Let The Music Play: The Best Of Shannon Music Review
Customer Let The Music Play: The Best Of Shannon Reviews
Average Rating: (4.7 out of 5 stars)
Shannon - A Good Find This is a really good collection. The only song missing is "Someone Waiting Home" which was a slow song released sometime in 1983/84. I even have the kids listening to the beats. Submitted by jfuster (Upstate New York) Was This Review Helpful? YesNo
excellent!! I could not find the song Do you want to get away anywhere. It was great to hear that song again along with all the other great hits on the album!! I love it!! Submitted by jayemt9 (Patchogue, NY) Was This Review Helpful? YesNo
Outstanding This is a wonderful collection of Shannon's biggest and greatest hits. I am amazed at how good this cd is. If you like to dance this is a must for your cd collection. Submitted by allinfun992002 (Memphis) Was This Review Helpful? YesNo
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$6.39 This is not a true greatest hits, but a collection of newly remixed (1987) versions of her hits.
Madonna's meteoric rise to stardom had as its springboard the early '80s NY club scene; dance music has provided a home base for any of the musical journeys her widely varied career has seen her take. 1987's YOU CAN DANCE found the reigning queen of pop revisiting some of her more famous works, courtesy of the mixing skills of some of the friends she'd made along the way, notably NY DJ and mix artist Jellybean Benitez (a name which was inseparable from the dance music genre at the time). Producer of Madonna's breakthrough "Holiday," he returns here with two slick remixes of the track, highlighting some of its many catchy instrumental nuances. The quintessential Madonna dance track, "Into The Groove," which inspired the album's title, bears the mark of editor ...
$15.19 Although the Pet Shop Boys are a rarity, a dance-pop band that makes well-structured and satisfying albums, Neil Tennant and Chris Lowe are at heart pop classicists who appreciate good hooks above all else. Their brilliant collaboration with Dusty Springfield, "What Have I Done to Deserve This?," and their even-better mash-up of U2 and Frankie Valli hits, respectively, "Where the Streets Have No Name (I Can't Take My Eyes Off You)," reveal the duo's underlying respect for and mastery of classic pop forms.
The other 16 songs here range from the breezy "Love Comes Quickly" and the Latin-tinged "Domino Dancing" to the more mature and emotionally weighty "Jealousy" and "Being Boring," with all of the tracks placed chronologically to chart the duo's ...
$25.19 While MUSICALLY RICH...AND FAMOUS documents the second half of British blues godfather Alexis Korner's career, KORNERSTONED adopts a more comprehensive approach, following the pioneering singer/guitarist from the very beginning of his musical life, all the way through every subsequent phase of his development. So we get not only his mid-1960s work with burgeoning blues-rock giants like Paul Rodgers and Steve Marriott, but also his `50s skiffle recordings (basically the British version of jug-band music) with the Ken Colyer band ...