| | Now, Vol. 20 CD (5 Customer Reviews)
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On its 20th installment, the wildly successful NOW THAT'S WHAT I CALL MUSIC! series continues to offer up the hottest hits in pop/rock and R&B/rap. (Those who think of twenty as a high number should note that the original British series reached ... Now, Vol. 20 Music Review Purchase Now, Vol. 20 CD To buy, Click on price to add to cart | Now, Vol. 14 CD (2003)
Now, Vol. 20 album
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| | Now, Vol. 16 CD (2004)
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| | Now, Vol. 17 CD (2004)
Now, Vol. 20 music CDs
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| | Now That's What I Call Music! 19 CD (2005)
Now, Vol. 20 songs
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| | Now That's What I Call Music! 22 CD (2006)
Now, Vol. 20 album
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| | Now, Vol. 23 CD (2006)
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| | Fakes Real Fiction CD (1995)
Now, Vol. 20 music CDs
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| | Headpins Turn It Loud CD (1982) Import
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| | Crowe Brothers Winds Are Blowing CD (2005)
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| | Doomshade CD (2007) Parental Advisory
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| | Buck Owens Warner Bros. Recordings CDs (2007)
Now, Vol. 20 music CDs
$39.29 As the '70s drew to a close, Buck Owens was still a superstar, thanks largely to his starring role on Hee Haw, still going strong after several years on the air. He may have been big on TV, but his recording career was on shaky ground. Things had never quite been the same for Buck since the death of Don Rich, and as the years passed, he started to seem a bit adrift, floating through the end of his Capitol contract and then jumping ship to Warner Bros toward the end of the '70s. Once he was situated at the new label, he began to do many things he promised never to do, chief among them recording in Nashville, which of course led to all sorts of compromises, culminating in covering England Dan & John Ford Coley songs -- something that would have been inconceivable just ten years before. These are the reasons his four Warner albums are commonly dismissed as dull and boring. As tempting as it is to think of this attitude as mere griping from country purists, the kind of thing that's ripe for revisionism, Rhino Handmade's double-disc 2007 set The Warner Bros. Recordings proves all of the conventional wisdom sadly accurate. Despite the uproarious attitude of the title of his 1976 album Buck 'Em, these recordings are an aural definition of listless, lacking in heart and energy -- it sounds as if Buck doesn't really care to be in the studio at all, he's merely biding time, waiting until the clock runs out. It seems as if he turned to Nashville because he not only had nowhere to go, he had no idea what to do, so might as well try the industry's rules for once. The industry helped make Buck 'Em and its successor Our Old Mansion professional records that could ease onto the charts, but such slick surroundings only emphasized the lifeless ...
| | Timothy W Tidwell Wanna Get To Heaven CD (2008)
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| | Collectable King Crimson, Vol. 4 CDs (2009)
Now, Vol. 20 album
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