| | Hrsta Ghosts Will Come And Kiss Our Eyes CD Hrsta Discography of CDs
Hrsta: Michael Moya, Brooke Crouser, Harris Newman, Eric Craven. Ghosts Will Come And Kiss Our Eyes Music Hrsta Ghosts Will Come And Kiss Our Eyes Songs Ghosts Will Come And Kiss Our Eyes Music Ghosts Will Come And Kiss Our Eyes Review
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Purchase Ghosts Will Come And Kiss Our Eyes CD To buy, Click on price to add to cart | Fall This Nation's Saving Grace CD (1985) Bonus Tracks
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| | Michael Church Live It Out Loud CD (2005)
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$16.49 Michael Dean Church BioMichael Dean Church was born in a part of our country where hard work is just a part of everyday life. Welch, WV isn’t glamorous. Dreams there are filled with the day-to-day struggle of working coal miners trying to survive. The work is dark, dirty and dangerous; but it binds the community together like no other profession. Families gather in small churches each Sunday where music becomes a food for their souls. Almost every family has at least one guitar player or banjo picker representing their family and some families have those that can sing. You learn to appreciate your neighbor, developing the skills of respect and concern when you grow up there. All of this becomes a part of who you are. On any given day, something could happen in a coal mine that would change your life forever. Church’s father was injured in a mining accident, while Church was just a toddler. Unable to continue mining, Church’s father worked in the mine as security.By the time Church was twelve, the local mines began to close, leaving his family no choice but to relocate to where work was available. They packed-up the family, and headed for Rome, Georgia.Michael Dean Church found himself in a whole new environment. Here the mountains didn’t block the radio waves. All types of music eagerly flowed into the Church’s home: country, blues, pop, R&B, and Gospel. Michael Dean Church soaked-up what he heard, singing ...
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| | Curt Smith Halfway Pleased CD (2008)
Ghosts Will Come And Kiss Our Eyes album
$14.15 Curt Smith is a musician, singer and songwriter, whose soaring voice is instantly recognizable to the millions of worldwide fans of Tears for Fears, the British group he co-founded in 1981. Still an active, acclaimed musician more than two decades later, Smith released his second solo album, "Halfway, pleased" via his own KOOK Media imprint in May, 2008. In addition to his solo career, the prolific Smith has also written music for television and is collaborating on a theatrical musical. His next creative goal is to compose for film. "The idea of adding a visual component to the lyrical and musical composition," he says, "appeals to me."Smith, now a naturalized U.S. citizen, originally hails from Bath, England, where he and Roland Orzabal met when both were teenagers. They first formed a band at school, for which Smith taught himself to play bass guitar – "we needed a bass player!" – and later formed the band Graduate, which achieved fame in Europe, and released its only album in 1980. After disbanding Graduate, Smith and Orzabal founded Tears for Fears. TFF’s debut album, 1982’s landmark "The Hurting," went on to produce three international bestselling singles – "Change," "Mad World," and "Pale Shelter" – each with indelible lead vocals provided by Smith. Their 1985 sophomore album, "Songs from the Big Chair," was even more successful, yielding hits including "Everybody Wants to Rule the World" (memorably sung by Smith), "Shout," and "Head Over Heels" (which Smith co-wrote). The duo spent the next several years recording their 1990 album "The Seeds of Love," which proved to be another bestseller the world over, but Smith left the band shortly after its release. "It had become unbearable," he says now. "This was due to fame as much as to the personal friction between Roland and me. I could either stop altogether, or continue in a better environment on my own. I moved to New York and found the latter."Smith acclimated to life in New York by hosting an MTV show, as well as a new music radio show that was syndicated to over 300 U.S. colleges, and by teaching a music industry course at New York University. Then, in 1995 a mutual friend introduced Smith to songwriter-guitarist Charlton Pettus. "I liked him, even though he used the word ‘meritocracy’ in the first sentence he spoke to me," Smith jokes. "I liked his passion. I’d spent so much time around people in the industry whose prime concern was business and income, that talking to someone whose love of music was so obvious made me realize why I’d become a musician in the first place." Smith and Pettus began writing together and formed a band called Mayfield. "It was first and foremost a live band," Smith explains. "I wanted to play gigs in small clubs, and record without the use of too much technology." ...
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