| 1. Intro | |||
| 2. Push - Killarmy, Superb | |||
| 3. Militant - Killarmy, U-God | |||
| 4. Originators | |||
| 5. Skit | |||
| 6. Sweatshop | |||
| 7. Street Monopoly | |||
| 8. After Hours, Pt. 1 | |||
| 9. Trilogy - Killarmy, | |||
| 10. Feel It | |||
| 11. Skit | |||
| 12. Whatever We Want | |||
| 13. Skit | |||
| 14. Monster | |||
| 15. Hit | |||
| 16. One to Grown On | |||
| 17. Skit | |||
| 18. Day One | |||
| 19. Spoken Word | |||
| 20. Nonchalantly | |||
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See all 22 tracks on this disc
| |||
Fear, Love & War,Killarmy,Relativity,Hardcore Rap,Hip-Hop,Pop,Rap & Hip-Hop
Average customer rating:
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Love and Fear
Tom Russell Manufacturer: Hightone Records ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B000ECX100 Release Date: 2006-03-21 |
Tracks:
- Pugilist at 59
- Beautiful Trouble
- Stealing Electricity
- Sound of One Heart Breaking
- Ash Wednesday
- K.C. Violin
- Four Chambered Heart
- Stolen Children
- It Goes Away
- All the Fine Young Ladies
- Old Heart
Amazon.com
Though not a conceptual narrative like his earlier Hotwalker, Love & Fear is Tom Russell offering a rootsy, Southwestern evocation of what Frank Sinatra called "the September of my years"--an album of thematically related material that ranks with his finest. The "love" of the title, in its infinite variety, permeates every track, while the "fear" is less fear of getting old or fear of death than, perhaps, fear of not making the most then of what he knows now. And knowing, in a lustful song such as "Beautiful Trouble," that he's capable of making those same mistakes (if they are mistakes) all over again. The bittersweet romanticism of "The Pugilist at 59" and "Ash Wednesday" could make converts of Springsteen diehards, the narrative of "Stolen Children" is about as bitter as Russell gets, and the rockier propulsion of "Stealing Electricity" and "Four Chambered Heart" pushes his music into edgier territory. "It All Goes Away" and "All the Fine Young Ladies" cast Russell as the older-and-wiser sage, while there's a hint of supper-club lounge in the closing "Old Heart." The spirit of the album feels like a benediction, but the creative vitality suggests that Russell has plenty more to offer. --Don McLeeseAlbum Description
Tom Russell was born in Los Angeles and now makes his home on the border in El Paso, Texas. He taught school for a year in Nigeria, during the Biafrant War. He lived in Spain, then relocated to Vancouver, B.C., where he started at the bottom of the music business, playing in the strip bars along skid row. With Love & Fear, Tom shakes off his folk troubadour shackles to bare his soul with his most personal recording to date.Customer Reviews:
Another "Non-commercial " hit........2007-05-16
Not Great But Not Bad.......2006-08-15
The reality is that Love and Fear is not a great album, but neither is it a bad one. Russell starts out strong with Pugilist at 59, a stark tale of growing old alone while being stalked by the demons of alcohol and caffeine. The brooding Beautiful Trouble builds on the promise offered by the opening cut. But then the spell is broken by the mildly humorous but musically awful Stealing Electricity. C'mon Tom, what is this garbage?
The spell broken, the quality of the rest of the CD fluctuates. The best of the rest are It All Goes Away and the gorgeous Old Heart which ends the CD. Four-Chambered Heart offers an interesting simile and musically, it is the hardest-driving piece on the CD. The mawkish and whiny sob song Stolen Children vies with Stealing Electricity for the title of worst song on the album.
If you are already a Tom Russell fan, you will find much to like here. But be honest, its not among his best. I like Russell, and I like Love and Fear. But I will certainly be skipping over the last two mentioned songs whenever I have the CD on.
Thankful I found out about Tom Russell and his beautiful music.......2006-07-31
what you see is what you get.......2006-05-15
Tom Russell at the Top of His Game.......2006-04-28
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Paramount 90th Anniversary Collection: Scores
Various Artists Manufacturer: Sony ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B000068TN9 Release Date: 2002-07-02 |
Tracks:
- Saving Private Ryan 'Hymn To The Fallen' - John Williams
- Double Indemnity 'Prelude' - Miklos Rozsa
- The Lost Weekend 'Finale' - Miklos Rozsa
- The Heiress 'Departure/Morris Suggests Love/The Proposal/Finale' - Aaron Copland
- Sunset Boulevard 'Prelude' - Franz Waxman
- The Ten Commandments 'Prelude' - Elmer Bernstein
- Breakfast At Tiffany's 'Moon River' - Henry Mancini
- Hatari! 'Baby Elephant Walk' - Henry Mancini
- Rosemary's Baby 'Main Title (Vocal)' - Christopher Komeda
- Romeo & Juliet 'Love Theme From Romeo & Juliet' - Nino Rota
- Once Upon A Time In The West 'Once Upon A Time In The West' - Ennio Morricone
- Love Story 'Theme From Love Story' - Francis Lai
- The Godfather 'Main Title (The Godfather Waltz)' - Nino Rota
- The Godfather 'Love Theme From The Godfather' - Nino Rota
- Chinatown 'Love Theme From Chinatown (Main Title) - Jerry Goldsmith
- The Godfather - Part II 'End Title' - Nino Rota
- Star Trek: The Motion Picture 'End Title' - Jerry Goldsmith
- Raiders Of The Lost Ark 'Raiders Of The Lost Ark' - John Williams
- Terms Of Endearment 'Theme From Terms Of Endearment' - Michael Gore
- Flashdance 'Love Theme From Flashdance' - Giorgio Moroder
- Beverly Hills Cop 'Axel F' - Harold Faltermeyer
Tracks:
- Witness 'Building The Barn' - Maurice Jarre
- Children Of A Lesser God 'Main Title' - Michael Convertino
- The Untouchables 'The Strength Of The Righteous (Main Title)' - Ennio Morricone
- Fatal Attraction 'Fatal Attraction' - Maurice Jarre
- The Addams Family 'Main Title' - Marc Shaiman
- Dead Again 'Winter 1948' - Patrick Doyle
- Indecent Proposal 'Flashback & Photos' - John Barry
- The Firm 'How Could You Lose Me?-End Title' - Dave Grusin
- Clear And Present Danger 'Main Title/A Clear And Present Danger' - James Horner
- Braveheart 'For The Love Of A Princess' - James Horner
- Primal Fear 'Courtroom Montage' - James Newton Howard
- Mission: Impossible 'Zoom B' - Danny Elfman
- Star Trek: First Contact 'End Credits' - Jerry Goldsmith
- Titanic 'Hard To Starboard' - James Horner
- The Rugrats Movie 'Baby Shower Happenings' - Mark Mothersbaugh
- The Talented Mr. Ripley 'Italia' - Gabriel Yared
- Rules Of Engagement 'Semper Fidelis (Always Faithful)' - Mark Isham
- Mission: Impossible 2 'The Bait' - Hans Zimmer
- Lara Croft: Tomb Raider 'Main Titles' - Graeme Revell
- Vanilla Sky 'To The Roof' - Nancy Wilson
- The Sum Of All Fears 'The Mission' - Jerry Goldsmith
- Forest Gump 'I'm Forrest...Forrest Gump' - Alan Silvestri
Amazon.com
Granddaddy of the Hollywood studios, Paramount Pictures is rightfully proud of its century of contributions to both American cinema and the art of film scoring. But the first disc of this 43-track double-CD anthology merely hints at the studio's musical peaks, blithely skipping through its first seven decades in just 17 tracks. Indeed, the package as a whole seems more interested in marketing its post-'70s catalog of hits and blockbusters than it does in paying real homage to history and roots. Even rarities like Double Indemnity and The Lost Weekend are served up via modern budget-line rerecordings, as is Ennio Morricone's epochal Once upon a Time in the West). Contemporary recordings of Aaron Copland's rare score to The Heiress and Franz Waxman's great Sunset Blvd. fare better, but soundtrack fans may miss the originals. The studio's rich pop-crossover successes in the '60s are documented via Breakfast at Tiffany's "Moon River" and excerpts from Romeo and Juliet and Love Story, while successful franchises like Star Trek and Raiders also get their due. Too often the '90s-focused second disc only underscores some uncomfortable trends in contemporary scoring--orchestral nervous tics punctuated by booming crescendos, treacly piano Muzak--and makes one wonder if the music of The Rugrats Movie and Lara Croft: Tomb Raider are really film music milestones. --Jerry McCulleyCustomer Reviews:
Great Movies have Great Soundtracks!.......2007-05-10
Only Disc 1 Is Worth Anything.......2006-07-19
And that brings up another problem. With all due respect to the late Jerry Goldsmith, who has provided some truly great classic movie scores, was it REALLY necessary to include TWO versions of the SAME Star Trek march in this collection? This seems evocative of the milk-it-for-all-its-worth attitude Paramount has had lately toward its now-tarnished crown-jewel franchise. Where's James Horner's theme music from Star Trek II and III? If they're gonna put Star Trek on here twice, they should have provided a little diversity. It wouldn't have taken much, I'm sure.
I'm sure that Paramount's had other films with far more memorable music (even Harold Faltermeyer's Top Gun Anthem could have helped on Disc 2). This just seems like a lazy attempt at something that really could have been great.
More of a propaganda CD.......2002-10-30
It seems a little odd to me that out of 90 years of film making the most memorable scores have been largely released within the last few years. I was pleased to find themes from the Godfather, Indiana Jones and Witness. I was perplexed with the inclusion of songs from Rugrats, both Mission Impossible movies (one would have been more than enough) and Tomb Raider (memorable???).
This is my own personal bias, but I do prefer movie soundtracks that evoke a feeling of excitement. With this collection I just couldn't get excited. I kept finding myself being let down by songs that didn't in some way complement the preceeding song.
There are certainly some great tracks here, but overall I was disappointed. My advise would be to look elsewhere.
Great selection of Film Hits!.......2002-09-25
Older recordings, main themes only.......2002-08-27
I would also personally have enjoyed more "secondary" music themes (otherwise it becomes like reading book summaries that always only quote the opening paragraph), and I could easily have done without the "pop" tunes (like Baby Elephant Walk and the Rugrats theme). In fact, it would have been very nice to listen to an album comprised of tracks chosen for their strong musical value rather than apparently for their box office and/or hit song popularity. But, to be fair, that may be precisely what draws some people to this CD set.
Film score music constitutes the single most significant body of classical music of our time. I hope some of these tracks will entice listeners to buy entire soundtracks and listen to some of these works as a whole.
Average customer rating: |
Handel: The Masterworks (Box Set)
Manufacturer: Brilliant Classics ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B00062FLI8 Release Date: 2004-11-30 |
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Fear Is on Our Side
I Love You But I've Chosen Darkness Manufacturer: Secretly Canadian ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B000E6GBZS Release Date: 2006-03-07 |
Tracks:
- Ghost, The
- According To Plan
- Lights
- Owl, The
- Today
- We Choose Faces
- Last Ride Together
- At Last Is All
- Long Walk
- Fear Is On Our Side
- (untitled)
- If It Was Me
Album Description
The full-length debut of this Texas band follows their 2003 self-titled five-song EP; a much poppier affair produced by Spoon's Britt Daniel, with a dose of thunder and lightning, pain and pleasure. Produced this time by Paul Barker (Ministry, Revolting Cocks), the record is more sadness than joy with lonely lyrics and hauntingly echoed guitar persuaded by chorused basslines. The sound is coaxing and familiar, then howling and anguished. Reminiscent of latter-era Talk Talk; with the introspection also comes passion. "Fear Is On Our Side" isn't trivial or banal, trendy or futile. It's a testament to our times, our revolutions, and our meaning. It's timeless, maniacal, and resounding. Darkness and truth.Customer Reviews:
AWESOME!.......2007-07-06
Great Sad Bastard Music.......2007-02-07
great mood.......2007-01-10
Nevermind the band's name... oh so enjoyable.......2006-09-23
"Fear Is On Our Side" (12 tracks, 52 min.) fleshes out (and matures) the sound of the 2003 EP, with great results. If you are not familiar with their sound, imagine a mix of the 80s Cure-meets-nowadays-Interpol. The band creates a mood with dark yet at times poppy and even danceable songs, to great effect. Check out the opener "The Ghost", which sets the table for the album. "Lights" is one of the few truly upbeat songs, along with "At Last At All". There are a couple of instrumentals along the way, creating more of the dark (but not scary) mood. Other highlights include "Last Ride Together", which truly is reminiscent of the 80s Cure sound, just great, and the closer "If It Was Me".
This is a great album. And it even translates better in a live setting. I saw ILUBICD in concert recently, and these songs ROCKED hard, much more so then on the studio versions. People may scratch their heads at the unusual band name, but I hope they will go beyond that and give this band a chance. Highly recommended!
Wonderful synth and guitar soundscape pop.......2006-07-31
Newbies to the band should check out their first single "According to Plan". For me, I don't particularly have a favorite song because the album blends together so well and I simply enjoy it as a whole (although one would be pleased to check out "we choose faces").
This is one album you will be happy to say you own, and a band you will be proud to say you started listening to before they hit it big.
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Bitter Love
Manufacturer: Sony ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B00000JWBU Release Date: 1999-08-17 |
Tracks:
- Against Time Of Desire
- I Once Dreamed
- Moist With Sweat
- NChiCa
- Gentle Showers
- How Sweet This Incense!
- It Is A Ghost!
- Your Solemn Vow
- Can It Be True
- This Is My Fear
- To Come
- At Peony Pavilion
- Stir My Belt Ornaments
- Secrecy Departing
Amazon.com
When he was a youth in his native China, Tan Dun spent a period as a fiddle player for a Beijing opera troupe. His intimate familiarity with the great Chinese epic opera The Peony Pavilion from the 16th century (produced during the 1999 Lincoln Center Festival) is evident in his own work of the same name, for which Peter Sellars collaborated as stage director. Bitter Love is a self-contained fusion of music and poetry that draws from Tan's larger opera score. The traditional love story of The Peony Pavilion--which bears some striking similarities to the Orpheus myth--comes through in floating, dreamlike fragments that reflect Chinese poet Tang Xianzu's lucid imagery like a smoky moon against water. As in his earlier and fascinatingly experimental opera Marco Polo, the New York-based Tan creates an eclectic collage of styles that mix East and West, old and new, as well as classical purity and pop energy, all with audacious imagination. This is, after all, a composer who has written music for water and stones, and he exhibits an almost childlike delight in the sensuous appeal of sounds here, in the overlay of traditional Chinese instruments such as pipa with synth beats, cross rhythms, and a panoply of percussion. Soprano Ying Huang gives Tan's fluttering threads of melody a silver sheen. However tempting it might be to label Tan's project as "crossover," it displays a depth and artistic integrity not usually associated with the term. --Thomas MayCustomer Reviews:
A Composition that Missed the Mark.......2007-06-15
Well, I love Chinese music, been listening to large volumes of Chinese operatic recordings and performances for more than 40 years - from the southern Cantonese to the north-western Qin and Yu operas, and even more the Eastern Kun operas and Huang Mei lyrics.
What is being achieved in this album? I would hesitate to call it East meeting West.
Fine, it is original. Fine again, that Miss Huang Ying is a lyrical soprano with a good voice and sound technique.
But please do not mistook the work as having any lineage with the Chinese operatic tradition: it has virtually none of such.
The choice of singer alone reveals that there is no regard to the authentic Chinese operatic tradition: a Western lyrical soprano is UNABLE to bring out the style and sonics in Chinese traditional-styled melodies. For such performer, go for the celebrated Chinese soprano Miss Wu Bixia instead, the pioneer of fusion of Chinese and Western vocal styles.
Very much unlike the more recent work of Tan "The First Emperor", this album endeavours to present music that is off the beaten track. However, the result is that it is off track. The stuff here, I dare say, accounts for more than half of the adverse criticism of that opera, a much more valid work in all respects but for these 'grey area' elements.
Chinese operatic arias are much more than wailing and whining. Musical lines are more melodious, harmonics much clearer.
The blurred effects here are not authentic Chinese style.
I envy those who are able to enjoy this album.
I generally admire Tan Dun, but this project was a misstep.......2006-03-28
Tan Dun's updating is drastic, maintaining the text (in English translation by Cyril Birch) but with totally new music. The traditional music of "Peony Pavilion", of which "Hang the Curtain Down" might be the most well-known, is nowhere to be heard here even in brief quotation. Instrumentation consists of pipa (a Chinese flute), percussion, several midi instruments, electronic sampler, and water gong. The rhythms, the scat singing, and the electronics make this work quite outside both the Western and Chinse traditions, and lovers of chillout projects such as Thievery Corporation may find this CD to their liking. Ying Huang's singing, however, displays the mannerisms of Beijing opera, so the work is a real fusion of styles.
Were this the only work by Dun, it might seem fresh and admirable, but it compares poorly to some of his recent works like THE MAP and the WATER PASSION. Some novel ideas, such as the mix of Chinese and Western instrumentation and the use of water for sound are present, but all in all the musical material here is very limited and repetitive. Perhaps it would be another matter entirely if I were watching a live performance where the orchestra is meant to accompany action onstage, but on its own the music isn't rich enough. Furthermore, Sony's packing of the material, with very unhelpful liner notes, makes it look as if Tan Dun's talent is being used to advance some mission of world music crossover gimmickry. I regrettably cannot recommend this like I can other works by Tan Dun, who is generally one of the most interesting living composers.
Dark depths and bright voices, a shock, a whimsy.......2004-05-24
A Music Collage.......2003-12-01
Ying Huang's pure soprano displays the poetry of the music beautifully. With sensuous approach, her singing is well attuned to the music's aura of longing and exotic beauty. The fabulous baritone chorus from The New York Virtuoso Singers gives a touch of the western opera and provides an indispensable layer to the otherwise rather thin orchestration.
But the music is not for everyone, nor for everyday. Despite its depth and range, it could be a strange land for the ears not tuned to its novelties and diversities, and as for that matter, one may wonder how much of the profound emotions Tan meant to deliver has actually reached the audience at general level.
Mind Opening.......2002-04-24
I would recommend this to anyone. Truly, a wonderful musical experience.
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Fear, Love & War
Killarmy Manufacturer: Relativity ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B00005MLX8 Release Date: 2001-09-11 |
Tracks:
- Intro
- The Push
- Militant
- Originators
- Skit
- Sweatshop
- Street Monopoly
- Afterhours Part 1
- Trilogy
- Feel It
- Skit
- Whatever We Want
- Skit
- Monster
- The Hit
- One To Grow On
- Skit
- Day One
- Spoken Word
- Nonchalantly
- The Rule
- Lady Sings The Blues
Customer Reviews:
killarmy's best album.......2007-02-18
Killarm is the truth... Real hip hop.......2006-06-01
Unlike All the other Wutang crap (cept for Black Knights),.......2003-07-23
I haven't heard the other Killarmy albums, but this is just banging. Hella tracks too. If ya'll like this stuff, check Black Knights' "Every Knight Is A Black Knight", they're Wu-published and are actually good too.
Good CD.......2003-04-09
swords for survival.......2002-06-18
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Ruth Lomon: Songs of Remembrance
Laura Ahlbeck (oboe) Manufacturer: Composers Recordings ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD ASIN: B00005Y4RU Release Date: 2002-02-01 |
Tracks:
- Chor der Waisen
- Mes Yeux
- The Survivor
- Fear
- Der Ewige Segne...
- The Butterfly
- Gedale's Song
- Sunny Evening
- Poeme Macabre
- Love Poem
Album Description
In 1945, as the Allies swept across Europe and the Third Reich crumbled, the Nazi death camps were liberated one by one. Photographs and news accounts forced the world at last to confront and acknowledge the horror of the genocide that had taken place. At the time, it was widely thought that words would never be found to express such inhumanity, and that the experience of such profound suffering lay beyond human expression. In reality, seminal works about the Holocaust appeared almost immediately: Viktor Frankl's important psychological treatise, Man's Search for Meaning, was published in 1946, and If This Is a Man, the first volume of Primo Levi's autobiographical memoir appeared in 1947, and many more books followed. This resiliency and urgent impulse of artistic response to that monumental 20th-century tragedy proves the human desire to create a narrative, context, and meaning from reality, however gruesomely incomprehensible it may be.Almost six decades later, new works of history, philosophy and art of all genres are still confronting the Holocaust in the context of a new millennium world that acknowledges genocide as part of our reality. I spoke with composer Ruth Lomon in order to understand her impulse to create this song cycle.
You've described the inception of Songs of Remembrance as being inspired by a year's stay in Jerusalem in 1994 during which you immersed yourself in reading poetry in the Library of the Yad Vashem Holocaust Museum. What has been your history with Israel and did you know in advance what your composition would entail? I've lived in Israel 1955-6, 1966, 1987 and 1993-4. My husband, Earle, is a physicist and we go back to Israel for his work and because we love the country and the friends we have there. At the time of our departure for Israel in 1994, the Oslo agreement had been reached and we were filled with renewed hope for peace. Originally, I intended to compose a song cycle on poems of peace by Israeli and Palestinian poets. But with the return of mounting conflict and tensions, this hope eroded and I turned my thoughts to the subject of the Holocaust.
You also studied Persian and Arabic modes (the Maqamet) with its use of quarter tones, as well as the Segah, used in the singing of the Torah. In addition, you have investigated early Christian music, precursors of Gregorian chant and Armenian church music from the third century. Were there features of these exotic and archaic music languages that you found particularly inspiring? How did you incorporate them into your own musical language?
The embellishments or melismas of the melodic line in the settings of Mes Yeux, Gedale's Song, Fear and Sunny Evening are influenced by the modes. Examples of the influence of early Armenian chants are most noticeable in the cadential material I use in Mes Yeux, which was the first poem I set to music; it is also a microcosmos of the song cycle because it contains harmonic and melodic references that are the basis of the work.
The cycle opens with an extraordinary setting of the poem by Nellie Sachs in which the phrase Wir Waisen (We orphans) becomes a statement of the paradox of the shared solitude of suffering, a central theme in Holocaust literature and in this moving collection of songs. There is the feeling of retelling or reframing what has been said in order to preserve it for the future and counteract this isolation. You met with two of the poets, Berthe Wizenberg Fleischer and Miriam Merzbacher-Blumenthal, who live in New York and Connecticut respectively. How did they react to your project?
I was worried about taking these very personal poems and setting them to music, but when I met with Berthe and Miriam and corresponded with the other poets, they made it clear that they felt it important to have the words sung, spoken, whatever the vehicle, so that we keep this knowledge of the Holocaust alive. Meeting Professor Rosette C. Lamont was also very important. She is
Customer Reviews:
Powerful music a tribute to Holocaust victims.......2003-01-12
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Songs to Shakespeare
John Addison , John Addison II , William Aikin , Thomas Arne , Sir Henry Rowley Bishop , Benjamin Britten , Geoffrey Bush , John Clifton , Henry Balfour Gardiner , Franz Joseph Haydn , Mervyn Horder , Herbert Howells , John Ireland , William Linley , John Major , Sir Charles H.H. Parry , Roger Quilter , John Christopher Smith , Charles Villiers Stanford , Michael Tippett , Ralph Vaughan Williams , Graham Johnson , and Anthony Rolfe Johnson Manufacturer: Hyperion ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD ASIN: B000002ZP7 Release Date: 1993-11-19 |
Tracks:
- You Spotted Snakes
- No More Dams I'll Make For Fish
- On A Day, Alack The Day
- She Never Told Her Love
- O Mistress Mine
- Lawn, As White As Driven Snow
- If Love Make Me Forsworn
- O Happy Fair!
- If Music Be the Food Of Love
- Farewell, Thou Art Too Dear For My Posessing
- When In Disgrace With Fortune And Men's Eyes
- Shall I Compare Thee To A Summer's Day?
- The Rain It Raineth Every Day
- Orpheus With His Lute
- Come Away Death
- Fear No More The Heat o' The Sun
- Take, O Take Those Lips Away
- It Was A Lover And His Lass
- Winter
- When Daffodils Begin To Peer
- Under The Greenwood Tree
- Songs For Ariel - I. Come Unto These Yellow Sands
- Songs For Ariel - II. Full Fathom Five
- Songs For Ariel - III. Where The Bee Sucks
- Who Is Silvia?
- Francie
- Sigh No More Ladies
Customer Reviews:
One of my Favorite CDs.......2004-02-19
Melodious Shakespeare.......2001-01-24
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Freedom from Agoraphobia Self Hypnosis CD
Manufacturer: World Sangha Publishing ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD ASIN: B000EX2PAG |
Product Description
This is a Powerful CD for anyone experiencing the disabling issue of Agoraphobia. This CD was brilliantly co-authored by a Certified Clinical Hypnotherapist and Registered Counselor with over 14 years of professional experience and by someone who has suffered from Agoraphobia for years. It is gentle and mindful to all the issues you face, yet powerful enough to help you move though the fear and take back your life. This CD will truly help you find Freedom from Agoraphobia and to take charge of your life again! Christopher Love CDs are very Powerful Transformational tools for you to heal and transcend the past, empower your present moment, help you hold the vision of what you want in the future from life, and to help you expand into the Mystery of Being. All CDs also include a combination of Alpha and Theta Brainwave technology for a deep and relaxed Mind/Body/Spirit experience. Alpha brainwaves are those most frequently found when you are in a deep meditation state. Alpha brainwave states are typically associated with contemplation, visualization, problem solving and accessing deeper levels of creativity. Theta brainwaves represent a state of deep relaxation and meditation, enhanced creativity, stress relief, light sleep and dreaming. It is also best to use headphones whenever possible but not absolutely necessary. Each CD includes beautiful full color graphics imprinted on top of the CD and are shipped in a slimline jewel case without a paper insert and without shrink-wrap. Christopher Love is an internationally known Bestselling Author, Award Winning Composer/Recording Artist, Certified Clinical Hypnotherapist, Certified Neuro-Linguistic Program Practitioner, Board Certified Hypnotherapy Instructor/Trainer and a Teaching Reiki Master with over 14 years of professional experience. He is the author of 9 books, 24 solo music CD's, 74 Self Hypnosis/Guided Meditations on CD, 2 Poetry CD's, 2 Rumi Poetry CD's and a children's stories on CD.Customer Reviews:
True Freedom!.......2007-04-11
Not what it claims to be.............2006-04-13
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Carmen (Sung in English)
Bizet , Bardon , Gavin , Plazas , Magee , and Parry Manufacturer: Chandos ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B00007JGRN Release Date: 2003-03-11 |
Tracks:
- Prelude
- In The Plaza
- Just Look At That Delicious Morsel
- Here Come Our New Soldier Boys
- Jose! There Was A Girl Here Looking For You Just Now
- Off With You Old Soldier Boys
- Corporal! Sir!
- We Have Heard The Bell Summon Us To Meet Here
- Ah, Just Look!
- But Why Hasn't She Come, Our Carmencita?
- Love's A Bird Wild As Any Rebel
- Carmen! We Will Follow You High And Low!
- The Cheek Of It!
- Give Me News Of My Mother!
- Your Dear Mother And I Were Leaving Church This Morning
- I See My Mother's Face!
- Wait A Moment - I'm Going To Read The Letter
- Come And Help
- So, Corporal: Tell Me What Happened
- Well, Carmencita: What Do You Have To Say For Yourself?
- Where Are You Taking Me?
- There's An Old Bar In The City
- Careful - It's Lieutenant!
- Entr'acte
- From Far Away Mysterious Sounds
- Bravo, Bravo! More! Keep Dancing!
- Hurrah! Hurrah! The Torero!
- Who's That? It's Escamillo, The Bullfighter From Granada
- Hurrah! Hurrah! The Torero!
- You're Most Kind
- We'll Come With You, Senor Torero
- Toreador, Be Ready!
- At Last! We Got Rid Of Them As Quickly As We Could
- There's A Little Job That We're Starting!
- Being In Love Is Not A Reason
Tracks:
- To Bid You Welcome To Our Bar
- La La La La La La La La...
- Back To Camp!... Go At Once!
- That Flow'r You Threw To Me I Treasured
- No, It's Not Love At All!
- Hello! Carmen!
- Lieutenant Fair, It's True
- The Sky Above The Open Road
- Entr'acte
- Keep Going, Dear Old Friend, Kep Going!
- Right! Let's Stop For A While
- Shuffle! Cut Them!
- In Vain You Would Avoid The Bitter Things They're Saying
- You're Back!
- As For That Man, It Should Be Easy!
- Is This The Place?
- I Say That There's Nothing To Fear
- It's Him! I'm Sure It's Him Over There!
- Escamillo Is My Name, And I Come From Granada
- She Had A Lover Here
- Hola! Hola! Jose!
- You Should Take Care, Carmen
- Alas! Jose, Your Mother Is Ill
- Entr'acte
- A Few Cuartos! A Few Cuartos!
- Here They Come! Here They Come!
- If You Love Me, Carmen
- It's You! It's Me!
- Viva! Viva! What A Corrida!
Customer Reviews:
English is an asset and a drawback.......2004-07-20
Unfortunately, the performance suffers from being sung in English. The singers declaim their parts with such proper British diction that Carmen comes across as a school marm. The spoken dialog is delivered beat for deliberate beat and is dripping with reverb. It makes the plaza, tavern and mountain pass all sound like a sewer pipe.
This is a good first Carmen for someone trying to understand the work. The libretto itself is a good investment for further listening. For an enjoyable performance with an emphasis on character and action, I recommend Regina Resnik on the London Double Decker set.
You Will Love Opera After Hearing Carmen In English.......2004-02-09
The real strength of this version is the dynamic drama. With the advantage of being sung in English, we get better insight on characters' emotions and motives, and we understand the drama a lot better. Carmen is all about great drama. Bizet drew the plot from the French writer Prosper Merimee's dark short story. Carmen is the ultimate femme fatale- a devil-may-care, sexy Gypsy living in Spain, seduces the conservatively raised soldier Don Jose, stealing him away from his fiancee, the passive Micaela, living a life of underground smuggling and rowdy taverns. "Habanera" and "The Gypsy Song and Dance" are very expressive of Carmen's extraordinarily liberal lifestyle. Don Jose, however, has fallen deeply in love- as he shows us in his song/aria "The Flower Song". But Carmen soon becomes tired of his constancy. Don Jose wants a committed, monogamous relationship with Carmen. But Carmen will not submit to love, since she is first and foremost a carnal creature. Eventually, she falls for the handsome Toreador Escamillo. Don Jose, consumed by jealousy, stabs Carmen at a bullfight after Carmen declares her love for Escamillo and rejects Don Jose's love. Don Jose's crazed, obscessive personality shines through in the English version as well. This tragedy has been done in English before so don't think this is the first time. Back in the 50's, there was a film, starring black actors "Carmen Jones" which was treated the same way as this opera- more like an English Broadway musical and with the dubbed singing voice of Marilyn Horne as Carmen. All in all, this recording is excellent.
A wholly credible "Carmen" -- finally!.......2003-09-17
I love Carmen!.......2003-08-15
And what of this recording? Carmen sits well in English, so it is good to hear in translation, although some of the detais in the text jar. Escamillo refers to Jose as "my dear", which sounds rather peculiar, and the guide's line to Micaela: "it's not exactly inviting, is it?" sounds distinctly Middle England rather than Rural Spain. Some of the performers, not least Carmen herself, make the words work, although there are long tracts, especially with the chorus, where the language is distinctly indistinct.
The soloists are, by and large, strong. Patricia Bardon's deep, Handel-friendly voice adapts well to Carmen and she colours the music with phenomenal detail, sounding sexy and provocative from the start with an edge of pride and anger that emerges as the show goes on. She is out of her depth above the stave, though, and some extra top notes in the second act don't show her off to her best advantage. I have previously said that Julian Gavin is poorly served by recordings, though here he sounds much more even and gives a thrilling and musical performance (but his wooden spoken lines let him down). Mary Plazas is a lovely Micaela, rich-voiced and sincere (and word-perfect), but Garry Magee sounds miscast as Escamillo, lacking the ballast at the bottom of the voice to do justice to this tricky role.
The supporting cast is good (Mary Hegarty seems to do nothing but Frasquita these days!) but the really treasurable thing is the conducting. Stepping out of Italian Ottocento, David Parry turns his hand to this French Comedie with an appropriate lightness of touch. His pacing and handling of the set pieces is exemplary and the enrtractes go with a real swing.
A pleasure, then, for the Carmen naive or a novelty for the Carmen-acquainted. I nearly wrote Carmen-weary - but I don't think it's possible.
Dance Music:
- Get Ur Freak On [CD-single] [Import]
- "Great Things"
- Grimy Individualz [Explicit Lyrics]
- Hand over Fist [Explicit Lyrics]
- Hated By Many Loved By Few [Explicit Lyrics]
- He Think He Raw [Explicit Lyrics]
- Headshotz [Explicit Lyrics]
- I Remember [CD-single] [Explicit Lyrics]
- I Remember [CD-single] [Explicit Lyrics]
- In the Mid-Nite Hour [Clean]
Dance Music
Something Else [CD-single] [Import]
Midnight Love [Extra tracks] [Original recording remastered] [SACD]
Mozart: Trio in Ef; Bruch: Pieces Op83/1-8
Non Ce N'e'per Nessuno [Import]