| 1. Baby Doll |
| 2. For the Love of You |
| 3. Who's Lovin' You |
| 4. Born Not to Know |
| 5. Little Walter |
| 6. Lovestruck |
| 7. Pain |
| 8. 261.5 |
| 9. Not Gonna Cry for You |
Who?,Tony! Toni! Tone!,Polygram Records,Hip-Hop,R&B,Urban
Average customer rating:
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Who We Are
Lifehouse Manufacturer: Geffen Records ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B000Q9OD5I Release Date: 2007-06-19 |
Tracks:
- Disarray
- First Time
- Whatever It Takes
- Who We Are
- Broken
- The Joke
- Easier To Be
- Make Me Over
- Mesmerized
- Bridges
- Learn You Inside Out
- Storm
Amazon.com
Who We Are is another set of rousing anthems from this reflective trio. On their fourth full-length, the Los Angeles three-piece sets the template for a harder-rocking effort with dynamic opener "Disarray," in which singer/guitarist Jason Wade admits he doesn't know where he's going, but "wouldn't have it any other way." The band rocks even harder on album highlight "The Joke," a song inspired by a real-life suicide. It's a risk that pays off, although the lyrics almost make the subject seem more defiant than regretful. Throughout the record, Rick Woolstenhulme's drums sound like they're cranked up to 11--not that there's anything wrong with that (Bryce Soderberg holds his own on bass). In other words, the music isn't shy (or subtle), but Wade's words read more like questions than answers. Granted, closing number "Storm," with Rocco DeLuca on organ, brings things to a gentle close, but most tracks follow in the over-sized footsteps of post-grunge precursors, like Live and Stone Temple Pilots. Then again, as Abigail Van Buren used to say, "If it ain't broke, don't fix it." If Lifehouse ever find what they're looking for, to paraphrase yet another sage, they may as well pack it in. --Kathleen C. FennessyAlbum Description
Lifehouse is singer-guitarist Jason Wade, drummer Rick Woolstenhulme and bassist-singer Bryce Soderberg. These three guys are a hit making machine!Jason Wade proved himself a gifted songwriter with Lifehouse's first record, 2000's multiplatinum No Name Face, which spawned the #1 hit "Hanging by a Moment." Calling that song a hit, however, is a bit of an understatement as "Hanging by a Moment" was the most-played song of 2001.
Stanley Climbfall, the band's Top 10 follow-up, was released in 2002.
2005 saw the release of their third album simply titled Lifehouse which included the undeniable hit #1 multi-format hit "You And Me" and kept the band out on the road touring for over a year.
With Who We Are, Lifehouse takes another evolutionary step making an upbeat album full of potential hits sure to please fans and make new ones.
Customer Reviews:
too safe.......2007-07-30
On the optomistic route, though, his voice was nice and the songs were sweet.
Awesome.......2007-07-28
Very Nice.......2007-07-23
A few people commented here about not liking "The Joke". Its one of my favorites on the CD. But then, I'm probably a little older than your average review writer here. "The Joke" shows direct old Cheap Trick influence. I could have easily been listenning to an old Neilsen/Zander/Peterson composition. For those of you who didn't like Cheap Trick in the 70's and early 80's (ala One on One, Dream Police, et al), this song may sound a little strange. However, I found it completely refreshing and different than anything I have heard in a long time. There guys just keep getting better.
Lifehouse rocking POP..........2007-07-23
Awesome!.......2007-07-23
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The Who: The Ultimate Collection
The Who Manufacturer: Mca ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B000065UFD Release Date: 2002-06-11 |
Tracks:
- I Can't Explain
- Anyway, Anyhow, Anywhere
- My Generation
- The Kids Are Alright
- A Legal Matter
- Substitute
- I'm A Boy
- Boris The Spider
- Happy Jack
- Pictures Of Lily
- I Can See For Miles
- Call Me Lightning
- Magic Bus
- Pinball Wizard
- I'm Free
- See Me, Feel Me
- The Seeker
- Summertime Blues (Live)
- My Wife
- Baba O'Riley
- Bargain
Tracks:
- Behind Blue Eyes
- Won't Get Fooled Again
- Let's See Action
- Pure & Easy
- Join Together
- Long Live Rock
- The Real Me
- 5:15
- Love Reign O'er Me
- Squeeze Box
- Who Are You
- Sister Disco
- You Better You Bet
- Eminence Front
Amazon.com
The Who's mighty catalog of beautiful, poignant, and often silly pop songs bashed out with Cassius Clay finesse has suffered in the past at the hands of multiple, butcher-shop best-ofs and horrible packaging. But this thrilling band--undeniably one of ye classicke rocke's greatest--gets the career-spanning entry-point compilation it deserves with the double-disc Ultimate Collection. The songs included here are no-brainers, for the most part--if they aren't huge hits like "My Generation," "I Can See for Miles," or "Baba O'Riley," they're long-standing fan favorites such as "Boris the Spider," "Pure and Easy," and "Squeeze Box." And while this reviewer wishes different songs were chosen from Tommy, and more than one tune was gathered from their arguably finest (and definitely silliest) album, The Who Sell Out, this record really isn't for fans (aside from the total trainspotter types) but for newcomers. --Mike McGonigalCustomer Reviews:
Probably is ultimate.......2007-07-01
If You Only Want To Own One Who Set..........2007-06-29
Very good introduction to one of the best Rock bands in the world - ever!.......2007-06-05
I'm sure there are other Who compilations still available, who will satisfy classic Rock purists more than this "Ultimate". However, if you're just trying to increase your knowledge of how good British Rock became in the 1960s and 1970s, this The Who collection at no doubt will lead you to get later their entire album collection. Enjoy it!
This Is Real Music........2007-05-19
The Who for Beginners.......2007-05-07
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Good News For People Who Love Bad News
Modest Mouse Manufacturer: Sony ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B0001M7P78 Release Date: 2004-04-06 |
Tracks:
- Horn Intro
- The World At Large
- Float On
- Ocean Breathes Salty
- Dig Your Grave
- Bury Me With It
- Dance Hall
- Bukowski
- This Devil's Workday
- The View
- Satin In A Coffin
- Interlude (Milo)
- Blame It On The Tetons
- Black Cadillacs
- One Chance
- The Good Times Are Killing Me
Amazon.com
It's hard to pinpoint the exact moment Modest Mouse started sounding like a real band. For the longest time, singer-songwriter Isaac Brock seemed to exist solely to defy the established rules, forging forward on sheer momentum and ingenuity. Even Pavement looked relatively ordinary in comparison to the band's early releases like 1996's This Is a Long Drive for Someone with Nothing to Think About and 1997's The Lonesome Crowded West. But on Good News for People Who Love Bad News, the frontman sounds like he's finally touching the earth, and the band--minus founding member and drummer Jeremiah Green--follows suit. A relaxed mood prevails, not so much in volume but in attitude. On the follow-up to the group's 2000 major label debut, The Moon & Antarctica, big sloppy melodies battle it out with brass on punky epics like "Float On" and "The Ocean Breathes Salty." The lyrics are simpler, the arrangements tamer, but the vitality remains. The prevailing mood is that Modest Mouse has pulled off something extraordinary here: a well-rounded, lovable record that doesn't sound anything like David Gray. --Aidin VaziriCustomer Reviews:
One hit song does not a sell-out album/band make.......2007-06-20
OK, you've heard that rant before, but not in such an *ahem* eloquent fashion. Now onto the review.
As usual, the hit is by no means the best song on the album. Other songs like "The World At Large", "Ocean Breathes Salty", "Bury Me With It", "Bukowski", "The View", and (ESPECIALLY) "The Good Times are Killing Me" (which, by the way, if you did not know, was remixed and tampered with by one of the best bands of all time, the Flaming Lips) not only give "Float On" a run for its money, they take the money and use it to buy cigars.
I mean, the fact that supposedly hardcore fans are nitpicking this great album because it has freakin' "Float On" on it more points out their own stupidity and narrow-mindedness than it does the band being sell outs.
So, in conclusion, if you want to keep your rather dubious "indie cred", do not buy this album. If you enjoy Modest Mouse as much as anyone should, however, than do.
"You wasted life, why wouldn't you waste death?".......2007-04-19
"The World At Large" starts off the album about as happy as it gets, with flutes and meaningless vocals in the background. "Bury Me With It" is about as angry as the band gets musically, though not lyrically. That would be "Bukowski", which is completely pleasant musically. "The View" sounds like kind of like dance music. "Satin In a Coffin" uses prominent drums and older sounding instruments to create a very interesting sound. "The Good Times Are Killing Me" finishes off the album while perfectly illustrating the conflict of sound and message, and it's produced by The Flaming Lips, which is cool. Modest Mouse is a unique band, and a good one at that.
I can't believe I heard this on the radio........2007-03-27
My highlights for this record include Bukowski, Black Cadillacs, and Satin In A Coffin. If you truly love the band and aren't just in it for the image, you'll love this record. The whole album is great. Yes, even Float On.
Even if you're an old school MM fan, listen to it with an open mind.......2007-03-12
What I love about Isaac Brock is that his music reveals a lot about who he is and what life has taught him. Good News for People Who Love Bad News is no exception.
The only track I don't like on this album is "Satin in a Coffin". After hearing a live recording, which I love, I can't stand to listen to the one on gnfpwlbn. It lacks passion and intensity.
Yet another masterpiece from Modest Mouse.......2007-01-21
Then I listen to it more, and it begins to grow on me, and soon I can't stop listening to it and I'm raving, "This is their greatest album!".
That's what happened to me with this one. Didn't blow me away at first. Now? I am like an addict. As soon as a song ends I need to hear it again immediately. And I can't stop listening to the album, and I don't want to listen to anything else....
I give it huge props, even though they diss my beloved Charles Bukowski.
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Who's Next
The Who Manufacturer: Mca ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B000002OX7 Release Date: 1995-11-07 |
Tracks:
- Baba O'Riley
- Bargain
- Love Ain't For Keeping
- My Wife
- The Song Is Over
- Getting In Tune
- Going Mobile
- Behind Blue Eyes
- Won't Get Fooled Again
- Pure And Easy
- Baby Don't You Do It
- Naked Eye
- Water
- Too Much Of Anything
- I Don't Even Know Myself
- Behind Blue Eyes
Amazon.com essential recording
A mix of old favorites and buried treasures makes this edition of Who's Next a definite must. One of the defining albums of 70s hard rock from one of the 60s most successful bands, the original album includes some of The Who's best-known work, such as the anthemic "Baba O'Riley" and "Won't Get Fooled Again", the by turns sorrowful and angry "Behind Blue Eyes", and perennial favorite "My Wife". The new tracks on this album are equally worth hearing, including "Pure and Easy" (an alternate edition of which is available on Odds & Sods) and the original version of "Behind Blue Eyes". A hard rock classic, Who's Next is required listening for rock fans of all ages. --Genevieve WilliamsCustomer Reviews:
One of the pinnacle releases from the Golden Age of Rock and Roll.......2007-06-28
WHO'S NEXT IS A ROCK MONUMENT ! (if it's not on your greatest albums of all time list, it should be.).......2007-06-10
I'd gladly lose me to find you
I'd gladly give up all I had
To find you I'd suffer anything and be glad.
The song's devotion is complete, unconditional, and cuts to the soul. It's one of The Who's best songs. Love Ain't For Keeping and Going Mobile highlight the band's acoustic side. One describes the urgency and uncertainty of love and the other is about a life on the road. The Song Is Over and Getting In Tune are both very good piano-based songs (Getting In Tune also rocks). The acoustic/electric, lonely and bitter Behind Blue Eyes is a pure classic from The Who and also one of their most popular songs. Without this, there would probably be no Metallica, no Staind, or any other angry metal music. We Don't Get Fooled Again is The Who's anthem, and it's cynical (but sadly, on target) view of the changes that were taking place in the world during the tumultuous 1960s and early 1970s. Musically, the song is a mighty force, with Pete Townsend's electric guitar power chords, an explosive Keith Moon drum assault during the extended, spacey instrumental break, and the longest, loudest screams in the history of recorded music from Roger Daltrey. Of course, "The Ox", John Entwistle, as always, brings it all together with his legendary bass guitar. This album changed the landscape, and the direction of rock music. A more powerful, masculine, and maturely introspective era of music soon followed. Who's Next is one of the greatest albums of all time, and it has had a profound effect on many people's lives in the world (including my own).
Rock 'n' Roll's quintessential.......2007-06-09
The Song is Over.......2007-04-28
One of the best rock albums of all time.......2007-04-12
Undeniably, this record makes my list of top twenty albums of all-time. In no particular order are some of the others. There are fewer than twenty - the list is fluid - but the following have been included for years:
Astral Weeks
Abbey Road
Are You Experienced
Dark Side of the Moon
Sticky Fingers
The Band
What's Going On
Blue
Pete Townsend wrote some memorable lyrics for this record.
From Goin' Mobile:
I don't care about pollution
I'm an air-conditioned gypsy
That's my solution
Watch the police and the taxman miss me!
I'm mobile!
From Bargain:
I'd pay any price just to win you
Surrender my good life for bad
To find you I'm gonna drown an unsung man.
From Getting' in Tune
I'm singing this note 'cause it fits in well
With the chords I'm playing
I can't pretend there's any meaning
Hidden in the things I'm saying.
Although Next is a rock and roll album this is not just A rock and roll album. By 1971 The Who had been innovative and experimental for a few years. This record continued the trend. Townsend plays his familiar electric guitar with a flourish. He also plays some introspective acoustic. There is the violin solo on Baba O'Riley. The synthesizer is used to good effect on several songs. The overall sound is spectacular. Even now, 36 years later, this remarkable recording sounds as fresh as it did when it was released. It demands five stars.
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Tommy (1969 Original Concept Album)
The Who Manufacturer: Mca ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B000002OZY Release Date: 1996-03-12 |
Tracks:
- Overture
- It's A Boy
- 1921
- Amazing Journey
- Sparks
- Eyesight To The Blind (The Hawker)
- Christmas
- Cousin Kevin
- The Acid Queen
- Underture
- Do You Think It's Alright?
- Fiddle About
- Pinball Wizard
- There's A Doctor
- Go To The Mirror!
- Tommy Can You Hear Me?
- Smash The Mirror
- Sensation
- Miracle Cure
- Sally Simpson
- I'm Free
- Welcome
- Tommy's Holiday Camp
- We're Not Gonna Take It
Amazon.com essential recording
Tommy had the dubious distinction of being the first-ever rock opera; however, it's none the worse for that, Ken Russell's adaptation notwithstanding. Due largely to Pete Townshend's skill as a songwriter and composer, Tommy tells a coherent story and includes quality rock and roll at the same time, an impressive feat by itself. While surprisingly more linear than the later Quadrophenia, Tommy boasts several songs that stand up well on their own, including the classic "Pinball Wizard," "The Acid Queen," "I'm Free," and "Sally Simpson." Much of the rest doesn't make much sense lyrically unless you listen to the entire album, but you'll probably want to do that anyway, preferably with the lights low and the stereo cranked. --Genevieve WilliamsCustomer Reviews:
"Sickness Will Surely Take the Mind Where Minds Can't Usually Go" (* * * * 1/4).......2007-06-13
The centerpiece of Tommy is "Pinball Wizard", whose strummed chords are among the most recognizable in rock, and which serve as a motif throughout the record. However, I should note - as others have - that it is not too far removed from the chords heard on "Old Man Going" from the previously mentioned S.F. Sorrow. (But hey, even the opening to "Stairway To Heaven" had a precursor in "Taurus" by the band Spirit.) Of the two dozen tracks on the album, this is probably the only one known to a wider audience, and rightfully so. This is an excellent single which stands well on its own, and serves as one of the pillars for an album that also includes three instrumentals ("Overture", "Sparks", "Underture") and several under one-minute adhesive pieces, which are at times reminiscent of the fake commercials on Sell Out. Among the other solid, free-standing songs are "Amazing Journey", "Christmas", "Go To the Mirror!", "Sensation", "Sally Simpson", and "I'm Free". Pete Townshend wrote all of these songs, and most of the others on Tommy. But there is also the smartly chosen cover of Sonny Boy Williamson's "Eyesight To the Blind (The Hawker)". Plus, John Entwistle's two tracks introduce the unsavory characters one would expect from him, in this case the bully "Cousin Kevin" and the alcoholic, sexually abusive Uncle Ernie ("Fiddle About").
Tommy is surely to be praised for its great songs and ambition, but also for the fact that the story holds together quite well. It is easy to criticize it for being sketchy, but no libretto can serve to illustrate every scene of an opera perfectly. Townshend obviously expected it to be presented on stage. I will not go too deeply into the plot, but it is worth pointing out the highlights. Tommy witnesses the murder of his mother's lover by his father, long thought to have been killed in World War I ("1921"). Terrified by his father's insistence that he saw and heard nothing, and that his never to tell anyone about it, he is psychologically struck deaf, dumb, and blind. His parents, bereft of hope, first seek to heal him first through a strange spiritual leader ("Eyesight To the Blind") and then hallucinagens ("The Acid Queen"). Both fail, but in the meantime Tommy discovers he has an uncanny talent for pinball, which catapults him to fame. Soon after this, his parents find a doctor who discovers that Tommy's symptoms are psychosomatic ("There's A Doctor"). The refrain of "See me, feel me, touch me, heal me" comes from Tommy, who is aware of what is happening even though he cannot express himself. Tommy is healed when his mother destroys the mirror into which he perpetually stares, and through which he saw the murder happen ("Smash The Mirror"). Thought by many to have been the recipient of a miracle, he acquires legions of followers, who too hope to have their senses revived figuratively the way Tommy's were literally ("Sally Simpson", "Welcome".) Alas, like most so-called gurus, Tommy insists that his followers gain enlightenment the same way that he did. This, coupled with the fact that Uncle Ernie is heading up the camp, cause his followers to abandon him ("We're Not Gonna Take It"). Fortunately, Tommy does not abandon himself as the latter half of "We're Not Gonna Take It" - released in single form as "See Me, Feel Me" - indicates.
If any band were to make the rock opera legitimate, The Who was surely the big band who could. Although S.F. Sorrow deserves its share of credit, and although Arthur is a better album, Tommy is the one that everyone knows about. Obviously such a large project ran the risk of being overblown, but Townshend's penchant for graceful but powerful singles and longer pieces prevented this from happening. Tommy may not be a Great album, but it is a very good one, and is worthy of its status as a major breakthough in the history of rock.
Tommy revisited.......2007-05-30
it started here.......2007-05-26
The music on this album is simply incredible. It's one thing to make a concept album and tell a good story. It's another when you can take a story and wrap *extremely* memorable music around it, which is what Tommy does so well.
I didn't really appreciate Keith Moon's drumming when I first heard this album, or Daltrey's emotional roller-coaster ride of a voice, going from convincingly angry to touching and sad. He's very good at going back and forth between those two emotions.
Still, I can't help but think back to my childhood. The line "See me, feel me, touch me, heal me" has stuck with me all these years, and there's a feeling when I listen to how that melody is sung that strucks me on a personal note. The "Right behind you, I see the millions" vocal line is another hook that has always stood up well, and will probably continue to do so.
I admit, Tommy is probably not my favorite Who album these days, because I've familiarized myself with other Who albums in the last decade. Denying the influence this album had on me would be ignorant and wrong, because Tommy is where my rock and roll obsession took off. The rest is history, my friend.
been there done that go for it...........2007-05-15
Somebody has it rough to begin with and somehow makes it out without falling down all the way to oblivion. Tommy gets it from the beginning parents not so together and a family that almost defies merit still the songwriter seems to have an uncanny insight into the whole outcome of such things if you have a little savvy of your own.
Nice music sometimes it's like you just stepped off the bus from home and set foot in the garden othertimes you're in a tractor's nuts with no place to go for a headache.
This may or not be intended as an opera but I don't know if you expect a full blown orchestra wallowing in the waters of oblivion you won't find it here just some very snappy rock and roll... or pop rather.
Tommy opens with an overture I don't know it's not strictly speaking a full symphonic movement but it 's got some french horn right where it counts sort of makes you wonder what next from an album called Tommy.
There's no Thomson machine gun jokes in Tommy in fact it's not in there.
Something deeper something a little closer to home. Kid has a rough childhood and makes good.... That's it. Okay so you can go too far and maybe that's the point of writing 24 songs all at once having made your point take what comes from that and PROCEED to the nearest exit.
There's an underture the opposite of a movement in formal music theory called an Overture strange place to be if you're one of those lucky people that don't want anything for themselves.
All the Who albums are pop music at it's best but I say Tommy is the first stop to make if you're on your way to the record man. It's a long album two albums actually the best of the bands diverse talents is brought to completion in this very pop record of a story about a boy that rises to the top and has it all and I mean all.
The web can put you straight on who's who and what's what after all with this record but they don't even ever have a personal review of their own encounter and there's the rub. I like rock and roll and this album provides.
Very nice record well done and to the point. Masterpiece in spite of what they tell you on page one!
A Classic.......2007-04-11
This was one of the first albums I bought. It was my introduction to the WHO. And, I play it quite frequently.
It is a classic album, and well worth the listen.
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Who You Are
Cary Brothers Manufacturer: bluhammock / Procrastination Music ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B000P2A23I Release Date: 2007-05-29 |
Tracks:
- Jealousy
- Ride
- Who You Are
- The Glass Parade
- Honestly
- The Last One
- Loneliest Girl In the World
- If You Were Here
- Think Awhile
- All the Rage
- Precious Lie
- Bonus Track 1
- Bonus Track 2
- Bonus Track 3
Customer Reviews:
Who He Is- Cary Brothers-Who You Are.......2007-07-31
Especially worth noting are the bluesy aching Blue Eyes (Bonus Song), beautiful wistful Jealousy with its great piano riffs, the gorgeous lyrics and melody of Glass Parade, and the delicate guitar melodies of the Thompson Twins cover If You Were Here. Although all of Cary's melodies are strong, I didn't care for some of the lyrics (Honestly)- how many songs about love gone bad, getting stoned and drowning yourself in whiskey can you listen to? Same for Think Awhile. The majority however are thoughtful confessions mainly from the heart. In the title track as well as in the Thompson Twins cover Cary gives a nod to the bands of the mid-80's, a growing trend that gen X and admirers will enjoy.
If you like Coldplay or Dashboard Confessional, give this CD a listen as well. You just might find Who You Are is something worth holding on to.
First Full Length CD Doesn't Disappoint!.......2007-07-25
Great album.......2007-07-12
Oooh MY.......2007-07-04
Nice..........2007-06-22
Buy it
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Who Is Jill Scott? Words and Sounds, Vol. 1
Jill Scott Manufacturer: Hidden Beach ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B00004UARR Release Date: 2001-01-03 |
Tracks:
- Jilltro
- Do You Remember
- Exclusively
- Gettin' In The Way
- A Long Walk
- I Think It's Better
- He Loves Me (Lyzel In E Flat)
- It's Love
- The Way
- Honey Molasses
- Love Rain
- The Roots (Interlude)
- Slowly Surely
- One Is The Magic #
- Watching Me
- Brotha
- Show Me
- Silent
- Silent
- Silent
- Silent
- Silent
- Silent
- Silent
- Silent
- Silent
- Silent
- Silent
- Silent
- Silent
- Silent
- Silent
- Silent
- Silent
- Silent
- Silent
- Silent
- Silent
- Silent
- Silent
- Silent
- Silent
- Silent
- Try
Amazon.com's Best of 2000
Jill Scott's debut, Who Is Jill Scott?, is a luscious portrait of the artist as a grown woman. In R&B, black femininity has often been reduced to two dimensions: sex and materialism. But Scott lives in 3-D, and it shows in her voluptuous songwriting. She combines a beautiful voice with an extreme generosity of spirit, making her music a dreamy, soulful delight. Lizz Mendez BerryAmazon.com
Jill Scott is the singer-songwriter who wrote the unforgettable hook on the Roots' "You Got Me." Jill Scott is a better singer than the garble-mouthed Erykah Badu, who mangled those lines (albeit prettily) on the Roots' single. If Scott had sung them (which she does, and marvelously so, on the group's live album, The Roots Come Alive), we would have known what the hell the words were. Thankfully, Jill Scott has put out her own album, which exceeds all hook-derived expectations. She is, in fact, a wonder--a magically soulful tunesmith who writes tunes like "The Way" and "Watching Me" that feel as comfortable, warm, and sexy as Al Green on a cold day. And then she rips into the songs' haunting melodies with a gorgeous honey-crisp alto that'll leave you wanting more. --Sylvia W. ChanCustomer Reviews:
Who Is Jill Scott? Words & Sounds, Vol. 1.......2007-07-21
This is a disc that still gets constant play in my house, in the car & at work! There was such a huge buzz on Jill Scott prior to the release of her debut that I could not wait to get my hands on it. Every song & interlude just flows so magically into the track making this not only one of the best debuts by any artist but also one of the best "neo-soul" albums ever produced so those who still don't know who Jill Scott is but enjoy good music will not be sorry in adding this disc to their collection.
My fave tracks to this day are: THE WAY, I THINK IT'S BETTER, WATCHING ME, ONE IS THE MAGIC #, HE LOVES ME, IT'S LOVE & HONEY MOLASSES. Another honorable mention goes to LOVE RAIN (although I like this version very much, I adore how she switched it up on her live cd).
If you didnt know...........2007-07-09
jill scott.......2007-06-30
Jill Scott is Neo-Soul.......2007-06-27
OVER 500 PEOPLE TOOK TIME TO REVIEW THIS CD.... .......2007-05-18
If you are looking for more good music check out Chrisette Michele's.. I Am.
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The Who Sell Out
The Who Manufacturer: Mca ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B000002OX5 Release Date: 1995-06-20 |
Tracks:
- Armenia City In The Sky
- Heinz Baked Beans
- Mary Anne With The Shaky Hand
- Odorono
- Tattoo
- Our Love Was
- I Can See For Miles
- I Can't Reach You
- Medac
- Relax
- Silas Stingy
- Sunrise
- Rael 1
- Rael 2
- Glittering Girl
- Melancholia
- Someone's Coming
- Jaguar
- Early Morning Cold Taxi
- Hall Of The Mountain King
- Girl's Eyes
- Mary Anne With The Shaky Hand (Alternative Version)
- Glow Girl
Amazon.com essential recording
The Who Sell Out's pirate-radio concept goes south in the album's second half--the Who ran out of time before they could write enough faux commercials--but it still remains in many ways their best and most entertaining album. Pete Townshend and John Entwistle supply song after great song, and along with Keith Moon play them with power and focus. The classic single "I Can See for Miles" is matched on at least a handful of tracks, including the opening psychedelic-pop blast of "Armenia City in the Sky" (written by Townshend pal Speedy Keen), the hilarious social-interaction tales "Odorono" and "Tattoo," and the majestic mini-opus "Rael." This remaster's bonus tracks are occasionally too much of a good thing, but the Tommy rough draft "Glow Girl" is brilliant. --Rickey WrightCustomer Reviews:
The Who would never be this much FUN again.......2007-07-04
The songs are a diverse, interesting, and fun lot, to say the least: "Tattoo" has in recent times become more relevant than ever ... "Our Love Was" is as good as power pop gets, with an absolutely stunning studio performance that steamrolls it along. Moonie was definitely at the top of his game, and his multi-tracked drums are composed, arranged, and recorded phenomenally well on tunes like "Rael" and "I Can See for Miles". And I love those lyrics and ultra-cheesy jingles ... nobody else has ever done stuff quite like this.
As for the bonus tracks, they just go to show that in 1967 The Who was leaving better stuff in the can than most bands were putting out. "Hall of the Mountain King" is the best rock-n-roll thrashing up of a classical piece I've ever heard, hands down.
If you enjoy classy British rock and power pop that REALLY has some power ... and the occasional moment of shimmering beauty ... The Who Sell Out will have you grinning from ear to ear.
This is the Who I love.......2007-04-18
Armenia Rules the Sky Since 1979.......2007-03-19
The Who's Big Bang.......2007-02-01
On the other hand, this is a lot of fun, and simply one of the Who's best. An ode to pirate radio, it's stuffed with mock-commercial jingles, all of which are a riot. More importantly, it contains some of the Who's key songs: I Can See For Miles was probably the heaviest song ever made at the time, and still packs a punch now. Marianne with the Shaky Hand returns the [..]theme from Pictures of Lily, this time with an easygoing (dare I say mellow?) folk-pop melody and such. Tattoo is one of the group's funniest, a song about coming of age told in a lighthearted way. Our Love Was is one of their best pop songs, and there's also the quasi-spiritual I Can't Reach You.
I'm Sold!.......2007-01-29
Average customer rating:
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Doctor Who - Original Television Soundtrack
Manufacturer: Silva Screen ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B000KC8O3S Release Date: 2007-02-13 |
Tracks:
- Doctor Who Theme - TV version
- Westminster Bridge
- The Doctor's Theme
- Cassandra's Waltz
- Slitheen
- Father's Day
- Rose In Peril
- Boom Town Suite
- I'm Coming To Get You
- Hologram
- Rose Defeats The Daleks
- Clockwork TARDIS
- Harriet Jones, Prime Minister
- Rose's Theme
- Song For Ten (performed by Neil Hannon)
- The Face of Boe
- UNIT
- Seeking The Doctor
- Madame de Pompadour
- Tooth and Claw
- The Lone Dalek
- New Adventures
- Finding Jackie
- Monster Bossa
- The Daleks
- The Cybermen
- Doomsday
- The Impossible Planet
- Sycorax Encounter
- Love Don't Roam (performed by Neil Hannon)
- Doctor Who Theme - Album Version
Amazon.com
The BBC's veteran time-traveling sci-fi hero returns via a smart 21st-century update, one whose adventurous plot lines and super-charged visuals inspired this equally ambitious musical score anthology (covering seasons one and two, as well as two extended specials) by Murray Gold. The composer's sinewy, synth-charged update of Ron Grainer's original '60s series theme is a study in spooky dramatics that's also treated to a more expansive, album-closing arrangement, while "Westminster Bridge" and "Slitheen" revel in muscular evocations of spy music past that recall Michael Giacchino's similar tongue-in-cheek romps for The Incredibles. From there, Gold's music steadily expands in scale and scope, often achieving big-screen dimensions via the cinematic sweep of "Boom Town Suite"/"I'm Coming to Get You," the minimalist-tinged rhythms of "Clockwork Tardis," or the overt piano-and-orchestra melancholy of "Rosie's Theme." Completing the saga's musical makeover are a pair of ballads sung by the Divine Comedy's Neil Hannon--the effusive pop charmer "Song For Ten" and the more retro-R&B-quirky "Love Don't Roam." --Jerry McCulleyCustomer Reviews:
The Doctor Dances!.......2007-07-19
So has the BBC.
I believe that this show could run forever now that it has been re-invented. Whether it does or not is important to me because it will live with me.
The new Doctor Who is not only for the fans nor is the music. This music will appeal to anyone so check out the shows and relate to the music! The theme has completely re-invented and I love that but I might say that without the Mark Ayres' and the Dominic Glynn's...where would we be now?
I love this.
Technical Problems Overshadow an Otherwise Fine Album.......2007-06-12
Doctor Who - Series 1-The Runaway Bride Soundtrack.......2007-06-12
The soundtrack's cover has a picture of David Tennant (The Tenth Doctor) and Billie Piper (Rose Tyler) and I'm really thankful that they did a complete (or at the very least nearly complete) soundtrack for the first two seasons rather than waiting several more seasons and having to do an abridged soundtrack.
The soundtrack contains all original tracks, for the most part by Murray Gold, and the only two predominantly vocal tracks are "Song for Ten" and "Love Don't Roam" but the soundtrack more than makes up for your lack of being able to sing along with it.
Personally, I love to listen to it when writing fanfiction as well as just any time I may feel like it. It really does retain the mood of the show even without images to accompany it.
For the information of anyone who is interested the other songs that I know of that have been included in Doctor Who but are not on the soundtrack are (these are not guaranteed accurate but I believe they are):
"Tainted Love" by Soft Cell (episode The End of the World, Series One)
"Toxic" by Britney Spears (episode The End of the World, Series One)
"Moonlight Serenade" by Glenn Miller (episode The Empty Child/The Doctor Dances, Series One*)
"In the Mood" by Glenn Miller (*)
*There is a Christmas song in the beginning of the Christmas Invasion that mentions a "red-nosed reindeer" but I'm not entirely sure that it is the actual song and if it is it's a very different version. This song is used more than once in reference to Christmas, however. It is playing in the garage in which Mickey is working in The Christmas Invasion.
"God Rest Ye Merry Gentlemen" - Traditional
"Hit Me with Your Rhythm Stick" by Ian Dury and the Blockheads (episode Tooth and Claw, Series Two)
Some classical music I can't recall the name of but that is mentioned by the computer's voice is used during a shift transition sometime during The Impossible Planet/The Satan Pit
"Mr. Blue Sky" by The Electric Light Orchestra (ELO) (episode Love and Monsters, Series Two)
Hope I've helped maybe!
Great Soundtrack.......2007-05-29
Awesome - music for the masses.......2007-05-27
Average customer rating:
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Who Made Who
AC/DC Manufacturer: Sony ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B00008WT5J Release Date: 2003-04-29 |
Tracks:
- Who Made Who
- You Shook Me All Night Long
- D.T.
- Sink The Pink
- Ride On
- Hells Bells
- Shake Your Foundations
- Chase The Ace
- For Those About To Rock (We Salute You)
Customer Reviews:
AC/DC Rocks.......2007-02-15
HMMMM...........2006-11-11
"Moneytalks" (The Razors Edge) you'll like this song. But the other songs are found on other albums, since this is a soundtrack from Stephen King's "Maximum Overdrive." If you don't like the albums that the other songs from this album are found on, then i sugest you buy this album that way you still get pretty good songs. Otherwise, I'd buy other AC/DC albums first and save this one for later. Also, wait until you find a low priced deal for this album-its not worth more than [...] dollars. Don't get me wrong, its a good album, but the band has much better albums that they worked harder on.
AC/DC's Original Masters Make AC/DC A Heavy Metal Band!!!!!!.......2006-10-15
It is what it is...A SOUNDTRACK.......2006-09-20
Who Made Who is a great start to this CD, as it fits the movie well. The lyrics and sound are both solid. The instrumental tracks D.T. & Chase the Ace are the other originals on here. The other tracks are some AC/DC classics, which can be found elsewhere in their history. Over all, it's fine for what it is, a movie soundtrack.
Now, to speak to an issue people seem to have with this CD. It is a soundtrack to a movie; NOT a greatest hits CD. The songs on here were meant for the movie and that is what's on here. So what if it's a combination of originals and past hits. It is what it is. The band did not release this as a greatest hits CD, so people shouldn't complain about it for that reason.
Some people seem to be forgetting that this is still AC/DC, which is better than most of the other music out there. If you want an AC/DC greatest hits collection, get Bonfire. But don't knock this by calling it something that it's not.
Who Made You?.......2006-08-06
Dance Music:
- Whoridin' [Explicit Lyrics]
- X Rap [Explicit Lyrics]
- You Be the Judge
- 16 Lessons from the Street
- 1746DCGA30035
- 3 Bad Brothers
- 6 Feet Deep [Clean]
- 99 Ways to Die [Explicit Lyrics]
- A Salt With a Deadly Pepa
- Angel De
Dance Music
Giovanni Picchi and the Venetian School
Complete Paris Sessions V.3 [Import]
Jazz 'Round Midnight: Duke Ellington & Strayhorn Songbook