| 1. Boom Boom Boom Boom! Airplay |
| 2. Boom Boom Boom Boom! [Brooklyn Bounce Boombastic Remix] |
| 3. Boom Boom Boom Boom! [Mark Van Dale With Enrico Remix] |
| 4. Boom Boom Boom Boom! [XXL Version] |
| 5. Boom Boom Boom Boom! [Equator Remix] |
| 6. Boom Boom Boom Boom! [Pronti and Kalmani Remixing] |
| 7. Boom Boom Boom Boom! [Beat Me up Scott Remix] |
Boom Boom Boom Boom!,Vengaboys,Groovilicious / S.R.,5"CD Singles,Club/Dance,Dance Music,Euro-Dance,Pop,Popular Music
Average customer rating:
|
Tick, Tick... Boom! (2001 Original Off-Broadway Cast)
Jonathan Larson , Amy Spanger , and Raul Esparza Manufacturer: RCA Victor Broadway ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B00005NQK5 Release Date: 2001-09-11 |
Tracks:
- 30/90
- Green Green Dress
- Johnny Can't Decide
- Sunday
- No More
- Therapy
- Real Life
- Sugar
- See Her Smile
- Come To Your Senses
- Why
- Louder Than Words
- Boho Days
- 30/90 Playout
Amazon.com
Rent is usually treated as Jonathan Larson's one and only show, but the truth is that he had a career--albeit a hitless one--before that blockbuster. There was a musical titled JP Morgan Saves the Nation with lyrics by Jeffrey M. Jones and music by Larson. And there was Tick, Tick... Boom!, an autobiographical piece that Larson workshopped for a while before setting it aside and finishing Rent.In 2001, Tick, Tick is getting a full off-Broadway production, and it's a rather endearing one. Lyrics have never been Larson's strong point, but he was a hell of a melodic composer--and the score here is even poppier than that of Rent (think Top 40 rather than Sondheim). It's hard to pick favorite songs: "Green Green Dress" is built on a rollicking piano boogie, for instance, and "Real Life" and "See Her Smile" are the kind of elegiac ballad that Larson would later perfect with "Seasons of Love." Luckily, this show has a lot more to offer than mere youthful musings. --Elisabeth Vincentelli
Customer Reviews:
A Vocally Dazzling Esparza Rides High on an Exuberant Pre-"Rent" Larson Score.......2007-06-16
However, it is the familiar Larson sound of Rent that is heard most in this score - driving, rock-out rhythms with unavoidable pop hooks and yearning, piano-driven ballads. Even the opener, "30/90", is a virtual sound-alike of the bigger show's title tune. If the songs are not quite as polished or even memorable as those in Rent, they feel more personal because the autobiographical story is far more intimate in scale. Set in 1990 in the same SoHo neighborhood as Rent, it's a simple three-character piece about Jon, an aspiring composer who considers giving up his dreams on the verge of his 30th birthday. With charismatic fire, Esparza is equally adept using his beautifully expressive voice in a rock milieu as in a Sondheim character study. He brings energetic brio to finger-snapping rockers like the Twinkie-induced "Sugar" and especially shines on the ballads, "See Her Smile" and the revelatory "Why".
With a slightly pinched voice that reminds me a bit of the Bangles' Susanna Hoffs, Amy Spanger as girlfriend Susan duets nicely with Esparza on the touching "Johnny Can't Decide", the rocking "Green Green Dress", and the comical self-help wordplay of "Therapy". Her shining solo moment comes with the knockout ballad, "Come to Your Senses". As Jon's embattled pal Michael, Jerry Dixon provides powerful vocals, bringing particular warmth to "Real Life" and grit to the fed-up rave "No More". The trio closes the show powerfully with the anthem-like "Louder Than Words". The overall score is a bit derivative and a tad too earnest, but the youthful zest of the cast and Larson's pop craftsmanship more than compensate. Two bonus tracks are offered at the end - an instrumental replay of the opener, "30/90 Playout" and a rare recording of Larson singing "Boho Days" a capella with propulsive hand claps.
Great tunes - great lyrics - great harmonies.......2006-11-04
I hope you like it... The theme is "Actions Speak Louder Than Words" rings true today as the day he wrote it.
John we miss you.
Love the Music.......2006-08-22
Larson Lives.......2006-05-06
Fantastic Music, but i wouldnt want to see it live.......2006-04-30
30/90
Green Green Dress
No More
Sugar
Come To Your Senses (originally from Superbia)
Louder Than Words
and i also enjoy the rest of the songs as well.
Average customer rating:
|
Wearing Someone Else's Clothes
Jason Robert Brown Manufacturer: Sh-K-Boom ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B0009S2TG6 Release Date: 2005-06-28 |
Tracks:
- Someone Else's Clothes
- Long Long Road
- Someone To Fall Back On
- Getting Out
- Over
- Music Of Heaven
- Nothing In Common
- I Could Be In Love With Someone Like You
- I'm In Bizness
- Coming Together
- Grow Old With Me
Amazon.com
The hippest of the new generation of Broadway composers, Jason Robert Brown breaks through with his first solo album, Wearing Someone Else's Clothes. Collecting songs written between 1996 and 2004, it's an eclectic mix of rock, gospel, funk, and jazz that won't surprise anyone familiar with his musicals, particularly his song cycle Songs for a New World. As a performer and a writer, Brown will draw the inevitable comparisons to Billy Joel's "angry young man" storytelling style (particularly with "Getting Out"), but he also seems to be picking up the baton from Stephen Schwartz, a well-known musical theater composer (Godspell, Wicked) who has had some success in the pianist-singer-songwriter realm. Brown and his band, the Caucasian Rhythm Kings, are frequent performers, and the numbers have a live excitement to them, often stretching out over five minutes. "Over" is a moving anti-war statement, and "Someone to Fall Back On" recalls the yearning passion of New World's "I'd Give It All for You." Guest artists include Lillias White, jazz guitarist Howard Alden, and a studio choir comprised of Brown's theater peers such as Rebecca Luker, Jessica Molaskey, Alice Ripley, and Matt Bogart. Wearing Someone Else's Clothes is an engaging and rewarding album, but that doesn't mean we can't still anxiously await Brown's next musical. --David HoriuchiCustomer Reviews:
Maturing Composer.......2007-07-09
Good Stuff.......2007-05-19
This may be the beginning of an obsession..........2007-03-09
Then there's the beautiful "Someone to Fall Back On" which I guess in one of his oldest songs on the album. Much like the last number I described (and many others on this CD), it tells of an insecure man who is unsure of what he has to offer the world - this time the woman he loves. As he lays out his faults and insists that having someone to come home to is a greater joy than a fast and furious flame, his assertions grow stronger until he becomes all the things he insisted he wasn't. Also - this song contains some of the best lyrical moments on the CD ("I've been alone, I'd rather be...the half of us, the least of you, the best of me").
"Over" is a beautiful ballad of an ugly subject, the narrative of a soldier recently killed in war, flying over the world as he leaves it. It pokes at patriotism but treats the human elements of war with much sympathy. "Nothing in Common" took me a few more listenings (I was distracted the first several times, so I missed important lyrics) - it's yet another beautiful song, this time about JRB and his relationship with his brother, beginning with the boy he knew several years back that lived in his house and looked like his mother and going through the different people that this constant in his life became as they grew up. "I Could Be in Love with Someone Like You," as I said, is the superior version of The Last Five Years' song (there was a lawsuit of sorts, so really he couldn't use it). This song is riddled with wonderful jokes, lines that jump out and surprise you, and a couple wonderfully driving moments that are very exciting and musically powerful.
Lastly, another fantastic song is the final, very jazzy "Grow Old With Me," in which he's finally offering himself as all he is and all that he'll become. Written very much in the style of cheesy-broadway love-me-forever songs, it includes lines like, "grow old with me, baby lets fossilize," and "don't leave me cold, don't leave me rusted and crusted with mold." It's adorable and it's funny in the same way as the Beatle's "When I'm Sixty-Four."
So, if you have any interest in musical-type numbers and aren't afraid of songs that tell a meaningful story that you have to work a little bit to uncover, then you will love this album. This isn't music to have quietly playing in the background - it's stick-it-in-your-ears-and-let-the-rest-of-the-world-slide-away stuff. You won't be sorry.
Watch this space!.......2007-01-05
YOU WILL BE GLAD YOU BOUGHT THIS!!!.......2006-11-30
Brown's pure talent shines through this album, and there are several moments that are just so beautiful that I just get chills listening to them. Every lyric and harmony has been precisely placed, and the music always fits the idea of the song very naturally. There are some amazing performance moments on this album; Brown is an incredible pianist and singer in addition to his composing and arranging talents.
This is probably the album that I listen to more than any other, and I would recommend it to anyone. It is packed with amazing musicality.
Don't listen to this while trying to get work done; these songs will steal your attention and keep it for the whole duration of the CD.
Average customer rating:
|
Legion of Boom
The Crystal Method Manufacturer: V2 Ada ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B0000X7KD2 Release Date: 2004-01-13 |
Tracks:
- Starting Over - Rahzel (vocals)
- Born Too Slow - Wes Borland (guitar) and John Garcia (vocals)
- True Grit
- American Way - Rahzel (vocal)
- I know its You - Milla Jovovich (vocals)
- Realizer - Lisa from the Bellrays (vocals) and Jon Brion (guitar)
- Broken Glass - Wes Borland (guitar)
- Weapons of Mass Distortion - Wes Borland (guitar)
- Bound Too Long - Hanifah aka Sha-kay (vocals)
- Acetone - Rahzel (vocals)
- High and Low - Lisa from the Bellrays (vocals)
- Wide Open - Hanifah aka Sha-kay (vocals)
Amazon.com
Crystal Method's Legion of Boom lives up to its title, dropping blasts of thumping samples, catchy riffs, and dependable grooves. But as with previous records like 2001's Tweekend, a chaotic, industrial darkness lurks around the edges that has little in common with the sheen of commercial dance. Many still compare Ken Jordan and Scott Kirkland to the Chemical Brothers and their Big Beat, arena-pleaser cousins. But Boom sounds more like Nitzer Ebb in a good mood, or an angst-free Front 242. The duo has invited another batch of touchy-feely artists to contribute, like those noted softies Wes Borland and John Garcia, formerly of Limp Bizkit and Kyuss, respectively. Don't think for a second they aren't all having a blast, mixing in big, dumb hair metal with abandon. Most fun of all is the boost singer/actress Milla Jovovich gives to "I Know It's You," weaving her tweaked voice through a forest of tangled keyboards. With its bombastic techno-jams, Legion of Boom definitely makes for a tasty party record. Just keep the lights down as low as the bass end if you really want to capture the mood. --Matthew CookeCustomer Reviews:
Entertaining.......2007-05-05
Crystal strikes GOLD.......2005-12-26
I can play this c.d. from track #1 all the way through without skipping a song and not loosing the good vibes that I feel. Whether I'm doing housework, studying, playing video games or just getting ready for a night out on the town you cannot deny the incredible production that this album represents. I will reccommend this to anyone who wants to get into this kind of music or who just wants to know The Crystal Method more. They are on a different plane than Fatboy Slim and in my opinion, a much greater one.
Better than the Chemical Brothers, but not Fatboy Slim.......2005-12-03
TCM: LOB.......2005-11-12
The negative reviews of LOB are encouraging me to pick up all other TCM records that I don't have.
I remember liking whatever TCM song I heard on the radio. When I came across Legion of Boom at my local public library... yes, my public library, I borrowed the CD and loved it from first listen. "American Way" is the only song I'm ever tempted to skip over...
I think this is an excellent record.
only for TCM diehards.......2005-09-11
When I listen to Vegas, I get the sense that TCM worked really hard with a medium budget to produce some groundbreaking music.
Tweekend is a slightly different style, but it still has plenty of aural complexity and exhibits good attention to detail. And while not as novel as Vegas, it is an excellent album.
LOB is spotty-some songs seem like the TCM of old, but without quite the same level of effort. In general the songs that have the same style as the first two albums contain fewer sonic textures and are less complex, and thus for me, less satisfying to listen to again and again. Some songs are just blatant attempts to make TCM appeal to a broader range of listeners, even at the expense of releasing mediocre material. I hope the lukewarm reception LOB has gotten will persuade TCM to go back to basics and provide us with tracks that really demonstrate how creative they can be. I don't need every album to sound like Vegas, but I expect every album to have solidly crafted tracks from start to finish.
Summary: LOB is only for those that are willing to pay for an entire TCM album to obtain 2 or 3 worthwhile tracks.
Average customer rating:
|
The Sonics Boom
The Sonics Manufacturer: Norton ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B00000IR02 Release Date: 1999-06-01 |
Tracks:
- Cinderella
- Don't Be Afraid Of The Dark
- Skinny Minnie
- Let The Good Times Roll
- Don't You Just Know It
- Jenny Jenny
- He's Waitin'
- Louie Louie
- Since I Fell For You
- Hitch Hike
- It's All Right
- Shot Down
- The Hustler
- The Witch (Alternate Take)
- Psycho (Live)
- The Witch (Live)
Album Description
1999 digitally remastered reissue of the second album by thelegendary kings of garage rock, originally released in 1966.Includes three bonus tracks: 'The Witch' (alternate) and two undisclosed live tracks.Customer Reviews:
"Wooooooooooo!!!!!!!!".......2007-06-09
Released in 1966 (one of the coolest years in musical history), The Sonics Boom is a loud, filthy, raw, and unspeakably fun slice of garage rock insanity. The band, which consists of piano-pounder and screamin' lead vocalist Gerry Roslie, guitar shredder Larry Parypa, sax man Rob Lind, and the unstopable rhythm section of bassist Andy Parypa (Larry's brother) and drummer Bob Bennett, is absolutely ferocious, tearing through these songs with a kind of breathless intensity that is simply incredible. Although the group didn't write very many songs (eight of the tracks from the original album are covers), the group originals are all fantastic: "Cinderella" opens the record with a frenzy of stomping drums, buzzing guitars, and Roslie's raucous throat-shredding. "Don't Be Afraid of the Dark" boasts a relentless rhythmic attack, bubbling guitars, and an anthemic sing-along chorus. "He's Waitin'" is a menacing, brutal pounder with a leering vocal from Roslie and a brutal two-chord guitar onslaught. "Shot Down" (the last track on the original album, although on this CD reissue it's followed by four bonus tracks) is a bouncing, attitude-soaked screamer with a freakishly good guitar solo. The covers are also surprisingly good. The group's version of "Louie Louie" is an absolute monster, a thunderstorm of filthy, distorted guitars and pulverizing vocals. Their take on "Jenny Jenny" is absolutely unhinged, an impossibly high-octane explosion of nasty sax playing, rumbling guitars, and Roslie drowning everything with his voice. "Skinny Minny," "Let the Good Times Roll" are playful and catchy, but with plenty of bite and manic energy. "It's Allright" (that's the actual spelling) is a rollicking party tune with another great guitar solo from Larry. A take on the Motown classic "Hitch Hike" is fantasically forceful, rolling along with some rambling drums and blaring sax. "Since I Fell For You" is a surprisingly good teen-pop heartbreak ballad, with some rolling rhythms, a passionate vocal, and some distorted guitars snaking around beneath the melody.
The Sonics Boom is one of the greatest pure rock n roll albums- if you really wanna hear that kinda thing, you can't go wrong with this.
boss.......2006-03-25
Not without merit, but far from the greatness of the debut.......2005-01-17
Gritty, Raw, Untamed, Primal.......2003-01-25
This is one of the two original albums by the Sonics that are must-owns, the other being HERE ARE THE SONICS! There is also a good compilation not currently available entitled HERE ARE THE ULTIMATE SONICS.
Essential..........2001-12-26
The highlight of this album is Louie Louie. The fact is that Louie Louie is far from a great song. That anyone wanted to argue over authorship of this song is based solely on it's popularity. A song like this is not written well, it is only performed well, being left to the artist to mold it into something altogether different from every other recording. A song containing the three same chords over and over again is a particular challenge, but the Sonics rise to it, creating the greatest, hardest, rawest, most ear piercing version of Louie Louie ever recorded. Rob Lind wails and screams after the greatest solo on the album, and you already know you'll be backing up a track to hear it again.
Take all of your Paul Revere and the Raiders albums, and burn them (because you really shouldn't subject your ears to that ever again) then take your Wailers albums (no disrespect, they try hard) and sell them, and take that money and buy this album. It's all you need.
Average customer rating:
|
Cypress Hill III: Temples of Boom
Cypress Hill Manufacturer: Sony ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B000002B0S Release Date: 1995-10-31 |
Tracks:
- Spark Another Owl
- Throw Your Set In The Air
- Stoned Raiders
- Illusions
- Killa Hill Niggas
- Boom Biddy Bye Bye
- No Rest For The Wicked
- Make A Move
- Killafornia
- Funk Freakers
- Locotes
- Red Light Visions
- Stickly Hip Hop
- Let it Rain
- Everybody Must Get Stoned
Amazon.com
Four years since the L.A. group's first pro-pot anthem, "Stoned Is the Way of the Walk," Cypress Hill is still telling us they love to smoke ganja. How B-Real and Sen Dog waste their days is their business, but it makes you wonder: What's wrong with their personal lives that they need to be stoned all the time? And how can they be so enthusiastic about it? III (Temples of Boom) exhales the same clouded sentiments of past albums, but offers no answers.Herb is never far from the conversation on Cypress Hill records--how they smoke more than anyone, how they were rapping about it before anyone--but they never explain why, never suggest they derive something positive (or negative) from pot. Though III's "Illusions" begins with an Indian sitar, presumably a reference to '60s drug culture's Eastern influence, there's no expanded consciousness in the accompanying raps. Cypress Hill champion drug use, it seems, to bolster their outlaw image; they place pot smoke alongside beat-downs, just another illegal activity to prove they're bad dudes. --Roni Sarig
Customer Reviews:
Solid CD.......2007-07-02
Cypress Hill's Masterpiece .......2007-06-13
My favorite tracks are 'Killafornia' (has one of the best instrumentals ever), 'Boom Biddy Bye Bye', and 'Strictly Hip Hop', but that doesn't mean you should just get the songs individually, this should be listened to in it's entirety because it's a real album. It all goes together.
'IV' is another Cypress Hill album I feel highly of, but even that didn't come close to touching this one (though that's another fantastic album as well). If you own one album by this group 'III: Temples of Boom' should be it.
Bangin'.......2007-02-16
Cypress Hill's Official "Hip-Hop" Album .......2006-11-29
Temples of Boom was seventh heaven for their rap-oriented followers; while fans of their rock-twist weren't highly impressed. As a result, Temples of Boom experienced platinum success, however, many fans voiced their dislike of the album to their record label (Sony / Ruffhouse) and other parties of interest. This ultimately (After IV) lead to mediocre albums such as Skull & Bones and Stoned Raiders, which featured a "forced" rock concept to each album respectively. While these albums received slight praise within their rock fanbase, it perplexed their rap followers due to the novelty that was Temples of Boom.
Cypress Hill's latest release Till Death Do Us Part, is a more hip-hop oriented album, however, still not as impressive as Temples of Boom (or even IV). Temples of Boom was the pinnacle of DJ Muggs. The instrumentals were earth-shattering and still to this day, these tunes are ahead of their time. The dark and sinister sounds accompany B-Real's flow perfectly. A dash of Sen Dog here and there, made good use of the album as well. In terms of a "street" album, Temples of Boom is as rough as it gets. The production is hard, the lyrics are gritty, and the ending result is almost flawless.
Cypress Hill's debut album is entirely classic, especially when you consider the sound the album introduced to the rap industry in the very early 90's, but the mid-90's release of Temples of Boom blessed the hip-hop community with a pure style that highlighted the group's greatest talents (especially that of DJ Muggs). Fans divided between genres forced 50/50 albums (rock & rap), and because there was little to no direction on these projects, the result was mediocrity. Temples of Boom was the only Cypress album with an entire direction focused on hip-hop music, however arguably their best.
Enter the Temples of Boom.......2006-05-17
Average customer rating:
|
Return of the Boom Bap
KRS-One Manufacturer: Jive ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B000000509 Release Date: 1993-09-28 |
Tracks:
- KRS-ONE Attacks
- Outta Here
- Black Cop
- Mortal Thought
- I Can't Wake Up
- Slap Them Up
- Sound Of Da Police
- Mad Crew
- Uh Oh
- Brown Skin Woman
- Return Of The Boom Bap
- 'P' Is Still Free
- Stop Frontin'
- Higher Level
Amazon.com
By 1993, hip-hop was transitioning from an organic form of musical expression into a big business fabricating stars. With many icons from his era either aging or losing their relevance (e.g., Chuck D, Rakim), KRS-ONE dropped a gem of an album that not only navigated the sound of the day but led the charge. Shedding his previous Boogie Down Productions moniker, KRS-One's Return of the Boom Bap is not just an album: it's KRS's call to arms for the return of hard beats and real rap in hip-hop music. The former took many forms, thanks to the recruitment of Gang Starr's DJ Premier, who was hitting his stride as hip-hop's preeminent beat-maker. Primo crafted the classic head-nod rhythm of the title track, the bump of "Outta Here," an autobiographical tale of KRS-One's rise in hip-hop, and the dancehall-inspired riddims of "Black Cop" and "Sound of da Police." Lyrically, KRS-One displayed variety in both style and content, meshing old-school bombast ("Mortal Thought"), consciousness ("Higher Level"), and crafty and conceptual wordplay ("I Can't Wake Up"). The album opens with KRS-One boasting, even decreeing, that he would "be here forever." At the crossroads, this album made it seem true. --Joseph PatelCustomer Reviews:
The Best Solo LP from Hip-Hop's Teacher-- Excellent!.......2007-06-05
"Return of the boom-bap means just that, it means return of the real hard beats and real rap." Released in the fall of 1993, KRS-One's first official solo album is arguably his best. In the early 90's, a new generation of west coast-based MCs became the superstars of rap; while in the east, acts like Naughty by Nature and Das EFX were stealing the thunder of their 1980's predecessors. Produced largely by Gang Starr's DJ Premier, Return of the Boom Bap rejuvenates standard-bearer KRS-One's stance as the Teacher of Rap while giving him a more competitive stoop to stand on.
The LP's first single, "Outta Here" warns currently hot rappers that their material trappings may not last: "Credit cards and bank account? Outta here; no doubt, BDP is old-school but we ain't goin' out.." On the surreal "I Can't Wake Up", KRS sees himself turned into a cigar, while humorously name-checking various early 90's rap stars. "The P is Still Free" updates a song from Criminal Minded about the lost souls of crack addiction. The Kid Capri-produced "Brown Skin Woman" critiques the sexism in rap, and the LP's biggest hit, "Sound of Da Police" (produced by Showbiz) highlights the dangers of police brutality in a post-Rodney King landscape: "The overseer had the right to get ill; and if you fought back the overseer had the right to kill; the officer has the right to arrest; and if you fight back they put a hole in your chest.."
The most blazing track would have to be the album's closer, "Higher Level": with a blistering funk sample from the Blacula soundtrack, KRS rants and raves about politics & religion in the glorious fashion that only he can: "I stand with God whether I'm paid or whether I'm crying broke; I like to ask these politicians, `would Jesus vote?'"
At the time of its release, the album (and most others) was overshadowed by Snoop Doggy Dogg's Doggystyle. In comparison, Doggystyle may have slicker production values, but Boom Bap's jazz-based rhythm tracks seem less dated, and with far less gangster excess. This deserves the deluxe re-release treatment, with any bonus material available.
Classic.......2007-06-03
It doesn't get much better than this.......2007-04-20
The album begins with an awesome intro, "KRS-One Attacks," where Premo laces a totally dope beat and covers it with some old BDP samples, to make a perfect start. "Outta Here" uses simple drum-and-bass to allow KRS to address the current state of hip hop, chronicling his life as a rapper and talking about the tendency of rappers to "fall off." Perhaps his best known song, "Black Cop" follows. Here, he is an entertainer first and an MC second, yelling and screaming, completely going wild on the mic. Anyone who hasn't sang along to the yelps of "Black coooop...black COP black COP black COP" shouldn't consider themself a hip hop fan. "Mortal Thought" is relevant, with a great chorus. I love the conceptually genius "I Can't Wake Up," where KRS raps from the perspective of a blunt. He namedrops most of the big names of '93 rap, as the MCs pass the blunt from rapper to rapper. Again, he yells and sings a great chorus, this song's another classic. The nice "Slap Them Up" precedes the infamous "Sound of da Police." The look at police brutalities is simply rap at its finest. My favorite part is where he draws a connection between the similar-sounding words "overseer" and "officer" in the second verse, as they both oppressed the urban black community. The chorus is just classic, nobody else could ever pull this off like KRS-One. "Mad Crew" has a heavily sampled beat, and "Uh Oh" uses a human beatbox in favor of a drum machine. "Brown Skin Woman" delivers musically and lyrically, and the following title track is just awesome. "'P' Is Still Free" is once again classic material, I remember first hearing this song on the Menace II Society: The Original Motion Picture Soundtrack compilation. The album ends perfectly with "Stop Frontin'" and "Higher Level."
I feel like this album gets overlooked in comparison to the BDP albums, but I think this is as entertaining and enjoyable as anything KRS-One has ever done. A classic album in every sense of the word, perfect hip hop from the best year for the genre, 1993. If you haven't already, do yourself a favor and pick it up.
Return Of The Real Hard Beats And Real Rap {5 Stars}.......2006-09-12
As far as flaws, I can only think of one..."I Can't Wake Up." That song was a bit of a misstep. Otherwise, the rest is straight fire. Anyone giving this less than 4 stars doesn't know what a timeless piece this album truly is.
Return Of The Boom Bap is classic. Point blank. Period. If you haven't heard this album yet, then quit cheating yourself and check it out. It may have come out in '93, but it sounds just as fresh 13 years later. I highly recommend making this one a collection piece.
Standout Tracks: 'P' Is Still Free, Slap Them Up, Black Cop, Mad Crew, Outta Here, Brown Skin Woman, Sound Of The Police, Stop Frontin', Mortal Thought, Uh Oh, Higher Level (My Favorite), and Return Of The Boom Bap
"Outta Here!! BDP is ol skool but we aint goint out.".......2006-08-31
Average customer rating:
|
Chicka Chicka Boom Boom and Other Coconutty Songs
Manufacturer: Youngheart ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B0001SXU7Q Release Date: 1995-01-01 |
Tracks:
- Chicka Chicka Boom Boom
- ABC Song
- Braggin' Dragon
- Helicopter Man
- Merry-Go-Round
- Didgereedoo
Customer Reviews:
Dull and boring.......2007-01-13
My apologies to any fans, but the CD did just not live up to the book. Interestingly, I bought a copy of the book with a CD with Ray Charles reading it. That was a much more fun version.
Great CD.......2006-11-15
Play with language and ride the waves of rhythm and delight .......2004-08-26
Play with language and ride the waves of rhythm and delight with the title track and a playful collection of engaging sing-along melodies peppered with rhythm, rap, and rhyme.
Format: Audio CD (Approximately 30 minutes of musical fun!)
Have fun with language and rhythm with this playful and delightful collection of engaging sing-along melodies peppered with rhythm, rap and rhyme. Kids love the 13 foot-stomping tunes, including a lively rendition of the classic story Chicka Chicka Boom Boom. This CD is a delightful introduction to the alphabet.
Average customer rating:
|
Boom Boom (Out Go the Lights)
Pat Travers Manufacturer: Mvd Visual ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B000P0IZYI Release Date: 2007-06-26 |
Tracks:
- Boom Boom (Out Go the Lights)
- Evil
- Snortin' Whiskey
- Crash And Burn
- Livin' Alone
- Gimme Back My Bullets
- Last Child
- Disappear
- Waitin' For the Bus
- Jesus Just Left Chicago
- Superstitious
- Politician
- Lights Out
Description
Boom Boom (Out Go The Lights): The Essential Rock Tracks features fresh recordings of the Pat Travers classics PLUS his interpretations of hits originally recorded by his rock contemporaries ZZ TOP, LYNYRD SKYNYRD, AEROSMITH and other superstars of hard rocks golden era. Pats guitar-playing and vocals have never sounded better and the 13 tracks collected here are a must for Pat Travers fans worldwide and for classic rock fans everywhere!Customer Reviews:
when we say BOOM, we mean BOOM.......2007-07-09
Average customer rating:
|
Boom Shinga Ling
Oojami Manufacturer: Cia - Copeland Int'l ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B000JBWW8S Release Date: 2006-11-14 |
Tracks:
- Wicked And Wild
- Boom Shinga Ling
- Wake Me Up
- What Kind Of World
- Propaganda
- Shake That Belly
- U And Me
- Hey Yo
- Some Like It Hot
- Hip Shaker
- Like That
- Dark Ages
- Zaman
- Zor
- Chicky
Customer Reviews:
Non traditional.......2007-05-04
It's pretty non-traditional as far as bellydance music goes. It's quite upbeat and I thoroughly enjoy listening to it. I get a little bit tired of the vocals at times because some of the lyrics are silly. But the "instrumentals"(i use the term loosely) totally make up for it. Sometimes some of the music has almost a Reggaeton feel to it. It's very remixed or I guess you could say Oojami employs a lot of electronic components in addition to actual instruments like drums and flutes...
Average customer rating:
|
The MARIO LANZA Collection
Manufacturer: RCA Victor ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B000003F6V Release Date: 1991-11-12 |
Tracks:
- Be My Love
- I'll Never Love You
- Because You're Mine
- The Song Angels Sing
- Drink, Drink, Drink
- Serenade
- The Loveliest Night of the Year
- La Donna E Mobile
- Because
- For You Alone
- Golden Days
- Deep In My Heart, Dear
- If I Loved You
- Yours Is My Heart Alone
- One Night Of Love
- Beloved
- Beautiful Love
- With A Song In My Heart
- You Are My Love
- Call Me Fool
Tracks:
- All The Things You Are
- My Song,My Love
- Love Is The Sweetest Thing
- Will You Remember
- Granada
- Lolita
- Serenade
- Temptation
- Lygia
- Lady of Spain
- This Land
- Lee-Ah-Loo
- Tina-Lina
- Boom Biddy Boom Boom
- The Bayou Lullaby
- The Lord's Prayer
- And Here You Are
- Song of Songs
- Somewhere A Voice Is Calling
- I Never Knew
Tracks:
- Ciribiribin
- Wonder Why
- Come Dance With Me
- O Sole Mio
- Younger Than Springtime
- For the First Time (Come Prima)
- Never Till Now
- Arrivederci, Roma
- If You Were Mine
- Behold!
- A Night to Remember
- Love in a Home
- Do You Wonder
- Softly as in a Morning Sunrise
- One Alone
- Aida:Celeste Aida
- Carmen: Flower Song
- La Traviata: Brindisi
- Rigoletto:Questa O Quella
- Pagliacci:Vesti La Giubba
- Cavalleria Rusticana: Addio Alla Madre
Customer Reviews:
Selections from the Greatest Voice of the Last Hundred Years.......2007-03-13
I recommend this for those who already know Lanza to some extent but want to go into more depth and understand his marvelous skills.
A Must Have .......2006-12-12
The Mario Lanza Collection.......2006-11-10
The MARIO LANZA Collection.......2006-08-19
WONDERFUL!!!!!.......2005-10-19
Meditation Music:
- Calling [UK CD2] [CD-single] [Import]
- Celebrity [Import]
- Christmas Blessings
- Christmas Collection [Original recording remastered] [Import]
- Christmas Song [CD-single]
- Come As You Are
- Don't Let Me Be the Last to Know [EP] [Limited Edition] [Import]
- Elektrodelica
- Enter My Mind
- Everytime [CD-single] [Import]
Meditation Music
Instrumental Nuggets: Vol. 1 [Import]
Magnificat: A Musical Celebration of the Great Jubilee of the Year 2000
Music: Lighthouse [CD-single] [Enhanced] [Import]
Like a Prayer [CD-single] [Enhanced] [Import]
Mix Inc V.2: Antoine Clamaran [Import] [Limited Edition]
Moods for Tokyo Ska: We Don't Know What Ska Is [Import]
Music for Babies - Peaceful Baby
New York Ny [Import] [Original recording remastered]