Break Like the Wind

Break Like the Wind

Break Like the Wind

Editorial Reviews
Amazon.com Music Reviews
Has there ever been a rock band more unjustly maligned than Spinal Tap? Accused of everything from heralding the demise of heavy metal to being the very raison d'être for alternative rock, they suffered their greatest indignity at the hands of director Rob Reiner (cowardly hiding behind the moniker Marty DiBergi), whose 1984 "rockumentary," This Is Spinal Tap, muckraked its way through the band's courageous, tragedy-strewn history in service of a few mocking laughs. Reiner/DiBergi even stooped so low as to employ a heartless, mercenary band of Hollywood writer/comedians to burlesque the band's core members--David St. Hubbins (played by mendacious Michael McKean), Nigel Tufnel (callow Christopher Guest), and Derek Smalls (haughty Harry Shearer). But the great ones just won't be denied; Spinal Tap reached deep down in 1992 and let loose with Break Like the Wind, another potent blast of the very stuff that made their legend. Featuring an all-star supporting cast (the title track alone boasts Slash, Steve Lukather, Joe Satriani, and Tufnel look-alike Jeff Beck), the Tap gallantly tried to stem the tide of flannel and tattoos with thundering odes to gender enlightenment ("Bitch School"), mystic quests ("Clam Caravan"), and its own glorious rock-fest legacy ("Stinkin' Up the Great Outdoors"). Pop diva Cher and St. Hubbins share a vocal tryst on the uplifting ballad "Just Begin Again," while even Steely Dan's reclusive Walter Becker pens technical notes, praising the album's pioneering use of the Crosley Phase Linear Ionic Induction Voice Processor System. Sadly, they just don't make albums like this anymore. --J.D. Swift

Break Like the Wind,Spinal Tap,Mca,Comedy Rock,Hard Rock,Heavy Metal,Pop,Rock,Spoken / Comedy / Radio Shows
Break Like The Wind
Average customer rating: 4 out of 5 stars
  • Better than most "real" heavy metal
  • Almost better than the first!
  • Sh*t Sandwich
  • not as funny as the original
  • And that's the Majesty of Rock!
Break Like The Wind
Spinal Tap
Manufacturer: Mca Special Products
ProductGroup: Music
Binding: Audio CD

GeneralGeneral | Alternative Rock | Styles | Music
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Similar Items:
  1. This Is Spinal Tap
  2. This Is Spinal Tap (Special Edition)
  3. The Return of Spinal Tap
  4. Return of Spinal Tap
  5. A Mighty Wind: The Album

ASIN: B00004WGVR
Release Date: 2000-08-29

Tracks:

  1. Bitch School
  2. The Majesty Of Rock
  3. Diva Fever
  4. Just Begin Again
  5. Cash On Delivery
  6. The Sun Never Sweats
  7. Rainy Day Sun
  8. Break Like The Wind
  9. Stinkin' Up The Great Outdoors
  10. Springtime
  11. Clam Caraban
  12. Christmas With the Devil
  13. All The Way Home

Amazon.com Music Reviews

Has there ever been a rock band more unjustly maligned than Spinal Tap? Accused of everything from heralding the demise of heavy metal to being the very raison d'être for alternative rock, they suffered their greatest indignity at the hands of director Rob Reiner (cowardly hiding behind the moniker Marty DiBergi), whose 1984 "rockumentary," This Is Spinal Tap, muckraked its way through the band's courageous, tragedy-strewn history in service of a few mocking laughs. Reiner/DiBergi even stooped so low as to employ a heartless, mercenary band of Hollywood writer/comedians to burlesque the band's core members--David St. Hubbins (played by mendacious Michael McKean), Nigel Tufnel (callow Christopher Guest), and Derek Smalls (haughty Harry Shearer). But the great ones just won't be denied; Spinal Tap reached deep down in 1992 and let loose with Break Like the Wind, another potent blast of the very stuff that made their legend. Featuring an all-star supporting cast (the title track alone boasts Slash, Steve Lukather, Joe Satriani, and Tufnel look-alike Jeff Beck), the Tap gallantly tried to stem the tide of flannel and tattoos with thundering odes to gender enlightenment ("Bitch School"), mystic quests ("Clam Caravan"), and its own glorious rock-fest legacy ("Stinkin' Up the Great Outdoors"). Pop diva Cher and St. Hubbins share a vocal tryst on the uplifting ballad "Just Begin Again," while even Steely Dan's reclusive Walter Becker pens technical notes, praising the album's pioneering use of the Crosley Phase Linear Ionic Induction Voice Processor System. Sadly, they just don't make albums like this anymore. --J.D. Swift

Customer Reviews:

4 out of 5 stars Better than most "real" heavy metal .......2007-05-29

It's hard to believe that these guys are not professional musicians and that they don't make a living from music. For a "parody" or "spoof" album, this is great music in it's own right. I listen to it first because it's funny, but I listen to it again because it's great stuff. The haunting title track is awesome, and tracks like "Rainy Day Sun" sounds like it was written by the Beatles. Like the first album the rhyming lyrics are purposefully contrived and are a chuckle at first listen, especially in "The Majesty of Rock" ("together and ever"). And the band's breadth of styles highlights the versatility of this extremely talented group of "musicians."

4 out of 5 stars Almost better than the first!.......2006-04-24

I have to say reading reviews that if people aren't laughing out loud at the music on this album you're missing the point. I agree that the lyrics are what give Spinal Tap their edge but if you're a musician listen to their dead on take of all forms of rock. The Sun Never Sweats is a highlight for me particularly the middle section that switches into three unrelated keys while the riff badly apes Slade or Jethro Tull. Rainy Day Sun does a great job of evoking bad '60's psychedlic rock - a cross between the Doors and the Kinks. The best part of the album though is Nigel's voicebox solo on Springtime. The only bad parts for me were the duet with Cher (too blatantly bad for me) and the remake of Christmas with the Devil which is done better on the remastered soundtrack (Take number one with their Hoiday greeting kicks every other version).

3 out of 5 stars Sh*t Sandwich.......2005-06-21

Nah, not really. I just wanted to use that line from the movie.

Good cd...definitely worth getting if you liked the original Tap music.

3 out of 5 stars not as funny as the original.......2004-12-19

Look, like everyone else posting here, I saw the movie a billion times, and went right out and picked up this new album just before seeing them live in San Francisco. I even dressed up in fake rocker attire with "Viv Savage Lives!" penned across my thigh. The problem - nobody else seemed to understand it was satire. People took it so seriously. I figured people would be dressed up, but no...just two of us. This album seems to suffer from the same malady. Yes, the lyrics are funny, but it seems a little forced, and its just not as fun as the first farce. It's in the face of farce. Farce-faced, even. Ok, I'm just being silly now. But what made the first album - and the movie - so much fun was the variety and spontenaity that's just missing from this collection of songs.

5 out of 5 stars And that's the Majesty of Rock!.......2004-11-25

Spinal Tap returns! The most prolific nonexistant band ever is back with "Break Like The Wind," a wonderfully warped metal album that celebrates rock'n'roll, bad lyrics and exploding drummers. This a bad album -- gloriously, magnificently bad, in the way only a spoof can be.

It opens with the roaring male dominance rocker "Bitch School," which would be offensive if it weren't tongue-in-cheek, then lurches on to the wonderfully bloated "Majesty of Rock," a gloriously ghastly duet with Cher, the insanely pretentious "The Sun Never Sweats" ("Bolder than the pirates who used to rule the sea/Braver than the natives, who never heard of tea...")

The peak of this album may be the song "Break Like the Wind," which aspires to be deep and inspirational despite lyrics like "We are the thumb on a stranger's hand." And two of the most priceless songs are at the end: the mope ballad "All the Way Home," and the truly twisted Christmas song, "Christmas With the Devil."

The world was first introduced to Spinal Tap in "This is Spinal Tap," the classic rockumentary about England's loudest band. With the help of Cher (yes, that Cher) and Dweezil Zappa, they take it upon themselves to roundly mock metal, hard rock, rock ballads, and quite a few other things as well -- they're funny because they put so much effort into doing a nudge-wink bad job.

The music itself is pretty standard hard rock riffs -- it's merely okay, and therein lies the irony. What's really startling is that while the music is not amazing in the technical sense, it's actually much better than many real-life bands were. Scary, no? It does have its moments of brilliance, due to Zappa and Jeff Beck mostly, as well as some gloriously ghastly sitar.

It's not the music but the lyrics that are genius. Michael McKean, Christopher Guest, and Harry Shearer are true geniuses of the bad song -- what's even better, these are the sort of bad songs that people write, but don't know that they are bad. "And that's the Majesty of Rock!/The Mystery of Roll!/The darning of the sock,/the scoring of the goal!" Does it get worse than that? Yes, if you include lines like "Rise! for you are cream" and "We may be gods or big marionettes/But the sun never sweats."

"Break Like the Wind" is a wonderful album by the loudest band in Britain, and the best band that never technically existed. Tap into this!
Break Like the Wind
Average customer rating: 5 out of 5 stars
  • Break like the WIND!
Break Like the Wind
Spinal Tap
ProductGroup: Music
Binding: Audio CD

GeneralGeneral | Hard Rock & Metal | Styles | Music
Hard RockHard Rock | Hard Rock & Metal | Styles | Music
Pop RockPop Rock | Pop | Styles | Music
GeneralGeneral | Comedy | Miscellaneous | Styles | Music
Comedy RockComedy Rock | Comedic Music | Comedy | Miscellaneous | Styles | Music
ASIN: B00004YTTN
Release Date: 2007-04-03

Tracks:

  1. Bitch School
  2. Majesty Of Rock
  3. Diva Fever
  4. Just Begin Again
  5. Cash On Delivery
  6. Sun Never Sweats
  7. Rainy Day Sun
  8. Break Like The Wind
  9. Stinkin' Up The Great Outdoors
  10. Springtime
  11. Clam Caravan
  12. Christmas With The Devil
  13. All The Way Home
  14. All The Way Home - Spinal Tap

Album Description

Enhanced UK pressing of Spinal Tap's 1992 rockin' return to the charts features two bonus tracks: 'All The Way Home' and the Enhanced Video for 'Bitch School'. Crank this one up to 11! MCA.

Customer Reviews:

5 out of 5 stars Break like the WIND!.......2007-04-03

Spinal Tap returns! The most prolific nonexistant band ever is back with "Break Like The Wind," a wonderfully warped metal album that celebrates rock'n'roll, bad lyrics and exploding drummers. This a bad album -- gloriously, magnificently bad, in the way only a spoof can be.

It opens with the roaring male dominance rocker "Bitch School," which would be offensive if it weren't tongue-in-cheek, then lurches on to the wonderfully bloated "Majesty of Rock," a gloriously ghastly duet with Cher, the insanely pretentious "The Sun Never Sweats" ("Bolder than the pirates who used to rule the sea/Braver than the natives, who never heard of tea...")

The peak of this album may be the song "Break Like the Wind," which aspires to be deep and inspirational despite lyrics like "We are the thumb on a stranger's hand." And two of the most priceless songs are at the end: the mope ballad "All the Way Home," and the truly twisted Christmas song, "Christmas With the Devil."

The world was first introduced to Spinal Tap in "This is Spinal Tap," the classic rockumentary about England's loudest band. With the help of Cher (yes, that Cher) and Dweezil Zappa, they take it upon themselves to roundly mock metal, hard rock, rock ballads, and quite a few other things as well -- they're funny because they put so much effort into doing a nudge-wink bad job.

The music itself is pretty standard hard rock riffs -- it's merely okay, and therein lies the irony. What's really startling is that while the music is not amazing in the technical sense, it's actually much better than many real-life bands were. Scary, no? It does have its moments of brilliance, due to Zappa and Jeff Beck mostly, as well as some gloriously ghastly sitar.

It's not the music but the lyrics that are genius. Michael McKean, Christopher Guest, and Harry Shearer are true geniuses of the bad song -- what's even better, these are the sort of bad songs that people write, but don't know that they are bad. "And that's the Majesty of Rock!/The Mystery of Roll!/The darning of the sock,/the scoring of the goal!" Does it get worse than that? Yes, if you include lines like "Rise! for you are cream" and "We may be gods or big marionettes/But the sun never sweats."

This particular edition includes some extra goodies -- the rambly little song "All The Way Home," which was a pre-band song that the guys sort-of-sing in the movie. And then there's the "Bitch School" video -- an all-girls school, where a leather-clad Monroe-lookalike turns up to be the new teacher, and teaches the girls to get in touch with their inner S&M madam.

"Break Like the Wind" is a wonderful album by the loudest band in Britain, and the best band that never technically existed. Tap into this!
Break Like the Wind
Average customer rating: 4 out of 5 stars
  • Better than most "real" heavy metal
  • Almost better than the first!
  • Sh*t Sandwich
  • not as funny as the original
  • And that's the Majesty of Rock!
Break Like the Wind
Spinal Tap
Manufacturer: Mca
ProductGroup: Music
Binding: Audio CD

GeneralGeneral | Rock | Styles | Music
GeneralGeneral | Hard Rock & Metal | Styles | Music
Hard RockHard Rock | Hard Rock & Metal | Styles | Music
GeneralGeneral | Miscellaneous | Styles | Music
GeneralGeneral | Comedy | Miscellaneous | Styles | Music
Comedy RockComedy Rock | Comedic Music | Comedy | Miscellaneous | Styles | Music
CDs $7 - $10CDs $7 - $10 | Hard Rock | Hard Rock & Metal | Today's Deals in Music | Formats | Music
All Bargain TitlesAll Bargain Titles | Hard Rock | Hard Rock & Metal | Today's Deals in Music | Formats | Music
Similar Items:
  1. This Is Spinal Tap
  2. This Is Spinal Tap (Special Edition)
  3. The Return of Spinal Tap
  4. Return of Spinal Tap
  5. A Mighty Wind: The Album

ASIN: B000002OJH
Release Date: 1992-03-17

Tracks:

  1. Bitch School
  2. The Majesty Of Rock
  3. Diva Fever
  4. Just Begin Again
  5. Cash On Delivery
  6. The Sun Never Sweats
  7. Rainy Day Sun
  8. Break Like The Wind
  9. Stinkin' Up The Great Outdoors
  10. Springtime
  11. Clam Caravan
  12. Christmas With The Devil
  13. Untitled
  14. All The Way Home

Amazon.com Music Reviews

Has there ever been a rock band more unjustly maligned than Spinal Tap? Accused of everything from heralding the demise of heavy metal to being the very raison d'être for alternative rock, they suffered their greatest indignity at the hands of director Rob Reiner (cowardly hiding behind the moniker Marty DiBergi), whose 1984 "rockumentary," This Is Spinal Tap, muckraked its way through the band's courageous, tragedy-strewn history in service of a few mocking laughs. Reiner/DiBergi even stooped so low as to employ a heartless, mercenary band of Hollywood writer/comedians to burlesque the band's core members--David St. Hubbins (played by mendacious Michael McKean), Nigel Tufnel (callow Christopher Guest), and Derek Smalls (haughty Harry Shearer). But the great ones just won't be denied; Spinal Tap reached deep down in 1992 and let loose with Break Like the Wind, another potent blast of the very stuff that made their legend. Featuring an all-star supporting cast (the title track alone boasts Slash, Steve Lukather, Joe Satriani, and Tufnel look-alike Jeff Beck), the Tap gallantly tried to stem the tide of flannel and tattoos with thundering odes to gender enlightenment ("Bitch School"), mystic quests ("Clam Caravan"), and its own glorious rock-fest legacy ("Stinkin' Up the Great Outdoors"). Pop diva Cher and St. Hubbins share a vocal tryst on the uplifting ballad "Just Begin Again," while even Steely Dan's reclusive Walter Becker pens technical notes, praising the album's pioneering use of the Crosley Phase Linear Ionic Induction Voice Processor System. Sadly, they just don't make albums like this anymore. --J.D. Swift

Customer Reviews:

4 out of 5 stars Better than most "real" heavy metal .......2007-05-29

It's hard to believe that these guys are not professional musicians and that they don't make a living from music. For a "parody" or "spoof" album, this is great music in it's own right. I listen to it first because it's funny, but I listen to it again because it's great stuff. The haunting title track is awesome, and tracks like "Rainy Day Sun" sounds like it was written by the Beatles. Like the first album the rhyming lyrics are purposefully contrived and are a chuckle at first listen, especially in "The Majesty of Rock" ("together and ever"). And the band's breadth of styles highlights the versatility of this extremely talented group of "musicians."

4 out of 5 stars Almost better than the first!.......2006-04-24

I have to say reading reviews that if people aren't laughing out loud at the music on this album you're missing the point. I agree that the lyrics are what give Spinal Tap their edge but if you're a musician listen to their dead on take of all forms of rock. The Sun Never Sweats is a highlight for me particularly the middle section that switches into three unrelated keys while the riff badly apes Slade or Jethro Tull. Rainy Day Sun does a great job of evoking bad '60's psychedlic rock - a cross between the Doors and the Kinks. The best part of the album though is Nigel's voicebox solo on Springtime. The only bad parts for me were the duet with Cher (too blatantly bad for me) and the remake of Christmas with the Devil which is done better on the remastered soundtrack (Take number one with their Hoiday greeting kicks every other version).

3 out of 5 stars Sh*t Sandwich.......2005-06-21

Nah, not really. I just wanted to use that line from the movie.

Good cd...definitely worth getting if you liked the original Tap music.

3 out of 5 stars not as funny as the original.......2004-12-19

Look, like everyone else posting here, I saw the movie a billion times, and went right out and picked up this new album just before seeing them live in San Francisco. I even dressed up in fake rocker attire with "Viv Savage Lives!" penned across my thigh. The problem - nobody else seemed to understand it was satire. People took it so seriously. I figured people would be dressed up, but no...just two of us. This album seems to suffer from the same malady. Yes, the lyrics are funny, but it seems a little forced, and its just not as fun as the first farce. It's in the face of farce. Farce-faced, even. Ok, I'm just being silly now. But what made the first album - and the movie - so much fun was the variety and spontenaity that's just missing from this collection of songs.

5 out of 5 stars And that's the Majesty of Rock!.......2004-11-25

Spinal Tap returns! The most prolific nonexistant band ever is back with "Break Like The Wind," a wonderfully warped metal album that celebrates rock'n'roll, bad lyrics and exploding drummers. This a bad album -- gloriously, magnificently bad, in the way only a spoof can be.

It opens with the roaring male dominance rocker "Bitch School," which would be offensive if it weren't tongue-in-cheek, then lurches on to the wonderfully bloated "Majesty of Rock," a gloriously ghastly duet with Cher, the insanely pretentious "The Sun Never Sweats" ("Bolder than the pirates who used to rule the sea/Braver than the natives, who never heard of tea...")

The peak of this album may be the song "Break Like the Wind," which aspires to be deep and inspirational despite lyrics like "We are the thumb on a stranger's hand." And two of the most priceless songs are at the end: the mope ballad "All the Way Home," and the truly twisted Christmas song, "Christmas With the Devil."

The world was first introduced to Spinal Tap in "This is Spinal Tap," the classic rockumentary about England's loudest band. With the help of Cher (yes, that Cher) and Dweezil Zappa, they take it upon themselves to roundly mock metal, hard rock, rock ballads, and quite a few other things as well -- they're funny because they put so much effort into doing a nudge-wink bad job.

The music itself is pretty standard hard rock riffs -- it's merely okay, and therein lies the irony. What's really startling is that while the music is not amazing in the technical sense, it's actually much better than many real-life bands were. Scary, no? It does have its moments of brilliance, due to Zappa and Jeff Beck mostly, as well as some gloriously ghastly sitar.

It's not the music but the lyrics that are genius. Michael McKean, Christopher Guest, and Harry Shearer are true geniuses of the bad song -- what's even better, these are the sort of bad songs that people write, but don't know that they are bad. "And that's the Majesty of Rock!/The Mystery of Roll!/The darning of the sock,/the scoring of the goal!" Does it get worse than that? Yes, if you include lines like "Rise! for you are cream" and "We may be gods or big marionettes/But the sun never sweats."

"Break Like the Wind" is a wonderful album by the loudest band in Britain, and the best band that never technically existed. Tap into this!
The Best of Gilbert & Sullivan
Average customer rating: Not rated
    The Best of Gilbert & Sullivan

    Manufacturer: Angel Records
    ProductGroup: Music
    Binding: Audio CD

    All Works by SullivanAll Works by Sullivan | Sullivan, Arthur | ( S ) | Featured Composers, A-Z | Classical | Styles | Music
    General ModernGeneral Modern | Modern, 20th, & 21st Century | Historical Periods | Classical | Styles | Music
    Brannigan, OwenBrannigan, Owen | ( B ) | Featured Performers, A-Z | Classical | Styles | Music
    GeneralGeneral | Classical | Styles | Music
    GeneralGeneral | Opera & Vocal | Styles | Music
    OperettasOperettas | Opera & Vocal | Styles | Music
    ASIN: B00004SSJR
    Release Date: 2002-11-05

    Tracks:

    1. The Mikado: Overture
    2. The Mikado: A Wandering Minstrel I
    3. The Mikado: Our Great Mikado, Virtuous Man
    4. The Mikado: Young Man, Despair
    5. The Mikado: Behold The Lord High Executioner!...Taken From The County Jail
    6. The Mikado: As Some Day It May Happen
    7. The Mikado: Three Little Maids From School Are We
    8. The Mikado: Were You Not To Ko-Ko Plighted
    9. The Mikado: I Am So Proud
    10. The Mikado: The Sun, Whose Rays
    11. The Mikado: Here's A How-De-Do!
    12. The Mikado: Miya Sama (Entrance Of The Mikado)
    13. The Mikado: A More Humane Mikado Never
    14. The Mikado: The Criminal Cried
    15. The Mikado: See How The Fates Their Gifts Allot
    16. The Mikado: The Flowers That Bloom In The Spring
    17. The Mikado: Alone, And Yet Alive!...Hearts Do Not Break!
    18. The Mikado: On A Tree By A River
    19. The Mikado: There Is Beauty In The Bellow Of The Blast
    20. The Mikado: For He's Gone And Married Yum-Yum
    21. Trail By Jury: The Learned Jungle
    22. H.M.S. Pinafore: I'm Called Litttle Buttercup
    23. H.M.S. Pinafore: My Gallant Crew...I Am The Captain Of The Pinafore
    24. Sorry Her Lot Who Loves Too Well
    25. H.M.S. Pinafore: When I Was A Lad I Served A Term

    Tracks:

    1. H.M.S. Pinafore: Fair Moon, To Thee I Sing
    2. H.M.S. Pinafore: Things Are Seldom What They Seem
    3. H.M.S. Pinafore: The Hours Creep On Apace
    4. H.M.S. Pinafore: Never Mind The Why And Wherefore
    5. The Pirates Of Penzance: Oh, Better Far To Live And Die
    6. The Pirates Of Penzance: Oh, Is There Not One Maiden Breast
    7. The Pirates Of Penzance: Poor Wandering One!
    8. The Pirates Of Penzance: I Am The Very Model Of A Modern Major-General
    9. The Pirates Of Penzance: When The Foeman Bears His Steel
    10. The Pirates Of Penzance: Ah, Leave Me Not To Pine
    11. The Pirates Of Penzance: When A Felon's Not Engaged In His Employment
    12. The Pirates Of Penzance: With Cat-Like Tread
    13. Patience: The Soldiers Of Our Queen...If You Want A Receipt For That Popular Mystery
    14. Patience: Am I Alone And Unobserved...If You're Anxious For To Shine
    15. Patience: Sad Is That Woman's Lot...Silvered Is The Raven Hair
    16. Patience: A Magnet Hung In A Hardware Shop
    17. Patience: Love Is A Plaintive Song
    18. Patience: So Go To Him And Say To Him
    19. Patience: When I Go Out Of Door
    20. Patience: After Much Debate (Finale Act 2)
    21. Iolanthe: When I Went To The Bar As A Very Young Man
    22. The Lady Of My Love...(Finale Act 1)

    Tracks:

    1. When All Night Long A Chap Remains
    2. When Britain Really Ruled The Waves
    3. When You're Lying Awake With A Dismal Headache
    4. If You Go In, You're Sure To Win
    5. Ruddigore: My Boy, May Take It From Me
    6. Ruddigore: The Battle's Roar Is Over
    7. Ruddigore: In Sailing O'er Life's Ocean Wide
    8. Ruddigore: You Understand?
    9. Ruddigore: When The Night Wind Howls
    10. Ruddigore: My Eyes Are Fully Open
    11. Ruddigore: There Grew A Little Flower
    12. The Gondoliers: We're Called Gondolieri
    13. The Gondoliers: From The Sunny Spanish Shore...In Enterprise Of Martial Kind
    14. The Gondoliers: I Stole The Prince
    15. The Gondoliers: When A Merry Maiden Marries
    16. The Gondoliers: Take A Pair Of Sparkling Eyes
    17. The Gondoliers: Dance A Cachucha, Fandango, Bolero
    18. The Gondoliers: There Lived A King, As I've Been Told
    19. The Gondoliers: I Am A Courtier Grave And Serious
    20. The Yeoman Of The Guard: I Have A Song To Sing, O!
    21. The Yeoman Of The Guard: How You Say Maiden, Will You Wed
    22. The Yeoman Of The Guard: Where I Thy Bride
    23. The Yeoman Of The Guard: Oh! A Private Buffoon Is A Light Hearted Loon
    24. The Yeoman Of The Guard: Comes The Pretty Young Bride
    Break Like The Wind
    Average customer rating: Not rated
      Break Like The Wind
      Spinal Tap
      Manufacturer: MCA
      ProductGroup: Music
      Binding: Audio CD

      GeneralGeneral | Hard Rock & Metal | Styles | Music
      GeneralGeneral | Soundtracks | Styles | Music
      ASIN: B000LWOGVQ

      Music Track:

      1. Daughter of Time [Original recording remastered] [Import]
      2. Dawn of Hawkwind [Limited Edition] [Import]
      3. Dead Soul Tribe
      4. Deaf Gods of Babylon
      5. Death Or Glory
      6. Doctor Butcher [Import]
      7. Electrically Driven [Live] [Import]
      8. Epitaph [Import]
      9. Fassade
      10. Forever Free

      Music Track

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