| 1. Tu Me Manques |
| 2. Ni Les Mots Ni Les Mains |
| 3. L'ame De L'homme |
| 4. Free Style |
| 5. Laisse Toi Aimer |
| 6. Trois Anges Dans Mon Paradis |
| 7. Reptile |
| 8. On Se Ressemble |
| 9. Insane |
| 10. Dors Mon Petit Papa |
Editorial Reviews
2005 Studio Release, Recorded in Collaboration with Derrick Mckenzie (Jamiroquai).
Reptile,Francis Lalanne,EMI Int'l,France,French,Int'l & World Music,Pop,World Music
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Reptile
Eric Clapton Manufacturer: Reprise / Wea ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B000059R8Y Release Date: 2001-03-13 |
Tracks:
- Reptile
- Got You On My Mind
- Travelin' Light
- Believe In Life
- Come Back Baby
- Broken Down
- Find Myself
- I Ain't Gonna Stand For It
- I Want A Little Girl
- Second Nature
- Don't Let Me Be Lonely Tonight
- Modern Girl
- Superman Inside
- Son & Sylvia
Amazon.com
A reptile, according to Eric Clapton, is something of a bloke, as in some local character you might share a pint with down at the pub. So this 14-song collection is aptly named: If it were a barfly, it wouldn't turn heads when it entered the bar, but it wouldn't empty the place, either. Working with essentially the same team that put together '00's Riding with the King (sans, of course, B.B. King), Reptile feels like a summary of the many guises Clapton has adopted in his illustrious past. Blues has always been the backbone of EC's music and here he tackles Walter Davis's "Come Back Baby" with surefootedness. Clapton has mined J.J. Cale's fine-and-mellow repertoire in the past, coming up with the hits "Cocaine" and "After Midnight"; here he revives Cale's "Travelin' Light" with unfussy aplomb. He kicks things off with an instrumental samba, ventures back into lite rock, and mixes originals and covers, the latter bunch including Stevie Wonder's "I Ain't Gonna Stand for It" and James Taylor's "Don't Let Me Be Lonely Tonight." In the end, it's apparent this reptile is something of a chameleon. --Steven StolderCustomer Reviews:
Solid.......2007-05-05
A pleasure to listen to........2007-03-20
It's a good CD to listen to when taking a road trip, or relaxing on a Saturday or Sunday afternoon.
Not Your Usual Clapton -- but GREAT CD!.......2006-10-03
YOU CAN'T PLEASE ALL OF THE PEOPLE ALL OF THE TIME.......2006-04-20
THIS ALBUM IS AN ECLECTIC MIX OF SONGS AND STYLES - LATIN AMERICAN, JAZZ AND URBAN BLUES INFLUENCES, COUNTRY-ROCK, POP ETC. THE OVERALL SOUND IS WARM AND, FOR THE MOST PART, RELAXED; BUT THE SOUND IS ALSO RATHER 'MUDDY' AND I THINK THE WHOLE ALBUM WOULD HAVE BENEFITTED FROM MUCH LEANER PRODUCTION.
EC's VOCALS, AT TIMES, SOUND STRAINED AND HOARSE. BACKING VOCALS (THE IMPRESSIONS) DON'T ALWAYS SEEM APPROPRIATE. THE MUSCISIANSHIP IS COMPETENT AND EC's PLAYING IS FINE - THERE JUST ISN'T A LOT OF IT (THE 2 INSTRUMENTAL TRACKS ASIDE).
I QUITE ENJOYED THE FOLLOWING TRACKS :
REPTILE (INSTRUMENTAL) (Eric Clapton) - This is a samba (bossa nova ?). The backing instruments (organ, bass, percussion) are quite restrained - a subtle sound. EC's playing reminds me a bit of George Benson but without the improvisations.
TRAVELIN' LIGHT (J J Cale) - EC usually does decent cover versions of J J Cale songs and this is no exception. This version features driving percussion and a couple of nice slide guitar solos. It's a while since I've heard the original but, as I recall, it has a crisper more natural sound (no doubt due, in part, to the sparse production that J J Cale adopts).
SUPERMAN INSIDE (Eric Clapton/Doyle Bramhall II/Susannah Melvoil) - of all the tracks, this one gets the closest to 'rocking' but it never really manages to 'take off'. There is some good slide guitar playing (I think Doyle Bramhall II takes the lead on this track).
THERE ARE 2 BLUES TRACKS - 'GOT YOU ON MY MIND' AND 'COME BACK BABY' AND THERE IS SOME FINE (BUT RATHER BRIEF) GUITAR PLAYING ON BOTH.
THE REMAINING TRACKS ARE A MUNDANE COLLECTION OF SONGS ALL SHARING A COMMON DELIVERY WHICH, AT BEST, IS PLEASANT BUT RATHER BLAND AND AT WORST, IS DOWNRIGHT DREARY.
EVEN WITH THE FEW TRACKS THAT I LIKED, MY ENJOYMENT WAS LESS THAN IT COULD HAVE BEEN (THANKS TO THE OVER-PRODUCTION AND LARGELY SUPERFLUOUS BACKING VOCALS). FANS WHO LIKE EC PLAYING RAW, GRITTY BLUES OR HEAVIER BLUES-ROCK FUSIONS WILL BE LESS THAN ENTHRALLED. THE ALBUM MAY APPEAL, ALBEIT WITH SOME RESERVATIONS, TO THOSE WHO LIKE EC's 'LAID BACK' COUNTRY-ROCK STYLE; BUT I WOULD DESCRIBE THE APPROACH ON THIS ALBUM AS LANGUID RATHER THAN 'LAID BACK'.
I SUPPOSE THE ALBUM DEMONSTRATES THAT EC IS A COMPETENT AND VERSATILE GUITARIST BUT, ON THIS EVIDENCE, LITTLE ELSE.
Not an essential purchase but still a great experience.......2006-03-16
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Order Of The Reptile
Ego Likeness Manufacturer: Dancing Ferret ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B000FP2IWI Release Date: 2007-07-16 |
Tracks:
- Weave
- Burn Witch Burn
- Smothered
- Aviary
- Save your Serpent
- Severine
- World of Shame
- The Foolish Man Who Has No Home
- Seventy-Nine
- Raise Your Red Flags
- Afterhours
Album Description
Ego Likeness continue to build on their musical foundation as they did with their 2004 release "Water to the Dead." Some downtempo tracks recall their "Dragonfly" release, but as with Water, this disc is more eclectic. Aviary is a slow, dangerous, smouldering, slithering track that may well be the best Ego Likeness song to date. However, uptempo rockers like Severine and Burn Witch Burn are well represented on this album as well. Fans of Curve and Collide should continue to enjoy new Ego Likeness material, but this is certainly a band that is blazing its own trail. Also includes the first-ever Ego Likeness video, "Aviary."Customer Reviews:
Dark Music Lover.......2007-03-13
Wonderful and underrated band with an inspiring message.......2007-03-12
So I picked up Ego Likeness' Order of the Reptile, and wasn't the least bit disappointed.
The songs on this CD are infused with Steven Archer's powerful use of guitar and wonderfully sung by Donna Lynch, who actually sings it like she *means* it: unlike other goth/industrial bands I could name (cough*Cruxshadows*cough), Ego Likeness' songs actually sound honest and from the heart, with such songs as "World of Shame", "Burn Witch Burn" and "Raise Your Red Flags" using the power of words to draw a complex portrait of a strange, fantastic other land, and at the same time providing the listener with a beautiful message of hope and perseverance amidst a dark and hostile world.
Even if you don't like this kind of music, it's definitely worth a listen.
Five stars all around.
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Daikaiju
Daikaiju Manufacturer: Reptile ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B0007GAER6 Release Date: 2005-03-08 |
Tracks:
- Daikaiju Die!
- Attack of the Crab Women
- The Trouble with those Mothra Girls
- Sharkakhan
- Showdown in Shinjuku
- The Daikaiju who Loved Me
- Son of Daikaiju
- Incognito
- Super X-9
- Farewell to Monster Island
Customer Reviews:
Large. Apparition. Beast........2006-04-19
Pitchforkmedia.com reviews Daikaiju!!.......2006-01-30
Rating: 7.8
Somewhere along the line, surf music ceased to have anything to do with actual surfing and migrated to kitsch. Dick Dale had "Pipeline", the Surfaris had "Wipe-Out!", and Man...or Astroman? had..."You Can't Get Good Riblets in Space". But although shuddering tremolo bars fit the image of a guy in floral print trunks, the music is mostly instrumental and as such essentially abstract, so you can make it mean anything you want it to. Even early surf rockers like the Ventures and the Tornados realized this and began to incorporate the astronautical, lounge, and kitsch elements that color most efforts in the genre these days.
So the term "surf" as it relates to music today basically just refers to music with lots of reverb and crazy guitar playing, which is fine-- you can acknowledge the roots without trying to turn them into branches. I can say pretty categorically that Croatia's Bambi Molesters are the best surf band in the world today, but given Man...or Astroman?'s long silence, Daikaiju certainly have a claim to the #2 spot. Much like fellow modern surf-rockers Los Straightjackets, the men of Daikaiju keep their identities secret, each represented by a mask in the band's press releases, which also feature a lot of fake Japanese-to-English translations like "Kabuki men deliver most high rocket impact!"
Students of Godzilla, Mothra, and Gamera know that Daikaiju is Japanese for "giant monster," and the Huntsville, Ala., quartet are obviously enamored with the most conspicuous aspects of Japanese popular culture, though they refrain from sticking soundclips from Mechagodzilla sequels all over their albums the way so many other surf groups recently have. They instead opt to let the music speak for itself, and when it does, it's impressive, to say the least. Though their sound is closer to Man...or Astroman? than anything else (it's of course possible that there are members of that band hiding out in their ranks) there's a certain degree of prog muscle behind all that reverbed shredding.
Surf is one of those funny genres where a fan basically knows what to expect and enjoyment comes from hearing it done really well, and Daikaiju delivers on that score, but there is one monumental surprise lurking in this mix in the form of album closer "Farewell to Monster Island". At almost nine minutes long it's nearly four times longer than the average surf instrumental and in place of the manic snare and ride cymbal of a surf beat, the band rides a skanking dub riddim, marrying two genres that in retrospect were born to love each other. The e-bowed interlude is something to hear, but even more impressive is the simple fact that the guitarists hiding behind these masks have a jazz-like sense of how to phrase a solo. The song is the kind of jam that bands just don't do any more, and it sort of makes me wish more would.
So in the end, Daikaiju is an impressive full-length debut for a band that's clearly got more up its sleeve than a few Trashmen 45s and tablature print-outs for "Rabble Rouser". The thing with the masks and stage names like Secret Asian Man and Brain Conflict is frankly little more than a distracting sideshow to the main event, which is of course the band's massive wave of prime surf. Grab your board.
-Joe Tangari, August 31, 2005
[...]
HybridMagazine Review.......2005-09-01
Daikaiju's eponymous release is full to the brim with twanging and boinging guitars, blistering tom rolls, and throbbing basslines. From the very first notes of "Daikaiju Die!" the album is a rollicking good time ride through the world of surf rock. Most tracks on the album clock in at right around three and a half minutes, which makes the album pass by so quickly that there will be an immediate need to hit the play button again. None of the tracks are sleepers (Take that, other surf bands!) and every track has it's own unique character, which makes this one of the finest surf albums of all time. Standouts include the brilliant tremolo swoops on "Incognito" and the stuttering machine gun guitars of "Super X-9". The jazzy cymbal wash of "The Trouble With Those Mothra Girls" makes perfect counterpoint to the deliberate bass walks and chiming guitars. The Van Halen-esque rhythm guitars on the intro to "Sharkakhan" give way to a fast paced racing song that would fit right at home in any good spy movie, especially during a chase scene.
No sleeper tracks. Distinctly different feels melodies in each song. Amazing guitar, bass and drum tones. Musicianship of the highest caliber. Those are the things you will find on this release, Daikaiju. And really, beyond that, the only thing you need to know about Daikaiju is that one of the guys goes by the moniker Secret Asian Man. And who can't stand behind that?
-L. Keane
Much more than a surf band.......2005-03-09
Easy, but not really fair, and certainly not accurate.
Daikaiju blends the instrumental surf rock genre with all sorts of other influences. Super-heavy riffs worthy of any hard rock outfit ("Daikaiju Die!"), beautifully intricate melodies (see "Farewell to Monster Island", and hints of reggae, jazz, and even some jamband-esque elements makes for an album that is very distinctive and interesting, never getting repetitive or tiresome at all.
I reccommend this record not only to surf fans, but to lovers of great, unique, instrumental music in general. Buy this record now and experience "the soundtrack to the greatest monster movie never made"
Oh, and for god's sake...seek out their first CD "The Phasing Spider Menace". It's out-of-print, but it's worth any price you might pay just for "Rising Up From the Depths of Time".
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Music for Insect Minds
Halo of Flies Manufacturer: Amphetamine Reptile ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B0000004FO Release Date: 1997-08-26 |
Tracks:
- Tired & Cold
- Wasted Time
- Death Of A Fly
- Ain't No Hell
- Spit It Out
- Ballad Of Extreme Hate
- No Time
- You Get Nothing
- Headburn
- Easy Or Hard
- Father Paranoia
- Drunk (In Detroit)
- Garbage Truck
- D.D.T. Beat 69
- One Barrel Spent
- I'm Clean
- Richies Dog
- How Does It Feel To Feel
- M.D. 20/20
- Pipebomb
- Sinner Sings
- D.D.T. Fin 13
- Can't Touch Her
- Rubber Room
- Thoughts In A Booth
- Human Fly
- I'm A Bug
- Jagged Time Lapse
- Clowns
Customer Reviews:
timeless.......2001-12-16
You gotta want grunge..........2001-11-03
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Heavy Surf
Heavy Surf Manufacturer: Reptile ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B00009KTW8 Release Date: 2003-06-03 |
Tracks:
- Shores of Hell - Mark Brodie & Beaver Patrol
- Drifter
- Outlaw Beatnik - Cadillac Angels
- Rumble in the Congo - 3 Balls of Fire
- Six String Highway - Davie Allan,
- Fast and Loose - Davie Allan,
- Rising Surf
- Phasing Spider Menace
- Sandpaper Paddles - Surf Report
- Heptane - Surf Report
- Death of a Reventlo - Reventlos
- King Kong - Reventlos
- Surf as Houdini
- Killing an Arab
- Batwave - Insect Surfers
- Toro Muerto Con Queso - Huevos Rancheros
- Another Human Error
- Lara's Theme
- Sex Wax
- Cadillacin'
- Pop Killer Cometh - Surfin' Dead
- Dragster - The Surf Sluts
- Scooter Trash - Hillbilly Soul Surfers
- Surf Pit
- Satan Stole My Surfboard
Customer Reviews:
I Love Surf Metal.......2007-06-25
Answering the ageless question...........2006-04-29
Surf Music for the 21st Century.......2004-01-06
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Scattered, Smothered & Covered
Unsane Manufacturer: Amphetamine Reptile ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B0000004HP Release Date: 1995-09-26 |
Tracks:
- Scrape
- Alleged
- Blame Me
- Out
- Can't See
- Get Off My Back
- Blew
- Empty Cartridge
- No Loss
- Test My Faith
- Ruin
- Swim
Amazon.com
It's ironic that while Unsane's debut release, Total Destruction, chose to keep their tribal noise grindings fully intact and raw, when they dropped back to indie they added elements to make their music slightly more accessible. That's not to say Scattered, Smothered & Covered is any less visceral than their previous releases, but if their earlier work hacked into the listener's skull like a rusty saw, this one slices cleanly with a more refined, razor-sharp precision. You don't bleed any less, it's just slightly less painful. Gone is the incessant, driving tribal beat that their original drummer, Charlie Ondras (who died of a heroin overdose), made an Unsane trademark. His replacement, Vinnie Signorelli, provides a more standard rock-oriented thump that makes some of the tunes downright groovy. Were it not for all of the distortion the bass, guitar, and vocals are pushed through, Scattered, Smothered & Covered might actually find some FM radio success. Unsane, however, is nowhere near ready to compromise the extreme, bleak noise rock they've gnashed out since 1991. Still, this tightening of their sound is a great step forward for a band that seemed to have reached a musical dead end, and it'll surely prove that they're more than one-dimensional distortion-mongers. --Adem TepedelenCustomer Reviews:
This record will blow your brains out your a**!.......2005-05-17
Genuine Noise Rock, Not Noise.......2005-04-09
A pioneering work of noise sculpture.......2004-11-21
Really, though, what makes this album an undying classic is the emotion these guys so clearly put into what they were doing. Now, when I say "emotion," I am most definitely NOT referring the prepackaged saccharine pumped out by every lame nu-metal and wuss-rock band on the airwaves these days. Rather, Unsane channelled all of their frustration and disaffection into creating some of the most compellingly demented music ever recorded, propelled by a succession of punishing rhythms and throat-ripping screams. Much like its equally brilliant followup, Occupational Hazard, Scattered, Smothered, and Covered is a sort of mood music for psychopaths. It's heavy, it's passionate, and it's technical: what more could you want?
this album rules so hard.......2003-09-06
one of the best albums all time-period........2003-01-18
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Honky
Melvins Manufacturer: Amphetamine Reptile ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B0000004IU Release Date: 1997-05-06 |
Tracks:
- They All Must Be Slaughtered
- Mombius Hibachi
- Lovely Butterfly
- Ptfalls In Serving Warrants
- Air Breather Deep In The Arms Of Morphius
- Laughing With Lucifer At Satan's Sideshow
- How
- Larry Lauders Walking Stick Tree
- Grin
- In The Freaktose The Bugs Are Dying
Customer Reviews:
I am Ahab..........2005-11-06
not just for white people.......2003-12-25
A wonderful triumph in a time of trouble.......2003-02-03
The results of this intensive songwriting period are fascinating, bringing The Melvins to new planes and universes of creativity never before touched upon by any of their 14+ prior releases. These eclectic new sound experiments venture into the worlds of ambient drones and moody space rock to reveal some of the band's truly interesting yet often overlooked influences. The extended aural gem "Air Breather Deep in the Arms of Morphius" recalls the heyday of psychedelic metal-heads Hawkwind and songs like "How--++--" and "Harry Lauder's Walking Stick Tree" would fit perfectly on Pink Floyd's 1973 classic "Dark Side of the Moon". Repetitive pulses and synth flares straight out of the Kraftwerk and Can songbook then perfect Honky's bad acid trip atmosphere. All of these established styles are then filtered into the perfect mixture that is uniquely "Melvinish" adding just the right amounts of dark overtones and schizophrenic diversity to set Honky apart as being anything but a rip off. With all of Honky's original development and improvisational experimentation however, there is still plenty of material here for fans of the Melvins' older work. The blasting guitars of "Mombius Hibachi" and "Lovely Butterfly" nearly blow out the speakers while the frenzied grind of "In the Freaktose the Bugs are Dying," is enough to make Metallica ... their pants on the spot.
The most endearing and important characteristic of Honky however is not the songwriting itself, but its testament to its creator's resilience and persistence in the face of adversity. Despite being relegated to an obscure Midwestern indie label, The Melvins not only managed to put out some of their best original music to date, but actually used the lo fi aesthetics to creatively enhance their sound in the same fashion as "Piper at the Gates of Dawn" or "The Velvet Underground and Nico". Obviously untarnished and more alive than ever, Honky was an amazing accomplishment from a transitional period that not only stands as a great album on its own terms but also expands the vast limits of The Melvins' sounds to their absolute breaking point.
Great...Album.......2002-04-16
Melvins at their uncompromising best............2001-12-28
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Born Annoying
Helmet Manufacturer: Amphetamine Reptile ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B0000004HH Release Date: 1995-04-21 |
Tracks:
- Born Annoying
- Rumble
- Shirley MacLaine
- Geisha To Go
- Taken
- Your Head
- Oven
- No Nicky No
- Primitive
- Born Annoying
Amazon.com
A bunch of hard-to-find B sides and out-of-print singles are collected here in one nice, little package. This is the Helmet I prefer--the one less interested in hammering the listener with gargantuan riffs than in the squall a guitar is capable of making within the confines of a bludgeoning rock song. The cover of the Melvins' "Oven" (available originally on a Sub Pop Singles Club comp) is certainly a highlight, as are the four songs from their first demo, two of which became the rare "Born Annoying" 7." Kudos to Am Rep for making all this stuff available on one CD, but where the hell's "Impressionable," the best Helmet song ever? --Adem TepedelenCustomer Reviews:
The Artwork... The bands BEST!.......2004-12-08
Many fans of Helmet was introduced to them by their album "Betty" (Just like me). You remember the Harmonics, the pleasure? Well forget it on this album. This Album of B Sides is the true Helmet orgin. The tracks are all Unique compared to their more listened to tracks like Milquetoast, Repetition, Unsung just to name a few. I dont think I have ever heard a song quite like the Album's Title Song "Born Annoying", and only Helmet can make it work. The beginning of "Shirley Mcclaine" blew me away the first time I heard it. I looked down at my radio and said to myself "Holy S#%#!" Even the song /Punk sound "Taken" blew me away. The bands Instrumental's (Rumble and No Nicky No) are good songs if you want to beat the crap out of someone.
The only track I did not like was the Remake of Born Annoying. It went to fast, and the Chorus wasnt as good as the Original one. But thats why there is a skip option on CD Players.
If you want to hear Helmet at their prime, pick up this album if you can find it. There is a reason why the Album Label was called "Noise".
It's no Betty.......2004-08-25
Born Annoying is nothing like Meantime or Betty. It is more like Strap it On with it's rough, dirty sound and the songs seem to have almost no structure to them. The song "Rumble" is a perfect example. Although it is the low point of the album, the rest of it doesn't get much better. Don't look for anything to sound like "Wilma's Rainbow" or "Unsung" on this album.
If you are the type of Helmet fan that thought Strap it On was their best work, you will probably like Born Annoying. If you are the type of fan that thought Betty was their best, like I said, I'm not sure how you could like this one as well. The sounds are very different. Born Annoying comes off to me sounding like a bunch of kids in their garage randomly banging on their instruments. If you are a fan of that sound, then by all means, buy this album.
A must-own for the Helmet fan.......2003-11-22
Also, the amazon.com reviewer wants to know where "Impressionable" is (and i agree, best Helmet song ever). I've linked to the album that contains it in my "recommended in addition to" link.
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Into the Vortex
Hammerhead Manufacturer: Amphetamine Reptile ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B0000004GQ Release Date: 1994-03-31 |
Tracks:
- Swallow
- Starline Locomotive
- Zesta
- All This Is Yours
- Brest
- Double Negative
- Empty Angel
- Galaxy 66
- Journey to the Center of Tetnus 4
Customer Reviews:
One of the greatest sonic hardcore albums ever.......2004-05-20
Blazing guitars, a maniac of a drummer, and bass lines straight up from the sewer. Yeah, so the guy can't sing, but he sure as hell can scream, with gut-wrenching, tragic lyrics that will either make you want to cry or do a cartwheel out a plate glass window.
Other hardcore albums continue to be weeded out of my collection as my tastes change, my mood mellows, and my hair falls out. 'Into the Vortex' will NEVER be lost, though. This album sums up more about modern life in nine songs than most groups manage in a whole career.
Clue: singing class.......2004-02-09
Louder than Grunge.......1999-12-17
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Iguana Iguana
Reptile Palace Orchestra Manufacturer: Omnium ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B00000IN40 Release Date: 1999-04-27 |
Tracks:
- El Pescador
- Enchanted Reptile Palace
- Sombre Reptiles
- Gankino Horo
- Speak Softly Love
- Small Horizons
- Lupita
- Bucimis
- Catwoman
- Night Is What A Harbor's For
Customer Reviews:
Excellent world roots music.......1999-06-15
World Music:
- Salve Jorge [Import]
- Scio [Import]
- Self Inflicted [Import]
- Shangaan Disco
- Slipping Away [Import]
- Solo Tango [Import]
- Songs from Greece
- Songs from Italy
- Sotto O'Sole [Import]
- Surprise-Partie: Best Dance Record
World Music
Classical Treasures: Classics for Meditation
C.P.E. Bach: Orchestral Symphonies
Bride of the Wind / Fleming, Thibaudet, Endelman (2001 Film) [Soundtrack]