music to listen too
![]() |
|
|
Listen Of $14.38 PAUL BRYAN is the pseudonym Brazilian artist and musician S?RGIO SA used to produce an album of British and American influenced folk tunes. Sergio is a blind-born keyboard player with a long and successful musical career in Brazil as composer, producer and arranger. JAZZANOVA member JUERGEN VON KNOBLAUCH found the LP while record digging in Berlin 9 years ago. He played it to the rest of the (Sonar) collective and they all instantly fell for it. As the time goes by this record has been forgotten but it was without counting on JAZZANOVA who proudly re-release it on Sonar Kollektiv 35 years after it's original release! And after all those years `Listen Of' is still a beautiful and soothing record of ballads and romantic songs. And like JAZZANOVA you will in love with PAUL BRYAN 's `Listen Of' instantly too. |
|
|
Listen. $11.95 Listen. |
|
|
Listen * $17.73 Listen * |
|
|
Listen $19.52 Listen |
|
|
Listen To This $9.95 Listen To This |
|
|
Listen To These... $20.13 Listen To These... |
|
|
Listen To The Music $19.73 Listen To The Music |
|
|
Listen To The Music ... $17.63 Listen To The Music ... |
|
|
Listen to Me $5.95 When Mom and Dad are too busy to talk and to listen, a boy and his grandmother enjoy conversation and spending time together. |
|
|
You Can Listen Too $15.18 Description not provided. |
|
|
Listen to This $89.05 Listen to the music. Hear the elements. Expand your playlist... |
|
|
Listen, Listen: The Definitive Collection $12.98 The Merry-Go-Round's Listen, Listen: The Definitive Collection is a near-perfect example of doing a reissue the right way. Lovingly put together by the folks at Rev-Ola, the package is a perfect blend of enlightenment and entertainment, with insightful liner notes that feature new interviews with many members of the group and their guiding light, Emitt Rhodes, excellent photos, clean and crisp sound, and best of all, the wonderful music of the Merry-Go-Round and Emitt Rhodes. First, some bookkeeping. The opening half of the disc contains the group's lone album released on A&M in 1967, The Merry-Go-Round, the second half is the Emitt Rhodes album released by A&M in 1970 (and also in '71 with a different cover and an altered track listing) called The American Dream. The album is made up of songs Rhodes cut with studio pros in 1969 after the demise of the group, as well as demos recorded in the latter days of the Merry-Go-Round. The package is rounded out by four songs taken from singles released after The Merry-Go-Round, the mono version with drums of "Time Will Show the Wiser," and as a bonus, the band's recording of "Good Vibrations" with A&M honcho Herb Alpert on lead trumpet. Now for the music. The Merry-Go-Round is a breathtaking blend of chiming folk-rock guitars, British Invasion harmony vocals, baroque pop arrangements, and pure pop songcraft that sounds daisy fresh in 2005. The Beatles are a huge influence, there is plenty of Paul McCartney in Rhodes' sweet vocals and their vocal harmonies. You can hear the Byrds a bit, some Left Banke (especially on the sweeping orchestral pop gem "You're a Very Lovely Woman"), some L.A. garage on rockers like "Where Have You Been All My Life" and "Lowdown"; the group definitely didn't exist in a vacuum. There are some songs, though, that are quite unique and original like "Time Will Show the Wiser" with its otherworldly sped-up and backwards guitars and enchanting melody; the warm and bouncy hit single "Live," and "Had to Run Around" an exquisite ballad whose tender beauty foreshadows Rhodes' classic 1970 Emitt Rhodes album. These songs, and the overall quality of the songs and the group's loose and earthy playing, help lift the album above the pack and should lead to it being mentioned in the same breath as Love's first album or Buffalo Springfield's first when talking about classic American debut albums of the '60s. The singles included on the reissue show the band adding piano and a fuller sound, not too surprising since many of the tracks on the album were demos. They are fine songs, too; 1968's "Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Heart's Club Band"-inspired "Listen, Listen" rocks harder than anything else they recorded and has one of Rhodes' most intense vocals; "She Laughed Loud" is a self-mocking tune with some great background vocals, and "Missing You" incorporates some lovely harpsichord and was unjustly buried as a B-side. The American Dream album features some of Rhodes' best songs, like the rollicking Harr |
|
|
Listen to Music Band $13.29 Listen to Music Band |
|
|
How To Listen To Music $23.43 How To Listen To Music |
|
|
Now, Listen! $11.98 For those lucky few able to tune it in or dig up the session CD-R's passed from fan to fan, Coldcut and DJ Food's Solid Steel program has been, bar none, the leading light of the turntablist underground since its 1988 inception. As freewheeling as American crews like Invisibl Skratch Piklz or Beat Junkies but able to cast a much wider net over the font of musical knowledge on record, the Ninja Tune collective have blown up London's airwaves -- first on the pirate station Kiss-FM and later on BBC -- with mix after invincible mix of the broadest beats in the world. Finally, in 2001, Ninja Tune inaugurated a (hopefully long) series of Solid Steel mixes with Now, Listen!, the results of a 60-minutes-of-madness session featuring DJ Food (aka PC and Strictly Kev) plus DK. Though it wasn't recorded entirely live, the results are far too thrilling to bother quibbling over technicalities. The musical mind-melds include ska-revivalists the Beat over an early Roni Size production, the Commodores' "Assembly Line" mixed up with educational records, a Mr. Scruff track over a Motion Man rap, and Cut Chemist's ironically Coldcut-referencing "2.5 Minute Workout" of Blackalicious' "Alphabet Aerobics," plus snippets of everyone from Ray Bradbury to Herbie Hancock to Perrey-Kingsley to Man from U.N.K.L.E. star David McCallum to Innerzone Orchestra to Four Tet to David Shire's score to the 1974 heist film The Taking of Pelham One-Two-Three. No surprise -- it's also one of the best-paced mixes heard on an official release since Coldcut & PC's 70 Minutes of Madness tape from 1996. Showcasing the best in dance and groove no matter which historical or musical boundaries they obliterate in the process, Now, Listen! is one of the best mix albums released to date. ~ John Bush, Rovi Performers: Gudtyme - Rap |
|
|
Stop and Listen $9.93 Probably the greatest set in Baby Face Willette's all-too-slim discography, Stop and Listen matches the organist with the hugely sympathetic team of guitarist Grant Green and drummer Ben Dixon (the same trio lineup who recorded Green's debut LP, Grant's First Stand). With no saxophonist this second time around, it's just Willette and Green in the solo spotlight, and they play marvelously off of one another. As a soloist, Willette has a nimble, airy touch, and though he owes no debt to the modal style of Larry Young, he has a greater melodic imagination than many of his instrument's straight blues players. What's more, his playing is far less in-the-pocket than his inspiration, Jimmy Smith's; Willette can really make a groove percolate, whether he's soloing or adding keen rhythmic interest with his left hand (witness the throbbing slow blues of "Chances Are Few" or the marching beat of "Soul Walk"). Green is in prime form as well, in particular contributing some unbearably lovely solos to the standard "At Last." Nearly every selection is memorable, with other highlights coming from Willette's manic original "Jumpin' Jupiter," a breezy treatment of "Willow Weep for Me," and Nat Adderley's jauntily swinging "Worksong." There's nary a bit of sleepy meandering on this set of grooves; each musician is plugged in and ready to wail. With Blue Note's extraordinary stable of talent, it's a shame that Willette never led another session for the label, which makes Stop and Listen that much more essential for soul-jazz fans. ~ Steve Huey, Rovi Performers: Baby Face Willette - Organ; Ben Dixon - Drums; Grant Green - Guitar |

Love music worth listening to
The majority of people if they rock and roll or heavy metal and rock sounds of loud music, but really think about that are not completely honest. Whether you rock, jazz or classical music to play an increased risk. In case you are not a musician, but to enjoy going to live shows, you also very well be extremely loud music for your hearing as well as subjecting. If your radio or MP3 player, enjoying music, you usually crank up the volume needed to remove background noise. This is especially so when you are playing music, your car is running. There are plenty of professional artists who are suffering from tinnitus. Some artists who have admitted Barbra Streisand, Pete, Sting, and include Neil Clapton. I hear ringing in his ears because of Eric Clapton "unplugged" shows started.
There also create songs that artists have experienced ringing in the ears about. Tracks by Wilco, Bob Dylan, Nine Inch Nails, U2, Beck and Peter Frampton noted ear ringing. You probably can remember many others. Lars Ulrich of Metallica on TV was that the younger generation often has an iPod in their ears to express my concern about the shows. Currently, a popular video on YouTube.com called "Tinnitus - Can you hear?" This one minute video clip about ringing in the ears have warned youngsters and tell them it really well in live shows is to wear ear protection. In addition to wearing hearing protection, you can control down to the tools you need to keep the volume level. A low amount of risk is pretty cool that you can easily its normal tone of voice you can hear someone talking. Initially when I first heard that, I thought "Wow. That is seriously cool." Some high-quality music, inexpensive way you do not get the earplugs at the drugstore find.
Express love is easy when you have the right means or more specific right to tell my experience to find songs. Lyrics and music to art to which all people have the power to capture hearts and minds as it is. Express an emotion like love Love is simple with the right kind of music. Love is a wonderful feeling and you need the right kind of music to express feelings to another person. My dear, mother, father, siblings and friends love to express love songs though is just perfect. For terms to send any message to anyone around, so if you more or less a love song that puts you in words all the feelings and emotions really come across in his hand a great song capacity. Love songs not only tell about the feelings and emotions, but also a romantic ambiance to create when they are played. There are many other love songs associated with some of the amazing things. Songs, it sounds and beats of the music in general between songs and love songs of all types can make all the difference. I love your list of favorite songs, they just let me feel romantic, no matter what I'm in the mood. Love songs to some of my personal favorites in the category you're feeling my love by Bob Dylan. Find me a romantic who does not love this song and I believe I will rebuild the list. Song sensitive, love and sex in all around the world for people of all age groups are appealing. The song is just special and no one who is out in the heat affection can remember the song is truly in love. Love songs, meaningful lyrics is one thing that most people are appealing.
About the Author
This article was prepared for israel kamakawiwo'ole, please visit them for more information.
Tags: audio, mp3, music, music to listen to, music to listen to when high, music to listen to while high, music to listen to while reading, music to listen to while studying, reference, web2.0


US $44.39







































































