
ALBUm COVER??
WHRE CAN i GET THE album cover for the korn ft amy lee song freak on leash?
search for it on googles images.
Chris Brown Fortune Album Cover, Release Date
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CR Gibson Pocket Page Recipe Book Custom recipe storage in classic black, features top-stitched genuine bonded leather with window frames for embossed letter inserts that slip in easily for instant personalization. CR Gibson’s Pocket Page Recipe Book is the perfect place to organize and store favorite recipes. 20 PVC-free pocket page sheets hold 40 4-inch x 6-inch decorated recipe cards and are easy to wipe clean; 12 tabbed decora… |
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Vandor The Beatles Coasters Set with Tin $16.94 Beatlemania lives on with this unique coaster set. This 13 piece set includes coasters featuring each of the Beatles 13 albums. The perfect tribute to John Lennon, Paul McCartney, George Harrison and Ringo Starr…. |
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Bon Appetit Recipe Book $17.95 C.R. Gibson’s lines of recipe holders have always been the best you’d find anywhere, and the Bon Appetit collection is no exception. It’s rich, warm red faux leather covering makes it feel luxurious, yet ready to use. The 12 tabbed dividers help you group your recipes by categories, and the recipe card protectors keep your cards clean, and ready to use. The book comes with 20 sheets and forty card… |
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Michael Jackson’s Ghosts $14.95 Asia exclusive VCD (viewable on all DVD players) features the ‘King Of Pop’s’ 1997 short film (38 minutess), produced to promote his Blood On The Dance Floor album. The film was directed by special effects wizard Stan Winston and co-written by horror icon Stephen King. The film tells the story of a scary Maestro with supernatural powers, who is being forced out of a small town by its mayor. The mo… |
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Ricky Martin: Live – Black and White Tour [Blu-ray] $8.40 RICKY MARTIN LIVE BLACK & WHITE TOUR – Blu-Ray Mov… |
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Final Fantasy VII – Advent Children [UMD for PSP] $14.94 The question facing any viewer of the Japanese CG feature Final Fantasy VII: Advent Children is: do you have to know the games on which it’s based in order to understand the film? And the answer is: it certainly helps. But even complete novices (i.e., most parents) in the Final Fantasy world will find some entertainment in its wealth of fantasy-based action, and the animation never fails to astoni… |
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Eyes Open $6.42 Snow Patrol are frequently compared to Coldplay in the press, which seems strange as they write far better songs and do not appear to be quite so self-hating, nor as rich. Their delightfully dour little pop songs do touch on the melancholic side of things, but the lyrics are wonderfully slice-of-life descriptions. Singer/lyricist Gary Lightbody gives a shout-out to Sufjan Stevens when on the punch… |
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Scotch Book Tape 845 3M 845 Book Tape is a tough crystal-clear transparent tape with a long-aging, synthetic adhesive that conforms readily to book contours and flexes with cover movements. Excellent for repairing, reinforcing, protecting and covering bound edges and surfaces. Use on books, magazines, pamphlets, record album jackets and more. The transparent polypropylene backing has excellent clarity which doesn’t hi… |
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Pat Metheny Group $9.05 Having crisscrossed America to the tune of 250 to 300 one-nighters a year while getting their sound and repertoire together, the Pat Metheny Group struck gold with this self-titled jazz-fusion classic in 1978. All the familiar components that have defined their evolution over the last 20 years are in place on Pat Metheny Group: the leader’s dark, reverberant electric guitar sound and graceful ac… |
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The Preacher’s Wife $4.12 Features include: •MPAA Rating: PG•Format: DVD•Runtime: 124 minutes… |
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!Cocinando!: Fifty Years of Latin Album Cover Art $15.82 New – Driving beats, coursing rhythms, swaying skirts, and swaggering bandleaders playing deep into the sultry night: Latin music is a celebration of life and sensuality, and nowhere are these essential values better reflected than the dazzling record covers that present this music to the world. “Cocinando!: Fifty Years of Latin Album Covers draws together the most beautiful, sexy, colorful, innovative, and creative Latin record covers from all the various genres of Latin music: Mambo, Conga, Ru |
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!Cocinando!: Fifty Years of Latin Album Cover Art $7.5 Used – Driving beats, coursing rhythms, swaying skirts, and swaggering bandleaders playing deep into the sultry night: Latin music is a celebration of life and sensuality, and nowhere are these essential values better reflected than the dazzling record covers that present this music to the world. Cocinando!: Fifty Years of Latin Album Cover Art draws together the most beautiful, sexy, colorful, innovative, and creative Latin record covers from all the various genres of Latin music: mambo, salsa, |
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Neutral Milk Hotel, In the Aeroplane Over the Sea $6.03 Used – Of all the recordings to emerge from the Athens-via-Denver collective called “Elephant 6″, Neutral Milk Hotel’s second album is the one that has worked its way under the most skins. “Magnet” magazine named it the best album of the 1990s, and “Creative Loafing” recently devoted a cover story to one fan’s quest to understand why bandleader Jeff Mangum dropped out of sight soon after “Aeroplane’s” release. The record sells steadily to an audience that finds it through word of mouth. Weird, b |
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Simple Minds $10.99 Used – This is a study of the success of the rock band Simple Minds, examining their history, chart appearances and sell-out tours. The dynamics between Jim Kerr and Chrissie Hynde are discussed, but the author attempts to cover every influence on the band and all its members and significant moments in the band’s history. Adam Sweeting reminds old fans of the heady early days of the 80s and perhaps informs the newer audiences of this band’s roots. Each record, each album, he asserts must be reas |
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Simple Minds $71.25 Used – This is a study of the success of the rock band Simple Minds, examining their history, chart appearances and sell-out tours. The dynamics between Jim Kerr and Chrissie Hynde are discussed, but the author attempts to cover every influence on the band and all its members and significant moments in the band’s history. Adam Sweeting reminds old fans of the heady early days of the 80s and perhaps informs the newer audiences of this band’s roots. Each record, each album, he asserts must be reas |
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# Untitled Second [Bomp!] $15.98 The Telescopes began as a run-of-the-mill British shoegazer band fully under the thrall of noise and My Bloody Valentine, perhaps a little angrier than most of that ilk but pretty unmemorable. At some point, however, they discovered subtlety and songcraft. They traded in most of their noise pedals for some that make the guitars go all spacy and phased-out. They also wrote a batch of songs with melodies and hooks reminiscent of Love or The Notorious Byrd Brothers-era Byrds. The songs on The Telescopes are built on acoustic guitars, then the aforementioned tricked-out electric guitars are laid on top and garnished with bongos, organs, pianos, and all sorts of classic instruments. Stephen Lawrie’s vocals are restrained and semi-emotional and female backing vocals add a touch of sweetness that might otherwise be missing from the record, as the overall atmosphere is very moody and introspective. A large chunk of the credit should be given to producer Guy Fixsen, who also helmed some great records with Moose and Rollerskate Skinny and was a member of Laika. Sadly, the Telescopes split soon after this album came out, but the classic sound they came up with here lives on in bands like Mojave 3 and the Verve. [In 2008 Bomp! reissued the album under the title # Untitled Second, something Rev-Ola had done in 2004. That previous edition included two bonus tracks ("Dnaanb" and "Tornado") and a new cover. The Bomp! version keeps the same cover but adds three different bonus tracks: the EP version of "High on Fire," a sitar-led version of "The Sleepwalk" and non-LP track "Sunspray". Hopefully the next time the record is reissued the label involved pulls together every stray track, re-mix and version, and comes up with something definitive.] ~ Tim Sendra, Rovi |
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‘Em Are I $14.99 The bandaged-head cover cartoon and cutesy title wordplay of Jeffrey Lewis’ fifth album provide a decent indication, for the uninitiated, of the N.Y.C. songwriter/illustrator’s goofiness and droll wit, qualities that are evident in many of the songs contained within. But they also hint, cleverly and somewhat obliquely, at the album’s surprisingly weighty subject matter: though not specifically medical in focus, most of these songs are concerned with death, existential pain, and the otherwise more corporeal aspects of the human experience. Actually, “concerned” may be the wrong word — far from morbid, Lewis often sounds insouciant and practically gleeful in his perspectives on mortality, especially on the screwy bluegrass stomper “Whistle Past the Graveyard” and the jaunty “Good Old Pig, Gone to Avalon,” a fond eulogy to a beloved porker (with some suitably unhinged soloing courtesy of J Mascis). The tone-setting two-chord talking blues “If Life Exists(?)” and the wistful “To Be Objectified,” with its hippie-dippie philosophizing, are more pensive and brooding, but they maintain a generous and optimistic outlook, with Lewis’ affably nasal delivery dotted with jokey self-reference and the occasional groan-worthy one-liner. Best of all is “Bugs and Flowers,” a mellow ramble that finds Lewis out walking along the tracks, ruminating on growth, decay, and universal oneness, in a touchingly quirky and unaffected fashion. It’s not all mortality and metaphysics: “Roll Bus Roll” is a sweet if world-weary ode to bus travel; scrappy opener “Slogans” offers a series of motivational affirmations, more or less literalizing the album’s titular pun along the way (“Everyone you meet is you/Divided by what they’ve been through”); and the self-castigating “Broken Broken Broken Heart” is an endearingly honest take on good old-fashioned lovesickness (complete with a bouncy singalong chorus). All of these are very good tunes, but it’s the heartfelt content at the a… |
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…And Then He Kissed Me/Blame It on Love $13.98 Ohio-born and Stiff Records-approved teen dream Rachel Sweet only cut four albums during her too-brief career in music before moving on to become a successful writer and producer in television, and her third and fourth LPs make their CD debut in this two-fer reissue from Collectables. Most of 1981′s …And Then He Kissed Me was produced by Rick Chertoff, who fitted Sweet out in epic-scale arrangements with a decided Springsteen and Spector influence, but Sweet’s big, passionate vocal style was more than up to the challenge, and the first two tracks, “Shadows of the Night” and “Then He Kissed Me/Be My Baby,” walk a fine line between the spectacular and the bombastic, with Sweet’s dead-on delivery nudging them into to the former territory. The rest of the album is uneven, with Sweet not always getting the material she deserves, and you have to wonder how she got stuck with Rex Smith as a duet partner on “Everlasting Love.” But the best moments of …And Then He Kissed Me show just how great a rock singer Sweet could be when given the right backing. Released in 1982, Blame It on Love is Sweet’s weakest album, and unfortunately it seems she carries a large share of the blame — she wrote or co-wrote all the songs and produced the sessions herself in collaboration with Marc Blatte and Larry Gottlieb. Sweet seemed to be reaching for a sexier, poppier image on Blame It on Love, and she looks luscious on the cover, but the album is short on the tough, spunky rock that was her strongest suit, and though she’s in solid voice throughout, for every song like “Paralyzed” and “American Girl” that fits her personality like a glove, there’s a couple like “Cool Heart” and “Sticks and Stones” that fall flat. (It’s worth noting Sweet wrote and produced “Paralyzed” and “American Girl” by her lonesome, which might suggest she didn’t have as much autonomy on the rest of the album as the credits suggest.) Fans will be happy to see the latter half of Rachel Sweet’s rec… |
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1, 2, To the Bass $11.98 Stanley Clarke is without doubt a phenomenally talented bassist but has not done much to showcase this ability on his own recordings since the late ’70s. You can chalk that up mostly to Clarke’s propensity for trite, pop-oriented material that does little to illuminate his great technical command of the instrument or to engage the listener either melodically or lyrically. 1, 2, to the Bass is a step in the right direction with a more jazz-oriented feel and some interesting guest appearances. Rapper Q-Tip gets things off to a nice start on the title track which reimagines ’90s hip-hop jazz as “quiet storm” R&B. “Simply Said” is reminiscent of Sting’s more fusion-style originals with flutist Hubert Laws on a nice melodic hook. There is also an inspired reworking of the R&B classic “Where Is the Love” featuring Glenn Lewis and Amel Larrieux. Later on, if “Los Caballos (The Horses)” sounds a little too much like Madonna’s “Borderline,” and Oprah Winfrey’s reading of Maya Angelou’s “I Shall Not Be Moved” seems a bit out of place on an album that includes a song titled “Just Cruzin’,” there’s at least the “Rock It”-styled electro-disco-funk of “Bout the Bass.” And don’t forget the monstrous “freak” funk cover of “Hair” that almost redeems everything guitarist Joe Satriani has ever done. Perhaps not the exhilarating breakthrough one would hope, 1, 2, to the Bass is nonetheless a very exciting return to form. ~ Matt Collar, Rovi |
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100 Best Beatles Songs: A Passionate Fan’s Guide $14.95 Which Song is the Best and Why? Read it and see! Organized by rank, from 1 to 100, this illustrated celebration of the best songs by the boys who revolutionized rock-and-roll includes expert commentary, historical context, interview material, and lots of great sidebars (including “best” lists from some of today’s pop music powerhouses.) Like all “best of” lists, the book’s opinionated stance generates animated discussion.Here, There, and Everywhere is profusely illustrated with photos of the band at work and play, and all of the unforgettable album-cover art. Appendices include a complete song list, discography, videography, and bibliography, making it a one-stop source of Beatles facts and figures. |

