Bestsellers > Music > A Cappella
|
|
Buy Now |
Feels Good(more) »rank: 35430by: Take 6
:Album Description:When you are the world's greatest jazz, R&B, soul/gospel acapella vocal group, people have a difficult time describing your music. it always seems inadequate. Beginning in 1989 with their self titled debut, Take 6 has been hard to categorize. Selling a million records, nominated for Best New Artist at the Grammy Awards and winning two Grammy's, Best Jazz vocal performance, Best Soul Gospel Performance, Take 6 has not slowed down a single quarter note. Forming their own record compnay and partnering with 33rd Street, Take 6 is bringing their groove-laden acapella vocals to every corner of the country. 'Feels Good' is the ... |
Buy Now |
Brothers(more) »rank: 133942by: Take 6
:Album Description:When you are the world's greatest jazz, R&B, soul/gospel acapella vocal group, people have a difficult time describing your music. it always seems inadequate. Beginning in 1989 with their self titled debut, Take 6 has been hard to categorize. Selling a million records, nominated for Best New Artist at the Grammy Awards and winning two Grammy's, Best Jazz vocal performance, Best Soul Gospel Performance, Take 6 has not slowed down a single quarter note. Forming their own record compnay and partnering with 33rd Street, Take 6 is bringing their groove-laden acapella vocals to every corner of the country. 'Feels Good' is the ... |
Buy Now |
On Christmas Day: New Carols from King's Choir of King's College, Cambridge(more) »rank: 63895by: Edward Grint, Thomas Ades, Richard Rodney Bennett, Sir Lennox Berkeley, Judith Bingham, Sir Harrison Birtwistle, Diana Burrell, John Casken, Robert Chilcott, Sir Peter Maxwell Davies, Jonathan Dove, Alexander Goehr, Jonathan Harvey, Robin Greville Holloway, James MacMillan, Nicholas Maw, Arvo Part, Stephen Harrison Paulus, John Rutter, Peter Sculthorpe, Giles Swayne, Judith Weir, John Woolrich, Stephen Cleobury, Philippa Davies, Cambridge King's College
:Album Description:When you are the world's greatest jazz, R&B, soul/gospel acapella vocal group, people have a difficult time describing your music. it always seems inadequate. Beginning in 1989 with their self titled debut, Take 6 has been hard to categorize. Selling a million records, nominated for Best New Artist at the Grammy Awards and winning two Grammy's, Best Jazz vocal performance, Best Soul Gospel Performance, Take 6 has not slowed down a single quarter note. Forming their own record compnay and partnering with 33rd Street, Take 6 is bringing their groove-laden acapella vocals to every corner of the country. 'Feels Good' is the ... |
Buy Now |
Don't Tell Me You Do(more) »rank: 63139by: Rockapella
: :Rockapella fans, rejoice! For years this dynamic vocal group's recordings have been available only as expensive Japanese imports or hard-to-find U.S. self-produced CDs. Don't Tell Me You Do, released on the heels of a national TV commercial that Rockapella recorded for Folgers coffee, should give the group its widest distribution--and widest audience--yet. This album, largely a reissue of 1997's Rockapella (now out of print), showcases their signature combination of tight harmonies mixed with rock, jazz, and R&B. Highlights include the gorgeous ballads 'I'll Hear Your Voice' and 'Don't Tell Me You Do,' the infectious beat of 'I Am Your Man' (driven by the ... |
Buy Now |
The Kings Singers - New Day(more) »rank: 15318by: John David, Peter Christie, Cy Coleman, Warren Casey, Bob Barratt, John Lennon, Lionel Richie, Don Schlitz, Hal David, George Harrison, Jim Jacobs, Benny Andersson, Paul McCartney, Michel Legrand, Barry Manilow, Ed Welch, Harry Robinson, Daryl Runswick, The King's Singers, Gordon Langford Quartet, Cliff Hall
: :Rockapella fans, rejoice! For years this dynamic vocal group's recordings have been available only as expensive Japanese imports or hard-to-find U.S. self-produced CDs. Don't Tell Me You Do, released on the heels of a national TV commercial that Rockapella recorded for Folgers coffee, should give the group its widest distribution--and widest audience--yet. This album, largely a reissue of 1997's Rockapella (now out of print), showcases their signature combination of tight harmonies mixed with rock, jazz, and R&B. Highlights include the gorgeous ballads 'I'll Hear Your Voice' and 'Don't Tell Me You Do,' the infectious beat of 'I Am Your Man' (driven by the ... |
Buy Now |
Baltic Voices 2(more) »rank: 88482from: Harmonia Mundi Fr.
: :Rockapella fans, rejoice! For years this dynamic vocal group's recordings have been available only as expensive Japanese imports or hard-to-find U.S. self-produced CDs. Don't Tell Me You Do, released on the heels of a national TV commercial that Rockapella recorded for Folgers coffee, should give the group its widest distribution--and widest audience--yet. This album, largely a reissue of 1997's Rockapella (now out of print), showcases their signature combination of tight harmonies mixed with rock, jazz, and R&B. Highlights include the gorgeous ballads 'I'll Hear Your Voice' and 'Don't Tell Me You Do,' the infectious beat of 'I Am Your Man' (driven by the ... |
Buy Now |
Songs from the Soul(more) »rank: 36579by: Blenders
:Album Description:In the tradition of Rod Stewart's `°Songbook' collections and Michael McDonald's 'Motown,' The Blenders have selected some classic soul tracks and done them as the only The Blenders can. With over 200.000 units sold in their career this will be another major release for the band. The Blenders are proud to call Minneapolis, MN, their home base. They have spent the last 14 years crisscrossing the country with their unique style of vocal harmony music. They have toured 46 states to date and opened for such acts as Jay Leno, Howie Mandel, Savage Garden, Blues Traveler, Chicago, The Righteous Brothers, Lou Rawls, ... |
Buy Now |
Vaughan Williams, Holst: Choral Folksong Arrangements(more) »rank: 39645from: EMI Classics
:Album Description:From the series of British Composers, Vaughan Williams & Holst with the Choral Folksong Arrangements of London Madrigal Singers with Christopher Bishop and the Baccholian Singers of London. |
Buy Now |
In Concert(more) »rank: 88384by: Rockapella
: :Today's popular music has reduced it to a kind of subgenre--sometimes singled out by the label 'unplugged,' as if it were like taking to a cabin with no running water for a week--but the practice of 'a cappella' vocalism (i.e., voices alone without accompaniment) is the heart and soul of singing. Natural as it seems to the ear, it's true virtuosity that enables the vocal quintet Rockapella to hold audiences spellbound. Ever since their street-performing days in late-1980s Manhattan, the group has evolved a style of sweet close harmonies and acoustical illusions all the more impressive for the effortlessness with which they carry ... |
Buy Now |
Bendy's Law(more) »rank: 43150by: Da Vinci's Notebook
: :Today's popular music has reduced it to a kind of subgenre--sometimes singled out by the label 'unplugged,' as if it were like taking to a cabin with no running water for a week--but the practice of 'a cappella' vocalism (i.e., voices alone without accompaniment) is the heart and soul of singing. Natural as it seems to the ear, it's true virtuosity that enables the vocal quintet Rockapella to hold audiences spellbound. Ever since their street-performing days in late-1980s Manhattan, the group has evolved a style of sweet close harmonies and acoustical illusions all the more impressive for the effortlessness with which they carry ... |




Marie opens the show with an outdoor rendition of "We Need a Little Christmas" and then moves into the studio where Kirk Cameron arrives on a snowmobile (fresh from rescuing a trio of blonde snow bunnies) to read "The First Christmas Story." Lee Greenwood performs "Christmas to Christmas" and later a duet with Marie. "It's Beginning to Look a Lot Like Christmas" is sung by Sally Struthers and daughter with help from the Osmond Boys--six stepping stones ages 4 to 12 who have the senior Osmonds' moves down pat. The adorable award, though, goes to Marie's 5-year-old son, Steven, who performs a rockin' version of "Santa Claus Is Comin' to Town" (clapping on the off-beat nearly the whole song).
Marie has a good, strong voice, but many of the songs are overproduced and melodramatic. This, most likely, is a product of the big, pouffy '80s (her hair and outfits are also bigger-than-life) rather than a reflection of her talents. The closing number, "O Holy Night," sung by Marie alone, is quite lovely. --Dana Van Nest