Bestsellers > Music > Compilations
|
|
Buy Now |
Heart of the Congos(more) »rank: 65822by: The Congos
|
Buy Now |
Putumayo Presents: African Groove(more) »rank: 11425by: Various Artists
: :This ain’t your daddy’s Afrobeat, but a prime sampler of cutting-edge urban dance grooves by African artists. Of course, most non-classical Western styles can trace their essence to the continent anyway. But now, as American and European pop saturate the world’s airwaves and the internet is omnipresent, enthusiastic cross-pollination in the opposite direction has also become commonplace. Ancient tribal traditions are colliding--and colluding--with hip-hop, funk, reggae, and electronica, incorporating every imaginable sound-manipulation technology with compulsively danceable results. The set opens with a spine-loosening, mid-tempo floor-warmer by Mali’s techno Issa Bagayogo, and progresses through a small universe where synth patches, wah-wahs, programmed beats, and ... |
Buy Now |
Harder They Come (Deluxe Edition)(more) »rank: 18454from: Hip-O Records
: :Jamaican filmmaker Perry Henzell made reggae an integral player in his gritty 1973 saga of a renegade Kingston singer who becomes a modern Robin Hood, casting one of the style's earliest stars, Jimmy Cliff, in the lead, and filling this soundtrack--here presented in a remastered version--with classics from Toots & the Maytals ('Pressure Drop,' 'Sweet and Dandy'), Desmond Dekker ('Shanty Town'), the Melodians ('Rivers of Babylon'), and the Slickers ('Johnny Too Bad'). Cliff himself gets pole position, however, getting in the first ('You Can Get It If You Really Want') and last ('The Harder They Come') words in this first-rate reggae primer, which ... |
Buy Now |
Equal Rights(more) »rank: 22389by: Peter Tosh
: :Even though Captured Live might be Peter Tosh's greatest recorded gift, this 1977 studio album was his best--by far--away from the stage. Equal Rights opens with two great salvos, 'Get Up, Stand Up' and 'Downpressor Man,' both of them politically unequivocal in their support, aptly, of human rights and political equity. In his post-Wailers days, Tosh seemed ever in dialogue with his conscience and his obsession with Bob Marley's fame. Tosh sought a place for himself somewhere between reggae and pop (check out the Mick Jagger and Tosh duet, '(You Gotta Walk and) Don't Look Back' on the hits pack Scrolls of the ... |
Buy Now |
Radio(more) »rank: 43969by: Ky-Mani Marley
: :'Radio' will be Ky-Mani Marley's first release since his Grammy nominated album, Many More Roads, five years ago. The album features several key singles including One Time, The March and Conversation among others. All of the songs contain Marley s unique sound of classical reggae beats mixed with contemporary hip hop. Featured artists include Young Buck and Mya.Son of the legendary Bob Marley, Ky-Mani continues the exodus in a different, but difficult world after 30 years. |
Buy Now |
I Can Feel Your Pain(more) »rank: 34328by: Gyptian
:Album Description:Gyptian's multi-faceted music blends influences as diverse as Cold Play & I Wayne, blending contemporary Reggae and R&B styles with convincing results. The Tenor delivers emotive ballads and mid-tempo, love songs laced with strong melodies falsetto blasts to maximum effect. The album displays strong talent and musical growth, with Gyptian sharing in writing and production credits. His 2006 album, My Name Is Gyptian, established Gyptian as a strong new talent and the 2008 album is primed to take him to new heights internationally. Led off by the hit single of the same name, 'I Can Feel Your Pain' is just what Gyptian ... |
Buy Now |
Bad Boys(more) »rank: 7383by: Inner Circle
:Album Description:Gyptian's multi-faceted music blends influences as diverse as Cold Play & I Wayne, blending contemporary Reggae and R&B styles with convincing results. The Tenor delivers emotive ballads and mid-tempo, love songs laced with strong melodies falsetto blasts to maximum effect. The album displays strong talent and musical growth, with Gyptian sharing in writing and production credits. His 2006 album, My Name Is Gyptian, established Gyptian as a strong new talent and the 2008 album is primed to take him to new heights internationally. Led off by the hit single of the same name, 'I Can Feel Your Pain' is just what Gyptian ... |
Buy Now |
Arkology(more) »rank: 42724by: Lee "Scratch" Perry
: :The nearly four hours of astounding music encoded on these three discs merely scratch the surface of the highly personal sonic universe created by this legendarily eccentric, yet ridiculously prolific, dub-reggae producer. It's still the best source of entry into Lee 'Scratch' Perry's world, though, a place defined by homemade avant-garde production techniques applied to the wittiest, angriest, sexiest, and most soulful reggae tunes ever written. Perry was born in 1936, and his career spans the history of Jamaican music. These 52 tracks, however, derive mainly from the late 1970s, when he was at the height of his considerable powers and recording hits ... |
Buy Now |
Funky Kingston/In the Dark(more) »rank: 73640by: Toots & the Maytals
: :The nearly four hours of astounding music encoded on these three discs merely scratch the surface of the highly personal sonic universe created by this legendarily eccentric, yet ridiculously prolific, dub-reggae producer. It's still the best source of entry into Lee 'Scratch' Perry's world, though, a place defined by homemade avant-garde production techniques applied to the wittiest, angriest, sexiest, and most soulful reggae tunes ever written. Perry was born in 1936, and his career spans the history of Jamaican music. These 52 tracks, however, derive mainly from the late 1970s, when he was at the height of his considerable powers and recording hits ... |
Buy Now |
Labour of Love(more) »rank: 29927by: UB40
: :UB40 are not great innovators, but they are great imitators, and, in a sense, Labour of Love made them the Pat Boone of reggae. Featuring a handsome and clean-cut (by reggae standards) white singer, Ali Campbell, UB40 covered Jamaican standards and turned millions of Americans and Europeans on to another form of black music. Interestingly enough, the album's smash hit, 'Red Red Wine,' was a cover of a rocksteady cover of a Neil Diamond track. Being that UB40 had the pick of the reggae litter, Labour of Love is chock full of stellar material. From Jimmy Cliff's 'Many Rivers to Cross' to the ... |




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