Bestsellers > Music > Supergroups
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The Final Cut(more) »rank: 5170by: Pink Floyd
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Between the Buttons(more) »rank: 10057by: The Rolling Stones, Rolling Stones
:Album Description:Remastered reissue of 1967 album, suitable for standard & 'Super Audio' CD players. Digipak. :The Stones began their transitional period, from reinvigorating R&B standards (on their early albums) to reinventing rock & roll (on the brilliant four-album streak beginning with Beggars Banquet), on this underrated 1967 collection. Even the songs that didn't become smash hits, such as the speed demon 'Miss Amanda Jones' and the honky-tonking 'She Smiled Sweetly,' are more than curiosities despite experimental touches with organ, sitar, and kazoo. Mick Jagger proves, on the psychedelic 'Yesterday's Papers' and 'Ruby Tuesday,' that he can sing a sexy ballad even if he's ... |
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The Dark Side of the Moon [Vinyl](more) »rank: 4107by: Pink Floyd
:Album Description:Limited Edition Japanese pressing of this album comes housed in a miniature LP sleeve. 2008. essential recording:Dark Side of the Moon, originally released in 1973, is one of those albums that is discovered anew by each generation of rock listeners. This complex, often psychedelic music works very well because Pink Floyd doesn't rush anything; the songs are mainly slow to mid-tempo, with attention paid throughout to musical texture and mood. The sound effects on songs like 'On the Run,' 'Time' and especially 'Money' (with sampled sounds of clinking coins and cash registers turned into rhythmic accompaniment) are impressive, especially when we ... |
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Classic Queen(more) »rank: 6526by: Queen
: :This is an excellent collection of one of the most popular and influential rock bands of all time, though it omits 'We Are the Champions' and 'Fat Bottomed Girls' (these, however, can be found on the Greatest Hits album, which together with Classic Queen gets you a comprehensive selection of their work). There's some great stuff here, including rockers like 'Hammer to Fall,' 'Stone Cold Crazy,' 'I Want It All,' 'Headlong,' and the hilarious 'Tie Your Mother Down.' There's also a good sampling of ballads, performed with an energy and sincerity that sets them apart: 'Who Wants to Live Forever' is sorrowfully beautiful, ... |
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Jump Back: The Best of the Rolling Stones 1971-1993(more) »rank: 5509by: The Rolling Stones
:Album Description:Full title - Jump Back: The Best Of The Rolling Stones 1971-1993'. This collection features 18 of the Stones' best hits after leaving Abkco in 1971, all remastered from the original masters via 20 bit technology. Features 'Start Me Up', 'Brown Sugar', 'It's Only Rock 'N' Roll', 'Mixed Emotions', 'Angie', 'Miss You', 'Hot Stuff', 'Beast Of Burden', 'Wild Horses', 'Bitch', 'Undercover Of The Night', & more! Virgin. 1994. --This text refers to the Audio CD edition. |
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December's Children (And Everybody's)(more) »rank: 9711by: The Rolling Stones, Rolling Stones
:Album Description:DECEMBER'S CHILDREN marked a crucial point in the Stones' development. The band was beginning to move away from its blues/R&B roots toward something more uniquely its own. Certainly those roots were far from absent in the songs composed for this album, and the Stones still cover their share of the masters here (Chuck Berry, Arthur Alexander, Hank Snow), but something new was afoot. The aching ballad 'As Tears Go By,' complete with baroque orchestration, heralded a new direction in the Stones' songwriting. Similarly, the folk-rockish strains of 'The Singer Not The Song' hint at previously uncharted directions. Perhaps the most crucial track ... |
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Early Days: The Best of Led Zeppelin, Vol. 1(more) »rank: 6762by: Led Zeppelin
:Album Description:Limited edition polyprop box (like NIN's 'Fisted') with silkscreened artwork. Contains the 'Early Days' CD (a 13 track 'best of' of their first four albums), two tattoos, a printed t-shirt, a sticker and a numbered certificate. 500 copies only. :Having previously released no less than four boxed repackages of their studio output, Led Zeppelin may well be the band who made redundancy redundant. Well, surprise! They've done it again. Culled from the band's first four albums by Jimmy Page himself (as if a fourth-grader with an FM radio would have been hard-pressed), this collection captures Page and company's blues-riff-ripping prime, relieved only ... |
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Tommy(more) »rank: 9566from: Geffen Records
:Album Description:Japanese-only SHM-CD (Super High Material CD) pressing of this classic rock album. SHM-CDs can be played on any audio player and delivers unbelievably high-quality sound. You won't believe it's the same CD! Universal. 2008. essential recording:Tommy had the dubious distinction of being the first-ever rock opera; however, it's none the worse for that, Ken Russell's adaptation notwithstanding. Due largely to Pete Townshend's skill as a songwriter and composer, Tommy tells a coherent story and includes quality rock and roll at the same time, an impressive feat by itself. While surprisingly more linear than the later Quadrophenia, Tommy boasts several songs that ... |
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Goats Head Soup(more) »rank: 9361by: The Rolling Stones
:Album Description:Japanese-only SHM-CD (Super High Material CD) pressing of this classic rock album. SHM-CDs can be played on any audio player and delivers unbelievably high-quality sound. You won't believe it's the same CD! Universal. 2008. essential recording:Tommy had the dubious distinction of being the first-ever rock opera; however, it's none the worse for that, Ken Russell's adaptation notwithstanding. Due largely to Pete Townshend's skill as a songwriter and composer, Tommy tells a coherent story and includes quality rock and roll at the same time, an impressive feat by itself. While surprisingly more linear than the later Quadrophenia, Tommy boasts several songs that ... |
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Who Are You(more) »rank: 5772by: The Who
: :\N :Posited between punk (Pete Townshend's instinctive ethos) and progressive (much of the music), Who Are You is ultimately a failed attempt to conciliate two camps that thrived on their opposition to one another. Neither the insurgent punks of Johnny Rotton's generation nor Townshend's comfortably numb peer group had the least need for one another. Townshend, on the other hand, seemed to want one thing from both forces: their contempt. It was something he could share with them. All of which led to one exceptional song (the title cut) and a handful of lesser statements (the modified minuet 'Guitar and Pen,' 'Music ... |

Critics and audiences didn't seem too happy with Back to the Future, Part II, the inventive, perhaps too clever sequel. Director Zemeckis and cast bent over backwards to add layers of time-travel complication, and while it surely exercises the brain it isn't necessarily funny in the same way that its predecessor was. It's well worth a visit, though, just to appreciate the imagination that went into it, particularly in a finale that has Marty watching his own actions from the first film. --Tom Keogh
Shot back-to-back with the second chapter in the trilogy, Back to the Future, Part III is less hectic than that film and has the same sweet spirit of the first, albeit in a whole new setting. This time, Marty ends up in the Old West of 1885, trying to prevent the death of mad scientist Christopher Lloyd at the hands of gunman Buford "Mad Dog" Tannen (Thomas F. Wilson, who had a recurring role as the bully Biff). Director Zemeckis successfully blends exciting special effects with the traditions of a Western and comes up with something original and fun. --Tom Keogh


