Albums Directory on Weblo Music
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Browse Albums Directory on Weblo Music: |
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Record 1 - 10 of 4819 [Total 482 Pages]
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F M Tango |
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F Stops The seven-part "F-Stops," which is the centerpiece of this CD, is named after the time exposure settings used in cameras. Other than the "2nd Flow," which has some odd vocalizing by Craig Harris and a meandering feature for his didgeridoo, the concise pieces hold one's interest and feature Harris, his quartet with keyboardist Darrell Grant and two occasional guest saxophonists in fine form. But it is the other selections, particularly "D.A.S.H.," "Burundi" (which keeps on shifting time signat... |
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F# A# (Infinity) "We are trapped in the belly of this horrible machine, and the machine is bleeding to death." Few albums begin with such promise and foreboding, but this first full-length from Canadian genius collective Godspeed You Black Emperor! succeeds in the first few moments. F# A# (Infinity) contains three compositions that run the gamut from grotesque to sublime. The term "composition" seems an appropriate one to use as this band does not write songs. Each piece is at least 14 minutes in length, cons... |
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F#@k off You C#%T |
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F**k |
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F*ck What You Think Even if Main Source's lineup had remained the same for the follow-up to Breaking Atoms, the group would've had trouble following it up. That's not all the group had working against it. Most significantly, in a very gutsy move, K-Cut and Sir Scratch opted to keep Main Source running after the departure of Large Professor, easily their greatest asset as both an MC and a producer. They replaced him with the rougher-sounding Mikey D. and didn't return with F*ck What You Think until a full three y... |
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F-A-Infinity (1995-1997) |
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F-Punk For his first album for Radioactive, Mick Jones changed the name of his group back to Big Audio Dynamite and delivered F-Punk. While the name was a retreat back to the BAD's most creative and exciting days of the '80s, the music on F-Punk simply reiterated all of the ideas of their last few albums -- which means that it restated the same themes as all of their previous records. Far from being "punk," with all its classic rock references and allusions to the glory days of 1977, the album sound... |
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F.A.B. |
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F.A.C.T. Australia II: A Global Tour |
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