Waiting For The Sun [Gold CD]
Editorial Reviews
Amazon.com
With the massive success of the single "Light My Fire" and their initial two albums, L.A.'s the Doors quickly built a sizable reputation for edgy, often over-the-top musical drama. Perhaps wary of stereotyping, or simply worn out from their grueling early success, the band took a decided left turn into softer sounds here, from the pop-drenched "Hello, I Love You" to the flamenco guitar wash of "Spanish Caravan." Even gentle ballads (by the band's standards, anyway) were a part of the Doors' new sensibility, as witnessed by "Love Street" and "Summer's Almost Gone." But lest one think the band had gone a little too soft, the antiwar diatribe "The Unknown Soldier," the edgy "Five to One," and the deliciously strange "Not to Touch the Earth" were there to remind listeners that even if the band had mellowed a bit, they were still a long way from Jay and the Americans. --Jerry McCulley --This text refers to the Audio CD edition.
Waiting For The Sun, Music, Doors, Pop, Popular Music, Rock, Rock/Pop
Average customer rating:
- Different but Still Great!
- We finally get the whole package
- Remixed!!???!!! - Yep, that's the whole point.........40th Anniversary Remix
- Remixed!!!
|
Waiting for the Sun
The Doors
Manufacturer: Rhino / Wea
ProductGroup: Music
Binding: Audio CD
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- Morrison Hotel
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ASIN: B000MCIBB6
Release Date: 2007-03-27 |
Tracks:
- Hello, I Love You
- Love Street
- Not To Touch The Earth
- Summer's Almost Gone
- Wintertime Love
- The Unknown Soldier
- Spanish Caravan
- My Wild Love
- We Could Be So Good Together
- Yes, The River Knows
- Five To One
- Albinoni's Adagio In G Minor (Bonus)
- Not To Touch The Earth (Dialogue) (Bonus)
- Not To Touch The Earth (Take 1) (Bonus)
- Not To Touch The Earth (Take 2) (Bonus)
- Celebration Of The Lizard (An Experiment/work In Progress) (Bonus
Album Description
1968's WAITING FOR THE SUN, the Doors' first chart-topper, delivered the #1 signature smash "Hello, I Love You" and the Top 40 hit "The Unknown Soldier." New liner notes penned by Paul Williams. Five bonus tracks include the 17-minute epic "Celebration Of The Lizard" and three previously unissued versions of "Not To Touch The Earth."
Customer Reviews:
Different but Still Great!.......2007-07-09
I bought this new version of "Waiting for the Sun" to get a studio-version of the legendary unreleased song "Celebration of the Lizard". Obviously the strongest part of the song is, what was released on the original album as "Not to Touch the Earth", and the track is what it says, "a work in progress". Still interesting moments. The other takes of "Not to Touch the Earth" which are included as bonus-tracks have made me realize how good a song this really is.
What surprised me the most when I listened through the album was that I thought it sounded different. Was it really that long since I last heard it? I did not realize that the album had been both remastered and remixed. I guess it will take some time to get used to these new "versions" - but the sound is really crisp and clear, and if I want to hear the old mixes I can always return to the originals.
The original album contains some the Doors' most poetic and melodic moments like "Yes, The River Knows", the exquisite "Love Street" , which is one of the highlights of the album. The moving "Summer`s Almost Gone". "Wintertime Love" and "Spanish Caravan" are other highlights.
"Not to Touch the Earth" and "Five to One" : Classic Doors !!!
The hit singles "Hello I Love You" and "The Unknown Soldier" may not have aged as well as the rest of the album`s songs. Except of course the weak "My Wild Love" which probably always will annoy me.
We finally get the whole package.......2007-06-23
When this album was released in the late 60's, I bought the vinyl album and noticed that the liner notes had the entire version of "The Celebration of the Lizard). The only part of this that appeared on the album was "Not to touch the Earth"
Not to Touch the Earth is probably the best part of the song, but its only part of it.
I remember being disappointed that the song was not long like, The End or When the Music's over were on their previous two releases.
FINALLY after 40 years they have released a studio version of the entire song.
Waiting for the Sun and their first album simply entitled the Doors are in my mind their best releases. Both albums are raw and are less commercial.
Some of the later releases such as Soft Parade and Morrison Hotel are either not as good or are too commerical. A few songs on Soft Parade even have horns and other things that make the recordings too "Refined"
Jim Morrison is reciting his poetry, and it is probably his first album where he does so.
For hard core Doors fans like myself this is a must. For casual listeners or new listeners, I dont know what to tell you.
For me the recording is now complete and Doors fans like myself can now hear this CD in its entirety.............Enjoy
Remixed!!???!!! - Yep, that's the whole point.........40th Anniversary Remix.......2007-04-14
OK.....What we have here is a failure for some folks to have done their homework. This is the 40th Anniversary "remix" of Waiting for the Sun. It's supposed to be a bit different from the original. In fact ALL of the Doors studio albums have been not only remastered, but remixed. Bonus tracks added as well. If you want the Doors sounding like the albums you grew up with, then pick up the last set of remastered CDs from 1999. If you want killer sound quality, bonus tracks and a new take on these classics pick the 40th Anniversary mixes on Rhino/Elektra. If you're a big fan like me, you'll have them both. At any rate, these editions are great! They are the same you would have gotten if you bought the "Perecptions" box set (no DVD 5.1 mixes here or video content though). Don't be bummed out, just shop wisely and enjoy!! Once again, these editions are a must for longtime fans.
Remixed!!!.......2007-04-03
Yes, the sound is great but the tracks are remixed, often with new vocal and instrumental parts. These are NOT the original mixes. Caveat emptor!
Average customer rating:
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Hitman: Codename 47 / Hitman 2 - Silent Assassin
Jesper Kyd
Manufacturer: La-La Land Records
ProductGroup: Music
Binding: Audio CD
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- Hitman: Contracts
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- Fable
ASIN: B000A2GP5W
Release Date: 2005-08-30 |
Tracks:
- Intro
- Main Title (Extended Version)
- Hong Kong Themes
- Jungle Exploration
- Dark Jungle
- Hotel Themes
- Harbor Themes
- Hospital Themes
- Hotel Music (Early Demo)
- Rainforest (Early Demo)
- Atmosphere Demo
- Main Title (Original Slow Version)
Tracks:
- Hitman 2 Main Title
- Waiting For Action
- Action Begins
- 47 Makes A Decision
- The Penthouse
- Japanese Mansion
- Japanese Snow Castle
- Streets Of India
- Mission In India
- 47 In St. Petersburg
- Trouble In Russia
- Desert Sun
- Arabian Dance
- The Setup
- End Boss
- Slow Ambience
- Fast Ambience
- H2 Exploration
- H2 Action
- Dreams Of Instanbul (Bonus Track)
Customer Reviews:
Pretty Good.......2006-07-29
This was a very unique item. Fans of the series will enjoy it. At times some of the tracks seem out of place when out of the game, but that's more than made up for by the many powerful and classic tracks that these CD's have. The first CD is more techno-inspired while the second is more operatic. It's good music to do push-ups to or to drive to. Especially the first track of the first CD.
Average customer rating:
- Excellant but incomplete
- Sun burn
- So It Might Not Be The Doors Best, But It's Still Good
- Interesting, at least
- the shaman lives
|
Waiting for the Sun
The Doors
Manufacturer: Elektra / Wea
ProductGroup: Music
Binding: Audio CD
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- Strange Days
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ASIN: B000007S5B
Release Date: 1990-10-25 |
Tracks:
- Hello, I Love You
- Love Street
- Not To Touch The Earth
- Summer's Almost Gone
- Wintertime Love
- The Unknown Soldier
- Spanish Caravan
- My Wild Love
- We Could Be So Good Together
- Yes, The River Knows
- Five To One
Amazon.com
With the massive success of the single "Light My Fire" and their initial two albums, L.A.'s the Doors quickly built a sizable reputation for edgy, often over-the-top musical drama. Perhaps wary of stereotyping, or simply worn out from their grueling early success, the band took a decided left turn into softer sounds here, from the pop-drenched "Hello, I Love You" to the flamenco guitar wash of "Spanish Caravan." Even gentle ballads (by the band's standards, anyway) were a part of the Doors' new sensibility, as witnessed by "Love Street" and "Summer's Almost Gone." But lest one think the band had gone a little too soft, the antiwar diatribe "The Unknown Soldier," the edgy "Five to One," and the deliciously strange "Not to Touch the Earth" were there to remind listeners that even if the band had mellowed a bit, they were still a long way from Jay and the Americans. --Jerry McCulley
Album Description
Digitally remastered pressing of The Doors third album from 1968, a mellower affair than their previous albums but certainly just as melodic and exciting. The Doors' mixture of Rock, Blues and Jazz combined with vocalist Jim Morrison's poetic lyrics and powerful vocals created a musical Molotov cocktail that could make your senses explode...in a good way! 10 tracks including 'Hello I Love You', 'Spanish Caravan' and 'The Unknown Soldier'. Warner.
Customer Reviews:
Excellant but incomplete.......2007-06-10
I remember purchasing this album back in 1968 during the summer it came out..
I got the album home and noticed on the inner liner the lyrics to a song called. "The Celebration of the Lizard. On the liner the lyrics were written. On the album all they had was a small incert of it. Not to Touch the Earth at the time seemed very unique. It was Morrison on his new album doing a song similar to "The End" or "When the Nusics Over"
A few years later the Doors released a new Live album with the Entire version of The Celebration of the Lizard" and I finally got to hear the entire song for the first time.
This album will always been in my mind one of the two or three best albums the Doors have ever done. Jim Morrison was a master poet and in my opinion this album includes some of his finest poetic love songs.
Hello I Love You is a partial rip off of the song by the Kinks, "All of the Day and All of the Night.
Love Street is good but the real meat and potatos is Wintertime Love, The Unknown Soldier and another of my favorites Five to One. Spanish Caravan and Yes, The River Knows are also outstanding............File this under "C" for classic, If you are not familliar with the Doors and are discovering them for the first time, I suggest you get their first album with Light my Fire and this one. Strange Days would be another one to check out These first three albums are the most raw and least commercial. But you can buy anything by the Doors and not go wrong.
Sun burn.......2007-03-06
WAITING FOR THE SUN might be evidence that Jim Morrison was either a tapped-out lyric writer ("Not To Touch The Earth" and "Summer's Almost Gone") or just totally stoned out of his mind ("The Celebration Of The Lizard" poetry). But then, we see flashes of the sort of brilliance that permeated the DOORS' first two albums-- tracks like "The Unknown Soldier" and "Five To One" stand up against any that this band ever recorded.
Musically, WAITING FOR THE SUN often sounds tremendously dated-- perhaps it was outmoded even in 1968. Fuzz guitar and calliope-like organ are everywhere-- there's waltzes ("Wintertime Love") and schmaltzes ("Love Street") and all sorts of filler. A pattern of inconsistency established here followed the group right through to L.A. WOMAN. The DOORS were a band that the "Best Of" compilation was ideal for. Like THE SOFT PARADE and MORRISON HOTEL, WAITING FOR THE SUN is only for their most devoted fans and perhaps '60s rock completists.
TOTAL RUNNING TIME -- 33:08
So It Might Not Be The Doors Best, But It's Still Good.......2006-11-24
I don't believe that there is a bad Doors album, it's just some albums are better then others. I don't think even that "The Soft Parade" is bad, it's just different.
But now onto this album. "Waiting For The Sun" is a classic Doors album. While it's not the best (that honor would go to either the first album or "LA Woman", maybe even "Morrison Hotel"), it's still very good. It is a little "lighter" then preceding albums or following albums, but there are some hard-rocking numbers here as well.
The album opens up with the driving, poppy "Hello, I Love You", which became a number 1 hit single, and it's not hard to understand why. Then comes "Love Street", which is a light song, but it's very underrated. It is a nice light song. Then we have "Not To Touch The Earth", an excerpt from the epic "Celebration of the Lizard". It's a creepy, rollicking song and one of the best songs on the album. The next song is "Summer's Almost Gone", which is somewhat like "Love Street", but not as good. Then comes "Wintertime Love", which is more upbeat then it's predecessor but is still very poppy. It's also the shortest song on the album. "The Unknown Soldier" comes next, the Doors famous anti-war song, and it's a great song that has appeared on many Greatest Hits compilations. "Spanish Caravan" follows, and, much like the title implies, it has a spanish feel to it. It's a pretty good song, especially towards the end when Robby Kreiger switches from accoustic to electric guitar. Then comes "My Wild Love", which is mostly just vocals, not a bad song, not great. Then comes "We Could Be So Good Together". Much like "Wintertime Love", it is an upbeat, poppy song, but not bad in any way. Then comes "Yes, The River Knows", which is probably the worst song on the album as it is slow and not Doors-like at all. But however much that song takes it away, the next song, "Five To One", repents for it and adds a lot to the album. Probably the best song on the album, "Five to One" is the most Doors-like on the album and is one of my personal favorites.
Overall, this is a really good album that deserves a chance even if it is not THE best Doors albums, it's still really good.
Hello, I Love You - 5/5
Love Street - 5/5
Not To Touch The Earth - 5/5
Summer's Almost Gone - 4/5
Wintertime Love - 3.5/5
The Unknown Soldier - 5/5
Spanish Caravan - 4.5/5
My Wild Love - 3/5
We Could Be So Good Together - 4/5
Yes, The River Knows - 2/5
Five To One 6/5
Interesting, at least.......2006-11-06
This is a fascinating album in that it contains some of the Doors' most bizarre tracks on the same album as a few of their most banal pop ones. The weird, whacky experimental songs all rule but one, and with a single exception, the banal songs are boring.
First, the single exception to the "banal pop song" rule. Hello, I Love You is sheer, moronic bubblegum, but I don't care - I love every minute of it, even if the riff was stolen from the Kinks. It's a lot like Love Her Madly: Pure, unadultered, unpretentious rock. And if you can't appreciate it for what it is, I'd recommend clinical help. But the question stands: how many times outside of one are you gonna listen to Love Street, Summer's Almost Gone, Wintertime Love, We Could Be So Good Together or Yes, The River Knows?
Then we get to the weird stuff - which, with one odious, glaring exception, is amazing. Not To Touch The Earth is simply demented - and the Celebration of the Lizard (which it's a small part of) is even more so, but I love it. Manzarek's organ sounds like it walked out of a funeral parlour from Hell, and I've got no clue what Jim's talking about but it sure is disturbing. Slightly more accessible is the politicized rant Five to One (or at least it looks political - I've heard that it means nothing because Jim was drunk off his keister when he wrote it), which is pure metal - and probably my favorite song off the album. And speaking of political protests, they pull a hell of an antiwar classic with The Unknown Soldier, which actually works in a real firing squad that, according to legend, shot at Jim in the studio. Cool! The last of my favorites is Spanish Caravan, which I think is one of the Doors' more unjustly unknown efforts. It certainly sounds like nothing else - contrast the two parts (yes, two parts in a three minute song!) and you'll see what I mean. The lone experiment I can't really get into is My Wild Love. What's the chant doing there? I don't know, but it's gotta go. Because that's one awful song.
This is a painfully obvious transition album (with Jim loaded during half the recording sessions - figures), but I think that this could've been something had they managed to get the full Celebration of the Lizard on tape and expanded on the experimental material - while keeping Hello, I Love You, just for contrast's sake. Now it's just an average album.
the shaman lives.......2006-06-26
Since my youth I have had an ear for roots music, whether I was conscious of that fact or not. The original of that interest first centered on the blues, then early rock and roll and later, with the folk revival of the early 1960's, folk music. I have often wondered about the source of this interest. I am, and have always been a city boy, and an Eastern city boy at that. Nevertheless, over time I have come to appreciate many more forms of roots music than in my youth. The subject of the following review is an example.
The Doors are roots music you ask? Yes, in the sense that one of the branches of rock and roll derives from early rythmn and blues and in the special case of Jim Morrison, leader of the Doors, the attempt to find shamanic roots in the Western American Native American culture. Some of that influence is apparent here.
More than one rock critic has argued that at their best the Doors were the best rock and roll band ever created. Those critics will get no argument here. What a reviewer with that opinion has to do is determine whether any particular CD catures the Doors at their best. This album while it has some classics is not uniformly their best work. This reviewer advises that if you want to buy only one Doors CD that would be The Best of the Doors. If you want to trace their evolution this CD is fine.
Average customer rating:
- Excellant but incomplete
- Sun burn
- So It Might Not Be The Doors Best, But It's Still Good
- Interesting, at least
- the shaman lives
|
Waiting for the Sun
The Doors
Manufacturer: Elektra
ProductGroup: Music
Binding: Audio CD
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Similar Items:
- Strange Days
- The Soft Parade
- Morrison Hotel
- L.A. Woman
- The Doors
ASIN: B000002I2B
Release Date: 2006-08-29 |
Tracks:
- Hello, I Love You
- Love Street
- Not To Touch The Earth
- Summer's Almost Gone
- Wintertime Love
- The Unknown Soldier
- Spanish Caravan
- My Wild Love
- We Could Be So Good Together
- Yes, The River Knows
- Five To One
Amazon.com
With the massive success of the single "Light My Fire" and their initial two albums, L.A.'s the Doors quickly built a sizable reputation for edgy, often over-the-top musical drama. Perhaps wary of stereotyping, or simply worn out from their grueling early success, the band took a decided left turn into softer sounds here, from the pop-drenched "Hello, I Love You" to the flamenco guitar wash of "Spanish Caravan." Even gentle ballads (by the band's standards, anyway) were a part of the Doors' new sensibility, as witnessed by "Love Street" and "Summer's Almost Gone." But lest one think the band had gone a little too soft, the antiwar diatribe "The Unknown Soldier," the edgy "Five to One," and the deliciously strange "Not to Touch the Earth" were there to remind listeners that even if the band had mellowed a bit, they were still a long way from Jay and the Americans. --Jerry McCulley
Album Description
Digitally remastered pressing of The Doors third album from 1968, a mellower affair than their previous albums but certainly just as melodic and exciting. The Doors' mixture of Rock, Blues and Jazz combined with vocalist Jim Morrison's poetic lyrics and powerful vocals created a musical Molotov cocktail that could make your senses explode...in a good way! 10 tracks including 'Hello I Love You', 'Spanish Caravan' and 'The Unknown Soldier'. Warner.
Customer Reviews:
Excellant but incomplete.......2007-06-10
I remember purchasing this album back in 1968 during the summer it came out..
I got the album home and noticed on the inner liner the lyrics to a song called. "The Celebration of the Lizard. On the liner the lyrics were written. On the album all they had was a small incert of it. Not to Touch the Earth at the time seemed very unique. It was Morrison on his new album doing a song similar to "The End" or "When the Nusics Over"
A few years later the Doors released a new Live album with the Entire version of The Celebration of the Lizard" and I finally got to hear the entire song for the first time.
This album will always been in my mind one of the two or three best albums the Doors have ever done. Jim Morrison was a master poet and in my opinion this album includes some of his finest poetic love songs.
Hello I Love You is a partial rip off of the song by the Kinks, "All of the Day and All of the Night.
Love Street is good but the real meat and potatos is Wintertime Love, The Unknown Soldier and another of my favorites Five to One. Spanish Caravan and Yes, The River Knows are also outstanding............File this under "C" for classic, If you are not familliar with the Doors and are discovering them for the first time, I suggest you get their first album with Light my Fire and this one. Strange Days would be another one to check out These first three albums are the most raw and least commercial. But you can buy anything by the Doors and not go wrong.
Sun burn.......2007-03-06
WAITING FOR THE SUN might be evidence that Jim Morrison was either a tapped-out lyric writer ("Not To Touch The Earth" and "Summer's Almost Gone") or just totally stoned out of his mind ("The Celebration Of The Lizard" poetry). But then, we see flashes of the sort of brilliance that permeated the DOORS' first two albums-- tracks like "The Unknown Soldier" and "Five To One" stand up against any that this band ever recorded.
Musically, WAITING FOR THE SUN often sounds tremendously dated-- perhaps it was outmoded even in 1968. Fuzz guitar and calliope-like organ are everywhere-- there's waltzes ("Wintertime Love") and schmaltzes ("Love Street") and all sorts of filler. A pattern of inconsistency established here followed the group right through to L.A. WOMAN. The DOORS were a band that the "Best Of" compilation was ideal for. Like THE SOFT PARADE and MORRISON HOTEL, WAITING FOR THE SUN is only for their most devoted fans and perhaps '60s rock completists.
TOTAL RUNNING TIME -- 33:08
So It Might Not Be The Doors Best, But It's Still Good.......2006-11-24
I don't believe that there is a bad Doors album, it's just some albums are better then others. I don't think even that "The Soft Parade" is bad, it's just different.
But now onto this album. "Waiting For The Sun" is a classic Doors album. While it's not the best (that honor would go to either the first album or "LA Woman", maybe even "Morrison Hotel"), it's still very good. It is a little "lighter" then preceding albums or following albums, but there are some hard-rocking numbers here as well.
The album opens up with the driving, poppy "Hello, I Love You", which became a number 1 hit single, and it's not hard to understand why. Then comes "Love Street", which is a light song, but it's very underrated. It is a nice light song. Then we have "Not To Touch The Earth", an excerpt from the epic "Celebration of the Lizard". It's a creepy, rollicking song and one of the best songs on the album. The next song is "Summer's Almost Gone", which is somewhat like "Love Street", but not as good. Then comes "Wintertime Love", which is more upbeat then it's predecessor but is still very poppy. It's also the shortest song on the album. "The Unknown Soldier" comes next, the Doors famous anti-war song, and it's a great song that has appeared on many Greatest Hits compilations. "Spanish Caravan" follows, and, much like the title implies, it has a spanish feel to it. It's a pretty good song, especially towards the end when Robby Kreiger switches from accoustic to electric guitar. Then comes "My Wild Love", which is mostly just vocals, not a bad song, not great. Then comes "We Could Be So Good Together". Much like "Wintertime Love", it is an upbeat, poppy song, but not bad in any way. Then comes "Yes, The River Knows", which is probably the worst song on the album as it is slow and not Doors-like at all. But however much that song takes it away, the next song, "Five To One", repents for it and adds a lot to the album. Probably the best song on the album, "Five to One" is the most Doors-like on the album and is one of my personal favorites.
Overall, this is a really good album that deserves a chance even if it is not THE best Doors albums, it's still really good.
Hello, I Love You - 5/5
Love Street - 5/5
Not To Touch The Earth - 5/5
Summer's Almost Gone - 4/5
Wintertime Love - 3.5/5
The Unknown Soldier - 5/5
Spanish Caravan - 4.5/5
My Wild Love - 3/5
We Could Be So Good Together - 4/5
Yes, The River Knows - 2/5
Five To One 6/5
Interesting, at least.......2006-11-06
This is a fascinating album in that it contains some of the Doors' most bizarre tracks on the same album as a few of their most banal pop ones. The weird, whacky experimental songs all rule but one, and with a single exception, the banal songs are boring.
First, the single exception to the "banal pop song" rule. Hello, I Love You is sheer, moronic bubblegum, but I don't care - I love every minute of it, even if the riff was stolen from the Kinks. It's a lot like Love Her Madly: Pure, unadultered, unpretentious rock. And if you can't appreciate it for what it is, I'd recommend clinical help. But the question stands: how many times outside of one are you gonna listen to Love Street, Summer's Almost Gone, Wintertime Love, We Could Be So Good Together or Yes, The River Knows?
Then we get to the weird stuff - which, with one odious, glaring exception, is amazing. Not To Touch The Earth is simply demented - and the Celebration of the Lizard (which it's a small part of) is even more so, but I love it. Manzarek's organ sounds like it walked out of a funeral parlour from Hell, and I've got no clue what Jim's talking about but it sure is disturbing. Slightly more accessible is the politicized rant Five to One (or at least it looks political - I've heard that it means nothing because Jim was drunk off his keister when he wrote it), which is pure metal - and probably my favorite song off the album. And speaking of political protests, they pull a hell of an antiwar classic with The Unknown Soldier, which actually works in a real firing squad that, according to legend, shot at Jim in the studio. Cool! The last of my favorites is Spanish Caravan, which I think is one of the Doors' more unjustly unknown efforts. It certainly sounds like nothing else - contrast the two parts (yes, two parts in a three minute song!) and you'll see what I mean. The lone experiment I can't really get into is My Wild Love. What's the chant doing there? I don't know, but it's gotta go. Because that's one awful song.
This is a painfully obvious transition album (with Jim loaded during half the recording sessions - figures), but I think that this could've been something had they managed to get the full Celebration of the Lizard on tape and expanded on the experimental material - while keeping Hello, I Love You, just for contrast's sake. Now it's just an average album.
the shaman lives.......2006-06-26
Since my youth I have had an ear for roots music, whether I was conscious of that fact or not. The original of that interest first centered on the blues, then early rock and roll and later, with the folk revival of the early 1960's, folk music. I have often wondered about the source of this interest. I am, and have always been a city boy, and an Eastern city boy at that. Nevertheless, over time I have come to appreciate many more forms of roots music than in my youth. The subject of the following review is an example.
The Doors are roots music you ask? Yes, in the sense that one of the branches of rock and roll derives from early rythmn and blues and in the special case of Jim Morrison, leader of the Doors, the attempt to find shamanic roots in the Western American Native American culture. Some of that influence is apparent here.
More than one rock critic has argued that at their best the Doors were the best rock and roll band ever created. Those critics will get no argument here. What a reviewer with that opinion has to do is determine whether any particular CD catures the Doors at their best. This album while it has some classics is not uniformly their best work. This reviewer advises that if you want to buy only one Doors CD that would be The Best of the Doors. If you want to trace their evolution this CD is fine.
Average customer rating:
- Never liked Marco, but...
- People...
- What a SNORE! Don't waste your money...
- Looking for a Song from the movie
- They did it to us again.
|
Blade 2 (Score)
Various Artists
Manufacturer: Varese Sarabande
ProductGroup: Music
Binding: Audio CD
Movie Soundtracks
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ASIN: B000067ARA
Release Date: 2002-06-04 |
Tracks:
- Nomack The Knife
- Waiting For The Sun
- Blade II (main title)
- Suckheads Infiltrate
- Nyssa Sucks
- B Slice
- House Of Pancakes
- Blade Pops A Cold One
- Family Feud
- Charge Of The Light Grenade
- Blade's Discharge
- Priest Splits
- Nomack Snacks
- Back In Black
- Nyssa Over Easy
- Wind & The Willows (Abayo)
Amazon.com
If the black-vampire-hunter-as-action-hero genre isn't exactly oversaturated, it's hardly because of the strong star turns of Wesley Snipes in the film adaptations of the popular Blade graphic novels. This sequel to the '98 original may have a plot hole (or three), but Marco Beltrami takes the baton from the original vamp-hunting thriller's Mark Isham and delivers a rousing orchestral score full of dark corners and ominous percussive thunder. While the film's strong, club-mix-heavy song score emphasizes the story's contemporary setting, Beltrami instinctively gets the tale's gothic, sword 'n' sorcery roots, punctuating his rhythmic, suspenseful score with blasts of Barbarian-friendly blasts of brass. The title track fuses the composer's dramatic instincts with the back-to-the-'70s synth-swagger of electronica artist-producer Danny Saber, while "Nomack the Knife" is anything but playful, powered by a beat-heavy symphonic wallop that just might clear the dance floor. --Jerry McCulley
Customer Reviews:
Never liked Marco, but..........2003-09-01
... Blade 2 was actually pretty good. Tough, many of the tracks i hoped for, wasent on the disc at all. Its a ok CD to add to your soundtrack collection.
People..........2003-03-20
#Not a review of the actual score, but soundtrack#
Look, for those of you coming to this in search for the songs appearing in the movie other than the composed pieces for the movie will find them on the release titled SOUNDTRACK. Yes, they did pull a big nasty on us with the first soundtrack release with Blade (not II). But if you [iago27sp, I understand your frustration, I can relate] would look a little closer..there is a soundtrack for Blade II, which does actually feature many of the songs appearing in the movie (yet cdnow requires searching for Blade 2, not Blade II, to find it)..take a look..they call this a SCORE for a reason =)
Good luck in your search (to everyone).
What a SNORE! Don't waste your money..........2002-11-28
Don't waste your hard earned money on this one. Just like the last movie, the original score is a bore.
Looking for a Song from the movie.......2002-11-12
Does anyone know the name of the song that plays after Blade emerges from the pool of blood in the last few minutes of the movie when he begins attacking all the security guards in Blade 2?
They did it to us again........2002-11-02
Remember all the bumpin jams from the last movie that didn't seem to make it onto the soundtrack? Well, it's the same with this soundtrack. I too was interested in the songs from the 'House of Pain' scene. The good news is that I found them. (That's right, there are two songs in that scene.) The first one--the one with lyrics that begins right when they show all the vampires dancing--is "Tao of the Machine" by BT, and The Roots. Run a search on google, I found a downloadable mp3 from some foreign site. The second song, the techno music without lyrics, is "Blood is Pumping" by Voodoo and Serano. I hope this helps everyone looking for the GOOD music from the movie. As far as a review of this CD, take a listen to the samples below and see if it's what your looking for, it wasn't what I wanted.
Average customer rating:
- I wish I was Swedish
- A feeling of discovery
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Anne Sofie von Otter - Wings in the Night (Swedish Songs)
Wilhelm Peterson-Berger , Sigurd von Koch , Wilhelm Stenhammar , Ture Rangstrom , Emil Sjogren , Anne Sofie von Otter , and Bengt Forsberg
Manufacturer: Deutsche Grammophon
ProductGroup: Music
Binding: Audio CD
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ASIN: B000001GRT
Release Date: 1996-03-26 |
Tracks:
- Nothing Is Like The Time Of Waiting
- When I Walk By Myself
- Like The Stars In The Sky
- In The Month Of Tjaitra
- Of Lotus Scent And Moonlight
- The Wanderer
- A Ship Is Sailing
- Maiden Blond And Maiden Brunette
- A Seaside Song
- Wings In The Night
- The Farewell
- Pan
- Come Little Buck To The Boy
- The Sun Shines Prettily In The Evening
- If You Love Me
- Spring Night's Rain
- Mankind's Lot
- The Wild Swans
- The Forest Is Asleep
- I Kiss Your White Hand
- In The Maple's Shade
- Jutta Comes to the Volkungs
- Old Swedish
- Melody
- Supplication to Night
- Boljeby Waltz
- Return
- You Look At Me With Silent Questions
- I Broke Off A Little Rose For You
- I Should Like to Hover over Valley and Hill
- Aspaker's Polka
Customer Reviews:
I wish I was Swedish.......2006-06-10
This is simply my favorite disc of song out there. As a recreational singer, it's wonderful to come across a disc like this and be given an entire new world of song that you can't even find music for. The songs by Sigurd von Koch, who spent some time in Asia, are beautiful enough to dissolve your brain! In The Month Of Tjaitra and Of Lotus Scent And Moonlight are so full of beautiful imagery and wonderful music I can't see why people sing anything else. And the folk-inspired Pertersen-Berger songs are loads of fun too, although of course not as moving.
A feeling of discovery.......2000-09-23
The songs on this wonderful Swedish anthology may not be familiar to most listeners but they occupy an idiom not so dissimilar to the world of Grieg. (Otter and Forsberg's Grieg recital from a few years earlier is also indispensible.). The nostalgia-tinged melancholy (or is it wistful joy?) of Wilhelm Peterson-Berger's folk-inspired songs, for example, convey a hint of Grieg's art yet are distinctively Swedish. There are nine selections by Peterson-Berger, out of 31 total, and they all exemplify this composer in full melodic flower. The other composers offer something closer to what we think of as art songs: somewhat rarefied, reserved, melodically rich and often evocative. The piano accompaniments are always first rate. This treasury provides a rich and varied 74-minute overview of Swedish song.
If the quality of the Swedish literature as a whole is half as good as what's presented here, let's hope that this is only an introduction from Otter and Forsberg, who would seem to have this repertoire to themselves although one could not hope for more understanding interpreters. After all, they are Swedish! All of imagination of their earlier Grieg interpretations is present here as well. There is all the necessary depth of characterization without affected artsiness.
If that's not enough, this disc also won the coveted Gramophone Award.
Average customer rating:
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One Star, At Last: A Selection of Carols of Our Time
Manufacturer: Signum UK
ProductGroup: Music
Binding: Audio CD
All Works by MacMillan
| MacMillan, James
| ( M )
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Maxwell Davies, Peter
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| Tavener, John Kenneth
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ASIN: B000BM3MK2
Release Date: 2005-11-29 |
Average customer rating:
- Excellant but incomplete
- Sun burn
- So It Might Not Be The Doors Best, But It's Still Good
- Interesting, at least
- the shaman lives
|
Waiting For The Sun
The Doors
Manufacturer: Dcc Compact Classics
ProductGroup: Music
Binding: Audio CD
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- The Doors
ASIN: B000000176
Release Date: 1993-10-22 |
Tracks:
- Hello, I Love You
- Love Street
- Not To Touch The Earth
- Summer's Almost Gone
- Wintertime Love
- The Unknown Soldier
- Spanish Caravan
- My Wild Love
- We Could Be So Good Together
- Yes, The River Knows
- Five To One
Amazon.com
With the massive success of the single "Light My Fire" and their initial two albums, L.A.'s the Doors quickly built a sizable reputation for edgy, often over-the-top musical drama. Perhaps wary of stereotyping, or simply worn out from their grueling early success, the band took a decided left turn into softer sounds here, from the pop-drenched "Hello, I Love You" to the flamenco guitar wash of "Spanish Caravan." Even gentle ballads (by the band's standards, anyway) were a part of the Doors' new sensibility, as witnessed by "Love Street" and "Summer's Almost Gone." But lest one think the band had gone a little too soft, the antiwar diatribe "The Unknown Soldier," the edgy "Five to One," and the deliciously strange "Not to Touch the Earth" were there to remind listeners that even if the band had mellowed a bit, they were still a long way from Jay and the Americans. --Jerry McCulley
Album Description
Digitally remastered pressing of The Doors third album from 1968, a mellower affair than their previous albums but certainly just as melodic and exciting. The Doors' mixture of Rock, Blues and Jazz combined with vocalist Jim Morrison's poetic lyrics and powerful vocals created a musical Molotov cocktail that could make your senses explode...in a good way! 10 tracks including 'Hello I Love You', 'Spanish Caravan' and 'The Unknown Soldier'. Warner.
Customer Reviews:
Excellant but incomplete.......2007-06-10
I remember purchasing this album back in 1968 during the summer it came out..
I got the album home and noticed on the inner liner the lyrics to a song called. "The Celebration of the Lizard. On the liner the lyrics were written. On the album all they had was a small incert of it. Not to Touch the Earth at the time seemed very unique. It was Morrison on his new album doing a song similar to "The End" or "When the Nusics Over"
A few years later the Doors released a new Live album with the Entire version of The Celebration of the Lizard" and I finally got to hear the entire song for the first time.
This album will always been in my mind one of the two or three best albums the Doors have ever done. Jim Morrison was a master poet and in my opinion this album includes some of his finest poetic love songs.
Hello I Love You is a partial rip off of the song by the Kinks, "All of the Day and All of the Night.
Love Street is good but the real meat and potatos is Wintertime Love, The Unknown Soldier and another of my favorites Five to One. Spanish Caravan and Yes, The River Knows are also outstanding............File this under "C" for classic, If you are not familliar with the Doors and are discovering them for the first time, I suggest you get their first album with Light my Fire and this one. Strange Days would be another one to check out These first three albums are the most raw and least commercial. But you can buy anything by the Doors and not go wrong.
Sun burn.......2007-03-06
WAITING FOR THE SUN might be evidence that Jim Morrison was either a tapped-out lyric writer ("Not To Touch The Earth" and "Summer's Almost Gone") or just totally stoned out of his mind ("The Celebration Of The Lizard" poetry). But then, we see flashes of the sort of brilliance that permeated the DOORS' first two albums-- tracks like "The Unknown Soldier" and "Five To One" stand up against any that this band ever recorded.
Musically, WAITING FOR THE SUN often sounds tremendously dated-- perhaps it was outmoded even in 1968. Fuzz guitar and calliope-like organ are everywhere-- there's waltzes ("Wintertime Love") and schmaltzes ("Love Street") and all sorts of filler. A pattern of inconsistency established here followed the group right through to L.A. WOMAN. The DOORS were a band that the "Best Of" compilation was ideal for. Like THE SOFT PARADE and MORRISON HOTEL, WAITING FOR THE SUN is only for their most devoted fans and perhaps '60s rock completists.
TOTAL RUNNING TIME -- 33:08
So It Might Not Be The Doors Best, But It's Still Good.......2006-11-24
I don't believe that there is a bad Doors album, it's just some albums are better then others. I don't think even that "The Soft Parade" is bad, it's just different.
But now onto this album. "Waiting For The Sun" is a classic Doors album. While it's not the best (that honor would go to either the first album or "LA Woman", maybe even "Morrison Hotel"), it's still very good. It is a little "lighter" then preceding albums or following albums, but there are some hard-rocking numbers here as well.
The album opens up with the driving, poppy "Hello, I Love You", which became a number 1 hit single, and it's not hard to understand why. Then comes "Love Street", which is a light song, but it's very underrated. It is a nice light song. Then we have "Not To Touch The Earth", an excerpt from the epic "Celebration of the Lizard". It's a creepy, rollicking song and one of the best songs on the album. The next song is "Summer's Almost Gone", which is somewhat like "Love Street", but not as good. Then comes "Wintertime Love", which is more upbeat then it's predecessor but is still very poppy. It's also the shortest song on the album. "The Unknown Soldier" comes next, the Doors famous anti-war song, and it's a great song that has appeared on many Greatest Hits compilations. "Spanish Caravan" follows, and, much like the title implies, it has a spanish feel to it. It's a pretty good song, especially towards the end when Robby Kreiger switches from accoustic to electric guitar. Then comes "My Wild Love", which is mostly just vocals, not a bad song, not great. Then comes "We Could Be So Good Together". Much like "Wintertime Love", it is an upbeat, poppy song, but not bad in any way. Then comes "Yes, The River Knows", which is probably the worst song on the album as it is slow and not Doors-like at all. But however much that song takes it away, the next song, "Five To One", repents for it and adds a lot to the album. Probably the best song on the album, "Five to One" is the most Doors-like on the album and is one of my personal favorites.
Overall, this is a really good album that deserves a chance even if it is not THE best Doors albums, it's still really good.
Hello, I Love You - 5/5
Love Street - 5/5
Not To Touch The Earth - 5/5
Summer's Almost Gone - 4/5
Wintertime Love - 3.5/5
The Unknown Soldier - 5/5
Spanish Caravan - 4.5/5
My Wild Love - 3/5
We Could Be So Good Together - 4/5
Yes, The River Knows - 2/5
Five To One 6/5
Interesting, at least.......2006-11-06
This is a fascinating album in that it contains some of the Doors' most bizarre tracks on the same album as a few of their most banal pop ones. The weird, whacky experimental songs all rule but one, and with a single exception, the banal songs are boring.
First, the single exception to the "banal pop song" rule. Hello, I Love You is sheer, moronic bubblegum, but I don't care - I love every minute of it, even if the riff was stolen from the Kinks. It's a lot like Love Her Madly: Pure, unadultered, unpretentious rock. And if you can't appreciate it for what it is, I'd recommend clinical help. But the question stands: how many times outside of one are you gonna listen to Love Street, Summer's Almost Gone, Wintertime Love, We Could Be So Good Together or Yes, The River Knows?
Then we get to the weird stuff - which, with one odious, glaring exception, is amazing. Not To Touch The Earth is simply demented - and the Celebration of the Lizard (which it's a small part of) is even more so, but I love it. Manzarek's organ sounds like it walked out of a funeral parlour from Hell, and I've got no clue what Jim's talking about but it sure is disturbing. Slightly more accessible is the politicized rant Five to One (or at least it looks political - I've heard that it means nothing because Jim was drunk off his keister when he wrote it), which is pure metal - and probably my favorite song off the album. And speaking of political protests, they pull a hell of an antiwar classic with The Unknown Soldier, which actually works in a real firing squad that, according to legend, shot at Jim in the studio. Cool! The last of my favorites is Spanish Caravan, which I think is one of the Doors' more unjustly unknown efforts. It certainly sounds like nothing else - contrast the two parts (yes, two parts in a three minute song!) and you'll see what I mean. The lone experiment I can't really get into is My Wild Love. What's the chant doing there? I don't know, but it's gotta go. Because that's one awful song.
This is a painfully obvious transition album (with Jim loaded during half the recording sessions - figures), but I think that this could've been something had they managed to get the full Celebration of the Lizard on tape and expanded on the experimental material - while keeping Hello, I Love You, just for contrast's sake. Now it's just an average album.
the shaman lives.......2006-06-26
Since my youth I have had an ear for roots music, whether I was conscious of that fact or not. The original of that interest first centered on the blues, then early rock and roll and later, with the folk revival of the early 1960's, folk music. I have often wondered about the source of this interest. I am, and have always been a city boy, and an Eastern city boy at that. Nevertheless, over time I have come to appreciate many more forms of roots music than in my youth. The subject of the following review is an example.
The Doors are roots music you ask? Yes, in the sense that one of the branches of rock and roll derives from early rythmn and blues and in the special case of Jim Morrison, leader of the Doors, the attempt to find shamanic roots in the Western American Native American culture. Some of that influence is apparent here.
More than one rock critic has argued that at their best the Doors were the best rock and roll band ever created. Those critics will get no argument here. What a reviewer with that opinion has to do is determine whether any particular CD catures the Doors at their best. This album while it has some classics is not uniformly their best work. This reviewer advises that if you want to buy only one Doors CD that would be The Best of the Doors. If you want to trace their evolution this CD is fine.
Average customer rating:
|
Sailing By: The Music of Ronald Binge
Manufacturer: White Line
ProductGroup: Music
Binding: Audio CD
General
| Concertos
| Forms & Genres
| Classical
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| Music
Saxophone
| Reeds & Winds
| Instruments
| Classical
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ASIN: B00004VXDU
Release Date: 2000-11-14 |
Tracks:
- Elizabethan Serenade - NPO/Charles Gerhardt
- The Watermill - Sailing By
- Saxophone Con: I. Allegro Spiritoso - South German Radio Orch/Ronald Binge
- Saxophone Con: II. Andante Espressivo - South German Radio Orch/Ronald Binge
- Saxophone Con: III. Allegro Gioccoso - South German Radio Orch/Ronald Binge
- Miss Melanie - Sailing By
- Man In A Hurry - Sailing By
- A Scottish Rhapsody - Orch Raphaele/Heinz Hotter
- Saturday Sym: I. Allegro Moderato - South German Radio Orch/Ronald Binge
- Saturday Sym: II. Scherzo (Allegro Vivace) - South German Radio Orch/Ronald Binge
- Saturday Sym: III. Lento Espressivo Assai - South German Radio Orch/Ronald Binge
- Saturday Sym: IV. Finale (Andante - Allegro Festevole) - South German Radio Orch/Ronald Binge
Tracks:
- Sailing By
- Give Me A Ring
- I Like Your Smile
- Perhaps I'm Young
- A Star Is Born
- Morning Light
- I Sent You Roses
- Waiting For The Moonlight
- When You Are Young
- Tango Corto
- At The End Of The Day
- Under The Sun
- Butterflies
- Homeward
- The Last Of The Clan
- Inamorata
- The Look In Your Eyes - The Dreamland Orch
- Autumn Dream - The Dreamland Orch
- There's A Light In Your Eyes - Walter Heller & His Orch 1
- Candles On The Table
- What Do You Know?
- The Sound Of Music Is Everywhere
- The Moon Looks Down
- Fugal Fun - Orch Raphaele/Heinz Hotter
- Farewell Waltz - Orch Raphaele/Heinz Hotter
Customer Reviews:
Note from OANegrin.......2003-10-02
Note to fellow saxophonists:
Aage Voss is the saxophone soloist on this recording of the Binge Concerto.
OANegrin
Average customer rating:
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Waiting for the Sun
Unruly Child
Manufacturer: EMI
ProductGroup: Music
Binding: Audio CD
General
| Rock
| Styles
| Music
General
| Hard Rock & Metal
| Styles
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Rock
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Similar Items:
- Unruly Child
- Uciii
ASIN: B00000I7BK
Release Date: 1998-12-15 |
Tracks:
- Heart Run Free
- Rise Up
- Why Should I Care
- Forever
- Man Inside
- Do You Ever Think Of Me
- Still Believe
- To The Cross
- Fool Again
- Live In The Night
- Waiting For The Sun
Album Description
Ace.
Album Details
New Aor Rock Band Release from Kelly Hansen and ,guy Allison plus Ricky Phillips of Bad Company.
Customer Reviews:
Uneven album.......2000-03-30
This is a promising start from Unruly Child, although it is very uneven in its quality. The good songs are indeed very good, with lots of hooks and catchy melodies that stick from the start. The best songs are Heart Run Free, Rise Up and Forever. Unfortunately there are also songs that aren't up to my high standards, but that doesn't mean that they are no good, simply average. Nonetheless, this is an album well worth listening to.
Music Review:
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Music Review
Music Review