Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
However, some critics have expressed reservations about the album's length across 21 tracks. Amy Zimmerman of The Daily Beast gave the album a positive review, stating "a mix of instrumental tracks, lovely ballads and solemn covers, true that is music to make sweet love to. The sound is all melancholy, alternative, and adorable".
I'll Be Your Mirror: A Tribute to The Velvet Underground & Nico is a tribute album, by various artists, to the eponymous 1967 album The Velvet Underground & Nico by American rock band the Velvet Underground and German singer Nico.
Cross Fire is a 1984 studio album by American soul music vocal group the Spinners, released on Atlantic Records.This release continued a commercial decline that the group experienced beginning in the late 1970s and was their final album on long-time label Atlantic.
[11] Stereo Review opined that Knight "is buried in a mire of unimaginative and downright boring arrangements." [ 12 ] AllMusic called "Save the Overtime (For Me)" "the kind of jubilant, celebratory, rousing performance that had marked their best Motown singles, and it put some fresh life into what had become a stagnant group."
In///Parallel received generally positive reviews from critics upon release. On Metacritic it received a weighted score of 74/100 based on 7 reviews indicating "generally favorable reviews". [ 5 ] Stephen Erlewine from AllMusic gave the album a 3.5/5 stars saying "Harrison exudes a quiet confidence, letting IN///PARALLEL unfold surely and ...
Get AOL Mail for FREE! Manage your email like never before with travel, photo & document views. Personalize your inbox with themes & tabs. You've Got Mail!
You're Driving Me Crazy is the 39th studio album by Irish musician Van Morrison, his first in collaboration with American jazz organist & trumpeter Joey DeFrancesco. [4] His third album in just seven months, and released on 27 April 2018 by Sony Legacy, it reached the Top 20 in the UK, and features Morrison's daughter, Shana.
Edward Moore Zimmerman, often given as E. M. Zimmerman, (January 9, 1859 – December 6, 1922) was an American bass, composer, choir conductor, organist, and music educator. [2] A longtime resident of Philadelphia , he was active as a church and concert singer in that city from the 1880s into the early years of the 20th century.