Your basket is empty

Categories:
Results 1 to 20 out of a total of 56
From
HI-RES$16.59
CD$14.39

The White Lotus (Soundtrack from the HBO® Original Limited Series)

Cristobal Tapia de Veer

TV Series - Released July 11, 2021 | WaterTower Music

Hi-Res
From
CD$12.09

Red Fang

Red Fang

Hard Rock - Released March 10, 2009 | Sargent House

On their self-titled debut, Red Fang don't waste any time establishing themselves as a band that destroys amps, beers, and eardrums in equal measure. With a sound rooted in the down-and-dirty sound of classic metal and stoner rock, the band is like a hyper-energized Mountain, tearing through fuzzed-out Southern rock-style riffs song after song without ever giving the dust they kick up time to settle. With no studio trickery or conceptual weirdness at work, the album is a refreshing island in a sea of increasingly heady and convoluted heavy metal. Red Fang shows that with the right combination of pacing, volume, and swagger, the rest just kind of falls into place. © Gregory Heaney /TiVo
From
CD$14.39

Human Being

Seal

Soul - Released November 17, 1998 | Warner Records

U.K. pop sensation Seal has become notorious for taking extended breaks between albums (usually up to four years). On his third album, Human Being, producer Trevor Horn again joins Seal, and as on his past releases, life's trials and tribulations are used as the basis for the song's subject matter and lyrics (broken relationships, death, etc.). Horn again helps Seal achieve an unbelievably sonically rich album -- with each listen, you hear something you didn't before. The moderately paced, grooving opening track, "Human Beings," merges Seal's trademark soothing and crooned vocals with lyrics that deal with the highly publicized deaths of gangsta rappers Tupac Shakur and Notorious B.I.G.. Directly after, three instant Seal classics follow -- the gentle "State of Grace" and "Just Like You," plus the dance-rocker "Latest Craze." Other highlights include the ethereal beauty of "Still Love Remains," the gradually building "Excerpt From," and the moving "Colour." Although Seal fans might grow impatient with such long breaks between albums, the pop perfection of Human Being turns out to be well worth the wait.© Greg Prato /TiVo
From
CD$13.09

Just Like Blood

Tom McRae

Pop - Released February 2, 2003 | DB Records

Tom McRae's second effort, Just Like Blood, doesn't venture into territory that far removed from his self-titled debut. It's rather unfortunate, because the album gets off to an invigorating start with its first two tracks. "A Day Like Today" feels like a mix of David Byrne's world music excursions and early Peter Murphy. Amid soaring strings and what sounds like a tribal xylophone, McRae sings passionately about loving someone to death. "You Only Disappear" benefits from slick phrasing, a minimalist piano, and deep bass notes. The song feels like one of the finer moments from I Am Kloot's self-titled sophomore album. After these two songs, McRae too often gets mired in overwrought lyrics, murky ambient effects, and uninteresting melodies. Too much of the album comes off like a David Gray or Travis throwaway. While "Ghost of a Shark" recalls Ry Cooder musically, and "Overthrown" bares a sonic resemblance to Slowdive, McRae's anguished lyrics and hushed, processed vocals prove to be the album's undoing. That's not to say that there isn't an audience for anguished songs, but songs like "Karaoke Soul" and "Mermaid Blues" offer up lyrics even more embarrassing than their titles. "Mermaid Blues" perhaps best displays McRae's weakness. Without a doubt inspired by Talk Talk's minimalist albums, the song peaks too soon while McRae dabbles in flat and awkward images of "burning arrows (that) fall backwards." With perhaps just a few patches of humor or even a hint of a smile, these ten songs would be easier to stomach. That being said, fans of earnest artists like the Devlins, Travis, or Damien Rice will most likely appreciate the syrupy thickness of McRae's delivery and emotional nakedness. The nearest comparison would probably be Ed Harcourt. But where Harcourt often loses the plot in commercial-style rock bombast, McRae suffers from overblown high school quality metaphors and safe songwriting. If there were more moments like the two opening tracks, it would be easier to recommend Just Like Blood.© Tim DiGravina /TiVo
From
CD$15.09

Human Remains

Terry Allen

Country - Released January 23, 1996 | Sugar Hill Records

The conceptual scope of Human Remains is not nearly as ambitious as Lubbock. But the gutsier and more varied musical arrangements -- crafted with help from Lloyd Maines, David Byrne, Joe Ely, Lucinda Williams, and many others -- may make this a better introduction to Allen's world. There's certainly no shortage of interesting character sketches, like a one-legged dancing woman, memories of "flower children and their sh*t-eating grins," and 13-year-olds well on their way to reform school. "Gone to Texas" especially is a refreshing blast of true anti-establishment sentiment, Allen singing in even-mannered tones that he doesn't need a chickensh*t (his term) business man telling him what to do, and dissing some country star who thinks that all it takes to be special is to wear a hat and win Grammys.© Richie Unterberger /TiVo
From
CD$9.19

Human Remains

Hell

Rock - Released May 13, 2011 | Nuclear Blast

Booklet
Hell first came into being in the early 1980s, during the New Wave of British Heavy Metal movement that gave the world Iron Maiden, Raven, Diamond Head, and many other acts. They never managed to record more than a single at that time, though; the label they were signed to imploded two weeks before they were supposed to enter the studio. The band called it quits, and original vocalist Dave Halliday committed suicide. The reunited lineup here includes three original members: guitarist/multi-instrumentalist Kev Bower, bassist Tony Speakman, and drummer Tim Bowler. They're joined by new singer Dave Bower (brother of Kev) and guitarist Andy Sneap, best known to most metal fans as a producer, though he's also in the U.K. doom outfit Sabbat. A few of these songs date back to the band's earliest demos, but others are new. Old or new, they're classic heavy metal in style and approach, with hammering drums, galloping guitar riffs, and a thick, full bass sound. Dave Bower's vocals are high-pitched and overwrought (he's been an actor for decades, so he enunciates every syllable and generally acts the role of a heavy metal frontman, tipping over into goofiness more than a few times), and the lyrics are often quite cheesy in a Satanic-fantasy vein, with sound effects adding entertainment value. This is a fun record that will give fans of old and/or retro metal a lot to like. © Phil Freeman /TiVo
From
HI-RES$15.56
CD$12.45

Human Remains

Robert Haigh

Electronic - Released March 18, 2022 | Unseen Worlds

Hi-Res
From
CD$12.45

Only Human Remains

Fractured

Electronic - Released October 24, 2005 | Dependent

From
CD$14.39

Gorillas In The Mix

Bernie Krause & Human Remains

Electronic - Released January 1, 1989 | Ryko - Rhino

From
CD$15.69

Where Were You When

Human Remains

Metal - Released March 19, 2002 | Relapse Records

From
CD$11.12

Human Remains

Rolando Simmons

Techno - Released November 4, 2022 | Utter

From
CD$10.67

Rationing The Sacred Human Remains

Parasitic Ejaculation

Rock - Released July 22, 2013 | Ghastly Music

From
CD$7.49

Festering Human Remains

Scaphism

Metal - Released April 19, 2012 | Scaphism

From
CD$10.79

Rationing The Sacred Human Remains

Parasitic Ejaculation

Metal - Released September 3, 2013 | Ghastly Music

From
CD$13.09

Using Sickness as a Hero

Human Remains

Metal - Released September 10, 1996 | Relapse Records

From
HI-RES$1.59
CD$1.39

Human Remains

Nobody's Wolf Child

Alternative & Indie - Released July 7, 2023 | Nobody's Records

Hi-Res
From
HI-RES$3.99
CD$3.19

The Remains of Human Bones

Μνήμα/Mnima

Metal - Released May 20, 2018 | 2975545 Records DK

Hi-Res
From
CD$0.95

Human Remains

Ink Bomb

Punk / New Wave - Released January 20, 2023 | Fiction Records

From
CD$1.53

Human Remains

High-Functioning Flesh

Electronic - Released February 26, 2016 | Dais Records

From
HI-RES$15.74
CD$12.59

Remains in Space

Maybe Human

Alternative & Indie - Released March 8, 2024 | Maybe Human

Hi-Res