Country Music Radio Los Angeles Live

country music radio los angeles live

Taylor Swift – White Horse – LIVE Acoustic Performance


New Year's Concert 2012


New Year’s Concert 2012


$12.51


New Year’s Concert 2012 by Mariss Jansons & Vienna PhilharmonicThis product is manufactured on demand using CD-R recordable media. Amazon.com’s standard return policy will apply….

Live Radio


Live Radio


$9.58


After unhappy stints at several record labels, the Los Angeles singer/songwriter duo Lowen & Navarro have subsided to their own imprint for this, their sixth overall album, Live Radio. The disc is culled from Eric Lowen and Dan Navarro’s four appearances on Roz and Howard Larman’s L.A. public radio show FolkScene in 1994, 1996, 1998, and 1999, and it allows them to return to the two-acoustic-guitars, two-part-harmonies style that they honed in gigs around L.A. in the 1980s; it’s their “unplugged” album. For old-time fans, that should be welcome. On Lowen & Navarro’s last couple of studio albums, Pendulum (1995) and Scratch at the Door (1998), they turned to more of a rocking style, while this stripped-down approach puts their songs front and center. It also allows them to reclaim for their own material featured on those albums and on the earlier Broken Moon (1993), making it something of a successor to Live Wire (1997), the archival album drawn from one of their 1989 club dates. There are no interview segments here, no spoken words except a count-in, so the effect is of a continuous musical performance in which the two often alternate lead vocals by song and sometimes by verse, then sing the choruses together, Lowen’s tenor soaring over Navarro’s deeper, gruffer voice. There are articulate love songs and poetic reflections on life’s travails, all with delicate, detailed guitar playing and catchy choruses. The two may not have given up the search for a rock & roll hit — they make a point of taking issue with the idea that their music is “folk” in the strict sense in the brief liner notes — but this album suggests that they may have found their level and, perhaps, may earn a loyal audience by presenting their music in an unadorned way. ~ William Ruhlmann, Rovi Performers: Dan Navarro – Vocals, Guitar; Eric Lowen – Guitar, Vocals

TROUBLE: LIVE IN LOS ANGELES


TROUBLE: LIVE IN LOS ANGELES


$20.25


TROUBLE: LIVE IN LOS ANGELES

Live in Los Angeles


Live in Los Angeles


$15.88


Live in Los Angeles

Live from Los Angeles


Live from Los Angeles


$15.75


Live from Los Angeles

Live in Los Angeles Californ


Live in Los Angeles Californ


$12.99


Live in Los Angeles Californ

Dean Myles of Los Angeles, Ca, a Radio City Music Hall Rockette


Dean Myles of Los Angeles, Ca, a Radio City Music Hall Rockette


$69.99


Dean Myles of Los Angeles, Ca, a Radio City Music Hall Rockette – Photographic Print

Live in Los Angeles 1988 (Import)


Live in Los Angeles 1988 (Import)


$14.25


Live in Los Angeles 1988 (Import)

Testimony Two-Live in Los Angeles


Testimony Two-Live in Los Angeles


$28.34


Testimony Two-Live in Los Angeles

Gipsy Kings-Live in Los Angeles


Gipsy Kings-Live in Los Angeles


$16.13


NTSC/Region 0. The passionate, irresistible music of the great Gipsy Kings in a powerful, fully packed live concert, deftly shot, in high-end documentary style, over two exciting nights in Los Angeles in 1990. Here the Gipsy Kings perfectly demonstrate

Live in Los Angeles [2-CD]


Live in Los Angeles [2-CD]


$13.98


Maze’s live albums are true reflections of their live show. You know what to expect from Maze: they sing the songs that made them famous, and others culled from many albums recorded over a successful career. You don’t have to worry about them trying to show their versatility or musical awareness by performing songs made famous by others. The show opens with a bang with Frankie Beverly and the boys doing a rousing “Running Away” for an elated crowd, and it’s followed by “Too Many Games,” where he scats a bit. Beverly writes all of Maze’s material and has been prolific without the quality suffering. On “I Wanna Thank You,” he gives thanks to Maze fans and supporters, highly unusual in song form but a nice gesture. “Happy Feelin’s” will remain a concert staple as long as Maze performs, regardless of how many other hits they have; they enjoy doing it, and its positive, perky beat never bores. Famous for their beat ballads, “I Want to Feel I’m Wanted” doesn’t disappoint. The groove continues on an uplifting “We Are One,” where they cleverly interject snatches of “Look at California.” “Back in Stride Again,” with its maniacal beat, is crisp and clear. An added studio cut, “When You Love Someone,” is satisfying. Aesthetically pleasing, and all Maze; the ’60s-sounding MC is a bit much, though. [The album was reissued by Capitol in 2003 with a bonus disc.] ~ Andrew Hamilton, Rovi Performers: McKinley Williams – Vocals (Background), Percussion; Roame – Vocals (Background), Conga; Frankie Beverly – Vocals, Piano, Guitar; Kimo Cornwell – Keyboards, Synthesizer; Michael White – Drums; Robin Duhe – Guitar (Bass); Sam Porter – Organ; Wayne Thomas – Guitar

Live in Los Angeles 1988


Live in Los Angeles 1988


$11.89


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