Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
He performed, wrote, and collaborated on every Beastie Boys album from 1992's Check Your Head to the group's final album, 2011's Hot Sauce Committee Part Two. Mark co-authored the Grammy Award winning album The Mix-Up. Money Mark contributed the keyboard phrase that opens and underpins "Where It's At" from Beck's 1996 album, Odelay.
The album debuted at number 15 on the U.S. Billboard 200, selling 44,000 copies in its first week. [19] It was their lowest charting album in the US. Uncut magazine gave it four stars out of five, saying "The Mix-Up is the best record collection ever thoroughly digested and re-imagined by a bunch of guys in love with sound."
Rough Mix is an album by Pete Townshend, guitarist with the Who, and Ronnie Lane, former bassist with Small Faces and Faces. The album was released in September 1977 as Polydor 2442 in the UK and MCA 2295 in the US. [1] It peaked at number 44 on the UK Albums Chart, [2] and at number 45 on the Billboard 200.
The first rock album issued on then-folk giant Elektra Records, the album begins with the group's radical reworking of the Burt Bacharach-Hal David song "My Little Red Book" and also features "Signed D.C." (allegedly a reference to one-time Love drummer Don Conka), along with the poignant "A Message to Pretty".
The album peaked at No. 2 in the Flemish Ultratop album chart, staying in the chart for 41 weeks, and reached No. 29 in Norway, No. 31 in the Netherlands, and No. 79 in France. [11] The album was certified a gold record in Belgium. [2] Neil Strauss rated it the best pop album of 2002 in his end-of-year list in The New York Times. [12]
[11] AllMusic writer Andy Kellman was less favourable, writing that "Cabaret Voltaire's first two proper studio albums hardly match the greatness of later works like Red Mecca, 2 X 45 and even 3 Crepuscule Tracks", while noting that Mix-Up "only helped solidify Cabaret Voltaire's status as an integral part of the extended frisson of 1978–1982 ...
The topic of this article may not meet Wikipedia's notability guideline for stand-alone lists. Please help to demonstrate the notability of the topic by citing reliable secondary sources that are independent of the topic and provide significant coverage of it beyond a mere trivial mention.
Playlist: The Very Best of Sir Mix-a-Lot is a compilation album of songs from the Seattle based hip-hop artist Sir Mix-a-Lot, released as part of the Playlist series issued by Sony BMG in 2009. AllMusic critic Stephen Thomas Erlewine praised the album as a "solid overview" of Sir Mix-a-Lot's songs, and he added that he thought it "serves as ...