I count five, not including reissues. So, um, no.For more info on all of Leonard's Albums please visit http://www.chaseclub.com/records.html
He recorded more albums than the Beatles you know...
It's actually 46 not including reissues
I count five, not including reissues. So, um, no.For more info on all of Leonard's Albums please visit http://www.chaseclub.com/records.html
He recorded more albums than the Beatles you know...
"It's a faaaaake."DeForest Kelley's LP was so unknown to me that when I learned of its existence, I wondered if it was an Internet mockup. A lot of fake LP covers get created in Photoshop. But this is real. I just haven't heard it. Anybody?
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The front photo is culled from an old clothing ad with De and Bill. Also.
Okay, well, by that standard, the Beatles recorded 117 albums if you consult this webpage, or even more depending on how exhaustive a list you want to hunt up.I count five, not including reissues. So, um, no.For more info on all of Leonard's Albums please visit http://www.chaseclub.com/records.html
He recorded more albums than the Beatles you know...
It's actually 46 not including reissues
That was the whole point. For most self-respecting musical artists back then, the album was considered an art form of its own, not just a collection of songs. You were supposed to sit down and listen to the sides all the way through. Track arrangement, lead-ins and -outs, and run-on tracks were all given consideration by the artist, and that's how they wanted you to listen to it.
Track sequencing is still an art form. It's sad to see that disappearing.
I'm not a huge Tom Petty fan, but I appreciated that he did this:[
I program my CD player to stop half way through Kind of Blue and Miles Ahead. Turning the record over and the first cut of side 2 is a new beginning, and Act II. And NO playing bonus tracks after the album-as-intended: SO anticlimactic and disrespectful to the artists/producers who labored on these treasures. YMMV.
I'm not a huge Tom Petty fan, but I appreciated that he did this:
I still play Nichelle Nichols's Down to Earth music album twice a year or so at work. If memory serves, it was released during TOS's first season. You might consider it ''Uhura'''s first solo act. But I never got around to her 1990s CD. (Out of This World?)
Then there's Mr. Spock's Music from Outer Space, a mixed bag to be sure, but a bit longer than Transformed Man.
Come on, the Theme from Mannix?! That alone made me laugh my ass off. Yeah, she's a fake. but a brilliant one.
They can't be any worse than that "official" lyrics Roddenberry wrote for Star Trek, or those for the Bonanza or I Dream of Jeannie themes:Hey I used to love putting words to instrumental tv themes.
If you've got the time to spare, find the opening credits to TJ HOOKER and try singing the following along with it.
It's the TJ HOO-KER Theme.
It's the TJ HOO-KER Theme.
TJ HOO-OOH-KER
TJ HOOKER Theme.
(repeat as needed, or until other parties fall unconscious)
Hey I used to love putting words to instrumental tv themes.
They can't be any worse than that "official" lyrics Roddenberry wrote for Star Trek, or those for the Bonanza or I Dream of Jeannie themes:
Anybody else have faux lyrics or syllables to themes?
Does this record/album sound familiar to anybody?
Actually all of those examples are better than the drivel Roddenberry penned.
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