Cheap Peace (Music) (Jim Brickman) Price
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| ARTIST: | Jim Brickman |
| CATEGORY: | Music |
| MANUFACTURER: | Windham Hill Records |
| TYPE: | Christmas / Chanukkah, Pop |
| MEDIA: | Audio CD |
| TRACKS: | We Three Kings, Hark! The Herald Angels Sing, Let It Snow! Let It Snow! Let It Snow! - The Blind Boys of Alabama, Early Snowfall, Do You Hear What I Hear?, Away in a Manger, Rejoice (O Come, O Come Emmanuel), O Holy Night, Jingle Bells, God Rest Ye Merry Gentlemen, Sending You a Little Christmas, Blessings, Peace (Where the Heart Is) [#] |
| # OF MEDIA: | 1 |
| UPC: | 828765289627 |
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Customer Reviews of Peace
ABSOLUTELY BEAUTIFUL I became a fan of Jim Brickman when he released The Gift. I have enjoyed every single cd he has released.
His newest creation PEACE is his 2nd foray into holiday music. And I will say that he has not lost his touch. His melodies are still so wonderful and soothing.
He beautifully mixes a little vocal arrangement into some of the traditional Christmas songs. Such as LET IT SNOW, LET IT SNOW, LET IT SNOW (with The Blind Boys of Alabama) and DO YOU HEAR WHAT I HEAR? (with Anne Cochran & Tracy Silverman; this is a very magical version of this classic). Once again Collin Raye performs a song (written by Jim Brickman) called PEACE. Aside from the vocal recordings, Jim beautifies the traditional works into a new masterpiece. Such as HARK! THE HERALD ANGELS SING, AWAY IN A MANGER, O COME, O COME EMMANUEL (sounds like Christmas Eve mass at my church) and O HOLY NIGHT.
I have always loved the original pieces Jim has created. On this cd there is the exquisite and soft EARLY SNOWFALL.
PEACE is what I would call Jim's masterpeice and I have fallen in love with his stylings all over again. This is the kind of cd you want to snuggle up with (preferrably a loved one) next to an open fire.
Brickman's best yet - Sending us all a little Christmas!
Jim Brickman's second holiday CD, not just an incredible work worthy of a Grammy nomination, will also carry with it his patriotic efforts, as fans remember his farewell shows for the USO and CD distribution to the departing troops. Kristy Starling, who sings "Sending You a Little Christmas" and Jeff Timmons (of 98 Degrees) joined Jim for several farewell shows for deploying troops during the holidays. The USO named that song as its theme, CDs were distributed to the troops, and many soldiers and their families seemed pleased with the sendoff.
Jim's beautiful renditions of traditional favorites like "We Three Kings", "Hark the Herald Angels Sing", "Away In a Manger", "O Holy Night", "God Rest Ye Merry Gentlemen" and "Rejoice" lend such beauty to the season. "Do You Hear What I Hear?" with Tracy Scott Silverman's electric violin and Anne Cochrane's lovely voice ... if you've ever seen them perform this live in concert, well, it's a very special treat."
The title track, "Peace ... Where the Heart Is" is superbly performed by Colin Raye, who vocalized on "The Gift" with Susan Ashton on Jim's previous holiday CD. The Blind Boys of Alabama do a nice job of "Let It Snow"
Having seen Jim's live performances (and some are available on DVD: My Romance, and Love Songs and Lullabies), the CD is a wonderful way to close your eyes and re-live that show.
"Early Snowfall" was a favorite of mine ... original and accoustically descriptive, as Jim's native Ohio background sparks his creativity. "Blessings" was exactly my feeling about this collection ... each song was a blessing to enjoy from "America's Newest Romantic Piano Sensation"
A metal X-mas as only Brickman can deliver
When I first heard that Jim Brickman was offering up a second metal X-mas CD, I was extremely skeptical. After all, how does one follow up the staggering metal might of "The Gift" from 1997? The answer: One does it with "Peace," Jim Brickman's stellar second X-mas metal CD, a piece of work so groundbreaking in the X-mas Metal genre, one wonders just what sort of substance Brickman was on when recording this seminal classic.
First off, don't let the title of the record, or, for that matter, the title of the songs, fool you. Brickman hasn't lost his dark X-mas edge, and in fact sounds gloomier than ever on such tunes as "Early Snowfall (For the Wicked)" and "O Holy Night (For the Axe Stalkers)." Brickman combines his eerie synth notes with an Iron Maiden-like thrash of guitars behind him, creating a complex symphony of chaos not heard since the days when Saxon and early Metallica roamed the Earth.
Though Brickman's quaint Midwestern face on the album cover may look content, this is an angry man filled with pure rage - and he wants the world to know it. You can't touch songs like "Jingle Bells (In Hell)" and "Away in a Rotted Manger" - you just can't!!!!
"Peace (For No One)" ends this masterpiece of pure cacophony, Brickman's exiting kiss-off of Christmas Chaos for the damned. Frankly, Jim Brickman has failed on his recent attempts to capture the brutal free-for-all X-mas metal militia heard on this record, and one can only hope that the young and evolving Brickman does not forget the roots of his foreboding metal past.
MAKE THIS X-MAS WORTHWHILE!!!!!
MAKE THIS X-MAS WITH BRICKMAN!!!!!!!!!!!