(JP¥2,739)
+HK$74.34 Shipping fee
+HK$15.75 Agent service fee
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クーチョコニャンコ
5/5760
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Item condition
No noticeable scratches or marks
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Japan
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This item can't be bundled due to shipping restrictions. Please buy separately.
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This item can't be bundled due to shipping restrictions. Please buy separately.
Final price reduction. From my collection, I'm offering the domestic version with obi of "Uta Koso Subete" (歌こそすべて), which is highly sought after for its inclusion of "Dance with Me" but is out of print and expensive, as it was not carried by major record stores (Tower Records, HMV, etc.). If you purchase other Orleans CDs together, I will discount them by 250 yen for 2 CDs and 450 yen for 3 CDs, so please let me know in advance. As I've mentioned before, I'm a fan of American rock, and my favorite bands are CCR, The Allman Brothers Band, The Band, Little Feat, and Lynyrd Skynyrd, all of which have a Southern taste and are bands with music that can be called the essence of American rock and solid performance skills. And there's a band that has both a Southern taste and a West Coast taste, and that band is Orleans (at the time, it was either Orleans or Orlins). At the time, they were called Little Feat of the West and Orleans of the East, and their musical inclinations were very similar. That is, New Orleans funk, R&B, swamp rock, etc., and their debut album and Little Feat's "Dixie Chicken" of the same year had a very similar tendency, with many commonalities in some of the song styles. The biggest difference was John Hall's dry sound, compared to Lowell's slide guitar's stickiness. (John, the guitarist, was one of the three greatest guitarists who produced a dry sound. The others were Jim Messina and Mark Knopfler.) Neither of them was released in Japan at the time, so I bought the import versions, but Orleans had a bigger impact and I liked it better. (Dixie Chicken somehow gave me the impression of being calm and settled, and I didn't realize its power and coolness until I heard the live performance.) After that, Orleans broke through with "Uta Koso Subete," which is included in this work and is connected to the West Coast, and the big hit of "Dance with Me" (the first record company, Dunhill, didn't have an eye for talent), and became a beloved band with real ability. I've been selling Orleans records, and I've kept the 1st, 2nd, best-of, Harvard Square, live, etc., on CD, but I'm finally in a situation where I have to organize my collection, so I decided to buy a 2CD set (which was expensive) and sell "Yume no Samayoi" and "Uta Koso Subete." Since I've been collecting them, the case, jacket, liner notes, and disc surface are in good condition. I'm selling various items, and combined transactions (with discounts) are possible.
3 days ago