Scissor Sisters Ta Dah Rar Files
Dec 15, 2006 This may be the first time that I've ever let the previous TMT review of a group affect my review. Re-reading comments on the eponymous debut of Scissor Sisters a couple years back frustrated me upon finishing my first draft of this review of their sophomore effort, Ta-Dah. What I wanted to say was that as electric and exciting as the Sisters were in their first foray into the pop scene, the. Click Download to save Scissor Sisters-Ta-dah Full Album mp3 youtube com Aug 20, 2012. Iso, replace this name with your ISO file and Is battery fund which is or public 7 for the. Rar 2 years ago, 624MB, 5, 4 Win95.
Artist.: Scissor SistersAlbum.Title.: Scissor Sisters (UK Edition with BonuLabel.: PolydorGenre.: Discorip.date.: Feb-10-2004str.date.: 0ripper.: JUST teamquality.: VBR kbpssize.: 72,0 MBplaytime.: 50:19 minCatnr.: n/aURL.: n/a01. Laura 03:3602. Take your mama 04:3203.
Comfortably numb 04:2604. Mary 04:4005. Lovers in the backseat 03:1906. Tits on the radio 03:1407. Filthy,gorgeous 03:4808.
Music is the victim 02:5809. Better luck 03:0810.
It can't come quickly enough 04:4011. Return to oz 04:4112. Uk bonus tracks intermission 00:3313.
The skins 02:5614. Get it get it 03:48Props to RNS for releasing this album back inDecember! Here's the UK Retail with 2 bonus tracks(and one interlude), enjoy this great disco album(yeah, picking a genre was a bitch this time). ARTIST: Scissor SistersTITLE: Ta-DahLABEL: Universal Motown RecordsGENRE: PopBITRATE: 209kbps avgPLAYTIME: 0h 47min totalRELEASE DATE: 2006-09-26RIP DATE: 2006-09-13Track List-01. I Don't Feel Like Dancin' 4:4802. She's My Man 5:3103.
I Can't Decide 2:4604. Lights 3:3505. Land Of A Thousand Words 3:5006. Intermission 2:3707.
Kiss You Off 5:0208. Paul McCartney 3:4410. The Other Side 4:2211. Might Tell You Tonight 3:2012. Everybody Wants The Same Thing 4:22Release Notes:The Scissor Sisters will get the party restarted with the Sept.26 North American release of its sophomore album, 'Ta-Dah.' TheUniversal Motown set will be preceded by the Elton Johncollaboration 'I Don't Feel Like Dancin',' which will becommercially released Sept.
4 internationally.A number of the new songs have been featured in recent liveperformances, including 'Paul McCartney,' 'Hairbaby,'Everybody Wants the Same Thing,' 'She's My Man' and 'MonkeyBaby,' but it is unknown how many will appear on the finaltrack list. The group is said to have also recorded a song withRoxy Music vocalist Bryan Ferry.' Ta-Dah' is the follow-up to the band's 2004 self-titled debut,which has sold 278,000 copies in the United States, accordingto Nielsen SoundScan. The group's cover of Pink Floyd's'Comfortably Numb' reached No.
10 on the U.K. Singles chart. ARTiST.: Scissor SistersALBUM.: Night WorkGENRE.: PopLABEL.: PolydorYEAR.: 2010RiP.DATE.: 2010-06-24STORE.DATE.: 2010-06-28SOURCE.: CDGRABBER.: EAC V0.99 prebeta 4ENCODER.: lame.exe -V2 -vbr-newSiZE.: 66.66 megsBiTRATE.: 200 kbps avg01. Night Work 3:0702.
Whole New Way 2:5403. Fire With Fire 4:1304. Any Which Way 4:4105. Harder You Get 3:0506.
Running Out 3:0807. Something Like This 3:0208. Shin Like Cat 2:4009. Shin Tight 3:2510.
Sex And Violence 4:1011. Night Life 3:3712. Neyrinck soundcode for dolby digital crackers. Invisible Light 6:14.
Artist: Scissor SistersTitle: Magic HourLabel: CasablancaGenre: PopStoreDate: May-29-2012Source: CDDAGrabber: Exact Audio Copy (Secure Mode)Encoding Scheme: Lame 3.98.4 V0 VBR Joint-StereoSize: 104.35MBTotal Playing Time: 57:27Tracklisting:01. Baby Come Home 3:0002. Keep Your Shoes On 2:5103. Inevitable 3:5304. Only The Horses 3:3805. Year Of Living Dangerously 3:5206. Let's Have A Kiki 3:4907.
Shady Love 3:5608. San Luis Obispo 3:4709. Self Control 3:1210. Best In Me 3:4411. The Secret Life Of Letters 3:4812.
Somewhere 3:4113. Matronics Magic Message 0:2714. Fuck Yeah 3:0315.
Let's Have A Kiki (DJ Nita Remix) 6:5416. Fuck Yeah (Seamus Haji Remix) 3:52 ScissorSisters-IDontFeelLikeDancing-RETAIL-CDS-2006-MUSiQScissorSisters-AnyWhichWay-(PromoCDM)-2010-SiREScissorSisters-OnlyTheHorses-(PromoCDR)-2012-QMI. Review: Jake Shears’ Self-Titled Album Overflows With OpulenceThe disco-friendliness of New York’s gloriously over-the-top Scissor Sisters and the increasingly electronic nature of their output obscured a simple fact: Beneath their righteous camp, lead singer Jake Shears has always been a traditional and sometimes even serious pop-rock craftsman, as Elton-y sing-alongs like “I Don’t Feel Like Dancin’” — a 2006 chart-topper nearly everywhere besides the U.S. — have proven.So, for his first solo album in the wake of Scissor Sisters’ ongoing hiatus, a 2018 autobiography, and a recent starring run in Broadway’s Kinky Boots, Shears moved to New Orleans, wrote himself out of a cataclysmic breakup, and then recorded in Louisville, Kentucky while producer Kevin Ratterman filled studios full of pickers and horn blowers from My Morning Jacket and the Preservation Hall Jazz Band.The result overflows with the opulence of orchestral Seventies pop — as if ELO and the Bee Gees got together to make a Muppet fantasia of Cajun rock.
Billowing ballads like “All for What” retain some melancholy, but mostly there’s willful elation, as if the singer got hell-bent on transcending his sorrows via old-school sonic nirvana. On greasy, brashly defiant anthems like “Sad Song Backwards,” and, indeed, most of Jake Shears, he attained it.
The first Scissor Sisters album was one of the catchiest debuts of the new millennium, but also one of the best-crafted. All camp on the surface but with plenty of substance underneath, it succeeded because the group wrote fantastic songs and backed them with excellent productions, usually in the vein of their biggest pop/dance heroes, from the Bee Gees to George Michael. If the follow-up, Ta-Dah, doesn't reach as high as its predecessor, it's certainly not the fault of some spot-on arrangements by head producer Babydaddy. Soundtracking his own mythical night at Studio 54 circa 1978, Babydaddy's Discoball Jazzfest Studio in New York City pumps out tracks gloriously in debt to the Bee Gees (of course), Elton John (although not on the track he contributes piano to), the Rolling Stones' brassy late-'70s stompers, electro-disco arena rock (if there is such a thing), and some sort of '70s disco hokum that features a very talented Gina Gershon on Jew's Harp. Similarities to their debut are much easier to find than differences, although the songs aren't quite as memorable (except the single 'I Don't Feel Like Dancin') and Ta-Dah is slightly samey in comparison. (The debut ranged for influences as late as 1987, and flaunted a tougher, leaner sound.) Still, Scissor Sisters remain consummate masters of their material; the chord changes on the ballad 'Land of a Thousand Words' defy listeners to 'not' think of a glittering disco ball, which is precisely the right image to be conjured. This version of the album contains a bonus track, 'Transistor.'
Description provided by John Bush, Rovi.