Bobby Diamond - For Just One Kiss album flac
Performer: Bobby DiamondTitle: For Just One Kiss
Style: Vocal
Released: 1962
MP3 album: 1535 mb
FLAC album: 1670 mb
Rating: 4.7
Other formats: WAV MMF RA MP2 VOC MOD VOX
Genre: Pop
Kiss is the debut studio album by American rock band Kiss, released on February 8, 1974. Much of the material on the album was written by Gene Simmons and Paul Stanley, as members of their pre-Kiss band Wicked Lester. Simmons estimated that the entire process of recording and mixing took three weeks, while co-producer Richie Wise has stated it took just 13 days.
Black Diamond" is a song by American hard rock band Kiss, written by rhythm guitarist Paul Stanley. 'Black Diamond' was written almost exactly as it is," he said, "except that the riff wasn't there; Gene brought that part i. t's all about arrangement and embellishment. But that doesn't mean you wrote the song.
The Last Kiss is the third studio album by American rapper Jadakiss. The album was released on April 7, 2009, on D-Block Records, Ruff Ryders Entertainment, Roc-A-Fella Records and Def Jam Recordings, after numerous delays. The album features guest appearances from Faith Evans, Swizz Beatz, Bobby V, Pharrell Williams, OJ da Juiceman, Sheek Louch, Mary J. Blige, Styles P, Ghostface Killah, Ne-Yo, Raekwon, Young Jeezy, D-Block, . Lil Wayne, & Avery Storm
1995: Kissin' Christmas: The Bobby Vinton Christmas Album. 1995: Roses Are Red. 1998: Bobby Vinton Sings Blue Velvet: His Greatest Hits. Sealed With a Kiss" b/w "All My Life" (Non-album track). Originally recorded in the late 50s, this demo recording was released by Diamond Records to compete with Vinton's then-big hit single "Roses are Red (My Love)". The hit version was not leased to Epic for subsequent LPs, so the song had to be rerecorded for Epic.
Gold is a 2005 greatest hits collection by American shock rock band Kiss. This two-disc set covers the band's recordings from 1974 to 1982. from Kiss (1974) (Lead vocals: Paul Stanley). from Kiss (Lead vocals: Gene Simmons, Peter Criss). from Kiss (Lead vocals: Stanley). from Kiss (Lead vocals: Simmons). from Kiss (Lead vocals: Criss, intro by Stanley).
You can read really cute news snippets about the cast's personal milestones, like this one: Eleven's first kiss with Mike in season one was Millie Bobby's Brown first kiss ever in real life, which is really really cute. In an interview with Variety, Millie said: "It was a strange experience
The only weak track is a tacky cover of the 1959 Bobby Rydell hit "Kissin' Time," which was added to subsequent pressings of the album to tie in with a "Kissing Contest" promotion the band was involved in at the time. Along with 1976's Destroyer, Kiss' self-titled debut is their finest studio album, and has only improved over the years.
This album was released just two years after Alive!, by which time Kiss, despite heavy touring, had managed to squeeze out another trio of studio efforts. As a result, Alive II, again a double-disc set, basically reproduces the blockbuster formula of its predecessor, but with an entirely new batch of songs (making it perhaps the last time, if we pretend that the album represents one discrete show, that the band didn’t play Rock and Roll All Nite ). What it really signaled, however, was the birth of an entirely new Kiss, one now encased in an metallic sheen. Eric Carr, several years into his tenure with the band, emerged as a more forceful and commanding drummer than Peter Criss, and Frehley, though still pictured on the album's cover, was by this point out for good, here replaced by a shreddier group of guitarists led by Vinnie Vincent.
Tracklist
| A | For Just One Kiss | 2:05 |
| B | Please, Mr. Jones | 2:00 |









