Single Hits Indo
February 25, 2009Single Hits: Afgan - Terima Kasih Cinta Agnes Monica - Matahariku (OST Jelita) Angkasa - Jangan Pernah Selingkuh Antique - Satu Bintang Ari Lasso feat. Bunga Citra Lestari - Aku Dan Dirimu Ari Lasso - Mana Ku tahu Asap - Ingatkah Kamu Bondan & Fade 2 Black Kroncong Protol Changcuters - Racun Dunia Delon ft.Irene - Indah Pada Waktunya DOT - Belahan Jiwa Merpati Band - Tak Selamanya Selingkuh Itu Indah Kasmaran Theme Song (ANTV) Maia Ratu - Ingat Kamu Mulan Kwok - Makhluk Tuhan Yang Paling Seksi Mulan Jameela - Wonder Woman Naff - Kaulah Hidup dan Matiku Nine Ball - Hingga Akhir Waktu (OST Hingga Akhir Waktu) Pilot Band - Sepanjang Hidupku Rossa - Ayat-Ayat Cinta (OST.Ayat-Ayat Cinta) Seven Soul - Bersamamu Yovie ft.Nuno - Menjaga Hati . Acha ft Irwansyah -Ada Cinta Acha ft Irwansyah - Kenapa Malu Acha ft.Irwansyah - Menerima Kau Pergi Ada Band - Akal Sehat Ada band - Semenit Waktu Ada Band - Belahan Jiwa Ada Band - Lari Dari Kenyataan Ada Band - Kau Dan Dirinya Ada Band - Nyawa Hidupku Andhika Pratama - Bebas Andhika Pratama - Nyanyian Senja Andhika Pratama - Tersenyumlah Andien - Gemintang Andity - Semenjak Ada Dirimu Andra & The BackBone - Sempurna . Bunga - Kasih Jangan Kau Pergi Bibus - Bukan Pacarmu . Chandra - Sekali Lagi Bersamamu Cokelat - Saat Jarak Memisahkan CrossBottom - 9 Tahun . d’Masiv - Tak Bisa Hidup Tanpamu Dave Koz ft.Ada Band - Manusia Bodoh Dewi Dewi - Roman Picisan Dewi Sandra - I Love You Drive - Bersama Bintang D’cinnamons - Kuyakin Cinta . Elfonda - Anggun . Gigi - 11 Januari Gita Gutawa - Bukan Permainan (right click + save as) Gita Gutawa - Kembang Perawan (right click + save as) Gita Gutawa ft.Delon - Your Love Gya ft.NEO - Mencari Cinta Jikustik - Puisi (right click + save as) J-Rock - Kau Curi Lagi Julian Cely ft.Terry - Tentang Kita Juliette - Bukannya Aku takut Kaimsasikun - Pria Dijajah Wanita Kertas - Kekasih Yang Tak Dianggap KD - I’m Sorry Goodbye Kunci - 1=sama Lala - Langkah Baru Letto - Permintaan Hati Letto - Sebelum Cahaya berikutnya>>
As Roger Waters’s solo career set into a sunset of suspiciously self-serving Wall revivals and compelling if modest-selling solo efforts, his former band became one of the few outfits in the soft live market of the 1990s to burnish its stadium-filling appeal. But their recorded output wasn’t quite so rosy. As all post-Dark Side of the Moon albums must have a Big Important Theme, The Division Bell is vaguely about levels of separation (did you say, duh!?), with more than one not-so-opaque lyrical jab at the estranged Waters. But there’s a sense that the band may have put more thought into its trademark audio gimmickry (well represented here by the actual sound of the earth’s crust cracking–you don’t get that on Rage Against the Machine albums!–and a “spoken” intro by Dr. Stephen Hawking, or rather his voice synthesizer) than it did into its songs this time around. The opening “Cluster One” has a hypnotic minimalist lure that dissolves all too quickly into the bluesy waffle of “What Do You Want From Me,” while Floyd Mach III leader Dave Gilmour’s usually lyrical guitar work is uninspired throughout, a definite Floydian slip. Still, the band maddeningly manages a few moments of the old grandeur here and there. The Division Bell is not a great Pink Floyd album, but an all-too-fallible simulation.





