![]() USP Recreate 90ct / Expiration MARCH 2012 $33.97 When you begin taking Recreate you'll feel your body getting leaner. From the very first dose you'll feel highly energized, yet not "cracked out" - Your energy will remain high throughout the day - without the dreaded "crash". You'll be overwhelmed with a happy, euphoric feeling. You'll have zero cravings for junk food. That's right, you simply won't want to eat junk food! In addition, you'll feel an overall warming feeling of the body -which is a sure sign your body's burning fat like a New England fireplace in winter. Before you know it, your skin will be tighter, muscles more defined and your six-pack will begin to appear. Compliments will be plenty as your confidence grows by the day. I can go on and on about how great you'll feel while taking Recreate; And all of the attention you'll get - but it's impossible to explain through words how good being ripped feels. You simply have to experience it to believe it! ![]() March Fourth Band at Austin Tour de Fat Canvas Print - Canvas Art This is a beautiful stretched-canvas art print wrapped on 2.5" thick stretcher bars. The print is professionally printed, assembled, and shipped within 2 - 3 business days from our production facility in North Carolina and arrives ready-to-hang on your wall. FineArtAmerica.com is home to more than 20,000 artists from all over the world who entrust us to fulfill their print orders online. We offer a 30-day money-back guarantee on every print that we sell and look forward to helping you select your next piece. ![]() 1939-47 Performances $15.98 Drawn from Toscanini's NBC Symphony Orchestra this band of six boys and a goil tried to cash in on the swingin'-the-classics trend that payed such generous dividends to the likes of Larry Clinton, Tommy Dorsey, Claude Thornhill and a host of others. The classic string quartet plus rhythm guitar, bass and harp, play leader Sylvan Shulman's formulaic and not very inventive arrangements of mostly classical melodies with a light swinging touch. Many of the tunes' titles resemble those of Raymond Scott: long, clever and humorous (such as "Heavy Traffic on Canal Street" or "Shoot the Shubert to Me, Hubert"), but, like Scott's musical offspring, they cannot conceal the emptiness of the musical material. It's only by looking at the stereo set's display that you can tell you're listening to another number than the one before. The jazz content is non existent, despite the presence of clarinet virtuosos Buster Bailey (of Fletcher Henderson and John Kirby Sextette fame) and Hank d'Amico (Bob Crosby, Dick Himber etc.), they do not play any improvised solos to speak of (Bailey was not a noted improviser anyhow). So while the music may serve a purpose as a hybrid curiosity or unobtrusive background music, it is totally devoid of any historical importance or even interest, either as swing or indeed jazz music (which it is definitely not), no matter how lyrical the liner notes may wax about it. HEP might better have chosen different, more interesting artists (e.g. Jerry Wald, Shep Fields' All Saxophone Orchestra, Seger Ellis' Choir of Brass or George Paxton are just a few names that come to mind) still waiting to be reissued than these Friends of Rhythm, however friendly they may be. |
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