Vinyl Confessions (Remastered) - Kansas

Vinyl Confessions (Remastered)

Kansas

  • Genre: Rock
  • Release Date: 1982-06-01
  • Explicitness: notExplicit
  • Country: USA
  • Track Count: 10

  • â„— 1982 Epic Records, a division of Sony Music Entertainment

Tracks

Title Artist Time
1
Play the Game Tonight Kansas 3:27 USD 1.29
2
Right Away Kansas 4:07 USD 1.29
3
Fair Exchange Kansas 5:02 USD 1.29
4
Chasing Shadows Kansas 3:21 USD 1.29
5
Diamonds and Pearls Kansas 4:51 USD 1.29
6
Face It Kansas 4:17 USD 1.29
7
Windows Kansas 3:32 USD 1.29
8
Borderline Kansas 4:00 USD 1.29
9
Play On Kansas 3:32 USD 1.29
10
Crossfire Kansas 6:36 USD 1.29

Reviews

  • Sweet

    4
    By Breathoflife95
    This is a great album, my personal favorite kansas release. The lead vocals really shine.
  • Outstanding

    5
    By RJRandalls
    The song writing is truly the best of both worlds, with the best of both Elefante and Livgren, while stylistically, there is a great blend of progressive rock, jazz, and blues styles, with expressive and moving use of the piano, fiddle, harmonica, and saxophone, all unique (for Kansas) to this album. Not a single "filler" song.
  • This is Not the Kansas You Knew

    2
    By cosmic msgr
    In this rendition of Kasas, the musical style changed along with the lead singer . If you were a big fan of the old Kansas sound, you may be disappointed with this release. The progressive rock sound is gone.
  • Love it

    5
    By jonathan.fann
    Just what I needed
  • New Singer - John Elefante...

    5
    By Blackelsluck
    Replaced the departed Steve Walsh and did an admirable job of it. Warren Ham also joined the band, providing vocals, harmonica, keyboards and saxophone accompaniment. The energy of the band was up when I saw them in concert in October at the Universal Amphitheater. Phil Ehart and Dave Hope laid a solid foundation of rhythm and thunder. Robby Steinhardt's soaring violin was matched only by John Elefante's soaring vocals. John also provided guitar and keyboards to the mix on stage, allowing Kerry Livgren to do more keyboards, and Rich Williams to shine on his guitar. Warren Ham played a hot harmonica and gave Kansas the opportunity to play an old favorite "Down The Road". The concert was John's triumphant return to Los Angeles, having grown up in nearby Long Beach. The only bummer of the evening was Robby Steinhardt's announcement that the St. Louis Cardinals had defeated the Milwaukee Brewers in the final game of the World Series.