Playboy's Blondes, Brunettes & Redheads - 2007 PDF | English | 30MbPlayboy is an American men's magazine, founded in Chicago, Illinois by Hugh Hefner and his associates, which has grown into Playboy Enterprises, Inc., reaching into every form of media. Playboy is one of the world's best known brands. In addition to the flagship magazine in the United States, special nation-specific versions of Pla
Playboy's Blondes, Brunettes & Redheads - 1993 - RAREPDF | English | 12MbPlayboy is an American men's magazine, founded in Chicago, Illinois by Hugh Hefner and his associates, which has grown into Playboy Enterprises, Inc., reaching into every form of media. Playboy is one of the world's best known brands. In addition to the flagship magazine in the United States, special nation-specific versions
The Brunettes - Structure and Cosmetics - 2007 (67.92 MB)Tercer disco desta banda neo zelandesa, debutan en el sello Sub Pop (en USA), presentan sonidos de pop indie, elementos acústicos; lanzaron su EP Mars Loves Venus en 1998, el dúo de la portada son Jonathan Bree (voz, guitarra) y Heather Mansfield (voz, piano, glock), los demás: James Milne (coros, bajo), Ryan McPhun (coros, bateria), Harry Cundy (trompeta), Jamie Power (bateria en los temas 6 y 8), William Cotton (coros, saxofón tenor, celeste - tipo piano) y Dionne Taylor (lapsteel).Debutan en USA GlockBrunettes Against Bubblegum Youth Stereo (Mono Mono) Her Hairagami Set Credit Card Mail Order Obligatory Road Song Small Town Crew If You Were Alien Wall Poster Star Structure and Cosmetics
An intriguing although not entirely successful blend of 1965 and 1981, the debut album by New Zealand's Brunettes starts brilliantly with the bubblegum mini-operetta "The Moon in June Stuff," a multi-part invention that mixes the free and swinging grace of a classic Gene Pitney or Shangri-Las single with a layer of hyper-self-aware irony common to post-punk teenagers who just discovered Phil Spector. Songwriter/producer Jonathan Bree and lead singer Heather Mansfield sound like they've digested decades' worth of bubblegum, echoes of everything from Joe Meek to the Apples in Stereo crop up in these songs, but the mixture of plinky synths and Burt Bacharach chords at the root of songs like "Talk to Jesus" or "End of the Runway" sounds refreshing and unique most of the time. The problem is that a few of the songs, like the gimmicky "Dancefloor" and the relentlessly name-dropping "Summer Love," sound a bit schematic, like you can tell which old records they've copped bits from. Most of