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1.6K items sold
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Location: United StatesMember since: Nov 14, 2003

All feedback (1,886)

xpressbreaks (393)- Feedback left by buyer.
More than a year ago
Verified purchase
Thank you for fast payment and a smooth transaction! Excellent buyer, A+++ :)
nchan88 (1524)- Feedback left by buyer.
More than a year ago
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Thank you for an easy, pleasant transaction. Excellent buyer. A++++++.
wyndoz (45350)- Feedback left by buyer.
More than a year ago
Verified purchase
Good buyer, prompt payment, valued customer, highly recommended.
mi652288 (377)- Feedback left by buyer.
More than a year ago
Verified purchase
Thank you for an easy, pleasant transaction. Excellent buyer. A++++++.
goldsmithcards (12150)- Feedback left by buyer.
More than a year ago
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Perfect transaction. Thank you!
o***4 (343)- Feedback left by buyer.
More than a year ago
Verified purchase
Good seller. Great communication.
Reviews (6)
Mar 24, 2006
It doesnt get any better than this
J.R. Cash takes an early interest in music while growing up on an Arkansas cotton farm in the Great Depression. He is very close to his elder brother Jack, who dies in an accident involving a table saw in 1944 when J.R. is out fishing. His guilt about this event is not helped when his father blames him as well, so it comes as a welcome escape when he is old enough to enlist in the air force and is sent to Germany. Inspired by a film he sees there, Inside the Walls of Folsom Prison (1951) he composes a song, "Folsom Prison Blues." Leaving the air force Cash marries and attempts to succeed as a door-to-door salesman in Memphis, Tenn. but his heart is in music and he succeeds in an audition with Sam Phillips at Sun Records. Soon Johnny is touring and meets June Carter, who has been a country star since childhood. Although they are drawn to each other, they are married to others. Touring takes a toll on Johnny's marriage, and in the 1960's he becomes addicted to amphetamines. His marriage ends and June helps him beat the drug dependency. Reading fan letters from prisoners inspires Cash to perform a concert at Folsom Prison, which leads to a very successful album. June finally accepts Johnny's proposal of marriage given as they perform together on stage in Ontario in February, 1968
5 of 9 found this helpful
Mar 24, 2006
5 stars - read on
?Some Hearts?. First let me say that I have been buying music for a good 35 years now. I have bought many Albums? that had 1 or 2 good songs on it that I liked. Thank you for creating Itunes. I?ve love buying Greatest hits CD because it?s a collection of all the best songs of several albums. When I heard Some Hearts for the 1st time I thought to myself, man I?ve not found a song on here that I don?t enjoy. This reminds me of a Greatest hits CD from an artist that?s been around the block a few times. This CD is laid out very nicely. It?s a beautiful mixture of Country music that naturally crossover to other charts. The CD flows beautifully from start to finish. Each song tells a story that I can relate to an experience in my life. The golden egg on here is Carries Voice!, WOW does it really shine. She has an amazing recording voice. She can take an average song and make it sound really beautiful. In all honesty, this is by far the best Debut CD I?ve ever bought from a new artist in my entire life. Carries voice is simply amazing! WOW 5 Stars!
4 of 6 found this helpful
Mar 24, 2006
Another masterpiece - read on
Cell begins with Clayton Riddell, an artist from Maine, in Boston on business. A pulse is sent through the cell phone network so that anyone on the phone at the time is turned into a maniacal zombie who attack everyone else, other zombies included. The resulting mayhem forces family members to kill each other and civilization unravels. Clay and a few others struggle to get out of the city. As he heads home to his family in Maine, signs point to the pulse emanating from his home state. Instead of heading toward safety, he may be heading into peril. Stephen King's novel has received mostly positive reviews with the Seattle Times saying, "With its atmosphere of dread, its underlying sarcasm about those enslaved to technology, and its finely rendered scenes of horrific violence and human compassion, Cell is another milestone for King and one of the first novels - genre or otherwise - to truly capture the tenor, at least so far, of the 21st century."
3 of 6 found this helpful