Download

Martha Stewart Living Music: Jazz For The Holidays

by

Eartha Kitt

. It’s fast and easy. 100% legal. Over 1 million songs from Kazaa.com.
 
Brought to you byBrilliant Digital Entertainment, Inc.

Create your account!

First name
Last name
Email address
Password
Confirm
Password
Home Phone
- -
 
Loading...
Click here to browse by genre
Album

Martha Stewart Living Music: Jazz For The Holidays

Download Martha Stewart Living Music: Jazz For The Holidays by Eartha Kitt
Preview All Songs

Martha Stewart Living Music: Jazz For The Holidays

Eartha Kitt Sony
Released: Oct 18, 2005
1

Let It Snow! Let It Snow! Let It Snow!

  by  Chris Botti
Time: 2:43     Size: 6MB
2

Santa Claus Is Comin' To Town

  by  Tony Bennett
Time: 1:58     Size: 4MB
3

Rudolph The Red-Nosed Reindeer

  by  Tuck Andress
Time: 2:35     Size: 5MB
4

'Twas The Night Before Christmas

  by  Wynton Marsalis
Time: 5:28     Size: 11MB
5

Sugar Rum Cherry (Dance of the Sugar-Plum Fairy)

  by  Duke Ellington & His Orchestra
Time: 2:24     Size: 4MB
6

O Come All Ye Faithful

  by  Terence Blanchard
Time: 4:39     Size: 9MB
7

Jesu, Joy Of Man's Desiring

  by  Grover Washington, Jr.
Time: 2:58     Size: 6MB
8

I'll Be Home For Christmas

  by  Steve Tyrell
Time: 2:21     Size: 5MB
9

Snowfall

  by  Tex Beneke;The Glenn Miller Orchestra
Time: 2:50     Size: 4MB
10

Deck The Halls

  by  Herbie Hancock;Chick Corea
Time: 5:00     Size: 7MB
11

Have Yourself A Merry Little Christmas

  by  Dexter Gordon Quartet
Time: 9:35     Size: 13MB
12

O Christmas Tree

  by  Russell Malone
Time: 1:59     Size: 4MB
13

Winter Weather

  by  Benny Goodman;Peggy Lee
Time: 3:00     Size: 4MB
14

Shake Hands With Santa Claus

  by  Louis Prima
Time: 1:46     Size: 3MB

-= Featured Artist | kazaa.com =-

Rihanna - Carribbean Barbie TM


It’s raining Rihanna, or as she is known to her close friends, Caribbean Barbie TM. The cameraman’s wet dream, with her pretty doll-faced features and petit albeit juicy figure, is a photogenic goddess with all the aesthetic appeal of a Disney princess. Perhaps that's was caught megastar producer Evan Rodgers eye when he was introduced to the aspiring entertainer in 2005 while on holiday in Barbados with his family. Rihanna was fifteen, with bronze skin, plump, expressive lips and sea-green eyes. She was a frequent winner of local beauty and talent contests and on meeting her, the dollar sign cha-chinged behind Rodger’s eyes and he brought her back to the States to make her the billboard empress she is today. With the help of the man who produced such acts as N*SYNC, Christina Aguilera and Jessica Simpson, it’s no wonder she so stylishly broke into the pop scene. Jay-Z signed her to his record label Def Jam Recordings and the rest is history.

Her debut hit Pon de Reply, in 2005 was an instant success. It’s a salty dance hit with Caribbean rhythm and has Rihanna in all her glittering glory, introducing the world to her spectacular torso tricks and her characteristic know it all smirk. Her second album, Girl Like Me, was released in 2006. S.O.S. has our tiny dancer begging to be rescued from her tropical hip hop island of mediocrity. Unfaithful, written by R&B golden boy Ne-Yo, is a tragic ballad with melodramatic harmonies. Rihanna plays the part well, her timber, nasal voice conveying guilt, pity and the inner pain of a teenager trying and failing to sing Rhythm and Blues. In 2007, the Gods of Pop put their heads together to produce Good Girl Gone Bad. Jay-Z enlisted Ne-Yo, Timberland and Stargate. Even Justin Timberlake got in on the action, co-writing and providing backup vocals for Rehab. Rihanna is portrayed in all her pseudo-mechanic class, swooning over car hoods and alternating between baby-doll dresses and bad-ass leather ensembles. But most of the album was outshined by the billboard earthquake that is Umbrella. The song, originally written for Britney Spears, spent seven consecutive weeks at the top of the Billboard 100 and lorded over charts worldwide. It invaded countries, ransacked radio stations and pillaged tween pockets like a Caribbean Pirate. It’s Raining, It’s Pouring has been replaced as the weather’s national anthem, and yes, the artist has even sprouted her own line of designer… umbrellas. It's considered Rihanna’s best effort to date, with its epic scale and a chorus that inserts itself into your head and never. Lets. Go. Rihanna was born for stardom, and she glitters in silver paint, grinning wickedly to herself because she knows it. The world is her umbrella.

Download Music

Search for more content using these related keywords