Product description This CD came from a Radio Station DJ Collection and although it does not sport a Promo Banner anywhere, the back of the Protective Extra Cover displays a round cut mark on the Bar Code that is often seen on Promo Issues. Titles Featured: Think Long Fraud in the '80s Like U Crazy Beautiful Dreamer What It Means For the Actor Nature and the Wreck So Many Ways Punchlines Running Out We have quite a few CDs, Lps & Original 78 RPMs up for sale on Amazon at this time and more will be listed in the near future & many are Rare & quite difficult to obtain so please check them out! Also, If you are interested in more than one item we can ship all items in one package and refund you the shipping rate difference to save you $$ - If you have any questions about any of our items feel free to contact us. Amazon.com There are songs designed for listening, for dancing, and for singing in the shower--Bring It Back hits all the bases. For their Barsuk Records debut, husband and wife duo Kori (vocals, organ) and Jason (vocals, drums) kick up more of an exuberant ruckus than ever before. They may be a twosome, but over a dozen musicians guest on their fuller-sounding fourth album, including infant daughter Magnolia (kazoo and "singing," i.e. cooing). Nicknamed "Bubs," she's also name-checked on "Like You Crazy" ("Bubs noticing bees in the air"). While the Gardner-Hammels aren't exactly competing with the sprawling Polyphonic Spree for "big band" supremacy, they do employ a choir on "Running Out," while additional instruments include bass ("Beautiful Dreamer"), trumpet ("For the Actor"), guitar ("Punchlines"), and viola ("Nature and the Wreck"). The centerpiece of their high-spirited sound, however, remains their irresistible hooks and exquisite harmonies, put to best effect on the stuttering "Fraud in the '80s" and bouncy "Beautiful Dreamer." Sometimes Kori takes the lead ("Running Out"), sometimes Jason ("What It Means"), but their voices are so tuned into each other that it's hard to pick a favorite (unlike most dual-vocalist bands where one inevitably outshines the other). Like the Beach Boys and the Turtles at their most euphoric, Bring It Back bursts with all the joy and vigor listeners have come to expect--and more of it. --Kathleen C. Fennessy