Singing Machine Reviews




singing machine reviews

Memorex MKS-SS1 SingStand Home Karaoke System.


Singing Machine


Singing Machine


$4.99


We believe it is important to preserve what makes music special, and make it easy to craft listening experiences. At MOG, browse millions songs and play them instantly. Or just turn on radio where you can stop and replay songs. You can also create playlists for any occasion, and even download songs to your mobile. We are dedicated to employing the cleanest but most powerful technology so you can enjoy music as much as ever.

The Singing Machine / DISCO LIGT KARAOKE SYS / SML-390


The Singing Machine / DISCO LIGT KARAOKE SYS / SML-390


$116


The Singing Machine – DISCO LIGT KARAOKE SYS – SML-390

The Singing Machine / PRTABL CDG KARAOKE DISCO / SML383


The Singing Machine / PRTABL CDG KARAOKE DISCO / SML383


$64.24


The Singing Machine – PRTABL CDG KARAOKE DISCO – SML383

The Singing Machine SML-390 Karaoke System


The Singing Machine SML-390 Karaoke System


$113.99


Tray Loading CDF Player 5.5″ B/W Monitor Two Microphone Jacks Built-in Speakers Balance and Echo & Auto Voice Control Black Karaoke System SML-390 SML-390 Karaoke System The Singing Machine The Singing Machine Company, Inc www.singingmachine.com

The Singing Machine SMG-903 Karaoke System


The Singing Machine SMG-903 Karaoke System


$129.99


Tray-loading CDG player 5.5 B&W monitor back speaker system LED track display 2 microphone jacks with separate volume controls iPod Keyboard Guitar input jack with separate volume control Video & Audio out stereo on screen lyrics digital key controller Volume balance & echo control auto voice control MP3 playable AC operation Karaoke System SMG-903 SMG-903 Karaoke System The Singing Machine The Singing Machine Company, Inc www.singingmachine.com

The Singing


The Singing


$8.99


The Singing

The Singing Machine / PRO CDG KARAOKE PA SYS / SMG-903


The Singing Machine / PRO CDG KARAOKE PA SYS / SMG-903


$155


The Singing Machine – PRO CDG KARAOKE PA SYS – SMG-903

Singing Machine IP158 Corded Microphone


Singing Machine IP158 Corded Microphone


$29.38


Big sound with durable metal construction. Connects to any 1/4 microphone jack. High quality components. Performance of the highest level. Selections to fit every occasion. Satisfaction ensured.

Birds Are Singing


Birds Are Singing


$23.48


Can a country man make it in Liberia? This is the question Sumowor Gbamokorli wrestles with during his long and eventful journey from village life in Fuama Chiefdom to the capital city, Monrovia. Set in the mid-1960s, Birds Are Singing is the story of an ambitious native Liberian youth caught in the webs of conservative tribal and ]civilized] societies that deny him the freedom to live according to his own plans. ]Korli, ] as he is known, wants more than just to earn a living, raise a family, and die of old age. He refuses to join any secret society besides the Poro, and he rejects an arranged marriage. Korli]s father, Nuulaa, resents his disdain for the conventions, and doesn]t hesitate to try to sacrifice him to win a chieftaincy election. Korli shoots his disguised attacker and flees to the so-called civilized society when he discovers that he has killed his own father. Wilton Sankawulo]s tragic hero takes the reader on an adventure full of strife, intrigue, and triumphs against the odds. From the rituals of secret societies and family traditions in the interior, to crooks and corrupt leaders in the city, Sankawulo]s colorful characters reveal the social, cultural, and political factors that retard the development and unity of Liberia. Birds Are Singing is a magnificent story that brilliantly portrays a nation torn apart by tribalism and tyranny, while offering possible remedies that might finally serve to usher in equality and justice. Editorial Reviews]This book is Sankawulo’s magnum opus, his final compulsive effort to be heard and understood, his vision of a just, egalitarian, productive Liberian society, his thorough understanding of both our better natures and our very ugly, wicked ways, and his prayer for our redemption.] ]STEPHANIE HORTON, Sea Breeze Journal of Contemporary Liberian Writings]Birds Are Singing]gives great insight into Liberian history, culture and politics. Like Sankawulo]s previous novels, The Rain and the Night, and Sundown at Dawn, it confirms his brilliant role as a teacher, historian and preserver of culture. ]ALTHEA ROMEO-MARK, author of If Only the Dust Would SettleThe history of Liberia through the reign of President William Vacanarat Shadrack Tubman is told in thinly disguised story form. Moreover, the rest of Liberia]s story up to and including the tragic civil conflicts of the 1980s, 1990s and early 2000s is present in embryo. The reader who knows Liberia well]in fact any reader who knows the tragedy of failed states around the world]will understand this story. Read it, enjoy it, and reflect on it.]]JOHN GAY, author of Red Dust on the Green Leaves and The Brightening Shadow]Birds Are Singing holds a mirror up to Liberia and reveals a place where the best and brightest are cut down time and time again to the detriment of all. And we]Liberian people]must read it with that same urgency with which Sankawulo put it down as the ultimate deadline loomed before him.] ]SENGBE KONA KHASU, Musician, Screenwriter and Dir

The Singing Machine SMG-901 Professional CDG Karaoke PA System


The Singing Machine SMG-901 Professional CDG Karaoke PA System


$87.99


Hit all the high notes with the SMG-901 karaoke system from The Singing Machine. This CD+G system has a built-in screen that lets you see the song lyrics as you sing. It also features 2 microphone inputs so you can sing some great duets and is iPod compatible, for more song choices.

Reviews


Reviews


$3.99


Reviews (1908) is a volume of critical and literary views and reviews of Oscar Wilde about various subjects and writers. These reviews, illustrating the middle period of the writer's maturing career, between the aesthetic period and the production of Lady Windermere's Fan, reveal his opinions of the contemporaries who thought little of him. Some of the reviews are prophetic in nature, some are biased by hostile or friendly prejudice, others are witty and positive.



 Elephant Jokes


Elephant Jokes


$15.98


Has Robert Pollard been reading his reviews lately? The back cover of 2009′s Elephant Jokes, the fifth album Pollard released that year, features the blurb “Another big batch of Robert Pollard songs, a new nadir in patience and delicacy,” suggesting he’s become aware of the not-uncommon complaint that he’s more interested in quantity than quality. But truth to tell, Pollard’s joke has been attached to the wrong record: Elephant Jokes sounds more like a Guided by Voices album than anything Pollard has done in quite a while, which is to say the tunes are short, energetic, and hooky as all get-out and he dives into them with a full head of steam. The album was cut using Pollard’s now standard working method — Bob singing and playing guitar; Todd Tobias recording, producing, and handling the rest of the instruments — but the results suggest Pollard put a bit more thought into his guitar playing, with a larger portion of joyously aggressive slop making its way into the final mix than listeners have come to expect, and though Elephant Jokes still doesn’t perfectly replicate the sound of the members of a full band bouncing ideas off one another in the studio, it comes much closer than most of his post-GbV work. And as for the songs, Elephant Jokes is just consistent enough that perhaps Pollard actually threw away a few less than worthwhile tunes for a change; the wordplay is thoroughly cryptic, as usual, but there’s actually some sort of point to “Things Have Changed (Down in Mexico City)” and “Hippsville (Where the Frisbees Fly Forever),” and the primitivism of “Jimmy” and “Symbols and Heads” is enough to make you think the man has rediscovered his four-track cassette machine, and likes it. Sure, Elephant Jokes is another big batch of Robert Pollard songs, but it harks back to a time when most smart pop fans could hardly ask for anything more. ~ Mark Deming, Rovi

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