Search Results:
We found 95 results for "Cindy Miller"
Album
Cindy Miller: Love You Madly (2003)
Lovely jazz standards recorded by a gathering of New York's finest musicians... fresh and lyrical
Album
Miller-Kelton: Goodbye Cindy (2009)
Midwestern folklore blends to politics and despair, summer rolls forever and American boys return home. The seaside Chautauqua folds up for the season, Cindy's gone, and we offer our last poem for a Senator, a man without a country.
Recommended if you like
Allison Krauss,
Gillian Welch,
Lucinda Williams.
Album
Cindy Miller: Originals (2006)
"Land That We Love" Patriotic - "Sensitive Man" & "The Menopause Song" - country
Album
Cindy Miller: I've Got The Music In Me (2006)
Song from a cabaret/dinner theatre show - pop, country, show tones, with great songs, great parodies and great impersonations
Recommended if you like
Barbra Streisand,
Julie Andrews,
Olivia Newton-John.
Album
Various Artists: Females On Fire 1 (2005)
A compilation of 30 female artists across many genres and all styles of music
Recommended if you like
Alanis Morissette,
Madonna,
Sheryl Crow.
Album
Heidi and Esther Haase: Tidings of Comfort and Joy (2006)
Cheerful Classy-folk instrumentals with a Celtic flavor on hammered dulcimer and folk harp with guitar, whistles, uilleann pipes, mandolin, violin, and oboe.
Recommended if you like
Cindy Ribet,
Miller-Rowe Consort,
Russell Cook.
Album
Heidi Haase & Friends: Hymns From the Hills (2007)
Classy-folk style instrumentals of favorite hymns from the 19th century played on hammered dulcimer, double bass, guitar, violin, folk harp,penny whistle, mountain dulcimer, uilleann pipes, and low whistle.
Recommended if you like
Cindy Ribet,
Miller-Rowe Consort,
Russell Cook.
Album
Heidi Haase: Echoes from the Hills (2008)
Relaxing classy-folk instrumentals echoing beautiful melodies from the British Isles to the Appalachian mountains on hammered dulcimer, folk harp, guitar, whistles, violin, oboe, uilleann pipes, cello and mandolin.
Recommended if you like
Cindy Ribet,
Miller-Rowe Consort,
Russell Cook.
Album
Jim Krause: Going Up the Missouri: Songs & Dance Tunes from Old Fort Osage (1999)
Take a generous sampling of Apalachian folk music, add a dash of Celtic sentimentality and flavor it with the blues, all accompanied on reproduction musical instruments of the 1760-1820 era, and you have an idea what this record record sounds like.
Recommended if you like
Bill Staines,
Century,
Think.