"Although this is a good collection of tracks, up to 2 minutes has been chopped off each of the first 3 tracks. So if you are looking for the full length versions, you will want to buy the individual cds that the songs came from."
A Forgotten Disco Hit
Robert Cabuto | 09/27/1998
(5 out of 5 stars)
"A great dance album form the 70's. I had the LP and lent it to a friend and never saw it again. I've been looking for it for almost 20 years."
A classic album, now a classic CD.
Pieter | 10/07/1998
(5 out of 5 stars)
"I had the album for years and stumbled onto the CD a few years back. My heart was broken when both were stolen during a recent move. I've been looking for over a year until a friend turned me onto "Amazon" just a few minutes ago. I logged on and lo and behold, I'll have my CD replaced soon! As a matter of fact I"m buying two since I have several friends who have expressed an interest in it!!"
What a shame
Mario A. Ortiz Rdz | México | 04/25/2005
(4 out of 5 stars)
"
nice songs but hot productions didn't tell me this was a CDR !!! I hate been fooled"
Disco with a big D
Pieter | Johannesburg | 05/14/2003
(4 out of 5 stars)
"This album is a disco classic from 1978 when Don't Let Me Be Misunderstood spent weeks in the top 10 all over Europe and House Of The Rising Sun was another huge hit. This was considered underground disco, a far heavier sound and mood than stuff like Chic or The Village People. Besides the aforementioned tracks, this version of Street Fighting Man, Sevilla Nights and Eternal Light also stand out as memorable highlights of an era. Strangely enough, it has aged rather well for disco music, perhaps because its almost heavy metal edge was mirrored in the 1990s by a blend of dance beats and heavy instrumentation that approached the same territory, by industrial artists like Ministry, Nine Inch Nails and Revolting Cocks. Disco came in a multitude of styles and Santa Esmeralda's unique guitar-driven style sounds great today."