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Spaced Out - The Best of Leonard Nimoy & William Shatner

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Download links and information about Spaced Out - The Best of Leonard Nimoy & William Shatner by William Shatner, Leonard Nimoy. This album was released in 1997 and it belongs to Rock, Pop, Humor genres. It contains 24 tracks with total duration of 01:09:32 minutes.

Artist: William Shatner, Leonard Nimoy
Release date: 1997
Genre: Rock, Pop, Humor
Tracks: 24
Duration: 01:09:32
Buy on iTunes $11.99
Buy on Amazon $11.49

Tracks

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No. Title Length
1. King Henry the Fifth (Edit) 3:02
2. Elegy for the Brave (Edit) 3:17
3. Highly Illogical 2:20
4. If I Had a Hammer (The Hammer Song) 2:11
5. Mr. Tambourine Man (Edit) 2:51
6. Where Is Love 2:01
7. Music to Watch Space Girls By 2:22
8. It Was a Very Good Year (Edit) 3:55
9. Ruby Don't Take Your Love to Town 2:49
10. Hamlet (Edit) 3:51
11. A Visit to a Sad Planet 3:05
12. Abraham, Martin and John 3:22
13. Lucy In the Sky With Diamonds (Edit) 2:57
14. If I Was a Carpenter 2:43
15. How Insensitive (Edit) 3:33
16. I'd Love Making Love to You 2:53
17. Put a Little Love In Your Heart 2:31
18. Sunny 3:22
19. Gentle On My Mind 2:47
20. I Walk the Line 2:19
21. Ballad of Bilbo Baggins 2:21
22. Everybody's Talkin' 3:00
23. Both Sides Now 2:54
24. Spock Thoughts 3:06

Details

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One of the true ultimates in so-bad-it's-sublime listening. This collection culls the most interesting results of the famously bad recording careers of Star Trek's Kirk and Spock, both of whom recorded albums in the late 1960s. William Shatner's seven cuts all stem from his notorious album The Transformed Man, which the liner notes here aptly describe as "a bewildering collision of Dylan, Shakespeare, and the Beatles, narrated over a strangely disconnected free-for-all." Leonard Nimoy, meanwhile, gets considerably more attention, owing to his having recorded five (!) albums of "musical" material — mostly covers of folk-rock contemporary tunes. He turns in no genuinely good material, but his unsteady attempts at carrying a tune are worth more than a few laughs, whether in his struggles to keep the meter in "Put a Little Love in Your Heart" or his attempts to channel the "spirit" of Spock in "Highly Illogical" and "Spock Thoughts" (the latter of which is actually "Desiderata"). Although a high rating seems inappropriate for a collection such as this, Spaced Out is actually a must-have for ironists who wish to impress their friends with pop culture detritus.