On this page you will find a list of prices for Bad Love at UK online CD stores with the cheapest prices at the top.
The links next to the prices will take you to the relative stores, where you can place an order or browse for more information.
| Title | Bad Love | ![]() |
|---|---|---|
| Artist | Randy Newman | |
| Release Date | 14 June 1999 | |
| Publisher | Polydor Group | |
| R.R.P. | £ 8.99 |
| Store | Item Price | Delivery Charge | Total Price | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Amazon (MP3) | £ 4.37 | £ 0.00 | £ 4.37 | Go To Store |
| SendIt | £ 4.49 | £ 0.00 | £ 4.49 | Go To Store |
| The Hut | £ 4.53 | £ 0.00 | £ 4.53 | Go To Store |
| Asda | £ 4.73 | £ 0.00 | £ 4.73 | Go To Store |
| Currys Entertainment | £ 4.93 | £ 0.00 | £ 4.93 | Go To Store |
| Tesco | £ 4.97 | £ 0.00 | £ 4.97 | Go To Store |
| Dixons Entertainment | £ 4.97 | £ 0.00 | £ 4.97 | Go To Store |
| 7digital (MP3) | £ 4.99 | £ 0.00 | £ 4.99 | Go To Store |
| Amazon UK | £ 4.37 | £ 1.45 | £ 5.82 | Go To Store |
| iTunes (digital download) | £ 5.99 | £ 0.00 | £ 5.99 | Go To Store |
| Play.com | £ 6.99 | £ 0.00 | £ 6.99 | Go To Store |
| Borders | £ 5.49 | £ 2.09 | £ 7.58 | Go To Store |
| HMV | £ 7.99 | £ 0.00 | £ 7.99 | Go To Store |
| PowerPlayDirect | £ 11.99 | £ 0.00 | £ 11.99 | Go To Store |
The following stores were also checked when comparing prices for the Bad Love, but they do not currently stock this CD: - Blackwell, SelectCheaper, 991.com, CD WOW!, Crotchet Music, Bang CD, 194U, ChoicesUK, LoveFilm | ||||
Three songs into Bad Love, Randy Newman lobs a smart bomb into the bunker of classic rock, impersonating a boomer-aged rocker just going through the motions, "Each record that [he's] making ... like a record that [he's] made--just not as good." Giving the punch line added snap is the happy irony of Newman's own music at midlife, which proves as perceptive, funny, and, yes, moving as any he's recorded. Comparisons to past triumphs are inevitable here, and mostly favourable, starting with the mock piety of "My Country", an anthem to America's virtual family life entranced by television, "having other people's voices fill our minds." Elsewhere, he grins through a new geopolitical patter song ("The Great Nations of Europe"), undertakes his own dialectic on materialism with the ghost of Karl Marx ("The World Isn't Fair"), and, in the album's mordant zenith, conjures the sputtering jealousy and lust of an elderly New Orleans burgher smitten by a sweet young thing. That song, "Shame", embellishes a piano blues that might have fit snugly on 12 Songs, with choral and instrumental flourishes that are apt and hilarious--mocking female singers repeat the title in frank emulation of Sylvia Robinson's venerable disco hit, while elsewhere Newman's arrangements suggest Carl Stalling's vivid Looney Tunes scores. --Sam Sutherland Amazon.co.uk Review.