One card, millions of ways to enjoy it. Use the App Store & iTunes Gift Card to get apps, games, music, movies and TV shows. Available in a variety of denominations - spend it on in-app content, books, TV show subscriptions or even iCloud storage to secure files from all your Apple devices.
Best Buy asked me to review my most recent purchase: a $15, blue/purple iTunes gift card. This item gets the job done: buy it, enter the code into your iTunes account, and you have $15 worth of credit to buy music and more from iTunes. Or you can give the card as a gift, as the name suggests. The blue/purple color is nice but the only downside is that now I have a card to dispose of (Best Buy takes them back to be recycled, or used to, the last time I checked). Sometimes Best Buy runs promos where these are discounted; this was part of a Black Friday, buy-one-get-one-at-30%-off special, so it was a good deal.
This is another great album from Mavis Staples, following "You Are Not Alone" and "One True Vine." This time, M. Ward produces and does a fine job providing a sonic backdrop that supports Staples's vocals without getting in the way of them. Songs are provided by the likes of Merrill Garbus, Nick Cave, and Ward himself. Highlights are "High Note," written by Valerie June, and "Tomorrow," featuring Troy "Trombone Shorty" Andrews.
Great album overall with some excellent standout tracks. "The Pop Kids" is one of their best singles in years. Includes plenty of dance floor tracks like "Groovy" and "Burn," but I'm fond of some of the slower, moodier cuts like "The Dictator Decides" and "Sad Robot World." If you're a fan from back in the day, you'll want this, and it's not a bad introduction to the group if you're a new listener.