Tuesday, 31 October 2023

Corey Harris - Greens From The Garden (1999)

Year: 1999 (CD Mar 23, 1999)
Label: Alligator Records (US), ALCD 4864
Style: Blues

Country: Denver, Colorado, U.S. (February 21, 1969)
Time: 60:24
Format: Flac Tracks 16/44,1 kHz
Size: 348 Mb

Born in Denver, CO on February 21, 1969, Corey Harris got his first taste of the blues via his mother’s collection of Lightnin’ Hopkins records. He first picked up the guitar at age 12, and at the same time developed his singing abilities in church choirs. By high school, he was playing in rock bands.
An Anthropology major at Bates College in Maine, Harris traveled to Camaroon to study African linguistics, and returned there a couple years later on a post-graduate fellowship. During these visits, he soaked up as much African music as possible, entranced by its complex polyrhythms.
After returning to the U.S., Harris taught English and French in Napoleonville, LA, and spent his spare time playing in the clubs, coffeehouses and street corners of nearby New Orleans. He quickly developed a local reputation that earned him a record deal with the Alligator label, where he released his solo acoustic1995 debut album, Between Midnight and Day, a recording that showcased his mastery of numerous variations on the delta blues style. This first outing earned high marks from the critics – enough to score a high-profile opening slot on tour with Natalie Merchant.
Harris followed up with Fish Ain’t Bitin’ in 1997, an album that featured more original material than the previous recording and took him beyond the confines of traditional blues by enlisting a New Orleans-style brass section on several tracks. Two years later, he released the even stronger set, Greens from the Garden, a mix of original and cover material that added layers of funk, R&B, reggae and hip-hop to his already solid blues foundation.
Pianist Henry Butler’s appearance on Greens served as a segue to Vu-Du Menz, a Harris-Butler collaboration released in 2000. This jazz-influenced recording marked the end of Harris’ tenure on Alligator, and he moved to Rounder for the 2002 release of Downhome Sophisticate, an album that added layers of African and Latin music to Harris’ ever-expanding palette.
In addition to his work in the recording studio, Harris also made a foray into filmmaking when he appeared in the Martin Scorsese documentary, Feel Like Going Home, an installment in the blues series that aired on PBS in 2003. In the film, Harris explores African-American blues on a journey that begins in the ..Mississippi.. delta and eventually takes him to Mali, where he discovers still more layers of African music to add to his repertoire. Harris returned to Mali, a few months later to record the aptly titled Mississippi to Mali, a late 2003 release that mirrors the Scorsese film by seamlessly welding traditional African music and African-American blues.
The artistic and critical success continued in 2005 with Daily Bread, an album that synthesized various shades and dimensions of African and African-America music – blues, reggae, ska and even rap.
Zion Crossroads, Harris’ 2007 recording on Telarc, a division of Concord Music Group, was a reggae-flavored set that reflected his travels to Ethiopia during the prior year.
In 2007, Harris was awarded a MacArthur Fellowship – commonly referred to as a “genius award” – from the John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation. The annual grant, which recognizes individuals from a wide range of disciplines who show creativity, originality and commitment to continued innovative work, described Harris as an artist who “forges an adventurous path marked by deliberate eclecticism.” That same year, he was also awarded an honorary Doctor of Music degree from Bates College, his alma mater in Lewiston, Maine.
Harris shifts his focus to more traditional American blues and related styles with the September 29, 2009, release of blu.black, a collection of fourteen original songs – primarily blues and reggae, but with generous doses of other genres – that examine the African-American story of earlier centuries and connect it to the present day and future generations.
“I always deal with Africa and the blues and roots on my records,” he says. “Those have been my primary themes throughout most of my career. On this record, I wanted to express my love for great black music, and demonstrate that love in original song form. It’s the same goal I’ve been pursuing for some time – to make original music and try to educate people in the process.”
(reggaeville.com/artist-details/corey-harris/about/)

01. Introduction to the Greens (00:48)
02. Basehead (04:41)
03. Honeysuckle (04:23)
04. Tapado (00:39)
05. Eh la Bas (05:50)
06. Interlude (00:40)
07. Wild West (04:04)
08. In the Kitchen with Momma (00:22)
09. Sweet Black Angel (04:08)
10. Pas Parlez (04:30)
11. Interlude (00:13)
12. Lynch Blues (06:16)
13. Greens Back in the Day (01:20)
14. Congo Square Rag (01:44)
15. Diddy Wah Diddy (02:31)
16. Ites (01:14)
17. Just a Closer Walk with Thee (05:56)
18. Nola Rag (04:56)
19. Epilogue (00:49)
20. Teabag Blues (bonus track) (04:59)
21. Untitled (00:11)

Corey-Harris99-Greens-From-01 Corey-Harris99-Greens-From-03 Corey-Harris99-Greens-From-04 Corey-Harris99-Greens-From-back Corey-Harris99-Greens-From-back-in

TurboBit                KatFile

Monday, 30 October 2023

Scorpions - Fly To The Rainbow [Japan Ed.] (1974)

Year: 1 November 1974 (CD Jun 21, 1989)
Label: RCA Records (Japan), B20D-41010
Style: Hard Rock
Country: Hanover, West Germany
Time: 41:01
Format: Flac Tracks 16/44,1 kHz
Size: 273 Mb

In support of the Lonesome Crow album, Scorpions toured as the opening act for the British rock band UFO. At the end of the tour, Scorpions lead guitarist Michael Schenker was asked to fill an open position as UFO's guitarist and accepted the position. Schenker's departure temporarily resulted in the breakup of the band but Rudolf Schenker and Klaus Meine ultimately merged with the band Dawn Road. The new band consisted of guitarist Uli Jon Roth replacing Michael as well as drummer Jurgen Rosenthal, keyboardist Achim Kirschnig and bass guitarist Francis Buchholz. The new lineup assumed the Scorpions name and recorded Fly to the Rainbow. Three songs on Fly to the Rainbow were co-written with departing guitarist Michael Schenker as part of his agreement on leaving the band.
When asked to comment on the cover art for the album, Uli Jon Roth said: "Don't ask me what that cover means...  I disliked it from the beginning. It looked ludicrous to me back then and looks just as bad today. It was done by a firm of designers in Hamburg, who had actually done a good job on the Lonesome Crow album before, but I think that time they failed miserably. As for the meaning, I can only guess, but I'd rather not... "
(en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fly_to_the_Rainbow)

01. Speedy's Coming (03:38)
02. They Need A Million (04:54)
03. Drifting Sun (07:44)
04. Fly People Fly (05:05)
05. This Is My Song (04:17)
06. Far Away (05:41)
07. Fly To The Rainbow (09:39)

Scorpions74-Fly-To-The-Rainbow-Jap-01 Scorpions74-Fly-To-The-Rainbow-Jap-back

TurboBit                KatFile

Dave 'Honeyboy' Edwards, Sunnyland Slim, Big Walter Horton, Kansas City Red, Floyd Jones - Old Friends (1980)

Year: 1980 (CD 1993)
Label: Earwig Music (US), EARWIG 4902CD
Style: Chicago Blues, Blues
Country: U.S.
Time: 68:48
Format: Flac Tracks 16/44,1 kHz
Size: 438 Mb

Old Friends... together for the first time... nearly fifty years after their paths first crossed, a legendary group of old blues friends from Memphis and the Mississippi Delta finally gathered in a Chicago studio to record together for the first time. Sunnyland Slim, Big Walter Horton, Floyd Jones and Honeyboy Edwards knew each other since the early 1930s: Kansas City Red, the youngster of the bunch at 54, met the others one by one during the 1940s, and over the years, in Chicago and down South, the bluesmen worked with one another off and on in various combinations. Not until 1979, at a prestigious Carnegie Hall concert in New York, did all five play together on the same stage, and it was 1980 before the quintet recorded as a unit. This recording session and the Carnegie Hall concert were the only times these musicians played as a quintet.
(earwigmusic.com/earwig-artists/old-friends-honeyboy-edwards-floyd-jones-kansas-city-red-sunnyland-slim-big-walter)

01. Apron Strings (03:04)
02. Gamblin' Man (02:49)
03. 43Rd Street Jump (02:55)
04. The War Is Over (03:18)
05. When I Came In (02:52)
06. Banty Rooster (03:44)
07. Mr. Freddy Blues (03:36)
08. Over The Seas Blues (04:12)
09. I'm A Prisoner (05:18)
10. Freedom Train (04:55)
11. Lightnin' Struck The Poor House (04:37)
12. Linda Lu (05:57)
13. Lula Mae (04:49)
14. That's All Right, I'll Be Around (03:53)
15. Heartache (04:40)
16. Sometimes I Worry (04:14)
17. I'm Going Back Home (03:44)

Dave-Honeyboy80-Old-Friends-01 Dave-Honeyboy80-Old-Friends-back Dave-Honeyboy80-Old-Friends-cd

TurboBit                KatFile

The Holy Modal Rounders - The Moray Eels Eat The Holy Modal Rounders (1968)

Year: 1968 (CD 2002)
Label: Water Records (US), water101
Style: Psychedelic Folk
Country: New York, NY, U.S.
Time: 26:28
Format: Flac Tracks 16/44,1 kHz
Size: 158 Mb

Fiddle and banjo player Peter Stampfel and country-blues guitarist Steve Weber were introduced to each other by Greenwich Village figure Antonia (also known as Antonia Stampfel or Antonia Duren). Stampfel and Antonia were dating at the time and she would receive many cowriting credits to the band's songs. According to Peter Stampfel, he and Weber began performing together as an act in May 1963, not long after being introduced.
Music critic Richie Unterberger remarked that the duo intended to "update old-time folk music with a contemporary spirit." He expanded that "they twisted weathered folk standards with wobbly vocals, exuberantly strange arrangements, and interpretations that were liberal, to say the least." John Sebastian, of the Lovin' Spoonful, noted that the duo stood out in Greenwich Village because they "played [old-time folk music] in an irreverent way [and] with a sense of humor." Stampfel himself described his approach to music at the time: "I got the idea in 1963: What if Charlie Poole, and Charley Patton, and Uncle Dave Macon and all those guys were magically transported from the late 1920s to 1963? And then they were exposed to contemporary rock 'n' roll. What did they do? And that sounded way, way, way more interesting than" faithfully imitating folk music.
The duo released their first album, The Holy Modal Rounders in 1964. Most notably, it contained a version of "Hesitation Blues", the lyrics of which included the first use of the term psychedelic (here pronounced "psycho-delic") in popular music. Shortly after the release of their second album The Holy Modal Rounders 2 in 1965, the duo joined The Fugs for a short time. Their 1965 recordings with the Fugs are on the band's debut studio album The Village Fugs and compilation albums Virgin Fugs and Fugs 4, Rounders Score. Weber's cult classic "Boobs a Lot" was included on The Village Fugs and the Rounders recorded their own version of the song on the 1971 album Good Taste Is Timeless.
(en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Holy_Modal_Rounders)

01. Bird Song (02:14)
02. One Will Do For Now (01:22)
03. Take-Off Artist Song (02:36)
04. Werewolf (03:40)
05. Interlude (00:48)
06. Dame Fortune (02:56)
07. Mobile Line (03:19)
08. The Duji Song (00:22)
09. My Mind Capsized (02:46)
10. The Step Song (01:12)
11. Interlude 2 (01:41)
12. Half A Mind (02:23)
13. The Pledge (01:05)

Holy-Modal-Rounders68-The-Moray-01 Holy-Modal-Rounders68-The-Moray-05 Holy-Modal-Rounders68-The-Moray-back

TurboBit                KatFile

Sunday, 29 October 2023

Black Sabbath - Paranoid [Japan Ed.] (1970)

Year: 18 September 1970 (CD Feb 21, 2007)
Label: Strange Days Records (Japan), POCE-1098
Style: Hard Rock
Country: Birmingham, England
Time: 42:07
Format: Flac Tracks 16/44,1 kHz
Size: 271 Mb

After an excellent debut album, Black Sabbath pumped up the iron (Iron Man, to be correct). This album is a true metal classic, but also the first true prog-metal classic, as the complex playing and lyrics are not your standard bluesy affair. The album has a number of great songs, that range from about two minutes to eight minutes, and all have a purpose and can rock your brains out.
1.War Pigs - The anti-war song that is so controversial, the record dealer didn't want the album name to be War Pigs, (mind you, this was released when Vietnam War was still happening). The track is ultimatly mind-altering, as the intro sets the trippy standard, and the vocal sections from Ozzy Osbourne are utterly classic. The way he makes melodies out of air is still astounding to this day. The improvision in the track is also one of a kind, truely great playing from all as teh interplay with Geezer Butler, Tony Iommi and Bill Ward is unheard off and, for the most part, a drug induced beauty. (10/10)
2.Paranoid - The ultimate in consice metal pop cuts. The heavy riffage from Iommi is ultimatly one of the best of this new (at the time) genre, and the steady rhythm section can only be classic. Vocal melodies and talk of social destruction make this track all the better. (10/10)
3.Planet Caravan - After true, blunt force, we get a stoner classic. The song is so mellow and trippy, one could get a contact high just from listening. The song, of traveling space, is excellently played; a well needed break after the crushing metal of the first two tracks. The bassline on the track is almost hypnotic, as this track is almost drone like in structure as the repetition is very high, albiet with some electronic sound effects and phaser on vocals. Another metal, even if mellow, classic. (9.5/10)
4.Iron Man - The immortal riff of all riffs. Everyone knows this song, as it is the law of guitar to learn how to play this riff, along with the riff to Deep Purple's Smoke on the Water and the opening to Led Zeppelin's Stairway to Heaven. The cut is a true bluesy number with heavily imporvised playing, great melodies, and some of the most dark and frightening sounds from a guitar that you will ever hear. The bass and drum interplay is excellent, almost jaw- dropping at how percise Butler and Ward are in their groove. Essential listening. (10/10)
5.Electric Funeral - A personal favourite of mine off the album. Even it is not as well know as a few of the other songs on the album, it's a classic. The riff and vocal melodie are all played in harmony by the bass, guitar, and, obviously, voclas. The drumming could not be better, as Ward pulls of some of his better and hard playing. The lyrics are about an apocolyptic future, a truely new and scary topic. The breakdown section in the middle of the track is totally new and trippy, so much intensity for one track. (10/10)
6.Hand of Doom - Another classic track, totally about what happens when you try heroin (one of the most dangerous drugs known to man; food for thought). A very complex drumming, and intense bass playing make this track a crazy trip of awkward emotions that seem to always end up in the needle. Musicianship at it's highest and freakiest. (10/10)
7.Rat Salad - The only track that is below average, as it is only a bluesy track augmented with excellent drum playing, as it is a drum solo. The track might be needed, as it shows the great talent that can be put in a song at a little over two minutes. (8.5/10)
8.Fairies Wear Boots - The best Black Sabbath track. Ever. This is one of the best, most hallucinogenic track that you will ever find on any album. The musicianship of the track is undeniable, and the lyrics about skinheads could be a link to marijuana or even acid. The guitar playing is great, as the funky bassline from Butler is truely fresh and crucial the the sound of the track. The drumming is totally swing and changes the atmosphere of the track instantly. The vocal melody is where the trip starts to set in, as it's pretty much one of the most interesting, as Osbourne screams about fairies wearing boots. This track is a classic that must be heard. (10/10)
This album is pretty much near perfection, as this is the closest anyone could be to prog- metal in 1970. All tracks are well crafted (except one) and trippy in their own right, with a fair amount of complexity and sheer power. A 5 stars for an almost flawless album.
(progarchives.com/Review.asp?id=318295) Review by Jazzywoman. 2010-11-14

01. War Pigs (07:57)
02. Paranoid (02:52)
03. Planet Caravan (04:34)
04. Iron Man (05:56)
05. Electric Funeral (04:52)
06. Hand Of Doom (07:07)
07. Rat Salad (02:30)
08. Fairies Wear Boots (06:14)

Black-Sabbath70-Paranoid-01 Black-Sabbath70-Paranoid-02

TurboBit                  KatFile

Saturday, 28 October 2023

Neil Young and Crazy Horse - Everybody Knows This Is Nowhere [Japan Ed.] (1969)

Year: May 14, 1969 (CD 2005)
Label: Reprise Records (Japan), WPCR-75087
Style: Country Rock
Country: Los Angeles, California, U.S. / Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada
Time: 40:28
Format: Flac Tracks 16/44,1 kHz
Size: 265 Mb

Neil Young’s eponymous debut gave some clues as to the direction his music would take after his solo career began to take shape. Even “The Old Laughing Lady” hints at the eccentric folk balladry that made him so unique. On balance, however, the album, while enjoyable, seems tentative. Young appeared to have some ideas from his Buffalo Springfield days he needed to discharge.
With his second album, Everybody Knows This Is Nowhere, Young firmly established himself as one of the key musicians and songwriters of the 60s and beyond. Everything he would accomplish over the long span of his creative life took seed on the album, whether it’s the proto punk of “Cinnamon Girl” or the country rock distinguishing the title tune. The guitar wrangling on “Down by the River” and “Cowgirl in the Sand” anticipates his later experiments with noise and dissonance.
Everybody Knows This Is Nowhere also marks Young’s first appearance on record with Crazy Horse, his stalwart backing band. Chris Bellman’s vinyl remaster adds heft to each of the instruments, even in comparison to the very good original pressing. Billy Talbot’s bass rings out with authority; Ralph Molina’s snare drum snaps hard. Young’s voice is more emotionally nuanced and detailed, and further out in front.
In particular, the distorted guitars on “Cinnamon Girl” feel edgier and sustain longer on the newer pressing. Young’s arpeggios in the right channel forcefully cut through the mix. There’s better separation between Young and Danny Whitten on their shared lead vocal, and the guitar strings on the former’s solo at the end of the track possess more immediacy and sharpness.
Young’s iconic guitar solos on “Down by the River” and “Cowgirl in the Sand” are about tone, texture, and impact. Every aspect of the approach explodes here. Vibrato, picking technique, and attack stand out and give passages structure and clarity. Crazy Horse’s contributions also come to the fore. It’s easier to hear how much Whitten’s rhythm guitar brings to the tunes, particularly when he and Young engage in spirited interaction. Bellman’s mastering also adds definition to Talbot’s bass, which supplies the songs with a stronger foundation all the while making them more fluid and dynamic.
That’s not all. The guitar twang and string pulls on the title track are brighter and more powerful on the new pressing. And while the main and background vocals smear together on the earlier pressing, the backing vocals now fully complement Young’s lead. Acoustic guitars on “Round & Round (It Won’t Be Long),” too, sound more natural and complex. They’re more cleanly separated—just like Young’s multi-tracked vocals. And during “Running Dry (Requiem for the Rockets),”Bobby Nokoff’s violin comes across reserved on the earlier pressing but sings here. This remaster brings all the elements of the recording into higher resolution, and the result brings you deeper into the music.
Everybody Knows This Is Nowhere proved Young was a triple threat—a guitarist, singer, and songwriter beyond category. On this remaster, you can hear how he carved out his place in the rock n’ roll pantheon. That he’s still going strong is both an affirmation and inspiration.
(vinylreviews.com/album/everybody-knows-this-is-nowhere/) Review by Joe Taylor

01. Cinnamon Girl (03:00)
02. Everybody Knows This Is Nowhere (02:28)
03. Round & Round (It Won't Be Long) (05:53)
04. Down By The River (09:16)
05. The Losing End (When You're On) (04:06)
06. Running Dry (Requiem For The Rockets) (05:35)
07. Cowgirl In The Sand (10:06)

Neil-Young69-Everybody-Knows-02 Neil-Young69-Everybody-Knows-03 Neil-Young69-Everybody-Knows-04 Neil-Young69-Everybody-Knows-05 Neil-Young69-Everybody-Knows-06 Neil-Young69-Everybody-Knows-back

TurboBit                KatFile

George Harrison - Live In Japan [2CD] (1992)

Year: 13 July 1992 (CD 2004)
Label: Dark Horse Records (Europe), 7243 5 94665 2 1
Style: Rock
Country: Liverpool, England (25 February 1943 - 29 November 2001)
Time: 42:28, 44:46
Format: Flac Tracks 16/44,1 kHz
Size: 280, 303 Mb

Live in Japan is a live double album by English musician George Harrison, released in July 1992. Credited to "George Harrison with Eric Clapton and Band", it was Harrison's second official live album release, after 1971's Grammy-winning The Concert for Bangladesh. The album was recorded during his Japanese tour backed by Eric Clapton in December 1991, and it contains live versions of Harrison's work as a solo artist alongside many of his best-known Beatles songs. Aside from the 2001 reissue of All Things Must Pass, with previously unavailable bonus tracks, Live in Japan was Harrison's last release before his death in November 2001.
In 1991, a year after releasing the second Traveling Wilburys album, Traveling Wilburys Vol. 3, Harrison was persuaded by close friend Eric Clapton to tour Japan with him. Although mindful of his troubled 1974 North American tour for Dark Horse, Harrison performed a series of well-received shows in December 1991, which also featured a short set of Clapton's songs. The experience proved to be an enjoyable one for Harrison, whose set list included a variety of his Beatles-era songs alongside selections from his solo career. It would end up being his final tour before his death, though he had more tours planned.
(en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Live_in_Japan_(George_Harrison_album))

01. I Want To Tell You (04:33)
02. Old Brown Shoe (03:50)
03. Taxman (04:15)
04. Give Me Love (03:37)
05. If I Needed Someone (03:50)
06. Something (05:21)
07. What Is Life (04:47)
08. Dark Horse (04:20)
09. Piggies (02:56)
10. Got My Mind Set On You (04:56)

01. Cloud 9 (04:22)
02. Here Comes The Sun (03:31)
03. My Sweet Lord (05:41)
04. All Those Years Ago (04:26)
05. Cheer Down (03:53)
06. Devil's Radio (04:24)
07. Isn't It A Pity (06:32)
08. While My Guitar Gently Weeps (07:08)
09. Roll Over Beethoven (04:45)

George-Harrison92-Live-In-Japan-02 George-Harrison92-Live-In-Japan-03 George-Harrison92-Live-In-Japan-04 George-Harrison92-Live-In-Japan-05

CD1:     TurboBit                KatFile

CD2:     TurboBit               KatFile

Friday, 27 October 2023

Eurythmics - Live 1983-1989 [3CD] (1993)

Year: November 1993 (CD 1993)
Label: BMG Records (UK), 74321171452
Style: Synth-Pop, New Wave
Country: London, England
Time: 49:14, 57:26, 15:06
Format: Flac Tracks 16/44,1 kHz
Size: 338, 390, 105 Mb

Charts: UK #22, AUS #102, AUT #40, GER #80. UK: Gold.
Eurythmics released this belated live album nearly five years after We Two Are One, which would prove to be the duo's last record together for a decade. It's a chronological run-through of the group's hits (with some of their stronger album tracks interspersed) with the songs culled from the parent album's respective tours. There are some notable players in their live bands including once-and-future Blondie drummer Clem Burke, future Curve member Dean Garcia, and Eddie Reader (frustratingly, it is not noted who played which tours). The performances are spirited with Annie Lennox's vocals as rapturous as the studio counterparts. Some of the earlier, more new wave-inflected material sounds a bit thin and anemic while the more organic songs from Be Yourself Tonight fare better. Coming far after the Eurythmic's commercial peak, Live 1983-1989 received little interest upon its 1993 release and most fans would be more likely satisfied with the less-complete greatest-hits package issued two years earlier.
(allmusic.com/album/live-1983-1989-2-disc--mw0000105207)

CD 1:
01 Never gonna cry again ( Manchester-March '83 ) 5:14
02 Love is a stranger ( Los Angeles-July '83 ) 4:00
03 Sweet Dreams are made of this ( Berlin-March '83 ) 3:45
04 This city never sleeps ( Manchester-October '83 ) 5:37
05 Somebody told me ( New York-July '83 ) 3:43
06 Who's that girl ( Chicago-April '84 ) 4:07
07 Right by Your side ( Austin-April '84 ) 4:27
08 Here comes the rain again ( Stockholm-October '86 ) 5:50
09 Sex crime 1984 ( Nuremberg-October '86 ) 3:46
10 I love you like a ball and chain ( Rome-November '86 ) 5:05
11 Would I lie to you ( Houston-August '86 ) 3:34

CD 2:
01 There must be an angel ( London-November '86 ) 6:57
02 Thorn in my side ( Brighton-November '86 ) 4:34
03 Let's go ( Christchurch-January '87 ) 4:55
04 Missionary Man ( Sydney-November '87 ) 5:03
05 The last time ( Melbourne-February '87 ) 4:49
06 Miracle of love ( Paris-September '89 ) 6:22
07 I need a man ( Rome-October '89 ) 3:59
08 We too are one ( Dublin-September '89 ) 4:19
09 My my baby's gonna cry ( Edinburgh-October '89 ) 5:10
10 Don't ask me why ( Rome-October '89 ) 5:04
11 Angel ( London-September '89 ) 6:07

CD 3: (Live accoustic. Recorded at Palazzo dello Sport in Rome, 27 October 1989)
01. You have placed a chill in my heart (03:59)
02. Here comes the rain again (02:46)
03. Would I lie to you (02:05)
04. It's alright (baby's coming back) (01:30)
05. Right by your side (01:22)
06. When tomorrow comes (03:21)

Eurythmics93-Live1983-1989-03 Eurythmics93-Live1983-1989-05 Eurythmics93-Live1983-1989-back

CD1:     TurboBit                        KatFile

CD2:     TurboBit                        KatFile

CD3:     TurboBit                        KatFile

Bachman Turner Overdrive - Best Of B.T.O. (So Far) [9 bonus tracks] (1976)

Year: July 1976 (CD Oct 20, 1998)
Label: Mercury Records (Europe), 538 040-2
Style: Rock, Hard Rock
Country: Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada
Time: 78:40
Format: Flac Tracks 16/44,1 kHz
Size: 564 Mb

Charts: CAN #7, AUS #84, NZ #21, US #19. US & Canada: Platinum.
Best of B.T.O. (So Far) (1976, Mercury Records) is a compilation album by Bachman–Turner Overdrive that contains material from their first five studio albums. "Gimme Your Money Please," a cut from the band's 1973 debut album, was released as a single in 1976 to support this greatest hits package.
A remastered version was released in 1998, titled Best of B.T.O. (Remastered Hits), which added the tracks "Four Wheel Drive", "Free Wheelin'", and "Down to the Line". The European issue added another six tracks. All songs were also full-length album versions, though in the U.S. the single edit of "Let It Ride" was used.
(en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Best_of_B.T.O._(So_Far))

01. Roll On Down The Highway (03:57)
02. Hey You (03:32)
03. Lookin' Out For #1 (05:20)
04. Gimme Your Money Please (04:41)
05. Let It Ride (04:26)
06. Take It Like A Man (03:41)
07. You Ain't Seen Nothing Yet (03:54)
08. Blue Collar (06:10)
09. Takin' Care Of Business (04:50)
10. Four Wheel Drive (bonus track) (04:22)
11. Free Wheelin' (bonus track) (03:46)
12. Down To The Line (bonus track) (04:02)
13. I'm In Love (bonus track) (03:54)
14. Shotgun Rider (bonus track) (05:23)
15. Jamaica (bonus track) (04:11)
16. Down The Road (bonus track) (04:07)
17. Heartaches (bonus track) (03:54)
18. Down, Down (bonus track) (04:21)

Bachman-Turner-Overdrive76-Best-01 Bachman-Turner-Overdrive76-Best-02 Bachman-Turner-Overdrive76-Best-back

TurboBit                        KatFile

Thursday, 26 October 2023

Kevin Rowland & Dexys Midnight Runners - Too-Rye-Ay [2CD Deluxe Ed.] (1982)

Year: July 22, 1982 (CD 2007)
Label: Mercury Records (Europe), 9800889
Style: Pop, Folk Rock
Country: Birmingham, England
Time: 71:24, 78:02
Format: Flac Tracks 16/44,1 kHz
Size: 253, 506 Mb

Charts: UK #2, AUS #2, CAN #10, GER #29, NL #9, NOR #22, NZ #2, SWE #22, US #14. Canada: Gold; Australia, New Zealand and UK: Platinum.
When most people bother to think of Dexys Midnight Runners at all, it's usually as one of those one-hit-wonder '80s bands. There's more to it than that, though. The truth is that in a musical era known more for its singles than its LPs, Dexys' Too-Rye-Ay is actually one of the stronger albums of that decade, as well as one of the more atypical ones. An English band that mixed Celtic phrases and rhythms with soul and R&B influences, Dexys Midnight Runners eschewed the synth-pop style so fashionable in the '80s. In the process, they not only scored a huge international hit single with "Come on Eileen", they also created a unique and powerful LP.
Following their moderately successful debut album, 1980's Searching for the Young Soul Rebels, co-founder Kevin "Al" Archer and several other band members quit the Dexys, leaving lead singer/multi-instrumentalist Kevin Rowland and trombonist Jim Patterson (who sometimes referred to themselves as the "Celtic Soul Brothers") to remake the band. The new band ended up at 11 members strong, and included a pair of violinists (the idea of which had been one of the key bones of contention that caused some of the previous band members to bolt). Dexys then left EMI for Mercury Records, and released the first single for their new label, "The Celtic Soul Brothers", which only got as high as #45 on the British charts. However, their second Mercury single, "Come on Eileen", propelled them to stardom.
It's hard to overstate just how big a hit "Eileen" was. A playful seduction song wherein the saucy protagonist tries to convince the object of his affection to come back to his place and "take off everything", the song reached #1 in the charts in the UK, and the U.S., as well as in Ireland, Canada and a number of other countries. With its pronounced Celtic fiddling and a chorus that included the lyrics "Too-ra-loo-ra, too-ra-loo-rye, aye" (which hearkened back to a 1913 Irish-American song later made popular by Bing Crosby in the film Going My Way), "Eileen" was something of a novelty number that became even more popular thanks to having its video placed in constant rotation on MTV. It became a mega-hit, and deservedly so. Even now, 35 years later, it's instantly recognizable to most music fans, and in fact it's currently being featured prominently in a commercial for the new season of the American television series Preacher.
(sputnikmusic.com/review/73568/Dexys-Midnight-Runners-Too-Rye-Ay/)

01. Celtic Soul Brothers (More, Please, Thank You) (03:11)
02. Let's Make This Precious (04:03)
03. All in All (This One Last Wild Waltz) (04:10)
04. Jackie Wilson Said (I'm in Heaven When You Smile) (03:05)
05. Old (05:32)
06. Plan B (05:04)
07. I'll Show You (02:40)
08. Liars A To E (04:10)
09. Until I Believe in My Soul (07:01)
10. Come on Eileen (04:41)
11. Love, Pt. 2 (01:18)
12. Dubious (02:41)
13. T.S.O.P (03:47)
14. Let's Get This Straight from the Start (03:35)
15. Old [Live] (04:55)
16. Respect [Live] (07:42)
17. Let's Make This Precious [Original Version] (03:42)

01. T.S.O.P. [Live] (04:14)
02. Burn It Down [Live] (04:01)
03. Let's Make This Precious [Live] (04:04)
04. Jackie Wilson Said (I'm in Heaven When You Smile) [Live] (03:15)
05. Come on Eileen [Live] (06:32)
06. Soon [Live] (01:26)
07. Plan B [Live] (04:05)
08. Geno [Live] (03:33)
09. Respect [Live] (06:59)
10. Old [Live] (04:26)
11. Celtic Soul Brothers (More, Please, Thank You) [Live] (02:45)
12. There, There My Dear [Live] (04:54)
13. Show Me [Live] (03:25)
14. I'll Show You [Live] (03:02)
15. Let's Make This Precious [BBC Session] (03:40)
16. Jackie Wilson Said (I'm in Heaven When You Smile) [BBC Session] (03:05)
17. All in All (This One Last Wild Waltz) [BBC Session] (03:52)
18. Old [BBC Session] (04:39)
19. Reminisce, Pt. 1 [BBC Session] (05:55)

Kevin-Rowland-Dexys82-Too-Rye-Ay-01 Kevin-Rowland-Dexys82-Too-Rye-Ay-02 Kevin-Rowland-Dexys82-Too-Rye-Ay-08 Kevin-Rowland-Dexys82-Too-Rye-Ay-A

CD1:     TurboBit                        KatFile

CD2:    TurboBit                        KatFile

Journey - Departure (1980)

Year: February 29, 1980 (CD 2006)
Label: Legacy Records (US), 88697 00119 2
Style: Arena Rock, Hard Rock, Soft Rock
Country: San Francisco, California, U.S.
Time: 47:27
Format: Flac Tracks 16/44,1 kHz
Size: 311 Mb

Charts: US #8, CAN #48, JPN #61. US: 3x Platinum.
Departure offers ample proof that the Seventies hard-rock genre so many people have been trying to bury for the last few years just doesn’t want to die. Journey may well be the best American band in this idiom, which is ironic, because, stylistically, they’ve always seemed to struggle with it, as if hard rock were a new shirt they had trouble fitting into. For an Aerosmith or a Ted Nugent, no such difficulties existed — hard rock was their only option. But Journey could have gone in any number of musical directions. Founding members Gregg Rolie (keyboards) and Neal Schon (guitar) came from Santana, Aynsley Dunbar from his own groups and Frank Zappa’s Mothers of Invention, and Ross Valory from the Steve Miller Band.
For years, Journey appeared torn by conflicting interests that were only temporarily pacified by the hard-rock compromise. The addition of megalomaniac producer Roy Thomas Baker and lead vocalist Steve Perry further confused the issue. Nevertheless, the group slowly managed to improve, making albums that were extremely commercial. Journey reached their recording peak in 1978 with Infinity and then proceeded to burst apart at the seams. Dunbar left, disgusted by the lack of a clear-cut musical direction, while Baker was told in no uncertain terms that his time was coming to an end. The band had never liked his production, and the last LP they did together, 1979’s Evolution, showed it. Evolution also suffered from the growing pains of adding drummer Steve Smith to the lineup.
All of these problems have been resolved on Departure. The most conspicuous absence is that of Roy Thomas Baker, whose meddling isn’t missed. Engineer Geoff Workman has been promoted to producer, which places the group’s musical direction in its own hands. Not surprisingly, a real leader has emerged for the first time in Journey’s history: Steve Perry, a fine singer with a penchant for snappy melodic hooks, is currently calling the shots, writing or cowriting all but one of the songs and keying the sound around his vocal arrangements. “Any Way You Want It,” “Where Were You,” “I’m Cryin’ ” and “People and Places” demonstrate the band’s new approach. Steve Smith’s steady, unspectacular drumming has proved to be an addition by subtraction: goodbye to Aynsley Dunbar’s virtuoso technique. In the past, the group’s good moments came when Neal Schon and Dunbar took off on extended jams, but now Journey works best as a band. And they’ve never rocked harder.
(rollingstone.com/music/music-album-reviews/departure-255541/) Review by John Swenson. June 12, 1980

01. Any Way You Want It (03:21)
02. Walks Like A Lady (03:16)
03. Someday Soon (03:31)
04. People And Places (05:04)
05. Precious Time (04:49)
06. Where Were You (03:00)
07. I'm Cryin' (03:42)
08. Line Of Fire (03:05)
09. Departure (00:37)
10. Good Morning Girl (01:44)
11. Stay Awhile (02:48)
12. Homemade Love (02:53)
13. Natural Thing (Bonus Track) (03:42)
14. Little Girl (Bonus Track) (05:47)

Journey80-Departure-02 Journey80-Departure-03 Journey80-Departure-04 Journey80-Departure-05 Journey80-Departure-06 Journey80-Departure-08

TurboBit                        KatFile