Saturday, 17 December 2022

Graham Bonnet (Rainbow) - Back Row In The Stalls (1974)

Year: 1974 (CD 2016)
Label: HNE Recordings Ltd (Europe), HNECD067
Style: Pop, Pop Rock
Country: Lincolnshire, England (23 December 1947)
Time: 61:20
Format: Flac Tracks 16/44,1 kHz
Size: 439 Mb

In 1979, Bonnet was approached to join UK glam rock band Sweet to replace Brian Connolly. However, he was chosen by Ritchie Blackmore to replace Ronnie James Dio as the vocalist of hard rock band Rainbow. This was something of a musical departure for Bonnet, who had previously identified himself more as an R&B singer. Bonnet would later credit his time in Rainbow and his collaboration with Blackmore, in particular, as fundamentally changing his musical outlook to a more hard rock focus. He sang on the Down to Earth LP, which would become his most successful album. It spawned two hit singles in 1979 and 1980: "Since You Been Gone" and "All Night Long". During Bonnet's time in the band, Rainbow also headlined the inaugural Monsters of Rock festival at Donington Park, Castle Donington.
Bonnet's time with Rainbow was short and he left to resume his solo career, releasing the Line-Up album in 1981, handled by producer John Eden. Following on from his time in Rainbow, the album had a markedly more rock-based sound than his previous solo recordings, whilst retaining some of his former R&B influences. For the recording of Line Up Bonnet enlisted several well-known rock musicians including Whitesnake guitarist Mick Moody, Whitesnake and Rainbow drummer Cozy Powell, Deep Purple and Whitesnake keyboard player Jon Lord, and Status Quo guitarists Francis Rossi and Rick Parfitt. The album reached No. 62 in the UK Albums Chart. The album's lead single, "Night Games", reached No. 6 in the UK Singles Chart, with the follow-up single, "Liar", reaching No. 51. Around this time Bonnet sang on an advertisement for Levi's jeans (the song was entitled "These Eyes"), although his version has never been released.
(en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Graham_Bonnet)

Best known as a hard rock singer for acts such as Rainbow, Alcatrazz, The Michael Schenker Group and Blackthorne, at heart Graham Bonnet is an old fashioned rock and roll man. Originally slated for release in 1974, Back Row In The Stalls, which illustrates that R&R side of the frontman's skills, suffered from label indecision. Not the usual stories of not knowing how to promote the album, or whether to back the singer with a tour, but instead whether the powers that be wanted to be running a record label or a film studio! Not long after this intended debut release from Bonnet (although he had released some solo singles and had prior chart success in the band The Marbles) was due, DJM took the plunge and went down the film route. Bonnet did actually have a part ? and one single line ? in the resultant (and by all accounts terrible) Three For All and the music from his album did too, a single even being released, but under the name Billy Beethoven (the band Bonnet fronts in the film). The film flopped, the single flopped and then a further 7" under Bonnet's name did likewise, the singer told to record 60 (yes, that's sixty) songs the label liked in order for them not to drop him?
Duly dropped, the album was shelved and that was that until forty years later when Bonnet went looking for the master tapes in hope of finally setting his debut album free. However they were nowhere to be found and instead the album's producer, Kaplan Kaye, unearthed a cassette of the finished recordings. Thankfully they were in a good enough condition that Bonnet managed to clean them up to the extent we hear here, this CD version a distinct sonic improvement on that released digitally a couple of years back as Private-I, although the transfer from cassette to CD is far from cutting edge. Fans of the singer's later output will find the jump back to Bonnet's early years a jolt; twee cutsie pop/soul/R&R the order of the day. However rest assured that Bonnet shows time and again the strength, range and clarity of his then young voice.
From the thirteen tracks originally cut for the album, "Here's Comes The Rain", "Private Eye" and "Mamma Mine" do at least offer a rockier side that still hints at the edges of the chart scene of the time, while the album's title track and "Ade's Song" bring a slightly more sophisticated swagger. However, in truth, there's nothing here that stands out. The closing three, "Don't Drink The Water", "Dreams (Out In The Forest)" and "We're Free" all featured in the Three For All movie, although here too the formula remains uninspired, even if Bonnet's vocals remain top notch.
A further six cuts (which would appear judging by the crackles and pops to be vinyl transfers) are added as bonus tracks, the first four the a and b sides to Bonnet's earlier post Marbles singles, which if anything, outshine the album itself. While the final two are actually songs by Adrienne Posta (who Bonnet was married to at the time) that he was heavily involved with. The pair adding further interest, if not really a whole lot more ? although Posta too can sing.
The liner notes, by Malcolm Dome no less, suggest that it would be a stretch to call Back Row In The Stalls a lost classic, although going on to state it stands up to the harsh glare of modern critique. Personally as a long term Graham Bonnet fan I'm delighted to have this release in my collection, but even taking that into account, it's hard to see this as much more than an interesting glance back at the early years of a singer who would go on to record much better solo and band material. In that light Back Row In The Stalls has a place, however as an album in its own right, there's not really much to recommend here? other than that voice!
(seaoftranquility.org/reviews.php?op=showcontent&id=18867)

01. Here Comes The Rain (04:14)
02. What's This 'Ere Then (03:19)
03. Private Eye (02:20)
04. Ghost Writer In My Eye (03:39)
05. Saturday's Over (04:14)
06. Back Row In The Stalls (02:20)
07. She May Be Not Much To Look At (But She's Certainly Got A Heart) (03:54)
08. Ade's Song (03:31)
09. Mamma Mine (03:07)
10. Relaxae (04:49)
11. Don't Drink The Water (02:12)
12. Dreams (Out In The Forest) (02:48)
13. We're Free (02:29)
14. Whisper In The Night (Single A-Side, 1972) (03:51)
15. Rare Specimen (Single B-Side, 1972) (02:28)
16. Trying To Say Goodbye (Single A-Side, 1973) (02:55)
17. Castles In The Air (Single B-Side, 1973) (03:30)
18. Dog Song (By Adrienne Posta, Single A-Side, 1973) (02:36)
19. Express Yourself (By Adrienne Posta, Single B-Side, 1973) (02:56)

Graham-Bonnet74-Back-Row-01 Graham-Bonnet74-Back-Row-02 Graham-Bonnet74-Back-Row-03 Graham-Bonnet74-Back-Row-07 Graham-Bonnet74-Back-Row-back

TurboBit                GigaPeta

Friday, 16 December 2022

Focus - Moving Waves (Focus II) (1971)

Year: October 1971 (CD 2001)
Label: Red Bullet (Netherlands), RB 66.188
Style: Symphonic Rock, Art Rock
Country: Amsterdam, Netherlands
Time: 41:40
Format: Flac Tracks 16/44,1 kHz
Size: 251 Mb

Charts: NL #4, AUS #15, UK #2, U.S. #8, CAN #6. U.S.: Gold.
Focus II (better known by its international title, Moving Waves) is the second studio album by Dutch progressive rock band Focus, released in October 1971 on Imperial Records. Following the departure of original bassist Martin Dresden and drummer Hans Cleuver in 1970, the band recruited Cyril Havermans and Pierre van der Linden, respectively, and prepared material for a new album. Focus recorded Focus II in London in April and May 1971 with Mike Vernon as producer. The album features "Hocus Pocus" a hard rock song featuring keyboardist Thijs van Leer's yodelling, scat singing, and whistling, and "Eruption", a 22-minute track inspired by the opera Euridice by Italian composer Jacopo Peri.
Focus II was released to a mostly positive response and remains one of their most commercially successful albums, reaching No. 2 in the UK, No. 4 in the Netherlands, and No. 8 in the US. "Hocus Pocus" was released as a single in the Netherlands in July 1971, followed by its international release in 1973, where it reached No. 9 in the US and No. 20 in the UK. The album is certified gold by the Recording Industry Association of America for selling 500,000 copies in the US.
(en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Focus_II)

01. Hocus Pocus (06:42)
02. Le Clochard (02:01)
03. Janis (03:08)
04. Moving Waves (02:42)
05. Focus II (04:03)
06. Eruption (23:02)

Focus71-Moving-Waves-01 Focus71-Moving-Waves-02 Focus71-Moving-Waves-back

TurboBit                GigaPeta

Thursday, 15 December 2022

Bill Ward (Black Sabbath) - Accountable Beasts (2015)

Year: 25 April 2015 (CD 2015)
Label: Aston Cross Music (????), MZE0147
Style: Hard Rock, Rock
Country: Birmingham, England (5 May 1948)
Time: 41:31
Format: Flac Tracks 16/44,1 kHz
Size: 275 Mb

Accountable Beasts is the third solo album from Black Sabbath drummer Bill Ward. It was released as a digital download on 25 April 2015, 18 years after his previous solo album, When the Bough Breaks.
After recording his second solo album, When the Bough Breaks in 1996, Ward found himself without a record contract or means of publishing the album. During this period, he began work on a third solo album, titled Beyond Aston. When the Bough Breaks was eventually released in 1997, and Ward continued to work on Beyond Aston sporadically for the next number of years. In 2008, Ward started work on Accountable Beasts as a means of taking a break from Beyond Aston. He first announced that he was working on the album in September 2013 and it was released on 25 April 2015.
(en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Accountable_Beasts)

01. Leaf Killers (04:38)
02. Accountable Beasts (03:15)
03. Katastrophic World (04:14)
04. D O T H (04:12)
05. First Day Back (03:54)
06. As It Is In Heaven (02:25)
07. Ashes (05:32)
08. Straws (03:02)
09. The Wall Of Death (10:15)

Bill-Ward2015-Accountable-01 Bill-Ward2015-Accountable-02

TurboBit                GigaPeta

Tuesday, 13 December 2022

Bill Nelson (Be Bop Deluxe) - Songs Of The Blossom Tree Optimists (2011)

Year: 2011 (CD 9. Jan. 2012)
Label: Sonoluxe Records (UK), SLSCD 002
Style: New Age, Art Rock
Country: Wakefield, England (18 December 1948)
Time: 56:33
Format: Flac Tracks 16/44,1 kHz
Size: 362 Mb

'Songs Of The Blossom Tree Optimists' was originally released on CD in 2011...
"This album can be appreciated as a companion piece to 'Model Village' or as an independent project in its own right. It is a song-based album with the emphasis on vocals and acoustic guitar but with added orchestral colours and percussion to give a neo-baroque flavour to the music.
The album could also be thought of as the missing link between 'Northern Dream', 'Rosewood' and 'The Alchemical Adventures of Sailor Bill'.
"It's a warm, heartfelt fantasia with lots of detail and cross-references. An album for grown-ups who can appreciate music that paints pictures.
"A personal homage to a kind of long-lost, romantic, utopian 'Englishness'. Many of the songs on these albums attempt to capture an elusive, ancient spirit, a spirit of a place inhabited by quiet ghosts unique to old Albion, an English Arcadia, an imaginary Eden that only exists in the gentle souls of artists and poets. It's quite artificial, dreamlike, ethereal, a figment of Faerie, a Midsummer Night's Dream...Beautiful, fragile and utterly, seductively unreal." - Bill Nelson.
(billnelson.bandcamp.com/album/songs-of-the-blossom-tree-optimists)

01. The Blossom Tree Optimists (02:55)
02. Standing On Tiptoes, Reaching For The Sky (04:37)
03. Memory Is A Data Cloud Forever Primed With Rain (04:26)
04. Rambling Through The Meadows (Wonder Wise) (03:44)
05. Garden Of Cascades (03:25)
06. My Botticelli Angel (04:04)
07. When Boys Were Lost For Words (04:09)
08. Lovers In The Pleasure Gardens (04:36)
09. The Buzz, Buzz, Buzz Of The Forever Bee (03:36)
10. The Girl Who Was Electrically Carried Away (03:05)
11. One Summer Night (04:27)
12. Silent Glides My Armstrong Siddeley (03:39)
13. These Are The Dreams (04:07)
14. Gathered In At Gloaming (02:33)
15. The Blossom Tree Optimists (Alternative Mix) (03:03)

Bill-Nelson2011-Songs-01 Bill-Nelson2011-Songs-02 Bill-Nelson2011-Songs-03 Bill-Nelson2011-Songs-04

TurboBit                GigaPeta

Sunday, 11 December 2022

Faces - Ooh La La [Japan Edition] (1973)

Year: March 1973 (CD Dec 21, 1990)
Label: Warner Bros. Records (Japan), WPCP-4039
Style: Rock, R&B
Country: London, England
Time: 30:32
Format: Flac Tracks 16/44,1 kHz
Size: 209 Mb

Charts: U.S. #21, CAN #23, AUS #9, NOR #22, UK #1.
Ooh La La is the fourth studio album by the English rock band Faces, released in March 1973. It reached number one in the UK Albums Chart in the week of 28 April 1973.
The cover of the album was designed by Jim Ladwig, around a stylised photograph of "Gastone", a stage character of 1920s Italian comedian Ettore Petrolini. The original LP's art deco-inspired cover was constructed in such a way that when the top edge of the sleeve was pressed down, a concealed die-cut design element would descend that made Gastone's eyes appear to discolour and move to the side, and his jaw would appear to drop into a leering smile. The back cover also featured art deco-inspired design elements, and detailed song information and album credits alongside tinted individual photographic portraits of the band members. The original gatefold sleeve's inner design depicted a large stylised photomontage of the band in typical 'laddish' pose, admiring the charms of a Can-can dancer (referencing the lyric of the title track).
(en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ooh_La_La_(Faces_album))

01. Silicone Grown (03:07)
02. Cindy Incidentally (02:38)
03. Flags And Banners (02:02)
04. My Fault (03:07)
05. Borstal Boys (02:55)
06. Fly In The Ointment (03:50)
07. If I'm On The Late Side (02:38)
08. Glad And Sorry (03:07)
09. Just Another Honky (03:33)
10. Ooh La La (03:31)

Faces73-Ooh-La-La-01 Faces73-Ooh-La-La-02 Faces73-Ooh-La-La-05

TurboBit                GigaPeta

Manfred Mann's Earth Band - Solar Fire [Japan Edition] (1973)

Year: 30 November 1973 (CD May 25, 2005)
Label: Air Mail Archive (Japan), AIRAC-1108
Style: Rock, Art Rock
Country: London, England
Time: 43:42
Format: Flac Tracks 16/44,1 kHz
Size: 268 Mb

Charts: U.S. #96, CAN #96.
This album seems to come at an appropriate moment, at a time when our eyes are on the heavens, awaiting the arrival of the comet Kohoutek on its journey round the sun.  A unique form of skywriting indeed, and it couldn't have been more apt.  The album takes planetary/evolutionary theme, the overall concept being one of genesis; that's not as heavy as it sounds, though there are passages of foreboding and coldness, as each track reaches for a mood relative to its title.  Generally, it's hard, grinding rock, driven home with finality and conviction: they're a band who feel committed to getting that solid backbeat across, and setting bodies in motion.  It's a meaty sound, very compact - concentrated even, like hard tack.  There's a lot to chew on.  Dylan's "Father Of Day, Father Of Night", the first track, sets the scene and is the tour de-force of the record.  Mann, believing Dylan to have wasted the song on "New Morning”, has realised the disguised potential of' this number and vividly underlined its hymnal qualities.  It begins with a spatial choir, floating in a void, and from that small seed grows a stately production with a beautiful organ tone and powerful guitar from Mick Rogers.  Rogers plays with great clarity and feeling throughout, in taut, pent-up fashion, communicating tension.  However, having seen him play live, one feels he's been recorded beneath his full capabilities.  He'll be giving a lot more in future no doubt, even though one can say his performance on these particular tracks encompasses all that's desired.  "In the Beginning, Darkness" is linked with "Sunfire" where strident guitar breaks leap out and Moog synthesiser is introduced.  Mann always using it sparingly and to maximum effect.  Nothing gets out of hand.  "Pluto the Dog" is a strange, loping instrumental, the lead taken by Moog and percussive organ, and with a barking dog effect that sounds suspiciously like a human imitation.  Rather abstruse, but it's the odd track out.  Side two is hot and bubbling in the title track, Moog and guitar stirring the cauldron, but is contrasted against the icy impact of "Saturn, Lord of the Ring" and its memorable melody line.  And as one might think; "Mercury, the Winged Messenger" is played with celerity, guitar and organ duetting in stabbing bursts of energy.  The trip ends on "Earth", which is in two parts.  It's probably the most vital, integrated album they've produced to date.
(Melody Maker - December 29, 1973)

01. Father of Day, Father of Night (09:54)
02. In the Beginning, Darkness (05:21)
03. Pluto the Dog (02:47)
04. Solar Fire (05:15)
05. Saturn, Lord of the Ring - Mercury the Winged Messenger (06:32)
06. Earth, the Circle Part 2 (03:21)
07. Earth, the Circle Part 1 (03:57)
08. Joybringer (03:24)
09. Father of Day, Father of Night (edited Version) (03:06)

Manfred-Mann73-Solar-Fire-01 Manfred-Mann73-Solar-Fire-02 Manfred-Mann73-Solar-Fire-03

TurboBit                GigaPeta

IQ - Frequency (2009)

Year: May 2009 (CD 2009)
Label: InsideOut Music (Germany), INO 2804-2
Style: Neo-Progressive
Country: Southampton, England
Time: 62:00
Format: Flac Tracks 16/44,1 kHz
Size: 451 Mb

IQ are a British neo-progressive rock band founded by Mike Holmes and Martin Orford in 1981 following the dissolution of their original band The Lens. Although the band have never enjoyed major commercial success and had several lineup changes, IQ have built up a loyal following over the years and are still active as of 2022, currently with the original recording line-up (with the exception of Orford).
The band's musical style, especially earlier in their career, was reminiscent of Peter Gabriel and Steve Hackett era Genesis because of singer Peter Nicholls' vocal and stage-presence similarities to Gabriel and keyboardist Martin Orford's grandiose keyboarding. However, guitarist Mike Holmes' role was far more assertive in the band, giving them a harder edge musically. After Nicholls' departure, the band's style became increasingly commercial and radio-friendly — albeit without much success — on Nomzamo (1987) and Are You Sitting Comfortably? (1989), although each album still featured some progressive rock-style tracks. Beginning with the return of Nicholls on 1993's Ever, the band returned to its prog rock roots, with longer tracks featuring intricate arrangements and complex musicianship.
(en.wikipedia.org/wiki/IQ_(band))

01. Frequency (08:29)
02. Life Support (06:27)
03. Stronger Than Friction (10:31)
04. One Fatal Mistake (04:53)
05. Ryker Skies (09:45)
06. The Province (13:42)
07. Closer (08:10)

IQFrequency2009-back IQFrequency2009-book-1-2 IQFrequency2009-book-front-back

TurboBit                GigaPeta

Saturday, 10 December 2022

Pink Floyd - The Final Cut [Vinyl Rip] (1983)

Year: 21 March 1983 (LP 1983, ? 1st press)
Label: Harvest, EMI Records (Germany), 1C 064-65042
Style: Rock
Country: London, England
Time: 42:54
Format: Flac Tracks 16/44,1 kHz
Size: 220 Mb

This may be art rock’s crowning masterpiece, but it is also something more. With The Final Cut, Pink Floyd caps its career in classic form, and leader Roger Waters — for whom the group has long since become little more than a pseudonym — finally steps out from behind the “Wall” where last we left him. The result is essentially a Roger Waters solo album, and it’s a superlative achievement on several levels. Not since Bob Dylan’s “Masters of War” twenty years ago has a popular artist unleashed upon the world political order a moral contempt so corrosively convincing, or a life-loving hatred so bracing and brilliantly sustained. Dismissed in the past as a mere misogynist, a ranting crank, Waters here finds his focus at last, and with it a new humanity. And with the departure of keyboardist Richard Wright and his synthesizers — and the advent of a new “holophonic” recording technique — the music has taken on deep, mahogany-hued tones, mainly provided by piano, harmonium and real strings. The effect of these internal shifts is all the more exhilarating for being totally unexpected. By comparison, in almost every way, The Wall was only a warm-up.
The Final Cut began as a modest expansion upon the soundtrack of the film version of The Wall, with a few new songs added and its release scheduled for the latter half of 1982. In the interim, however, the movie, a grotesquely misconceived collaboration between Waters and director Alan Parker, was released to a general thud of incomprehension. Around the same time, Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher, irked by the unseemly antics of an Argentine despot, dispatched British troops halfway around the world to fight and die for the Falkland Islands.
That event, coming in the wake of his failed film statement, apparently stirred Waters to an artistic epiphany. Out of the jumbled obsessions of the original Wall album, he fastened on one primal and unifying obsession: the death of his father in the battle of Anzio in 1944. Thus, on The Final Cut, a child’s inability to accept the loss of the father he never knew has become the grown man’s refusal to accept the death politics that decimate each succeeding generation and threaten ever more clearly with each passing year to ultimately extinguish us all.
(rollingstone.com/music/music-album-reviews/the-final-cut-248504/)

01. A1 The Post War Dream (02:52)
02. A2 Your Possible Pasts (04:30)
03. A3 One Of The Few (01:19)
04. A4 The Hero's Return (02:57)
05. A5 The Gunner's Dream (05:04)
06. A6 Paranoid Eyes (03:36)
07. B1 Get Your Filthy Hands Off My Desert (01:15)
08. B2 The Fletcher Memorial Home (04:12)
09. B3 Southampton Dock (02:10)
10. B4 The Final Cut (04:41)
11. B5 Not Now John (05:02)
12. B6 Two Suns In The Sunset (05:09)

Pink-Floyd83-The-Final-Cut-back Pink-Floyd83-The-Final-Cut-front Pink-Floyd83-The-Final-Cut-inside

TurboBit                GigaPeta

Friday, 9 December 2022

Them - Them Featuring Van Morrison (1972)

Year: 1972 (CD 1987)
Label: London Records (West Germany), 810 165-2
Style: Rhythm and Blues, Rock
Country: Belfast, Northern Ireland
Time: 41:11
Format: Flac Tracks 16/44,1 kHz
Size: 221 Mb

A double LP consisting of 20 cuts from first two US albums.
Them were a rock group formed in Belfast, Northern Ireland, in April 1964, most prominently known for the rock standard "Gloria" and launching singer Van Morrison's musical career. The original five-member band consisted of Morrison, Alan Henderson, Ronnie Milling, Billy Harrison and Eric Wrixon.
Them scored two UK hits in 1965 with "Baby, Please Don't Go" (UK No. 10) and "Here Comes the Night" (UK No. 2; Ireland No. 2). The latter song and "Mystic Eyes" were top 40 hits in the US.
Morrison quit the band in 1966 and went on to a successful career as a solo artist. Despite their relatively few hit singles, the Belfast group had considerable influence on other bands, such as the Doors.
The band's 1964 recording of "Gloria" was inducted into the Grammy Hall of Fame in 1999. It was rated at No.69 on Dave Marsh's 1989 book, The Heart of Rock and Soul, The 1001 Greatest Singles Ever and "Mystic Eyes" was rated at No.458. "Gloria" was listed at No.208 on the 2004 Rolling Stone magazine's feature, The 500 Greatest Songs of All Time.
(en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Them_(band))

01. Gloria (02:41)
02. The Story Of Them (07:21)
03. Stormy Monday (02:44)
04. Mystic Eyes (02:45)
05. Hey Girl (03:03)
06. Baby Please Don't Go (02:45)
07. Here Comes The Night (02:49)
08. My Lonely Sad Eyes (02:32)
09. Richard Cory (02:47)
10. (It Won't Hurt) Half As Much (03:12)
11. Turn On Your Love Light (02:24)
12. I Put A Spell On You (02:39)
13. Don't Look Back (03:23)

Them72-Featuring-01 Them72-Featuring-02 Them72-Featuring-back

TurboBit                GigaPeta

Anderson Bruford Wakeman Howe (Yes) - Anderson Bruford Wakeman Howe [Vinyl Rip] (1989)

Year: 1989 (LP 1989)
Label: Arista Records (UK), 209 970
Style: Symphonic Rock
Country: London, England
Time: 59:21
Format: Flac Tracks 16/44,1 kHz
Size: 399 Mb

Charts: The Billboard 200 - USA #30, UK Charts #14.
Those familiar with the progressive rock band Yes know of the many twists and turns throughout that band's history. One such turn involved lead singer Jon Anderson bringing together Yes alumni to record an album together while Yes was still somewhat active. This new band included drummer Bill Bruford, keyboardist Rick Wakeman, and guitarist Steve Howe. Additional musicians included bassist and Chapman stick player Tony Levin (who had worked with Bruford in King Crimson), keyboardist Matt Clifford, and rhythm guitarist Milton McDonald.
Some might describe this album as a return to the classic Yes style of the 1970s in some respects, not quite like the pop rock style that the band embraced in the 1980s. Of course, ABWH's self-titled album, released by Arista Records in 1989, was not a Yes album, despite some fans considering it one. Members have even said that they wanted to distinguish themselves from Yes. But it has, over the years, been included in Yes discography lists on the In a Word: Yes boxset, The Ultimate Yes: 35th Anniversary Collection, and even the YesWorld website. When ABWH tried recording a second album, the band ended up merging with the Yes that still included bassist Chris Squire, guitarist Trevor Rabin, drummer Alan White, and keyboardist Tony Kaye. The result was a Yes album called Union, which included a lot of session musicians and mixed results in the eyes of many fans. There were session musicians on ABWH's first album, but not to the extent of Union.
(vocal.media/beat/anderson-bruford-wakeman-howe-album-review)

01. A1 Themes (Part 1 2 3) (05:58)
02. A2 Fist Of Fire (03:31)
03. A3 Brother Of Mine (Part 1 2 3) (10:21)
04. A4 Birthright (06:05)
05. A5 The Meeting (04:19)
06. B1 Quartet (Part 1 2 3 4) (09:23)
07. B2 Teakbois (07:40)
08. B3 Order Of The Universe (Part 1 2 3 4) (08:38)
09. B4 Let’s Pretend (03:22)

Anderson-Bruf-Wake-Howe89-back Anderson-Bruf-Wake-Howe89-front Anderson-Bruf-Wake-Howe89-inside-A Anderson-Bruf-Wake-Howe89-inside-B

TurboBit                GigaPeta

Wednesday, 7 December 2022

I Musici - Albinoni Bonporti Geminiani [Vinyl Rip] (1966)

Year: 1966 (LP 1966)
Label: Philips Records (UK), SAL.3759
Style: Classical, Baroque, Instrumental
Country: Italy
Time: 45:01
Format: Flac Tracks 16/44,1 kHz
Size: 246 Mb

I Musici, also known as I Musici di Roma, is an Italian chamber orchestra from Rome formed in 1951. They are well known for their interpretations of Baroque and other works, particularly Antonio Vivaldi and Tomaso Albinoni.
Among their engagements, the original Chamber Orchestra completed acclaimed tours of Southern Africa 1956, and again in 1967, with a few replacement performers
In the 1970s, I Musici recorded the first classical music video and, later, the group was the first to record a compact disc for the Philips label.
One of their founding members and first violin, Felix Ayo, is still active as of 2012.
Matrix side A: C AA 802 715 1Y 1 670 115C2 7, side B: C AA 802 715 2Y 1 670 129C1 2

01. A1a Albinoni - Concerto In C For Oboe Strings And Continuo Op 9 No 5 Allegro (03:46)
02. A1b Albinoni - Concerto In C For Oboe Strings And Continuo Op 9 No 5 Adagio (03:10)
03. A1c Albinoni - Concerto In C For Oboe Strings And Continuo Op 9 No 5 Allegro (03:41)
04. A2a Albinoni - Concerto In B Flat For Oboe Strings And Continuo Op 9 No 11 Allegro (04:30)
05. A2b Albinoni - Concerto In B Flat For Oboe Strings And Continuo Op 9 No 11 Adagio (03:56)
06. A2c Albinoni - Concerto In B Flat For Oboe Strings And Continuo Op 9 No 11 Allegro (03:18)
07. B1a Bonporti - Concerto A Quattro In F Op 11 No 5 Larghetto (04:38)
08. B1b Bonporti - Concerto A Quattro In F Op 11 No 5 Recitativo Adagio Assai (05:11)
09. B1c Bonporti - Concerto A Quattro In F Op 11 No 5 Allegro (02:41)
10. B2a Geminiani - Concerto Grosso In D Op 7 No 1 Andante (02:18)
11. B2b Geminiani - Concerto Grosso In D Op 7 No 1 Presto (02:57)
12. B2c Geminiani - Concerto Grosso In D Op 7 No 1 Andantino (02:13)
13. B2d Geminiani - Concerto Grosso In D Op 7 No 1 Allegro Moderato (02:48)

Albinoni-Bonporti-Geminiani66-back Albinoni-Bonporti-Geminiani66-front Albinoni-Bonporti-Geminiani66-label1-2 Albinoni-Bonporti-Geminiani66-side1-2-Spectr-DB

TurboBit                 GigaPeta

Sunday, 4 December 2022

Ten Years After - A Space In Time (1971)

Year: August 1971 (CD ????)
Label: Chrysalis Records (U.S.), F2 21001
Style: Classic Rock, Blues Rock
Country: Nottingham, UK
Time: 37:31
Format: Flac Tracks 16/44,1 kHz
Size: 213 Mb

Charts: UK #36; AUS #18; CAN #21; DEN #8; FIN #11; GER #35; NOR #13; SWE #9; U.S. #17. CAN: Gold, U.S.: Platinum.
A Space in Time is the sixth studio album by the British blues rock band Ten Years After. It was released in August 1971 by Chrysalis Records in the United Kingdom and Columbia Records in America. A departure in style from their previous albums, A Space in Time is less 'heavy' than previous albums and includes more acoustic guitar, perhaps influenced by the success of Led Zeppelin who were mixing acoustic songs with heavier numbers. It reached number 17 in the Billboard 200.
The third track on the album, "I'd Love to Change the World", is also their biggest hit. By combining a melodic acoustic chorus with challenging electric guitar riffs, they managed to produce a sound that hit number 10 in the charts in Canada and number 40 in the USA. Although this was their biggest hit, they rarely played it live. "Baby Won't You Let Me Rock 'n' Roll You" also charted, peaking at number 61 in the USA, and reaching number 54 in Canada.
(en.wikipedia.org/wiki/A_Space_in_Time)

01. One Of These Days (05:50)
02. Here They Come (04:36)
03. I'd Love To Change The World (03:44)
04. Over The Hill (02:28)
05. Baby Won't You Let Me Rock 'N' Roll You (02:16)
06. Once There Was A Time (03:22)
07. Let The Sky Fall (04:19)
08. Hard Monkey's (03:10)
09. I've Been There Too (05:44)
10. Uncle Jam (01:57)

Ten-Years-After71-ASpace-01 Ten-Years-After71-ASpace-02 Ten-Years-After71-ASpace-back

TurboBit                GigaPeta