вторник, 25 марта 2008 г.

TUCKY BUZZARD - TIME WILL BE YOUR DOCTOR: Rare Recordings – 1971-1972 (UK) hard rock

Here's an interesting 2CD anthology of the seldom mentioned British proto-prog/hard rock band Tucky Buzzard. Formed from the ashes of the demise of the group the End, Tucky Buzzard caught the attention of the Rolling Stones bassist Bill Wyman, who took the band under his wing and managed & produced the band, and their first three albums Tucky Buzzard, Warm Slash, and Coming On Again, released in the years 1971 & 1972, are including here in their entirety. The band played in a style that can be best compared to contemporaries like Humble Pie, Cressida, UFO, Deep Purple, Uriah Heep, Rare Earth, Grand Funk Railroad, Warhorse, Bloodrock, Spooky Tooth, Cactus, Whitesnake, and Captain Beyond, with stinging, bluesy guitar riffs, heavy rhythms, swirling organ, and husky vocals. Honestly, I'm surprised that Tucky Buzzard rarely gets mentioned at all in hard rock circles seeing as how good these long out of print recordings are. The first disc is made up of songs from the first two albums, which shows the band in raw, hard rockin' form. The band at the time was comprised of Jimmy Henderson on vocals, Terry Taylor and Paul Kendrick on guitar, Nick Graham on keyboards, David Brown on bass, and Chris Johnston on drums (who had replaced Paul Francis mid-way through the recording of the album). Guest guitar parts were played by Mick Taylor from the Stones, as well as the horn section of Bobby Keys and Jim Price on a couple of tracks. There's no shortage of classy hard rock and early psychedelic prog on Tucky Buzzard and Warm Slash, like "Stainless Steel Lady", "Rolling Cloud", and the scorching "Which Way, When for Why", complete with plenty of fiery guitar solos and tasty organ. Disc Two features the other half of the Warm Slash album as well as Coming On Again in its entirety. The latter is a very fine album, which features more organ than the earlier material, and the songs and arrangements are a bit more adventurous, allowing the band to stretch out a bit more over tracks like the near 15-minute "Suite" and the moody prog of "You're All Alone". In fact, this album features the Madrid Philharmonic Orchestra, and ironically was only ever released in Spain, making its inclusion here a must for the collector. Tucky Buzzard would go on to record two more albums before breaking up in the mid-70's. Sanctuary Records has done the world a great service by releasing these recordings for all hard rock and prog fans to hear. I'll bet most have never heard of this excellent band, but now you can check them out and see what the secret has been all these years. Highly recommended for fans of the above mentioned bands, and those who like early 70's music with lots of guitar, organ, and strong vocals.

Jimmy Henderson (vocals)
David Brown (bass)
Terry Taylor (guitar)
Nick Graham (keyboards)
Paul Francis (drums)
Chris Johnson (drums)
Paul Kendrick (vocals, guitar)
CD 1
Tucky Buzzard 1971
1. Time Will Be Your Doctor
2. Stainless Steel Lady
3. Sally Shotgun
4. Gu Gu Gu
5. My Friend
6. Pisces Apple Lady
7. She's Meat
8. Ace The Face
9. Whiskey Eyes
10. Rolling Cloud
Warm Slash (side 1) 1971
11. Mistreating Woman
12. (She's A) Striker
13. Fill You In
14. Need Your Love
15. Which Way, When For Why
CD 2
Warm Slash (side 2) 1971
16. Burnin'
17. Heartbreaker
18. Sky Balloon
19. Ain't Too Soon
Coming On Again 1972
20. Suite: Coming On Again (Part I) / For Maryse / Over The Hill / Coming On Again (Part 2)/ Believe Me / Here I Am
21. You're All Alone
22. You Never Will
23. Free Ticket
24. Lady Fair

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TUCKY BUZZARD - ALLRIGHT ON THE NIGHT/BUZZARD – 1973/1974 (UK) hard rock

In 1997, Repertoire released Tucky Buzzard/Allright on the Night, which contained two complete albums — Tucky Buzzard (1974, originally released on Passport) and Allright on the Night (1973, originally released on Purple) — by British hard rockers Tucky Buzzard on one compact disc.
1 Can't Live Without It 3:49
2 Fast Bluesy Woman 3:36
3 Gold Medallions 4:34
4 All I Want Is Your Love 3:44
5 Rainbow Rider 4:26
6 Rudie Movie Star 4:02
7 Pictures 3:32
8 Last War 5:15
9 Who Do You Love 3:59
10 Run In The Morning 4:24
11 Hanging On In There (Waiting For You To Come) 5:38
12 Superboy Rock 'N' Roller '73 2:12
13 Bo' Bo's Hampton 4:29
14 Wine And Wimmen 4:55
15 Superfine Lady 4:24
16 Near To Me 3:48
17 Shy Boy 7:31

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CACTUS – V – 2006 (US) hard rock

There were probably fewer people clamoring for this Cactus reunion in 2006 than for a Vanilla Fudge or Beck, Bogert & Appice one, but that didn't stop the famed plodding rhythm section from giving it another go. Original Cactus lead singer Rusty Day passed in 1982, but the core trio of bassist Tim Bogert, drummer Carmine Appice, and guitarist Jim McCarty recruited singer Jimmy Kunes and let fly with this hourlong set of forceful, sweaty blues-rock. Cactus were never known for their subtlety, and the simplistically titled V doesn't challenge the group's historically predictable game plan as it plows through familiar terrain with requisite enthusiasm but a lack of the imagination and creativity that made even minor guilty pleasures such as 1971's Restrictions catalog highlights. It's unfair to criticize Cactus for not working outside of the boogie rock boundaries they established on their releases over three decades earlier, but the derivative vocals of Kunes make the quartet now seem like a second-rate AC/DC. Songs such as "Muscle and Soul" have neither, despite the band's best intentions. McCarty's Jimmy Page-styled guitar works all the clichés, but the riffs don't resonate and the songs never rise above their Humble Pie roots. "Cactus Music"'s chorus of "Raise your hands up to the music/Rock! Rock!/Gettin' down with Cactus music/Never wanna stop" is symbolic of the group's modest goals on this overlong comeback. The band's remaining but dwindling grizzled followers might find some of this reminiscent of previous glories, but for younger fans of the genre, more contemporary acts such as Gov't Mule offer far better alternatives.

Carmine Appice (drums)
Tim Bogert (bass)
Jim McCarty (guitar)
Jimmy Kunes (vocals)
1 Doin' Time
2 Muscle and Soul
3 Cactus Music
4 The Groover
5 High in the City
6 Day for Night
7 Living for Today
8 Shine
9 Electric Blue
10 Your Brother's Keeper
11 Blues for Mr. Day
12 Part of the Game
13 Gone Train Gone
14 Jazzed

This album revisits the early seventhies with a hard rocking sound powered by the guitar of Jim McCarthy and the kicking rhythm section of Carmine Appice and Tim Bogert. Jimmy Kuners on vocals can neatly integrate himself in this power trio with a voice reminding the former singer Rusty, who died long ago.
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HUMBLE PIE – BACK ON TRACK – 2002 (UK) hard rock

Humble Pie with no Steve Marriott? As preposterous as that sounds — after all, Marriott was the heart, soul, and voice of the band — that's exactly what took place on the 2002 release Back on Track. The trusty old Humble Pie rhythm section is back in place (bassist Greg Ridley and drummer Jerry Shirley), who are now joined by a pair of newcomers — guitarist Bob Tench and vocalist Dave Colwell. And despite being issued in the early 21st century, songs such as the album-opening "Dignified" and "Ain't No Big Thing" have an unmistakable '80s mainstream rock feel to them. Which is quite puzzling, as it was grit and soul that served as major ingredients on the majority of classic, Marriott-led Humble Pie releases.

Greg Ridley - bass, background vocals
Jerry Shirley - drums
Dave "Bucket" Colwell - guitar
Bobby Tench - vocals, guitar
Also: David Gilmour, Zoot Money
1 Dignified 3:27
2 The Real Thing 3:37
3 Trouble 4:07
4 Ain't No Big Thing 3:57
5 Stay One More Night 5:21
6 Still Got a Story to Tell 4:13
7 All I Ever Needed 3:23
8 This Time 3:35
9 Flatbusted 3:52
10 Between Old Teddy and Your Mom 4:20

This does not sound like the Humble Pie that everyone knows, and it is quite obvious it could not without Steve Marriot and Clem Clempson. But, the Humble Pie very recognizable rhythm section is there intact. By itself, considered without bias, this album is VERY good. Great guitar work, good songs, and the singer is very good. If these guys had come out with this CD under a different name avoiding the bias of the expectation of what Humble Pie should be, it is very possible it would have been quite popular.
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LEAF HOUND – UNLEASHED – 2007 (UK) hard rock

The mighty Leaf Hound finally joins the growing numbers of legendary semi-known bands of yore such as Cactus, Blue Cheer and Sir Lord Baltimore and releases its anticipated comeback album - Unleashed.
While vocalist Pete French is the only surviving member of the same ensemble who recorded the rightfully praised Growers of Mushroom, new comers Luke Rayner, Jimmy Rowland and Ed Pearson are more than capable to deliver to goods. And while French understandably cannot reach the high notes as he did some 30 something years ago screaming like a banshee, he is still better than 95% of the vocalists that inhabit this planet.
Now, if you were waiting for Growers of Mushroom part II, you'd probably have to wait some more. Unleashed opens with 3 straight ahead hard rock tunes, "Barricades" being the best of the three. "The Man With the Moon in Him" breaks mid way into a somewhat "Stoner" moment followed by a gilmour-like solo. The riffs are good and catchy, quite heavy, and fans of mid-70's hard rock will be very pleased so far. You can definitely hear more Ducks in Flight (Pete French's solo album from 78) than Growers of Mushroom so far.
"Nickles and Dimes" might just be my favorite track and sounds like something Robert Plant might have recorded, with French delivers his best performance in the album.
We finally get to hear the old Leaf Hound sound in "Too Many Rock'n'Roll Nights" - This is old school Blues-Rock of the highest order. God, I missed that.
The biggest surprise here is the album closer - a "metalized" version of Atomic Rooster's "Breakthrough", on which French originally sang. I wont spoil you the fun by detailing it. I just know Vincent Crane smiling in his grave and says: "Godammit, thats exactly how the song should have always been. Well done boys! (stonerock.com)

Peter French (vocals)
Ed Pearson (bass)
Jimmy Rowland (drums)
Luke Rayner (guitar)
1 One Hundred and Five Degrees
2 Barricades
3 The Man With the Moon in Him
4 Nickels and Dimes
5 Stop, Look and Listen
6 Overtime
7 Too Many Rock'n'Roll Times
8 Deception
9 Breakthrough

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Re Up: LEAF HOUND – GLOWERS OF MUSHROOM – 1971 (UK) hard rock

Leaf Hound were one of the dozens of heavy rock bands that evolved during the late-'60s British blues-rock boom. Rhythm guitarist Derek Brooks and his brother, Stuart Brooks, had been in the Black Cat Bones, a South London-based band that at one time featured Free's Paul Kossoff. Vocalist Peter French and his cousin, lead guitarist Mick Halls, had been in several London groups: Switch, Erotic Eel, Joe Poe, and the Brunning Sunflower Blues Band (featuring Bob Brunning). In the latter half of 1970, after the Black Cat Bones' lead guitarist Rod Price quit (he was heading off to join Foghat), the Brooks brothers formed a new group with Halls and French, drafting in newcomer Keith George Young on drums. This new group -- christened Leaf Hound, a name found in an anthology of stories by horror writer Herbert Van Thal -- recorded "Barbed Wire Sandwich" for Decca's Nova subsidiary in 1969, and soon were playing shows in England, reportedly blowing headliners UFO off-stage. A full-length recording contract with Decca Records soon followed, and the band found themselves ensconced in the Mayfair's Spot Studios, where they recorded Growers of Mushrooms in a mere 11 hours. Meanwhile, the band traveled to Germany, where their album was licensed for release by the Telefunken label. This German-only release actually preceded the official U.K. release on Decca; somewhat surprisingly, it omitted two tracks: the title song and the lead-off track, a blistering "Freelance Fiend." Telefunken also issued a single, "Drowned My Life in Fear," which was backed with the non-LP track "It's Going to Get Better." Then, in October 1971, Decca finally released the band's debut in their own country, adding back the omitted tracks. However by then, Leaf Hound had already decided to call it a day. French had the most success thereafter. He was briefly in a group called Big Bertha before he joined Atomic Rooster, around the time of 1971's In Hearing of Atomic Rooster. He eventually left that band to join the U.S.-based boogie band Cactus (featuring former Vanilla Fudge members Tim Bogert and Carmine Appice), then returned to the U.K. to join a later lineup of Randy Pie, circa 1977. He also sang in Der Fuhrer, a controversial German rock opera highlighting the futility of war, before finally recording a solo album, 1978's Ducks in Flight, for Polydor Germany with an all-star session crew including ex-Thin Lizzy guitarist Brian Robertson and Kenney Jones (ex-Small Faces). Growers of Mushrooms, long out of print for decades (and commanding a hefty price from collectors, up to as much as 1,300 dollars), was finally reissued on CD by Repertoire in 1994 and See for Miles in 1995.

Leaf Hound -- like Killing Floor -- was one of dozens of other working-class heavy rock bands who sprouted up in England during the British blues-rock boom of the late '60s. They immediately found themselves in the shadow of better bands, including Led Zeppelin and Free (to name just two), which may have led to their short life together. They recorded only one album, Growers of Mushroom, which found its first release in on the German-based Telefunken label. Somewhat surprisingly, however, the title track and leadoff track, "Freelance Fiend," were both left off that release. This error was corrected for the October 1971 release by Decca Records, but, by then, Leaf Hound had suffered from various internal problems and already called it a day. The album reportedly took only 11 hours to record in Mayfair's Spot Studios, which may be the reason there's nothing too special about this LP. Nevertheless, it has become a much-sought-after LP by collectors (mint condition copies have reportedly sold for as much as 1,300 dollars). Lead vocalist Peter French -- who went on to form Atomic Rooster and later worked with Cactus and a later lineup of Randy Pie -- is in fine form here, and his scorched-earth screech may even remind some fans of Robert Plant. His cousin, guitarist Mick Halls (who replaced Foghat-bound lead guitarist Rod Price, guitarist in French's earlier group, Black Cat Bones), doesn't have the same guitar prowess that, say, Jimmy Page had at the time, but he's no slouch either, showing considerable skill throughout. Interestingly, the song titles -- like the band's name -- were taken from an anthology of stories by horror author Herbert Van Thal. In 1995, See for Miles released a remastered CD reissue which featured a rarely heard bonus track, "It's Gonna Get Better," the B-side to their only single, "Drowned My Life in Fear"; some versions of the reissue also have "Hipshaker" added as a second bonus track.
DEREK BROOKS gtr
STUART BROOKS bs
PETE FRENCH vcls
MICK HALLS ld gtr
KEITH GEORGE YOUNG drms
1 Freelance Fiend 3:09
2 Sad Road to the Sea 4:14
3 Drowned My Life in Fear 2:58
4 Work My Body 8:09
5 Stray 3:45
6 With a Minute to Go 4:16
7 Growers of Mushroom 2:16
8 Stagnant Pool 3:57
9 Sawdust Ceasar 4:26
Bonus Tracks
10 It's Going to Get Better (Single B-Side Telefunken U 56154/1971) 3:04
11 Hip Shaker (Previously Unreleased) 3:32


Great riff-bases hard rock with elements of blues and progressive.
If you love early Led Zeppelin,Black Sabbath,and other great 60/70 hard rock bands- you would love this record.
It's sad that record company waited a year to release this LP in 1971 since this was recorded in 1970. The band split to that time so they don't tour to support the album and no one buyed it.
But no means-music is great
Also recomended for all live records fans becouse this album was recoded in 10 or 11 jour studio marathon-so it sounds almost live.
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пятница, 21 марта 2008 г.

ESPERANTO – ESPERANTO ROCK ORCHESTRA – 1973 (BEL/UK) progressive rock

If the core/backbone of the group was Belgian - the Malisan brothers , Bruno Libert and raimond Vincent came from the region of Mons , Belgium - the frontmen were from a little all over the planet - Australia , UK among others - and they recorded in London and were based there.
The music developped here resembles best Electric Light Orchestra gone overboard but not in a bad sense. This reminds me of the first four albums of ELO when they made still what could be considered as prog muze. I think that they had a very strong financial support at first , just to have so many players. However the frontmen kept changing as the albums passed and although relative/moderate success was there , they dibanded after the third from lack of money. I will re-listen the other two albums before making the review but from memory , you should start with the last one and work backwards. (progarchives.com)

- Bridget Lokelani Dudoit(Hawaïan): vocals, acoustic guitar
- Tony Harris / viola, saxophone
- Brian Holloway / guitar, piano
- Timothy Kraemer / cello, piano
- Bruno Libet / keyboards
- Gino Malisan / bass, flute
- Tony Malisan / drums
- Geoffrey Salmon / 2nd violin
- Glenn Shorrock / vocals, guitar
- Janice Slatter / vocals
- Raymond Vincent / 1st violin
- Joy Yates / vocals, flute
1. On Down The Road (5:00)
2. Never Again (5:40)
3. Perhaps One Day (4:35)
4. Statue Of Liberty (5:00)
5. Gypsy (6:35)
6. City (4:06)
7. Roses (5:10)
8. Move Away (3:39)
Bonus tracks:
9. Getting along (3:01)
10. Waiting till the day I die (6:49)
11. Emma (3:20)

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ESPERANTO – DANSE MACABRE – 1974 (BEL/UK) progressive rock

Way more exciting than a grime debut (excessive adjective, yet not ghastly and unalloyed in keeping the high profile up and the simple tones away from the best kind) has been able to stray and reeve, the second album by Esperanto (a wishing excellent classic prog band, but more sincerely a classic time, timed and timing progressive attitude), called Danse Macabre, being emboweled in concept and rustle great music, in typical frenzy power and the shining counts of eclecticism, is an album worth noticing, an experience worth belonging and a type of connection to the spirit of music worth firing it up, in no immoderate but neither indecisive means. Maybe in a childlike manner of being amazed or just listening with a special gulp and a different key-figure, the excellent taste is nothing yet sojourned and complete – then again that would mean the failure of Esperanto as a prime figure in prog rock, which isn’t necessarily true, it’s just very paced down as to seem highly stylistic and very touching as to emote the factors of beauty music, powder rock and inconsolable somberness.
The visible quality is a bit of concept put in each and every flare, plus the long walk of music compositions and deep rock, that more or less casual, more or less sensitive, more or less perspicuous. From 10 minutes of intensity (The Journey) to even the short dreams and havoc, the schooner fixture of Esperanto playing a great accuracy of progressive bond, the downright touch breadth of eclectic flavors and the ambition of sound and magic movement to have to sill levies. The style ranges from hard rock (finally easy to sense, after the debut just seemed like it comes from making the music of the past influences), assorted melodic boost and poetry, lyric shortened fascination for the endless charades of powerful instrumentality, a little folk and dark thrill (though I can sense how the expansion of this idea is simply ornament), a bit of dry wedge symbol-scrape, with the hint of sugar motives and very irresistible dynamics. More confoundedly, Esperanto already has the vast liaison in playing a more than suggestive mode and tender of classic bands and intriguing senses, like Renaissance in a mild and modest symphony or fantasia-luxury, Gentle Giant in the all-awing dynamic of difficult music, tight clutch composing and frank zeal durance. But, essentially, it’s all about Esperanto making a less incredible classic purpose on a more intuitive dream, excitement and intensiveness. The shades of self-shine aren’t that most sophisticated and inherent, for instance The Journey isn’t the greatest piece, despite dynamic aggressiveness and totally balanced composition post, instead other light movements (of the similar depth) do have an impressive melody, a rock genius and generous touch, given belated classic excitement, fully connected to music finally being understood by the masters, and finally being extremely pleasant for the listener and the ward fan. The tone is much conservative, but, out of no reason in the momentary happiness it gains, is Danse Macabre not the soiree distinction of Esperanto. (progarchives.com)

- Keith Christmas / lead vocals
- Tony Harris / viola
- Brian Holloway / guitar
- Tony Kraemer / cello
- Bruno Libert / piano, organ, ARP synthesizers, harpsichord, vibes, backing vocals
- Gino Malisan / bass
- Tony Malisan / drums
- Glenn Shorrock / backing vocals
- Raymond Vincent / 1st violin
1. The Journey (10:15)
2. The Castle (3:33)
3. The Duel (7:06)
4. The Cloister (5:28)
5. The Decision (5:57)
6. The Prisoner (7:21)
7. Danse Macabre (2:01)
Bonus tracks:
8. The Duel (7:00)
9. The Decision (7:19)
10. The Cloister (5:11)

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ESPERANTO – LAST TANGO – 1975 (BEL/UK) progressive rock

Esperanto are a cornering classic progressive rock band, with influence into the various good moods of style and smile, with an open expression in mostly all the rough, gentle or renitent moments and with a perfect time, though a little too slow, to show how this music of the 70s has the value of assimilation, of eclecticism and of bit of wealthy craft for the healthy mind and spur. All good things, all accessible draft and impressive simplicities, sketches on a band without pretentious but with a sufficiently talent enormous derider and earnestness. The third official album, called sweepingly Last Tango, hasn’t got any tired feelings or any numb desires, despite the name which allure a sad story and a slow beat, or the fact that Esperanto’s final major churn lies in this, and the signs of spading the last drops of creativity or resting in many places from the extraordinary happenings are considerate. In fact, listening to all three albums was hardly tired (except if Danse Macabre is quite a too inspirational great album), what to tell of the character of one album, short as it is, rapidly consummating as it derrises, plus in a fashion of gallant progressiveness, unpretentious moods (sure, this doesn’t mean the proverbial superlative either) and ponder inquisitiveness of music band, vocal effects and joice conviction ever getting far enough to sound like music of a dowry pleasure prescription, of a couple good sonnets and of pure inspiration in a time of classical mead.
Last Tango is full of hope in getting a special sensation, a quintessence pallor and a beat of raveling touches. In a veritable point of view, there is an intense feeling of progressive resister in everything Esperanto does, and this kind of an maturity-doused album wouldn’t miss that kind of program. Yet a prog rock genuine taster (not I call myself that, just that I imagine the strong view over what’s beyond the music) will acclaim, without stress actually, that the classic stage and those giant monsters have rumbled in many places, spots and dots of the movement, also getting essentials in so various directions, as for Esperanto to miss, and not by margins, the fit in the collective of innovators or the excellent music meanders; Last Tango’s glow has little to do with the most exquisite effects realized by the band, yet it’s one of three in telling the moody and the cornering (as I’ve said already) talent of Esperanto in more tranquil and divvied ways of prog rock classic time – it expresses very much the band in its shade of unique movement, afterwards dealing with a lot of interesting music. It defines the panic around the edgy surfaces (cause there are), only to resume remembering the greats points in which they’ve missed nothing. Left is, thus, the raveling sound, rhythm and confident art of Esperanto, which here has delight and a bit of bright brew, condensed along the last tangos and tongues of linguine prog delight. Last Tango isn’t a masterpiece or a collection vinyl gloss, it just doesn’t disappoint at all the Esperanto general imitation and immixture.
After the ominous band and style wobble, the music of Last Tango is culvert, inning , assent, but with a very pleasant emotion and in a meaningful glow. The album is or comes felt as short, despite pieces of a thick outline and a massive interplay. The course of music goes deep into instrumental cursive crash and vocal charm, having no concept but sticking to bright effects. We have pieces of dancing moods, rough scales, intensive rock and lyrical faucet. The hard rock is less convincing than ever, though Esperanto played some up in their regaled previous masterpiece, and stick to that essence; more superficial though, there is the folk-ish resemblance, which loses fantasy over the feel, the spirit and the creative play. Left are some melodic rock fine tunes, some rock astound dynamics (very nice actually; “how clean can you get”) , some round ways of filling up color over reflection, some good choices of vocals being above the clean and free gloss, also some interesting sundry exceptions from the normal virility of tempered states, meaning that there are pieces of surprising heat or cold sheet. Eleanor Rigby, though inconsistent to the main thought we would have (that of a cover), is a splendid piece of violin exhaustion and cyclic leitmotifs. The epic piece, around the last in the album, misses again the utmost brilliantine shape, much like The Journey did in Danse Macabre. A bit of melodrama is sketched, a bit of strange music (even, if I may say, some early disco plastic harmonies) is present and itches, a bit of melancholy in living the high grounds of rock and power towards the more plat and left in desire nuances is controllably felt. The album is good, the band experience is awesome, the credits are extinguished in the same resume as ever: very nicely shaped prog rock, very little lighted extreme expression, very smart hidden obscure pleasures, very low written unique words and distinctive joys. At the end, the album falls into memento; or the acquired taste saves it a little longer.
In the fortitude of a goodbye,Last Tango is the last breath-hold of Esperanto, who demise or sketch worse than expected afterwards. Pleasure and enticement shouldn’t be unconceivable in this fast album of great feeling tenses. Two or three pieces, along with two or three defining elements, top this album at the middle stand between what was shockingly disappointing in the album and mildly refreshing in the master-album; therefore, by this album and by the figurative appreciation, Esperanto aren’t actually heading into unconsciousness, but stick around a good sense of lithe progressive classic presence. (progarchives.com)

- Timothy Kraemer / cello
- Bruno Libert / keyboards
- Gino Malisan / bass
- Tony Malisan / drums
- Roger Meakin / vocals
- Kim Moore / vocals
- Geoffrey Salmon / 2nd violin
- Raymond Vincent 1st violin
1. Eleanor Rigby (7:43)
2. Still Life (7:27)
3. Painted Lady (3:26)
4. Obsession (4:33)
5. The Rape (12:07)
6. Last Tango (3:29)
Bonus tracks:
7. In Search Of A Dream (4:45)
8. Busy Doing Nothing (3:44)

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суббота, 15 марта 2008 г.

THE J. GEILS BAND - THE J. GEILS BAND – 1970 (US) blues/south rock/hard rock

The J. Geils Band's self-titled debut serves notice that rock & roll wasn't dead in 1970 despite the best efforts of the singer/songwriter brigade. Though it sounds a bit reserved in the light of the albums that followed, compared to the majority of bands on the scene, it was a nonstop blast of energy, fun, and sweat. Featuring the hipster jive of singer Peter Wolf, the amazing afro and harp chops of Magic Dick, the fret-burning work of J. Geils, and the jack of many trades Seth Justman (keys, compositions, backing vocals), the Geils Band rips through some classic blues by the likes of Otis Rush ("Homework"), Walter Price ("Pack Fair and Square"), and John Lee Hooker (a slow-burning "Serves You Right to Suffer"), old Motown gems ("First I Look at the Purse"), and originals that stand up well next to the covers ("Wait," "What's Your Hurry," and future live favorite "Hard Drivin' Man"). A nice mix of nostalgia, intensity, and bar band excitement, the album serves as fair warning that the Geils Band was on the scene and was ready to bring back the good-time spirit of the juke joint, the abandon of the early rock & roll scene, and the high energy of the late-'60s concert halls.

Peter Wolf (vocals)
Jay Geils (guitar)
Magic Dick [Richard Salwitz] (harmonica)
Danny "D.K." Klein (bass, saxophone)
Stephen Jo Bladd (drums, percussion)
Seth Justman (keyboards, vocals)
1 Wait 3:25
2 Ice Breaker (For the Big "M") 2:15
3 Cruisin' for a Love 2:32
4 Hard Drivin' Man 2:18
5 Serves You Right to Suffer 5:01
6 Homework 2:45
7 First I Look at the Purse 3:54
8 What's Your Hurry 2:44
9 On Borrowed Time 3:03
10 Pack Fair and Square 2:01
11 Sno-Cone 3:24

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THE J. GEILS BAND – THE MORNING AFTER – 1971 (US) blues/south rock/hard rock

The Morning After is a near perfect follow-up to the J. Geils Band's self-titled debut album. It's more of the same winning blend of rocked-out blues, jumped-up soul, and pure rock & roll wildness with enough attitude and energy to get a club full of people from zero to sweaty in less than 60 seconds. Featuring the original versions of songs that became radio staples in their live incarnations ("Looking for a Love," the Magic Dick showcase "Whammer Jammer"), a batch of covers of rare soul gems ("So Sharp," Don Covay's "The Usual Place," the aforementioned "Looking for a Love"), and some fine originals (the rip-roaring opener "I Don't Need You No More," the very funky "Gotta Have Your Love," and the heart-rending ballad "Cry One More Time," which was covered memorably by Gram Parsons on G.P.), The Morning After is definite proof that the J. Geils Band were well on their way to becoming one of the best rock & roll bands of any era.

Peter Wolf (vocals)
Jay Geils (guitar)
Magic Dick [Richard Salwitz] (harmonica)
Danny "D.K." Klein (bass, saxophone)
Stephen Jo Bladd (drums, percussion)
Seth Justman (keyboards, vocals)
1 I Don't Need You No More 2:35
2 Whammer Jammer 2:34
3 So Sharp 3:09
4 The Usual Place 2:44
5 Gotta Have Your Love 4:32
6 Looking for a Love 3:45
7 Gonna Find Me a New Love 3:23
8 Cry One More Time 3:21
9 Floyd's Hotel 3:08
10 It Ain't What You Do (It's How You Do It!) 5:12

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THE J. GEILS BAND – FULL HOUSE – LIVE – 1972 (US) blues/south rock/hard rock

The J. Geils Band made many fine, sometimes great, studio albums but where they really captured their full, thrilling potential was on the concert stage. Most live albums tend to be a poor excuse for actually being at the show in question, but the Geils Band's live albums jump out of the speakers with so much joy, fun, and unquenchable rock & roll spirit that you might as well be there. "Live" Full House was their first live record, and it is a blast from start to finish. Recorded in 1972 at Detroit's Cinderella Ballroom, the group runs through songs from their first two albums, The J. Geils Band and The Morning After, kicking out the jams on rockers like the Motown chestnut "First I Look at the Purse," Otis Rush's "Homework," and one of the group's first self-penned classics, "Hard Drivin' Man," as well as positively scorching through an incredible version of John Lee Hooker's dark and evil blues "Serves You Right to Suffer." It's easy to overlook J. Geils himself on guitar when you have a magnetic frontman like Peter Wolf or the unstoppable force that is harp player Magic Dick (check "Whammer Jammer" for proof of his greatness), but his soloing on this track serves notice that he could tear off a ferocious solo with the best of them. "Live" Full House is a short, punchy shot of rock & roll genius by one of the great bands of the '70s and one of the best live albums ever recorded.

Peter Wolf (vocals)
Jay Geils (guitar)
Magic Dick [Richard Salwitz] (harmonica)
Danny "D.K." Klein (bass, saxophone)
Stephen Jo Bladd (drums, percussion)
Seth Justman (keyboards, vocals)
1 First I Look at the Purse
2 Homework
3 Pack Fair and Square
4 Whammer Jammer
5 Hard Drivin' Man
6 Serves You Right to Suffer
7 Cruisin' for a Love
8 Looking for a Love

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THE J. GEILS BAND – BLOODSHOT – 1973 (US) blues/south rock/hard rock

Bloodshot is the J. Geils Band's third studio album and their first Top Ten (and last until 1982's smash Freeze Frame). The band sounds tighter, meaner, and funkier than on their first two releases, frontman Peter Wolf is looser and wilder than ever, and J. Geils positively rips things up on guitar. This newfound power could be down to the band blanketing the country and honing their craft in sweaty bars and concert halls. The positive response to their raw and alive live album Full House may have helped too. Whatever the cause, Bloodshot fairly jumps through the speakers on flat-out rockers like their cover of obscure soul stomper "(Ain't Nothin But A) Houseparty," the lean and nasty "Back to Get Ya" (which features a classic Wolf aside, "Scramble my eggs, honey!"), and concert fave "Southside Shuffle." The band also shows their range with hokey but fun blues shuffle "Struttin' with My Baby," bopping jump blues ("Hold Your Loving"), and very convincing heartbroken balladry ("Start All Over Again"). The band also delivers their first self-penned classic, the reggae-influenced "Give It to Me," which starts off as a tight and tough reggae-influenced pop song and spreads out into a funky jam that equals anything similar the Stones ever attempted. Along with it being a hit, Bloodshot is the first Geils album to stake a claim on the major leagues of rock & roll.

Peter Wolf (vocals)
Jay Geils (guitar)
Magic Dick [Richard Salwitz] (harmonica)
Danny "D.K." Klein (bass, saxophone)
Stephen Jo Bladd (drums, percussion)
Seth Justman (keyboards, vocals)
1 (Ain't Nothin' But a) House Party 4:43
2 Make Up Your Mind 3:31
3 Back to Get Ya 5:22
4 Struttin' With My Baby 3:16
5 Don't Try to Hide It 2:35
6 Southside Shuffle 3:43
7 Hold Your Loving 2:30
8 Start All Over Again 4:15
9 Give It to Me 6:32

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THE J. GEILS BAND - LADIES INVITED – 1973 (US) blues/south rock/hard rock

The J. Geils Band were coming off their biggest album yet (Bloodshot, which hit the Top Ten on the Billboard album charts) when Ladies Invited appeared in 1973. It didn't reach the same level of sale (peaking at number 51) and none of the songs became AOR staples. Despite this, the record is solidly entertaining Geils, full of jumping party tunes and heart-punching ballads all composed by the band itself. As usual the up-tempo songs are the best: "Did You No Wrong" is a dynamic rocker with some blistering J. Geils guitar work, "I Can't Go On" is a full-out funky jam, and "Lay Your Good Thing Down" is fine blue-eyed soul with slick hipster vocals from Peter Wolf. The ballads here show a level of emotion and commitment that you might not expect: "My Baby Don't Love Me" is a countrified, tear-in-my-beer weeper with aching harmony vocals from Seth Justman, "Chimes" is an atmospheric, paranoid tune with great dynamics and a vocal from Wolf that veers between intimate and over-the-top howling, and probably best of all is the laid-back, Stonesy "That's Why I'm Thinking of You." It is really a shock that none of these songs caught on with AOR programmers. The only one that got a few spins was "No Doubt About It," and it is the album's highlight, a low-down and nasty blues rocker featuring the one and only Magic Dick getting down on his lickin' stick. That and stuff like the driving "Take a Chance (On Romance)" and the corny but fun "Diddyboppin'" should have been blasting out of radios up and down the strip, in high-school parking lots, and on the beach — basically everywhere AOR sounds the best. Don't let anyone tell you that Ladies Invited is one of Geils' lesser works. It is just one of the band's overlooked works that deserve a second listen.

Peter Wolf (vocals)
Jay Geils (guitar)
Magic Dick [Richard Salwitz] (harmonica)
Danny "D.K." Klein (bass, saxophone)
Stephen Jo Bladd (drums, percussion)
Seth Justman (keyboards, vocals)
1 Did You No Wrong 4:08
2 I Can't Go On 5:05
3 Lay Your Good Thing Down 4:33
4 That's Why I'm Thinking of You 3:13
5 No Doubt About It 3:41
6 The Lady Makes Demands 4:22
7 My Baby Don't Love Me 3:43
8 Diddyboppin' 3:32
9 Take a Chance (on Romance) 3:56
10 Chimes 5:04

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вторник, 11 марта 2008 г.

LONE STAR - RIDING HIGH: The unreleased third album – 1978 (UK) hard rock

Lone Star was a rock band formed in Cardiff, Wales, in 1975 by Paul 'Tonka' Chapman. They signed to CBS Records, and released their self-titled debut album. It charted at #47 in 1976. The second album, Firing On All Six, saw original vocalist Kenny Driscoll replaced by John Sloman. That album reached #36 in the UK charts.

Management problems beset the band during rehearsals for a third album. The label finally pulled the plug and the band split in 1978. A third album, Riding High, was released on the Zoom Club label in 2000.

- John Sloman / vocals
- Paul Chapman / guitar
- Tony Smith / guitar
- Rik Worsnop / keyboards
- Pete Hurley / bass
- Dixie Lee / drums
1. Skytrain
2. The Writings On The Wall
3. One For The Money
4. Miss Demeaner
5. The Fool's Gold
6. Riding High
7. Can I Live The Night
8. Travelling Man
9. Painted Face
10. Longer In The Night

Thanx to Chris!

Rip from CD 320@ (artwork included)
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http://lix.in/1d21fb24

воскресенье, 9 марта 2008 г.

FLEETWOOD MAC - THE COMPLETE BLUE HORIZON SESSIONS

A six-CD set of everything Fleetwood Mac recorded for the British Blue Horizon label. Wait, you're saying, didn't they only do two albums for Blue Horizon before leaving the company in early 1969? True, but there were also the non-LP singles that comprised the bulk of the U.K. compilation The Pious Bird of Good Omen, the two albums of blues jams in Chicago that came out later in 1969, and the 1971 LP The Original Fleetwood Mac, comprised of early outtakes. Make each of those half-dozen LPs a CD, add some outtakes and alternate takes to each, and you've got a pretty full box. Unintentionally, this box makes the Mac a candidate for Most Erratic Major Rock Group of the Late 1960s, ranging from the sheer brilliance of Peter Green's songs to rote blues covers that are downright mundane, particularly some of the Jeremy Spencer showcases and Chicago blues jams. If you're a committed enough fan to consider buying this box, you already know that; you're probably more concerned with whether the previously unreleased material merits the cost. Those extras are marginal, to be honest, comprised largely of false starts, incidental studio chatter, and alternate versions that are pretty close to the official takes. Certainly the highlight of those newly unearthed tracks is the 37 minutes of alternate takes of "Need Your Love So Bad." It's also nice that the Danny Kirwan tracks that appeared only on the U.S. album English Rose are here as well. Unfortunately, this is not a complete retrospective of the Peter Green era, whose best material was recorded for Reprise; there's also a lot of noteworthy live stuff that appeared on different labels. Looking for more reasons to get the box anyway? There are extensive notes by producer Mike Vernon, which incorporate a few comments from Green. by Richie Unterberger
Peter Green - Vocals, Guitar, Harmonica
Jeremy Spencer - Vocals, Guitar, Piano
Mick Fleetwood - Drums, Percussion
John McVie - Bass
Danny Kirwan - Vocals, Guitar
Bob Brunning - Bass
Christine Perfect - Piano
David Howard, Roland Vaughan, Steve Gregory, Johnny Almond - Saxophone
Duster Bennett - Harmonica

Extra Personnel on CDs 4-5 only
Walter Horton - Vocals, Harmonica
Buddy Guy - Guitar
'Honey Boy' Edwards - Vocals, Guitar
Willie Dixon - Upright Bass
J. T. Brown - Saxophone, Vocals
Otis Spann - Vocals, Piano
S. P. Leary - Drums
Producer - Mike Vernon
Engineer - Mike Ross
Assistant producer CDs 4-5 - Marshall Chess
Engineer CDs 4-5 - Stu Black

Disc 1: Peter Green's Fleetwood Mac
1 My Heart Beat Like a Hammer (Take 2) 3:32
2 Merry Go Round (Take 2) 4:20
3 Lone Grey Mare 2:15
4 Hellhound on My Trail (Take 1) 2:06
5 Shake Your Moneymaker 3:14
6 Looking for Somebody 2:52
7 No Place to Go 3:21
8 My Baby's Good to Me 2:51
9 I Loved Another Woman 2:56
10 Cold Black Night 3:17
11 The World Keep on Turning 2:29
12 Got to Move 3:21
13 My Heart Beat Like a Hammer (Take 1) 3:43
14 Merry Go Round (Take 1) 0:57
15 I Loved Another Woman (Take 1-4) 6:09
16 I Loved Another Woman (Take 5-6) 5:10
17 Cold Black Night (Take 1-6) 5:30
18 You're So Evil 3:07
19 I'm Coming Home to Stay 2:29

Disc 2: Mr. Wonderful
1 Stop Messin' Round (Take 4) 2:36
2 I've Lost My Baby 4:18
3 Rollin' Man 2:54
4 Dust My Broom 2:53
5 Love That Burns 5:04
6 Doctor Brown 3:46
7 Need Your Love Tonight 3:28
8 If You Be My Baby 3:53
9 Evenin' Boogie 2:42
10 Lazy Poker Blues 2:36
11 Coming Home 2:41
12 Trying So Hard to Forget 4:51
13 Stop Messin' Round (Take 1-3) 4:34
14 Stop Messin' Round (Take 5) 2:50
15 I Held My Baby Last Night 4:28
16 Mystery Boogie 2:52

Disc 3: The Pious Bird of Good Omen
1 Need Your Love So Bad (Version 2, Take 4) 6:58
2 Rambling Pony 3:34
3 I Believe My Time Ain't Long 3:03
4 The Sun Is Shining 3:12
5 Albatross 3:11
6 Black Magic Woman 2:53
7 Jigsaw Puzzle Blues 1:35
8 Like Crying 2:31
9 Need Your Love So Bad (Version 1, Take 1-3) 11:34
10 Need Your Love So Bad (Version 2, Take 1-2) 13:08
11 Need Your Love So Bad (Take 3) 6:22
12 Need Your Love So Bad (USA Version) 6:20

Disc 4: Blues Jam in Chicago - Volume One
1 Watch Out 4:20
2 Ooh Baby 4:05
3 South Indiana (Take 1) 3:21
4 South Indiana (Take 2) 3:47
5 Last Night 5:01
6 Red Hot Jam (Take 1) 5:55
7 Red Hot Jam (Take 2) 6:02
8 I'm Worried 3:47
9 I Held My Baby Last Night 5:16
10 Madison Blues 4:56
11 I Can't Hold Out 4:49
12 Bobby's Rock 4:00
13 I Need Your Love (Take 2) 4:32
14 Horton's Boogie Woogie (Take 1) 3:37
15 I Got the Blues 4:55

Disc 5: Blues Jam in Chicago - Volume Two
1 World's in a Tangle 5:26
2 Talk With You 3:28
3 Like It This Way 4:25
4 Someday Soon Baby 7:37
5 Hungry Country Girl 5:46
6 Black Jack Blues 5:08
7 Everyday I Have the Blues 4:55
8 Rockin' Boogie 3:58
9 My Baby's Gone 4:04
10 Sugar Mama (Take 1) 0:49
11 Sugar Mama 6:08
12 Homework 3:20
13 Honey Boy Blues 2:20
14 I Need Your Love (Take 1) 2:15
15 Horton's Boogie Woogie (Take 2) 3:40
16 Have a Good Time 4:55
17 That's Wrong 4:13
18 Rock Me Baby 3:24

Disc 6: The Original Fleetwood Mac
1 Drifting 3:32
2 Leaving Town Blues (Take 5) 3:11
3 Watch Out (Take 2) 4:48
4 A Fool No More (Take 1-8) 8:01
5 Mean Old Fireman (Take 1-2) 4:08
6 Can't Afford to Do It 2:04
7 Fleetwood Mac 3:56
8 Worried Dream (Take 1) 6:57
9 Love That Woman (Alternate Original Mix) 2:34
10 Allow Me One More Show (Alternate Original Mix) 3:01
11 First Train Home 4:06
12 Rambling Pony No. 2 (Alternate Original Mix) 2:55
13 Watch Out (Take 1) 3:09
14 Something Inside of Me 3:57
15 Something Inside of Me (Take 2) 4:07
16 Something Inside of Me (Take 3) 4:17
17 One Sunny Day 3:13
18 Without You 4:33
19 Coming Your Way (Take 6) 3:01

This 6CD box-set includes nearly the whole stuff of Fleetwood Mac recorded for Blue Horizon with a lot of outtakes. This is the most complete set until now.
The sound quality is excellent and the material of great quality. No need to say that this Fleetwood Mac was far the best one. When Peter Green left the band, another story began with a different band in spite of having the same name and commun bandmates.
HIGHLY RECOMMENDED
Rip from CD 256@ (artwork included)
Download links
Disc 1: Peter Green's Fleetwood Mac
http://lix.in/c4600870
http://lix.in/25ccf479
Disc 2: Mr. Wonderful
http://lix.in/7efde7d5
http://lix.in/ee884914
Disc 3: The Pious Bird of Good Omen
http://lix.in/fee34e86
http://lix.in/9cf96617
Disc 4: Blues Jam in Chicago - Volume One
http://lix.in/32ed3605
http://lix.in/3b08977b
Disc 5: Blues Jam in Chicago - Volume Two
http://lix.in/3fdd9234
http://lix.in/f58c3f99
Disc 6: The Original Fleetwood Mac
http://lix.in/9d825459
http://lix.in/54854671

пятница, 7 марта 2008 г.

JUDAS PRIEST – ROCKA ROLLA – 1974 (UK) hard rock

A sketchy and underfocused debut, Rocka Rolla nonetheless begins to delineate the musical territory Judas Priest would explore over the remainder of the decade: frighteningly dark in its effect, tight in its grooves, and capable of expanding to epic song lengths. On the other hand, Rocka Rolla is also murkier, less precise and powerful in its riff attack, and more blues-based; the stylistic debts to Black Sabbath and Deep Purple are obvious at this juncture, although they would become much less apparent on subsequent releases. The compositions alternate between short songs and extended suites; some are decent, but overall they don't establish a real direction and tend to plod aimlessly in many of the longer pieces. Mostly a curiosity for hardcore fans, Rocka Rolla definitely hints at Judas Priest's potential and originality, but doesn't always suggest the quantum leap in vision that would occur with their very next record.

Rob Halford (vocals)
Glenn Tipton (guitar, piano, vocals)
Kenneth Keith Downing (guitar)
Ian Hill (bass)
John Hinch (drums)
1 One for the Road
2 Rocka Rolla
3 Winter
4 Deep Freeze
5 Winter Retreat
6 Cheater
7 Never Satisfied
8 Run of the Mill
9 Dying to Meet You
10 Caviar and Meths
11 Diamonds and Rust (bonus)

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JUDAS PRIEST – SAD WINGS OF DESTINY – 1976 (UK) hard rock

The groundbreaking Sad Wings of Destiny was the first great Judas Priest album, simultaneously taking the entire heavy metal genre to new depths of darkness and new heights of technical precision and musicality. Sad Wings of Destiny sounded like little else on the metal scene in 1976: it was heavy and chillingly bleak, in an almost unrelenting way that hadn't been seen since Black Sabbath's heyday, but its arrangements were much more intricately crafted, its sonic textures more varied, its grooves tight and menacing, yet tinged with a gothic elegance under the raging torrent of guitar riffs. Just as importantly, the more prog rock-influenced sections of Rocka Rolla have been brought under control, with the extended pieces displaying a newfound focus and direction, as well as complexity. Perhaps the only flaw lies in the album's pacing, which drags down some of the momentum toward the second half by keeping the slower pieces too close together (an effect not helped by the less-than-melodic rocker "Genocide"). However, virtually every other aspect of the album points to a stunning artistic leap forward. The opener, "Victim of Changes," was an instant metal classic, with Rob Halford delivering an electrifying performance; elsewhere, shorter songs like "The Ripper" and "Deceiver" come on like lightning-quick sneak attacks, ending before you know what's hit you. There are also two delicate, prog-style ballads, "Dreamer Deceiver" and the piano-based "Epitaph," demonstrating a compelling emotional range. Although neither as commercially successful nor as technically flashy as subsequent releases, Sad Wings of Destiny was an important milestone in the eventual development of the progressive metal subgenre, and established a standard of excellence to which Judas Priest would adhere through the remainder of the '70s.

Rob Halford (vocals)
Glenn Tipton (guitar, piano, vocals)
Kenneth Keith Downing (guitar)
Ian Hill (bass)
John Hinch (drums)
1 Victim of Changes 7:45
2 The Ripper 2:51
3 Dreamer Deceiver 5:53
4 Deceiver 2:47
5 Prelude 2:02
6 Tyrant 4:30
7 Genocide 5:49
8 Epitaph 3:21
9 Island of Domination 4:20

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среда, 5 марта 2008 г.

DA CAPO – DA CAPO – 1970 (GER) heavy krautrock

Germany and played guitar-dominated progressive rock with clear West Coast influences. It's only vinyl was produced in 1970 in a small studio and was recorded with a 2-track tapemachine. It consists of Seven tracks, all very well done. Especially the long instrumental track 'A Day In the Rest Of My Life' with two lead-guitars remembers to the style of Quicksilver Messenger Service in a very positive way. The edition amounted to 500 vinyls and they were sold in the beginning at the band's gigs. As this wasn't very successful the band began to sell the records at a loss for a price of 3 DM ( = 1.50 $ ) in the flea-markets at Nьrnberg and the surrounding areas. Enervated the band throw the remaining half of the vinyls into the waste container at last. This sad story paired with the high quality of the record is the reason, that today this belongs together with first Can and Tybun Tall LPs as the most sought-after German rock-albums from the early seventies

Peter Stanek (guitars, vocals)
Peter Treiber (guitars, vocals)
Peter Weisner (bass, vocals)
Alfred Urban (drums)
Side 1
1 - Free
2 - Future
3 - Find My Way Home
4 - Young Man
5 - Can Smile
Side 2
6 - She's Leaving
7 - A Day In The Rest Of My Life
8 – Marihuana

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понедельник, 3 марта 2008 г.

BARRELHOUSE – BARRELHOUSE – 1974 (DUTCH) heavy blues

In 1973, when Barrelhouse first came together as “Barrelhouse Bailey's Blues & Boogie Band,” the musicians already had years of experience under their belts. Barrelhouse Bailey himself was none other than Han van Dam. It was his stage name in the Oscar Benton Blues Band, where Jan Willem Sligting was known as Jay Walker. The LaPorte surname also stems from this period and isn't the real last name of brothers Guus and John. The Oscar Benton Blues Band, along with Cuby & the Blizzards, was the premier blues group in the Netherlands in the late 60s and early 70s.

Han and Jan Willem had worked together before, first in the Haarlem-based Han van Dam Trio in the early 60s, and again in the Smoke Town Stompers, a reference to the smokestacks of IJmuiden on the Dutch North Sea coast.
Guus, and later John, joined them in the Oscar Benton period. First on guitar, and then on bass, taking over from Jan Willem when the latter temporarily switched to drums.

When the Oscar Benton Blues Band split up in 1973, the drummer at the time, Art Bausch, went on to work with Smyle, a group from The Hague with hit potential. Oscar joined forces with Monica & the Voices of Freedom, who worked primarily in Germany. Han, Jan Willem, and John had plans for a new blues band and were looking for a drummer. With the help of Andrй Valkering, who Han knew, they heard about Bob Dros, then member of the hard-rocking Head over Heels, formerly the Frogs (of Castricum, the Netherlands). Bob, who got his start in the Typhoons in 1962 (on the island of Texel, in the Netherlands), provided accompaniment to Andrй's boogies in the Uilenstede dorm where they both lived (in Amstelveen, just south of Amsterdam). Everyone went to go see Bob play at a session in Castricum. After a particular fill, John is said to have declared, “He's the one.” But with a background steeped in the Beatles, the Stones, Black Sabbath, and Led Zeppelin, the new drummer had a lot of homework to do on blues rhythms like the shuffle. Jan Willem gave a lot of demonstrations on drums, and Bob was given tapes of O.D. Paine, Fred Below, and Mick Fleetwood to listen to. This enthusiasm and effort was a great help and motivation for him. John: “You don't always have to play your high hat precisely in line with the snare, Bob.”

Guus wasn't a part of Barrelhouse in the early days. He was too busy terrorizing the North Country with his band Snake. The four original members in 1973 were Han on piano, Jan Willem on bass, John on guitar, and Bob on drums. Through Han's connection with Job Zomer of Munich Records, early practice sessions took place in an empty house in the town of Herwijnen, a rustic spot with a view of the Waal River. Later, they relocated to Provadja, in the city of Alkmaar. The foursome toured the country for a short time as Barrelhouse Bailey's Blues & Boogie Band with a repertoire of instrumentals (“Sans singin',” as Han would say.) To make up for the lack of a vocalist, they contacted blues singer and guitarist Shakey Sam (the late Simon Vlietstra, from Franeker, the Netherlands) and he did a sort of opening act in the spring of 1974, joining the band when they took the stage after the break. But once Tineke had joined the fray in April, Shakey Sam's role was relegated to the background, and he ended up starting his own group, the Shakey Sam Blues Band.

The four original Barrelhouse guys first heard Tineke sing during a jam session organized by Jan Hupkes at Bruintje Beer in Alkmaar, and they, like so many others, were very impressed. Tineke got her start in the early 70s in Flat Country – a blues band of course. Blues was her passion from the get go. The Blizzards and the Oscar Benton Blues Band were among Tineke's musical idols, so she was really surprised and thrilled when ex-Oscar Benton members asked her to sing with them. At her first few gigs with Barrelhouse at Mahogany Hall in Edam, she only sang 5 or 6 songs with the band. But with the addition of Tineke, the group's definitive sound really started to take shape.

With the girl from Akersloot on board, the band took off. Plans for Han's solo album turned into a self-titled debut album for the band in 1974, at the suggestion of Job Zomer and Martin van Olderen of the Oldie Blues label. It was a productive period in which each gig generated two new ones and the band's popularity grew quickly, as did its reputation as one of the best live acts in the country: full of energy, like a well-oiled machine, and open to influences beyond the blues. The band caught the attention of tenor sax player Hans Dulfer, who for years would regularly join the band onstage. Dulfer formed a more or less fixed duo with trumpet player Jeff Reynolds, and highlights of their collaboration with Barrelhouse can be heard on “Beware” and “Got to Get Together” from the 1981 album. Paul Vielvoije from Leiden was also part of the line-up for a several months. There was no shortage of inspiration for new, original material during this period, and albums appeared at roughly one-and-a-half-year intervals.

But you can't make an omelet without breaking eggs. And at the close of the 70s, Jan Willem couldn't be prevented from leaving the band. Hans Oldenburg from Castricum took his place, and was himself later replaced by Roscoe Stallworth from Heemskerk. When Tineke left the band in 1984 for new pursuits with One-Two, Barrelhouse was fronted by a succession of vocalists, including Karin Wielenga in 1986 and Theo Houtkoop in 1987. But the most well-known among them was Jony de Boer who performed with the band for a couple of years after Tineke first left, and recorded several singles and even an album with the band, Every Night in the Week (1985). But it proved difficult to stay inspired without Jan Willem and Tineke around, and the motivation to continue trying gradually faded. One final attempt to draw Oscar into the group in 1987 met with a mixed reaction, and after the first and only gig with him in Bloemendaal, everyone decided to go their separate ways. Barrelhouse was no more.... Tears were shed, but everyone could look back with pride on many productive years, both on stage and in the studio, and on a loyal and enthusiastic following.
1. In The Mood
2. Way Down Low
3. Worried Life Blues
4. South Side Stomp
5. If You Really Wanna Leave
6. Dirty Dozen
7. Get Like You Used To Be
8. Harris' Country Line Up
9. Twenty Nine Ways
10. Going Down
11. You Don't Have To Go

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суббота, 1 марта 2008 г.

E.A.POE - GENERAZIONI (STORIA DI SEMPRE) – 1974 (IT) progressive rock

Somewhere between Murple's 'Io Sono Murple' and Apoteosi's self-titled album, lies 'Generazioni' by E. A. Poe. This mysterious band (it seems that any kind of information about the line-up is non-existent) displayed a somewhat gloomy kind of symph prog, with a moderately dark ambience to it, and yet, still melodic, refined and accesible: the instrumental arrangements follow the usual path of symphonic oriented standards, but keeping the complexity on a subtle level, without excessive ornaments or over-pretentious dramatic contrasts. Sometimes the rhythm section supports the melodies and textures with a jazzy mood, while some other times it rocks; meanwhile, the guitar and synth solos never get too loud or overplayed, yet they are carefully performed, even adding some healthy doses of dissonance. The grand piano is mostly used in a romantic way (a la Chopin or Lizst), while the rest of the keyboards are used for the benefit of colour, textures and orchestral layers, always keeping things at ease, very subtle. My fav tracks are 2, 4 and 5, since they comprise the best compositional ideas, and also incarnate the essence of E. A. Poe's music properly. There is also room for a couple of acoustic numbers (3 and 6), in which the band focuses on Mediterranean folk sounds. Though not a real stunning masterpiece, 'Generazioni' remains a special example of good Italian symphonic prog.

Giorgio Foti / keyboards, vocals
Beppe Ronco / guitar, mandolin
Lello Foti / drums
+ Marco Maggi / bass
1. Prologo
2. Considerazioni
3. Per un'anima
4. Alla ricerca.....
5. Ad un vecchio
6. La ballata del cane
7. Generazioni

Rather "dark" Italian Progressive rock. This one-album-band has similarities with Apoteosi. The music also has a jazzy feeling even though they sometimes abuse of the synth.
Rip from CD 256@ (artwork included)
Download link
http://lix.in/92c37d70

WALLENSTEIN – BLITZKRIEG – 1972 (GER) krautrock

This is the debut-album (’71) from WALLENSTEIN, a kind of international formation. From the very first second WALLENSTEIN will carry you away with their mind blowing sound on the four dynamic compositions (running time between 7 and 14 minutes): beautiful mellow moments but in general lots of propulsive rhythms and sumptuous outbursts with biting and blistering guitar work (from USA man Bill Barone), supported by sparkling piano, majestic Mellotron waves (by Jurgen Dollase) and a very dynamic rhythm-section, featuring the known Harold Grosskopf (Klaus Schulze) on drums and the Dutch Jerry Berkers on bass. An album with a unique sound, a bit raw but very exciting.

Bill Barone / Gibson 335 guitars, acoustic guitar, vocals
Jerry Berkers / bass, lead vocals
Jürgen Dollase / keyboards, Mellotron, lead vocals, words
Harald Großkopf / drums, percussion
1. Lunatic (11:55)
2. The theme (9:37)
3. Manhatten Project (13:47)
4. Audiences (7:38)

Pretty impressive jamming guitar / keyboard early prog sound from this German outfit. Very enjoyable.
Rip from CD 256@ (artwork included)
Download link
http://lix.in/e2a6f9ff