Showing posts with label Rock'N'Roll. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Rock'N'Roll. Show all posts

Wednesday, June 29, 2011

Neil Young and the International Harvesters – A Treasure (1984-1985 us folk rock, country rock and rock'n'roll - 2011 HDCD edition - MP3 320K and FLAC

Are you ready for the country? So sings Neil Young on the song of the same name, the second track of his new live release, A Treasure.

But this should probably be the first track on the album, since it’s more than just a fast, raunchy, countrified blues number; it’s something like an aesthetic standpoint.

Young asks us if we can handle this side of him. Are you ready for the country? If you are, then you need to get this album.

This ain’t your father’s Neil Young, unless of course your dad listens to Waylon Jennings, Townes Van Zandt, and/or once owned a confederate flag.

Neil was a musical shapeshifter in the 1980s, after a decade and a half of establishing himself as classic rock royalty in bands like Buffalo Springfield, CSN&Y, and Crazy Horse. As part of the burgeoning acid folk/folk rock/psychedelic scene of late ’60s Los Angeles, he brought an edge to the soft vocal harmonies of Crosby, Stills, and Nash, and his biting guitar rocks your inner core on songs like “Ohio” and “Southern Man”.

In 1982, Young released Trans, a synth-heavy rock album that could almost be the soundtrack to the original Tron. 1983 saw the release of Everybody’s Rockin’, an album of rockabilly-flavored 1950s rock and roll. And in 1985, Neil dropped Old Ways, an album that his label didn’t want to release, saying that it was too country.

In the midst of that creative period, Young toured with the International Harvesters, a group of musicians who could revel in the country twang of the Old Ways material.

Their concerts, in 1984 and 1985, are captured here for the first time on A Treasure. Of course, Neil Young is no stranger to southern music; “Are You Ready for the Country?” was first recorded on the 1972 gem Harvest, and the country sound has always been integral to this singer-songwriter’s world.

The live version of “Are You Ready…” brings out the country stomp, played at a much faster and more aggressive clip than the original studio version. Rufus Thibodeaux’s fiddle flies out in front, with Young’s phlanged guitar substituting for the Hank Williams twang of honky-tonk.

A Treasure was cobbled together from various recordings made during Neil’s fall 1984 and 1985 tours, but it arcs like a real show, coming to a frenzied peak with the most rocking selection on here, the album-closing “Grey Riders”. Never before released, and long considered a fan favorite, “Grey Riders” is a monster of Young’s “Cinnamon Girl” classic rock sound.

Thibodeaux’s crying fiddle is still there, and the fast country backbeat dominates the verses and chorus, but it’s all about the heavily distorted, syncopated guitar riff in between verses, and Young’s wailing, over-driven guitar solo.

Along the way, A Treasure visits a variety of Southern styles. “It Might Have Been” is fast Nashville sound, dominated by fiddle and Young’s nasally voice, with longtime Young collaborator Ben Keith on pedal steel guitar. “Bound for Glory” is a dramatic narrative ballad, a sad country love story.

The soulful country ballad “Nothing Is Perfect” features gospel backing vocals, which lend strong and commanding support to Neil’s reedy tenor, while bowed bass and barrel-house piano contribute that old-time homey sound. Banjo adds a frolicky bluegrass feel to “Get Back to the Country”, as Young sings, “Back where it all began.” It’s high-powered, über fast rock bluegrass, with electric guitars and drums commingling with the fiddle, banjo, and pedal steel.

There’s plenty of harder stuff on here, too. “Motor City” has gritty guitars, and the working class ethos of ’80s rockers like George Thorogood or John Mellencamp lurks in the background. Except that Neil Young brings more humor, more artistry, and more rawness to the sound than either of those commercial rockers.

“Soul of a Woman” is a 12-bar blues, hearkening back to a ’50s rock and roll sound. It’s the country tinge that Elvis, Carl Perkins, and Buddy Holly had, but with more grit, more drive, more overdrive on the guitars (and a totally bad-ass blues fiddle solo).

The nearly eight-minute “Southern Pacific”–a chugging lament on train culture–is the centerpiece of the second half of the album. The train screams into your headphones with a fast rock backbeat and lyrics full of melancholy and nostalgia.

Anthony Crawford’s totally raw banjo solo, complete with noisy fret scratching, sounds like the sound of rusty train brakes. Young’s voice soars with urgency, delivering a commanding performance of this socially conscious tune, channeling the plight of the American worker into song.

The album is being released in a variety of media, including a deluxe CD/Blu-ray combo pack featuring live footage of the ’84-’85 Harvesters when available. Longtime Neil Young fans and completists will salivate that this incredibly fruitful collaboration is finally an official release and that songs like “Grey Riders”, which previously existed only as grainy bootlegs, have been lovingly remastered.

This was Young’s offering on Record Store Day, telling something of the affection he has for this time period. Yes, it’s a live album, but not “this is what he’s been doing recently.”

If anything, this feels more like a vault release of a new band with familiar faces. Above all, you can feel the exuberance that comes from playing raw, unbridled live music, and there are few from that generation who excel at this better than Neil Young. Old man, take a look at your life, indeed (by Jaken Cohen).

Powderfinger:


Track List:
01.Amber Jean* (9/20/84) Nashville Now TV – Nashville, TN
02.Are You Ready for the Country? (9/21/84) Riverbend Music Center – Cincinnati, OH
03.It Might Have Been (9/25/84) Austin City Limits TV – Austin, Texas
04.Bound for Glory (9/29/84) Gilleys’ Rodeo Arena – Pasadena, TX
05.Let Your Fingers Do the Walking* (10/22/84) Universal Amphitheatre – Universal City, CA
06.Flying on the Ground is Wrong (10/26/84) Greek Theater – Berkeley, CA
07.Motor City (10/26/84) Greek Theater – Berkeley, CA
08.Soul of a Woman* (10/26/84) Greek Theater – Berkeley, CA
09.Get Back to the Country (10/26/84) Greek Theater – Berkeley, CA
10.Southern Pacific (9/1/85) Minnesota State Fair – St. Paul, MN
11.Nothing is Perfect* (9/1/85) Minnesota State Fair – St. Paul, MN
12.Grey Riders* (9/10/85) Pier 84 – New York, NY


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Thursday, June 16, 2011

Joe Meek - Vampires, Cowboys, Spacemen And Spooks (1959-1963 uk instrumental surf rock, rock'n'roll, proto psychedelic - MP3 320K and FLAC)

British record producer Joe Meek was ahead of his time in his use of weird effects, unusual arrangements, and technological manipulation to achieve oddball sounds and atmosphere of proto-psychedelic quality.

No one else in the 1960s, aside from Phil Spector, perhaps, had such a distinctive, idiosyncratic style of production.

VAMPIRES, COWBOYS, SPACEMEN & SPOOKS: THE VERY BEST OF JOE MEEK'S INSTRUMENTALS provides the perfect introduction to Meek's sonic universe, which sounds like something between a beach party and a haunted house--in space.

His landmark track for the Tornados, "Telstar," is included here.


Joe Meek, Heinz Burt, And The Tornados Live Footage...



The Saints - Wipe Out:


Disc: 1
01.Night of the Vampire
02.Ridin' the Wind [UK Version]
03.Theme from the Traitors
04.The Spook Walks
05.Green Jeans
06.Surfin' John Brown
07.Oo La La
08.Moon Rocket [#]
09.Dance Legless, Russian
10.Husky Team
11.Swingin' Low
12.Life on Venus [German Version]
13.Taboo
14.Cry My Heart
15.March of the Spacemen
16.Hatashiai (Japanese Sword Fight)
17.Jackson's Jump [#]
18.Just for Chicks
19.Union Pacific
20.Keep Moving
21.Robot
22.The Monster
23.Pinto
24.Valley of the Sioux
25.Saxon War Cry
26.Exodus [Undubbed Version][#]
27.Yashmak
28.Can Can 62
29.The Kennedy March
30.Jungle Fever [Stereo Version]

Disc: 2
01.Telstar [Stereo Version]
02.Sunday Date
03.Totem Pole
04.Ambush
05.Lost Planet
06.Besame Mucho [#]
07.Tom Tom Cat
08.Globetrotter
09.odge City
10.Lass of Richmond Hill
11.Big Breaker
12.West Point
13.Wipe Out
14.Order of the Keys
15.Reindeer Ride
16.The Theme of Freedom
17.Big Feet
18.Dragonfly
19.There's Something at the Bottom of the Well
20.Poet & Peasant
21.Last Stage West
22.The Spy
23.The Ice Cream Man
24.Evening in Paris
25.Kickin' Around
26.Midnight in Luxembourg
27.Christmas Stocking
28.Shenandoah [#]
29.The Phantom Hussar [#]
30.Return of the Vampire (The Bogey Man)


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Thursday, May 19, 2011

The Good Rats - From Rats To Riches (1978 us mix of hard rock, pop and rock'n'roll - MP3 320K and FLAC)

For fans of The Greatest Band That Was Never Known, Tasty & From Rats to Riches were arguably their best.

By 1978 the five man combo of Peppi Marchello-Vocals & Harmonica, Mickey Marchello-Guitar & Vocals, John (The Cat) Gatto-Lead Guitar, Lenny Kotke-Bass & Vocals and Joe Franco-Drums had coalesced into a solid unit mixing balls-out Rock & Roll with barbershop harmonies and turning that into great music that (dammit) should have translated into national fame.

At their height in the late '70s and early 80s The Good Rats had performed at Madison Square Garden, the Philadelphia Spectrum, the Nassau Coliseum, the Hammersmith Odeon in England, the Capitol Theater in Passaic, NJ (a late great venue) and New York's Central Park.

The Good Rats had also played most of the major showcase rooms in the country including the Bottom Line (RIP), Paradise in Boston, Whisky in L.A., well... you get the point!


They headlined and opened up for such groups as Twisted Sister, Rush, Aerosmith, Meatloaf, Ozzy, Grateful Dead, Kiss, Journey, Heart, Springsteen, Styx and many others.

With Tasty (1978) and From Rats To Riches (1978) the band was at the top of their form. Ranging from power ballads (Songwriter, Let Me) to witty ditties (Fred Upstairs and Ginger Snappers, Coo Coo Coo Blues) to Heavy Rock Injun Joe, Takin' it to Detroit) The Good Rats with their carefully blended harmonies, great (IMHO) writing and stellar musicianship had everything they needed to put themselves among the greats of their day.

Dammit, they should have made it, but despite being Picked up by a minor Capitol label and picking up Flo & Eddie for producers, they never made it to the charts, much less got airplay.

Still, their albums hold up to this day, and give me a charge every time I put them on (by Bogframe from audiokarma.org).


Don't Hate The Ones Who Bring You Rock:


Track List:
01.Taking It To Detroit (3:36)
02.Just Found Me A Lady (2:50)
03.Mr. Mechanic (3:39)
04.Dear Sir (3:12)
05.Let Me (4:45)
06.Victory In Space (3:06)
07.Coo Coo Coo Blues (4:37)
08.Don't Hate The Ones Who Bring You Rock & Roll (3:18)
09.Could Be Tonight (2:54)
10.Local Zero (5:08)

The Good Rats:
*Peppi Marchello-Vocals & Harmonica
*Mickey Marchello-Guitar & Vocals
*John (The Cat) Gatto-Lead Guitar
*Lenny Kotke-Bass & Vocals
*Joe Franco-Drums

[ Thank you LARRY for sending this post ]
CODE: 53230

Tuesday, May 17, 2011

The Godz - Power Rock From USA & Nothing Is Sacred (1978-1979 hard-heavy metal rock 'n'roll and boogie rock - CD + 2 vinyl rip - MP3 320K and Wave)

Quite the most amazing over the top example of Heavy Metal Rock n roll.

The Godz debut should have set themselves up to be an institution of the genre like but better than Motorhead, instead an awful second album and many other ..problems.. basically stopped their career.

This is Rock N roll but too the max. It's fun. Over the top raps. Perfect Production. Mighty metal moments... "Under the table" has to be the best number in the style i've heard.

The wonderful Feedback strewn annihilation of Golden Earring's "Candy's going bad" is so over the top it takes the breath away.

Over-serious music lovers and miserable unhappy people should avoid this album that parties and makes one smile! (by Hawkfanatic).

Candy's Going Bad:


CD Track List:
01.Go Away
02.Baby I Love You
03.Guaranteed
04.Gotta Keep A Runnin
05.Under The Table
06.Cross Country
07.Candy's Going Bad

Bonus (from Nothing Is Sacred album)
08.Gotta Muv (Bonus)
09.Rock Yer Sox Auf (Bonus)
10.I'll Bi Yer Luv (Bonus)
11.Luv Kage (Bonus)
12.He's A Fool
13.714
14.Hey Mama
15.I Don't Wanna Go Home


The Godz - vinyl rip (aka Power Rock From USA):
01.Go Away
02.Baby I Love You
03.Guaranteed
04.Gotta Keep A Runnin
05.Under The Table
06.Cross Country
07.Candy's Going Bad

Nothing Is Sacred - vinyl rip:
01.Gotta Muv
02.Festyvul Seasun
03.Rock Yer Sox Auf
04.I'll Be Yer Luv
05.Luv Kage
06.He's a Fool
07.714
08.Hey Mamma
09.Snakin
10.I Don't Wanna Go Home


The Godz:
*Bobby Hill - guitar, keyboard, vocals
*Eric Moore - bass, vocals
*Mark Chatfield - guitar, vocals
*Glen Cataline - drums, vocals


[ Thank you LARRY for sending this post ]
CODE: 52014