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Gooder'n Bad Vinyl

The Best Vinyl I've Got . . . Well, mostly vinyl, and mostly good ;-)

April 2006

( Monthly archive )

Forever More - Yours (1970) [Vinyl]

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Side 1
01 - Back in the States Again
02 - We Sing
03 - It's Home
04 - Home Country Blues
05 - Good to Me

Side 2
01 - Yours
02 - Beautiful Afternoon
03 - 8 O'Clock & All's Well
04 - Mean Pappie Blues
05 - You Too Can Have a Body Like Mine
06 - Sylvester's Last Voyage



http://rapidshare.com/files/1499991/fmy.rar


OK - Back in the late 80's I use to go to my local Radio Shack for connectors, cables, etc. They always had a very small cut-out bin with a few records in it. I always flipped through them but never saw anything that I really wanted. As time went on the number of LP's slowly got fewer and fewer until this was the only one left. When they finally marked it down to 25¢ I decided "what the heck" and took a chance. I'm glad I did! It's really a great album!!

Favorite songs? "We Sing", "Good to Me" and the title song.

Looks like someone recently paid $26 for it on E-Bay!

Personnel:
Alan Gorrie - Piano, Bass Guitar, Teapot (He went on to the Average White Band!)
Mick Travis - Guitar (his name sounds familiar)
Onnie Mair - Guitar, Bass Guitar, Backing Vocals
Stuart Francis - Drums, Backing Vocals

Produced by Ray Singer and Simon Napier-Bell.

And now you know all that I know!

This album runs the gamut. I hear Prog-Rock, Rock, Jazz, Country-Rock, Country. A little bit of everything.

I hear influences by Traffic, Youngbloods, Caravan, etc.

Anybody have any additional info out there it would be great.

Enjoy!

Flash Fearless Vs. Zorg Woman (1975)

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1. Trapped - Elkie Brooks
2. I'm Flash - Alice Cooper, Alice Cooper
3. Country Cooking - Jim Dandy
4. What's Happening - James Dewar
5. Space Pirates - Alice Cooper, Alice Cooper
6. Sacrifice - Elkie Brooks
7. Let's Go to the Chop - John Entwistle
8. Supersnatch - Frank Miller, Frank Miller
9. Blast Off - Jim Dandy
10. Trapped [Repise] - Eddie Jobson
(Original vinyl rip)




Amazon Buyer (CD) Review:
Back in the day...Flash Fearless was intended to be a touring musical (according to the cd booklet it actually was performed a time or two after the record had come out, but without the performers on the record) and the producers came up with this all-star cast to do the record.

Reasons to buy this cd:

1. James Dewar (vocalist for Robin Trower) delivers his strongest recorded performance ever on "What's Happening". If you like Dewar, then this is an absolutely critical cut for you to have - STELLAR!

2. Jim Dandy of Black Oak Arkansas brings it. He's completely in character and handles both the alienation of the country boy in deep space of "Country Cookin" and the naive optimism of man's future in the stars of "Blast Off". The vocal effect at the end of "Blast Off" predates it's use on "Too Hot To Stop" on BOA's "X-Rated" lp.

3. Alice Cooper. Humor, menace, solid Coop.

4. John Entwistle takes the vocal on "Let's Go To The Chop". The Ox sounds great and his bass work is his typically outstanding self.

5. The cd has a bonus cut that was not on the original vinly release. Unfortunately, "The Georgia Syncopator" is a relatively weak addition.

6. The cd does have a much better than average booklet with information that was not included in the vinyl release...it's informative and honest about the circumstances surrounding the whole Flash Fearless concept and the resulting album and tour.

The Elkie Brooks, Maddie Prior, and Frankie Miller cuts don't do anything for me. But, if you're a fan of Alice Cooper, Jim Dandy, or James Dewar you could buy this and be thrilled with these performances that you won't find elsewhere (outside of Cooper's on his box set). Overall, an intersting addition to the collection and worth the price.

http://rapidshare.com/files/1501390/ffzrg.rar


Enjoy!

The High Dials - A New Devotion (2003)



Going to do something a little bit different here. Plug a band that I've literally worn out the CD.

They're called The High Dials from Canada.

I heard a few of their songs on a blog last year and decided to order the CD. They are one of the best new bands I've heard in a long time!

So with that in mind, I'm giving you just 3 songs to listen to. If you like them go buy the album A New Devotion!!

01 Diamonds in the Dark.mp3
03 Desiderata.mp3
16 Morning's White Vibration.mp3

Trust me - The rest is just as good!

http://rapidshare.com/files/16372087/hd_and.rar


Bio:
The High Dials story begins in 2003, when their debut album, "A New Devotion," was released worldwide on NYC-based Rainbow Quartz Records. A wopping 18 songs, ranging from soft, pastoral pop to groovy, garage rave-ups, told the tale of a mysterious and troubled boy known only as "Silas" and his attempt to escape evil powers in a nightmarish city of the future. Drawing on everything from science-fiction, old comic books, movie soundtracks and psychedelia to Trevor’s garden- the album came off like some dark kaleidoscopic cartoon, a soundtrack to a movie that has still not been made. A New Devotion won great reviews and enjoyed college radio success in both Canada and the US. They got tons of airplay from Little Steven, a big fan, on his nationally syndicated radio show the Underground Garage. They hit the top 5 in Canada on the national college radio chart and cracked the U.S. top 50 reaching 42 on the CMJ Top 200 and 31 on the Core Top 75. They made a name for themselves as a strong live act touring North America and were opening acts for the Brian Jonestown Massacre, Kaiser Chiefs and Sloan. In 2004 they released a 6-song EP, "Fields in Glass" with remixes of the title song by Davy Love and Will Caruthers (Spaceman 3, Spiritualized) and Mike Musmanno (Lilys). They performed at Little Steven's Underground Garage Festival in New York with the Strokes, the Stooges and New York Dolls. In March 2005, the New York Post and Spin magazine both listed them as one of the top ten "must-see" bands at SXSW.

Meanwhile, the High Dials worked in secret on their highly anticipated follow-up. They recorded tracks in rehearsal spaces, barns, apartments and Blue Rodeo`s Toronto studio before finally deciding to join forces with Joseph Donovan (the Dears, Marlowe) as co-producer in Montreal. The end result is "War of the Wakening Phantoms," another patchwork of contrasting moods and tones that holds together in vibe without another buried storyline. Mixed by Dave Bianco in L.A. (Teenage Fanclub, Frank Black, Jayhawks), the new album is full of ghost stories that surge with sadness and optimism- bright and melancholy psychedelia touching on rock n' roll's timeless themes: heartbreak, longing and idealistic joy. "War of the Wakening Phantoms" was released in Canada in June 2005 and it went promptly to the number one spot on the college radio charts. Following its July release in the US, the album won glowing reviews from the All-Music Guide and Spin magazine. The band are currently on tour somewhere near you!

Website: http://www.thehighdials.com

Segarini - Gotta Have Pop (1978)

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Gotta Have Pop
Hide Away
Afraid Of The Ocean
I Don't Want To Lose You
Don't Believe A Word I Say
Livin' In The Movies
Steady Eddie
Dressed In The Dark
When The Lights Are Out
Love Story


Considered the 'Nick Lowe' of Canada, singer/songwriter Bob Segarini was the king of pub rock. Originally from the west coast, Segarini first fronted The Ratz featuring Gary Duncan of Quicksilver Messenger Service.

He then moved on to the popular Family Tree with Michael Dure (aka Mike Olson, aka Lee Michaels). They put out one record, 1968's 'Miss Butters', before Segarini moved to California and onto Roxy who also released one eponymous album on Elektra in 1970 before they also packed it in.

The Wackers became Segarini's meal ticket as he came back to Canada and Montreal specifically to hook up with Roxy's Randy Bishop (bass, guitar, keyboards), Family Tree's Bill Trochim (bass, guitar, vocals) and Spencer Earnshaw (drums) in 1971 for the albums 'Wackering Heights', 'Hot Wacks (1972) and 'Shredder' (1973) at which time they begin having drummer problems and recruited Jerry Mercer of April Wine/Mashmakhan to fill in. A 1974 album, with just Bishop, Trochim and Segarini called 'Wack 'N' Roll' was never released and the group fell apart.

Segarini and Trochim next put together The Dudes with the founding members of April Wine (Ritchie and David Henman) and future April Wine guitarist Brian Greenway. They recorded one album called 'We're No Angels' spawning the single "I Just Wanna Dance" (Pacemaker Records would release a retrospective rarities collection in the '90's).

With the April Wine alumni otherwise occupied, Segarini managed to sign a solo deal with A&M, issuing a 4 song EP called 'Starlight' which went nowhere.

However, he was immediately picked up by fledgling cutting edge Toronto label Bomb Records and recorded his first and most successful album 'Gotta Have Pop' (1978) at Puck's Farm with keyboardist turned producer Michael Fonfara (Lou Reed. Segarini called out a dozen favours and had Toronto's popular musicians drop in for the record: David-Clayton Thomas ( Blood, Sweat & Tears), Greg Godovitz and Doug Inglis (Goddo), David Henman (April Wine), and future Hammerheard Records president Paul Irvine on saxophone.

Two more albums followed with 'Goodbye L.A.' (1980) and 'On The Radio' (1980 but poor distribution and the eventual dissolution of Bomb Records sabotaged any chances the albums may have had. Segarini then jumped over to Rush's Anthem Records for one more album 'Vox Populi' in 1981 but Segarini's brand of pub rock had fallen out of favour in light of the synth oriented New Wave of music sweeping North America forcing Segarini to bailed out of the artistic side of the music biz.

Instead, he became a disc jockey known as The Iceman on Toronto's Q107 FM for several years as well as producing some television and doing jingle voice-over work..

Segarini's 'Gotta Have Pop' first saw light of day on CD through Pacemaker Records in 1996 and contained 4 bonus tracks from the 1973-1977 era plus one newly recorded track, 'Groucho Marx', that had been intended for the original album but was never released.
(NOTE - This is a vinyl rip so none of these bonus songs are included here)

Segarini would later form the Rhythm 'N' Cues All Stars with Terry Draper (Klaatu) and David Henman (April Wine) in Oak Ridges, Ontario. This line-up would eventually mutate into a recording unit called Cats & Dogs and a self-titled CD was released independently in 1997.

http://rapidshare.com/files/1499994/Sgrini.rar

(encoded at 320)

Here We Go! (1952)



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