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Gooder'n Bad Vinyl

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

The Section - Forward Motion (1973) [Vinyl]

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The Section was forerunner of groups like Toto. Bands made up of super studio musicians. In this case Danny Kortchmar (guitar), Craig Doerge (keyboards), Leland Sklar (Bass), and Russ Kunkel (drums). Of course Leland was the preeminent bass player of the time, playing on all the important albums of the time (all Jackson Browne, Phil Collins, C.S.& N., C.S.N.& Y.), The list goes on. Craig and Russ and Danny played on a bunch of stuff also (too much to mention here).

They appeared together and individually on many albums of the 1970s, particularly those by Crosby, Stills and Nash, James Taylor, Carole King and Jackson Browne, and acted as back-up band on their tours.

This is the middle album from 1973 - the others being The Section (1972) and Fork It Over (1977).

Kind of like Sea Level in places. Kinda Allman Brothers but not as Southern sounding. All instrumental. Leland's solo "Get Down, Piltdown" was not what you'd call a typical bass solo. But interesting to say the least!






01 - Smilin' Ed
02 - El Mirador Bolero
03 - A Kind Of Albatross
04 - One Drum
05 - Bullet Train
06 - Forward Motion
07 - Baby Lame
08 - Burning Bush
09 - Get Down, Piltdown
10 - The Garden of Ryoanji






Encoded at 320K from original vinyl promo album. Includes high quality scan of cover and track listing along with reviews.

S E C T I O N

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(NOTE - Tracks 9 and 10 had some surface noise I just could not get rid of)

Klark Kent - Musical Madness From The Kinetic Kid (1980) [Vinyl]

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HEY I'M BACK!! Sorry for the time out. I was busy with real music stuff (that is, music that I was involved in actually making)!

In honor of the Police reunion and upcoming tour (tickets go on sale here tomorrow!), I thought I'd post this little 10 inch green vinyl EP I've had lying around for a few years (about 27).

It's Stewart Copeland's alter-ego from the early 80's Klark Kent (how Kute is that!). According to published reports (see below) Stewart wanted to do some songs of his own that Sting(y) didn't want to sing. So he did it all himself. I haven't played this in about 25 years until tonight. But I heard a cut off from it on XM radio last week. Pretty good stuff. Very percussive (something Copeland was good at). Kinda Police-y, but not enough to give it away that this was actually him performing under this pseudonym, although most folks figured it out.







1. Don't Care – 2:08
2. Away From Home – 2:55
3. Ritch In A Ditch – 2:46
4. Grandelinquent – 3:09
5. Guerilla – 3:32
6. Old School – 2:44
7. Excess – 3:12
8. Theme For Kinetic Ritual – 4:18






Encoded at 320K from original vinyl promo album.

P o l i c e - M a n

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More info:
Since Clark Kent is the secret identity of Superman, it was no surprise when Klark Kent turned out to be an alter ego as well. Kent was actually Stewart Copeland, the drummer for the Police. In 1980, Copeland donned the Klark Kent disguise, even creating a false biography. The fictional story line portrayed Kent as a computer programmer who had sued IBM for stealing a mysterious invention; in reality, Copeland merely wanted to record songs he wrote for the Police that Sting didn't like. Copeland sang and played percussion, guitar, bass, kazoo, and piano on Klark Kent: Music Madness From the Kinetic Kid, a solo LP credited to Kent. Klark Kent's goofy, eccentric tunes were in contrast to the Police's considerably more weighty oeuvre, at least lyrically. The single Away From Home received airplay on new wave radio stations, but it probably would've been unnoticed -- and largely forgotten -- if it hadn't originated from a member of the Police. Once Kent's true identity was revealed, Copeland retired the character and returned to the Police. In 1995, the Kent material was compiled onto a CD as Kollected Works. ~ Michael Sutton, All Music Guide

Pete Carr - Not A Word On It (1976) [Vinyl]

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01 - Tuscumbian Lover
02 - Foxfire
03 - Journey With The Breeze
04 - On Lucifer's Knee
05 - Theme From Sparkle
06 - Trapped In A Bubble
07 - Broken Stone
08 - Race Of The Computers
09 - Twisted Hair





Whew! This guy is great! And he's been very busy over the years!

But this is his first solo album on Big Tree records. Kinda like the Allman Brothers (he was good friends with Duane before his death). Kinda like Sea Level.

Encoded at 320K from original vinyl promo album. Includes artwork, an interview with Pete and track listing.

N o t A W o r d

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Favorite song? "Theme From Sparkle". Kinda reminds me of an alternate version of the Allman Bothers' "Melissa". And yes, that's Chuck Leavell on the organ!

Read more:
Pete Carr, recognized as one of the most versatile studio guitarists of the past three decades, has contributed to hit recordings by Bob Seger, Paul Simon, Rod Stewart, Wilson Pickett, Hank Williams, Jr., The Staple Singers, Barbra Streisand, Luther Ingram and many other artists. Carr is known for versatility, using the electric or acoustic guitar, playing with taste and his ability to create standout guitar lines on hit songs. Pete being a recording engineer and producer adds even more depth to his talents and understanding of the recording studio environment.

Carr was born in Daytona Beach Florida and started to play the guitar at the age of 13. The Beatles and the Rolling Stones were leading the "British Invasion" at that time. Pete bought their records and others such as the Yardbirds, The Animals and The Searchers which helped him learn the guitar as he studied and played along with the records. The first few albums released by the Beatles and the Stones contained many American Rhythm & Blues songs. The Rolling Stones at that time were deeply influenced by American R&B artists. Two of Pete's favorite "Stones" songs at the time were "It's All Over Now" by Bobby Womack and "Mercy, Mercy" by Don Covay, both American R&B recording artist. Pete never dreamed that he would one day play guitar on recordings for artist like Womack and Covay. It is ironic Carr was introduced to American Blues by British bands. One of Pete's favorite guitar instrumentals was "Walk Don't Run 64" by The Ventures, which he learned note for note. Around this time a guitar player from Memphis, Travis Wammack, released an instrumental guitar record named "Scratchy". The other side of the record was named "Fire Fly". When Pete heard "Scratchy" on the radio he was so impressed he immediately went out and bought the record. Carr also learned from listening to guitarist such as James Burton, Jeff Beck, Eric Clapton, Duane Allman, Ted Connors and Chet Atkins.

Pete's next learning experience was to go and watch bands play. The first band he went to see were playing at the Daytona Beach City Island Recreation Center. They were called the House Rockers, an early version of the Allman Joys. Pete was very young but remembers the two guitar players had blonde hair. Pete didn't talk with the two guitar players at the time. It would be at a later date when he would meet the two guitar players, Gregg and Duane Allman. Later, another popular Daytona Beach band called the Night Crawlers, would play at the same place. Pete would watch The Night Crawlers play songs from the first few Rolling Stones records which Pete had been learning from. Pete learned more as he watched the bands two guitar players, Sylvan Wells and Pete Thomason. Pete now plays an acoustic guitar made by Wells.

At the age of 15, Carr went to see the Allman Joys play at the Club Martinique in Daytona Beach. Carr, with guitar case in hand, introduced himself when the band took a break and asked Gregg Allman to show him some guitar lines. Gregg replied, "That's my brother, Duane's, department." At that point Pete introduced himself to Duane Allman. That meeting began a friendship which lasted until Allman's tragic death in a motorcycle crash Oct. 29, 1971.

Pete moved to Decatur Alabama in 1966 to play guitar for a band called the Five Minutes. Their guitar player, Eddie Hinton, was leaving the band to pursue studio work and Carr was called to be his replacement. Johnny Sandlin, Mabron McKinney and Paul Hornsby were the other members of the band. Pete was a fast learner with the guitar so he fit right into the new band. Pete remembers Sandlin playing him songs such as "It's All Over Now" by Bobby Womack and the Valentinoes. Carr already knew the Rolling Stones version of this song, which he loved, but he also liked Womack's version. Sandlin had heard Womack's version first and did not like the Stones version. They were both great recordings in different ways. Sandlin also got Pete to sit down with the classic B.B. King album "Live at the Regal". The band could not find a lead singer so they eventually disbanded after a few weeks. Carr credits Johnny Sandlin and Paul Hornsby as both being big brother influences and teachers in his music career.

In 1967 Pete, Gregg, Duane, Paul Hornsby and Johnny Sandlin, in a group named The Hour Glass, played together on the "The Power Of Love" album. The Hour Glass had recorded songs in Muscle Shoals, Alabama, at Rick Hall's FAME Studios which was known for innovative productions and great sound. One song recording at FAME, "Sweet Little Angel", was later released in a Duane Allman Anthology set. This recording is now considered a classic piece of raw electric southern rock blues. Pete recalls some warm memories from that time. I remember Gregg, Duane and I playing and singing "Long Black Veil", a great country music standard. It started "Ten years ago, on a cold dark night, there was someone killed, in the town that night". I remember us harmonizing on that song and it really was a moment separated from everything else we were doing. It was like a close family thing. I remember my mother talking about how my Aunt Gertrude would play and sing songs like that. She played guitar also, but she died before I was old enough to really remember her very much. My mom said she would sometimes play the guitar using a kitchen butter knife, so she must have played slide guitar also. She had epilepsy and I think I recall Mom saying that had something to do with her death.

Carr soon found he liked playing in recording studios along with engineering and producing. Pete eventually moved to Muscle Shoals around the age of 20. Johnny Wyker and Court Pickett would soon start work on their "Motorcycle Mama" album. Carr was called on to contribute as musician, engineer and producer of the project. The album was a commercial success for the new Muscle Shoals producer. After this Pete moved into the lead guitarist seat for the Muscle Shoals Sound Rhythm Section. The 70s were among the most productive of the Muscle Shoals Rhythm Section as the cream of rock, pop and soul found their way to 3614 Jackson Highway in Sheffield, AL. Carr played on almost all sessions recorded at the studio for the next 10 years. A good example of Pete's musical ability and taste is the standout guitar lines he played on the Bob Seger hit "Main Street". The Rhythm Section co-produced Paul Simon's "There Goes Rhymin' Simon" which earned them a Grammy nomination. Jimmy Johnson, the rhythm guitar player for the Muscle Shoals Sound Rhythm Section was quoted as saying "..Duane Allman had a magic touch with the guitar that no one else had, with the exception of Pete Carr.."

Carr continued as the premier session guitarist in the Muscle Shoals area playing on projects for artists recording at the main studios and also produced two guitar instrumental albums on himself. This strengthened Carr's reputation as one of the South's best studio session guitarists, as well as an artist in his own right. Jerry Wexler, a world renowned record executive and producer, helped Carr find a record label for his productions. Pete put together the group LeBlanc & Carr and created the album "Midnight Light" as both artist and producer. The song "Falling" became a big hit for LeBlanc & Carr. "Falling" was mixed at FAME Studios which is where Pete did most of the mixing for his production projects. The group's first tour was with Lynyrd Skynyrd on the "Street Survivors Tour" and ended tragically with an airplane crash in Mississippi, Oct. 20,1977. After this tragedy, and other band problems, Pete decided to return to the studio.

Pete Carr had now distinguished himself as the only studio musician in the Muscle Shoals area to succeed as studio musician, artist, composer, engineer and producer. Tom Dowd called Carr to Los Angeles to play on a Rod Stewart album which produced the big hit "Tonight's The Night". Pete's guitar playing was a prominent part of the hit. He layered rhythm and lead guitars throughout the song. In 1980 Carr was chosen to play for the Simon and Garfunkel Reunion World Tour and the legendary HBO Central Park Concert where he played acoustic and electric guitars.

Rolling Stone magazine gave Pete a rave review for his bluesy and tasty electric guitar solo on the Barbra Streisand song "Make It Like A Memory" from her "Guilty" album. The song "Woman In Love" from the same album was a big hit for Streisand. Pete's opening harmony guitar lines were notably unique and hard to categorize but very effective in introducing this Streisand hit.

Carr got his first personal computer in 1978 and became enthralled with it and it's possibilities. Carr experimented with computer multimedia around this time. He had computer data recorded on a music album that when loaded into a computer would display extra information about the album. Denny Purcell, a top mastering engineer in Nashville, ran the test for Carr and it all worked fine. Denny was very impressed with Carr's innovative idea and setup Billboard Magazine to do an interview but Pete was busy at the time. Carr and Purcell believe that this was the first time digital computer information was included along with a music album. Of course the record company did not want to release an album with computer data and for good reason. There were very few personal computers around at the time, thus no market for such a product. Pete studied computer science in Florida during the 80s.

Countless people around the world enjoy Pete Carr's contribution to American music everyday. During the Falklands War of 1982, as British battle ships set sail to reclaim the Islands the BBC (The British Broadcasting Corporation) played the Rod Stewart song "Sailing" nation wide. "Sailing" featured Pete Carr's acoustic and electric guitar playing.

Bliss Band - Dinner With Raoul (1978) [Vinyl]

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1. Rio
2. Over The Hill
3. Slipaway
4. Don't Do Me Any Favours
5. On The Highway
6. Right Place, Right Time
7. Stay A Little Longer
8. Here Goes
9. Whatever Happened
10. Take It If You Need It




I cannot find hardly any information on these guys. Back at the record store we use to ask folks if they liked Steely Dan and the Doobie Brothers (Michael McDonald era). We'd play this for them and they were always amazed that this wasn't being played on the radio!

So - If you like Steely Dan, The Doobie Brothers and Michael McDonald (not the 40 Year Old Virgin version of him!), then you'll like this - a lot!!

Comments please??

Encoded at 320K from original vinyl promo album. Includes artwork and track listing.

B L I S S B A N D

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PRODUCER: JEFF "SKUNK" BAXTER

Featuring:
FROM STEELY DAN, DOOBIE BROTHERS:
MICHAEL McDONALD, JEFF BAXTER,
KEITH KNUDSEN (The late Doobie Brothers drummer)

FROM THE CRUSADERS:
VICTOR FELDMAN (THE CRUSADERS)

FROM TOWER OF POWER:
STEPHEN KUPKA, EMILIO CASTILLO, GREG ADAMS,
MICHAEL GILLETTE, LEONARD PICKETT

The vocalist & keyboard player Paul Bliss leaded this west coast music group that in late 70´s released two albums. Their debut album "Dinner With Raoul" was released in 1978 and was quickly followed up by the album "Neon Smiles" in 1979. The band did only release two albums. In 1997 Paul Bliss released his solo album "Edge Of Coincidence".
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Paul Bliss both recorded and toured with David Essex. He made stage appearances with him from 1977 to 1983 and he appears on the Stagestruck album.

Paul was born in Birmingham, 2 years before 'little brother' Martin, and went into the music industry in the early Seventies, fronting a band called The Bliss Band. The band released 2 albums on CBS America, Dinner with Raoul in 1978 and Neon Smiles in 1979. Lead guitar with the band was Phil Palmer another ex-member of The David Essex Band.

As well as playing and recording Paul is also a songwriter and he has had songs recorded by Olivia Newton John, The Hollies, Sheena Easton, Justin Hayward and Celine Dion to name but a few. In 1997 Paul released an album of his own material called The Edge of Coincidence. For the past few years Paul has been touring with The Moody Blues as their keyboard player and he is well known by their fans.

Robin Lane and The Chartbusters (1980) [Vinyl]

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When Things Go Wrong
It'll Only Hurt a Little While
Don't Cry
Without You
Why Do You Tell Lies
I Don't Want to Know
Many Years Ago
Waitin' in Line
Be Mine Tonite
Kathy Lee
Don't Wait Till Tomorrow




Encoded at 320K from original vinyl promo album. Includes artwork, reviews and tracklisting

http://rapidshare(dot)com/files/7263264/rl_chrtbst.rar


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(By Richie Unterberger)
Even if Robin Lane & the Chartbusters' self-titled 1980 debut album didn't quite meet the expectations of the band and their rabid Boston following, it did capture their blend of new wave pop with dynamic folk-rockish guitar lines for the first time on a widely distributed national release. At the fore were singer-songwriter Lane's own husky vocals, delivering songs that for all their melodic hooks were tinged with far greater darkness and ambivalence than most pop-rock of the time, new wave or otherwise.

Although Robin Lane & the Chartbusters was Lane's first album, she had actually been active as a singer-songwriter for about a decade. Back in 1969 she had sung backup vocals on "Round and Round" on Neil Young's classic Everybody Knows This Is Nowhere. In the 1970s she left California to move East, and only a little prior to hooking up with the Chartbusters, she'd been playing far mellower, folk-rock-aligned singer-songwriter material. Those were the kinds of songs she was doing when she got a deal with Private Stock, Blondie's first label.

Soon afterward, a newfound love for acts like Patti Smith, Television, the Clash, the Sex Pistols, Talking Heads, Tom Petty, Cheap Trick, and Dwight Twilley sent her own music into a much different path. Hanging out with Boston bands like the Real Kids and at the legendary local venue the Rat got her in touch with most of the musicians who would become the Chartbusters: guitarist-vocalists (and ex-Modern Lovers) Asa Brebner and Leroy Radcliffe, bassist-vocalist Scott Baerenwald, and drummer Tim Jackson. "I put this other band together and actually enticed them to be my bandmates, because I had this deal with Private Stock," remembers Lane. "And then about a month or two later, Private Stock folded. So I had my new band and new direction."

The new direction would come as a shock to many of her old fans. "Our first gig, we were opening for another of our manager's bands, NRBQ. I pretty much just didn't sing, I screamed!" she laughs. "NRBQ just hated us. A lot of people who had liked me before went, 'What have you done?' It really wasn't an about-face, because I always felt social issues and identified with the underdog. I just thought that this music was a better way to say it [and] put it in. The people that came to listen to me, [when I was] the mellow Robin, would just kind of sit there, and it would be all nice and peachy-keen. But it wasn't affecting them in the gut. It wasn't passionate. I suddenly realized, 'Here's some fertile soil I can plant some seeds in, and it'll be more meaningful to me.'"

She dropped her old repertoire and penned a new one virtually from scratch, though one of her old numbers would be reworked into her most famous song, "When Things Go Wrong" (the song from which it evolved, "Never Enough," was covered on the 1979 album of the same name by the Pousette-Dart Band). Although several record labels expressed interest, the band signed with Warner Brothers after Jerry Wexler saw a show and offered them a deal. A three-song EP (with an early version of "When Things Go Wrong") had already come out on the Deli Platters label and gotten some airplay in Boston before the Chartbusters went to Los Angeles to record their Warners debut.

In hindsight, Lane feels that the album didn't capture the band as well it could have: "Though some people really liked that album, it lost the guitar sound that we had. They had a really wonderful kind of mesh that was lost. I think I wasn't singing as well as I could have; I was trying to retain the force of the songs that we had live, and pushing too hard. After we came back to Boston, people couldn't believe it when they heard the album; they said, 'This is not you.'"

But the songs were definitely Lane's, though "Don't Wait Till Tomorrow" was written with Jackson and Radcliffe, and "Kathy Lee" and "When Things Go Wrong" had assistance from Joanne Cipolla (from the band Planet Street), who at one time lived upstairs from Robin. "When Things Go Wrong" was the single that made the charts, though just as impressive were cuts like the sullen and jaggedly rhythmic "It'll Only Hurt a Little While," and the Sid Vicious-inspired "I Don't Want to Know." Lane also likes "Many Years Ago" and "Don't Cry" ("a kind of staple for us: a cute little ditty, and it's pop").

"I gravitate towards minor keys," reflects Lane when asked what set her most apart from other acts bridging the new wave-pop gap at the time. "Actually with the Chartbusters I started writing in major keys more. But still, that minor key always calls me. And that, right away, kind of sets up the more brooding kind of feel." Some of her lyrics were not out of the radio airplay textbook either: "I remember I was playing 'you digest me with facts like a piece of cheese' [from 'Waitin' in Line']. My publisher goes, 'You can't say that!'"

"I think her history gave her a distinct advantage over a lot of what were considered 'new wave' acts of the time," adds Asa Brebner. "The whole 'new wave' thing was kind of stuck on us because of Leroy Radcliffe['s] and my background with Jonathan Richman and so forth, and that colored how they proceeded to produce and market us. I think we were naive and happy to be signed to a major label, and although we liked [producer] Joe Wissert very much, we just went along with whatever they had planned for us. I think now we could have done a much better job producing ourselves. I still cringe at that album cover, which I think largely sunk us as a candy-ass major label contrivance to those uninitiated to our music. The music itself was watered down enough so it could not overcome that basically cosmetic impression that the casual record store [browser] would garner on seeing it in the bins. It didn't represent us, and I felt cheated."

The album did not widely break the Chartbusters beyond their regional base, and after another live EP and a second album (1981's Imitation Life), they were dropped from Warner Brothers. Although Lane's only sporadically released music since then (most recently on 1995's Catbird Seat), she and the Chartbusters have recently reunited, with all of the original members save Radcliffe. A new album is in the works that will mix newly written songs with others that the group performed live in their original incarnation, but never recorded. Lane is also working on a book about her "kooky crazy peripatetic life in the music world and other planets" that, given a career that has spanned many styles and intersected with many musicians of both star and cult renown, should prove to be quite a ride.

The Producers - You Make The Heat (1982) [Vinyl]

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01 - Back To Basics
02 - She Sheila
03 - Operation
04 - Dear John
05 - Breakaway
06 - You Make The Heat
07 - Merry-Go-Round
08 - Chinatown
09 - Domino





Ripped from vinyl LP @ 320 kbps Includes tracklisting, reviews and album artwork NOT suitable for CD cases (sorry I lost my original post and had to re-up. And I did not have time to tag these - BUT i still sounds great!!).

http://rapidshare.com/files/47631158/prdcrs_umkht.rar

Password: bassoprofundo

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The Producers were a new wave and power pop band from Atlanta, Georgia in the 1980s. Original members included Van Temple on guitar and vocals, former Whiteface member Kyle Henderson on bass and vocals, former Billy Joe Royal sideman Wayne Famous on keyboards, and Brian Holmes on Drums. Originally formed as a Beatles cover band named Cartoon, they changed musical directions and began performing their own material in nightclubs around the Atlanta area. The response to their music was so good that they were quickly signed to CBS subsidiary Portrait Records by Cheap Trick, REO Speedwagon and Mother's Finest producer Tom Werman. They released two albums for the Portrait label, The Producers (1981) and You Make the Heat (1982). The Producers quickly became a regional favorite in the southeastern United States, propelling "What She Does to Me" onto the national Billboard Magazine singles charts. They toured extensively opening for Cheap Trick, and The Motels. "She Sheila" from their second album was a popular MTV video. They headlined MTV's New Year's Rockin Eve in 1982.

Despite this success, Portrait Records dropped the band after only two albums. Kyle Henderson became a born-again Christian and left the band shortly after they were dropped to record a solo album for Kerry Livgren's Christian rock label, Kerygma Records and was replaced by future Jellyfish and Umajets bassist Tim Smith. The next Producers album, Run For Your Life, was released in 1985 on a small Atlanta-based independent label. That album featured a collaboration between The Producers and Kansas, "Can't Cry Anymore," a song which appeared on both Run For Your Life and the 1986 Kansas album Power. The Producers regained a major label contract in the late 1980s with MCA Records and recorded what was to be their fourth album, Coelacanth, but the band was one of several dropped in a 1989 label purge at MCA before the album could be released. Coelacanth was finally released in 2001. The band "retired" as a going concern in 1989 but still plays reunion shows around the Atlanta area from time to time.

See the video of The Producers performing their hit "She Sheila".
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PbDP62YRZjU

Another video from their first album. The Producers performing "What's He Got".
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CLlT_aanSQg

Get the album here:
http://my.opera.com/walknthabass/blog/show.dml/288901

OK - One more video: The Producers performing "Certain Kind Of Girl" from their 1st album.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=drAFiftJpc0

Felix Cavaliere (1974) [Vinyl]

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HEY!
Almost 1000 downloads of this and not one stinking comments? COME ON NOW!






01 - A High Price To Pay
02 - I Am A Gambler
03 - I've Got A Solution
04 - Everlasting Love
05 - Summer In El Barrio
06 - Long Times Gone
07 - Future Train
08 - Mountain Man
09 - Funky Friday
10 - It's Been a Long Time
11 - I'm Free




Ripped from vinyl promo copy.

Encoded @ 320

Ex-Rascal

Password: bassoprofundo

Review
Two years after the Rascals broke up, leader Felix Cavaliere launched his solo career with this self-titled debut. The good news was that it was a major effort: Cavaliere co-wrote all the songs, and the record was co-produced by Todd Rundgren. Cavaliere had an eclectic ability to mix rock with Latin and soul elements and to sing his songs in a compellingly soulful voice that could be stirring or smooth. The bad news was that the Rascals had been in commercial decline since their popular heyday of 1966-1968, which meant that Cavaliere had the appearance of a has-been. He was unable to overcome this disadvantage, and Felix Cavaliere failed to establish him as a solo star. ~ William Ruhlmann, All Music Guide

Credits
Todd Rundgren (Guitar), Todd Rundgren (Producer), Todd Rundgren (Engineer), Elliott Randall (Guitar), Wayne Andre (Saxophone), Julien Barber (Viola), Kenneth Bichel (Synthesizer), Randy Brecker (Trumpet), Mervin Bronson (Bass), Felix Cavaliere (Organ), Felix Cavaliere (Piano), Felix Cavaliere (Keyboards), Felix Cavaliere (Vocals), Felix Cavaliere (Producer), Felix Cavaliere (Main Performer), Selwart Clarke (Viola), Judy Clay (Vocals), Noel DaCosta (Violin), Kevin Ellman (Drums), John Fausty (Engineer), Paul Fleisher (Clarinet), Paul Fleisher (Sax (Alto)), Paul Fleisher (Sax (Baritone)), Jack Jeffers (Horn (Baritone)), Kermit Moore (Cello), Pablo Rosario (Percussion), Alan Rubin (Trumpet), Allen W. Sanford (Violin), John Seigler (Bass), Larry Spencer (Trumpet), Renelie Stafford (Vocals), Carman Moore (String Arrangements), Carman Moore (Musical Consultant), Deidre Tuck (Vocals), Al Brown & His Tunetoppers (Viola), Antonio Jiminez Arana (Percussion), Antonio Jiminez Arana (Conga)

Frankly - this album didn't do a thing for me. Too much synth, too much wah-wah, too much cowbell (last song). There were a couple of OK songs, but overall I'd rather listen to the Rascals!

Marti Jones - Any Kind of Lie (1990) [Vinyl]


Living Inside the Wind
I've Got Second Sight
Any Kind of Lie
Second Choice
Cliche
My Tears Are Poison
Read My Heart
Is This the Game?
One Shade Darker
It's a Crime
Old Friend


(from Answers.com)
Before Mary Chapin Carpenter, Shawn Colvin and Sheryl Crow there was Marti Jones. She broke out of the early 80's new wave scene to create some of the most original, trend-setting and influential albums of that era. Along with artists like Bonnie Raitt, Suzanne Vega and Chrissie Hynde (a fellow Akronite and new-waver), her three records for A & M put the guitar back in a woman's hands, renewing the tradition of Janis Ian, Carole King and Joni Mitchell. A tradition which had been largely lost to the disco, hard rock, diva-with-a-mic generation of female performers. Marti's records blurred the lines between pop and folk, jazz and rock.

Real alternative music.

Some of you may ask, "If she was so influential, why don't I know about her." Truly restless and eclectic, she made records that required your attention and often had jarring juxtapositions, but were always musical and catchy. Consequently, she was too commercial for the radical, too radical for the radio. Most critics agreed she was just a little ahead of the curve. Indeed, she was not an easy fit anywhere and A&M never found a way to break a single or ignite the imagination of the MTV generation. Listening back to these records, you wonder how that was possible. The truth is, by the time she released "Used Guitars", her last A&M album, she had reached true cult status, selling out shows on both coasts, garnering features in all the major magazines, performing on popular network TV shows. But when "Used Guitars" stalled, she'd had it. She wanted a fresh start.

In 1990 she moved to RCA. With a new president who believed in her, she hoped she'd found a place where she would be better understood, but alas and alack, even with the brilliant single "Any Kind of Lie", it was not to be. The new president, her major supporter, was sacked and Marti was dropped by the label. She decided to take a break from the music business.

But she left a trail of fans across the country who never gave up hope. With the release of "my Tidy Doily Dream", she has embarked on her most ambitious tour in years and is receiving tremendous response to the new songs. On this tour, she's concentrating on performing songs from her new cd, but she's also singing material from her entire catalog with the help of her long-time percussionist, Jim Brock and a string trio - violin, viola and cello.

Since it's release in late January 2002, "my Tidy Doily Dream" has begun to get some attention from new fans as well as old. Maybe the curve has finally caught up to Marti Jones.

Credits:
Richard Barone (Songwriter), Don Dixon (Bass), Don Dixon (Guitar), Don Dixon (Keyboards), Don Dixon (Vocals (Background)), Don Dixon (Producer), Don Dixon (Vibraphone), Bruce Hornsby (Piano), Bruce Hornsby (Accordion), Marti Jones (Guitar), Marti Jones (Vocals), Marti Jones (Main Performer), Jim Brock (Percussion), Sonny Landreth (Dobro), Sonny Landreth (Guitar), Paul Atkinson (Guitar (Acoustic)), Denny Fongheiser (Drums), Willie Gillon (Clarinet), Jamie Hoover (Guitar), Jamie Hoover (Vocals (Background)), Karl Fats Kaplin (Accordion), Karl Fats Kaplin (Guitar (Steel)), Treva Spontaine (Vocals (Background)), Fats Kaplin (Accordion), Fats Kaplin (Guitar (Steel))

Encoded @320K from original vinyl elpee.

http://rapidshare(dot)com/files/2588578/mj_akl90.rar

Password: bassoprofundo

Ten Wheel Drive - Brief Replies (1970) [Vinyl]







1 - Morning Much Better
2 - Brief Replies
3 - Pulse
4 - Come Live With Me
5 - Stay With Me
6 - How Long Before I'm Gone
7 - Last of the Line
8 - Interlude: A View of Soft





Encoded @ 320 from original vinyl

Also includes tracklisting, reviews and high quality album artwork

http://rapidshare.com/files/1501407/twdbr.rar


Password: bassoprofundo

All Music Reviewby Joe Viglione

Quoting Damon Runyon on both the back cover and inside the gate fold, Brief Replies warns "Do not sweet-talk me sweet-talker, for I am no stranger...." Music that was too literate for the time, the second album from Ten Wheel Drive emerged as Jimi Hendrix and Janis Joplin were making their exits in 1970. "Pulse" was intended to be the opening track, and it would have been a great one, but despite being listed that way on the back cover, it is actually the third band on the vinyl's first side, and is evidence that sequencing is so key. "Morning Much Better" opens the album without the sledgehammer blues of this Genya Ravan/Michael Zager funk/rock dirge. It is explosive without the Top 40 appeal of Blood, Sweat and Tears. Going further down the road of complete artistry, "Come Live With Me" pulls away from the big band sound, leaving the authors -- Genya Ravan on a wailing harp and voice alone with co-writerAram Schefrin's guitar. The thing about Ten Wheel Drive is their defiance to what was considered conventional at the time. Each song on all three of their long players, those on the 1969 debut Construction #1, and the polished gems from 1971's effort with Alice in Wonderland cartoons on the cover, Peculiar Friends (are better than no friends at all) break down barriers and stretch the formats of the day. They reached their pinnacle with a cover of the Ragavoy/Weiss masterpiece, "Stay With Me." Janis Joplin's last producer, the late Paul Rothchild -- who created many a Doors album, had Bette Midler sing in the film The Rose what Genya Ravan gave birth to here. But it is Genya's harp and dynamic and soulful performance which puts the tune over the top. The compact, radio-friendly tour-de-force is a departure from the lengthier jams like "How Long Before I'm Gone." Though they change moods enough within a tune like this before veering off into the scribblings which made Chicago Transit Authority such a labor, it was still too progressive for rock audiences that were driven by the Top 40 single. That Clive Davis could edit Ragovoy's "Piece of My Heart" on behalf of Big Brother & the Holding Company was one of the reasons Big Brother's album (and single) charted so high. When Ravan left T.W.D. for her solo outings, including one on Columbia with Davis as president, that too failed to generate the excitement a talent like Genya Ravan deserved then, as she does now. "Last of the Line" shows her chameleon like skills, and those of the band as well. She started as one of the pioneers of the girl group sound in the sixties, reinvented herself in this experimental pop/jazz unit, and went on to put out solid rock & roll solo albums in the 1980's. Had the songwriting duo of Michael Zager and Aram Schefrin continued working with Genya Ravan, we would have a body of work that would be impressive, and they would no doubt be household names. There is every indication of that here, especially on "Last of the Line," perhaps the most commercial of Zager & Schefrin's tunes. A classy hook about a ramblin' gal..."the last branch of the tree/which will die with me/I'm the last of the line." The instrumental "Interlude: A View of Soft" concludes this special album with Ravan's voice used as an instrument, as accurate as Dave Leibman's flute and sax. Powerful music that should have been stretched out over 25 or so albums.

Rival Suns - Feel (1993) [CD]





01 Long Way From Home
02 Julia
03 To Heaven
04 Cool Hair
05 She's Running Away
06 There is a Hand
07 Teardrops
08 I Feel
09 Torn In Two
10 Rain On Me
11 Man In The Moon
12 Goodbye Dr. Kraai
13 So Long


Encoded @ 320

Also includes high quality album artwork sized for a CD cover.

http://rapidshare(dot)com/files/1381874/rsns_fel.part1.rar

http://rapidshare(dot)com/files/1381984/rsns_fel.part2.rar


Password: bassoprofundo

Forgot I had this. It's been so long since I listened to it it's gone out of print. I also can't find hardly any information about these guys.

Pure Power Pop!

Favorite songs - "Julia" and "She's Running Away"

They're from Pennsylvania (I think).

Album notes
Rival Suns: Allan Blair (vocals, bass); Rick Beato (vocals, guitar, keyboards); J.J. Zeller (drums, percussion).
Additional personnel: Sky (bass).
Engineers: Rival Suns, Rob "Wacko" Hunter.
Recorded at Choppy Road Studio, Willow Grove, Pennsylvania; Epsilon Studio, Princeston, New Jersey; Pyramid Sound, Ithaca, New York.
Engineer: Sky.

Looks like they had another album out called "Pressure" in 1994.

Rick Beato might be a producer now.

That's all I can find - So just enjoy! I like it - that should be enough!
December 2009
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