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Gooder'n Bad Vinyl

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

The Boomers YYZ - The Art Of Living (1993) [CD]

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1. Art of Living 5:46
2. You've Got to Know 4:54
3. Things I Didn't Say 6:52
4. The Way You Feel 5:08
5. Good Again 3:43
6. Modern Man 3:42
7. Still in This Thing 4:12
8. When I Get Like This 4:21
9. Lie to Me 4:55
10.What Love Can Do 4:27
11.To Comfort You 5:07




Heard the title song on the radio years ago (before the Internet). Took me a while to find out who it was. Was very surprised to find out it was Ian Thomas! Anybody remember 1973's "Painted Ladies"? No? Well most of you know Dave Thomas from SCTV and of Bob and Doug Mackenzie fame (Take off, hoser!). This is Dave's brother.

Looks like this is out of print in the States. Amazingly enough, I'm posting this from a little bitty CD! Not a big ole' black vinyl rip (don't faint)!

If you're not familiar with Ian or The Boomers try it! You'll like it. There's a fabulous"money back" guarantee if you are not absolutely delighted!

Encoded @ 256K

http://rapidshare(dot)com/files/971579/bmrs_aolvn.rar


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Produced by Ian Thomas & Paul DeVilliers (mostly).

Guitar & Lead Vocals: Ian Thomas
Bass & Accordion: Peter Cardinali
Drums: Rick Gratton
Guitar, Guitorgan & Mandolin: Bill Dillon
Organ: Dennis Keldie
Guitar: Doug Macaskill
Percussion: Maureen Brown
Mandolin: Randy Hill

(From Blogcritics.org April 23, 2003)
Ian Thomas is one of my favorite Canadian songwriters, ever. He burst onto the Canadian scene in 1973 with the tune, "Painted Ladies", and has remained a fixture ever since, albeit somewhat quietly at times. Thomas's regional hit single, "I'll Do You Right", from his 1984 album Riders on Dark Horses, is my favorite singalong-in-the-car song, and a brilliant love song as well.

Three years after his last album, Levity, was released in 1988, Thomas joined forces with three great Canadian musicians: Bill Dillon (guitar), Peter Cardinali (bass), and Rick Gratton (drums), all of whom he had known for years by that time, to form The Boomers. Between 1991 and 1996 they released three albums: What We Do, The Art of Living, and 25,000 Days. By the third album, Thomas's writing had turned to themes about getting older, musing about past sins, changes a' coming, truth, and the entire span of life: 25,000 days is in fact, just about the average life span of a man, just under 68.5 years. What impressed me consistently about these albums was the songwriting craft of Thomas combined with one of the most solid rhythm sections working today. Cardinali and Gratton are a perfect fit, laying down an impressive foundation for every song, and Bill Dillon's guitar and occasional mandolin work are very tasty.

In 2002, after a six-year hiatus, The Boomers released Midway in the fall of 2002. The title intrigues me: does it reference the end of Part 1 of the Boomers' collective lives (all four are in their 40s, at least, and likely early 50s), or is it the halfway point in the life of the band? In any event, Thomas returns to familiar themes on this album, such as aging, reliving warm memories, the ever-present need to believe in something, and love, but not casual, in-your-20s love, with flaming crotches and palpitating hearts, but love that has lasted for years, strengthening and deepening with the ages. Musically The Boomers offer a selection of songs that I can best describe as laid back, at times a bit too much for my taste, but not at the expense of the musicianship or writing. The Boomers are not a band that's going to "rock your world", or prepare you for the mosh pit (wait, are those still around?). My favorite tune on the album is I Remember, a song that grabbed me from the outset as it opens with an infectious guitar hook and builds from there.

I hope The Boomers are around for a time to come. If I could advise Thomas on the next album, I'd say, "Ian, rock out a bit more next time. Let the band flex its muscles!" That said, I'm still listening to Midway. There is a danger in suggesting their music is better suited for older listeners (i.e., 35+), and I hesitate to do so. But my guess would be that a seasoned listener might have more appreciation for Thomas's songwriting and the band's amazing musicianship.

Ian Thomas, and The Boomers, are examples of great Canadian musical talent that has remained regionally successful in Canada, immensely successful in Europe, especially Germany, but have made no noise in the USA. This may be your chance to hear them.

-- Randy Reichardt

Batdorf and Rodney - Off The Shelf (1971) [Vinyl]

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Love these guys! Been meaning to digitize this one for a looong time!

First of all - I like the band America! There, I said it! I forgot that I did until I revisited to their Greatest Hits album again.

Now hear where that kind of sound came from (Trivia: the 1st America album came out a little bit after this album in the same year).

Sounds like America, Dan Fogelberg, Loggins and Messina, etc.




Record Label: Atlantic - Released 1971

Personnel:
Guitar and voices: John Batdorf and Mark Rodney
Vibes and piano: Barry Beckett
Bass: Chris Ethridge and Dave Hood
Drums: Roger Hawkins and John Barbata

Produced by Ahmet Ertegun and Batdorf and Rodney

Songs:

01 - Oh My Surprise
02 - Me and My Guitar
03 - Can You See Him
04 - Workin Man, Blind Man
05 - You Are The One
06 - Don't You Hear Me Callin
07 - Where Were You and I
08 - Never See His Face Again
09 - One Day
10 - Farm
11 - Let Me Go

Encoded @ 320 from original vinyl

Also includes tracklisting, reviews and high quality album artwork sized for a CD cover.
http://rapidshare.com/files/16367592/bdn_ots.rar


Password: bassoprofundo

This was Batdorf and Rodney's first album. The song "Can You See Him" received the most airplay on FM radio stations. According to Mark Rodney, he did most of the lead guitar work on this song and this is his favorite song from all of their albums.

Although they first met in high school in Hollywood, California, John and Mark got musically together in the mystical desert of Las Vegas, Nevada in September 1970.

John, originally from Dayton, Ohio was in a Cowsills type band called the "Loved Ones", featuring soap opera star Patty Weaver and her brothers. He was 15 at the time. They signed with Atlantic Records chairman Ahmet Ertugen and moved west, but the band went nowhere.

Mark, who grew up in Hollywood, California came from a famous musical family. As a teenager, he played in various blues bands and jammed with famous bands like the orginal Blues Image, Jimi Hendrix, and many rock stars in Hollywood clubs.

By 1970, both John and Mark had tired of the Los Angeles scene and were both interested in the new music revolution of the 70s....acoustic music! They re-connected in Las Vegas and started playing acoustic guitars together. They were both heavily into the new sound of Crosby, Stills, and Nash, Neil Young, James Taylor, and Simon & Garfunkel. After three months, they had conquered Las Vegas and had enough originals to head back to Los Angeles. By a magic coincidence, Ahmet Ertegun was in Los Angeles and offered to audition them. He immediately signed them to Atlantic Records and produced them himself in legendary Muscle Shoals, Alabama.

The group eventually recorded three albums on Atlantic, Asylum (one of their first releases), and Arista Records. The three A's! They toured for five years with groups like Bread, The Youngbloods, Loggins and Messina, Three Dog Night, Dan Fogelberg, Chicago, Seals and Crofts, and every group from that era. They had several regional hits but never broke nationally before they had enough of the business. Batdorf and Rodney were actually before groups like America, Seals and Crofts, and Dan Fogelberg. They were always considered a major influence of that sound.

The Dillards vs The Incredible L.A. Time Machine (1977) [Vinyl]

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01 - Gunman's Code
02 - The Poet
03 - Do, Magnolia, Do
04 - Anabel Lee
05 - Softly
06 - Ding Dong Howdy
07 - Jayne
08 - In One Ear
09 - Old Cane Press
10 - Let The Music Flow






Encoded @ 320 from original vinyl

Also includes tracklisting, and high quality album artwork of the inside boardgame! Try to make it from Nashville to LA!

http://rapidshare.com/files/1501386/dlrds_vs_am.rar


Password: bassoprofundo

Could not find much info about this album at all other than I like it a lot!

Some snippets from here and there:

Later albums included "The Dillards v The Incredible LA Time Machine", a dig against the music industry which hadn't given them the rewards they deserved.

Originally, the group was a straight bluegrass band, but over the years, through various personnel changes and new musical ideas, they've become what they are now: a band solidly rooted in the bluegrass tradition, but with a hell of a lot more to offer. They plan to experiment at both ends as well (the old and the new), becoming more involved with synthesizers as well as concentrating a bit more on a capella close harmony vocals. It's likely that some of this will be reflected in their next album, The Dillards vs. the Incredible L.A. Time Machine. It'll be their first for Flying Fish and is expected shortly.

Ten Wheel Drive - Construction #1 (1969) [Vinyl]

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1 - Tightrope
2 - Lapidary
3 - Eye of the Needle
4 - Candy Man Blues
5 - Ain't Gonna Happen
6 - Polar Bear Rug
7 - House in Central Park
8 - I Am a Want Ad





Encoded @ 320 from original vinyl

Also includes tracklisting, reviews and high quality album artwork

http://rapidshare.com/files/1501424/twd01.rar


Password: bassoprofundo

All Music review:
Reviewby Joe Viglione

This exemplary recording by songwriters Aram Schefrin, Mike Zager and singer Genya Ravan was highly experimental in ways that Chicago, Big Brother & The Holding Company, Traffic and other of their contemporaries wanted to be. Imagine Ronnie Spector leaving The Ronettes to join Blood Sweat & Tears, and realize the sweet Goldie Zelkowitz from Goldie & The Gingerbreads did just that by reinventing herself here as the great Genya Ravan. The Ravan co-write Tightrope is five minutes and ten seconds of psychedelic blues/jass/funk. This is the sound Janis Joplin would refine for her Kozmic Blues experience, and while Janis Joplin and Kozmic Blues performed at Woodstock, Ten Wheel Drive were getting such a buzz they turned Woodstock down. History would, indeed, have been different had they played I Am A Want Ad at that event, but with Sid Bernstein as co-manager, and songs like Lapidary, the band had a lot going for it. Lapidary is a complete about face, Traffic's John Barleycorn with a female vocalist. Eye Of The Needle on the other hand, was an eight minute plus show stopper of horns and guitars that come in like some country's national anthem. With Genya's amazing wail at the end it becomes powerful stuff. Songwriter Louie Hoff got to arrange his Candy Man Blues, which puts Genya in a nightclub setting, the piano and flutes changing the mood dramatically. This is such an adventurous and remarkable record by such a talented crew, it is a shame they didn't record twenty or more platters. A Polydor executive made a statement that if they couldn't break Slade they weren't a real company. Polydor did, in fact, fail to launch that British supergroup in America, and one wonders if these recordings were made for another label, if oldies stations wouldn't be playing Ten Wheel Drive today. Ain't Gonna Happen is extraordinary music, a band on the prowl, and a singer that pounces every chance she gets with a voice that does all sorts of wild things. If Polar Bear Rug and House In Central Park were a bit too evolved for Top 40, their A & R man should have brought them a single. Ten Wheel Drive could, like Etta James, play to those who crave this wonderful fusion of jazz and blues with a rock edge. A Ten Wheel Drive reconstructing, bringing this music back onstage, is something that would make the world a better place.

ENJOY!

Baby Flamehead - Life Sandwich (1990) [CD]

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01 Life Song
02 Rubber Iguana
03 Mira
04 Harmony
05 Thimbe Full 'o' Nothin'
06 The Ballad of Shatter Box Window
07 Amy
08 Lettuce of a Little Mind
09 Supple Turtles Worry About Milk
10 The Circus
11 Stupid Surfer
12 Anna
13 Corpus Christi
14 Desire

Oh Hell - I was lazy this time - ripped from a CD @ 320kbps! But it's out of print.

I think I bought this just because I liked the name! Lucky me!

http://rapidshare.com/files/1501455/BFLS90.part1.rar

http://rapidshare.com/files/1501338/BFLS90.part2.rar


Password: bassoprofundo

The amazing Philly-based acoustic folk-rock band that featured the gorgeous vocals of Eden Daniels, Chris Unrath on guitar, Dean (Clean) Sabatino of the Dead Milkmen on drums, and the incomparable Andy Bresnan on the Ukranian Burda - a three string bass instrument that looked like a cross between a cello and a Noguchi coffee table. Baby Flamehead released one great album in 1990 on Texas Hotel Records called Life Sandwich and squeezed out one tour before Bresnan's departure (Burda slung over his shoulder) and Dean's Milkmen obligations put the band into several years of low gear. During the Flamehead tour Eden and Chris forged a friendship with Jonathan Segel of Camper Van Beethoven that survives to this day.

ALLMUSIC REVIEW
Review by Greg Adams

Despite a link with fellow Pennsylvanians the Dead Milkmen (erstwhile Milkman Dean Clean plays drums in both combos), Baby Flamehead was something completely different: an eclectic folk-rock band with a sense of humor that tended toward the obscure. Life Sandwich, their only album, reveals shades of R.E.M. and 10,000 Maniacs, most prominently on "Corpus Christi," but with weird detours like "Supple Turtles Worry About Milk" and the mean-spirited singalong "Amy." "The Circus" is effectively built upon a cheesy drum machine beat, but suffers from the band's not-infrequent difficulty coming up with a chorus. Minor and most definitely a product of its time, Life Sandwich will please those who thought R.E.M.'s Fables of the Reconstruction was much better than the critics said.

ENJOY!

Mandalaband (1975) Progressive Rock [Vinyl]

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I kind of run the gamut when it comes to music - don't I?



1. Om Mani Padme Hum:
a) Movement one (7:46)
b) Movement two (4:34)
c) Movement three (3:29)
d) Movement four (4:56)
(one long track)
2. Determination (5:49)
3. Song for a king (5:19)
4. Roof of the world (4:30)
5. Looking in (4:42)

Ripped from vinyl promo copy @ 320

Also includes tracklisting, reviews and album artwork

http://rapidshare.com/files/1501471/mndbd.rar


Password: bassoprofundo

Mandalaband was the brainchild of David Rohl, musician, composer, producer and now eminent Egyptologist, Director of the Institute for the study of interdisciplinary Sciences and Editor of the Journal of the Ancient Chronology Forum. His was the guiding spirit behind the two albums which appeared on the Chrysalis label under the Mandalaband name in the latter years of the seventies.

To trace their origins, we must journey backwards in time to 1967, when the young David Rohl left school in the midst of his "A" level exams in order to form a band called The Sign Of Life, who played their first London 'gig' at Battersea Town Hall on September 28th, 1968. His interest in mythology in general, and that of Egypt in particular, was reflected in the change of name of this band to Ankh, the hieroglyphic determinative for life in Ancient Egypt. Ankh, by then consisting of entirely different musicians from the earlier band, recorded some demos at Stockport's Strawberry Studios with Eric Stewart, part-owner of the studios, former lead singer of The Mindbenders and later to achieve fame and fortune with 10cc. On the strength of these demos, Ankh were signed up by Vertigo for an album to be produced by BBC DJ Tommy Vance. However, Vertigo declined to issue the finished product, and the band split up. Disillusioned, Rohl went to study photography at Manchester College of Art, during which time he was commissioned to photograph The Moody Blues - examples of his work can be seen on the inside of the gatefold sleeve of A Question Of Balance.

Rohl's next venture drew on his experience of working with Eric Stewart and within his own band, when, at the age of 23, he set up a new recording studio just outside Stockport. Camel Studios, in Poynton, was the birthplace of the original Mandalaband. Tony Cresswell had auditioned as session drummer for Camel Studios and became a founder member of the new band. David and Tony then recruited Vic Emerson, a keyboard virtuoso who worked as an arranger and co-director at Camel before joining the fledgling outfit.

Meanwhile, bassist John Stimpson and lead guitarist Ashley Mulford's band Friends had broken up, and he, too, became part of the band after recording at Camel. The final piece fell into place when David Durant, a singer and friend of Stimpson and Mulford, auditioned and became the voice of Mandalaband.

They quickly drew the attention of major record companies, and Chrysalis won the race to sign them. Their first live gig, at Warwick University on 30th January 1975, was swiftly followed by a support slot on Robin Trower's UK tour in February, but problems arose when Rohl was prevented from producing their debut album, Chrysalis preferring instead to bring in John Alcock. Rohl, who says that he has always been happier in the background than performing in the limelight departed from the band he had founded, and the album, an ambitious concept inspired by the Tibetan people's brave resistance to the Chinese invasion and subsequent occupation of their country, largely written by Rohl, went ahead without him. The recording was not an unqualified success, and Rohl's stand was vindicated when Chrysalis Managing Director, Chris Wright, asked him to return to remix the tapes at Air Studios. Despite his ministrations, the album never quite captured the power and epic sweep of Rohl's original vision. The four movements of "Om Mani Padme Hum", affectionately known as "Oh My Papa" by the band, took up the whole of the first side of the debut album, Mandalaband (Chrysalis CHR 1095), which was released on October 24th, 1975, (and re-issued on CD by Edsel in early 1992). With its mantras taken from Tibet's national anthem, sung in Tibetan over a highly complex arrangement for band, choir and string synthesizers, "Om Mani Padme Hum" was as far outside the mainstream of the 'rock' idiom as it was possible to get, and fell on confused and bemused ears! The album was engineered by Tim Friese-Greene, who is now well-known for his success with the band Talk Talk.

Rohl returned to engineering, at Indigo Sound in Manchester, working with such luminaries as Marc Bolan, Thin Lizzy and Barclay James Harvest, whilst the remainder of the band, with new vocalist Paul Young and an additional guitarist, Ian Wilson, (both formerly of local band Gyro) renamed themselves Sad Café and recorded another album. Chrysalis failed to see their potential, and Sad Café and their album were sold to RCA, with whom they went on to have hits with songs such as "Every Day Hurts" and "My Oh My"; Paul Young also tasted success in Mike And The Mechanics. In 1976, Rohl took over from Eric Stewart as Chief Engineer at Strawberry Studios where he produced a series of albums and singles for artists such as Barclay James Harvest, Maddy Prior, Tim Hart and Roy Hill. Chrysalis retained his services as a writer and performer during this period, and at their suggestion the Mandalaband name was retained for his next project, a series of three albums based around the theme of a fabulous gemstone with mystical properties. The first part of the trilogy, The Eye Of Wendor: Prophecies, was act in a prehistoric world peopled by characters who would not be out of place in a Tolkien bestiary (in fact, the opening theme was originally penned for a soundtrack to The Lord Of The Rings).

Recording the album called for a new approach, Rohl no longer had his own band; instead, he created the "Mandalaband Club" from friends, acquaintances and colleagues met during his many years in the music business. Musicians of the calibre of Justin Hayward, 10cc, Barclay James Harvest, Maddy Prior, Paul Young and many others gave their services free and were recorded singly or in groups in the small boom when the studios were free. The whole album took nearly two years to record, and the resulting tapes were then painstakingly pieced together and mixed down by David with assistance from Martin Lawrence, who was fresh from engineering Godley & Creme's mammoth project, Consequences.

The main characters in the tale of Wendor are played by individual vocalists: Justin Hayward sings the pail of King AEnord, ruler of Carthilias, Maddy Prior plays his daughter, Princess Ursula, and Eric Stewart is Florian, the young hero whom the prophecies tell will retrieve the Eye Of Wendor from the evil Witch Queen, Silesandre. The narrative vocalists, Graham Gouldman, Kevin Godley and Paul Young, describe Florian's adventures in his quest and the characters he meets, including Almar the alchemist in his laboratory, the primeval sea-serpent Elsethea and Damien, the old King's heir. The major instrumental contributions were made by Rohl himself, Barclay James Hamest's Woolly Wolstenholme, Kim Turner and Steve Broomhead (who both later joined Woolly in his band Maestoso), Phil Chapman and the late Ritchie Close (to whom this CD release is dedicated), not forgetting members of the Halle Orchestra.

The album, The Eye Of Wendor: Prophecies, was finally released on Chrysalis (CHR 1181) on 12th May, 1978, and, whilst it didn't set the world alight, sold respectably in Britain, Germany, Holland, Canada, Japan and Australia. As time has passed, it has achieved cult status and commands high prices on the collectors’ market. This RPM issue is its first appearance on CD, and is mastered from the original mixdown master tapes to give a new clarity and depth to the album.

The original album included an illustrated story sheet which has been omitted from the CD, as David feels that the music has stood the test of time better than the rather derivative, sub-Tolkien text. That sheet promised that the story was ‘to be continued’: as far as the Mandalaband project was concerned, that rash statement was the kiss of death! Whilst The Eye Of Wendor cost just BP8,000 to complete (a derisory sum for an album of such complexity, even in 1978), any follow-up would have been considerably more expensive, and Chrysalis decided not to take the risk.

However, David has since continued to work occasionally in the industry, collaborating with Woolly Wolstenholme on soundtracks for TV, including Cosgrove Hall's animations for Cinderella, 'The Pied Piper’ (which received two British Academy Awards) and Gerald Durrell's "The Talking Parcel", Thames TV's series "S.W.A.L.K." and "The Squad", and writing the music for "The All Electric Amusement Arcade" on his own. Since then, he has written and produced recordings for the band Vega and a fine song called "Peace On Earth" for a children's version of Live Aid. He continues to study the ancient world, preparing a Ph.D. thesis entitled, A Test of Time: A reinvestigation of the Chaser of the Ancient World, and is currently planning a TV project which would combine the two abiding themes in his life - music and the study of Man's ancient past.

In the meantime, we could do a lot worse than re-appraise his earlier work; The Eye Of Wendor has worn very well, and repeated listens reveal hitherto unnoticed nuances in the music, which make each playing a voyage of discovery. The Eye Of Wendor has a strange history, but it lives on, and we are now its guardians - the story continues…

Keith Domone, 1992

Odds - Nest (1996) [CD]

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Saw these guys open for Barenaked Ladies back in 1996 and thought they were great! Bought this CD and have never regretted it.



01 - Someone Who's Cool
02 - Make You Mad
03 - Hurt Me
04 - Heard You Wrong
05 - Tears & Laughter
06 - Nothing Beautiful
07 - Say You Mean It Wondergirl
08 - Out Come Stars
09 - Night's Embrace
10 - Suppertime
11 - At Your Word

Encoded @ 320

Also includes tracklisting, reviews and album artwork

http://rapidshare.com/files/1501461/odsnst.rar


Password: bassoprofundo

Amazon Reader Reviews:
"Nest" is the 4th set from this Vancouver band and has been described as the Lovin' Spoonful, Badfinger & Hollies with a 90's sensibility. Early in their career, they toured with Warren Zevon. As a fairly new discovery for me, "Make You Mad" is currently riding at the top of my own personal Top 10 with its throbbing guitar line & Craig Northey's breezy vocals, "When I call you beautiful, it's cause I can; and when you think I'm sucking up, I sort of am." The opener "Someone Who's Cool" was a modest hit, "It was the suit that got me the gig; it was the tear that got me the girl." "Hurt Me" thunders propulsively with breezy Beach Boy-like background vocals, "Low on meat & high on flies; you were hunted down by packs of lies." "Heard You Wrong" has a pretty melody with acoustic guitar predominating with an addictive guitar line on a dreamy breakup song. "Tears & Laughter" pumps up the amps with driving electric leads. Odds give some great hooks, a sweet pop melody combined with a cutting lyric on "Nothing Beautiful," "Out to rot when the going got tough, cockroaches turn adversity to immunity." "Say You Mean It Wondergirl" is a breezy thrill ride while "Out Come the Stars" is a midtempo radio-friendly harmony fest. "Pails of blue glass beads and baubles in the toilets of the supermodels," Northey intones on a whimsical "Suppertime," somewhere bewteen fantasy & utopia. The CD concludes with "At Your Word," a thundering rocker that references the Big Bopper & Buddy Holly, "I'll take you at your word & as far as I can throw you, leave you with the baby & I hardly even know you." "Nest" is an excellent set that mostly thunders, occasionally coos, but creates a great tension between the power pop hooks and the cutting edge lyric. U Snooze, U Lose with this little diamond. Enjoy!

Another criminally overlooked band. For whatever reason they never got the recognition and album sales they should have. This CD is very good from beginning to end. Not a flash in the pan type of band. They sound similar to how Guster sounds today. "Heard You Wrong" could be played on Guster's Keep It Together and I don't think anyone would notice the addition. And I mean that in a good way so if you are not a fan of Guster or even if you are check out the Odds. At these prices you're getting a sure thing for your money.

This album is obviously close to slipping from the ranks of the available. Which is strangely appropriate if tragic. It has to be played a fair number of times to be fully appreciated. The 3 singles hopefully will keep you listening long enough to notice that there is brilliance elsewhere. Just try the 3 and 4 cuts, 'Hurt Me' and 'Heard You Wrong'. 'Hurt Me' is a racecar-fast workout of classic guitar riffs played off against inscrutable but amusing wordplay. 'Heard You Wrong' is a funny and bloodchilling portrait of a just-dumped guy lying in disbelief in bed. Also try the last 4 cuts in sequence, from the sweet 'Out Come Stars' to the raving 'At Your Word'. It's music for the brain delivered with haunting melody and killer pop-rock hooks. Don't let it die.

FYI - It did die (it's out of print).

Deadeye Dick - A Different Story (1994) [CD]

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Ok - You probably remember the song "New Age Girl" from the movie "Dumb and Dumber. One hit wonder stuff.

But I like these guys! So there! Enjoy it or don't. Long out of print and you can buy it on E-Bay for 10¢! Here you get a break!



01 - New Age Girl
02 - Perfect Family
03 - Your Love Is Killing Me
04 - Marguerite
05 - The Oath
06 - Anyone
07 - Sentimental Crap
08 - Like a Shadow
09 - Molly
10 - Different Story
11 - Lucky One

Encoded @ 320

Also includes tracklisting, review and album artwork

http://rapidshare.com/files/1501440/dedidck.rar


Password: bassoprofundo

Authors of the collegiate novelty hit "New Age Girl," Deadeye Dick found themselves quickly consigned to alternative rock's one-hit wonder bin. Formed in New Orleans in 1991, the band consisted of vocalist/guitarist Caleb Guillotte, bassist Mark Miller, and drummer Billy Landry, and took their name from a Kurt Vonnegut novel. Playing a college-friendly brand of new wave-inspired guitar pop, Deadeye Dick built a following by touring the Southeast, and self-produced an album's worth of material before they'd landed a record deal. One of its songs, the hippie-chick satire "New Age Girl," became regionally popular and earned some radio airplay in New Orleans and Atlanta. That success led to a record deal with the independent Ichiban label, more known for its soul and blues catalog than alternative rock. Ichiban gave a wide release to the group's debut album, A Different Story, in 1994, and "New Age Girl" was selected for inclusion on the soundtrack of the smash comedy Dumb and Dumber. It became a national hit late that year, climbing into the pop Top 30 and becoming nearly ubiquitous on college and alternative radio. Catchy as it was, the song's novelty humor had many pegging Deadeye Dick as flashes in the pan, and the follow-up singles, "Perfect Family" and "Marguerite," were virtually ignored. A second album, the slightly rootsier Whirl, was released in 1995, but met with a similar fate, and Deadeye Dick disbanded. Guillotte and Miller remained active on the local New Orleans scene as producers. ~ Steve Huey, All Music Guide

Pezband - Thirty Seconds Over Schaumberg EP (1978) [Vinyl]

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01 - Blue Wind - Stroll On
02 - I'm Not Talking
03 - I'm Leaving
04 - Crash And Burn
05 - Close Your Eyes

Encoded @ 320K

Includes high quality album artwork

http://rapidshare.com/files/1501389/pzthrysec.rar


Password: bassoprofundo

The title is a tongue-in-cheek reference to the Chicago suburb from whence they came. The music is loud, ferocious, and wonderful. Tommy Gawenda is a little out of control here (too many multi-chorus solos), but after all is said and done, this record proves what a great live band the Pezband was. Extra points for a rippin' version of Jeff Beck's "Blue Wind" and its neat segue into the Yardbirds' "Stroll On." ~ John Dougan, All Music Guide

Experts / About.com
Explosive live act
Passport Records, now anxious to tout Pezband's rampageous live act released the group's second live EP, Thirty Seconds Over Schaumburg fittingly pressed on bright red vinyl. The record highlights the group's British blues influences-especially on the explosive cover-medley of Jeff Beck's "Blue Wind" and the Yardbirds' "Stoll On" and "I'm Not Talking."

Penny's Arcade - Penny Nichols (1968) [Vinyl]

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01 - Track Listing
02 - Wash Day
03 - Moon Song
04 - Color Of Love
05 - Games
06 - Salton Sea Song
07 - Sunshine Blues
08 - Rainy Days
09 - Summer Rain
10 - Yellow Chimes
11 - Look Around Rock
12 - Mountain Song
13 - Holly Holy
14 - Farina

Ripped from original vinyl LP.

http://rapidshare.com/files/1501401/PNPA.rar


Password: bassoprofundo

Favorite song? "Look Around Rock"

Penny Nichols's debut album is not a major singer/songwriter statement, but neither is it as mundane as many such also-ran LPs of the late '60s. She has a nice, pleasant strong voice, if not one of great distinction. There might be more folk-rock than anything else to her songs, but there are also a good amount of pop smarts to her melodies. There's also a fair amount of pop acumen to the modest but effective production, including contributions from guitar aces Vincent Bell, Bruce Langhorne, and Al Gorgoni. The tunes have a little bit of an airy hippie wistfulness, very slightly reminiscent of some of Joni Mitchell's early fantasy-fueled lyrics, though without Mitchell's gravity. There's a tinge of country and pop vaudeville in "Games," with some nicely baroque arrangements (by Artie Butler) to amplify the period sense of wonder and expansion. "Look Around Rock" gets into some almost entrancing jazz-folk-psychedelic wooziness, and is the highlight of the record, though the slightly eerie melancholy of the closer "Farina" is also worth noting. It's a bit of a frustrating album to reassess, though, as it can't be wholeheartedly recommended as an exciting discovery, nor can it be dismissed as dull or unexceptional. It's worth picking up, ultimately, if you're heavily into early rock singer/songwriters, though it might not be easy to find cheap due to its rarity. ~ Richie Unterberger, All Music Guide
November 2009
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