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Gooder'n Bad Vinyl

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

Lake - Lake (1977) [Vinyl]

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01 - On the Run
02 - Sorry to Say
03 - Time Bomb
04 - Chasing Colours
05 - Do I Love You
06 - Key to the Rhyme
07 - Jesus Came Down
08 - Between the Lines





Lake - Lake

Password: bassoprofundo

I actually forgot just how good this is! If you liked Supertramp you'll like this!

Cover artwork, Amazon reviews and marketing flyer (only included with promo copies) included!
Ripped from original vinyl promo copy @ 320 kbps

Amazon.com Editorial Reviews (Note - this was not available on CD)
Product Description:
Debut album from 1977. From the opening piece, 'Key To the Rhyme,' the group established themselves in the same vein as bands like Supertramp.

Amazon Customer Reviews (4 Stars - out of 5)

70's Classic, March 7, 2003
This album has to be considered a 70's gem although I don't remember it getting much if any radio play. I used to see this album in record stores and wonder what it sounded like. Then I was at a friend's who had it. After listening to it I decided to buy one for myself. "On the Run", "Timebomb", and "Chasing Colours" are my favorites but there isn't a bad song on here. It's probably a different kind of rock then most people are used to but that's what made rock great--all the variety that you could still classify as rock and roll. This album definitely stands out as one of the better rock albums of the 70's.

I love this album.....in fact, I own an album. I don't think it ever took off like it should have, but, maybe it was before its time. The song "Do I Love You?" is one of my faves. Everytime I
I hear it, it sends me back to my youth and everything was so exciting. One of my loves dedicated it to me. Over all, just a great listening album!

Sand - Sand (1973) [Vinyl]

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Disc 1
01 - Who Ya Tryin' To Fool - 5:23 (J. Meussdorffer - D. Ross)
02 - Lovin' You - 3:51 (J. Meussdorffer - Gooch - D. Ross)
03 - You - 5:46 (J. Meussdorffer)
04 - Destined Road - 6:15 (J. Meussdorffer - D. Ross)

Disc 2
01 - Mystery - 5:27 (J. Meussdorffer - D. Ross)
02 - She - 4:27 (J. Meussdorffer - D. Ross)
03 - Eagle's Claw - 4:27 (J. Meussdorffer - D. Ross)
04 - Lady Of Mine - 4:10 (J. Meussdorffer - Gooch - D. Ross)

SAND

Password: bassoprofundo

Produced By: Ken Mansfield
Associate Producer: Dann Lottermoser

SAND - s/t Barnaby Records BRS 15006 [4/73] The album has a gatefold cover picturing a sandwich covered in sand, with 2-one sided LPs (apparently the idea was to put both disks on a stackable turntable and play one after the other:"freeflowing Sand") - just before the 70's energy crisis made the LP expensive to produce. The band was from Portland Oregon, and included Jack Meussdorffer (aka Jack Charles, guitar/vocals), Dan Ross (steel guitar/guitar/vocals), Dan Wilson (guitar/vocals), Rich Gooch (bass/vocals), and Steve Williams (drums). Meussdorffer and Gooch later played in Quarterflash (with the hit "Harden My Heart").
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1973 Oregon band; double-album set is gimmick of two one-sided LPs (equal ... one full LP!); musically good rural/CSNY rock with nice electric guitar. The other side of each record was blank! The idea was that you'd put this on your automatic turntable (slam!) and have an uninterrupted album of music (freeflowing sand - get it?) to listen to!
Clever - huh?

Don't remember where I got this review but it's more like Poco than CSNY. Lots of pedal steel and great harmonies.

Favorite Song? "Lady of Mine"

Green - Green (1969) [Vinyl]

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Not much info on this one at all.

Atco SD 33-282


01 - To Be
02 - Where Have I Been
03 - Sunrise #7
04 - Just Try
05 - Sparkle
06 - Green
07 - Footprints in the Snow
08 - At The Time
09 - RCMPB
10 - Don't
11 - Have You Ever


GREEN

Ripped from vinyl @ 320

Password: bassoprofundo

Review from: http://www.lysergia.com/LamaReviews/reviews5.htm#GREEN

It had to happen sooner or later. All of the 60s psych albums that were completely dismissed and ignored for about thirty years are finally being re-evaluated. Most sucked then and suck now, but for a variety of reasons a few lost albums, most of which are much more interesting than the old standbys, are beginning to get their due. It wasn’t until the early 90s that all of the psych albums on the Mainstream label became hot commodities. Psych fans always scoffed at pop albums (at least the ones with no Curt Boettcher involvement), but finally a bunch of straightforward but good pop-psych albums are becoming desirable. And while it may seem that there’s an unlimited supply of obscure private press albums out there, sometimes it’s easier to take a look at a few major label albums that you passed by because they were too “easy.”

The self-titled album by Green is a perfect example of a recent rediscovery. One can only guess why nobody noticed such a terrific record. Was it because it was so difficult to categorize? Was it because their more well-known second album was so bad that nobody bothered to go back and listen to the first? Was it because so many dealers and collectors are indiscriminate horn-haters and didn’t dare listen to it after seeing the credits on the back cover? While I’m asking, why is it that every album with a cover shot of the artist in and around a big tree (i.e. Karen Beth’s JOYS OF LIFE) is destined to be underrated?

Let’s start with the horns. There’s no Tower of Power/Cold Blood-style bombast here, no jazzy showing off, no soulful flourishes. There isn’t even anything resembling the effective use of horns on classic psych albums like Love’s FOREVER CHANGES or The Common People’s OF THE PEOPLE, BY THE PEOPLE, FOR THE PEOPLE. Instead, Green uses french horns, phased trumpets and sliding trombones to create a wall of sound. They don’t dominate; they color and shape the songs. They’re used more like keyboards than as lead instruments. If you don’t read the liner notes (which credit four band members with horns and two with reeds) or pay close attention, you might not even notice that there are horns at all. The band has a hard rock type of energy, but the flowing horns and soft, reassuring lead vocals (dead ringer for Kensington Market, another horribly underrated band) give the album a consistency and gentleness of tone that lulls the listener into a false state of security. Aha! Maybe nobody listened enough times for this album to reveal itself, and that’s why it just floated by them! The melodies are there; the hooks are there, but they’re subtle, and these songs don’t attract our attention through guitar solos, brash sound effects, or bluesy vocal intensity. They do, however, use creative and clever arrangements that sneak up on you.

The album’s defining moment is the chorus of “At The Time.” The instruments stop, a line is sung unaccompanied, then the instruments return, flanged beyond recognition, and with no low end. At first you’ll wonder if your woofer went out, then you’ll marvel at the genius of the arrangement. Other subtle moments of sonic bliss occur throughout the album. On “To Be,” the french horn shifts from speaker to speaker, then is double tracked behind the guitar solo, creating a beautiful, haunting cacophony of sound. “Where Have I Been” starts with some Eastern-flavored fuzz guitar, develops several excellent hooks, and alternates guitar-based breaks with horn-led accompaniment. Each verse is arranged differently, and until you’ve listened several times you won’t notice the brilliant shift from horns, to guitars, to flute. The song “Green” (obviously they used their imagination for the arrangements, not the song titles) starts with an unexpected blast of feedback, then moves to a complex mix of spastic percussion, heavy metal guitar and marching-band horns. The horns and guitars both play melodies that you swear you remember from your youth but can’t exactly place. Until they hit a few trills, the horns sound uncannily like a synthesizer, and the song ends with a fuzz bass/maraca war. Yes, these songs are jam-packed with ideas. Just listen to the great percussion arrangements to see how much is going on here!

Green are equally adept at ballads, such as the mildly jazzy “Sunrise #7,” which has some nifty, subtle time signature changes, and “Footprints In The Snow,” which features harpsichord and flamenco guitar. If you haven’t already guessed, these guys are multi-talented musicians, yet they never show off or lose focus. GREEN is a short album, with eleven songs barely cracking half an hour, and the songs are so concise that you’ll wish they were longer. What a refreshing concept from an era of self-indulgence!

After a while there’s a bit of melodic similarity, and both album sides peter out a little bit as they go along. Still, even the lesser songs have something to offer, such as the great melodic bass playing on “Just Try”. This album stands up as a noble experiment gone right. It’s inventive, moody, confident and distinctive. Green are from Texas, but, trust me, don’t sound like any other Texas band you’ve heard. They were as out of place among their musical contemporaries as they were their non-musical peers. Now, can anyone tell me what “RCMPB” stands for??

- review by Aaron Milenski

Pretty neat stuff for a bunch of guys from Dallas. Very psychedelic with a little Canterbury thrown in! And some Beatle-ish sounding horns.

Enjoy!

Argent - Ring of Hands (1971) [Vinyl]

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01 - Celebration
02 - Sweet Mary
03 - Cast your spell Uranus
04 - Lothlorien
05 - Chained
06 - Rejoice
07 - Pleasure
08 - Sleep Won't Help Me
09 - Where Are We Going Wrong







Link: ROH

Password: bassoprofundo

Line-up
- Rod Argent / keyboards, vocals
- Russ Ballard / lead vocals, guitar
- Bob Henrit / drums
- Jim Rodford / bass

Release information Lp. Epic E 30128 (1971)

If you've only heard songs like "Hold Your Head Up" you've been missing out all these years!

Rod Argent openly admits that this is his favourite Argent album. The songs are a little more adventurous on their second outing, clearly the musicians were starting to gel as a unit. Reflecting the musical trends of the time, tracks like "Lothlorien" explore the instrumental talents in the band. While Argent and Ballard trade organ and guitar solos, Jim Rodford knits everything together with some adventurous bass playing. Again the songwriting credits are split between "Argent/White" and "Ballard", the latter showing a flair for more commercial material with a rockier edge. Rod Argent even included "Pleasure" and "Rejoice" in the setlist on his tour with Colin Blunstone back in 2002. "Ring of Hands" was a difficult album to get hold of if you missed it the first time around. But I got it!

Favorite songs? "Lothlorien", "Chained", "Celebration", "Rejoice", "Where Are We Going Wrong". Hell, it's all good!

The Beckies (1976) [Vinyl]

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01 - Ride By My Side (Etude)
02 - River Bayou
03 - Midnight and You
04 - Fran
05 - Other Side of Town
06 - Song Called Love
07 - Can't Be Alone
08 - River Song
09 - On the Morning That She Came
10 - One of These Days
11 - Run Jenny Run




http://rapidshare.com/files/1501393/bkees.rar


Password: dontwalkthatbass

Michael Brown's (The Left Banke) Last Group

Songwriter/keyboardist Michael Brown established his credentials with The Left Banke, Montage and The Stories. Frustrated with The Stories' musical direction and lacked of widespread success, Brown quit in 1973. Following a two year hiatus he reappeared with The Beckies (singer Scott Trusty and former Chessmann Square drummer Gary Hodgden and guitarist Mayo James McAllister).

Signed by Sire, 1976's "The Beckies" featured a thoroughly entertaining collection of pop-rock. Exemplified by material such as "Ride By My Side (Etude)", "Midnight and You" and "River Bayou" the set underscored Brown's knack for penning catchy, commercial melodies. Among the few complaints, neither Hodgden nor Trusty were inspired singers (in case anyone cared, Hodgden was probably the better of the two). Unfortunately, in spite of rave reviews, in an era of disco madness, the set vanished without a trace. The band quickly followed suit, as has Brown who's effectively dropped out of the music scene over the ensuring three decades.

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)



Welcome - Let's wait a minute and see what develops!
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