Bird Boy

«The Complete Writings of Art Smith, the Bird Boy of Fort Wayne, Edited by Michael Martone» by Michael Martone

«The Complete Writings of Art Smith, the Bird Boy of Fort Wayne, Edited by Michael Martone» by Michael Martone
English | EPUB | 2.0 MB

Sonny Boy Williamson - The Best Of Sonny Boy Williamson (2000)  Music

Posted by gribovar at April 6, 2024
Sonny Boy Williamson - The Best Of Sonny Boy Williamson (2000)

Sonny Boy Williamson II - The Best Of Sonny Boy Williamson (2000)
EAC Rip | FLAC (tracks+.cue+log) - 265 MB | Covers - 22 MB
Genre: Blues, Chicago Blues | RAR 3% Rec. | Label: Spectrum Music (544 277 2)

Highly-regarded blues singer and harmonica player, an unpredictable character, and a major figure of Chicago blues.
Sonny Boy Williamson was, in many ways, the ultimate blues legend. By the time of his death in 1965, he had been around long enough to have played with Robert Johnson at the start of his career and Eric Clapton, Jimmy Page and Robbie Robertson at the end of it. In between, he drank a lot of whiskey, hoboed around the country, had a successful radio show for 15 years, toured Europe to great acclaim and simply wrote, played and sang some of the greatest blues ever etched into black phonograph records. His delivery was sly, evil and world-weary, while his harp-playing was full of short, rhythmic bursts one minute and powerful, impassioned blowing the next…

Sonny Boy Williamson II - The Chess Years [4CD Box Set] (1991)  Music

Posted by gribovar at Sept. 18, 2021
Sonny Boy Williamson II - The Chess Years [4CD Box Set] (1991)

Sonny Boy Williamson II - The Chess Years [4CD Box Set] (1991)
EAC Rip | WavPack (image+.cue+log) - 1,29 GB | Covers - 56 MB
Genre: Blues | RAR 3% Rec. | Label: Charly Records (CD REDBOX I)

Sonny Boy Williamson was, in many ways, the ultimate blues legend. By the time of his death in 1965, he had been around long enough to have played with Robert Johnson at the start of his career and Eric Clapton, Jimmy Page, and Robbie Robertson at the end of it. In between, he drank a lot of whiskey, hobo'ed around the country, had a successful radio show for 15 years, toured Europe to great acclaim, and simply wrote, played, and sang some of the greatest blues ever etched into Black phonograph records. His delivery was sly, evil and world-weary, while his harp-playing was full of short, rhythmic bursts one minute and powerful, impassioned blowing the next. His songs were chock-full of mordant wit, with largely autobiographical lyrics that hold up to the scrutiny of the printed page. Though he took his name from another well-known harmonica player, no one really sounded like him.
Sonny Boy Williamson - The Yardbirds with Eric Clapton & The Animals with Eric Burdon [Recorded 1963]

Sonny Boy Williamson - The Yardbirds with Eric Clapton & The Animals with Eric Burdon [Recorded 1963]
EAC Rip | WavPack (image+.cue+log) - 396 MB | MP3 CBR 320 kbps (LAME 3.93) - 196 MB | Covers - 8 MB
Genre: Blues, Blues Rock | RAR 3% Rec. | Label: Optimism Incorporated (OP CD-0125)

Recorded December 8th, 1963 at Craw-Daddy Club, Richmond and at the Club A Go Go, Newcastle-Upon-Tyne, England on 30 Dec. 1963.
Sonny Boy Williamson was, in many ways, the ultimate blues legend. By the time of his death in 1965, he had been around long enough to have played with Robert Johnson at the start of his career and Eric Clapton, Jimmy Page, and Robbie Robertson at the end of it. In between, he drank a lot of whiskey, hoboed around the country, had a successful radio show for 15 years, toured Europe to great acclaim, and simply wrote, played, and sang some of the greatest blues ever etched into Black phonograph records…

Sonny Boy Williamson - In Europe [Recorded 1963-1964] (1995)  Music

Posted by gribovar at Jan. 14, 2023
Sonny Boy Williamson - In Europe [Recorded 1963-1964] (1995)

Sonny Boy Williamson - In Europe [Recorded 1963-1964] (1995)
EAC Rip | WavPack (image+.cue+log) - 307 MB | Covers - 17 MB
Genre: Blues, Chicago Blues | RAR 3% Rec. | Label: Evidence Music (ECD 26071-2)

More highlights from Sonny Boy Williamson's overseas travels, in a wide variety of settings - during the 1963 and 1964 American Folk Blues Festivals with old friends like Willie Dixon, Sunnyland Slim, Hubert Sumlin and Matt Murphy behind him, and for nine tracks, with the Yardbirds in support. The latter combination works pretty well - Eric Clapton and company offer reverent, laidback rhythms that seldom intrude and often mesh nicely.

Sonny Boy Williamson II - His Best [Recorded 1955-1964] (2001)  Music

Posted by gribovar at May 13, 2021
Sonny Boy Williamson II - His Best [Recorded 1955-1964] (2001)

Sonny Boy Williamson - His Best [Recorded 1955-1964] (2001)
EAC Rip | FLAC (image+.cue+log) - 259 MB | MP3 CBR 320 kbps (LAME 3.93) - 129 MB | Covers - 46 MB
Genre: Blues | RAR 3% Rec. | Label: Chess/MCA Records (1125492)

While some hardliners will point to his early 1950s Trumpet recordings as his most undiluted work, Sonny Boy's tenure at Chess Records was his longest and most successful and therefore deserves first look for the novice coming to this remarkable bluesman at ground level. This 20-track collection takes 17 tracks from the excellent two-disc Essential Sonny Boy Williamson collection and adds "Sad To Be Alone," "My Younger Days" and an alternate session-second version of "One Way Out" with Buddy Guy on guitar (yes, this is the version that the Allman Brothers used as the blueprint for their cover version) to the final mix. This is another entry into MCA's Chess 50th Anniversary Series and the digital transfers here are exemplary, making this an automatic audio upgrade for those who already have this material in their collection.
VA - The Red Bird Girls Very First Time In True Stereo 1964-1966 (2012)

VA - The Red Bird Girls Very First Time In True Stereo 1964-1966 (2012)
XLD Rip | FLAC (tracks, cue, log) - 479 MB | MP3 CBR 320 kbps - 185 MB
1:19:47 | Soul, Pop | Label: Real Gone Music

From Real Gone Music comes a discovery that already has the collector community buzzing, and especially those collectors in search of previously unheard stereo–20 tracks discovered deep in the vaults of the Red Bird label, every one of which makes its true stereo debut right here! Founded in 1964 by Jerry Leiber and Mike Stoller, and run by George Goldner, Red Bird is considered to this day as the girl group label of the '60s, and this collection produced by long-time archivist and engineer Ron Furmanek together with Ash Wells and annotated by James Moniz features the biggest stars on the label roster, and sources its first-time stereo mixes straight from the original master tapes. Among the most notable tracks are Call Me His, a totally unknown and unreleased recording from the great Ellie Greenwich written by a neophyte songwriter named Neil Diamond; an early, unreleased version of The Boy from New York City, recorded by the Ad-Libs back when they were known as The Cheerio's; Go Now by Bessie Banks, a song that became a big hit for The Moody Blues a year later, and I Can t Let Go by Evie Sands, which, similarly, became a hit for the Hollies; I Wanna Love Him So Bad by The Jelly Beans featuring a rare lead vocal from Alma Brewer, and The Young Generation's The Hideaway featuring a very young Janis Siegel before she became a superstar with Manhattan Transfer. Meticulously documented inside a 16-page booklet boasting copious photos and interviews with Siegel, Sands and songwriter/producer Brooks Arthur among many others, The Red Bird Girls Very First Time in True Stereo sheds a new light on the genius artists, songwriters and producers that recorded for the Red Bird label, and displays their work in all its sonic stereo glory.
VA - The Red Bird Girls Very First Time In True Stereo 1964-1966 (2012)

VA - The Red Bird Girls Very First Time In True Stereo 1964-1966 (2012)
FLAC (tracks) - 375 MB | MP3 CBR 320 kbps - 130 MB
56:49 | Soul, Pop | Label: Real Gone Music

From Real Gone Music comes a discovery that already has the collector community buzzing, and especially those collectors in search of previously unheard stereo–20 tracks discovered deep in the vaults of the Red Bird label, every one of which makes its true stereo debut right here! Founded in 1964 by Jerry Leiber and Mike Stoller, and run by George Goldner, Red Bird is considered to this day as the girl group label of the '60s, and this collection produced by long-time archivist and engineer Ron Furmanek together with Ash Wells and annotated by James Moniz features the biggest stars on the label roster, and sources its first-time stereo mixes straight from the original master tapes. Among the most notable tracks are Call Me His, a totally unknown and unreleased recording from the great Ellie Greenwich written by a neophyte songwriter named Neil Diamond; an early, unreleased version of The Boy from New York City, recorded by the Ad-Libs back when they were known as The Cheerio's; Go Now by Bessie Banks, a song that became a big hit for The Moody Blues a year later, and I Can t Let Go by Evie Sands, which, similarly, became a hit for the Hollies; I Wanna Love Him So Bad by The Jelly Beans featuring a rare lead vocal from Alma Brewer, and The Young Generation's The Hideaway featuring a very young Janis Siegel before she became a superstar with Manhattan Transfer. Meticulously documented inside a 16-page booklet boasting copious photos and interviews with Siegel, Sands and songwriter/producer Brooks Arthur among many others, The Red Bird Girls Very First Time in True Stereo sheds a new light on the genius artists, songwriters and producers that recorded for the Red Bird label, and displays their work in all its sonic stereo glory.

Boy, Snow, Bird  eBooks & eLearning

Posted by Tamaar at Oct. 10, 2018
Boy, Snow, Bird

Boy, Snow, Bird
by Helen Oyeyemi
English | EPUB | 1.6 MB
Deniece Williams - Song Bird (1977) [2010, Remastered & Expanded Edition]

Deniece Williams - Song Bird (1977) [2010, Remastered & Expanded Edition]
R&B, Soul/Funk, Gospel, Disco | EAC Rip | FLAC, Tracks+CUE+LOG+Scans (PNG) | 37:55 | 331,11 Mb
Label: Big Break Records (UK) | Cat.# CDBBR 0009 | Released: 2010-08-05 (1977-10-28)

"Song Bird" is a 1977 album by American singer Deniece Williams released by Columbia Records on October 28, 1977. The album went to #23 and #66 on the Black and Pop album Charts respectively. The single "Baby, Baby My Love's All For You" reached #13 and #32 on the Black and UK singles.