FM Long Time No See

Chicago - Ultra Rare Tracks Vol.1 & 2 (2000) Re-up  Music

Posted by v3122 at June 27, 2017
Chicago - Ultra Rare Tracks Vol.1 & 2 (2000) Re-up

Chicago - Ultra Rare Tracks Vol.1 & 2 (2000)
EAC | Flac(Image) + Cue + Lo & MP3 CBR 320Kbps
4CD | Bootleg | ~ 1804 or 616 Mb | Scans
Soft Rock / Jazz-Rock / Prog Rock

Richard Tunnicliffe - Bach: Cello Suites (2012)  Music

Posted by peotuvave at Oct. 28, 2014
Richard Tunnicliffe - Bach: Cello Suites (2012)

Richard Tunnicliffe - Bach: Cello Suites (2012)
EAC Rip | Flac (Image + cue + log) | 2 CDs | Full Scans | 679 MB
Genre: Classical | Label: Linn Records | Catalog Number: 396

Experience, virtuosity and individuality are all required when tackling J.S. Bach’s popular cello suites; Richard Tunnicliffe brings a lifetime of insight to his debut solo recording. Richard has made a special study of Bach's cello suites and his performances of all six have been acclaimed in Europe and Australia as well as at numerous venues in Great Britain, including Wigmore Hall and the Purcell Room in London.

Creedence Clearwater Revival: Box Set, 6 CDs (2001)  Music

Posted by Gomez at Oct. 24, 2007
Creedence Clearwater Revival: Box Set, 6 CDs (2001)

Creedence Clearwater Revival: Box Set, 6 CDs (2001)
Fantasy | November 1, 2001 | Country Rock | APE | 3% Recovery | 2,52 Go | Covers | 6 CDs

Amazon.com
Popular but not hip, basic but not shallow, rooted but not retro, Creedence Clearwater Revival distinguished themselves in the late 1960s and early 1970s through these contradictions. This six-disc set is the definitive Creedence collection, offering superbly remastered versions of all of their studio and live albums and adding a disc's worth of pre-Creedence material. The ultimate blue-collar rock band, John Fogerty and CCR found success by wholly giving in to their fascination with the American South (despite hailing from Northern California) and exploring the turf that connected R&B and country–the same turf that their heroes at Sun studios tilled at rock's birth. As the songs on the first disc prove, they hadn't always taken this approach though perhaps they should have: The first four songs from 1961 (by Tommy Fogerty and the Blue Velvets), original compositions in the classic '50s rock & roll style they loved, hold up better than subsequent Golliwogs tracks that attempt to replicate the British Invasion sound in vogue at the time. Still, the Golliwogs tracks offer hints of John Fogerty's menacing growl and biting guitar that would fully blossom later on.

When diving into CCR's entire body of work, many myths dissipate and a more well-rounded view comes into focus: the quintessential singles band that dominated AM radio was also quite an album band, releasing solid records from top to bottom even though half of the songs were saturating radio long before the LP would hit. Also, they weren't quite as far removed from their Bay Area brethren (who were reared on the same roots music) as is often stated, offering a number of long and loose jams that, while not overtly psychedelic, gave them and their fans a chance to stretch out. Without question, though, CCR were the kings of the three-minute rock single, and it's these now-ubiquitous gems–the consummate AM band now dominates FM radio–that will always define them. –Marc Greilsamer

Barnesandnoble.com

It was stripped down, it rocked and rolled, and amazingly, in an era when pop music grew more complex and seemingly more sophisticated with each passing month, the music of Creedence Clearwater Revival was also enormously popular. The underdogs of rock during the late '60s and early '70s, CCR had a series of consecutive hit singles and albums that may have been out of step with the era's AM radio blandness and pretentious prog-rock but nonetheless spoke directly to fans across the board. With guitarist, vocalist, composer, producer, and resident genius John Fogerty at the helm, the band combined the lean funk of R&B with the grit of the blues and the sweet soul of country, tying it all up with a tough-as-nails rock 'n' roll sound that had a direct lineage from Sun Studio rockabilly and Specialty Records-era Little Richard rave-ups. Creedence cut tunes that got to the point fast and then wrapped them up before they wore out their welcome. In the process they made classic music: "Born on the Bayou," "Proud Mary," "Green River" "Going up Around the Bend," "Fortunate Son," and plenty of others will live as long as rock 'n' roll does. And it all can be found on this comprehensive six-CD box set collecting the band's seven official studio albums (and one live recording) as well as a disc full of fascinating pre-Creedence material that will be an immediate draw to collectors and others already pulled into the CCR universe. But even casual listeners will appreciate the remastered sound, a remarkable sonic improvement over the previously available CDs that puts the band's righteous rockin' right in your face. The roots of the quartet's no-nonsense sound can be heard in the early, previously unreleased material: Within the Motown and British Invasion grooves pulse the economic, ultra-tight rhythm section and Northern California garage rock ethic that would define the band's mature style. The formula that Fogerty later conceived, and that CCR thankfully stuck with through its glory years – 1968 through 1970, covering the albums Creedence Clearwater Revival through Cosmo's Factory (the two final, problematic albums Pendulum and Mardi Gras, can also be examined for revisionist opinions) – still holds it own three decades after the band's dissolution. Creedence's influence may be even more strongly felt today: Try to imagine Americana rock without their grassroots kick as an example. A case can even be made that Creedence may be the most elemental of all American bands. The evidence is right here on this must-have set. The accompanying 72-page booklet features essays from noted music crits Ben Fong-Torres, Dave Marsh, Robert Christgau, and others. Each box is individually numbered, adding to the collectors' value. –Steve Futterman

Chicago: The Heart Of Chicago - The Videos 1982-1991 (2005)  Music

Posted by robi62 at July 11, 2013
Chicago: The Heart Of Chicago - The Videos 1982-1991 (2005)

Chicago: The Heart Of Chicago - The Videos 1982-1991 (2005)
Video: NTSC, MPEG-2 at 6 260 Kbps, 720 x 480 (1.333) at 29.970 fps | Audio: PCM 2 channels at 1 536 Kbps, 48.0 KHz
Genre: Rock | Label: Warner Music Ent. | Copy: Untouched | Release Date: 3 Oct 2005 | Runtime: 47 min. | 2,74 GB (DVD5)

A collection of 80s/ first 90s music videos from AOR band Chicago. The promos of their best known hits and ballads are here included, coming both from the Peter Cetera and the Jason Scheff eras. Among them: 'Hard to Say I'm Sorry', 'Love MeTomorrow', '25 or 6 to 4', 'Will you still love me?', 'You're Not Alone' and 'Chasin' the Wind'.
According to Billboard chart statistics, Chicago is second only to the Beach Boys as the most successful American rock band of all time, in terms of both albums and singles.
Jethro Tull: Albums Collection. Part 1 (1968-1976) [Non-Remastered Studio Albums] Re-up

Jethro Tull: Albums Collection. Part 1 (1968-1976)
EAC | Flac(Image) + Cue + Log & MP3 CBR 320Kbps
12CD | ~ 3422 or 1426 Mb | Scans(png) -> 1181 Mb
Rock / Progressive Rock / Progressive Folk Rock

Jethro Tull was a unique phenomenon in popular music history. Their mix of hard rock; folk melodies; blues licks; surreal, impossibly dense lyrics; and overall profundity defied easy analysis, but that didn't dissuade fans from giving them 11 gold and five platinum albums…

Ultimate Ableton Live 12, Part 4: Sound Design & Synthesis  eBooks & eLearning

Posted by ELK1nG at Jan. 11, 2024
Ultimate Ableton Live 12, Part 4: Sound Design & Synthesis

Ultimate Ableton Live 12, Part 4: Sound Design & Synthesis
Published 1/2024
MP4 | Video: h264, 1920x1080 | Audio: AAC, 44.1 KHz
Language: English | Size: 5.44 GB | Duration: 5h 23m

The BEST Ableton Live 12 Training available! By J. Anthony Allen, Ableton Certified Trainer and University Professor.

The Beatles - The Complete BBC Sessions (9CDs, 1993)  Music

Posted by Discograf_man at Jan. 12, 2017
The Beatles - The Complete BBC Sessions (9CDs, 1993)

The Beatles - The Complete BBC Sessions (9CDs, 1993)
Classic Rock | MP3 CBR 320 kbps | 1.45 GB
Label: Great Dane Records | Release Year: 1993

9-disc box set released on the Great Dane label, Italy, 1993. Contains every existing Beatles performance on BBC radio, from March 1962 through their final set in June 1965. Only a relatively small portion of these performances, all recorded exclusively for BBC broadcast (and thus different from the familiar LP studio versions), are otherwise available. Sound quality varies, particularly on the earlier discs, with much of the material derived from personal collections when it could not be located in the BBC archives.
Pink Floyd - Rainbow Theatre (1972) [1st Press Vinyl Bootleg (16/44.1) by Prof. Stoned]

Pink Floyd - Rainbow Theatre (1972) [1st Press Vinyl Bootleg (16/44.1) by Prof. Stoned]
1 CD | flac (separate files) | no cue, no log | ffp, md5 | Artwork (TIFF, 300dpi) or (JPG, PNG, 300dpi) | 293 MB (3% rec)
Title: "The Best Of Tour '72 - Restored." Remastered From Original 1st LP Pressing by Prof. Stoned.

When Love Speaks  eBooks & eLearning

Posted by robin-bobin at April 24, 2011
When Love Speaks

When Love Speaks: Shakespeare's Love Sonnets - Read and Sung by Various Artists
Audio CD (April 23, 2002) | ASIN: B00006357N | Language English | Audio CD in MP3/128Kbps | 74 MB

When Love Speaks is a collection of Shakespearean love sonnets as read by famous actors, and songs inspired by Shakespeare’s love sonnets…
Fleetwood Mac – “1-2-3” - Fleetwood Mac - Mr. Wonderful - The Pious Bird of Good Omen – 3-CD Box

Fleetwood Mac – “1-2-3” – 01. Fleetwood Mac (1968) – 02. Mr. Wonderful (1968) – 03. The Pious Bird Of Good Omen (1969) (3-CD Box)
Columbia | 1968-1969 | Blues | EAC RIP | FLAC+CUE+LOG+HQ-Covers (400Dpi) | 01. 233+13Mb 02. 248Mb+25Mb 03. 215Mb+12Mb

The Blues has always been popular in England. Performers like Screamin' Jay Hawkins, Howlin' Wolf and even Freddie King and Bo Diddley were stars in England before making it big in their own country. When John Mayall formed the Bluesbreakers it was out of respect and admiration to those performers; and he's stayed with the blues, cultivating a number of fine young blues musicians including guitarists Eric Clapton and Peter Green. After Clapton left Mayall, moving on to form Cream, Peter Green replaced him. Now Green has formed his own group, Fleetwood Mac (along with another former Bluesbreaker, bassist John McVie).
Whereas Clapton expanded onto new horizons with Cream, Green has chosen to remain dedicated to the blues, and on this, their first recorded effort, Fleetwood Mac have established themselves as another tight English blues band—joining Mayall's Bluesbreakers, Ten Years After and Savoy Brown as chief practitioners of blues in England.
Green, like Mayall, has studied the records and performances of Howlin' Wolf, Memphis Slim, Junior Wells and Elmore James carefully. The piano riffs on "Hellbound on My Trail" are lifted directly from Slim's classic "If You See Kay," but it's done well, if perhaps a little too self-consciously. Fleetwood Mac (the name is a combination of the names of members of the group), know what they're doing, they dig the music they're playing and that's great—but the drawback here is that they don't put enough of themselves into it instead of what they've heard from the original artists.
Green is a more than competent guitar player, and the Mac's treatment of "Shake Your Moneymaker" is just as powerful as the first Butterfield version (on the Paul Butterfield Blues Band album). The harp work is proficient in most places but rather weak on "Got to Move," the old Sonny Boy Williamson song. Green's composition "Long Grey Mare" is one of the best cuts on the album, anchored by McVie's strong bass line. The record has a strange, prematurely vintage (if there can be such a thing) sound to it, like an old classic recording made in the late Forties or early Fifties.
Like most modern white bluesmen, Fleetwood Mac try very hard to live the kind of music they play—not picking cotton in the Delta, but maintaining the hard-life blues tradition, gigging at small clubs in Northern England and in scruffy halls in the East End. Their music retains an unaffected rough quality. They play well, and if it sounds a little scratchy at times it's because that's the way they happen to feel at that particular moment. The licks they've copied from other performers are natural enough—it's more of a tribute than an imitation.
The English continue to prove how well into the blues they really are, and know how to lay it down and shove it back across the Atlantic. Fleetwood Mac are representative of how far the blues has penetrated—far enough for a group of London East-Enders to have cut a record potent enough to make the South Side of Chicago take notice.