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John Martyn - Bless The Weather (1971) Expanded Remastered 2005  Music

Posted by Designol at May 20, 2023
John Martyn - Bless The Weather (1971) Expanded Remastered 2005

John Martyn - Bless The Weather (1971) Expanded Remastered 2005
EAC | FLAC | Tracks (Cue&Log) ~ 402 Mb | Mp3 (CBR320) ~ 198 Mb | Scans included | 01:15:19
Singer/Songwriter, British Folk, Folk-Rock | Label: Island Remasters | # IMCD 321, 983 073-1

Bless the Weather is a 1971 album by John Martyn and marks his return as a solo artist having released two albums with his wife Beverley Martyn. When it was released it garnered his best reviews to date, and remains a firm favourite among fans, featuring such standards as "Head and Heart" and the title track. The album is predominantly acoustic, although it does feature Martyn's first real 'echoplex' track in "Glistening Glyndebourne". Q magazine chose Bless the Weather among the dozen essential folk albums of all time in 1999. According to Q the album was recorded in just three days. In November 2007 Bless the Weather was included in a list by The Guardian newspaper entitled '1000 Albums to Hear Before You Die'.

Mississippi Fred McDowell - Down Home Blues 1959 (2010)  Music

Posted by gribovar at Feb. 11, 2024
Mississippi Fred McDowell - Down Home Blues 1959 (2010)

Mississippi Fred McDowell - Down Home Blues 1959 (2010)
EAC Rip | FLAC (tracks+.cue+log) - 871 MB | MP3 CBR 320 kbps (LAME 3.93) - 360 MB | Covers - 106 MB
Genre: Blues, Country Blues, Delta Blues | RAR 3% Rec. | Label: JSP Records (JSP4227)

Downhome Blues 1959 contains 46 tracks, spread out over two CDs, tracing the rural blues guitarist Mississippi Fred McDowell’s earliest recordings. The sessions take place on the front porch of his Como, MS farm between September 21-25, 1959 and recorded by folk researcher Alan Lomax with assistance from Shirley Collins. On the first disc, McDowell is heard playing acoustic guitar and is occasionally joined by guitarist Miles Pratcher with Fannie Davis on kazoo and comb, with vocals by McDowell’s wife Annie Mae, James Shorty, Sidney Carter, and Rose Hemphill. The second disc includes one McDowell track, “Shake ‘Em on Down,” with the remaining cuts spotlight other Lomax recordings from the same time by bluesmen Forrest City Joe, Boy Blue, Willie Jones and the fife and drum duo of Ed Young and G.D. Young…