The unedited in-line mono recording of the Beatles live from Shea Stadium on August 15, 1965, direct from the public address feed onto reel-too reel taple as the event happened.
Greatest Hits is a lean yet complete overview of Tom Petty & the Heartbreakers' biggest singles from their first prime. Sure, it's possible to pinpoint a few great songs missing, but the group had a lot of great songs during the late '70s and '80s…
This is the third, and apparently, the last single of OMD taken from their 2013 album "English Electric". The CD is divided in two parts: "Night Café" in five different versions and… five non-album B-Sides, including the never released before "Kill Me". As per "Night Café", we have of course, the album version that really didn't need any further editing or remixing as the song in itself is just brilliant. A pure typical OMD songs in the vein of ‘Secret’ or "If You Leave", with a more melancholic and darker side probably. The four remixes are just what a New Wave fan expect from a remix: just enough experimentation and twittering, extending and fresh production with great respect of the artist's work, keeping some synth lines and not playing too much with vocals.
A chronological, inexpensive British 52 track, 134 minute essential Del Shannon collection, with 33 of his 44 U.S. released single A-sides from 1961-91, starting w/his first, the #1 Runaway, to the fabulous (posthumously released, sadly non-charting) Walk Away, written will Jeff Lynne & Tom Petty, along with non-U.S. A-sides, rarities, B-sides & a few album cuts…