For their 25th band anniversary Solar Project releases the debut album The Final Solution from 1990 together with the album EMP - A Tribute To Pink Floyd consisting of the classic tracks Echoes, Money and Pigs as a limited special edition digipak CD.
The Final Solution is a gigantic art-rock spectacle, an opulent sound setting and an intense hodgepodge of electronic-symphonic drama and baroquish friskiness.
Just three months before his death, pianist BIll Evans was extensively recorded at the Village Vanguard. Originally, one or two LPs were to be released featuring his brilliant new trio (with bassist Marc Johnson and drummer Joe LaBarbera), but after the innovative pianist's death, the project was stalled for over 15 years. Finally, when Warner Bros. got around to it, a definitive six-CD box set was released (although unfortunately in limited-edition form). Evans sounded quite energized during his last year, Johnson was developing quickly as both an accompanist and a soloist, and the interplay by the trio members (with subtle support from LaBarbera) sometimes bordered on the telepathic. The playing throughout these consistently inventive performances ranks up there with the Evans-Scott LaFaro-Paul Motian trio of 20 years earlier.
For their 25th band anniversary Solar Project releases the debut album The Final Solution from 1990 together with the album EMP - A Tribute To Pink Floyd consisting of the classic tracks Echoes, Money and Pigs as a limited special edition digipak CD.
The Final Solution is a gigantic art-rock spectacle, an opulent sound setting and an intense hodgepodge of electronic-symphonic drama and baroquish friskiness.
Toys in the Attic is the third studio album by American rock band Aerosmith, released in April 1975 by Columbia Records. Its first single, "Sweet Emotion," was released on May 19 and "Walk This Way" followed on August 28 in the same year. The album is the band's most commercially successful studio LP in the United States, with eight million copies sold, according to the RIAA. The album was ranked No. 229 on Rolling Stone's list of The 500 Greatest Albums of All Time. The album's title track and Run–D.M.C.'s version of "Walk This Way" are included on the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame list of the "500 Songs that Shaped Rock and Roll".