Another Day in Paradise 1997

Taj Mahal - Queen Bee (2018)  Music

Posted by varrock at Dec. 8, 2018
Taj Mahal - Queen Bee (2018)

Taj Mahal - Queen Bee (2018)
MP3 CBR 320kbps | Tracks: 42 | 193:32 min | 444 Mb
Style: Blues | Label: Warner Music

One of the most prominent figures in late 20th century blues, singer/multi-instrumentalist Taj Mahal played an enormous role in revitalizing and preserving traditional acoustic blues. Not content to stay within that realm, Mahal soon broadened his approach, taking a musicologist's interest in a multitude of folk and roots music from around the world – reggae and other Caribbean folk, jazz, gospel, R&B, zydeco, various West African styles, Latin, even Hawaiian. The African-derived heritage of most of those forms allowed Mahal to explore his own ethnicity from a global perspective and to present the blues as part of a wider musical context. Yet while he dabbled in many different genres, he never strayed too far from his laid-back country blues foundation. Blues purists naturally didn't have much use for Mahal's music, and according to some of his other detractors, his multi-ethnic fusions sometimes came off as indulgent, or overly self-conscious and academic. Still, Mahal's concept was vindicated in the '90s, when a cadre of young bluesmen began to follow his lead – both acoustic revivalists (Keb' Mo', Guy Davis) and eclectic bohemians (Corey Harris, Alvin Youngblood Hart).

The Freddie Mercury Tribute Concert (2013) [2xDVD-9 + DVD-5]  Music

Posted by v3122 at Dec. 24, 2019
The Freddie Mercury Tribute Concert (2013) [2xDVD-9 + DVD-5]

The Freddie Mercury Tribute Concert (2013)
2xDVD-9+DVD-5: NTSC 4:3 (720x480) VBR | LPCM, 2 ch / DTS, 6 ch
Arena Rock | 01:25:35+01:46:38+01:32:33 | ~ 18.61 Gb

The Freddie Mercury Tribute Concert for AIDS Awareness was a benefit concert held on Easter Monday, 20 April 1992 at Wembley Stadium in London, England for an audience of 72,000. The concert was produced for television by Ray Burdis, directed by David Mallet and broadcast live on television and radio to 76 countries around the world, with an audience of up to one billion. The concert was a tribute to Queen's lead vocalist, Freddie Mercury, who died of AIDS on 24 November 1991…