Jon Hiseman Colloseum Eroc

The New Jazz Orchestra - Le Déjeuner Sur L'Herbe (1969/2021) [Official Digital Download 24/96]

The New Jazz Orchestra - Le Déjeuner Sur L'Herbe (1969/2021) [Official Digital Download 24/96]
FLAC (tracks) 24-bit/96 kHz | Front Cover | Time - 44:54 minutes | 956 MB
Jazz | Label: Decca (UMO) , Official Digital Download

The NJO was the offspring of a popular weekend jazz club, the "Jazz house" which had it's home at the Green Man pub on Blackheath Hill (demolished to make way for Allison Close) where the "house" band was the Ian Bird Quintet (initially comprising Ian Bird, tenor sax; Clive Burrows, baritone sax; Johnny Mealing, piano; Tony Reeves, bass and Trevor Tomkins, drums - Mealing and Tomkins left to join the newly formed Rendell-Carr Quintet and were succeeded by Paul Raymond and Jon Hiseman respectively.

Wolfgang Dauner's Et Cetera - Knirsch (1972)  Music

Posted by Domestos at Sept. 7, 2017
Wolfgang Dauner's Et Cetera - Knirsch (1972)

Wolfgang Dauner's Et Cetera - Knirsch (1972)
EAC Rip | ape (image+.cue, log) ~ 253.83 Mb | 44:53 | Scans included
Jazz Fusion | Country: Germany | Label: HGBS

German pianist Wolfgang Dauner (1935) was a reluctant pioneer of free improvisation on Dream Talk (september 1964) by a trio with Eberhard Weber on bass and Free Action (may 1967) by a septet with French violinist JeanLuc Ponty, percussionist Mani Neumeier, Weber and tenorist Gerd Dudek. Fuer (april 1969), by a quartet featuring Eberhard Weber mainly on cello, and The Oimels (july 1969) instead embraced the hippy age with an acid-soul-jazz sound replete with fuzz guitars and sitar. So inconsistent as creative, Dauner flirted with choral music in Psalmus Spei, off Fred van Hove's Requiem For Che Guevara (november 1968), fusion on Rischka's Soul (november 1969), with swing on Music Zounds (february 1970) and with electronics on Output (october 1970), all of them for trios with Weber. Dauner-eschingen (october 1970) repeated the experiment with the choir.

Colosseum II - Electric Savage (1977) {1989, Japan 1st Press}  Music

Posted by popsakov at Oct. 22, 2024
Colosseum II - Electric Savage (1977) {1989, Japan 1st Press}

Colosseum II - Electric Savage (1977) {1989, Japan 1st Press}
EAC Rip | WavPack (Img) + Cue + Log ~ 272 Mb | MP3 CBR320 ~ 105 Mb
Covers Included | 00:41:59 | RAR 5% Recovery
Jazz Rock, Fusion, Progressive Rock | MCA Records / Warner-Pioneer Corp. 18P2-2756

Colosseum II was a British band formed in 1975 by the former Colosseum drummer and leader, Jon Hiseman, following the 1974 demise of his band Tempest. Hiseman announced his plan to form the band eventually named Colosseum II in November 1974, but only Gary Moore was named as a member. Rehearsals were due to begin on January 1, 1975, but a permanent unit was not finalised until May 1975. Among musicians who almost made the group were Graham Bell, Duncan Mackay and Mark Clarke. The final line-up was completed by Don Airey, Neil Murray and Mike Starrs.

Tempest - Tempest [24-bit rem] (1972)  Music

Posted by uff at Feb. 9, 2011
Tempest - Tempest [24-bit rem] (1972)

Tempest - Tempest [24-bit rem] (1972)
rock | 1cd | EAC Rip | flac + Cue + Log | covers
Progressive Line | PL 542 | 24bit remastered 2003 | 240Mb

The 1972 debut by this little-known "minor supergroup" (as they are referred to in the CD liner notes) is well worth your attention if you are a fusion and/or prog rock fan. The Tempest sound is propelled by the tasty fretwork of gifted British axemeister Allan Holdsworth (Gong,Soft Machine,etc.), the rhythm section from pioneering jazz-rock outfit Colosseum and the formidable warbling of one Paul Williams (no, not the diminutive composer with dubious pipes who penned "Rainy Days And Mondays", but another!)The most amazing thing about the album is how contemporary it sounds; the only thing that screams "early 70's" are the occasional silly lyric (a la Spinal Tap's "Stonehenge").

Colosseum II - Strange New Flesh (1976) {1986, Japan 1st Press}  Music

Posted by popsakov at Nov. 15, 2024
Colosseum II - Strange New Flesh (1976) {1986, Japan 1st Press}

Colosseum II - Strange New Flesh (1976) {1986, Japan 1st Press}
EAC Rip | FLAC (Img) + Cue + Log ~ 274 Mb | MP3 CBR320 ~ 106 Mb
Scans Included | 00:42:21 | RAR 5% Recovery
Jazz Rock, Fusion, Progressive Rock | Victor #VDP-1156

Several years after the original art rock supergroup Colosseum disbanded, drummer Jon Hiseman formed Colosseum II, a more jazz fusion-oriented outfit featuring guitarist Gary Moore (Thin Lizzy) and keyboardist Don Airey. Their eclectic debut, Strange New Flesh, shows some impressive chops from all involved, with an emphasis on Moore's soulful guitar leads. Vocalist Mike Starr, while not an immensely engaging singer, does a nice job keeping up with Hiseman and bass player Neil Murray. Highlights include the technically showy but blissfully irreverent ode to Pink Floyd, "Dark Side of the Moog," a nice version of Joni Mitchell's "Down to You," and the funky "Gemini and Leo."

Tempest - Tempest 1972  Music

Posted by micaus at Jan. 17, 2009
Tempest - Tempest  1972

Tempest - Tempest 1972
MP3 @ 256 | 71 MB | Covers included
Genre: Rock

Formed by drummer Jon Hiseman in 1974 after the break up of COLOSSEUM, TEMPEST (no relation to the US band of the same name) are most notable for their line up rather than their albums. Hiseman brought in an at the time very young guitarist by the name of Allan Holdsworth, with Mark Clark (bass) and Paul Williams (vocals) completing the band. Clark had also been a member of COLOSSEUM. Paul Williams had played with JOHN MAYALL'S BLUESBREAKERS and JUICY LUCY.
Colosseum II - Strange New Flesh (1976) {2012, Expanded Edition, Remastered}

Colosseum II - Strange New Flesh (1976) {2012, Expanded Edition, Remastered}
2CD | EAC Rip | FLAC (Tracks) + Cue + m3u + Log ~ 815 Mb | MP3 CBR320 ~ 294 Mb
Full Scans | 01:07:11 + 00:41:55 | RAR 5% Recovery
Jazz Rock, Progressive Rock | Esoteric Recordings #ECLEC22315

Several years after the original art rock supergroup Colosseum disbanded, drummer Jon Hiseman formed Colosseum II, a more jazz fusion-oriented outfit featuring guitarist Gary Moore (Thin Lizzy) and keyboardist Don Airey. Their eclectic debut, Strange New Flesh, shows some impressive chops from all involved, with an emphasis on Moore's soulful guitar leads. Vocalist Mike Starr, while not an immensely engaging singer, does a nice job keeping up with Hiseman and bass player Neil Murray. Highlights include the technically showy but blissfully irreverent ode to Pink Floyd, "Dark Side of the Moog," a nice version of Joni Mitchell's "Down to You," and the funky "Gemini and Leo."

Colosseum II - Electric Savage (1977)  Music

Posted by uff at Jan. 24, 2011
Colosseum II - Electric Savage (1977)

Colosseum II - Electric Savage (1977)
rock | EAC Rip | flac + Cue + Log | covers
MCAD-22081 | rel: 1993 | 290Mb

Everybody's got that one album that took the blinkers off them; the one that damn near killed you on first listen with the excitement of whole new vistas opening up. In my case, that was this record, almost 25 years ago. I'd been into heavy rock for a few years when I bought this album, by a band whose name I'd never seen before. Needless to say, it blew me away with its instrumental fury and virtuoso playing….it sounded as though Colosseum II (Jon Hiseman, Don Airey, John Mole & Gary Moore) wrote and recorded these tracks specifically to please ME. Not quite jazz/rock.

Jack Bruce - Things We Like (1970) {2003 Polydor Reissue}  Music

Posted by ruskaval at March 23, 2011
Jack Bruce - Things We Like (1970) {2003 Polydor Reissue}

Jack Bruce - Things We Like (1970) {2003 Polydor Reissue}
EAC rip (secure mode) | FLAC+CUE+LOG -> 277 Mb | MP3 @320 -> 114 Mb
Full Artwork @ 400 dpi (jpg) -> 83 Mb
© 2003 Polydor / UMC | 065 604-2
Rock / Prog Rock / Blues Rock

Enthusiasts expecting to hear a continuation of the type of material that Jack Bruce (bass) had been responsible for during his tenure(s) with Cream or the Graham Bond Organisation might be in for quite a shock when spinning Things We Like (1970) for the first time. Instead of an album's worth of blues-based rockers, the seven instrumentals feature Bruce with other former Graham Bond stablemates John McLaughlin (guitar), Jon Hiseman (drums), and Dick Heckstall-Smith (sax) performing post-bop and free jazz.

Colosseum - Transmissions Live at the BBC (2020)  Music

Posted by ciklon5 at Nov. 28, 2020
Colosseum - Transmissions Live at the BBC (2020)

Colosseum - Transmissions Live at the BBC (2020)
FLAC tracks | 6:38:08 | 2,2 Gb
Genre: Rock, Jazz-Rock, Blues Rock / Label: Repertoire Records

This is the BBC Radio 1 Service. We proudly present one of the world's greatest bands… Colosseum! Fans tuning into their wireless sets during the great age of progressive rock would have been thrilled to hear the announcer introduce one of their favourite bands about to hit the airwaves.They wouldn't be disappointed. Few bands played with such power, fire and intensity whether in a club, at a festival or even in the confines of a radio station studio. Led by drumming legend Jon Hiseman, Colosseum was guaranteed to give an exciting performance as soon as the red recording light went on and the engineer gave the thumbs up.Even so, it seemed like a fleeting moment, once the broadcasts were over, never to be heard again. But here is the exciting news. Many of the shows when Colosseum roared into epic arrangements like Walking In The Park, Daughter Of Time , Tanglewood 63 and Rope Ladder To The Moon were captured on tape for posterity, not only by the BBC but by listeners armed with their own home recorders.