Nektar

Nektar - Journey To The Centre Of The Eye (1971) [2CD Japanese Edition 2013]

Nektar - Journey To The Centre Of The Eye (1971) [2CD Japanese Edition 2013]
EAC Rip | FLAC (image+.cue+log) - 529 MB | MP3 CBR 320 kbps (LAME 3.93) - 208 MB | Covers - 208 MB
Genre: Progressive/Psychedelic Rock | RAR 3% Rec. | Label: Belle Antique (BELLE 132133-4)

Nektar's debut album was one of their finest releases, saturated with abstract psychedelia and a wonderful science-fiction motif that is magnified through the rigorous but dazzling Mellotron of Allan Freeman and Roye Albrighton's nomadic guitar playing. Throughout Journey's 13 cuts, Nektar introduced their own sort of instrumental surrealism that radiated from both the vocals and from the intermingling of the haphazard drum and string work. With the synthesizer churning and boiling in front of Howden's percussive attack and Mick Brockett's "liquid lights," tracks like "Astronaut's Nightmare," "It's All in the Mind," and both "Dream Nebula" cuts teeter back and forth from mind-numbing, laid-back melodies to excitable, open-ended excursions of fantastical progressive rock…

Nektar - A Tab In The Ocean (1972) [2CD Japanese Edition 2013]  Music

Posted by gribovar at April 1, 2024
Nektar - A Tab In The Ocean (1972) [2CD Japanese Edition 2013]

Nektar - A Tab In The Ocean (1972) [2CD Japanese Edition 2013]
EAC Rip | FLAC (image+.cue+log) - 665 MB | MP3 CBR 320 kbps (LAME 3.93) - 275 MB | Covers - 203 MB
Genre: Progressive Rock | RAR 3% Rec. | Label: Belle Antique (BELLE 132127-8)

A Tab in the Ocean mirrors Nektar's first album, but only to a certain degree. While their sound still basks in lengthy keyboard passages and fantastic lyrics, the psychedelia is traded in for a more directional and established approach, with longer tracks and a tighter progressive structure. There's an obvious cohesiveness between the guitar and keyboard tandem, with an attempt at shaping a concept through the album's five tracks. Both the title track and the 19 minutes of "King of Twilight" are Tab in the Ocean's best examples of Nektar's maturing process, with sleek instrumental runs that taper off into the lyrics as opposed to a more improvised feel that surrounded their last album. A stronger influence can be felt on Roye Albrighton's guitar playing, which is more structural, and Derek Moore's basslines are sturdier and more expressive…

Nektar - A Tab In The Ocean (1972)  Music

Posted by se5a at Dec. 22, 2007
Nektar - A Tab In The Ocean (1972)

Nektar - A Tab In The Ocean (1972)
MP3 | CBR | 256 Kbps | 75Mb
Genre: Progressive Rock | RapidShare

Nektar - Sounds Like This (1973) + Bonus CD  Music

Posted by se5a at Dec. 22, 2007
Nektar - Sounds Like This (1973)
FLAC + MP3 | CBR | 320 Kbps | 958Mb or 296Mb
Genre: Progressive Rock | RapidShare

Nektar - ...Sounds Like This (1973) (2cd edition) REPOST  Music

Posted by uff at Dec. 15, 2012
Nektar - ...Sounds Like This (1973) (2cd edition) REPOST

Nektar - …Sounds Like This (1973) (2cd edition)
rock | 2cd | Eac Rip | Flac + Cue + Log | covers
Dream Nebulo | rel: 2005 | 950Mb

One thing you can not criticize Nektar for and that is making albums that sound the same. "Sounds Like This" was the result of a 2 day live in studio recording experiment without great gobs of editing and studio trickery.. They were pretty much just captured live and raw. The end result is still a very much psychedelic NEKTAR rock sound with a certain raw vibe throughout. The big problem with "Sounds Like This" was that it was sandwitched between "Tab In The Ocean" and "Remember The Future" and has forever been sadly greyed out by many in perspective

Nektar - Remember The Future (1973) [3CD Limited Edition 2014]  Music

Posted by gribovar at Jan. 31, 2019
Nektar - Remember The Future (1973) [3CD Limited Edition 2014]

Nektar - Remember The Future (1973) [3CD Limited Edition 2014]
EAC Rip | FLAC (image+.cue+log) - 771 MB | Covers - 384 MB
Genre: Progressive Rock | RAR 3% Rec. | Label: Cleopatra Records (CLP 0274)

A unique deluxe box edition of prog legends Nektar most critically acclaimed album Remember The Future. Comes with a bonus disc of the famous Chipping Norton Studios session recorded live on March 27, 1974. Among Nektar fans, there are many who consider Remember the Future to be the band's creative peak. The album certainly creates the grounds for making that argument. Indeed, it is an ambitious work that is essentially one composition divided into two parts. The whole is performed in a very seamless and competent manner. Still, many critics just plain didn't get it. The juxtaposition of the two opinions makes this album to Nektar much like what Tales From Topographic Oceans was to Yes…

Nektar - Journey To The Centre Of The Eye (1971)  Music

Posted by uff at Nov. 13, 2012
Nektar - Journey To The Centre Of The Eye (1971)

Nektar - Journey To The Centre Of The Eye (1971)
rock | 1cd | Eac Rip | Flac + Cue + Log | covers
Dream Nebula DNECD1203 | SACD Red Book layer | rel: 2004 | 320Mb

Nektar's debut album was one of their finest releases, saturated with abstract psychedelia and a wonderful science-fiction motif that is magnified through the rigorous but dazzling Mellotron of Allan Freeman and Roye Albrighton's nomadic guitar playing. Throughout Journey's 13 cuts, Nektar introduced their own sort of instrumental surrealism that radiated from both the vocals and from the intermingling of the haphazard drum and string work. With the synthesizer churning and boiling in front of Howden's percussive attack and Mick Brockett's "liquid lights," tracks like "Astronaut's Nightmare," "It's All in the Mind," and both "Dream Nebula" cuts teeter back and forth from mind-numbing, laid-back melodies to excitable, open-ended excursions of fantastical progressive rock.

Nektar - A Tab In The Ocean (1972)  Music

Posted by uff at Jan. 3, 2013
Nektar - A Tab In The Ocean (1972)

Nektar - A Tab In The Ocean (1972)
rock | 1cd | Eac Rip | Flac + Cue + Log | covers
Dream Nebula 2004 | 550mb

A Tab in the Ocean mirrors Nektar's first album, but only to a certain degree. While their sound still basks in lengthy keyboard passages and fantastic lyrics, the psychedelia is traded in for a more directional and established approach, with longer tracks and a tighter progressive structure. There's an obvious cohesiveness between the guitar and keyboard tandem, with an attempt at shaping a concept through the album's five tracks. Both the title track and the 19 minutes of "King of Twilight" are Tab in the Ocean's best examples of Nektar's maturing process, with sleek instrumental runs that taper off into the lyrics as opposed to a more improvised feel that surrounded their last album.

Nektar - 5 Essential Albums (2019)  Music

Posted by Rtax at Sept. 15, 2021
Nektar - 5 Essential Albums (2019)

Nektar - 5 Essential Albums (2019)
EAC Rip | FLAC (tracks, cue, log, scans) - 1.3 GB | MP3 CBR 320kbps - 538 MB
03:39:42 | Prog Rock, Psychedelic Rock | Label: Bacillus Records / Bellaphon

Nektar (German for Nectar) is an English progressive rock band originally based in Germany.
The band formed in Hamburg, West Germany in 1969. The founding members were Englishmen Roye Albrighton on guitars and lead vocals, Allan "Taff" Freeman on keyboards, Derek "Mo" Moore on bass, Ron Howden on drums and artists Mick Brockett and Keith Walters on lights and "special effects". Though the concept of non-performing bandmembers was not unprecedented (i.e. lyricist Keith Reid in Procol Harum), it was considered unusual that a third of Nektar's lineup had no role in performing or writing their music. Throughout their early existence the band's songwriting was credited to all six members on the album sleeves, but BMI records show that the music was written by the four performing members (Albrighton, Freeman, Moore and Howden). Mick Brockett did however co-write the lyrics with "Mo" Moore, and invented or contributed to the original album titles.

Nektar - Retrospektive 1969-1980 (2011)  Music

Posted by ciklon5 at Jan. 15, 2025
Nektar - Retrospektive 1969-1980 (2011)

Nektar - Retrospektive 1969-1980 (2011)
FLAC (image+.cue,log,scans) | 2:34:35 | 1.1 Gb
Genre: Prog Rock, Space Rock

Nektar, formed in Germany by four Englishmen, never stormed the charts during prog rock's brief early-'70s heyday, but they created their own distinctive sounds with early work that conjured images of floating through outer space, including chunky guitar chords, doom-laden organ, and phased vocals suggesting a cold and lonely trip through the vast cosmos (a parallel but harder-rocking universe to Saucerful of Secrets-era Pink Floyd). There was also a change in direction during the mid-'70s, featuring crisper production as well as pop lyrics and choruses, deemphasizing the abstract, spacy elements that initially made Nektar's music distinctive. At its peak, the quartet was capable of powerful music that ranks among the best progressive rock, and for a little while in the early to mid-'70s, it seemed like they might take the American rock world by storm.