Pink Floyd Mfsl

Pink Floyd - Meddle (1971) [MFSL, 1989]  Music

Posted by gribovar at April 20, 2019
Pink Floyd - Meddle (1971) [MFSL, 1989]

Pink Floyd - Meddle (1971) [MFSL, 1989]
EAC Rip | FLAC (image+.cue+log) - 230 MB | Covers - 95 MB
Genre: Progressive/Psychedelic Rock | RAR 3% Rec. | Label: Mobile Fidelity Sound Lab UltraDisc #1 (UDCD 518)

Atom Heart Mother, for all its glories, was an acquired taste, and Pink Floyd wisely decided to trim back its orchestral excesses for its follow-up, Meddle. Opening with a deliberately surging "One of These Days," Meddle spends most of its time with sonic textures and elongated compositions, most notably on its epic closer, "Echoes." If there aren't pop songs in the classic sense (even on the level of the group's contributions to Ummagumma), there is a uniform tone, ranging from the pastoral "A Pillow of Winds" to "Fearless," with its insistent refrain hinting at latter-day Floyd. Pink Floyd were nothing if not masters of texture, and Meddle is one of their greatest excursions into little details, pointing the way to the measured brilliance of Dark Side of the Moon and the entire Roger Waters era…

Pink Floyd - The Wall (1979) [MFSL, UDCD 2-537]  Music

Posted by v3122 at April 10, 2021
Pink Floyd - The Wall (1979) [MFSL, UDCD 2-537]

Pink Floyd - The Wall (1979)
EAC | Flac(Image) + Cue + Log & MP3 CBR 320Kbps
1989 | Mobile Fidelity Sound Lab, UDCD 2-537 | ~ 420 or 192 Mb | Scans(jpg) -> 89 Mb
Psychedelic / Progressive Rock

The Wall was Roger Waters' crowning accomplishment in Pink Floyd. It documented the rise and fall of a rock star (named Pink Floyd), based on Waters' own experiences and the tendencies he'd observed in people around him. By then, the bassist had firm control of the group's direction, working mostly alongside David Gilmour and bringing in producer Bob Ezrin as an outside collaborator…
Pink Floyd - Returning Echoes - The Alternate Best of Pink Floyd (2022)

Pink Floyd - Returning Echoes - The Alternate Best of Pink Floyd (2022)
CD Rip | FLAC (tracks, no cue, no log) - 2 GB | MP3 CBR 320 kbps - 750 MB
3:44:33 | Acid Rock, Art Rock, Classic Rock, Psychedelic Rock, Prog Rock | Unofficial Release | Label: Kapital Records

This 4 CD edition includes alternate versions, rare mixes, new song edits and many more surprises!

Pink Floyd - Atom Heart Mother (1970) [MFSL, 1994] (Re-up)  Music

Posted by gribovar at Oct. 30, 2022
Pink Floyd - Atom Heart Mother (1970) [MFSL, 1994] (Re-up)

Pink Floyd - Atom Heart Mother (1970) [MFSL, 1994]
EAC Rip | FLAC (image+.cue+log) - 257 MB | MP3 CBR 320 kbps (LAME 3.93) - 124 MB | Covers - 151 MB
Genre: Progressive/Psychedelic Rock | RAR 3% Rec. | Label: Mobile Fidelity Sound Lab (UDCD 595)

Appearing after the sprawling, unfocused double-album set Ummagumma, Atom Heart Mother may boast more focus, even a concept, yet that doesn't mean it's more accessible. If anything, this is the most impenetrable album Pink Floyd released while on Harvest, which also makes it one of the most interesting of the era. Still, it may be an acquired taste even for fans, especially since it kicks off with a side-long, 23-minute extended orchestral piece that may not seem to head anywhere, but is often intriguing, more in what it suggests than what it achieves. Then, on the second side, Roger Waters, David Gilmour, and Rick Wright have a song apiece, winding up with the group composition "Alan's Psychedelic Breakfast" wrapping it up…

Pink Floyd - The Dark Side Of The Moon (1973) {MFSL}  Music

Posted by tiburon at Jan. 16, 2020
Pink Floyd - The Dark Side Of The Moon (1973) {MFSL}

Pink Floyd - The Dark Side Of The Moon (1973) {MFSL}
EAC 0.95b2 | FLAC tracks | Cue+Log+M3U | Full Scans 400dpi | 221MB + 5% Recovery
MP3 CBR 320 Kbps | 106MB + 5% Recovery
Genre: Psychedelic Rock, Progressive Rock, Art Rock

By condensing the sonic explorations of Meddle to actual songs and adding a lush, immaculate production to their trippiest instrumental sections, Pink Floyd inadvertently designed their commercial breakthrough with Dark Side of the Moon. The primary revelation of Dark Side of the Moon is what a little focus does for the band. Roger Waters wrote a series of songs about mundane, everyday details which aren't that impressive by themselves, but when given the sonic backdrop of Floyd's slow, atmospheric soundscapes and carefully placed sound effects, they achieve an emotional resonance. But what gives the album true power is the subtly textured music, which evolves from ponderous, neo-psychedelic art rock to jazz fusion and blues-rock before turning back to psychedelia. It's dense with detail, but leisurely paced, creating its own dark, haunting world.
Pink Floyd - The Dark Side Of The Moon (1973) JP Pressing - LP/FLAC In 24bit/96kHz

Pink Floyd - The Dark Side Of The Moon
Vinyl | LP Cover (1:1) | FLAC + cue | 24bit/96kHz | 900mb
Original Master Recording, Mastered By (Half-speed) Stan Ricker
Label: Mobile Fidelity Sound Lab/MFSL 1-017 | Released: 1973 | This Issue: 1979 | Genre: Progressive-Rock

Essential: a masterpiece of progressive rock music
One of Britain's most successful and long lived avant-garde rock bands, Pink Floyd emerged relatively unsullied from the mire of mid-Sixties British psychedelic music as early experimenters with outer space concepts.
Supertramp - Crime Of The Century (1974) [MFSL UDCD 505] Re-up

Supertramp - Crime Of The Century (1974)
EAC | Flac(Image) + Cue + Log & MP3 CBR 320Kbps
1987 | MFSL, UDCD 505 | ~ 212 or 104 Mb | Scans(png) -> 38 Mb
Progressive Rock

Supertramp came into their own on their third album, 1974's Crime of the Century, as their lineup gelled but, more importantly, so did their sound. The group still betrayed a heavy Pink Floyd influence, particularly in its expansive art rock arrangements graced by saxophones, but Supertramp isn't nearly as spooky as Floyd – they're snarky collegiate elitists, an art rock variation on Steely Dan or perhaps a less difficult 10cc, filled with cutting jokes and allusions, best heard on "Bloody Well Right."…

Love - Da Capo (1966) [MFSL Remastered 2013]  Music

Posted by Designol at July 2, 2023
Love - Da Capo (1966) [MFSL Remastered 2013]

Love - Da Capo (1966) [MFSL Remastered 2013]
EAC | FLAC | Image (Cue&Log) ~ 224 Mb | Mp3 (CBR320) ~ 109 Mb | Scans included | 00:36:27
Folk Rock, Baroque Pop, Psychedelic | Label: Mobile Fidelity Sound Lab | # UDSACD 2130

Love broadened their scope into psychedelia on their sophomore effort, Arthur Lee's achingly melodic songwriting gifts reaching full flower. The six songs that comprised the first side of this album when it was first issued are a truly classic body of work, highlighted by the atomic blast of pre-punk rock "Seven & Seven Is" (their only hit single), the manic jazz tempos of "Stephanie Knows Who", and the enchanting "She Comes in Colors", perhaps Lee's best composition (and reportedly the inspiration for the Rolling Stones' "She's a Rainbow"). It's only half a great album, though; the seventh and final track, "Revelation", is a tedious 19-minute jam that keeps Da Capo from attaining truly classic status.
Andrew Powell And The Philharmonia Orchestra - Play The Best Of The Alan Parsons Project (1983) [MFSL MFCD 806] Re-up

Andrew Powell And The Philharmonia Orchestra - Play The Best Of The Alan Parsons Project (1983)
EAC | Flac(Image) + Cue + Log & MP3 CBR 320Kbps
1985 | Mobile Fidelity Sound Lab, MFCD 806 | ~ 241 or 120 Mb | Covers(jpg) Included
Modern Classical, Prog Rock

This is an excellent CD if you're into orchestrations of pop or rock music. Andrew Powell And The Philharmonic Orchestra do justice to some of The Alan Parsons Project's most recognizable songs, and did this before this became 'de rigeur' in the late 80's through now…

Roger Waters - Amused To Death (1992) [Japanese Edition 2005]  Music

Posted by gribovar at April 23, 2019
Roger Waters - Amused To Death (1992) [Japanese Edition 2005]

Roger Waters - Amused To Death (1992) [Japanese Edition 2005]
EAC Rip | FLAC (image+.cue+log) - 413 MB | MP3 CBR 320 kbps (LAME 3.93) - 190 MB | Covers (18 MB) included
Genre: Progressive Rock | RAR 3% Rec. | Label: Sony Music (MHCP 693)

War is Roger Waters' great muse, the impetus for so much of his work, including the semi-autobiographical 1979 opus The Wall. The Final Cut, his last album with Pink Floyd, functioned as an explicit sequel to The Wall, but 1992's Amused to Death acts as something of a coda, a work where Waters revisits his obsessions - both musical and lyrical - and ties them together with the masterful touch of a mature artist. Certainly, Waters' narrative of a society filtering all manners of ugliness through a television screen isn't as sci-fi silly as that of its immediate predecessor Radio K.A.O.S., but a greater point in its favor is that it's a richer affair than that stiff, synthesized relic of the late '80s…