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I Nuovissimi X-Men - Volume 38  Comics

Posted by Mendose at Jan. 14, 2021
I Nuovissimi X-Men - Volume 38

I Nuovissimi X-Men - Volume 38
Italian | CBR | 53 pages | 38.3 MB

I Nuovissimi X-Men - Volume 39  Comics

Posted by Mendose at Jan. 27, 2021
I Nuovissimi X-Men - Volume 39

I Nuovissimi X-Men - Volume 39
Italian | CBR | 52 pages | 40.5 MB

I Nuovissimi X-Men - Volume 40  Comics

Posted by Mendose at March 18, 2021
I Nuovissimi X-Men - Volume 40

I Nuovissimi X-Men - Volume 40
Italian | CBR | 71 pages | 54.5 MB

I Nuovissimi X-Men - Volume 41  Comics

Posted by Mendose at April 24, 2021
I Nuovissimi X-Men - Volume 41

I Nuovissimi X-Men - Volume 41
Italian | CBR | 52 pages | 38.1 MB

I Nuovissimi X-Men - Volume 42  Comics

Posted by Mendose at May 2, 2021
I Nuovissimi X-Men - Volume 42

I Nuovissimi X-Men - Volume 42
Italian | CBR | 52 pages | 35.3 MB
Cream - Disraeli Gears (1967) {2018, Japanese MQA-CD x UHQCD, Limited Edition, Remastered}

Cream - Disraeli Gears (1967) {2018, Japanese MQA-CD x UHQCD, Limited Edition, Remastered}
EAC Rip | FLAC (Tracks) + Cue + Log ~ 487 Mb | MP3 CBR320 ~ 207 Mb
Covers Included | 01:22:50 | RAR 5% Recovery
Blues Rock, Psychedelic Rock | Polydor / Universal Music #UICY-40172

Cream teamed up with producer Felix Pappalardi for their second album, Disraeli Gears, a move that helped push the power trio toward psychedelia and also helped give the album a thematic coherence missing from the debut. This, of course, means that Cream get further away from the pure blues improvisatory troupe they were intended to be, but it does get them to be who they truly are: a massive, innovative power trio. The blues still courses throughout Disraeli Gears – the swirling kaleidoscopic "Strange Brew" is built upon a riff lifted from Albert King – but it's filtered into saturated colors, as it is on "Sunshine of Your Love," or it's slowed down and blurred out, as it is on the ominous murk of "Tales of Brave Ulysses." It's a pure psychedelic move that's spurred along by Jack Bruce's flourishing collaboration with Pete Brown.
The Rolling Stones - Sticky Fingers (1971) {2018, Japanese MQA-CD x UHQCD, Remastered}

The Rolling Stones - Sticky Fingers (1971) {2018, Japanese MQA-CD x UHQCD, Remastered}
EAC Rip | FLAC (Tracks) + Cue + Log ~ 304 Mb | MP3 CBR320 ~ 120 Mb
Covers Included | 00:46:33 | RAR 5% Recovery
Classic Rock, Hard Rock, Rock & Roll | Universal Music #UICY-40164

Sticky Fingers is the ninth British and eleventh American studio album by the English rock band the Rolling Stones, released 23 April 1971 on their new, and own, label Rolling Stones Records. Sticky Fingers is considered one of the Rolling Stones' best albums. It was the band's first album to reach number one on both the UK albums and US albums charts, and has since achieved triple platinum certification in the US. Songs such as "Brown Sugar," the country ballad "Dead Flowers," "Wild Horses," "Can't You Hear Me Knocking," and "Moonlight Mile" were chart-toppers. The album is inducted in the Grammy Hall of Fame and included in Rolling Stone magazine's 500 Greatest Albums of All Time list.
Eric Clapton - 461 Ocean Boulevard (1974) {2018, Japanese MQA-CD x UHQCD, Limited Edition, Remastered}

Eric Clapton - 461 Ocean Boulevard (1974) {2018, Japanese MQA-CD x UHQCD, Limited Edition, Remastered}
EAC Rip | FLAC (Tracks) + Cue + Log ~ 253 Mb | MP3 CBR320 ~ 109 Mb
Covers Included | 00:39:18 | RAR 5% Recovery
Blues Rock, Classic Rock | Polydor / Universal Music #UICY-40177

461 Ocean Boulevard is Eric Clapton's second studio solo album, arriving after his side project of Derek and the Dominos and a long struggle with heroin addiction. Although there are some new reggae influences, the album doesn't sound all that different from the rock, pop, blues, country, and R&B amalgam of Eric Clapton. However, 461 Ocean Boulevard is a tighter, more focused outing that enables Clapton to stretch out instrumentally. Furthermore, the pop concessions on the album – the sleek production, the concise running times – don't detract from the rootsy origins of the material, whether it's Johnny Otis' "Willie and the Hand Jive," the traditional blues "Motherless Children," Bob Marley's "I Shot the Sheriff," or Clapton's emotional original "Let It Grow." With its relaxed, friendly atmosphere and strong bluesy roots, 461 Ocean Boulevard set the template for Clapton's '70s albums. Though he tried hard to make an album exactly like it, he never quite managed to replicate its charms.
Steely Dan - Pretzel Logic (1974) {2018, Japanese MQA-CD x UHQCD, Limited Edition}

Steely Dan - Pretzel Logic (1974) {2018, Japanese MQA-CD x UHQCD, Limited Edition}
EAC Rip | FLAC (Tracks) + Cue + Log ~ 259 Mb | MP3 CBR320 ~ 115 Mb
Covers Included | 00:33:55 | RAR 5% Recovery
Soft Rock, Pop Rock, Jazz Rock, Classic Rock | Universal Music #UICY-40199

Pretzel Logic is the third studio album by American rock band Steely Dan, released on February 20, 1974, by ABC Records. It was written by principal band members Walter Becker and Donald Fagen, and recorded at The Village Recorder in West Los Angeles with producer Gary Katz. It was the final album to feature the full quintet lineup of Becker, Fagen, Denny Dias, Jim Hodder, and Jeff "Skunk" Baxter (who left to join The Doobie Brothers) and also featured significant contributions from many prominent Los Angeles-based studio musicians and the last to be made and released while Steely Dan was still an active touring band. The album was a commercial and critical success. Its hit single "Rikki Don't Lose That Number" helped restore Steely Dan's radio presence after the disappointing performance of their 1973 album Countdown to Ecstasy. Pretzel Logic was reissued on CD in 1987 and remastered in 1999 to retrospective critical acclaim.
John Mayall With Eric Clapton - Blues Breakers (1966) {2018, Japanese MQA-CD x UHQCD, Special Edition, Remastered}

John Mayall With Eric Clapton - Blues Breakers (1966) {2018, Japanese MQA-CD x UHQCD, Special Edition, Remastered}
EAC Rip | FLAC (Tracks) + Cue + Log ~ 283 Mb | MP3 CBR320 ~ 107 Mb
Covers Included | 00:37:48 | RAR 5% Recovery
Blues Rock, Electric Blues, Chicago Blues | Deram / Universal Music #UICY-40171

Bluesbreakers with Eric Clapton was Eric Clapton's first fully realized album as a blues guitarist – more than that, it was a seminal blues album of the 1960s, perhaps the best British blues album ever cut, and the best LP ever recorded by John Mayall's Bluesbreakers. Standing midway between Clapton's stint with the Yardbirds and the formation of Cream, this album featured the new guitar hero on a series of stripped-down blues standards, Mayall pieces, and one Mayall/Clapton composition, all of which had him stretching out in the idiom for the first time in the studio. This album was the culmination of a very successful year of playing with John Mayall, a fully realized blues creation, featuring sounds very close to the group's stage performances, and with no compromises.