Wilma Reading

VA - Right Back Where We Started From: Female Pop And Soul In Seventies Britain (2020)

VA - Right Back Where We Started From: Female Pop And Soul In Seventies Britain (2020)
EAC Rip | FLAC (tracks+log+.cue) - 1,4 Gb | MP3 CBR 320 kbps - 532 Mb | Covers - 110 Mb | 03:52:26
Pop, Disco, Soul, Female Vocal | Label: RPM Records, Cherry Red Records

Back in 1975, Maxine Nightingale became an overnight sensation in the UK when her latest single, ‘Right Back Where We Started From’, stormed into the Top 10. Thereafter, the track’s catchy appeal spread like wildfire across the globe, topping the charts in Canada and the US and was a massive hit in most other countries.
VA ‎– O Sister! (The Women’s Bluegrass Collection) (2001)

VA ‎– O Sister! (The Women’s Bluegrass Collection) (2001)
FLAC (tracks) - 338 MB
55:26 | Folk, Country, Bluegrass | Label: Rounder

The early days of bluegrass were "men only." Thank goodness, times have changed, and women artists are now accepted on their own terms.The bluegrass bandwagon continues to roll in 2001. This collection attempts to capitalize on the breakthrough success of the O Brother, Where Art Thou? soundtrack. Drawn from Rounder's rich catalog, the 19-cut sampler of female singing, fiddling, and picking extends from an era when women were a novelty in this male-dominated music category through the popular crossover ascendance of such contemporary artists (and O Brother favorites) as Alison Krauss and the Cox Family. Harmonies from the likes of Rhonda Vincent and the Stevens sisters soar toward the heavens, while the earthier strains of Hazel Dickens and Ginny Hawker are more reflective of the music's hardscrabble roots. Though Wilma Lee Cooper's "You Tried to Ruin My Name" has all the subtlety of a hog-calling contest, such rawness is about as real as this music gets. –Don McLeese