25.9.10

VA - Viva Disco

VA - Viva Disco
EAC Rip | Included: EAC Log + CUE + Flac + Covers | Size: 456 MB | RAR files
Orig Year: 1983 | Release Date: 2010 | Label: Philips / Polygram | Number: CD 810449
Genre: ItaloDisco | Mono/Stereo: 2 Channel  | RS.com & Letitbit.net
Mastered by P.P. @#!*% at ECMusic St. Studios ℗ 2010

Album Details:
"Gazebo - Masterpiece", "Key Of The Dreams - Africa", "Bo Boss - Tequila", "Bizzy & Co - Take A Chance" and more... are the songs which included in this collection "Viva Disco", released in 1983 by Philips / Polygram label. 
Mastered by P.P. @#!*% at ECMusic St. Studios ℗ 2010.

Track Listing:
==========================================
01. Gazebo - Masterpiece
02. Key Of The Dreams - Africa
03. Kid - Fine Time Tonight
04. D.D. Sound - Wake Up In The Night
05. Ricchi E Poveri - Sara Perche Ti Amo
06. Bo Boss - Tequila
07. Romina Power - Il Ballo Del Qua Qua
08. Gary Low - You Are A Danger
09. Klein & M.B.O. - Dirty Talk
10. Jose & The Kazoo Band - Kazoo Kazoo
11. Ricchi E Poveri - Made In Italy
12. Al Bano & Romina Power - Felicita
13. Bizzy & Co - Take A Chance
14. Dario Farina - Sei La Sola Che Amo
Total Time: 01:01:01
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Blondie - Autoamerican

Blondie – Autoamerican
EAC Rip | Included: EAC Log + CUE + Flac + Covers | Size: 493 MB | RAR files
Release Date: 1980 / 2001 24Bit Remastered | Label: Capitol / Chrysalis
Number: 72435-33595-2-2 | Genre: Pop/Rock
Mono/Stereo: 2 Channel  | FileServe.com
Album Notes:
Autoamerican is the fifth studio album by the US new wave band Blondie. It was released in November 1980 and reached no.3 in the UK charts, and no.7 in the US.
The album proved to be a radical departure for the band, with opening track “Europa” setting the pace. The track was a dramatic instrumental overture featuring orchestral arrangements and ending with vocalist Debbie Harry reciting a poem about the importance of the car in American society. Besides rock and pop tracks, the band explored a wide range of other musical genres; “Here’s Looking At You” and “Faces” show jazz and blues influences, the reggae hit “The Tide Is High” was a cover of The Paragons 1965 Jamaican ska hit, whereas “Rapture” combined funk, rock, jazz, and even saw them embracing the then budding genre of rap. The closing track, “Follow Me”, was a cover of a torch song from Alan Jay Lerner and Frederick Loewe’s 1960 Broadway musical Camelot, based on the King Arthur legend.
The band released two singles from this album, “The Tide Is High” and “Rapture”. “The Tide Is High” hit number one in several countries, including the U.S. and the UK. “Rapture” became the first rap song not only to be released from the band but also the first ever to reach number one on the singles chart in the U.S. (it also reached no.5 in the UK). The first edition of the US pressing of the album had a sticker on the cover stating Including “The Tide Is High”, “Rapture” and “T-Birds”, suggesting that the track was planned as the third single release.
Autoamerican was digitally remastered and reissued with two bonus tracks by Chrysalis Records in the UK in 1994 which included extended “special disco mix” versions of “Rapture” and “Live It Up”. The album was again remastered and re-released by EMI-Capitol in 2001, again featuring the extended version of “Rapture” along with the extended version of their no.1 hit “Call Me” (from the film soundtrack to American Gigolo), and also “Suzy & Jeffrey” which was originally the B-side to “The Tide Is High” single.
Track Listing:
==========================================
01 – Europa
02 – Live It Up
03 – Here’s Looking At You
04 – The Tide Is High
05 – Angels On The Balcony
06 – Go Through It
07 – Do The Dark
08 – Rapture
09 – Faces
10 – T-Birds
11 – Walk Like Me
12 – Follow Me
13 – Call Me (Original Long Version)
14 – Suzy & Jeffrey
15 – Rapture (Special Disco Mix)
Total Time: 01:09:14
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Bee Gees - Love Songs

Bee Gees - Love Songs
EAC Rip | Included: EAC Log + CUE + Flac + Covers | Size: 477 MB | RAR files
Release Date: Dec 6, 2005 | Label: Polydor | Number: 987422-7
Genre: Pop / Rock | Mono/Stereo: 2 Channel  | RS.com, Letitbit.net, Vip-File

Album Notes:
Love Songs was the third Bee Gees  compilation album in four years, though the first to cover a specific musical style. A proposed album of love songs was in the works around 1995 when the Bee Gees recorded old hits like "Heartbreaker" and "Emotion" from the late '60s, but that project was soon shelved and those recordings remained unavailable until 2001.
Following the success of the Number Ones compilation in 2004, Universal once again tried to mine the Bee Gees catalog, this time focusing on their ballads. Spanning their entire career, Love Songs features many of the group's big hits, but also includes some lesser known tracks such as "Secret Love" and "For Whom The Bell Tolls", which were both big hits in Europe. Also, included is the live version of "Islands In The Stream", which many consider the superior Bee Gees version as compared with the techo-version found on 2001's Their Greatest Hits: The Record.
The U.S. and the UK versions differed slightly in song selection and running time. Included in the UK version were 1993's "Heart Like Mine" and a song the Gibb Brothers wrote for Ronan Keating in 1999 called "Lovers And Friends" in which The Bee Gees sing backup. This irked many fans as this was not a true Bee Gees song in that it prevented other classic Bee Gees tracks from making the album. Another anomaly was the inclusion of the Robin Gibb solo hit "Juliet" from 1983, which was a big hit in many countries, except in the UK and the U.S.
By the time "Love Songs" was released, there had been several Bee Gees compilations on the market as well as their entire back catalog, so this release seemed somewhat redundant. In the U.S. it did chart but only managed to reach #166. In the UK it climbed to #51, but its best showing was in France where it went Top 20, peaking at #18.

Track Listing:
==========================================
   1. To Love Somebody
   2. Words
   3. First of May
   4. Lonely Days
   5. How Can You Mend Broken Heart?
   6. How Deep Is Your Love?
   7. More Than a Woman
   8. (Our Love) Don't Throw It All Away
   9. Emotion
  10. Too Much Heaven
  11. Heartbreaker
  12. Islands in the Stream
  13. Juliet
  14. Secret Love
  15. For Whom the Bell Tolls
  16. Closer Than Close
  17. I Could Not Love You More
  18. Wedding Day
Total Time: 01:09:43
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Ten Years After - I'm Going Home


Ten Years After - I'm Going Home
EAC Rip | Included: EAC Log + CUE + Flac + Covers | Size: 458 MB | RAR files
Release Date: 1996 | Label: Discy | Number: DC 868782
Genre: Rock | Mono/Stereo: 2 Channel  | RS.com & Letitbit.net


Biography:
Ten Years After is an English blues-rock band, most popular in the late 1960s and early 1970s. Between 1968 and 1973, Ten Years After scored eight Top 40 albums on the UK Albums Chart. In addition they have had twelve albums enter the US Billboard 200, and are best known for their tracks "I'm Going Home", "Hear Me Calling", "I'd Love To Change the World" and "Love Like a Man".
After several years of local success in the Nottingham/Mansfield  area as a band known since 1962 as The Jaybirds (its core was formed in late 1960 as Ivan Jay and the Jaycats), and later as Ivan Jay and the Jaymen, Ten Years After was founded by Alvin Lee and Leo Lyons. Ivan Jay sang lead vocals from late 1960 to 1962 and was joined by Ric Lee in August 1965, replacing drummer Dave Quickmire, who had replaced Pete Evans in 1962. In 1966 The Jaybirds moved to London, where Chick Churchill  joined the group. That November the quartet signed a manager, Chris Wright, and decided to change its name to Blues Trip, Blues Yard (under which they played a show at the Marquee Club supporting the Bonzo Dog Doo-Dah Band), and finally in November 1966, to Ten Years After, (in honor of Elvis Presley, an idol of Lee's whose momentous year in rock - 1956, helps to better explain the band's name). The group became the first act booked by the soon-to-be Chrysalis Agency. It secured a residency at the Marquee, and received an invitation to play at the Windsor Jazz Festival in 1967. That performance led to a contract with Deram, a subsidiary of Decca – the first band so signed without a hit single. In October, its 1967 self-titled debut album was released.
In 1968, after touring Scandinavia and the United States, Ten Years After released its second album, the live Undead, which brought the noteworthy song "I'm Going Home". This was followed in February 1969 by the studio issue Stonedhenge, a British hit, that included another well known track, "Hear Me Calling" (it was released also as a single, and covered in 1972 by the British glam rock rising stars, Slade). In July 1969 the group appeared at the Newport Jazz Festival, in the first event to which rock bands were invited. In August, the band performed a breakthrough American appearance at Woodstock; their rendition of "I'm Going Home" featuring Alvin Lee as lead singer, was featured in both the subsequent film and soundtrack album and catapulted them to star status.
During 1970, Ten Years After released "Love Like a Man", the group's only hit in the UK Singles Chart. This song was on the band's fifth album, Cricklewood Green. The name of the album comes from a friend of the group who lived in Cricklewood, London. He grew a sort of plant which was said to have hallucinogenic effects. The band did not know the name of this plant, so the members called their album Cricklewood Green. It was the first record to be issued with a different playing speed on each side – one a three-minute edit at 45rpm, the other, a nine-minute live version at 33rpm. In August 1970, Ten Years After played the Strawberry Fields Festival near Toronto, and the Isle of Wight Festival 1970.
In 1971, the band switched labels to Columbia Records and released the hit album A Space in Time, which marked a move toward more commercial material. It featured the group's biggest hit, "I'd Love To Change The World". In late 1972 the group issued their 2nd Columbia album Rock & Roll Music To The World and in 1973 the live double album Ten Years After Recorded Live. Unfortunately, the band broke up after their final 1974 Columbia album Positive Vibrations.  The members re-united in 1983 to play the Reading Festival, and this performance was later released on CD as The Friday Rock Show Sessions - Live At Reading '83' . In 1988, the members re-united for a few concerts and recorded the album About Time (1989). In 1994, they participated in the Eurowoodstock festival in Budapest.
Alvin Lee has since then mostly played and recorded under his own name. In 2003, the other band members replaced him with Joe Gooch, and recorded the album, Now. Material from the following tour was used for the 2005 double album, Roadworks. Ric Lee is currently in a band called The Breakers, along with Ian Ellis (ex-Clouds).

Track List
==========================================
01 - I'm Going Home
02 - I'd Love To Change The World
03 - It's Getting Harder
04 - Love Like A Man
05 - Woodchoppers Ball
06 - Rock And Roll Music To The World
07 - Me And My Baby
08 - I Woke Up This Morning
09 - Stoned Woman
10 - Choo Choo Mama
11 - Slow Blues In 'C'
12 - 50,000 Miles Beneath My Brain
13 - Positive Vibrations
14 - Hear Me Calling
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