Listening to the worlds greatest bass player James Jamerson do his thing with Marvin & the Funk Brothers on what I consider Motowns crown jewel in their magnificent musical cannon Marvin Gaye Super Hits on my original Tamla vinyl Rockin to Can I Get A Witness man when you compare the Stones version to Marvin it just doesn't compare Never has though The best album from 1970
This one holds up pretty well. Some sold rock 'n' roll and 2 or 3 odd numbers as well. Remaster is definitely an upgrade. 4 years until this one turns 50. Gulp.
Bob Dylan and the Band The Spectrum, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, 6th Jan 1974 (Afternoon) I don't revisit this tour too often - but this show is a good one. A few tunes played that were not played too often during the 74 tour. Nice audience recording, too. 77 and still touring like a 33 year old.
Excellent performances, badly mastered. That combination enrages me sometimes, but there's one that's definitely worse: bad performances which are badly mastered.
I just had laser surgery to fix a small tear in my retina. They used a green laser to do that. The lasers that BOC used at their shows in the 70's? Green lasers. The irony didn't escape me. Lasers were outlawed at concerts because of the fear of eye damage, and now they're using that same "damage" to fix eyes! I always have a "queue" in my head, of what I'm going to listen to next. I've been hard core listening to Black Sabbath lately. What a run of albums from the first one to Born Again! BOC or Humble Pie is next up in my queue.
I wonder if this album was sponsored by Blue Moon Belgian White, manufactured by MillerCoors. I'll guess no.
Albert Ayler Quartet: The Hilversum Session Explosive legendary studio session from late 1964 - the last recording/performance from the quartet with Don Cherry, Gary Peacock & Sunny Murray
You can definitely say that about the music But he's a better lyricist than Springsteen. And I hold Springsteen pretty damn high in that department. But you would never know since he only writes in swedish
Capitalists. Ozzy notes how he'd sometimes just sing along, copying Iommi's melodies. Said he did not know what "paranoid" meant when Iommi first wrote the lyrics. Ozzy also says Sabbath was not "heavy metal," just rock & roll.
Pulling out some mostly west coast rocking country and folk records from about 45-50 years ago: The Flying Burrito Brothers, Gram Parsons and the Fallen Angels, The Byrds (w/g parsons and without), Buffalo Springfield, all centering aroundthe time from 1968-73. Box sets, live boots, anthologies, and single discs, all redbook, mostly remastered to mostly include the period' with Clarence White as far as Byrds material goes. This will probably move through the weekend and holiday. Some Burritos for starters, in getting into the spirit of a festive, rain-soaked few days. Cheers...
Tusk 5.1 from box set. Been missing it for over a year. Was “put “ away by the wife in a spring clean up Reunited with the rest of the box set