Sunday, April 27, 2014

Illinois Speed Press - Duet (1970)


01. Country Dumplin'
02. Sadly Out Of Place
03. The One Who Knows
04. Dearly/Bittersweet/Random Roads (And His Big Band)/Dearly Theme
05. Morning Blues
06. Bad Weather
07. The Life
08. The Visit
09. Seventeen Days



Illinois Speed Press was an American rock band formed - originally, in 1965, as The Rovin' Kind - in Chicago, later relocating to California. The band was formed by Paul Cotton - later of Poco - and Kal David. According to Allmusic, their sound "combined elements of R&B and country music in a powerful double-lead-guitar attack." Cotton and David have occasionally reunited in recent years to perform together under the name.

Fun fact about the song "Bad Weather": Most people who listen to the song think it's a one-on-one thing, a guy and his girl breaking up. It's actually a rather autobiographical song about lead guitarist Paul Cotton's old band ("Illinois Speed Press") breaking up. When Cotton joined Poco in the early 1970s, the song was included on Poco's album From The Inside and featured a pedal steel guitar solo by virtuoso Rusty Young and a memorable 12-string guitar interlude by Richie Furay, formerly of Buffalo Springfield and the Souther, Hillman and Furay Band. (thanks, Gene - Hammond, IN)


Read more about Illinois Speed Press on Wikipedia

Links:

Standin' at the Crossroads - nice blog post about ISP
Kal David's website
Paul Cotton's website
The Review Revue - nice review of the double album CD release

Ripped from the second disc of the double album remastered CD

Encoded at 320K. Includes high-rez scans of the LP cover. ZIP format.

Download: Illinois Speed Press - Duet

Wednesday, January 22, 2014

Buckingham Nicks (Vinyl) 1973



01. Crying in the Night (Nicks) – 2:48
02. Stephanie (Buckingham) – 2:12
03. Without a Leg to Stand On (Buckingham) – 2:09
04. Crystal (Nicks) – 3:41
05. Long Distance Winner (Nicks) – 4:50
06. Don't Let Me Down Again (Buckingham) – 3:52
07. Django (John Lewis) – 1:02
08. Races Are Run (Nicks) – 4:14
09. Lola (My Love) (Buckingham) – 3:44
10. Frozen Love (Nicks, Buckingham) – 7:16


Buckingham Nicks is the debut and sole studio album by the American rock duo Buckingham Nicks. Produced by Keith Olsen, the album was released in September 1973 by Polydor Records. Buckingham Nicks is notable as an early commercial collaboration between Stevie Nicks and Lindsey Buckingham, who later joined Fleetwood Mac. The album was a commercial failure on its original release, and despite the duo's subsequent success, it has yet to be commercially remastered or re-released on any format since 1973.

Main performers:

Lindsey Buckingham – guitar, percussion, vocals
Stevie Nicks – vocals

Additional personnel:

Ronnie Tutt – drums
Jim Keltner – drums
Jerry Scheff – bass guitar
Gary Hodges – drums, percussion overdubs
Monty Stark – synthesizer
Peggy Sandvig – keyboards
Jorge Calderón – percussion
Waddy Wachtel – additional guitar on "Lola (My Love)"
Richard Hallagan – string arrangement

Production:

Producer: Keith Olsen
Executive producer: Lee Lasseff
Engineer: Keith Olsen
Assistant engineer: Richard Dashut
Photography: Jimmy Wachtel
Album design: Jimmy Wachtel

Find out more about Buckingham Nicks on Wikipedia

Digitized from vinyl at 24 bit, 96 kHz

Encoded at 320K. Includes high-rez scans of the gatefold LP including the inside liner notes. ZIP format.

Download: Buckingham Nicks

Monday, January 6, 2014

Umajets - Demolotion (1997)


1. Halt Man Half Wrecking Ball
2. Fly
3. The Wannabees
4. Mother
5. No Mattress
6. The Middle Of Monday
7. The Halls You Walk Through
8. Girl Named God
9. American Pipe
10. Daphne Disease
11. Mathdor
12. Skydiving
13. Union Umbrella
14. My Heary Eyes
15. Bring Back Our Super Hero
16. La Dia Muertos

This is the debut album from the band "Umajets", who are an Atlanta-based duo paired by former Hollyfaith frontman Rob Aldridge and ex-Jellyfish bassist Tim Smith. Originally playing together infrequently as "Thing 1 Thing 2", Umajets became Aldridge and Smith's primary focus around 1995, in the wake of their previous bands' simultaneous dissolutions; their debut LP, Demolotion, followed in 1997.

If you are a fan of Jellyfish, you are sure to enjoy the Umajets.

This Japanese import contains 3 bonus tracks not on the original album.

Demolition by Umajets was released Jan 01, 2006 on the Victor label. Umajets' Southern-fried pop is notable primarily for Rob Aldridge and Tim Smith's witty, clever songs -- "No Mattress" is a tongue-in-cheek tale of love among the nation's disenfranchised youth, while "Matador" lampoons earnest AOR ballads with equal amounts of savagery and affection. Demolition buy CD music A promising debut. ~ Jason Ankeny CD contains bonus track. Demolition CD music contains a single disc with 16 songs.

Encoded at 320K from CD. Includes CD artwork, CD booklet and tray liner. In Zip format.

Download: Demolotion

Robin Lane & the Chartbusters (1980)

Side A:
1. When Things Go Wrong
2. It'll Only Hurt a Little While
3. Don't Cry
4. Without You
5. Why Do You Tell Lies
6. I Don't Want to Know
Side B:
1. Many Years Ago
2. Waitin' in Line
3. Be Mine Tonite
4. Kathy Lee
5. Don't Wait Till Tomorrow


Review by Richie Unterberger (All Music):
Even if Robin Lane & the Chartbusters' self-titled 1980 debut album didn't quite meet the expectations of the band and their rabid Boston following, it did capture their blend of new wave pop with dynamic folk-rockish guitar lines for the first time on a widely distributed national release. At the fore were singer-songwriter Lane's own husky vocals, delivering songs that for all their melodic hooks were tinged with far greater darkness and ambivalence than most pop-rock of the time, new wave or otherwise.

Although Robin Lane & the Chartbusters was Lane's first album, she had actually been active as a singer-songwriter for about a decade. Back in 1969 she had sung backup vocals on "Round and Round" on Neil Young's classic Everybody Knows This Is Nowhere. In the 1970s she left California to move East, and only a little prior to hooking up with the Chartbusters, she'd been playing far mellower, folk-rock-aligned singer-songwriter material. Those were the kinds of songs she was doing when she got a deal with Private Stock, Blondie's first label.

Soon afterward, a newfound love for acts like Patti Smith, Television, the Clash, the Sex Pistols, Talking Heads, Tom Petty, Cheap Trick, and Dwight Twilley sent her own music into a much different path. Hanging out with Boston bands like the Real Kids and at the legendary local venue the Rat got her in touch with most of the musicians who would become the Chartbusters: guitarist-vocalists (and ex-Modern Lovers) Asa Brebner and Leroy Radcliffe, bassist-vocalist Scott Baerenwald, and drummer Tim Jackson. "I put this other band together and actually enticed them to be my bandmates, because I had this deal with Private Stock," remembers Lane. "And then about a month or two later, Private Stock folded. So I had my new band and new direction."

The new direction would come as a shock to many of her old fans. "Our first gig, we were opening for another of our manager's bands, NRBQ. I pretty much just didn't sing, I screamed!" she laughs. "NRBQ just hated us. A lot of people who had liked me before went, 'What have you done?' It really wasn't an about-face, because I always felt social issues and identified with the underdog. I just thought that this music was a better way to say it [and] put it in. The people that came to listen to me, [when I was] the mellow Robin, would just kind of sit there, and it would be all nice and peachy-keen. But it wasn't affecting them in the gut. It wasn't passionate. I suddenly realized, 'Here's some fertile soil I can plant some seeds in, and it'll be more meaningful to me.'"

She dropped her old repertoire and penned a new one virtually from scratch, though one of her old numbers would be reworked into her most famous song, "When Things Go Wrong" (the song from which it evolved, "Never Enough," was covered on the 1979 album of the same name by the Pousette-Dart Band). Although several record labels expressed interest, the band signed with Warner Brothers after Jerry Wexler saw a show and offered them a deal. A three-song EP (with an early version of "When Things Go Wrong") had already come out on the Deli Platters label and gotten some airplay in Boston before the Chartbusters went to Los Angeles to record their Warners debut.

In hindsight, Lane feels that the album didn't capture the band as well it could have: "Though some people really liked that album, it lost the guitar sound that we had. They had a really wonderful kind of mesh that was lost. I think I wasn't singing as well as I could have; I was trying to retain the force of the songs that we had live, and pushing too hard. After we came back to Boston, people couldn't believe it when they heard the album; they said, 'This is not you.'"

But the songs were definitely Lane's, though "Don't Wait Till Tomorrow" was written with Jackson and Radcliffe, and "Kathy Lee" and "When Things Go Wrong" had assistance from Joanne Cipolla (from the band Planet Street), who at one time lived upstairs from Robin. "When Things Go Wrong" was the single that made the charts, though just as impressive were cuts like the sullen and jaggedly rhythmic "It'll Only Hurt a Little While," and the Sid Vicious-inspired "I Don't Want to Know." Lane also likes "Many Years Ago" and "Don't Cry" ("a kind of staple for us: a cute little ditty, and it's pop").

"I gravitate towards minor keys," reflects Lane when asked what set her most apart from other acts bridging the new wave-pop gap at the time. "Actually with the Chartbusters I started writing in major keys more. But still, that minor key always calls me. And that, right away, kind of sets up the more brooding kind of feel." Some of her lyrics were not out of the radio airplay textbook either: "I remember I was playing 'you digest me with facts like a piece of cheese' [from 'Waitin' in Line']. My publisher goes, 'You can't say that!'"

"I think her history gave her a distinct advantage over a lot of what were considered 'new wave' acts of the time," adds Asa Brebner. "The whole 'new wave' thing was kind of stuck on us because of Leroy Radcliffe['s] and my background with Jonathan Richman and so forth, and that colored how they proceeded to produce and market us. I think we were naive and happy to be signed to a major label, and although we liked [producer] Joe Wissert very much, we just went along with whatever they had planned for us. I think now we could have done a much better job producing ourselves. I still cringe at that album cover, which I think largely sunk us as a candy-ass major label contrivance to those uninitiated to our music. The music itself was watered down enough so it could not overcome that basically cosmetic impression that the casual record store [browser] would garner on seeing it in the bins. It didn't represent us, and I felt cheated."

The album did not widely break the Chartbusters beyond their regional base, and after another live EP and a second album (1981's Imitation Life), they were dropped from Warner Brothers. Although Lane's only sporadically released music since then (most recently on 1995's Catbird Seat), she and the Chartbusters have recently reunited, with all of the original members save Radcliffe. A new album is in the works that will mix newly written songs with others that the group performed live in their original incarnation, but never recorded. Lane is also working on a book about her "kooky crazy peripatetic life in the music world and other planets" that, given a career that has spanned many styles and intersected with many musicians of both star and cult renown, should prove to be quite a ride.

Special thanks to my friend "walknthabass" for this needle drop!

Encoded at 320K from original vinyl promo album. Includes artwork, reviews and tracklisting

Download: Robin Lane & the Chartbusters

Sunday, January 5, 2014

Sand - Sand (1973)

Disc 1:
1. Who Ya Tryin' To Fool - 5:23 (J. Meussdorffer - D. Ross)
2. Lovin' You - 3:51 (J. Meussdorffer - Gooch - D. Ross)
3. You - 5:46 (J. Meussdorffer)
4. Destined Road - 6:15 (J. Meussdorffer - D. Ross)

Disc 2:
1. Mystery - 5:27 (J. Meussdorffer - D. Ross)
2. She - 4:27 (J. Meussdorffer - D. Ross)
3. Eagle's Claw - 4:27 (J. Meussdorffer - D. Ross)
4. Lady Of Mine - 4:10 (J. Meussdorffer - Gooch - D. Ross)



All songs published by Berwill Publishing Co./ Chronicle Music (BMI)
Produced By: Ken Mansfield
Associate Producer: Dann Lottermoser

SAND - s/t Barnaby Records BRS 15006 [4/73] The album has a gatefold cover picturing a sandwich covered in sand, with 2-one sided LPs (apparently the idea was to put both disks on a stackable turntable and play one after the other:"freeflowing Sand") - just before the 70s energy crisis made the LP expensive to produce. The band was from Portland Oregon, and included Jack Meussdorffer (aka Jack Charles, guitar/vocals), Dan Ross (steel guitar/guitar/vocals), Dan Wilson (guitar/vocals), Rich Gooch (bass/vocals), and Steve Williams (drums). Meussdorffer and Gooch later played in Quarterflash (with the hit "Harden My Heart").

Special thanks to my good friend "walknthabass" for the needle drop of this fine album!

Encoded at 320K from vinyl album. Includes album cover art and track listing. Zip format.

Download: Sand

The Bliss Band - Dinner with Raoul (1978)


1. Rio
2. Over The Hill
3. Slipaway
4. Don't Do Me Any Favours
5. On The Highway
6. Right Place, Right Time
7. Stay A Little Longer
8. Here Goes
9. Whatever Happened
10. Take It If You Need It



Produces by Jeff Baxter (of Steely Dan and Doobie Brothers fame)

Featuring: MICHAEL McDONALD, JEFF BAXTER, KEITH KNUDSEN, VICTOR FELDMAN, STEPHEN KUPKA, EMILIO CASTILLO, GREG ADAMS, MIC GILLETTE, etc...

The vocalist & keyboard player, Paul Bliss led this west coast music group that in late 70's released two albums. Their debut album "Dinner With Raoul" was released in 1978 and was quickly followed up by the album "Neon Smiles" in 1979. The band did only release two album. In 1997 Paul Bliss released his solo album "Edge Of Coincidence".

Paul Bliss, contrary to previous information, both recorded and toured with David Essex. He made stage appearances with him from 1977 to 1983 and he appears on the Stagestruck album.

Paul was born in Birmingham, 2 years before 'little brother' Martin, and went into the music industry in the early Seventies, fronting a band called The Bliss Band. The band released 2 albums on CBS America, Dinner with Raoul in 1978 and Neon Smiles in 1979. Lead guitar with the band was none other than Phil Palmer another ex-member of The David Essex Band.

As well as playing and recording Paul is also a songwriter and he has had songs recorded by Olivia Newton John, The Hollies, Sheena Easton, Justin Hayward and Celine Dion to name but a few. In 1997 Paul released an album of his own material called The Edge of Coincidence. For the past few years Paul has been touring with The Moody Blues as their keyboard player and he is well known by their fans.

Encoded at 320K from vinyl album. Includes album cover art, track listing, and insert.

Special thanks to "walknthabass" for the original needle drop of this great album.

Download: Dinner with Raoul

Saturday, January 4, 2014

The Brotherhood of Lizards - Lizardland (1989)

1. It Could Have Been Cheryl
2. The World Strikes One
3. The Dandelion Marine
4. Rusty Iron Sun
5. The Happening Guy
6. Clockwork Train
7. The Day After Yesterday
8. Market Day
9. Dear Anya
10. Love The Anglian Way
11. Sand Dragon
12. She Dreamed She Could Fly
13. Carmosine

If you enjoy "jangly" pop songs, you'll love this rare and hard to find album.

Artist Biography by Richie Unterberger (All Music):
When "Cleaners from Venus" were winding down toward the end of the 1980s, chief Cleaner Martin Newell started a similar project, the Brotherhood of Lizards, with bassist Nelson (no last name). The personnel may have been different, but the music was essentially the same: ringing guitars, droll English lyrics, inventive production quirks. There were only a couple of releases before Nelson left to join "New Model Army"; Newell began a solo career that was also essentially similar to his Cleaners from Venus output.

Bio from Newell's official site:
At the age of 19, Martin Newell joined an Essex glam-rock band The Mighty Plod as a singer and gigged in rough clubs, pubs and colleges for the next two years. In his early twenties he joined a hard rock /.prog band from Ispwich called Gypp and gigged in the UK as well as touring northern Germany several times. In 1979, he won his first record contract and shortly afterwards his first single Young Jobless / Sylvie In Toytown was released, first on an indie label and then with Liberty Records. Much Radio 1 airplay and the record briefly charted but then sank after trouble of various sorts.

In the 1980s he formed the anarchic and wacky Cleaners from Venus, who after much defiance of music biz convention, signed to a London record company and began making proper records which were well reviewed and well-received. He began co-writing songs with Captain Sensible in 1986, a relationship which endures to some extent to this day. In 1989 he and his friend Nelson, now of New Model Army formed The Brotherhood of Lizards, were signed to make an album and proceeded to promote it, touring the record by bicycle. This led to many TV appearances and some notoriety and amusement in the media. In 1993, with XTC's Andy Partridge in the producer's chair Martin made what was to become his most successful album The Greatest Living Englishman. This has been followed over the years by several other solo albums. Now in middle years, still held in some regard as a great English songwriter and sometimes compared to Syd Barrett and Ray Davies, it is said that he never got the commercial success he deserved. While this may or may not be true he continues to make and sell good pop records with a degree of international acclaim.

Links:
Martin Newell Official Site
Martin Newall Wikipedia
Rocker Music - has several videos of Martin performing live
Mutant sounds Blog

Encoded at 320K from CD. Includes CD artwork including booklet and tray liner. In Zip format.

Download: Lizardland

The Cryan' Shames - Synthesis (Sundazed)


1. Greenburg, Glickstein, Charles, David Smith & Jones
2. Baltimore Oriole
3. It's All Right
4. Your Love
5. A Master's Fool
6. First Train To California
7. The Painter
8. Sweet Girl Of Mine
9. 20th Song
10. Let's Get Together
11. Symphony Of The Wind
12. A Master's Fool (Single Version)
13. First Train To California (Single Version)
14. Greenburg, Glickstein, Charles, David Smith & Jones (Single Version)
15. Your Love (Single Version)
16. 20th Song (Single Version)
17. Let's Get Together (Mono Version)
18. Bits And Pieces
19. Rainmaker

This is not a rip of the original vinyl album, but instead it comes from the CD released by Sundazed. It does not appear to be available from them anymore, so I've decided to make it available to all Cryan' Shames fans out there! Synthesis is the 3rd album from the Chicago based, 60's band, that had a national hit with the song "Sugar & Spice".

Taken from a review by "Boomertunes" on Amazon:
In the mid to late 1960's, Chicago was a boom town for bands that broke nationally-The Buckinghams, Spanky and Our Gang, The New Colony Six, The Ides Of March, The American Breed, and The Shadows Of Knight.

Although their national success didn't quite match those groups, the Cryan' Shames were hugely popular in the Chicago area and the upper Midwest and received lots of airplay on local radio. Their three Columbia LP releases were essential records of the time if you lived in the area.

Their last album, "Synthesis", is part of the Sundazed reissue series of the group's catalog. It features the original eleven song line-up (along with six single or mono versions of those tracks) and two songs previously unavailable on album.

It's always been a mystery why leader James Fairs' final contribution to the group, "First Train To California", wasn't a monster hit single. It featured an exciting vocal performance by the group and interesting production. Other highlights include the hard edged "Greenburg, Glickstein, Charles, David Smith & Jones"; the percussive "20th Song"; a country styled "Your Mother Should Know"/Beatle homage entitled "It's All Right"; the moody "Baltimore Oriole"; a vocal workout on "Let's Get Together"; and Lenny Kerley's ultra romantic "Your Love". The two special bonus tracks are a Poco flavored "Bits and Pieces" and a cover of Nilsson's "The Rainmaker".

As was always true with the Shames' work, the vocal work and musicianship is top notch.


Band Memebers
Lenny Kerley - vocals, guitar and bass
Dave (Grape) Purple - vocals, guitar
Tom (Toad) Doody - vocals
Issac Guillory - vocals, guitars, bass, keyboards
Alan Dawson - vocals, drums
Jim (Hooke) Pilster - vocals, percussion

Links:
Wikipedia
Original Synthesis album on Wikipedia

Encoded at 320K from CD. Includes all artwork including booklet and tray liner pictures. Zip format.

Download: Synthesis

Friday, January 3, 2014

The Judybats- Native Son (1991)

01 - Native Son
02 - Daylight
03 - Convalescing In Spain
04 - Don't Drop The Baby
05 - She Lives (In A Time Of Her Own)
06 - Incognito
07 - In Like With You
08 - Woman In The Garden
09 - Waiting For The Rain
10 - Counting Sheep
11 - Perfumed Lies
12 - The Wanted Man


Back in the late 80's and early 90's I used to go down to Deep Ellum, a cool alternative area of town in downtown Dallas, Texas to hear lots of great bands. At the time there were lots of great music venues like Club Dada and Club Clearview, just to name a few. One night I got the chance to see The Judybats, a band from Knoxville, Tennessee, at Clearview. They were great! The band was made up of six nerdy, yet hip musicians. Interesting note, the song She Lives (In a Time of Her Own) is a song written by Roky Erickson of the Austin, Texas based 1960's psychedelic rock band The 13th Floor Elevators. If you like early 90's alternative music, you're sure to like The Judybats. Plus, I love their name.

The Band:
Jeff Heiskell - Lead Vocals
Ed Winters - Electric Guitars
Terry Casper - Drums
Peggy Hambright - Keyboards, Violin & Vocals
Timothy Stutz - Electric Bass & Vocals
Johnny Sughrue - Acoustic Guitar & Vocals

Favorite Songs: Don't Drop the Baby, Convalescing in Spain, and Native Son

Links:
Wikipedia
Native Son video on YouTube

Encoded at 320K from CD. Includes all CD artwork and 16 page booklet. Zip format.

Download: The Judybats- Native Son

Starbelly - Lemon Fresh (2000)


1. This Time
2. She's So Real
3. Sunflower
4. Rocketship
5. When Will You See
6. What Will You
7. Widow Sunday
8. Better Than Myself
9. To Be Loved
10. Made of Glass
11. Letters to Mary


A Review by Jason Damas (All Music):
Possibly one of the most appropriately named debut albums in the power pop world, Starbelly's Lemon Fresh is an excellently sweet-and-sour confection of Big Star-influenced guitar pop. Led by guitarist/vocalist Cliff Hillis (also of John Faye Power Trip fame) and bassist/vocalist Dennis Schocket, this collection of 11 tracks written by three songwriters sounds not entirely unlike the legendary Grays release Ro Sham Bo. It's packed with memorable hooks, melodies, and melt-away background vocals. Nearly impeccable production (courtesy of Myracle Brah's Andy Bopp) and a flawless set of songs help make this set truly stand out from other power pop releases, and it is another high-water mark for NotLame. Highlights include the smooth pop of the opening "This Time," the summer single "She's So Real" (a song that should only be listened to on sunny 90 degree days), and the up-tempo, start-stop "When Will You See."

Encoded at 320K from CD. Includes CD artwork. In Zip format.

Download: Starbelly - Lemon Fresh