Quantcast
Channel: Rho-Xs
Viewing all 1571 articles
Browse latest View live

RhoDeo Young 1's 9th

$
0
0
Hello,


Today the 9th episode of an 'historical' 12-episode dramatization of student life in early eighties UK, hooliganism had not made the headlights yet, but dare i say it quickly followed after this series was broadcast. Inspiring clueless chaos ..N'Joy

xxxxx xxxxx xxxxx xxxxx xxxxx

The Young Ones is a British "variety" show, broadcast in the United Kingdom from 1982 to 1984 in two six-part series. Shown on BBC2, it featured anarchic, offbeat humour which helped bring alternative comedy to television in the 1980s and made household names of its writers and performers. In 1985, it was shown on MTV, one of the first non-music television shows on the fledgling channel. In a 2004 poll, it ranked at number 31 in the BBC's list of Britain's Best Sitcoms.

The main characters were four undergraduate students who were sharing a house: aggressive punk Vyvyan (Adrian Edmondson), conceited wannabe anarchist Rick (Rik Mayall), oppressed paranoid hippie Neil (Nigel Planer), and the suave, charming Mike (Christopher Ryan). It also featured Alexei Sayle, who played various members of the Balowski family—most often Jerzei Balowski, the quartet's landlord—and occasional independent characters, such as the train driver in "Bambi" and the Mussolini-lookalike Police Chief in "Cash". Stories were set in a squalid house where the students lived during their time at Scumbag College.

The show combined traditional sitcom style with violent slapstick, non-sequitur plot turns, and surrealism. Every episode except one featured a live performance by a band, including Madness, Motörhead, and The Damned. This was a device used to qualify the series for a larger budget, as "variety" shows attracted higher fees than "comedy"

xxxxx xxxxx xxxxx xxxxx xxxxx

with

Adrian Edmondson - Vyvyan...
Rik Mayall - Rick...
Nigel Planer - Neil
Christopher Ryan - Mike
Alexei Sayle - The Balowski Family...


The Young Ones 09 Nasty (mp4  283mb)

09 Nasty 34:56

A strange package from South Africa interferes with the boys' plans to watch a video nasty on a rented VCR, Mike and Vyvan try to get their video player working as they are plan to watch video nasties, Neil has a bath and Vyvan, Rick, Mike and Neil are terrorized by a vampire. with The Damned performing Nasty

xxxxx xxxxx xxxxx xxxxx xxxxx

Previously

The Young Ones 01 Demolition (mp4  266mb)
The Young Ones 02 Oil (mp4  264mb)
The Young Ones 03 Bored (mp4  284mb)
The Young Ones 04 Bomb (mp4  285mb)
The Young Ones 05 Intresting (mp4  258mb)
The Young Ones 06 Flood (mp4  247mb)
The Young Ones 07 Bambi (mp4  282mb)
The Young Ones 08 Cash (mp4  275mb)

xxxxx xxxxx xxxxx xxxxx xxxxx


RhoDeo 1639 Roots

$
0
0
Hello,  well the debate just ended and Trump managed to ignore every serious question and Clinton failed to pounce him on it. What so many americans see in Trump beats me. Clinton could have scored with him not paying income tax or even his bills. Then his waffling about 5 trillion dollars kept outside the US because of burocracy right that's an euphemism for taxes that these multinationals owe on that cashpile but hey let's give these crooks more is Donald's big idea. I'm no fan of Hillary and she clearly is a person that's inclined to take on too much on her plate. She's like a plate spinner and inevitably some plates will crash but hey you'd rather watch Trump spin the one golden plate with his name on it ?...


The music of Brazil encompasses various regional music styles influenced by African, European and Amerindian forms. After 500 years of history, Brazilian music developed some unique and original styles such as samba, bossa nova, MPB, sertanejo, pagode, tropicalia, choro, maracatu, embolada (coco de repente), mangue bit, funk carioca (in Brazil simply known as Funk), frevo, forró, axé, brega, lambada, and Brazilian versions of foreign musical genres, such as Brazilian rock and rap.


Today an international singing superstar and songwriter, he may have his roots in Brazil, but his songs have touched audiences all over the world. Born in Rio, his adoptve parents, both white, brought him to Tres Pontas, a small town in the state of Minas Gerais, when he was two. He began singing as a teenager. When he was 19, he moved to the capital Belo Horizonte and began singing wherever and whenever he could. Finally he caught a break when the pop singer Elis Regina recorded one of his songs, "Canção do Sal," in 1966. Regina got him a showcase on a popular Brazilian TV program, and after performing at Brazil's International Song Festival the following year, his career was launched. ........N'Joy

xxxxx xxxxx xxxxx xxxxx xxxxx

Milton Nascimento born October 26, 1942, Rio de Janeiro his mother, Maria Nascimento, was a maid. As a baby, Milton Nascimento was adopted by a couple who were his mother's former employers; Josino Brito Campos, a bank employee, mathematics teacher and electronic technician and Lília Silva Campos, a music teacher and choir singer. When he was 18 months old, Nascimento's biological mother died, and he moved with his adopted parents to the city of Três Pontas, in the state of Minas Gerais. Nascimento was an occasional DJ on a radio station that his father once ran. He lived in the boroughs of Laranjeiras and Tijuca in Rio de Janeiro.

In the early stages of his career, Nascimento played in two samba groups, Evolussamba and Sambacana. In 1963, he moved to Belo Horizonte, where his friendship with Lô Borges led to the Clube da Esquina ("corner club") movement. Members included Beto Guedes, Toninho Horta, Wagner Tiso, and Flávio Venturini, with whom he shared compositions and melodies.

Nascimento is famous for his falsetto and tonal range, as well for highly acclaimed songs such as "Maria, Maria", "Canção da América" ("Song from America"/"Unencounter"), "Travessia" ("Bridges"), "Bailes da Vida", and "Coração de Estudante" ("Student's Heart"). The lyrics remember the funeral of the student Edson Luís, killed by police officers in 1968. The song became the hymn for the Diretas Já social-political campaign in 1984, was played at the funeral of the late President of Brazil Tancredo Neves the next year, and was also played at Ayrton Senna's funeral.

In 1972 he collaborated with fellow lyricists Márcio Borges, Fernando Brant, Ronaldo Bastos, and other friends to record Clube da Esquina, a double album that spurred three hit singles, including "Cais (Dock)" and "Cravo é Canela (Clove and Cinnamon)." The singles are still being recorded and have become standards in Brazil over the years. Since he began recording with his self-titled debut in 1967 for the Codil label, Nascimento has written and recorded 28 albums.

O Planeta Blue Na Estrada do SolNascimento's many achievements include Grammy nominations for his O Planeta Blue na Estrada do Sol in 1992, and in 1995 for his Warner Bros. debut, Angelus. Nascimento is also winner of the 1992 Down Beat International Critics' Poll and the 1991 Down Beat Readers' Poll. Nascimento has toured throughout the U.S., Europe, Japan, and Latin America.His lengthy discography includes Courage, a 1969 album for A&M and Milton Nascimento that same year for EMI Odeon; Milton, also for the EMI Odeon label, recorded in 1970, and then four more albums for the label EMI Odeon: Clube da Esquina (1972), Milagre dos Peixes (1973), Milagre dos Peixes (Ao Vivo) (1973), and Minas (1975).

His other titles include Native Dancer (CBS, 1976), Geraes (EMI Odeon, 1976), Milton (A&M, 1977), Clube da Esquina 2 (EMI Odeon, 1978), A Brazilian Love Affair, a collaboration with George Duke (CBS Records, 1980), Journey to Dawn (A&M Records, 1979), and a series of five albums for Ariola: Sentinela (1980), Cacador de Mim (1981), Missa dos Quilombos (1982), Anima (1982), and Milton Nascimento ao Vivo (1983).

His output through the rest of the 1980s and '90s has been steady and reliable, though never musically predictable. Like any true jazz and pop veteran, Nascimento has a deep need to keep challenging himself, vocally, lyrically, and stylistically. Nascimento's other releases include Encontros e Despedidas for Barclay in 1985, Corazon Americano for PolyGram in 1986, A Barca dos Amantes for Barclay in 1986, Milton/RPM for Epic/CBS in 1987, Yauaretê for CBS in 1987, Miltons in 1988 for CBS, Txai for the same label in 1990, and O Planeta Blue na Estrada do Sol for CBS in 1991.

Amigo In the mid-'90s, Nascimento switched to Warner Bros. He released two excellent, readily available albums for the label, Angelus, his 27th recording, in 1995, Amigo in 1996, Nascimento in 1997, and Crooner in 1999. He returned after a short hiatus in 2003 with Pieta, followed by The Essential Collection: The Best of the EMI Odeon Years (1969-78) in 2006.

This charismatic Brazilian superstar just won't slow down any time soon, and whether he's packing a stadium in Brazil or singing at a club in New York, his experienced stage persona allows everyone in the audience to feel as if they're in his living room. On Angelus, he's joined by saxophonist Wayne Shorter, who pays tribute to Nascimento's 1975 Native Dancer LP, the high point of which was the synthesis between Nascimento's voice and Shorter's saxophone. That album helped to solidify Nascimento's place on the international jazz and pop scene in the 1970s. Whatever he writes and sings about, be it the planet, ways of living, and loving and dying, his music has always carried an eternally optimistic spirit. As he entered the millennium, Nascimento won a Grammy for Best Contemporary Pop Album for 1999's Crooner at the first annual Latin Grammy Awards in fall 2000.

xxxxx xxxxx xxxxx xxxxx xxxxx

Geraes was recorded in 1976. At this point, Nascimento had had an experience with fusion in the Som Imaginário, and with jazzers such as Herbie Hancock (who had recorded with him in the previous year's Milton) and Wayne Shorter (Native Dancer). For this album, Nascimento experiments economically with orchestra, trying to recover his roots -- the culture of the Minas Gerais state, whose already strong civilization made possible an expressive Baroque and sacred music in the 17th century. Therefore, the atmosphere here is not as swinging, but it reaches deeper emotional dimensions in some hits, like the bucolic "Fazenda," the religious folkloric "Calix Bento," the Latin "Volver a los 17," the fundamental "O Cio da Terra," and others. The album also has special guest Chico Buarque on his "O Que Será (À Flor da Pele)."



Milton Nascimento - Geraes (flac  254mb)

01 Fazenda 2:40
02 Calix Bento 3:30
03 Volver A Los 17 5:10
04 Menino 2:47
05 O Que Será (À Flor Da Pele) 4:10
06 Carro De Boi 3:40
07 Caldera 4:25
08 Promessas De Sol 5:00
09 Viver De Amor 2:34
10 Lua Girou 3:42
11 Circo Marimbondo 2:55
12 Minas Geraes 5:13

 Milton Nascimento - Geraes   (ogg  107mb)

xxxxx xxxxx xxxxx xxxxx xxxxx

An elaborately produced piece of vinyl, Journey to Dawn was, alas, the result of yet another campaign to prematurely place Nascimento into the U.S. market in a big way. The cosmopolitan tropicalismo movement continued to leave its mark on Nascimento, placing the bossa nova on the back burner and replacing it with an urgency often generated by four-square rock rhythms and electric guitars, percussive sounds from the Brazilian jungle, and some orchestrations from California. Nascimento remains a mesmerizing performer in the studio with his manly baritone and keening falsetto, and there are plenty of memorable compositions -- including the hypnotic "Paula and Bebeto," which harkens a bit back to '60s bossa nova, the fascinating "Maria Tres Filhos," and the "Pablo" suite, which has some of the wild carnival atmosphere within it. Unfortunately, it was all too exotic for American audiences in the disco days (the lack of English-translated lyrics didn't help), so back went Nascimento to merely being a superstar in Brazil.



Milton Nascimento - Journey To Dawn   (flac  205mb)

01 Pablo II, Pablo, Pablo II 4:45
02 Idolatrada 4:41
03 Unencounter 2:49
04 Maria Maria 3:08
05 Journey To Dawn 3:22
06 O Cio Da Terra 3:32
07 Paula & Bebeto 3:27
08 Maria Tres Filhos 2:34
09 Credo 3:37
10 Alouca 3:20

Milton Nascimento - Journey To Dawn   (ogg  85mb)

xxxxx xxxxx xxxxx xxxxx xxxxx

This is a reissue of the original 1980 release, the first for Polygram after Milton Nascimento had left EMI. The album had the fundamental support of the melodic percussion of the Minas Gerais group Uakti, along with the usual robust orchestrations. Nascimento had a hit with "Canção da América," but several songs must be mentioned for their strong melodic qualities, like the folklore-tinged "Peixinhos do Mar,""Sueño Con Serpientes" (with Mercedes Sosa), Villa-Lobos'"Cantiga," and "Sentinela" (with singer Nana Caymmi showcasing her strong, personal voice timbre similar to Nascimento's, which serves wonderfully to convey the idea of religious devotion).



Milton Nascimento - Sentinela   (flac 240mb)

01 O Velho 0:36
02 Peixinhos Do Mar 3:34
03 Tudo 4:03
04 Canção Da América 3:52
05 Sueño Con Serpientes 4:41
06 Roupa Nova 2:58
07 Povo Da Raça Brasil 0:20
08 Sentinela 7:30
09 Cantiga (Caicó) Tema Folclórico 2:58
10 Bicho Homem 1:30
11 Itamarandiba 3:12
12 Um Cafuné Na Cabeça, Malandro, Eu Quero Até De Macaco 3:39
13 Peixinhos Do Mar 0:20

Milton Nascimento - Sentinela     (ogg 92mb)

xxxxx xxxxx xxxxx xxxxx xxxxx

By the mid-'80s, PolyGram decided that the time had come for Milton Nascimento to become a big North American star -- indeed, he had not even performed in America at all until 1985 -- so they took his then-current release from its Brazilian affiliate and gave it a full-court press. The vehicle is a fairly uneven record for Nascimento, one heavily decorated by Wagner Tiso's digital synthesizers, loaded with Nascimento's exhortations for brotherhood and happiness yet not that well-stocked with memorable tunes. Nascimento takes on apartheid on "Lagrima Do Sul" with the help of Uakti's collection of exotic marimbas, and in one guilelessly autobiographical song, "Quem Perguntou Por Mim" ("Who Asked for Me"), he even acknowledges his role as Brazil's voice to the world. The moody instrumental "Vidro e Corte" finds Pat Metheny -- a longtime admirer of Nascimento -- taking the lead, but "Raca," with Steve Slagle's lightweight alto up front, is clearly aimed at American fuzak tastes. Although not one of Nascimento's best, the album did establish a foothold for him at last beyond the obscure import racks in North America and he has remained a presence there ever since. [The CD version contains an extra track.]



Nascimento - Encontros e Despedidas (flac 222mb)

01 Portal Da Cor (Threshold Of Colours) 4:09
02 Caso De Amor (Love Affair) 3:20
03 Noites Do Sertão (Country Nights) 2:34
04 Mar Do Nosso Amor (Sea Of Our Love) 3:21
05 Lágrimas Do Sul (Southern Tear) 3:40
06 Raça (Race) 2:49
07 Para Eu Parar De Me Doer (So I Can Stop Feeling Hurt) 3:03
08 Encontros E Despedidas (Meetings And Farewells) 3:35
09 Quem Perguntou Por Mim (Who Asked For Me) 3:52
10 A Primeira Estrela (The Morning Star) 5:02
11 Vidro E Corte (Glass And Cut) 4:40
12 Radio Experiência (Radio Experience) 2:45

Nascimento - Encontros e Despedidas  (ogg  107mb)

xxxxx xxxxx xxxxx xxxxx xxxxx

RhoDeo 1639 Aetix

$
0
0
Hello,

Today's artists are an an English ska band led by frontman Buster Bloodvessel. They were at their most popular during the early 1980s, during a period when other ska revival bands such as Madness, The Specials and The Selecter filled the charts. They spent 111 weeks in the UK Singles Chart between 1980 and 1983, and they also achieved chart success with their first four studio albums ....N'Joy

xxxxx xxxxx xxxxx xxxxx xxxxx

Fronted by Buster Bloodvessel (born Douglas Trendle), the band was formed in 1976 while the members were together at Woodberry Down Comprehensive School near Manor House, North London. They commemorated the 1981 closure of the school on the back sleeve of their Gosh It's... The band, composed of vocalist Buster Bloodvessel (born Douglas Trendle), Louis Cook (guitar), David Farren (bass), Martin Stewart (keyboards), Brian Tuitti (drums), Gus Herman (trumpet), Chris Kane (saxophone), and Andrew Marson (saxophone), were one of the many bands to take their inspiration from the Specials and the ska revival movement in England in the late '70s.

After becoming popular in their native London, Bad Manners signed to Magnet Records in 1980, and became regular guests on television shows such as Tiswas. The band also appeared on The British Music Awards (1981) and Cheggers Plays Pop. In 1985, they also appeared on The Time of Your Life, hosted by Noel Edmonds. Being closely associated with the 2 Tone movement (though never signed to 2 Tone Records itself), they were one of six bands featured in the 1981 documentary film Dance Craze.

Some of their more notable hits include "My Girl Lollipop", "Lip Up Fatty", "Can Can", "Special Brew" and "Walking In The Sunshine". One of the main reasons for their notoriety, was their outlandish huge-tongued and shaven-headed frontman, Buster Bloodvessel. His manic exploits got them banned from the British BBC TV chart show Top of the Pops.[3] The band was also banned from Italian TV after Bloodvessel mooned a concert audience, after being told that the Pope was watching on TV.

Bad Manners left Magnet Records in 1983, and Telstar Records released a compilation album, The Height of Bad Manners, which reached number 23 in the UK Albums Chart. The album was assisted with a television advertisement promotion, and it brought the band back to the attention of the media and the British public - but no further chart hits.

The group then went on to sign a contract with Portrait Records in the United States and Mental Notes was released in 1985. For two years the band toured continuously all over the world but decided to disband in 1987.

Buster reformed the band with original members Louis Alphonso, Martin Stewart and Winston Bazoomies. Another original member, Chris Kane, also remained in the band, but left in 1990. In 1988, the band licensed the name and logo of Blue Beat Records, and set up office in a 50 ft barge in the back garden of Buster's former home in Spring Hill, London. After Blue Beat closed in 1990, Bad Manners were without a recording contract, but still continued to tour. In 1992, they signed a deal with Pork Pie Records and Fat Sound was released in Europe. The album was initially intended to be released in the UK on Blue Beat.

In 1996, Buster Bloodvessel moved to Margate, and opened a hotel on the seafront called Fatty Towers, which catered for people with huge appetites. While living in Margate, he was a regular spectator at Margate F.C., and Bad Manners sponsored the club for one season. Fatty Towers closed in 1998 and did not re-open despite a facelift. After its closure, he moved back to London. Bad Manners released Heavy Petting on Moon Ska Records in the United States in 1997. Six years later, Buster set up another record label and the band released Stupidity on Bad Records in 2003.

The band are currently in their 40th anniversary year, and can still be seen out touring regularly across the UK.

xxxxx xxxxx xxxxx xxxxx xxxxx

The Manners paint their visions of cats,monsters,woolly textures etc from a far richer palette.The brass section on this peice is also superb.If John Coltrane was a skinhead into ska he would have begged to join Bad Manners.Buster Bloodvessel is the ska Biggy Smalls except unlike that fat naughty legend this one still has blood pumping through him.Mind you he has a similiar sense of fun but not quite as many tunes about crack.Ska n B is Van Goff for the ear.



Bad Manners - Ska 'N' B   (flac  366mb)

01 Ne-Ne Na-Na Na-Na Nu-Nu 2:30
02 Here Comes The Major 2:53
03 Fatty Fatty 2:46
04 King Ska/Fa 4:43
05 Monster Mash 3:00
06 Caledonia 2:58
07 Magnificent 7 2:32
08 Wooly Bully 3:09
09 Lip Up Fatty 2:46
10 Special Brew 3:36
11 Inner London Violence 3:59
12 Scruffy The Huffy Chuffy Tug Boat 1:39
13 Holidays 2:12
14 Night Bus To Dalston (Instrumental Version) 2:18
15 Lip Up Fatty (12" Extended Mix) 4:42
16 Special Brew (Single Version) 3:19
17 Ivor The Engine 2:27

Bad Manners - Ska 'N' B  (ogg  135mb)

xxxxx xxxxx xxxxx xxxxx xxxxx

Bad Manners' sophomore release pretty much follows the blueprint of their debut release Ska'n'B, in that it's fun original pop ska, with a few cover tunes and boisterous instrumentals. The remastered sound is awesome and 2 bonus tracks not on the original LP, have been aded. Wonderful, cheerful driving music.



Bad Manners - Loonee Tunes!   (flac 289mb)

01 Echo Four-Two 2:43
02 Just A Feeling 3:13
03 El Pussycat 2:30
04 Doris 2:48
05 Spy I 4:05
06 Tequila 2:12
07 Lorraine 3:15
08 Echo Gone Wrong 4:21
09 Suicide 3:04
10 The Undersea Adventures Of Ivor The Engine 2:25
11 Back In '60 2:34
12 Just Pretendin' 3:05
Bonus
13 Lorraine (Extended 12" Version) 6:20
14 Here Comes The Major (New Version) 3:23

Bad Manners - Loonee Tunes!   (ogg  111mb)

xxxxx xxxxx xxxxx xxxxx xxxxx

Digitally re-mastered and expanded edition of the British Ska band's 1981 album including bonus tracks. This, their third album overall, was the bands' most successful full-length, reaching #18 in the UK charts. The album contains a fascinating mixture of styles, from the quality writing & musicianship of songs such as "Walking in the Sunshine"& "Casablanca" to the experimental, slightly leftfield "Gherkin", to the great fun tracks like "Can Can"& "Ben E. Wriggle". What you get is an amazingly diverse record that should have sold by the bucket load. BM were always perceived as a singles band, although this was the bands most successful record, it only peaked at 18 in the UK album charts. So if a fan of ska, then this album is an integral part of that scene. Amongst the six bonus tracks is the #34 hit single 'Buona Sera' plus many rare, previously non-LP B-sides making their debut on this album.



Bad Manners - Gosh It's (flac 401mb)

01 Walking In The Sunshine 3:26
02 Dansetta 3:53
03 Can Can 2:55
04 Weeping And Wailing 3:37
05 Casablanca (Rags And Riches) 4:48
06 Don't Be Angry 2:30
07 Ben E. Wriggle 3:48
08 Runaway 3:06
09 Never Will Change 3:04
10 Only Funkin' 3:32
11 End Of The World 2:57
12 Gherkin 4:36
Bonus
13 Armchair Disco 3;12
14 Night Bus To Dalston (Vocal Version)2:14
15 Buona Sera2:50
16 The New One 1:05
17 No Respect 1:58
18 Walking In The Sunshine (Ext 12" Version) 5:33

Bad Manners - Gosh It's (ogg  141mb)

xxxxx xxxxx xxxxx xxxxx xxxxx

Forging Ahead shows the band in peak form for the last time as the ska-revival was losing momentum. Includes the hit cover of Millie's (retitled) classic "My Girl Lollipop." Bad Manners were the pioneers of Ska/New wave/Zaniness and probably a few other categories that I missed. For fun, you can't beat this puppy! The Cossack-sounding That Will Do Nicely opens up the album, with the fun & echoey Salad Bar next. Tonight is Your Night is a great sing along while Sampson & Delilah & Exodus are great!My Girl Lollipop might have been done before, and recived the radio play, but remains my favorite, none-the-less.The Cd then goes into some hummable tracks, including the nutty remake of Van Morrisons Whats Up Crazy Pup! It may seem to you like I reviewed just about every song, and you'd be right! It's just that good. Listen to it yourself !



Bad Manners - Forging Ahead (flac 453mb)

01 That'll Do Nicely 2:52
02 Salad Bar 2:51
03 Tonight Is Your Night 3:25
04 Samson and Delilah 5:18
05 Exodus 2:45
06 Got No Brains 3:48
07 My Girl Lollipop 4:59
08 Falling Out of Love 3:23
09 Seventh Heaven 3:28
10 Educating Marmalade 3:16
11 What's up Crazy Pup 1:56
12 Your 3:49

Bad Manners - Forging Ahead   (ogg  99mb)

xxxxx xxxxx xxxxx xxxxx xxxxx


RhoDeo 1639 Grooves

$
0
0
Hello,  there was just 1 re-up request yesterday hence no re-up posting, meanwhile there's 5 so next week...  I admit i'm not interested in going to Mars but a holiday on the moon...

Today's artists are a much-derided group that never got their props.  Aside from New Order, they are the one group most responsible for the way we hear today's house records. Were they they alone in their time? No, but they solidified a pattern of beats and electronic sounds into a harder edged and more soulful version of HiNRG. Their kick drums are probably the only ones from the period (apart from New Order and a few Giorgio Moroder records that preceded them) that will endanger the foundation of your home. And like the aforementioned Moroder, Denis LePage's composition seamlessly made the hoky electronic ponderances of Kratwerk into something truly symphonic in nature. Their sound may be a little stuck in it's time on the majority of their records, but at their best those records sing.. ..... N'joy

xxxxx xxxxx xxxxx xxxxx xxxxx

Lime was a Canadian synth music outfit from Montreal, Quebec. The group was composed of husband and wife Denis and Denyse LePage. Very early in their career, the group released an instrumental 12" single vinyl record called "The Break" under the name Kat Mandu. The single was successful and peaked at number three on the disco chart.[2] Singer Denyse also wrote and sang on the record "Dancin' the Night Away" by Voggue. In between the Kat Mandu project, the LePages also helped produced and arranged music for numerous studio projects, notably for acts signed to Prelude Records.

Lime released their debut album (Your Love) in 1981. The title track became a #1 dance hit in the US. "You're My Magician" was also a big dance hit in the US. "Your Love" was featured in the 1982 movie Summer Lovers.1982 saw the release of Lime's second album (Lime II) and the release of one of Lime's best known hits, "Babe We're Gonna Love Tonight". In 1983 Lime released Lime 3, and the album gave us the hits "Guilty" and "Angel Eyes".

1984, Lime released Sensual Sensation, and the single "My Love" was a minor hit, but not as successful as prior hits. Lime's next album was Unexpected Lovers and the title track was another big hit. 1986's release (Take The Love) gave Lime two more chart hits, "Gold Digger" and "Cutie Pie". After Lime's fame in the early to mid 1980s, Problems between Denis and Denyse started to rise, and they separated in 1989 , Denis and Denyse still worked together until 1996.

Lime continued to release albums through 2002, but their next 4 CDs: A Brand New Day (88), Caroline (91), The Stillness of the Night (98), Love Fury (02), failed to have any hit singles. The band faded from popularity in the 1990s, and Denis LePage signed over his half rights to classic Lime royalties before releasing a new album, Love Fury, in 2002. After Denyse LePage had left him Denis LePage teamed up with several vocalists (Amber Star Chaboyer, Benedict Ouiment, Chubby Tavares, Julie Courchesne, Marie-Piere Vaillancourt, and Mary Lassard) for the final Lime project.

Two younger singers, Joy Dorris and Chris Marsh, were chosen to tour and appear as Lime. Later, Rob Hubertz would replace Chris Marsh. Joy Dorris and Rob Hubertz continue to perform today. Denis LePage from the original Lime has come out as transgender. She now releases records as Nini No Bless.



xxxxx xxxxx xxxxx xxxxx xxxxx

Critics of Euro-dance music tend to dismiss its artists as faceless, but Denis and Denyse LePage -- collectively the Canadian Hi-NRG duo Lime -- are hardly faceless and certainly deserve credit for being recognizable. While Denis LePage brings a gruff, rock-like vocal style to Lime's Euro-dance grooves, Denyse LePage tends to sing in a high voice and sounds more R&B-influenced. Put them together and you have an appealing combination. Lime never became pop/Top 40 superstars in the U.S., but in dance clubs that played a lot of Hi-NRG, the male/female duo commanded much respect in the 1980s. One of the Lime LPs that club DJs were quick to notice was Unexpected Lovers, which came out on the Matra label in Canada but was released by TSR in the U.S. The haunting title song was a huge club hit, and while the rest of the album falls short of the title song's excellence, it's generally enjoyable -- those who appreciate Euro-dance grooves will easily get into cuts like "I'm Falling in Love,""Say You Love Me," and "My Lovely Angel." Meanwhile, "Do Your Time on the Planet" combines the Euro-beat with synth-funk, and the instrumental "Are You Being Untrue Tonight" isn't unlike something Giorgio Moroder would have produced. For Hi-NRG enthusiasts, Unexpected Lovers is worth searching for



Lime - Unexpected Lovers    (flac  306mb)

01 Do You Time On The Planet 6:10
02 Profile Of Love 4:48
03 Are You Being Untrue Tonight 4:48
04 Alive And Well 4:45
05 Say You Love Me 5:36
06 My Lovely Angel 5:35
07 Unexpected Lovers 6:20
08 I'm Falling In Love 4:26

Lime - Unexpected Lovers  (ogg   106mb)

xxxxx xxxxx xxxxx xxxxx xxxxx

Great album,. great tunes specially Cutie Pie and Gold digger will move your ass..



Lime - Take The Love  (flac  505mb)

01 Take The Love 5:39
02 Cutie Pie 5:46
03 Irresistible Woman 4:28
04 Do You Like To Love 5:05
05 Gold Digger (U.S. Remix) 7:53
06 Did You See That Girl (Remix) 6:47
07 Come On Everybody 4:27
08 Did You See That Girl 6:50
09 Gold Digger 5:08
10 Dry Up 6:44
11 Gold Digger (Remix) 7:43
12 Cutie Pie (Remix) 5:16
13 Take The Love (Radio Edit) 3:24

Lime - Take The Love (ogg  183mb)

xxxxx xxxxx xxxxx xxxxx xxxxx

Lime's sound is as solid as ever. As seen in "Brand new day and Closer to you". "Sentimentally yours" was a nice find but "Please say you will" an out of the box hit. This collection adds to the ever growing list of great hits from this great energy dance duo.



Lime - A Brand New Day  (flac 506mb)

01 Please Say You Will (Be My Baby) (Remix) 6:04
02 Making Up My Mind About You 5:55
03 Bottoms Up 5:36
04 What You Waiting For 5:22
05 Closer To You 5:50
06 Sentimentally Yours 5:03
07 A Brand New Day 5:43
08 Please Say You Will (Be My Baby) (Extended Remix) 8:08
09 A Brand New Day (12'' Remix) 7:24
10 Sentimentally Yours (Club Mix) 7:46
11 Please Say You Will (Be My Baby) (Inst.) 5:50
12 Please Say You Will (Be My Baby) (Radio Edit) 4:10

Lime - A Brand New Day (ogg  190mb)

xxxxx xxxxx xxxxx xxxxx xxxxx

Anyone who loves Lime will enjoy this album. The only weak track on the disc is "Hot Dancer." Otherwise, the songs are up to Lime's incredibly high standards. "Caroline" and "Take My Heart Away" are outstanding! We miss you, Denis & Denyse!



Lime - Caroline  (flac 436mb)

01 It's Gonna Be Allright 5:32
02 My Love 5:27
03 Don't You Wanna Do It 6:03
04 Sensual Sensation 6:00
05 Take It Up 5:16
06 I Don't Wanna Lose You 5:58
07 Extrasensory Perception 4:59
08 The Party's Over 6:37
09 I Don't Wanna Lose You (Club Mix) 7:34
10 Take It Up (Mark Kamins Remix) 6:17
11 My Love (Mark Kamins Remix) 5:42
12 My Love (Radio Edit) 4:20
13 I Don't Wanna Lose You (Radio Edit) 4:09

Lime - Caroline (ogg  157mb)

xxxxx xxxxx xxxxx xxxxx xxxxx

Sundaze 1640

$
0
0
Hello, F1 news, looks like it's Hamilton's race to loose qualifying 4 tenths in front, behind him Rosberg leads the Red Bull and Ferraris all within 4 tenths, i'm sure the start will mix things up as Ferrari is firy... and Hamilton and Verstappen's starts haven't been that reliable, mistakes will be costly....


More from Extreme....today's artist is an Australian-born composer and producer, he is among the most focused and prolific artists of the contemporary experimental electronic scene. Releasing album after album of sprawling, icy, often difficult ambient and electro-acoustic music, his work has most often been grouped with post-industrial ambient/isolationist artists ... N'Joy

xxxxx xxxxx xxxxx xxxxx xxxxx

Schütze was born in Melbourne, Australia. He spent his childhood painting and drawing but left Caulfield Institute after only two months of an Arts Foundation Course to work in a factory. There he earned the money to buy his first electronic musical equipment. In 1979 he spend several months travelling and ended up in London where he immersed himself in concerts, museums and galleries. Returning to Melbourne he formed seminal improvising group Laughing Hands with Gordon Harvey, Ian Russell and Paul Widdicombe. The group existed in several forms until disbanding in 1982.

Schütze spent the next decade writing scores for films. His first feature soundtrack, The Tale of Ruby Rose (1987), won the Australian Film Institute Award for Best original Music Score. During this period Schütze lectured on film sound at both Swinburne Institute and AFTRS and worked as a film critic both in print and on national radio. In collaboration with Michael Trudgeon, Anthony Kitchener and Dominic Lowe Schütze curated and featured in Deus Ex Machina, an ambitious exhibition/ publication at Monash University in 1989. This was to be his first sound installation and subsequently his first solo album.

In 1992 Schütze re-located to London during a period of particular fertility in the independent music scene and released nearly thirty albums of original works over the next decade. Schütze contributed writings to The Wire, and performed his music in Europe, Scandinavia and Japan often with regular collaborator Simon Hopkins. In 1996 he formed improvising super-group Phantom City with Bill Laswell, Raoul Björkenheim, Dirk Wachtelaer at its core and Alex Buess, Toshinori Kondo, Lol Coxhill and Jah Wobble as guest collaborators.

In 2000 Schütze was invited to exhibit in Sonic Boom at the Hayward Gallery London by curator David Toop. The same year he received a large commission for a permanent installation work for Cap Gemini and a second for a massive twenty-two screen audio/video work at the Gasometer in Oberhausen, Germany. He also contributed a sound work to James Turrell’s Eclipse event/publication in Cornwall.

In 2002 Schütze began working with Alan Cristea Gallery London. In 2003 his first solo show Vertical Memory opened at ACG. The show included prints, video, sound and a huge wall work in which the whole of Alain Robbe-Grillet’s novel Topology of A Phantom City was rendered as a continuous plane of silver text. In 2004, Stiftelsen 314 in Bergen, Norway mounted his solo show Garden of Instruments. This was the next stage in a large scale project that began in 1997 with the release of Schutze’s spoken architectural opera Second Site and continued with a series of lightboxes for ACG also in 2004. This project which is still ongoing now has its own site.

In 2006 Schütze began to work with Galleria Estiarte in Madrid showing prints, videos and lightboxes. His work is also shown at the Alan Cristea Gallery in London. Following Schütze‘s two residencies at Cité des Arts in Paris making photographs, a solo show of photography – Twilight Science – opened in London at Alan Cristea Gallery in May 2008. An ongoing commission (initiated in 1999) to make a sound work for James Turrell’s Roden Crater has involved several research trips and has now been completed as a five-hour installation piece in Dolby Surround. In 2011 Schütze launched www.dressingtheair.com an open access online platform for multisensory creativity.

xxxxx xxxxx xxxxx xxxxx xxxxx

The title of this album might erroneously suggest something heavy, abrasive and industrial, but The Rapture of Metals is in part an elegant homage to the metallic gongs of the Indonesian gamelan orchestra. The title track is the most overtly Indonesian, with electronic drones and effects enhancing a traditional gamelan gong pattern. But on several other tracks, Schütze further personalizes his use of gongs, capturing the dreamy, otherworldly quality of Indonesian court music not just by "Westernizing" Indonesian motifs but by blending gamelan sounds and scales with his own rather haunting musical vision. Elsewhere on the album, Schütze utilizes keyboard synthesizers and sophisticated electronic processing to create thick, ambivalent atmospheres which explore the boundaries between madness and ecstasy. "The Rapture of Drowning" has a viscous, aquatic texture and bursts of nightmarish discord, but nonetheless suggests a transcendent experience of some sort. And the final 20-minute piece, "Sites of Rapture on the Lungs of God," is a series of elongated musical inhalations and exhalations, comprised of cathedral organ chords, sonorous drones, intriguing dissonances and various strange electronic treatments which add another level of dislocation to the music.




Paul Schutze - New Maps of Hell II,The Rapture of Metals   (flac  275mb)

01 The Rapture Of Concealment7:30
02 Rapture Of The Drowning 9:16
03 The Rapture Of Ornament 6:00
04 The Rapture Of Metals 7:02
05 Rapture Of Skin 11:15
06 Sites Of Rapture On The Lungs Of God 21:16

Paul Schutze - New Maps of Hell II,The Rapture of Metals    (ogg  128mb)

xxxxx xxxxx xxxxx xxxxx xxxxx

This is the third album in a Schütze trilogy which began with 1992's New Maps of Hell and continued with The Rapture of Metals; this final chapter is a certified masterpiece. Schütze, who plays keyboards and also supplies various inventive electronic treatments (tapes, digital sampling, etc.) has something of a signature sound, but he seldom repeats himself to the extent that you think you're hearing the same ol' thing. In the two earlier albums in the trilogy, echoes of the Miles Davis electric funk emerged from time to time as an influence, along with touches of Jon Hassell and vintage Weather Report. But on this CD, connections with the electric Davis of the 1970s are much more blatant. There's no trumpet, but Julian Priester's trombone supplies an occasional approximation, and the formidable guest list also includes Bill Laswell on bass, Lol Coxhill on soprano sax, Alex Buess on bass clarinet and Raoul Bjorkenheim on noisemetal guitars. And then there's the drumming. Dirk Wachtelaer's dominant cymbal and snare work is either very closely miked, or treated (or both), but regardless, it is frequently brutal-slamming, crashing, in-your-face confrontational. Throw in some serious guitar shredding by Bjorkenheim (Finnish guitarists seem to have a talent for this sort of thing), and inspired electronic moans and howls supplied by Schütze, and you've got music that can grab you by the lapels and toss you into next week, and then turn around and drop almost instantly to an insidious, nightmarish whisper. It almost seemed as if it would never happen, but Schütze's music on this album finally picks up where Davis left off in the mid-'70s. And while Davis and his edgy jazz funk still sounds good twenty years on, Schütze sounds even better. A major rush, and a major recording.



Paul Schutze  + Phantom City - Site Anubis  (flac  428mb)

01 Future Nights 12:23
02 An Early Mutation 7:24
03 Blue Like Petrol 7:08
04 The Big God Blows In 7:04
05 Ten Acre Ghost 6:30
06 Eight Legs Out Of Limbo 12:34
07 Inflammable Shadow (AKA Vermillion Sands II) 6:27

Paul Schutze  + Phantom City - Site Anubis    (ogg  142mb)

xxxxx xxxxx xxxxx xxxxx xxxxx

This double album from Schütze maintains the high standards of previous releases, with one disc tending toward a kind of delicate techno jazz, and the other moving into a twilight ambient world of slow-motion musical gestures and elusive melodic fragments. Schütze's prior experience as a film composer serves him well; he is a master at creating moods, and rather exceptional in his use of musical resources, refusing to limit himself to a particular instrumental palette or style. On the more ambient disc of the two, one of the four pieces is firmly in the Brian Eno/Steve Roach mode (and as lovely as anything produced by those two artists), while another piece is much closer to the industrial genre, with an austere combination of both organic and machine-like drones, and delicate, random chime tones with occasional clicking sounds. The best track on this disc, though, invokes contemporary classical composer Morton Feldman in its glacially evolving chorus of atonal horns, sounding like some obscure and subtle ritual of an advanced, post-industrial culture. The first disc contains similar treasures, with several pieces featuring vibraphones (a favorite Schütze timbre), delicate brush work on cymbals, and a gently rhythmic bassline. The result is a delicate, drifting chamber jazz which both soothes and charms with its quiet sense of mystery.



Paul Schutze - Apart (flac  348mb)

01 Rivers of Mercury (6:47)
02 A Skin of Air & Tears (6:16)
03 The Sleeping Knife Dance (4:47)
04 Visions of a Sand Drinker (4:53)
05 The Coldest Light (4:06)
06 Eyeless & Naked (4:58)
07 The Ghosts of Animals (4:46)
08 Taken (Apart) (3:06)
09 Consequence (4:30)
10 The Memory of Water Pt II (6:12)
Disc 2
11 Throat Full of Stars (5:52)
12 Sleep I (14:27)
13 Sleep II (8:27)
14 Sleep III (18:47)

Paul Schutze - Apart    (ogg 195mb)

xxxxx xxxxx xxxxx xxxxx xxxxx

Paul Schutze has been steadily amassing a large and significant body of work for nearly two decades now. His embracing of differing genres and sub-categories of contemporary electronica and experimental music has seen him adapt proto-jazz fusion, ethnic constructs, minimalism and austere ambient modes. Green Evil is a collection of works spanning over fourteen years; some rescued from Schutze's personal archives, others from obscure compilations.
This regrouping of material reveals Schutze as a master sound artisan, concerned with the merits of sound as ambient architecture ("The Memory of Water,""Always Past"), recombinant gamelan ("Revered Cigarette"), techno-tribalism ("Dead Hearts"), hazy beat music ("Flooded Island"), or with explorations into the machinations of the sampler on "Hallucinations." Schutze's facility for category shapeshifting and the ease with which he manipulates sound is nothing short of spellbinding. A broad cross-section of his aural ideas, Green Evil is a fine showcase for these masterful sound paintings.



Paul Schutze - Green Evil  (flac  338mb)

01 The Memory Of Water 5:04
02 Revered Cigarette 4:27
03 Dead Hearts 6:08
04 The Left Remembers 6:13
05 Always Past 4:21
06 Two Mirrors Facing 3:36
07 Seribo Aso 7:50
08 Flooded Island 2:37
09 Hallucinations 8:18
10 The Heart That Fades 5:35
11 Green Evil 5:32.

Paul Schutze - Green Evil    (ogg  142mb)

xxxxx xxxxx xxxxx xxxxx xxxxx

RhoDeo 16440 Young 1's 10th

$
0
0
Hello, an exiting F1 race today, the wrong man won as it was Verstappen that drove Hamilton to blow up his motor as in contrast to Ricciardo he was gaining time on him and he was now well within the pitstop 24sec window Hamilton still needed to make. For incomprehensible reasons Red Bull didn't order Ricciardo aside and make way for Verstappen who was racing Hamlton, instead they told him to race (block infact). Then Verstappen made a mistake he should have stayed out during the virtual safetycar,  Ricciardo had to change and would be back 23sec with 15 laps to go, the rest was way back, Verstappen would have held and if not he'd be second where he ended up now. Looks well orchestrated by Red Bull this Ricciardo win. Meanwhile Rosberg had a great race, getting tossed by Vettel he ended up last at the start but decisively rode to third, big 15 points payday for him.


Today the 10th episode of an 'historical' 12-episode dramatization of student life in early eighties UK, hooliganism had not made the headlights yet, but dare i say it quickly followed after this series was broadcast. Inspiring clueless chaos ..N'Joy

xxxxx xxxxx xxxxx xxxxx xxxxx

The Young Ones is a British "variety" show, broadcast in the United Kingdom from 1982 to 1984 in two six-part series. Shown on BBC2, it featured anarchic, offbeat humour which helped bring alternative comedy to television in the 1980s and made household names of its writers and performers. In 1985, it was shown on MTV, one of the first non-music television shows on the fledgling channel. In a 2004 poll, it ranked at number 31 in the BBC's list of Britain's Best Sitcoms.

The main characters were four undergraduate students who were sharing a house: aggressive punk Vyvyan (Adrian Edmondson), conceited wannabe anarchist Rick (Rik Mayall), oppressed paranoid hippie Neil (Nigel Planer), and the suave, charming Mike (Christopher Ryan). It also featured Alexei Sayle, who played various members of the Balowski family—most often Jerzei Balowski, the quartet's landlord—and occasional independent characters, such as the train driver in "Bambi" and the Mussolini-lookalike Police Chief in "Cash".
Stories were set in a squalid house where the students lived during their time at Scumbag College.

The show combined traditional sitcom style with violent slapstick, non-sequitur plot turns, and surrealism. Every episode except one featured a live performance by a band, including Madness, Motörhead, and The Damned. This was a device used to qualify the series for a larger budget, as "variety" shows attracted higher fees than "comedy"

xxxxx xxxxx xxxxx xxxxx xxxxx

with

Adrian Edmondson - Vyvyan...
Rik Mayall - Rick...
Nigel Planer - Neil
Christopher Ryan - Mike
Alexei Sayle - The Balowski Family...


The Young Ones 10 Time (mp4  278mb)

10 Time 34:09

After having a dream that himself, Rick, Vyvan, Mike and Mr. Bolowski are in the American television program "Dallas", Neil awakes and finds Rick has been sleeping with a Axe murderess, and the house passes through a time warp. with Amazulu performing Moonlight Romance

xxxxx xxxxx xxxxx xxxxx xxxxx

Previously

The Young Ones 01 Demolition (mp4  266mb)
The Young Ones 02 Oil (mp4  264mb)
The Young Ones 03 Bored (mp4  284mb)
The Young Ones 04 Bomb (mp4  285mb)
The Young Ones 05 Intresting (mp4  258mb)
The Young Ones 06 Flood (mp4  247mb)
The Young Ones 07 Bambi (mp4  282mb)
The Young Ones 08 Cash (mp4  275mb)
The Young Ones 09 Nasty (mp4  283mb)

xxxxx xxxxx xxxxx xxxxx xxxxx

RhoDeo 1640 Roots

$
0
0
Hello,

The music of Brazil encompasses various regional music styles influenced by African, European and Amerindian forms. After 500 years of history, Brazilian music developed some unique and original styles such as samba, bossa nova, MPB, sertanejo, pagode, tropicalia, choro, maracatu, embolada (coco de repente), mangue bit, funk carioca (in Brazil simply known as Funk), frevo, forró, axé, brega, lambada, and Brazilian versions of foreign musical genres, such as Brazilian rock and rap.


Today an international singing superstar and songwriter, he may have his roots in Brazil, but his songs have touched audiences all over the world. Born in Rio, his adoptve parents, both white, brought him to Tres Pontas, a small town in the state of Minas Gerais, when he was two. He began singing as a teenager. When he was 19, he moved to the capital Belo Horizonte and began singing wherever and whenever he could. Finally he caught a break when the pop singer Elis Regina recorded one of his songs, "Canção do Sal," in 1966. Regina got him a showcase on a popular Brazilian TV program, and after performing at Brazil's International Song Festival the following year, his career was launched. ........N'Joy

xxxxx xxxxx xxxxx xxxxx xxxxx

Milton Nascimento born October 26, 1942, Rio de Janeiro his mother, Maria Nascimento, was a maid. As a baby, Milton Nascimento was adopted by a couple who were his mother's former employers; Josino Brito Campos, a bank employee, mathematics teacher and electronic technician and Lília Silva Campos, a music teacher and choir singer. When he was 18 months old, Nascimento's biological mother died, and he moved with his adopted parents to the city of Três Pontas, in the state of Minas Gerais. Nascimento was an occasional DJ on a radio station that his father once ran. He lived in the boroughs of Laranjeiras and Tijuca in Rio de Janeiro.

In the early stages of his career, Nascimento played in two samba groups, Evolussamba and Sambacana. In 1963, he moved to Belo Horizonte, where his friendship with Lô Borges led to the Clube da Esquina ("corner club") movement. Members included Beto Guedes, Toninho Horta, Wagner Tiso, and Flávio Venturini, with whom he shared compositions and melodies.

Nascimento is famous for his falsetto and tonal range, as well for highly acclaimed songs such as "Maria, Maria", "Canção da América" ("Song from America"/"Unencounter"), "Travessia" ("Bridges"), "Bailes da Vida", and "Coração de Estudante" ("Student's Heart"). The lyrics remember the funeral of the student Edson Luís, killed by police officers in 1968. The song became the hymn for the Diretas Já social-political campaign in 1984, was played at the funeral of the late President of Brazil Tancredo Neves the next year, and was also played at Ayrton Senna's funeral.

In 1972 he collaborated with fellow lyricists Márcio Borges, Fernando Brant, Ronaldo Bastos, and other friends to record Clube da Esquina, a double album that spurred three hit singles, including "Cais (Dock)" and "Cravo é Canela (Clove and Cinnamon)." The singles are still being recorded and have become standards in Brazil over the years. Since he began recording with his self-titled debut in 1967 for the Codil label, Nascimento has written and recorded 28 albums.

O Planeta Blue Na Estrada do SolNascimento's many achievements include Grammy nominations for his O Planeta Blue na Estrada do Sol in 1992, and in 1995 for his Warner Bros. debut, Angelus. Nascimento is also winner of the 1992 Down Beat International Critics' Poll and the 1991 Down Beat Readers' Poll. Nascimento has toured throughout the U.S., Europe, Japan, and Latin America.His lengthy discography includes Courage, a 1969 album for A&M and Milton Nascimento that same year for EMI Odeon; Milton, also for the EMI Odeon label, recorded in 1970, and then four more albums for the label EMI Odeon: Clube da Esquina (1972), Milagre dos Peixes (1973), Milagre dos Peixes (Ao Vivo) (1973), and Minas (1975).

His other titles include Native Dancer (CBS, 1976), Geraes (EMI Odeon, 1976), Milton (A&M, 1977), Clube da Esquina 2 (EMI Odeon, 1978), A Brazilian Love Affair, a collaboration with George Duke (CBS Records, 1980), Journey to Dawn (A&M Records, 1979), and a series of five albums for Ariola: Sentinela (1980), Cacador de Mim (1981), Missa dos Quilombos (1982), Anima (1982), and Milton Nascimento ao Vivo (1983).

His output through the rest of the 1980s and '90s has been steady and reliable, though never musically predictable. Like any true jazz and pop veteran, Nascimento has a deep need to keep challenging himself, vocally, lyrically, and stylistically. Nascimento's other releases include Encontros e Despedidas for Barclay in 1985, Corazon Americano for PolyGram in 1986, A Barca dos Amantes for Barclay in 1986, Milton/RPM for Epic/CBS in 1987, Yauaretê for CBS in 1987, Miltons in 1988 for CBS, Txai for the same label in 1990, and O Planeta Blue na Estrada do Sol for CBS in 1991.

Amigo In the mid-'90s, Nascimento switched to Warner Bros. He released two excellent, readily available albums for the label, Angelus, his 27th recording, in 1995, Amigo in 1996, Nascimento in 1997, and Crooner in 1999. He returned after a short hiatus in 2003 with Pieta, followed by The Essential Collection: The Best of the EMI Odeon Years (1969-78) in 2006.

This charismatic Brazilian superstar just won't slow down any time soon, and whether he's packing a stadium in Brazil or singing at a club in New York, his experienced stage persona allows everyone in the audience to feel as if they're in his living room. On Angelus, he's joined by saxophonist Wayne Shorter, who pays tribute to Nascimento's 1975 Native Dancer LP, the high point of which was the synthesis between Nascimento's voice and Shorter's saxophone. That album helped to solidify Nascimento's place on the international jazz and pop scene in the 1970s. Whatever he writes and sings about, be it the planet, ways of living, and loving and dying, his music has always carried an eternally optimistic spirit. As he entered the millennium, Nascimento won a Grammy for Best Contemporary Pop Album for 1999's Crooner at the first annual Latin Grammy Awards in fall 2000.

xxxxx xxxxx xxxxx xxxxx xxxxx

As the second Brazilian wave neared its crest, Milton Nascimento signed with CBS and brought forth a typically eclectic offering, with contributions from familiar collaborators Wagner Tiso, Robertinho Silva, Uakti, and some stellar North American admirers. The key coup of the record was Nascimento's duet with Paul Simon on the reflective "Dream Merchant" (he would later return the favor by appearing on Simon's brilliant Brazilian/African The Rhythm of the Saints album), with Herbie Hancock on electronic layered keyboards. Keyboardist Don Grusin, guitarist Eric Gale and drummer Alex Acuña turn up now and then, and Hancock and old collaborator Wayne Shorter almost -- but not quite -- take over "Mountain." The lovely "Heart Is My Master" is almost a lush throwback to his breakthrough in the bossa nova era -- and indeed, he revisits one of his early standards, "Morro Velho," in an affectingly lush production supervised by Nascimento aficionado Quincy Jones. "Letter to the Republic" is a measured, post-military-government, state-of-the-state address by Nascimento to the Brazilian people, and the concluding "Songs and Moments" finds Milton Nascimento again addressing his fans directly, explaining why he does what he does.



Milton Nascimento - Yauarete  (flac  244mb)

01 Blue Planet (Planeta Blue) 3:38
02 Dream Merchant (O Vendedor de Sonhos) 4:08
03 Jaguar (Yuarete) 3:00
04 Enchanted City (Cidade Encantada) 3:45
05 Heart Is My Master (Meu Mestre Coracao) 3:54
06 Children's Dance (Danca Dos Meninos) 3:19
07 Eldorado 3:39
08 Letter to the Republic (Carta a Republica) 3:25
09 Old Hill (Morro Velho) 5:07
10 Mountain 4:55
11 Songs and Moments (Cancoes e Momentos) 3:40

 Milton Nascimento - Yauarete    (ogg  103mb)

xxxxx xxxxx xxxxx xxxxx xxxxx

"Txai" is described as a term of respect for those who are allies of the forest -- and such is the focus of this concept album, the end result of a fact-finding voyage through part of the northern Brazilian watershed. Utilizing forces ranging from a simple dialogue between Milton Nascimento's baritone and percussion to a large orchestra and chorus (often arranged by Wagner Tiso), Nascimento shares his thoughts about the rivers and nature, ultimately warning us not to let the forces of capitalism destroy the Amazon rain forest (reinforced by a spoken passage written and narrated by actor River Phoenix). The songs are separated by wild-sounding interludes of folk music from the peoples of the region, and there is a fascinating vocal/percussion arrangement of Heitor Villa-Lobos'"Nozani Na." As much as one applauds the sentiments and sincerity of Nascimento -- and as much as one wants to enjoy this record -- one is still forced to admit that despite the unity of conception, Nascimento's own material isn't as strong as it could have been. But the record's ambition and the continued allure of Nascimento's voice will commend it to the dedicated fan.



Milton Nascimento - Txai    (flac  216mb)

01 Abertura 1:16
02 Txai 4:07
03 Baü Mētóro 0:35
04 Coisas Da Vida 5:01
05 Hoeiepereiga 0:41
06 Estórias Da Floresta 1:33
07 Yanomami E Nós - Pacto De Vida 4:12
08 Awasi 0:46
09 A Terceira Margem Do Rio 3:50
10 Benke 3:45
11 Sertão Das Águas 2:29
12 Que Virá Dessa Escuridão? 2:23
13 Curi Curi 1:16
14 Nozanina 2:20
15 Baridjumokô 1:56

Milton Nascimento - Txai    (ogg  94mb)

xxxxx xxxxx xxxxx xxxxx xxxxx

Nascimento is Milton Nascimento's most deeply Brazilian-sounding album in a long time, and also the most downcast, but none the worse in its emotional impact. He adopts the battering, heavy percussion rhythms of the folia boxes (popularized by Olodum) on several tracks, which frame the main portion of the album and give it enormous vitality. There isn't a bumper crop of new songs here (only half of the 12 tracks), but what there is represents the most interesting material he has recorded in some time, including the beautiful "Rouxinol" with its haunting accordion, flute and a gently hypnotic rhythm, and the arresting "Louva-A-Deus," pitting Nascimento's voice against the huge drums. Particularly affecting is Léo Masliah's "Guardanapos de Papel," sung in Portuguese at first and reprised in Spanish at the album's close, which has an almost despairing Nascimento singing about prophetic yet impoverished poets with tasteful piano/keyboard textures. He offers a touching vocalese on his friend Wayne Shorter's "Ana Maria" from their collaboration Native Dancer as a memorial to Shorter's late wife (lost on the TWA plane that crashed into the Atlantic in 1996), with soprano saxophonist Nivaldo Ornelas offering a different take on Shorter's lead. Just about everyone seems to take on "Ol' Man River" sooner or later, but Nascimento does it as a vocalese with large choir -- and it works. So far, this album represents his best work of the '90s and even a good part of the '80s, a genuine renaissance for the Brazilian icon.



Milton Nascimento - Nascimento   (flac 291mb)

01 Louva-a-deus 3:07
02 O Cavaleiro 3:42
03 Guardanapos De Papel (Portuguese Version) 5:24
04 Cuerpo Y Alma 3:59
05 Rouxinol 3:15
06 Janela Para O Mundo 4:04
07 E Agora, Rapaz? 4:43
08 Levantados Do Chão 3:16
09 Ana Maria 5:18
10 Ol' Man River 3:33
11 Os Tambores De Minas 3:19
12 Biromes Y Servilletas (Spanish Version) 5:24

Milton Nascimento - Nascimento     (ogg 118mb)

xxxxx xxxxx xxxxx xxxxx xxxxx

To lovers of Brazilian jazz, the pairing of these two legends of the genre amounts to something of a musical orgasm. The only serious misfire isn't really that bad, just a bit incongruous. Why would two consummate Brazilian ambassadors choose to do their one English lyric song -- George Harrison's "Something" -- as a reggae tune? The groove is silly, but actually some of the guitar work is fun. Just as when Ivan Lins sings in his native Portuguese rather than stilted English, this tandem is most at home conveying emotions that go beyond simple semantics, usually with Gil writing the music and Nascimento the lyrics. "Sebastian" is a moody bass-and-drum driven power ballad which functions as a showcase to their raspy vocals. The romantic, accordion-enhanced "Duas Sanfonas" would be more effective without the guest vocals by Sandy and Junior. "Bom Dia" begins as a plaintive, folksy piece before evolving into a powerful spiritual statement via orchestral sweetening and the Sao Jose School Girls Choir. "Maria" is one of the disc's most honest emotional statements simply because it features Gil and Nascimento's two voices, gentle guitar accompaniment, percussion, and only subtle orchestral harmonies. "Lar Hospitalar" is a spirited funk piece that sweeps the listener up in its danceable grooves and sassy horns. The album has lots of odd mood swings, going from that number to the film score-like "Yo Vengo a Ofrecer" and "Dora" in the blink of an eye. This would have been an even better project if it focused on the two major talents involved more than trying to add too many oddball elements to the mix.



Gilberto Gil & Milton Nascimento - Gil & Milton (flac 364mb)

01 Portal Da Cor (Threshold Of Colours) 4:09
02 Caso De Amor (Love Affair) 3:20
03 Noites Do Sertão (Country Nights) 2:34
04 Mar Do Nosso Amor (Sea Of Our Love) 3:21
05 Lágrimas Do Sul (Southern Tear) 3:40
06 Raça (Race) 2:49
07 Para Eu Parar De Me Doer (So I Can Stop Feeling Hurt) 3:03
08 Encontros E Despedidas (Meetings And Farewells) 3:35
09 Quem Perguntou Por Mim (Who Asked For Me) 3:52
10 A Primeira Estrela (The Morning Star) 5:02
11 Vidro E Corte (Glass And Cut) 4:40
12 Radio Experiência (Radio Experience) 2:45

Gilberto Gil & Milton Nascimento - Gil & Milton  (ogg  136mb)

xxxxx xxxxx xxxxx xxxxx xxxxx

RhoDeo 1640 Aetix

$
0
0
Hello,

Today's artists are an English 2 Tone and ska revival band formed in 1977 in Coventry. Their music combines a "danceable ska and rocksteady beat with punk's energy and attitude". Lyrically they present a "more focused and informed political and social stance" than most other ska groups. The band wore mod-style "1960s period rude boy outfits (pork pie hats, tonic and mohair suits and loafers) added here a later spin-off....N'Joy

xxxxx xxxxx xxxxx xxxxx xxxxx

The band was originally formed in Coventry, in 1977, as the Coventry Automatics and later the Special A.K.A. by songwriter/keyboardist Jerry Dammers, with Terry Hall (vocals), Lynval Golding (guitar, vocals), Neville Staples (vocals, percussion), Roddy Radiation (guitar), Sir Horace Gentleman (bass), and John Bradbury (drums). Dammers started his own 2-Tone label, named for its multiracial agenda and after the two-tone tonic suits favored by the like-minded mods of the '60s. The Dammers-designed logos, based in ' 60s pop art with black and white checks, gave the label an instantly identifiable look. Dammers' eye for detail and authenticity also led to the band adopting ' 60s-period rude-boy outfits. The band released the "Gangsters" single, which reached the U.K. Top Ten. Soon after the movement was in full swing. Over the next several months, 2-Tone enjoyed hits by similar-sounding bands, such as Madness, the (English) Beat, and the Selecter. Late in 1979, the band released its landmark self-titled debut album, produced by Elvis Costello, where The Specials managed to distill all the anger, disenchantment, and bitterness of the day straight into their music.They followed with several 2-Tone package tours and a live EP, Too Much Too Young that track, a pro-contraception song, was banned by the BBC but still reached the number one spot in the U.K.

In 1979, shortly after drummer Hutchinson left the band to be replaced by John Bradbury, Dammers formed the 2 Tone Records label and released the band's debut single "Gangsters", a reworking of Prince Buster's "Al Capone". The record became a Top 10 hit that summer. The band had begun wearing mod/rude boy/skinhead-style two-tone tonic suits, along with other elements of late 1960s teen fashions. Changing their name to the Specials, they recorded their eponymous debut album in 1979, produced by Elvis Costello. Horn players Dick Cuthell and Rico Rodriguez were featured on the album, but would not be official members of the Specials until their second album.

The Specials led off with Dandy Livingstone's "Rudy, A Message to You" (slightly altering the title to "A Message to You, Rudy") and also had covers of Prince Buster and Toots & the Maytals songs from the late 1960s. In 1980, the EP Too Much Too Young (predominantly credited to The Special A.K.A.) was a No. 1 hit in the UK Singles Chart, despite controversy over the song's lyrics, which reference teen pregnancy and promote contraception.

Reverting once again to the moniker the Specials, the band's second album, More Specials, was not as commercially successful and was recorded at a time when, according to Hall, conflicts had developed in the band. Female backing vocalists on the Specials first two studio albums included: Chrissie Hynde; Rhoda Dakar (then of the Bodysnatchers and later of the Special AKA); and Belinda Carlisle, Jane Wiedlin and Charlotte Caffey of the Go-Go's. In the first few months of 1981, the band took a break from recording and touring, and then released "Ghost Town", a non-album Specials single, which hit No. 1 in 1981. However, shortly afterwards, Golding, Hall and Staple left the band to form Fun Boy Three.

For the next few years, the group was in a seemingly constant state of flux. Adding Dakar to the permanent line-up, the group recorded "The Boiler" with Dakar on vocals, Dammers on keyboard, Bradbury on drums, John Shipley from the Swinging Cats on guitar, Cuthell on brass and Nicky Summers on bass. The single was credited to "Rhoda with the Special AKA". The controversial track described an incident of date rape, and its frank and harrowing depiction of the matter meant that airplay was severely limited. Nevertheless, it managed to reach No. 35 on the UK charts, and American writer Dave Marsh later identified "The Boiler" as one of the 1,001 best "rock and soul" singles of all time in his book The Heart of Rock & Soul.

After going on tour with Rodriguez, the band (without Dakar, and as "Rico and the Special AKA") also recorded the non-charting (and non-album) single "Jungle Music". The line-up for the single was Rodriguez (vocal, trombone), Cuthell (cornets), Dammers (keyboards), Bradbury (drums), Shipley (guitar), returning bassist Panter, and new additions Satch Dickson and Groco (percussion) and Anthony Wymshurst (guitar).

Rodriguez and the three newcomers were all dropped for the next single, "War Crimes", which brought back Dakar and added new co-vocalists Edgio Newton and Stan Campbell, as well as violinist Nick Parker. Follow-up single "Racist Friend" was a minor hit (UK No. 60), with the band establishing themselves as a septet: Dakar, Newton, Campbell, Bradbury, Cuthell, Dammers and Shipley.

The new line-up (still known as the Special AKA) finally issued a new full-length album In the Studio in 1984. Officially, the band was now a sextet: Dakar, Campbell, Bradbury, Dammers, Shipley and new bassist Gary McManus. Cuthell, Newton, Panter and Radiation all appeared on the album as guests; as did saxophonist Nigel Reeve, and Claudia Fontaine and Caron Wheeler of the vocal trio Afrodiziak. Both critically and commercially, In The Studio was less successful than previous efforts, although the 1984 single "Free Nelson Mandela" was a No. 9 UK hit. The latter contributed to making Mandela's imprisonment a cause célèbre in the UK, and became popular with anti-apartheid activists in South Africa. Dammers then dissolved the band and pursued political activism

Shortly after the official breakup, various members of the band joined up with other bandless ska revivalists (English Beat, etc.) to form a touring unit named Special Beat. By the mid-'90s, in response to the third wave ska revival, a Dammers-less version of the Specials reappeared with a series of shameful cash-in albums: Today's Specials (1996,) Guilty Til Proved Innocent! (1998,) and Conquering Ruler (2002.) Currently they are still touring as the Specials (without Jerry Dammers that is, and John Bradbury who died on December 28, 2015)

xxxxx xxxxx xxxxx xxxxx xxxxx

A perfect moment in time captured on vinyl forever, such is the Specials' eponymous debut album; it arrived in shops in the middle of October 1979 and soared into the U.K. Top Five. It was an utter revelation -- except for anyone who had seen the band on-stage, for the album was at its core a studio recording of their live set, and at times even masquerades as a gig. There were some notable omissions: "Gangsters," for one, but that had already spun on 45, as well as the quartet of covers that would appear on their live Too Much Too Young EP in the new year. But the rest are all here, 14 songs' strong, mostly originals, with a few covers of classics thrown in for good measure. That includes their fabulous take on Dandy Livingstone's "A Message to You Rudy," an equally stellar version of the Maytals'"Monkey Man," and the sizzling take on Prince Buster's "Too Hot." If those were fabulous, their own compositions were magnificent. The Specials managed to distill all the anger, disenchantment, and bitterness of the day straight into their music. The vicious "Nite Klub" -- with its unforgettable line, "All the girls are slags and the beer tastes just like piss" -- perfectly skewered every bad night the members had ever spent out on the town; "Blank Expression" extended the misery into unwelcoming pubs, while "Concrete Jungle" moved the action onto the streets, capturing the fear and violence that stalked the inner cities. And then it gets personal. "It's Up to You" throws down the gauntlet for those who disliked the group, its music, and its stance, while simultaneously acting as a rallying cry for supporters. "Too Much Too Young" shows the Specials' disdain for teen pregnancy and marriage; "Stupid Marriage" drags two such offenders before a Judge Dread-esque magistrate, with Terry Hall playing the outraged and sniping prosecutor; while "Little Bitch" is downright nasty. Those were polemics; "It Doesn't Make It Alright" reaches a hand out to listeners and, with conviction, delivers up a heartfelt plea against racism, but even this number contains a sharp sting in its tail. It's a bitter brew, aggressively delivered, with even the slower numbers sharply edged, and therefore the band wisely scattered sparkling covers across the album to help lift its mood. The set appropriately ends with the rocksteady-esque yearning of "You're Wondering Now," the song that invariably closed their live shows. Even though producer Elvis Costello gave the record a bright sound, it doesn't lighten the dark currents that run through the group's songs; if anything, his production heightens them. It's left to guests Rico Rodriguez and Dick Cuthell to provide a little Caribbean sun to the Specials' sound, their brass sweetening the flashes of anger and disaffection that sweep across the record. And so, this was Britain in late 1979, an unhappy island about to explode.



The Specials - The Specials   (flac  287mb)

01 A Message To You Rudy (2:52)
02 Do The Dog (2:09)
03 It's Up To You (3:23)
04 Nite Klub (3:21)
05 Doesn't Make It Alright (3:24)
06 Concrete Jungle (3:18)
07 Too Hot (3:09)
08 Monkey Man (2:44)
09 (Dawning Of A) New Era (2:24)
10 Blank Expression (2:43)
11 Stupid Marriage (3:48)
12 Too Much Too Young (2:15)
13 Gangsters (2:44)
14 Little Bitch (2:31)
15 You're Wondering Now (2:34)

The Specials - The Specials  (ogg  105mb)

xxxxx xxxxx xxxxx xxxxx xxxxx

Less frenzied than its predecessor, but more musically adventurous, More Specials was nearly as popular in its day as its predecessor, falling just one chart place below their debut. It kicked off in similar fashion as well, with a classic cover, this time with an exuberant take on Carl Sigman and Conrad Magidson's 1940s chestnut "Enjoy Yourself." A slower, brooding version with the Go-Go's in tow brings the album to a close, taking the place of the set-sealing "You're Wondering Now," which brought the curtain down on their first set. But there the similarities come to an end. The rest of the album is comprised of originals, including a pair of instrumentals -- the Northern soul-esque "Sock It to 'Em JB" and the Mexican-flavored "Holiday Fortnight" -- as well as a duo of minimally vocalized pieces, the intriguing "International Jet Set," and the overtly apocalyptic "Man at C&A." But fans had already been primed for the band's changing musical directions by the release the month before of "Stereotypes," its spaghetti western aura filled with the group's more mournful mood. It's an emotional despair taken to even greater heights on "Do Nothing," as the group futilely searches for a future, but musically stumbles upon a cheery, easygoing rhythm more appropriate to the pop styles of the English Beat than the angrier sounds the Specials had made their own. But to prove it's no fluke, there's the equally bright and breezy "Hey, Little Rich Girl," boasting fabulous sax solos from Madness' Lee Thompson. However, it's an immortal line from "Pearl's Cafe" that Terry Hall and the guesting Bodysnatchers' Rhoda Dakar deliver up in duet that best sums up their own, and the country's pure frustration: "It's all a load of bollocks, and bollocks to it all." It was an intensely satisfying set in its day, even if it wasn't as centered as their debut. The group seems to be moving simultaneously in too many directions, while the lyrics, too, are not quite as hard-hitting as earlier efforts. That said a year later they released the original band's crowning achievement, Jerry Dammers'"Ghost Town" chronicles the twin calamities of race-related violence and unemployment that exploded in England in 1981. A No 1 hit in the UK



The Specials - More Specials (flac 309mb)

01 Enjoy Yourself (It's Later Than You Think) (3:38)
02 Man At C + A (3:37)
03 Hey, Little Rich Girl (3:37)
04 Do Nothing (3:43)
05 Pearl's Cafe (Voc.Rhoda Dakar) (3:09)
06 Sock It To 'em J.B. (2:54)
07 Stereotypes Pt 1+2 (7:25)
08 Holiday Fortnight (2:47)
09 I Can't Stand It (Voc.Rhoda Dakar) (4:04)
10 International Jet Set (5:39)
11 Enjoy Yourself (Reprise) (1:48)
bonus
12 Ghost Town 5:58

The Specials - More Specials   (ogg  117mb)

xxxxx xxxxx xxxxx xxxxx xxxxx

Three years and a reputed £500,000 pounds in the making, and what was the result? For starters, an album that just scraped into the U.K. Top 35 and a set that rounded up three out of the four Special A.K.A. singles: "War Crimes," the double A-sided "Racist Friend"/ "Bright Lights," and "Nelson Mandela," as well as the latter's 12" B-side, "Break Down the Door," and a set that spun off the group's final release, "What I Like Most About You Is Your Girlfriend." Thus, half the album had already spun at 45, poor value for the money. However, at a time when Wham!, Frankie Goes to Hollywood, and Duran Duran reigned supreme, In the Studio was offering something distinctly different, which explains its popularity. This was Jerry Dammers' baby, and the birthing had been decidedly difficult. And it's no wonder considering just how far Dammers had taken his music, light years from the Specials' roots and miles even from the group's more diverse More Specials finale. "Housebound," for example, is absolutely claustrophobic, the rhythm disconcerting and the melody moving into no wave territory. "The Lonely Crowd" is even more dislocating, with the club-meets-funk rhythm crashing into the no wave jazz atmosphere, while the purer club strains of "Nite on the Tiles" are equally disturbing, with its odd blend of genres. Even the more accessible numbers have bite and exceedingly sharp edges, from the frustration that fills the soul-styled "Break Down" to the derision that floods the lyrics of "Bright Lights" and on to the cutting theme of the dreamy, roots-flavored "Girlfriend." Dammers' world view was growing ever darker, and his lyrics reflect this polarization. Where once there was thoughtful reasoning laced with sarcasm, here the coddling is gone, and even the irony is heavy-handed. Proof is found in the uncompromising "Racist Friend," where Dammers insists one should sever such relationships rather than attempt to alter such opinions. The evocative, Arab-esque "War Crimes" is even more militant. Israel's invasion of Lebanon, in much of the world's opinion, certainly qualified as a war crime, but many felt that Dammers overstepped the mark by comparing it to Nazi death camps. Only the warm melody and gentle delivery prevent the song from being dismissed as an outright polemic. But the 2-Toner now saw the world only in black and white, searingly condemning everything around him. Which is why "Mandela" comes as such a shock smack-dab in the middle of the set. Its glorious melody, jubilant atmosphere, and exuberant optimism are the only bright moments on the entire album, a single song of hope which crumbles to dust by sequencing it just before the horrors of "War Crimes." That, like everything else on this album, was deliberate, and underscored the total desolation that Dammers saw all around him. It's an ugly vision, but the world is very much like that.



The Special A.K.A. - In The Studio (flac 274mb)

01 Bright Lights 4:11
02 The Lonely Crowd 3:51
03 What I Like Most About You Is Your Girlfriend 4:50
04 Housebound 4:12
05 Nite On The Tiles 3:03
06 Nelson Mandela 4:07
07 War Crimes 6:13
08 Racist Friend 3:49
09 Alcohol 5:00
10 Break Down The Door 3:36

The Special A.K.A. - In The Studio (ogg  99mb)

xxxxx xxxxx xxxxx xxxxx xxxxx

The Specials were one of the most popular and influential bands in the U.K., scoring a streak of seven straight Top Ten singles. Their popularity culminated with the prophetic "Ghost Town," which spent three weeks at number one in the summer of 1981. The "Ghost Town" single was the last to feature Terry Hall and the original lineup -- after its release Hall split along with the group's other two vocalists, Lynval Golding and Neville Staples, to form the Fun Boy Three. Where the Specials were a ska revival band, the Fun Boy Three were a new wave pop group with distinctly weird, skeletal, and experimental overtones. They released their first single, "The Lunatics (Have Taken Over the Asylum)," shortly after they departed from the Specials. The single peaked at number 20 late in 1981. Early in 1982, the group charted again with "It Ain't What You Do (It's the Way That You Do It)," a duet with Bananarama on an old Jimmie Lunceford song. The Fun Boy Three finally released their eponymous debut in the spring of 1982. That summer, they had a hit with a cover of George Gershwin's "Summertime." The group recorded a second album with Talking Heads leader David Byrne late in 1982. The resulting album, Waiting, appeared in the spring of 1983, concurrently with the Top Ten singles "The Tunnel of Love" and "Our Lips Are Sealed," a song Hall wrote with Jane Wiedlin, who already made it into a hit the previous year with her group, the Go-Go's. By the summer of 1983, the Fun Boy Three were peaking in popularity and Hall disbanded the group.
xxxxx
"Where do we go from here, what kind of sound do we follow?" muses Terry Hall on "Way on Down," a track from the Fun Boy Three's eponymous debut album. It was a question on numerous lips, ever since Hall and his fellow ex-Specials Neville Staples and Lynval Golding announced the formation of their new group. It's doubtful that anyone came even close to the correct answer. The album was built firmly around tribal drumming, whose percussive possibilities were inspiring a number of groups at the time. Most notably, Adam Ant had merged the beats with a Gary Glitter stomp and a military tattoo, and was now riding the rhythms toward world domination. The Boys, however, were taking the same African influence in an entirely different, and even more innovative, direction. Most surprisingly, or perhaps not, considering the size of their former band, was how minimalistic the music was. Many of the songs were stripped down to bare vocals and percussion, while even those tracks which did sport other instruments mostly utilized them as mere embellishments around the showcased rhythms. Long before modern rap and techno placed all its focus on the beats, the Boys were diligently working around this same concept. In fact, the album on occasion brought to light the direct link between African beats and American hip-hop; elsewhere it foreshadowed the rise of jungle, and even hinted at progressive house and techno-trance. At the same time, the vocalists created their own rhythm, which cunningly counterpoints the main beats. The band used both vocals and rhythms to explode genre boundaries, as "Sanctuary" beautifully illustrates. Beginning as an exercise in African choral singing, it subtly evolves into a Gregorian chant, all the while pulsating with pounding tribal drumming. It says much about the state of the British music scene of the time that such innovative music was not only accepted, but reveled in. Three of the album's tracks -- "The Lunatics,""It Ain't What You Do It's the Way That You Do It," and "The Telephone Always Rings" -- snaked their way into the U.K. Top 20. The album pulsated all the way number seven. It also introduced the world to Bananarama, who provided backing vocals on many of the record's tracks. "One of the most wonderful recordings of our time," the album sleeve boldly stated, and it was absolutely true.



The Fun Boy Three - The Fun Boy Three (flac 445mb)

01 Sanctuary 1:24
02 Way On Down 2:55
03 The Lunatics Have Taken Over The Asylum 3:15
04 Life In General (Lewe In Algemeen) 3:20
05 Faith, Hope And Charity 2:50
06 Funrama 2 (Feat Bananarama) 3:08
07 Best Of Luck Mate 3:21
08 T'Aint What You Do (It's The Way That You Do It) 2:52
09 The Telephone Always Rings 3:39
10 I Don't Believe It 3:27
11 Alone 3:01
Bonus:
12 Just Do It (Feat Bananarama) 2:59
13 The Funrama Theme (Extended Version) 6:03
14 Summertime (Extended Version) 6:26
15 Summer Of '82 4:01
16 The Telephone Always Rings (Extended Version) 5:34
17 The Alibi (The Station's Full Of Pipes) (12' Extended Mix) 5:56
Extra bonus
18 It Ain't What You Do (Ext. Version) 5:50
19 The Funrama Theme (Ext. Version) 6:02

The Fun Boy Three - The Fun Boy Three   (ogg  178mb)

xxxxx xxxxx xxxxx xxxxx xxxxx

For fans bowled over by their debut disc's heady and minimalist mix of tribal percussion, expressionist camp, and distinctly un-ska-like songs (scant residuals here from the trio's time with the Specials), Fun Boy Three's second album, Waiting, with its slicker production and decidedly more pop-flavored sound, was probably something of a shock. But what an enjoyable jolt it was. Along with the Terry Hall-penned "Our Lips Are Sealed" (also a Go-Go's hit), other highlights include the cinematically tango-tinged "Things We Do" and the spookily playful "We're Having All the Fun." The disc also features plenty of the band's wry and spot-on lyrics, which range from the comical strains of the ganja cut "Farm Yard Connecting" to an account of child molestation in "Fancy That." Topped off with David Byrne's fine production work, Waiting ranks way beyond the second-rate status it often gets saddled with.



The Fun Boy Three - Waiting  (flac  181mb)

01 Murder She Said 1:57
02 The More I See (The Less I Believe) 3:38
03 Going Home 3:36
04 We're Having All The Fun 2:51
05 The Farm Yard Connection 2:46
06 The Tunnel Of Love 3:08
07 Our Lips Are Sealed 3:36
08 The Pressure Of Life (Takes The Weight Off The Body) 3:10
09 Things We Do 3:36
10 Well Fancy That! 3:06

xxxxx xxxxx xxxxx xxxxx xxxxx

RhoDeo 1649 Re-Up 73

$
0
0
Hello,

These days i'm making an effort to re-up, it will satisfy a small number of people which means its likely the update will  expire relatively quickly again as its interest that keeps it live. Nevertheless here's your chance ... asks for re-up in the comments section at the page where the expired link resides, or it will be discarded by me. ....requests are satisfied on a first come first go basis. ...updates will be posted here and yes sign a name to your request and do it from the page where the link died! To keep re-ups interesting to my regular visitors i will only re-up files that are at least 12 months old (the older the better as far as i am concerned), and please check the previous update request if it's less then a year old i won't re-up.

Looka here another batch of 24 re-ups, requests fullfilled up to October 5th. There's much to be had here. My tip here randomly pick an archive date and move up or down a few pages to older or newer posts, browse was you get there and maybe you'll find something of your liking or it may triggers a memory of what you'd really want and then do a search  ...N' Joy

xxxxx xxxxx xxxxx xxxxx xxxxx

9x Wavetrain-Wire Bacl in Flac ( Colin Newman - A-Z, He Said - Take+Care, Gilbert & G Lewis - 8 Time, Wire - Pink Flag, Wire - Chairs Missing, Wire - 154, Wire - Document  & Eyewitness, Wire - A Bell Is A Cup, back in ogg (  P'o - Whilst Climbing Thieves Vie For Attention)


3x roots Back in Flac ( Bonga - Angola 72, Bonga - O'Melhor De Bonga, VA - Angola Soundtrack 2)


3x Roots Back in Flac (Booniay!! Compilation of W African Funk, Club Africa, Vol.1; Hard African Funk, Love's a Real Thing - The Funky Fuzzy Sounds Of W Africa)

3x Roots Back In Flac (Dub Syndicate ‎- The Pounding System, Dub Syndicate ‎– Tunes From The Missing Channel, Dub Syndicate - Echomania)


3x Sundaze NOW In Flac (O Yuki Conjugate - Sunchemical, Second Nature - Second Nature,  Doug Wimbish - Trippy Notes For Bass)


3x Aetix Back in Flac (Meat Puppets - Meat Puppets , Meat Puppets - Meat Puppets II, Meat Puppets - Up On The Sun)


xxxxx xxxxx xxxxx xxxxx xxxxx

RhoDeo 1640 Grooves

$
0
0
Hello,  ...

Today's artists are an American funk band that emerged from Hamilton, Ohio, in 1977. Particularly influential in the electro subgenre of funk, they served as partial inspiration toward the creation of the G-funk sound of hip-hop popular on the West Coast of the United States in the early to mid 1990s, with many of their songs sampled by numerous hip-hop artists. .. ..... N'joy

xxxxx xxxxx xxxxx xxxxx xxxxx

Born on November 29, 1951, in Hamilton, Ohio, Roger Troutman began recording music in the late to mid 1960s, issuing his first solo recording efforts "Jolly Roger" and "Night Time" on the obscure and now defunct Ohio label, Teen Records in 1966 under the band name 'Lil' Roger and His Fabulous Vels. Although neither song received recognition due to its very limited release, Troutman and brothers pursued their music career throughout the 1970s, forming Roger & The Human Body in 1976, on their privately owned label Troutman Bros. Records. Their own label allowed Troutman and the band to give a slightly wider and more high-profile release of their own music, issuing their first (and only) album Introducing Roger in 1976.


In the late 1970s Roger Troutman continued to record with his brothers, losing the name Roger & The Human Body and adopting the Zapp nickname from his brother Terry in 1977. The group searching for recognition, began playing at various small venues locally around Ohio. The Troutman family had long standing friendships with Ohio natives Phelps "Catfish" Collins and William Earl "Bootsy" Collins, who had both been involved with Parliament-Funkadelic in the early 1970s. Phelps and Bootsy were attendees at a performance, and were impressed with Zapp's musical abilities, prompting Bootsy to invite Roger to the United Sound Studios in Detroit (the P-Funk studio base) which was frequently used by Parliament-Funkadelic. Roger Troutman subsequently wrote and recorded the demo for "More Bounce to the Ounce" in 1978. George Clinton, the leader of Funkadelic liked the recording and encouraged Troutman to present the demo to Warner Bros. Records.[8] Warner Bros. signed Zapp in early 1979, and on July 28, 1980, Zapp released their debut album, which was recorded by Roger and produced by Bootsy between 1979 and early 1980 at the United Sound Studios in Detroit, their first recording on a major label. The album's sound, which is highly influenced by Parliament-Funkadelic, contrasts largely with Zapp's later releases. "More Bounce to the Ounce" reached number two on the Billboard Hot R&B tracks for two weeks during the autumn of 1980. By November 18, 1980, Zapp had been certified gold by the RIAA.

After the 1980 release of Zapp's debut album, tensions rose between Roger Troutman and George Clinton. Troutman's solo album The Many Facets of Roger was primarily funded by Clinton, through CBS, and was slated to be released on his own Uncle Jam Records label. By the early 1980s, Clinton and his musical projects were a midst financial troubles due to his poor management skills and shifting tastes in music. Around the time of Troutman's to be released debut, Warner Bros. Records dropped Clinton from their label, and quietly released The Electric Spanking of War Babies which Troutman had worked briefly on, in early 1981 without much impact.

Troutman, seeing the disarray that was surrounding Clinton at the time, accepted Warner Bros. offer of more money for the demo recordings of his album. The move resulted in a bitter severing of partnerships between Clinton and Troutman, and with Clinton's departure, Troutman was left to exercise virtually full creative control over the band's later work. In Clinton's biography George Clinton: For the Record, Troutman was quoted commenting on the situation with a blasé attitude, "... Heck gee-willickers, Warner Bros. offered me mo' money". In response, Clinton remarked, "CBS paid for it, I paid for it. I don't like to go into it on the negative side, but it cost about 5 million [dollars], and a lot of people's jobs and what we consider as the empire falling". The loss of money that resulted from the actions of Troutman, is credited as one of the factors that disassembled both Clinton's and Funkadelic's musical careers. The Many Facets of Roger was eventually released in October 1981 on Warner Bros.

Zapp released its second album, Zapp II, on October 14, 1982. It focused on more of an electronic orientated sound, containing greater use of the talk-box that is often considered Troutman's trademark. Despite the contrasting styles between the first and the second albums, Zapp II attained gold status by September 21, 1982. The album fared almost as well as Zapp's debut, peaking at number two on the Billboard R&B chart, and reaching 25 on The Billboard 200 Albums chart. The single "Dancefloor (Part I)" peaked at number one on the R&B singles chart of 1982.

Zapp spawned several more albums in close succession within the 1980s, retaining the heavily electronic style that Zapp II had adopted. Zapp III was released in 1983, but it did not reach the same chart positions as Zapp's previous efforts. While still gaining a gold certification, it only peaked at 39 on the Billboard 200 and nine on the R&B chart. Zapp III's poorer commercial performance became a sign that the band's popularity and impact were beginning to decline toward the mid 1980s, with post-disco music falling out of trend. By the release of The New Zapp IV U on October 25, 1985, Zapp's popularity declined more. The album gained gold status, but only in 1994, almost a decade after its initial release. Zapp's presence began to fade in the latter half of the 1980s, and Troutman's attention was focused on his solo career. The final release by Zapp before Troutman's death was Zapp V, on September 12, 1989, which was met with moderate commercial success and failed to receive an RIAA certification.

The growing and increasingly dominant West Coast hip-hop scene of the early to mid 1990s brought Zapp and Roger back into the spotlight for a brief amount of time as many hip-hop acts began favoring Zapp's material as a source for sampling in their own music. Troutman gained recognition for providing talk-box backing vocals for both the original and remixed version of Tupac Shakur's 1995-96 comeback single "California Love"; the alternate version of the music video features Troutman playing the keyboard and talk-box during a party. Roger's involvement in "California Love" awarded him a Grammy nomination for "Best Rap Performance by a Duo or Group" in 1997.

On Sunday morning, April 25, 1999, Roger Troutman was fatally wounded as a result of an apparent murder-suicide that was orchestrated by his older brother, Larry. Roger was shot several times in the torso by Larry as he exited a recording studio in Dayton, Ohio. Roger was taken to Good Samaritan Hospital, but died shortly after. Larry's body was found in a car a short distance away from the murder scene. There were no witnesses at the time, and Larry's motive for the murder of Roger remains unclear, however, there were increasingly large troubles over money surrounding Larry who managed the family run housing company, Troutman Enterprises. The business filed for chapter 11 bankruptcy, owing $400,000 in delinquent taxes.Larry was also possibly angry over Roger firing him as manager for his music career, of which Larry had been for several years.

During Roger's funeral, his nephew Clet Troutman performed a talk-box rendition of "Amazing Grace." Roger was survived by his six sons and five daughters; his eldest son, Roger Lynch Troutman Jr., died of head injuries several years after the murder of Roger, (January 31, 1970 – January 22, 2003).

The resulting impact of Roger and Larry's deaths left the band stranded, halting production. Without Roger serving as the creative source, they effectively disbanded, and quietly left the music industry altogether. Warner Bros. Records eventually dropped the band from their label, bringing the professional recording career of Zapp to a close. A few years later, Zapp resurfaced for a short period after the establishment of its own independent label, Zapp Town Records, managed by the Troutman family. The label released its only album, Zapp VI: Back By Popular Demand, in 2003. Zapp returned to performing only in live concert, touring across the U.S. at various venues.

Lester Troutman Sr. and Terry Troutman confirmed the release of a new project/album Evolution date August 2015


xxxxx xxxxx xxxxx xxxxx xxxxx

Released in 1980 just as George Clinton's P-funk empire had reached the brink of its existence, Bootsy protégé Roger Troutman proved himself a worthy successor with Zapp's self-titled debut album and its subsequent two follow-ups. In actuality, Zapp originally was a branch of the Parliament/Funkadelic collective, as group leader Roger Troutman was originally signed to Clinton's short-lived CBS subsidiary, Uncle Jam Records. After Troutman completed the album with CBS' money, Clinton's help, and Bootsy's production, Warner Bros. stepped in, offered Roger a considerable sum of money, and slyly bought the album -- leaving a distressed Clinton with no Zapp album for his shaky boutique label. Propelled by the dancefloor smash "More Bounce to the Ounce," the album quickly became a considerable hit. It was here that Troutman first defined the vocoder-laden funk aesthetic that would become his trademark for the remainder of his career. In addition to the near ten-minute "More Bounce," the album also featured "Be Alright," another epic jam that slowed down the funk to a smoked-out, almost ballad-like tempo (both songs would later fuel numerous early-'90s West Coast rap hits via sampling). Of the remaining four songs, "Funky Bounce" and "Brand New Player" also stand as perennial standouts, further affirming Troutman's dense funk aesthetic. Later Zapp albums would have their moments, but this debut is absolutely solid from beginning to end, in addition to being the foundation from which Troutman would base all later work, and with "More Bounce to the Ounce" and "Be Alright," it houses two of the best moments in '80s funk.



Zapp - Zapp    (flac  233mb)

01 More Bounce To The Ounce 9:31
02 Freedom 3:52
03 Brand New PPlayer 5:52
04 Funky Bounce 6:50
05 Be Alright 7:58
06 Comiing Home 6:34

Zapp - Zapp (ogg   95mb)

xxxxx xxxxx xxxxx xxxxx xxxxx

Building upon the unprecedented success of Zapp's self-titled debut and group leader Roger Troutman's solo debut, The Many Facets of Roger, along with those two album's hit singles -- "More Bounce to the Ounce" and "I Heard It Through the Grapevine," respectively -- Troutman returned in 1982 with Zapp II, a strong album again propelled by a mammoth single, "Dance Floor." Outside of the infectious single, which topped the R&B singles chart, Troutman stuck to his patented formula of vocoder-laden funk on each of the album's other songs. There isn't anything new here that wasn't on Zapp or The Many Facets of Roger, just more of the same; of course, this isn't exactly a bad thing, as Troutman retreads familiar ground effectively. At this point in his career, Troutman wasn't short on ideas and was able to inventively lay down dense, carefree funk with ease -- in sum, there's literally no filler here, impressive when you consider his prolific output during this era. Not quite as fresh as the first Zapp album but still a great album for its era.



Zapp - Zapp II  (flac  256mb)

01 Dance Floor 11:09
02 Playin' Kinda Ruff 6:48
03 Doo Wa Ditty (Blow That Thing) 4:58
04 Do You Really Want An Answer? 6:36
05 Come On 5:11
06 A Touch Of Jazz (Playin' Kinda Ruff Part II) 6:10

Zapp - Zapp II (ogg  102mb)

xxxxx xxxxx xxxxx xxxxx xxxxx

Where the first two Zapp albums were nearly flawless with their beginning-to-end knee-deep funk, Zapp III showed slight symptoms of becoming derivative. You are still strained to find any filler here, but the album's second side does pale considerably in relation to its first side, alluding to the possibility that group leader Roger Troutman may have finally begun struggling for new ideas at this point. These latter songs such as "Spend My Whole Life" aren't necessarily bad, just uninspired. The album's first side features two mammoth jams -- "Heartbreaker, Pt. 1 & 2" and "I Can Make You Dance" -- that weren't as successful commercially as "More Bounce to the Once" or "Dance Floor" yet were nearly as effective in terms of dancefloor utility. With both clocking near ten minutes in length, these songs never sound monotonous or dull in their entirety, as Troutman kept the grooves grooving and the hooks catchy, while forever focusing on the funk. In the end, though, these two wonderful songs end up carrying much of this album's weight, mostly because of their epic stature and their obvious dancefloor emphasis. The remaining songs are just that -- songs -- rather than jams. Still, even though this album may often get overshadowed by its predecessors, it has aged well and remains one of the best early-'80s funk albums



Zapp - Zapp III  (flac 221mb)

01 Heartbreaker (Part I, Part II) 7:30
02 I Can Make You Dance 9:01
03 Play Some Blues 5:45
04 Spend My Whole Life 4:07
05 We Need The Buck 5:43
06 Tut-Tut (Jazz) 5:15
07 Doo Wa Ditty (Live) 1:00

Zapp - Zapp III (ogg  93mb)

xxxxx xxxxx xxxxx xxxxx xxxxx

Though Zapp III was far from a failure or even a disappointment, it wasn't quite on par with previous Roger Troutman efforts, being a little uneven and less of a commercial success. So when Troutman resurfaced in 1985, he shook up his formula a bit, focusing on an even collection of succinct songs rather than an album driven by epic anthems and filled out with shorter songs. To further communicate the concept that he was shaking things up, Troutman blatantly titled his album The New Zapp IV U. On the one hand, things really didn't change as much as Troutman would have you believe. The New Zapp IV U is still immersed in bouncy, carefree funk, and he still has a monster anthem with "Computer Love." The main change seems to be an emphasis on tighter song structures rather than loose, epic dancefloor jams. Yet on the other hand, these tiny changes are all Troutman really needed to do. The previous three Zapp albums were all stellar, and it would have been a shame for him to abandon a winning formula. In the end, the new approach to songwriting here proves just enough change to make this a fresh-sounding album. Had Troutman returned with yet another Zapp album propelled by one or two epic, ten-minute dancefloor jams and a few shorter funk exercises, it would have seemed incredibly trite -- after three albums, it was time for a change to keep things fresh.



Zapp - The New Zapp IV U  (flac 478mb)

01 It Doesn't Really Matter 5:28
02 Computer Love 4:51
03 Itchin' For Your Twitchin' 4:05
04 Radio People 5:55
05 I Only Have Eyes For You 4:45
06 Rock' N Roll 4:51
07 Cas-Ta-Spellome 3:33
08 Make Me Feel Good 5:17
09 Ja Ready To Rock 4:18
Bonus
10 It Doesn't Really Matter (Long Version) 5:35
11 It Doesn't Really Matter (Edit) 4:05
12 It Doesn't Really Matter (7" Version) 2:34
13 Computer Love (Ext Version) 8:27
14 Computer Love (LP Remix) 4:07
15 Computer Love (Instrumental) 4:07

Zapp - The New Zapp IV U (ogg  178mb)

xxxxx xxxxx xxxxx xxxxx xxxxx

Sundaze 1641

$
0
0
Hello, F1 news, looks like it's Rosberg's race to loose qualifying in front, behind him Hamilton leads the Ferrari's and Red Bulls all within 6 hundred's of a second of eachother, how close is that ! I'm sure the start will mix things up as Ferrari is firy and Vettel needs to make up places as he got a 3 places penalty because he messed up last week. Who willl win this time..well Hamilton naturally, after all he's entitled too turn up his engine and should it blow it's sabotage...


The final post related to Extreme Records....today's artists have been introduced here apart from a German duo getting some well deserved attention here, electronic beats, dripping rhythms and ethereal voices for you to discover and ... N'Joy

xxxxx xxxxx xxxxx xxxxx xxxxx

Interestingly both artists here stem from a small but old rural town, Olpe. It's an idyllic place bordered by hills and a large reservoir, good infrastructure and services, in short the kinda of comfortable place where nothing really happens...

Carla Subito (composer), real name Christian Schöne born 1965 in Olpe / Germany

1980-1987 apprenticed to a church organist
1987 commenced composing with electronic instruments
1988-1990 Radio concerts in Berlin with Johannes Schmoelling (Ex Tangerine Dream)
1989 Founded Fetisch Park with Marlon Shy
1991 Worked with the Electronic Studio, Cologne (Director: Hans Ulrich Humpert)
1991 on… Video soundtracks and sound installations as Fetisch Park in Germany, Netherlands, Bombay / India and Bangkok / Thailand.

Marlon Shy (painter, writer, photographer, video artist) born 1956 in Olpe / Germany

Marlon Shy has traveled for many years in Africa, where she spent some time during her childhood, as well as travelling in Thailand, Malaysia, Indonesia, Himalayas and India, where the idea developed for a sound research project involving Indian and German musicians.
1972-1974 Studied traditional painting at the Institut National Superior des Beaux Arts in Abidjan / Ivory Coast (Africa).
1978-1979 Assistant to Hollywood Director Peter Bogdanovich in Singapore and Los Angeles. Further work in the film industry as production assistant, make-up artists, actress and director in Los Angeles and Munich.
1981-1983 Travelled through North Africa, Malaysia, Thailand and Indonesia.
1985-1987 Studio in Berlin.
1987-1989 Studio in Hamburg; first exhibition of her paintings and objects.
1983-1994 Travelled through India, Thailand and Nepal to study the social background of the women, focussing on understanding their religion and sexuality.
1995 on… Producing videos and books as FETISCH PARK


The curiously-named Fetisch Park is currently one Carla Subito, who has an uncanny knack for crafting strangely pulsing fourth-world/ambient tone poems. Though comparisons to various experimentalists and drone-artists might be inevitable, the broad sound expanses seem to rip their qualities right out of black heart of the void itself. Up until 1999 they released seven albums, Zungenpflug (91), Verbundenheit (93), Ego Ex Nihil (96),
Trost (96), Instinktverlust (96), Alluvial (97), Feuersaat: Retrospective Works (99) then the band split up. After a long hiatus, Carla Subito has now activated this outstanding project again. First the band played some select concerts in Europe, and Klanggalerie have now released the all-new Fetisch Park album "Elevation" also featuring Can's Jaki Liebezeit.



xxxxx xxxxx xxxxx xxxxx xxxxx

Ego Ex Nihil means freely translated from Latin "I out of nothing" it was registered during the pregnancy of Fetisch Park member (Marlon Shy) by sound researcher and composer Carla Subito.The inspiration of growing belly and the it's capacity of stretching. The tightness of it's living content pushed us towards the question how it feels inside the warm, wet and dark chamber. As communications by the normal means of looking and talking cannot be performed in this early nevertheless important period of human life, there must be other ways to express feelings by recieving touches and sounds from outside, the little human may give answers-sort of signs. Attentive mothers know how to decode those delicate mysterious indications in the proper way. Around the 18th week the fetus can hear, the ear is fully develloped. It is possible to msnipulste the baby by sound, noises and music, the sound should neither excite too muxh nor should it be too boring, after all the baby can't escape. The best result is a state of attentive relaxation..(from the cover)

This album transcends so much pseudo new age tags. One need only to a imagine the age of sorcery, quite simply magic trickling to ones ears! Quite possibly, this is one of the best minimal ambient albums ever recorded. The main component is sound of bells, transformed and modified in many different ways. Its quite emotional too, which might be unusual for given genre. The album was created for women in utero, The title in english is 'Is I out of nothing'



Fetisch Park - Ego Ex Nihil  (flac  387mb)

01 Tau Im Licht 6:15
02 Helle Luft 6:15
03 Moos Und Steine 8:07
04 Sanfter Stahl 17:32
05 Kristall Kopf 8:18
06 Verborgene Rinnsale 5:15
07 Widderherz 7:27
08 Erdwesen 6:06

Fetisch Park - Ego Ex Nihil    (ogg  151mb)

xxxxx xxxxx xxxxx xxxxx xxxxx

Fetisch Park's Alluvial is a wet glide into a pungent delta of broken electronic beats, dripping rhythms and ethereal voices carried across the watery flats from somewhere far off. The singing, fit to lure sailors onto hidden reefs, is actually the captured voices of Thai prostitutes captured by Carla Subito and placed into a fitting frame created in the studio. Knowing this, Alluvial becomes a fascinating document of transcending beauty and composer Subito's versatile and thoughtful skills. Former church organist Subito founded Fetisch Park nine years ago with Marlon Shy. Globetrotter and painter Shy is especially interested in the religion and sexuality of Thai and Nepalese women. Alluvial is a sort of diptych, in two halves. By "Ballroom" we are at our soggiest in sensuality and movement. The final half is an ambient afterglow that soothes and eases the listener back into reality. Alluvial should be readily prescribed for romance and relaxation, in that order.



Fetisch Park - Alluvial (flac  367mb)

01 Malaysia Hotel 4:36
02 Blow 5:51
03 Gradation D'Humour 5:33
04 Reiz 5:28
05 Off Line 5:41
06 Pongh 6:53
07 Ball-Room 3:37
08 Cargo 5:14
09 Kadse 5:22
10 Suktion 15:39

Fetisch Park - Alluvial   (ogg 174mb)

xxxxx xxxxx xxxxx xxxxx xxxxx

This is a limited edition collaborative effort (1000 copies) between Schutze and longtime musical associate Andrew Hulme, who has appeared with Schutze previously in several incarnations of the ethnic/ambient group O Yuki Conjugate. 7 degrees is murkier and more ambiguous than the typical Schutze solo effort, and the seven pieces are filled with unexpected sonic transitions and combinations. Metallic whirring, insect twittering, phase-shifted, stuttering drones, strange voices, short wave radio oscillators, fragments of ethnic chanting and the sounds of rain -- all these elements combine to create subliminal dreamscapes of an uneasy and ambiguous nature. There's an unpredictability to this partnership which is uncharacteristic for Schutze as a solo artist. Alone, he tends to work things out almost to a fault, and his musical visions sometimes have an almost preternatural clarity. But on this CD with Hulme, more chances are being taken. And while things may occasionally get a little arbitrary, the peculiar juxtapositions have their own power, as the two artists push each other into some sonic territories where they probably wouldn't be venturing on their own.



Paul Schutze & Andrew Hulme - Fell  (flac  274mb)

01 After The Knives 3:08
02 God Box 12:05
03 Dead Language 2:57
04 The Prayer 10:52
05 Rain Of Rust 8:09
06 Ioascan Incision 12:11
07 Fallen 4:23

Paul Schutze & Andrew Hulme - Fell   (ogg  128mb)

xxxxx xxxxx xxxxx xxxxx xxxxx

Another nice sampler from the folks at Extreme, offering up plenty of nice cuts from Mo Boma, Soma, The Fire This Time (whose "Waking Dreamer Dub," a blurred boundary between Native American music and reggae, is one of the best things on offer here), Pablo's Eye, Groovy, Muslimgauze, Vidna Obmana, Land and Social Interiors. An essential place to start if you're seeking worthy alternatives.



VA - Assemblage Volume Two  (flac  357mb)

01 Soma - Dark Koma 5:32
02 Soma - Antediluvian 4:36
03 Pablo's Eye - Les Larmes Du Tigre 2:19
04 Pablo's Eye - Gone By Night 4:24
05 Groovy - Expanding 5:03
06 The Fire This Time - Waking Dreamer Dub 8:33
07 MuslimgauzeMasawi - Wife & Child 7:42
08 Vidna Obmana - Challenging Boundaries 5:14
09 Land - Shu 6:42
10 Mo Boma - Nyodi 5:19
11 Mo Boma - Bataloo 4:00
12 Mo Boma - Day Of Forever 2:10
13 Social Interiors - Traces Of Mercury 7:35

VA - Assemblage Volume Two   (ogg  142mb)

xxxxx xxxxx xxxxx xxxxx xxxxx

RhoDeo 1641 Young 1's 11th

$
0
0
Hello, an exiting F1 race today, Rosberg won start to finish but behind him there was plenty of action. Hamilton missed the start and fell back to 8th, it gave him reason to overtake upto 3rd where he came up against Verstappen and once again this youngster proved hard to pass. Behind those 3 Vettel/Ferrari made the wrong call which saw him loose sight of the podium 4th for him 8secs in front of Raikonen with last race's winner Ricciardo back in 6th. All 5 top teams had both drivers in the top ten, difference between drivers after a 1,5 hours race: Mercedes 5sec, Ferrari 8 sec, Force India 1.5 sec, Williams 1 sec but at Red Bull 29 sec. Clearly Verstappen felt he needed to make clear, after last weeks Red Bull gifting Ricciardo the win, that after 6 months in the car he is their top driver.



Today the 11th and penultimate episode of an 'historical' 12-episode dramatization of student life in early eighties UK, hooliganism had not made the headlights yet, but dare i say it quickly followed after this series was broadcast. Inspiring clueless chaos ..N'Joy

xxxxx xxxxx xxxxx xxxxx xxxxx

The Young Ones is a British "variety" show, broadcast in the United Kingdom from 1982 to 1984 in two six-part series. Shown on BBC2, it featured anarchic, offbeat humour which helped bring alternative comedy to television in the 1980s and made household names of its writers and performers. In 1985, it was shown on MTV, one of the first non-music television shows on the fledgling channel. In a 2004 poll, it ranked at number 31 in the BBC's list of Britain's Best Sitcoms.

The main characters were four undergraduate students who were sharing a house: aggressive punk Vyvyan (Adrian Edmondson), conceited wannabe anarchist Rick (Rik Mayall), oppressed paranoid hippie Neil (Nigel Planer), and the suave, charming Mike (Christopher Ryan). It also featured Alexei Sayle, who played various members of the Balowski family—most often Jerzei Balowski, the quartet's landlord—and occasional independent characters, such as the train driver in "Bambi" and the Mussolini-lookalike Police Chief in "Cash".
Stories were set in a squalid house where the students lived during their time at Scumbag College.

The show combined traditional sitcom style with violent slapstick, non-sequitur plot turns, and surrealism. Every episode except one featured a live performance by a band, including Madness, Motörhead, and The Damned. This was a device used to qualify the series for a larger budget, as "variety" shows attracted higher fees than "comedy"

xxxxx xxxxx xxxxx xxxxx xxxxx

with

Adrian Edmondson - Vyvyan...
Rik Mayall - Rick...
Nigel Planer - Neil
Christopher Ryan - Mike
Alexei Sayle - The Balowski Family...


The Young Ones 11 Sick (mp4  280mb)

11 Sick 34:38

Vyvan, Rick, Mike and Neil are ill and they have colds. The Boys get taken hostage by violent criminal Brian Damage Balowski and Mr. and Mrs. Pye, Neil's parents are coming to the flat to have tea.... with Madness performing "Our House"

xxxxx xxxxx xxxxx xxxxx xxxxx

Previously

The Young Ones 01 Demolition (mp4  266mb)
The Young Ones 02 Oil (mp4  264mb)
The Young Ones 03 Bored (mp4  284mb)
The Young Ones 04 Bomb (mp4  285mb)
The Young Ones 05 Intresting (mp4  258mb)
The Young Ones 06 Flood (mp4  247mb)
The Young Ones 07 Bambi (mp4  282mb)
The Young Ones 08 Cash (mp4  275mb)
The Young Ones 09 Nasty (mp4  283mb)
The Young Ones 10 Time (mp4  278mb)

xxxxx xxxxx xxxxx xxxxx xxxxx

RhoDeo 1641 Roots

$
0
0
Hello,

The music of Brazil encompasses various regional music styles influenced by African, European and Amerindian forms. After 500 years of history, Brazilian music developed some unique and original styles such as samba, bossa nova, MPB, sertanejo, pagode, tropicalia, choro, maracatu, embolada (coco de repente), mangue bit, funk carioca (in Brazil simply known as Funk), frevo, forró, axé, brega, lambada, and Brazilian versions of foreign musical genres, such as Brazilian rock and rap.


Today's artist started her career in Rio de Janeiro in 1964 with the show "Opinião" ("Opinion"). Due to its popularity, with performances all over the country, and the popularity of her 1965 single "Carcará", the artist became a star in Brazil. She has released 50 studio albums in 47 years of career, and is among the 10 best-selling music artists in Brazil, having sold more than 26 million records.. ........N'Joy

xxxxx xxxxx xxxxx xxxxx xxxxx

Maria Bethânia, sister of Caetano Veloso, is a renowned singer on her own. Her scenic, dramatic abilities, in a profoundly Brazilian tradition, make her performances quite personal, which has brought her a massive and faithful audience over the decades.

As a child, she wanted to be an actress right from the start. But, as her mother loved to sing, music was always around. Her father was not musically gifted, but loved to listen to Dorival Caymmi and Noel Rosa compositions. At 13, her family moved to Salvador, and she began to frequent the "university circles," intellectual groups gathering around art exhibitions and performances. The access to theater plays strengthened her desire to become an actress. At that time, a novice Caetano Veloso had become the musical partner of the play director Álvaro Guimarães. For Guimarães's short movie Moleques de Rua, Veloso composed a soundtrack which should have had, according to him, his sister singing in it. At 16, Bethânia tried to refuse, as she had never sung under such pressure. But Guimarães loved her timbre, and included her in his 1963 staging of Nelson Rodrigues' musical Boca de Ouro, where she performed a cappella. In the same year, they became acquainted with Gilberto Gil and Gal Costa.

Next year, Veloso was invited to organize a Brazilian popular music show at the opening of Salvador's Teatro Vila Velha. The show, called Nós, por Exemplo, included Veloso, Maria Bethânia, Gilberto Gil, and Gal Costa (still under her name Maria da Graça). The show was a success and was reenacted two weeks later, with the addition of Tom Zé (still presented as Antônio José). The success was even bigger, and the group (without Zé) soon presented another show, Nova Bossa Velha, Velha Bossa Nova. In that same year, Bethânia acted alone in her musical Mora na Filosofia, directed by Veloso and Gil.

Edu e Bethania In January 1965, still a school student earning bad grades, she was surprised by the invitation to substitute for Nara Leão, already an established young singer who had had a problem with her vocal cords, in her highly successful show Opinião. Bethânia's opening on February 13, 1965, was very successful, and her dramatic performance of "Carcará" (João do Vale/José Cândido) launched her as an overnight national success, repeated during the São Paulo season. Because of the sucess, Guilherme Araújo, then assistant for Aluísio de Oliveira at the RCA label, invited her, through Veloso, to record for the label. In May of that year, Bethânia recorded her first single, and some months later, her first LP. On September 26, 1965, the Vila Velha gang opened the show Arena Canta Bahia, at São Paulo's Teatro de Arena. In April 1966, Bethânia, invited by Guilherme Araújo, opened her show Recital at the Cangaceiro nightclub, in Rio. It also opened the way for Guilherme Araújo to become the manager of Veloso, Gil, and Costa (receiving 20 percent for 70 of his songs, he would be sued by Gil in 1992). She also performed at the Barroco nightclub (Rio). In the same year, Bethânia performed in the show Pois É, together with Gilberto Gil and Vinícius de Moraes, at the Teatro Opinião. In the following month, October 1966, Bethânia performed "Beira mar" (Caetano/Gil) at the I FIC. In 1967, she recorded with Edu Lobo the Elenco album Edu Lobo e Maria Bethânia. Through 1970, she would also be featured in the shows Yes, Nós Temos Maria Bethânia (Teatro de Bolso, Rio), Comigo Me Desavim (Teatro Miguel Lemos, Rio), Recital Na Boite Blow Up (São Paulo), and Brasileiro Profissão Esperança (Teatro Casa Grande, Rio).

Caetano Veloso, Maria Bethania and Gilberto Gil In 1968, she performed on the LP Veloso, Gil e Bethânia (RCA) and the solo LP Recital na Boite Barroco. In 1969 and 1970 respectively, Bethânia released the LPs Maria Bethânia and Maria Bethânia Ao Vivo. In 1971, she recorded for Philips the LP A Tua Presença. In July, backed by the Terra Trio, she opened at Rio's Teatro da Praia her show Rosa Dos Ventos, which yielded a live album under the same name, produced by Roberto Menescal. In 1971, she went to Europe and performed at the MIDEM (Cannes, France), and in Italy. Next year, she appeared, together with Chico Buarque and Nara Leão, in the film Quando o Carvaval Chegar. The movie's soundtrack was released in 1972 by Philips. Bethânia wrote the lyrics for Caetano Veloso's song "Trampolim," released on her album Drama. A European tour through Italy, Germany, Austria, Denmark, and Norway followed. In 1973, she opened her show Drama, Luz da Noite, also recorded as an album under the same title. Commemorating the tenth year of her career, she opened her show A Cena Muda (1974), recorded and released in November 1974. On June 6, 1975, Bethânia performed in a live show together with Chico Buarque, recorded and released as Chico Buarque e Maria Bethânia Gravado ao Vivo no Canecão. In 1976, she recorded Pássaro Proibido. In July, together with Caetano Veloso, Gilberto Gil, and Gal Costa, she toured Brazil with the show Os Doces Bárbaros, which yielded a film of the same name by Jom Tob Azulay and a double album released by Philips in November 1976.

On January 13, 1977, her show Pássaro da Manhã opened, released as a studio LP under the same title, which brought her second gold record. In May 1978, Bethânia released, with Veloso, a live show recorded in LP as Maria Bethânia e Caetano Veloso ao Vivo. Alibi In 1978, the LP Álibi was released (certified as a gold record before hitting the streets, making her the first Brazilian female singer to reach one million sold copies), producing a show with the same name in July of the next year. In December 1979, she released the album Mel, which also brought the show Mel in January 1980. The same year came the LP Talismã. In the next year, she opened her show Estranha Forma de Vida and released her album Alteza. In 1982, Bethânia performed in the show Nossos Momentos. In 1983, she took another turn in her career with the album Ciclo, branching out of her popular formula toward a new acoustic direction. In 1984, she performed in her show A Hora da Estrela, with songs especially written by Veloso and Chico Buarque. The album A Beira e o Mar followed. In 1985, the show 20 Anos opened.

The next year, Bethânia signed with RCA for the release of Dezembros, which contained unpublished songs by Tom Jobim, Chico Buarque, and Caetano Veloso, and "Canções e Momentos," written especially for her by Milton Nascimento. In 1988, she recorded Maria, with guest stars Jeanne Moreau and Gal Costa, which also was the name of her show which opened in that year. In 1989, the album Memória da Pele was released, and Bethânia presented the show Dadaya -- As Sete Moradas. Her 25th career anniversary was commemorated with the album and show 25 Anos, with participation from Nina Simone, Hermeto Pascoal, Egberto Gismonti, João Gilberto, and others. In 1982, she released the album Olho D'água, which was included in a major soap opera's soundtrack. Her 1993 album As Canções Que Cocê Fez Para Mim, also a show, was the best-selling record of that year (1,500,000 copies sold). For the label EMI/Odeon was recorded the album Âmbar, and also a show which was recorded live and released in 1997 as Imitação da Vida.

In 2015, her album Meus Quintais was nominated for the 16th Latin Grammy Awards in the Best MPB Album category.


xxxxx xxxxx xxxxx xxxxx xxxxx

Actress and vocalist Maria Bethânia recorded Recital Na Boite Barroco for the Odeon label in 1968 and it was reissued on compact disc in 2007 by EMI. Born Maria Bethânia Vianna Telles Veloso in 1946, this passionate interpreter of Brazilian popular song was some three years into her recording career when she was taped in live performance with the Tamba Trio (pianist Luiz Eca, bassist Bebeto, and percussionist Helcio Milito). The Maria Bethânia heard on this album was already an adept handler of intimate ballads, jazz samba and bossa nova. Standing as it does among the earliest entries in her discography, Recital Na Boite Barroco serves as a pleasant prologue to her major triumphs of the '70s and her subsequent successes over the years.



Maria Bethania - Recital Na Boite Barroco  (flac  196mb)

01 Blue Planet (Planeta Blue) 3:38
02 Dream Merchant (O Vendedor de Sonhos) 4:08
03 Jaguar (Yuarete) 3:00
04 Enchanted City (Cidade Encantada) 3:45
05 Heart Is My Master (Meu Mestre Coracao) 3:54
06 Children's Dance (Danca Dos Meninos) 3:19
07 Eldorado 3:39
08 Letter to the Republic (Carta a Republica) 3:25
09 Old Hill (Morro Velho) 5:07
10 Mountain 4:55
11 Songs and Moments (Cancoes e Momentos) 3:40

     (ogg   mb)

xxxxx xxxxx xxxxx xxxxx xxxxx

This album captures Maria Bethania's professional first project with actor and director Fauzi Arap,who would continue to direct her in subsequent projects.Conceived in 1971,the show aimed at showcasing Bethania's theatrical abilities while presenting both popular songs and poems.This recording,however only presents about one third of the setlist presented during the 71-72 Brazil tour.Starting with the esoteric Sueli Acosta's Assombracoes,dancing through folk songs such as Toalha Da Saudade, and exploring the tango El Dia Que Me Quieras,Bethania sounds the most comfortable with the Chico Buarque penned title track and with brother Caetano's Janelas Abertas Nº 2. Maria makes it all a worthwhile journey with her raspy contralto wrapped with her passion and theatricality.



Maria Bethania - Rosa Dos Ventos   (flac  175mb)

Assombracoes 19:02

01 Assombrações
02 O Tempo E O Rio
03 Ponto De Oxum
04 Texto Nº 1
05 O Mar (Canção Praieira)
06 Suíte Dos Pescadores
07 Avarandado
08 Toalha Da Saudade
09 Imitação
10 Hora Da Razão
11 Cantigas De Roda
12 Doce Mistério Da Vida (Ah! Sweet Mystery Of Life)

Texto No.2 17:19

13 Texto Nº 2
14 Minha História (Gesubambino)
15 Lembranças
16 El Dia Que Me Quieras
17 Rosa Dos Ventos
18 Texto Nº 3
19 Janelas Abertas Nº 2
20 Não Identificado
21 Flor Da Noite
22 Texto Nº 4
23 Movimento Dos Barcos
24 Texto Nº 5

    (ogg   mb)

xxxxx xxxxx xxxxx xxxxx xxxxx

Toquinho is probably the most famous Brazilian guitarist of all times. His greatest success began in 1970 when he joined singer Vinicius De Moraes, with whom he recorded dozens of records throughout the 1970s. Nicknamed "O Poetinha" (The Little Poet) Vinícius was a seminal figure in contemporary Brazilian music. As a poet, he wrote lyrics for a great number of songs that became all-time classics. Vinícius was also a composer of Bossa nova, a playwright, a diplomat and, as an interpreter of his own songs, he left several important albums.
Ever since, the duo's mild and touching bossanova and samba are very well-known worldwid.

When they started the '70 and bossa nova was already somewhat recognized worldwide. Hence for a show at La Fusa (Buenes Aires) they invited Maria Bethania who took her first steps outside Brazil at that time.
And while doing many songs from Vinicius himself, near the public what would a few years later to explode worldwide, more precisely what would the Tropicalia and its references; which are interpreted and endorsed and on this album and the previous as a sign of the times.

Today over the years can see better and enjoy some humility that openness and Vinicius; and as he envisions the future when submitting to Bethania to interpret the song of his brother Caetano Veloso , E manha. That is to say it is an exciting and endearing version, only voice and guitar. Here also it appears in the vocal strength of the singer, Viramundo , a song by Gilberto Gil (another promise of those days) that is distinguished by its musicality and with another character. In addition Bethania beautifully sings the theme Jobin-Vinicius : Or tinha be . . In turn Toqinho blunts elegantly his guitar playing an instrumental track , authored by him with his beloved Vinicius do Moraes

This work really recreates the idea of the live show and the atmosphere of the café concert so well encourages Vinicius, but was recorded in studio. The end result is charming and excellent. The only thing different live concerts, is adding up to two Argentine session musicians. Today we can say that it is a historical registration, full of beautiful compositions that are part of the collective memory. A prized collector 's item, since it was conceived more than 40 years ago- and has and holds the powerful grace of the transcendent.



Vinicius de Moraes, Maria Bethânia, Toquinho - La Fusa   (flac 258mb)

01 A Tonga Da Mironga Do Kabulete 4:04
02 É De Manhã 2:36
03 Samba Da Rosa 2:35
04 Testamento 2:15
05 Samba Da Bênção 9:11
06 Tarde Em Itapoan 4:35
07 Viramundo 1:58
08 Apelo 3:34
09 Como Dizia O Poeta 3:46
10 O Que Tinha De Ser 1:55
11 O Dia Da Criação 4:25

Vinicius de Moraes, Maria Bethânia, Toquinho - La Fusa     (ogg 114mb)

xxxxx xxxxx xxxxx xxxxx xxxxx

This exceptional 1972 recording by Maria Bethânia, the matriarch of tropicalia and bossa nova, was produced by her brother, Caetano Veloso. Bethânia had been performing outside her native Brazil in Italy, Germany, Austria, Denmark, and Norway, and in 1973 Antonio Bivar and Isabel Chamber commissioned the direction of the full-blown stage show Drama Luz da Noite (Drama, Light From the Night). The show was recorded live in December 1973, and features the songs of Veloso, Gilberto Gil, Luiz Melodia, and Paulo Vanzolini, among many others who wrote specifically for her. The finest tunes are those written in collaboration with Veloso and the adapted traditional Bahian songs. The live stage version is not comparable to the exquisite LP from the previous year, which features some of the tropicalia movement's finest tunes. However, this work reveals the genius of Maria Bethânia, a mainstay (along with her brother) of the new Brazilian bossa nova sound of the early '70s.



Maria Bethania - Drama Anjo Exterminado (flac 175mb)

01 Portal Da Cor (Threshold Of Colours) 4:09
02 Caso De Amor (Love Affair) 3:20
03 Noites Do Sertão (Country Nights) 2:34
04 Mar Do Nosso Amor (Sea Of Our Love) 3:21
05 Lágrimas Do Sul (Southern Tear) 3:40
06 Raça (Race) 2:49
07 Para Eu Parar De Me Doer (So I Can Stop Feeling Hurt) 3:03
08 Encontros E Despedidas (Meetings And Farewells) 3:35
09 Quem Perguntou Por Mim (Who Asked For Me) 3:52
10 A Primeira Estrela (The Morning Star) 5:02
11 Vidro E Corte (Glass And Cut) 4:40
12 Radio Experiência (Radio Experience) 2:45

 (ogg   mb)

xxxxx xxxxx xxxxx xxxxx xxxxx

RhoDeo 1641 Aetix

$
0
0
Hello,

Today's artists featured a racially diverse line-up. Their lyrics featured themes connected to politics.[1] Reinforcing the songs of Neol Davies were the voice and rude girl style of Pauline Black and the rhythms of Desmond Brown on the Hammond organ. The band's name is based on the term "selector", which is a Jamaican word for disc jockey. The band were one of the most successful ska bands of the 2 Tone era, notching up several top forty singles in the British charts.....N'Joy

xxxxx xxxxx xxxxx xxxxx xxxxx

One of the key bands of the U.K. ska revival of the late '70s and early '80s, the Selecter were also one of the few racially and sexually integrated acts on the scene, and vocalist Pauline Black often tackled sexism along with racism and the other social ills focused upon by groups that were part of the 2-Tone movement. The Selecter originally began as a studio project: when the Specials released their debut single, "Gangsters," in 1979, they needed a second song for a B-side, and they decided to use a track that Specials drummer John Bradbury had previously recorded with guitarist Neol Davies and trombone player Barry Jones in 1977; the tune, "Kingston Affair," was credited to the Selecter. When "Gangsters" became a hit and "Kingston Affair" began gaining its share of attention, Davies opted to assemble a proper band using the name. Recruiting his friends Charley Anderson on bass and Desmond Brown on keyboards, Davies filled out the lineup with guitarist Compton Amanor, Charley "H" Bembridge on drums, and vocalist Arthur "Gaps" Hendrickson; when Davies met Pauline Black, he promptly gave her an audition, and she was added to the lineup as lead singer.

The Selecter were soon added to the 2-Tone Records roster, and scaled the U.K. singles charts with the singles "Three Minute Hero,""On My Radio," and "Missing Words." The Selecter's debut album, Too Much Pressure, was released in early 1980, and rose to number five on the U.K. album chart, eventually receiving a gold record. At the peak of their success, the Selecter were filmed on tour for Dance Craze, 2-Tone's documentary about the British ska revival, but the first proper lineup began to crumble when Charley Anderson and Desmond Brown left to form their own band, the People. With the addition of keyboard player James Mackie and Adam Williams on bass, the Selecter began work on their second album, but 1981's Celebrate the Bullet was welcomed with tepid reviews and poor sales, and Black left to pursue a solo career, with the band soon breaking up after a new vocalist didn't work out.

Black worked in music and as an actress before the enduring popularity of the 2-Tone sound led her to assemble a new lineup of the Selecter with Davies in 1991. The new Selecter released an album, 1992's Out on the Streets, but not long after its release, Davies had left the group, and "Gaps" Hendrickson came aboard in 1993, in time to help cut 1994's The Happy Album. In 1997, No Doubt, serious fans of the 2-Tone era, invited the Selecter to open their American tour, and a steady stream of live and studio releases appeared from the group, most featuring Black and a rotating cast of musicians. In 2006, Black left the Selecter, and for a while Davies toured with his own edition of the group. Black and Hendrickson began performing again as the Selecter in 2010, and in 2015 they released a new album, Subculture, a commanding fusion of reggae and ska that rose to number five on the U.K. indie album chart.

xxxxx xxxxx xxxxx xxxxx xxxxx

The Selecter's "Too Much Pressure" is the single most overlooked album of the U.K. ska revival, and in my opinion, the most overlooked album of the late-70s/early-80s. Fans of the short-lived U.K. ska revival are probably familiar with The Selecter, but unfortunately most don't own "Too Much Pressure". It was out of print until 2002, and then only released on a small indie label in the U.K. The album was originally released in 1980, following a few key singles, on the then fledgling 2-Tone label. Those early singles - "The Selecter", "On My Radio" and "Too Much Pressure" - are included as bonus tracks on this reissue.

Like other 2-Tone bands, The Selecter is indebted to early Jamaican ska, specifically Duke Reid and Prince Buster productions, as well as late seventies U.K. punk. The Selecter is rooted in rock steady and reggae rhythms as well, which aligns them more closely with The English Beat than The Specials or Madness (all label-mates.) What makes The Selecter completely unique is lead vocalist Pauline Black. Black was born to belt out infectious, punk-inspired ska tunes. Without her, The Selecter would sound too much like The English Beat - not a bad thing, just that Black really makes the band something special. She can back a social statement like "Danger" with fierce intensity and then bounce along playfully to some of the most infectious songs in existence. (Is "On My Radio" pure bliss or what?). No slapdash compilation can ever replace the original album, especially when every track is a killer.




The Selecter - Too Much Pressure   (flac  332mb)

01 Three Minute Hero 3:00
02 Time Hard 3:10
03 They Make Me Mad 2:47
04 Missing Words 3:22
05 Danger 2:38
06 Street Feeling 3:11
07 My Collie (Not A Dog) 2:45
08 Too Much Pressure 3:48
09 Murder 2:39
10 Out On The Streets 3:28
11 Carry Go Bring Home 3:02
12 Black And Blue 3:17
13 James Bond 2:16
bonus
14 The Selecter 2:59
15 On My Radio 3:07
16 Too Much Pressure (7") 2:50

The Selecter - Too Much Pressure   (ogg  123mb)

xxxxx xxxxx xxxxx xxxxx xxxxx

The Selecter were part of the 1980s ska revival that included Madness, the Specials, and Bad Manners. Their first album, Too Much Pressure (also long unavailable in its original form) was straightforward dance music, and is one of the highly rated albums of this genre. Their second album, Celebrate the Bullet, described by lead singer Pauline Black as "our blue period" featured a wider range of sound, some of it fast-paced dance music, some of it thoughtful and contemplative. It didn't meet with the success of the first record, and no doubt had something to do with the band's temporary demise.

Don't believe the critics, though. In fact, don't believe the current Selecter members, who ignored these songs entirely when they regrouped in the 1990s. Cool Blue Lady, Deep Water, and Bombscare feature Pauline Black's most haunting vocals, combined with emotionally intense, compelling melodies.There is fun to be had here, with lively beats and those orgasmic bass lines that make ska one of my favourite styles, but there is a much darker, more sombre edge to this album than to most ska. The music is haunting, intruding, not the carefree skanking tunes we are used to. The lyrics of ska have always been darker than the music, but in this case the music meets the lyrics emotionally, making an innovative and at times brilliant album.



The Selecter - Celebrate The Bullet (flac 404mb)

01 (Who Likes) Facing Situations 3:32
02 Deepwater 4:09
03 Red Reflections 3:39
04 Tell Me What's Wrong 3:26
05 Bombscare 3:05
06 Washed Up And Left For Dead 4:04
07 Celebrate The Bullet 4:25
08 Selling Out Your Future 3:59
09 Cool Blue Lady 3:30
10 Their Dream Goes On 3:56
11 Bristol And Miami 4:44
bonus
12 The Whisper 3:00
13 Train To Skaville 3:07
14 Last Tango In Dub 4:22
15 Train To Skaville (12" Version) 7:51

The Selecter - Celebrate The Bullet  (ogg  149mb)

xxxxx xxxxx xxxxx xxxxx xxxxx

The six member band consisted of Dave Wakeling on vocals and guitar, Andy Cox on guitar, David Steele on bass, Everett Morton on drums, Ranking Roger on vocals and toasting, and foundational first wave ska legend Saxa on saxophone. The band crossed over fluidly between soul, reggae, pop and punk, and from these disparate pieces they created an infectious dance rhythm. Along with their contemporaries The Specials, The Selecter, and Madness, The Beat became an overnight sensation and one of the most popular and influential bands of the British ska movement.

By Christmas of 1979, The Beat were riding high in the UK charts with their first single, a smoking remake of the classic Smokey Robinson tune "Tears of a Clown". Over the course of the next five years The Beat toured relentlessly and released three studio albums: "I Just Can't Stop It", "Wh'appen", and "Special Beat Service".

In 1980, the band decided to form its own 2-Tone-inspired label, Go-Feet (distributed by Arista). A string of hit singles followed in the U.K., including "Mirror in the Bathroom." Their debut LP, I Just Can't Stop It, combined the early hits with other pop/ska-oriented material. "Stand Down Margaret," with its anti-Thatcher stance, found the band moving in a more political direction, leading to several benefit gigs for "radical" causes. Musically, the Beat slowed down the tempo for a more traditional reggae sound showcased on 1981's Wha'ppen. This direction failed to bring the chart success of its predecessor. Featuring a more pop-oriented approach, 1982's Special Beat Service helped the band increase its U.S. fan base through MTV exposure of "Save It for Later" and "I Confess.".

xxxxx

I Just Can't Stop It was a late arrival onto the checker- boarded scene, the Specials, Madness and the Selecter had all beat the (English) Beat to the punch, but luckily this wasn't a race. Besides, the band had already primed the pump with a trio of Top 10 singles -- the double A-sided "Tears of a Clown"/"Ranking Full Stop,""Hands Off She's Mine" and "Mirror in the Bathroom," their debut album followed hard on "Mirror"'s heels, picking up the latter two songs and "Full Stop" to boot. Two more of the tracks within set followed them onto the chart, later that summer on another double A-sided single -- "Best Friend" coupled with a dub version of "Stand Down Margaret"." So this was a hit filled set. And so popular were such songs as "Rough Rider,""Twist and Crawl,""Can't Get Used to Losing You," and "Whine & Grine," becoming such staples, that fans can be forgiven for assuming they too were released on 45. Intriguingly, "Losing You" came courtesy of Andy Williams, and highlighted the softer styling that would swiftly overtake the Beat. But "Rough" and "Whine" had solid ska credentials, both were Prince Buster hits, while "Jackpot" was one of slew of racing themed rocksteady smashes that drove The Pioneers too fame, The Specials had opened their own account with another -"Longshot Kick the Bucket"." And it was this sheer diversity of influences that set The Beat's sound apart from their compatriots. Their own compositions were heavily cultural in theme -- the radical cries to depose the prime minister on "Margaret," the slashing anti-violence of "Two Swords" and even more ominous and feverish "Click Click," through the cultural nihilism of "Mirror" itself. With a few softer love and lovelorn tracks taking some of the edge off. Stop was a stunning achievement, its driving, frenetic numbers grounded in punk's fury smashing into the loose-limbed grooves and melodies of rocksteady inspired songs, and banging head on into sweeter pop fueled pieces. The album remained on the British charts for a whopping eight months, eventually peaking at Number Three. Time has not diminished its glory, the songs remain hugely as their continued inclusion in the band's offshoot's repertoire have proved.



The Beat - I Just Can't Stop It (flac 265mb)

01 Mirror In The Bathroom 3:11
02 Hands Off...She's Mine 3:01
03 Two Swords 2:20
04 Twist & Crawl 2:36
05 Tears Of A Clown 2:39
06 Rough Rider 4:52
07 Click Click 1:29
08 Ranking Full Stop 2:47
09 Big Shot 2:34
10 Whine & Grine / Stand Down Margaret 3:52
11 Noise In This World 2:20
12 Can't Get Used To Losing You 3:04
13 Best Friend 3:01
14 Jackpot 4:19

The Beat - I Just Can't Stop It (ogg  107mb)

xxxxx xxxxx xxxxx xxxxx xxxxx

This is an album of Peel Sessions and four cuts live from a November 1982 gig in Boston. Each of their albums has a distinctive character, something that carries through to the three Peel Sessions -- one delivered in support for each album. Its sixty minutes-plus duration comprised of live performances taken from British radio sessions as well as a concert in Boston in 1982. As evidenced by even the earliest of these recordings, a John Peel session from 1979, The English Beat’s collective instrumental precision was a corollary to their well-honed social acuity as expressed ever so directly, but politely, in "Stand Down Margaret." As lean lithe and lissome as the band sounded on studio records, the wiry strength they evince on these recordings is something else altogether. The edgy motion on something like "Monkey Murders" is all the more noticeable given the band’s smooth ensemble work, reminiscent of The Wailers and other great reggae bands. The tinny concert recordings highlight how tight was the group’s vocal work but given the age of the recordings too, the sound is remarkably full with dub-like effects, particularly crucial for the sound of band that relied so heavily on bass and drums. Would that there was more detail on these live recordings specifically on who was in the band on the later excerpts as personnel had begun to shift by that time, but that shortfall is minor.



The Beat - Peel Sessions & Live Boston (flac 395mb)

Peel Session - November 5, 1979
01 Tears Of A Clown 2:53
02 Ranking Full Stop 3:02
03 Click Click 1:30
04 Mirror In The Bathroom 2:24
05 Big Shot 1:53
Peel Session - September 22, 1980
06 Too Nice To Talk To 4:10
07 Psychedelic Rockers4:19
08 Monkey Murders 3:12
09 Walk Away 3:13
Peel Session - March 29, 1982
10 Spar Wid Me 3:47
11 End Of The Party 3:01
12 She's Going 2:06
13 Save It For Later 3:09
14 Sole Salvation 2:43
15 Pato And Roger A Go Talk 4:03
Opera House, Boston - November 19, 1982
16 Best Friend 2:59
17 Tears Of A Clown 3:34
18 Twist & Crawl 2:44
19 Get-A-Job/Stand Down Margaret 6:45

The Beat - Peel Sessions & Live Boston   (ogg  155mb)

xxxxx xxxxx xxxxx xxxxx xxxxx

RhoDeo 1641 Re-Up 74

$
0
0
Hello, some guy named 'Robert Zimmerman ' won the Nobelprice for literature, ah yes even the Swedes get older and nostalgic and succumb to the meme installed by mr Zimmerman that the times are changing. Considering how fast our world is changing these days, it's not really that surprising that this meme triggered the thought that this meme was of extraordinairy quality, and the man responsible for it must be a poet. And as this man wrote many more poems, usually disguised as lyrics and thus accompanied by music. This combo makes his efforts worthy of a Nobel price, i wonder when rappers get a look in, probably a few decades from now when it's fans are old and more influential. Hmm that would be never then...




These days i'm making an effort to re-up, it will satisfy a small number of people which means its likely the update will  expire relatively quickly again as its interest that keeps it live. Nevertheless here's your chance ... asks for re-up in the comments section at the page where the expired link resides, or it will be discarded by me. ....requests are satisfied on a first come first go basis. ...updates will be posted here and yes sign a name to your request and do it from the page where the link died! To keep re-ups interesting to my regular visitors i will only re-up files that are at least 12 months old (the older the better as far as i am concerned), and please check the previous update request if it's less then a year old i won't re-up.

Looka here another batch of 14 re-ups, requests fullfilled up to October 12th. There's much more to be had here. My tip here randomly pick an archive date and move up or down a few pages to older or newer posts, browse was you get there and maybe you'll find something of your liking or it may triggers a memory of what you'd really want and then do a search  ...N' Joy

xxxxx xxxxx xxxxx xxxxx xxxxx

3x Into BPM Back in Flac ( The Aloof - Cover The Crime, Eat Static - Implant, The Grid - Evolver)


3x Sundaze NOW in Flac ( Captain Beefheart - Trout Mask Replica, Captain Beefheart - Doc At The Radar Station, still in ogg Captain Beefheart And The Magic Band - A Carrot Is As Close As A Rabbit Gets To A Diamond)


5x Wavetrain Now in Flac (Poly Styrene - Translucence, John Foxx - Metamatic, still in ogg The Reds - I, Positive Noise - Heart of Darkness,  Positive Noise - Change Of Heart)

ah yes a request for more UK beat after yesterdays aetix post

3x Aetix Back In Flac (The Beat - Wha'ppen?, The Beat - Special Beat Service, The Beat - Bonus Beat (12' and Dub Versions))


xxxxx xxxxx xxxxx xxxxx xxxxx


RhoDeo 1641 Grooves

$
0
0
Hello,  so the Walloon part of Belgium is blocking CETA and those nitwit journo's are crying foul in concert with industrialists. The extremely nefarious European commision is up in arms as they see their underhand plan to force the EU into submission and accept TTIP, as any US company with a shed in Canada can have everything they want from CETA and thus there's no longer a reason to oppose TTIP and that's the reason this trojan horse was created in the first place. The deal only serves to interest the elite and wealthy whilst putting job security and social welfare for others at risk.
The EU is lead by mentally challenged alpha's (no clue when it comes to figures), idiots like socalled socialist leaders like french president Hollande who's despised by 70% of the french and fat bully Sigmar Gabriel the German vice cancellor, ignore the calls of the people and continue the sell out of Europe's wealth and health and turn us all into multinational serves....


Today's artists are an American soul-influenced funk group that formed in the early 1970s. They were initially a 14-member group known as the New York City Players; this name was later changed as it was too confusing to the average American fan as Ohio is so close to New York City (apparently-no it isn't, but then idiots are us-infact it was their label that told them to change their name) anyway a lawsuit from Ohio Players forced them to play under a different name, god knows who came up with the silly one they came up with (Larry Blackmon). I guess this name change cost them serious money in global appeal, as for those Ohio players most didn't make it into this century and the last one died this year. Karma is a bitch as they say .. ..... N'joy

xxxxx xxxxx xxxxx xxxxx xxxxx

An outlandish, in-your-face stage presence, a strange sense of humor, and a hard-driving funk sound that criss-crossed a few musical boundaries earned Cameo countless comparisons to Parliament/Funkadelic in their early days. However, Cameo eventually wore off accusations of being derivative by transcending their influences and outlasting almost every single one of them. Throughout the '70s and '80s, the group remained up with the times and occasionally crept ahead of them, such that they became influences themselves upon younger generations of R&B and hip-hop acts. By the time the group's popularity started to fizzle in the late '80s, a series of R&B chart hits -- ranging from greasy funk workouts to synthesized funk swingers to dripping ballads -- was left in their wake. Further separating Cameo from their forebears, they didn't have a diaper-clad guitarist. Instead, they had a codpiece-wearing lead vocalist.

Cardiac Arrest That vocalist was Larry Blackmon. In 1974, the ex-Juilliard student and New York City club-goer instigated a funk band with a membership of 13 called the New York City Players. Blackmon, Tomi Jenkins, and Nathan Leftenant formed the group's nucleus. The Casablanca label signed the group to their Chocolate City offshoot, and shortly after that, the group changed its name to Cameo. Their excellent debut album, 1977's Cardiac Arrest, was highlighted by four singles. Three of those hit the Billboard R&B chart: "Rigor Mortis" (number 33), "Funk Funk" (number 20), and "Post Mortem" (number 70). Although the group was clearly inspired by elder funk groups like Parliament, Funkadelic, and the Ohio Players, Cardiac Arrest made Cameo's case for belonging in the same division an open-and-shut one.

In an attempt to keep the ball rolling, 1978 saw the release of Cameo's second and third albums. Neither We All Know Who We Are nor Ugly Ego were as solid as the debut, but the group's singular characteristics were becoming increasingly evident. The winding, horn-punctuated "It's Serious" (from We All Know Who We Are) narrowly missed the Top 20 of the R&B chart, while "Insane" (from Ugly Ego) dipped just inside it, peaking at number 17. The best halves of these two albums would've made a fine sophomore LP.

1979's Secret Omen, featuring a disco-fied re-visiting of Cardiac Arrest's "Find My Way" and the magnificently funky and slightly loony "I Just Want to Be" (a number-three R&B chart hit), was stacked with fine album cuts and brought Cameo back as a group that excelled in the LP format. "Sparkle" was one of their best ballads, a sinewy number that hit the Top Ten. Five albums released between 1980 and 1983 (Cameosis, Feel Me, Knights of the Sound Table, Alligator Woman, Style) brought about a slight dip in quality on the album front. Despite an abundance of filler on each record, none of those albums were strict disappointments, delivering hot Top 20 R&B singles like "Shake Your Pants,""We're Goin' Out Tonight,""Keep It Hot,""Freaky Dancin'""Just Be Yourself,""Flirt," and "Style."

She's Strange One of the most significant ripples in Cameo's time line came during that period, in 1982, when they packed up and set up shop in Atlanta. Pared down to a quintet and located in a less hectic city, the group became bigger fish in a smaller pond. Blackmon even started his own label, Atlanta Artist. The label's first LP, Style, also marked a significant shift in sound, with synthesizers taking on a pronounced role. Paydirt was struck with 1984's She's Strange; the title cut, a late-night slithery smolder, topped the R&B chart and eclipsed the Top 50 of the pop chart, kicking off a remarkable three-album run that made Cameo one of the most popular groups of the '80s. Single Life and Word Up!, released respectively in 1985 and 1986, continued the hot streak. The singles from those two albums -- "Attack Me With Your Love,""Single Life,""Word Up,""Candy," and "Back and Forth" -- held down the Top Five plateau of the R&B chart. "Word Up" even went to number six on the pop chart, giving them their biggest bite of the mainstream. The song was everywhere.

What goes up must come down, and that's exactly what happened to Cameo. Despite the fact that two more singles -- "Skin I'm In" and "I Want It Now" -- scaled up to number five on the R&B chart, neither Machismo nor Real Men Wear Black performed well as albums. After 1991's Emotional Violence, the group's profile was lowered significantly, but they did tour sporadically to the delight of hardcore fans as well as plenty of misguided people who thought Cameo was all about "Word Up" and nothing more. Notably, Blackmon spent a few years of the '90s at Warner Bros., as the vice president of A&R.

Cameo's presence continued to be felt throughout the early 2000s, not only through extensive sample use and less tangible influences upon younger artists and producers. Several retrospectives have kept the group's music alive: Casablanca's 1993 compilation The Best of Cameo is an excellent point of entry. Mercury's 12" Collection & More, released in 1999, covers the group's best dancefloor moments. 2002's spectacular Anthology, a double-disc set also released by Mercury, covers a lot of ground and does the group justice as a total package.

Tomi Jenkins, who released his self-produced album The Way in 2005, is writing and recording his follow-up EP. He is also the music supervisor/producer on the film Icemosis, the story of a 1970s fictional funk band. The film is in music production and they hope to have the film released in 2013. He is also the author of a murder mystery entitled "Crime, Love and Honor" which he is autographing and selling at concerts.
Aaron Mills continues to tour with Cameo as well as other artists. He has worked with Andre 3000 and Big Boi to record a bassline for "Ms. Jackson".

Ex-Cameo vocalist John Kellogg became an entertainment lawyer representing such hit artists as the O'Jays, the late Gerald Levert and LSG. He also pursued a career in music industry higher education, becoming Assistant Chair of the Music Business/Management department at one of the world's leading institutions of contemporary music, Berklee College of Music in Boston, MA. Larry Blackmon & Tomi Jenkins recorded the next Cameo album with a tentative release scheduled for late fall 2012 or early 2013. Still no news about that one.

Gregory B. Johnson has released 2 album's on his own label, Allspice Record Co. "A New Hip" (smooth Jazz) in 2007. "Funk Funk (Just For A Little Time)" in 2012 (urban funk). In 2015, Cameo announced a new residency show at the Westgate Las Vegas Resort & Casino, opening March 2016.

xxxxx xxxxx xxxxx xxxxx xxxxx

In 1977, one of funk's most promising debuts came from Cameo, whose first album, Cardiac Arrest, made it crystal clear that Larry Blackmon's outfit was a force to be reckoned with. If you were into hard, tough funk in 1977, it was impossible not to be excited by Cameo's debut. This excellent LP contains a romantic soul ballad ("Stay By My Side") as well as the original version of "Find My Way," which is the sort of smooth yet funky disco-soul that groups like the Trammps and Double Exposure were known for in the late '70s. But for the most part, this is an album of aggressive, unapologetically gritty funk. On classics like "Rigor Mortis,""Funk, Funk," and "Post Mortem," one can pinpoint Cameo's influences -- namely, Parliament/Funkadelic, the Ohio Players, and the Bar-Kays. But at the same time, these gems demonstrate that even in 1977, Cameo had a recognizable sound of its own. And ultimately, Cameo would become quite influential itself. For funk lovers, Cardiac Arrest is essential listening. Period.



Cameo - Cardiac Arrest    (flac  229mb)

01 Still Feels Good 4:14
02 Post Mortem 4:17
03 Smile 3:48
04 Funk Funk 4:44
05 Find My Way 3:23
05 Rigor Mortis 5:18
06 Good Times 4:59
07 Stay By My Side 4:23

Cameo - Cardiac Arrest (ogg   88mb)

xxxxx xxxxx xxxxx xxxxx xxxxx

Cameo's second album, We All Know Who We Are, which saw Cameo becoming increasingly successful.
This got into the top 60 on the mainstream chart and number 15 on the R&B countdown. The single It’s Serious not only gave the band a Top 20 R&B hit but also got onto the all important dance chart, hitting number 21. With songs like C on The Funk , Cameo were really finding their range and establishing a unique niche.



Cameo - We All Know Who We Are  (flac  230mb)

01 Inflation 4:45
02 C On The Funk 4:20
03 Why Have I Lost You 4:41
04 Stand Up 3:29
05 We All Know Who We Are 5:53
06 It's Serious 7:58
07 It's Over 4:12

Cameo - We All Know Who We Are (ogg  89mb)

xxxxx xxxxx xxxxx xxxxx xxxxx

As Cameo rode both the critical and commercial success resulting from their debut, Cardiac Arrest, Chocolate City took the group straight from the road and right into the studio to record its follow-up. Because of this, the overall quality of Ugly Ego suffers mildly. It's uneven at points, but this easily could be attributed to erratic song sequencing, something that thankfully can be rectified in the digital age by the custom programming button. The band was developing its definitive sound at this point -- the sound later heard on Secret Omen that would usher Cameo from being just another funk band to funk overlords. The uptempo "Insane" would later go on to be a fan favorite, and the slower moments found on "Give Love a Chance,""Friend to Me," and "Two of Us" prove that Cameo were more than just a good-time party band, but serious soulful balladeers when the time was appropriate.



Cameo - Ugly Ego   (flac 221mb)

01 I'll Be With You 4:21
02 Insane 5:01
03 Give Love A Chance 4:50
04 I Want You 4:07
05 Ugly Ego 4:53
06 Anything You Wanna Do 3:32
07 Friend To Me 5:12
08 Two Of Us 4:31

Cameo - Ugly Ego (ogg  91mb)

xxxxx xxxxx xxxxx xxxxx xxxxx

Cameo never recorded a bad album, but it did record some uneven ones. One such LP was 1978's Ugly Ego, which was generally decent but fell short of the excellence of Cameo's superb debut album, Cardiac Arrest. But if Ugly Ego led some people to believe that Cameo might be slipping, the band's fourth album, Secret Omen, put that idea to rest. Released in 1979, Secret Omen is among Cameo's most essential releases. Everything on this album is a winner; anyone who appreciates sweaty, gutsy, horn-powered funk would have a hard time not loving "I Just Want to Be" (a major hit) and equally gritty gems like "New York,""Macho," and "The Rock." Meanwhile, a remake of "Find My Way" (previously heard on 1977's Cardiac Arrest) is even more disco-minded than the original version. Disco was never Cameo's specialty, but because disco was so huge in 1979, it made sense to revisit "Find My Way." And although "Find My Way" is atypical of Cameo on the whole, it's still a great song. Equally impressive is the hit soul ballad "Sparkle"; even though Larry Blackmon and friends are best known for up-tempo songs, they recorded their share of memorable ballads in the 1970s and 1980s. Secret Omen is recommended to anyone with even a casual interest in late-'70s funk.



Cameo - Secret Omen  (flac 227mb)

01 Energy 4:23
02 I Just Want To Be 5:18
03Find My Way 9:04
04 Macho 5:03
05 The Rock 3:55
06 Sparkle 4:51
07 New York 5:02

Cameo - Secret Omen (ogg  89mb)

xxxxx xxxxx xxxxx xxxxx xxxxx

Sundaze 1642

$
0
0
Hello,

Today's artist is a prolific, prodigiously talented artist, he was responsible for over thirty albums between 1993 and 2012, exploring the worlds of acid techno, trance, ambient, downtempo and beyond. His music was always completely individual, always esoteric yet never wilfully indulgent. His touch was that of a master craftsman, creating intricate musical jewels that sparkled like no others.... N'Joy

xxxxx xxxxx xxxxx xxxxx xxxxx

Susumu Yokota emerged in the early '90s as one of the most versatile and prolific electronic producers going. In his native Japan, he was known for many years as a top-tier dance music talent, specializing in all varieties of house while dabbling in techno, electro, and trance for the Sublime, Harthouse, and Planet Earth labels. Alternate aliases for his dance releases included Ringo, Prism, and Sonicstuff. While his dancefloor tracks were funky and playful with a heavy debt to epic disco -- he even covered Idris Muhammad's underground disco classic "Could Heaven Ever Be Like This" -- Yokota's ambient work unfolds with the patience of a butoh dance, all small gestures and gradually shifting layers of quiet sound. He gained international stature with home listeners and critics with the release of a series of well-received ambient albums on the U.K. label Leaf, beginning in 1998 with Magic Thread, and following with Image: 1983-1998 (1999), Sakura (2000), Grinning Cat (2001), and The Boy and the Tree (2002). (Some of these releases originally appeared in small runs on Yokota's Skintone label.) Releases for Lo Recordings followed, including the Rothko collaboration Distant Sounds of Summer (2005), Wonder Waltz (2006), Love or Die (2007), and Mother (2009). Also an accomplished DJ, Yokota leant his mixing skills to the 2001 label retrospective Leaf Compilation. His most recent album was 2012’s Dreamer, released on Lo Recordings.

Yokota’s family released a statement:

“It is with great sadness that we announce the death of Susumu Yokota who passed away on 27th March, 2015 at the age of 54 after a long period of medical treatment.


xxxxx xxxxx xxxxx xxxxx xxxxx

Susumu Yokota has always created readily accessible work; chipper melodies and predictable rhthyms weave their way along to natural conclusions with little unexpected happening inbetween: perfect techno pop music. On Cat, Mouse And Me he does this but to a wonderfully stunning conclusion - instead of disposable music, this album is filled with a deep warmth and depth served via repetition. The looped melodies are here, but have a melancholy edge. The rhythms don't excite, but lull you into a head-nodding trance. None of the tracks are particularly "difficult" listening, rather all are almost as immediately engaging as they are durable.



Susumo Yokota - Cat, Mouse And Me  (flac  333mb)

01 Good Morning 2:50
02 Neutral 5:10
03 Field 5:50
04 River Side 5:20
05 Wait For A Day 5:00
06 One Way 5:00
07 Lemon And Ginger 5:20
08 Ceramic Flower 5:40
09 Cat, Mouse And Me 5:00
10 From 6:30
11 Middle Finger 5:20
12 Few 4:20
13 In The Sky 5:40
14 Dodo 4:50

Susumo Yokota - Cat, Mouse And Me    (ogg  148mb)

xxxxx xxxxx xxxxx xxxxx xxxxx

Magic Thread is a charming exploration in sound sculpture, lilting melodies, softly shifting bass, echoing voices and all manner of means of exotic instruments makes this into a gorgeous album full of gentle ambience and subtle sounds. Yokota casually trims the edges of his samples, and apparently doesn't lose sleep over looped bursts of tape hiss that would make most audio engineers wince. While initially appearing careless, these touches are ultimately revealed as intrinsic components of his invitingly unpretentious style. On this disc, vinyl crackle (sampled as rhythm) and wheezing tape loops take an already offhand artist into realms that are positively lo-fi. Although most of Yokota's work is loop-based, "Magic Thread" is particularly repetitive. That said, those charmed by the quirky exotica of his later albums may find the landscape a wee bit barren.



Susumu Yokota - Magic Thread (flac  231mb)

01 Weave 5:05
02 Reflux 6:15
03 Unravel 2:45
04 Circular 5:45
05 Spool 6:47
06 Potential 6:28
07 Fiber 2:08
08 Metabolic 6:34
09 Stitch 4:17
10 Blend 5:39
11 Melt 4:07

Susumu Yokota - Magic Thread   (ogg 120mb)

xxxxx xxxxx xxxxx xxxxx xxxxx

Multi-talented producer Susumu Yokota returns to the ambient realm with the beautiful and diverse Sakura. When he indulges his fondness for pop hooks with his dancefloor material, Yokota's melodic choices are glossy and extroverted, but his music for home listening is focused, controlled, and deeply internal. His knack for blending traditional instruments like guitar and piano with simple electronics harks back to ambient music's birth in the mid-'70s; at times Sakura recalls the work of pioneers like Brian Eno, Cluster, and Manuel Göttsching. The icy "Saku" sets the meditative tone on Sakura, with gentle, winding guitar lines, relaxed synthesizer oscillations, and plenty of breathing space for the minimal instrumentation. Beats make their first appearance on "Uchiu Tanjyo," as smooth, semi-tribal hand drums blend organically with the repeating keyboard figures. "Genshi" adds house drum programming to the brew, and Yokota's knack for reflective electronic melody on the track rivals the best of Kraftwerk. Both "Azukiior No Kaori" and "Kodomotachi" use vocal samples to haunting effect, bringing to mind the favored techniques of Nobukazu Takemura without direct reference to machine glitches. The flow is marred by a misplaced jazz cutup ("Naminote"), but Sakura possesses an austere beauty and should not be overlooked.



Susumu Yokota - Sakura  (flac  250mb)

01 Saku 5:45
02 Tobiume 4:38
03 Uchu Tanjyo 3:13
04 Hagoromo 3:52
05 Genshi 4:57
06 Gekkoh 4:59
07 Hisen 3:48
08 Azukiiro No Kaori 2:39
09 Kodomotachi 4:06
10 Naminote 5:43
11 Shinsen 4:33
12 Kirakiraboshi 1:55

Susumu Yokota - Sakura  (ogg  100mb)

xxxxx xxxxx xxxxx xxxxx xxxxx

Possibly the most unique item within Susumu Yokota's highly idiosyncratic oeuvre, Symbol finds the multifaceted Japanese electronica master defying and muddying genre distinctions to create sui generis compositions of considerable beauty and strangeness. That's not exactly new territory for Yokota, but this time there's a gimmick: the album is consists primarily of fragments taken from classical pieces, many of them highly familiar, if not always readily identifiable, by the likes of Debussy, Rachmaninov, and Beethoven -- with a particular reliance on Tchaikovsky's "Nutcracker" and Saint-Saëns'"Carnival of the Animals" -- as well as bits of more recent works by John Cage and Meredith Monk, whose unearthly voice becomes a focal point for several of these tracks. But while Yokota cuts, pastes, and plunders the world of art music with a palpable exuberance akin to the mash-up artists, his contemporaries, who were doing similar things with pop, the results are more nuanced than merely novel. Nor is it entirely out of step with his previous work -- it's not as serenely ambient as the beloved Sakura (though it is generally quite soothing), and it certainly has little to do with his various dance-oriented releases, but it retains the meticulous, multilayered compositional approach of albums like Grinning Cat and The Boy & the Tree. And although the presence of electronics is kept relatively understated, the elements with which Yokota weaves together his mad grab-bag of orchestral motifs, frolicsome fragments of flute and piano, and stately string passages (there are sometimes as many as seven classical samples in a single four-minute piece) will be immediately familiar to his listeners: subtly burbling beats, wordless ethereal vocals, vaguely Asian-sounding percussion loops (as well as a marimba ostinato that could pass for a Steve Reich sample). Indeed, without the obviously recognizable nature of his sample sources (which, depending on your perspective, could be a source of distraction or a point of engagement), it would be difficult to distinguish many of these pieces from "standard" Yokota compositions -- a feat which is in itself quite an accomplishment. That it's also a fascinating and rewarding listen, and an undeniably gorgeous bit of craftsmanship, arguably elevates Symbol to near the level of its inspirations, or at least positions it as a curious bridge between too-often estranged musical worlds.



Susumu Yokota - Symbol  (flac  247mb)

01 Long Long Silk Bridge 3:00
02 Purple Rose Minuet 3:34
03 Traveler In The Wonderland 4:20
04 Song Of The Sleeping Forest 4:16
05 The Plateau Which The Zephyr Of Flora Occupies 2:25
06 Fairy Dance Of Twinkle And Shadow 4:17
07 Flaming Love And Destiny 4:54
08 The Dying Black Swan 2:21
09 Blue Sky And Yellow Sunflower 3:56
10 Capriccio And The Innovative Composer 2:23
11 I Close The Door Upon Myself 2:24
12 Symbol Of Life, Love, And Aesthetics 3:53
13 Music From The Lake Surface 3:12

Susumu Yokota - Symbol    (ogg  100mb)

xxxxx xxxxx xxxxx xxxxx xxxxx

RhoDeo 1642 Young 1's 12th

$
0
0
Hello,

Today the 12th and final episode of an 'historical' 12-episode dramatization of student life in early eighties UK, hooliganism had not made the headlights yet, but dare i say it quickly followed after this series was broadcast. Inspiring clueless chaos ..N'Joy

xxxxx xxxxx xxxxx xxxxx xxxxx

The Young Ones is a British "variety" show, broadcast in the United Kingdom from 1982 to 1984 in two six-part series. Shown on BBC2, it featured anarchic, offbeat humour which helped bring alternative comedy to television in the 1980s and made household names of its writers and performers. In 1985, it was shown on MTV, one of the first non-music television shows on the fledgling channel. In a 2004 poll, it ranked at number 31 in the BBC's list of Britain's Best Sitcoms.

The main characters were four undergraduate students who were sharing a house: aggressive punk Vyvyan (Adrian Edmondson), conceited wannabe anarchist Rick (Rik Mayall), oppressed paranoid hippie Neil (Nigel Planer), and the suave, charming Mike (Christopher Ryan). It also featured Alexei Sayle, who played various members of the Balowski family—most often Jerzei Balowski, the quartet's landlord—and occasional independent characters, such as the train driver in "Bambi" and the Mussolini-lookalike Police Chief in "Cash".
Stories were set in a squalid house where the students lived during their time at Scumbag College.

The show combined traditional sitcom style with violent slapstick, non-sequitur plot turns, and surrealism. Every episode except one featured a live performance by a band, including Madness, Motörhead, and The Damned. This was a device used to qualify the series for a larger budget, as "variety" shows attracted higher fees than "comedy"

xxxxx xxxxx xxxxx xxxxx xxxxx

with

Adrian Edmondson - Vyvyan...
Rik Mayall - Rick...
Nigel Planer - Neil
Christopher Ryan - Mike
Alexei Sayle - The Balowski Family...


The Young Ones 12 Summer Holiday (mp4  283mb)

12 Summer Holiday 34:59

It's the end of the term at College, and Vyvan, Rick, Mike and Neil are having a lazy summer holiday. But they end up getting evicted by Mr. Bolowski and decide to rob a bank, before making a getaway on a bus.


xxxxx xxxxx xxxxx xxxxx xxxxx

Previously

The Young Ones 01 Demolition (mp4  266mb)
The Young Ones 02 Oil (mp4  264mb)
The Young Ones 03 Bored (mp4  284mb)
The Young Ones 04 Bomb (mp4  285mb)
The Young Ones 05 Intresting (mp4  258mb)
The Young Ones 06 Flood (mp4  247mb)
The Young Ones 07 Bambi (mp4  282mb)
The Young Ones 08 Cash (mp4  275mb)
The Young Ones 09 Nasty (mp4  283mb)
The Young Ones 10 Time (mp4  278mb)
The Young Ones 11 Sick (mp4  280mb)

xxxxx xxxxx xxxxx xxxxx xxxxx

RhoDeo 1642 Roots

$
0
0
Hello,

The music of Brazil encompasses various regional music styles influenced by African, European and Amerindian forms. After 500 years of history, Brazilian music developed some unique and original styles such as samba, bossa nova, MPB, sertanejo, pagode, tropicalia, choro, maracatu, embolada (coco de repente), mangue bit, funk carioca (in Brazil simply known as Funk), frevo, forró, axé, brega, lambada, and Brazilian versions of foreign musical genres, such as Brazilian rock and rap.


Today's artist started her career in Rio de Janeiro in 1964 with the show "Opinião" ("Opinion"). Due to its popularity, with performances all over the country, and the popularity of her 1965 single "Carcará", the artist became a star in Brazil. She has released 50 studio albums in 47 years of career, and is among the 10 best-selling music artists in Brazil, having sold more than 26 million records.. ........N'Joy

xxxxx xxxxx xxxxx xxxxx xxxxx

Maria Bethânia, sister of Caetano Veloso, is a renowned singer on her own. Her scenic, dramatic abilities, in a profoundly Brazilian tradition, make her performances quite personal, which has brought her a massive and faithful audience over the decades.

As a child, she wanted to be an actress right from the start. But, as her mother loved to sing, music was always around. Her father was not musically gifted, but loved to listen to Dorival Caymmi and Noel Rosa compositions. At 13, her family moved to Salvador, and she began to frequent the "university circles," intellectual groups gathering around art exhibitions and performances. The access to theater plays strengthened her desire to become an actress. At that time, a novice Caetano Veloso had become the musical partner of the play director Álvaro Guimarães. For Guimarães's short movie Moleques de Rua, Veloso composed a soundtrack which should have had, according to him, his sister singing in it. At 16, Bethânia tried to refuse, as she had never sung under such pressure. But Guimarães loved her timbre, and included her in his 1963 staging of Nelson Rodrigues' musical Boca de Ouro, where she performed a cappella. In the same year, they became acquainted with Gilberto Gil and Gal Costa.

Next year, Veloso was invited to organize a Brazilian popular music show at the opening of Salvador's Teatro Vila Velha. The show, called Nós, por Exemplo, included Veloso, Maria Bethânia, Gilberto Gil, and Gal Costa (still under her name Maria da Graça). The show was a success and was reenacted two weeks later, with the addition of Tom Zé (still presented as Antônio José). The success was even bigger, and the group (without Zé) soon presented another show, Nova Bossa Velha, Velha Bossa Nova. In that same year, Bethânia acted alone in her musical Mora na Filosofia, directed by Veloso and Gil.

Edu e Bethania In January 1965, still a school student earning bad grades, she was surprised by the invitation to substitute for Nara Leão, already an established young singer who had had a problem with her vocal cords, in her highly successful show Opinião. Bethânia's opening on February 13, 1965, was very successful, and her dramatic performance of "Carcará" (João do Vale/José Cândido) launched her as an overnight national success, repeated during the São Paulo season. Because of the sucess, Guilherme Araújo, then assistant for Aluísio de Oliveira at the RCA label, invited her, through Veloso, to record for the label. In May of that year, Bethânia recorded her first single, and some months later, her first LP. On September 26, 1965, the Vila Velha gang opened the show Arena Canta Bahia, at São Paulo's Teatro de Arena. In April 1966, Bethânia, invited by Guilherme Araújo, opened her show Recital at the Cangaceiro nightclub, in Rio. It also opened the way for Guilherme Araújo to become the manager of Veloso, Gil, and Costa (receiving 20 percent for 70 of his songs, he would be sued by Gil in 1992). She also performed at the Barroco nightclub (Rio). In the same year, Bethânia performed in the show Pois É, together with Gilberto Gil and Vinícius de Moraes, at the Teatro Opinião. In the following month, October 1966, Bethânia performed "Beira mar" (Caetano/Gil) at the I FIC. In 1967, she recorded with Edu Lobo the Elenco album Edu Lobo e Maria Bethânia. Through 1970, she would also be featured in the shows Yes, Nós Temos Maria Bethânia (Teatro de Bolso, Rio), Comigo Me Desavim (Teatro Miguel Lemos, Rio), Recital Na Boite Blow Up (São Paulo), and Brasileiro Profissão Esperança (Teatro Casa Grande, Rio).

Caetano Veloso, Maria Bethania and Gilberto Gil In 1968, she performed on the LP Veloso, Gil e Bethânia (RCA) and the solo LP Recital na Boite Barroco. In 1969 and 1970 respectively, Bethânia released the LPs Maria Bethânia and Maria Bethânia Ao Vivo. In 1971, she recorded for Philips the LP A Tua Presença. In July, backed by the Terra Trio, she opened at Rio's Teatro da Praia her show Rosa Dos Ventos, which yielded a live album under the same name, produced by Roberto Menescal. In 1971, she went to Europe and performed at the MIDEM (Cannes, France), and in Italy. Next year, she appeared, together with Chico Buarque and Nara Leão, in the film Quando o Carvaval Chegar. The movie's soundtrack was released in 1972 by Philips. Bethânia wrote the lyrics for Caetano Veloso's song "Trampolim," released on her album Drama. A European tour through Italy, Germany, Austria, Denmark, and Norway followed. In 1973, she opened her show Drama, Luz da Noite, also recorded as an album under the same title. Commemorating the tenth year of her career, she opened her show A Cena Muda (1974), recorded and released in November 1974. On June 6, 1975, Bethânia performed in a live show together with Chico Buarque, recorded and released as Chico Buarque e Maria Bethânia Gravado ao Vivo no Canecão. In 1976, she recorded Pássaro Proibido. In July, together with Caetano Veloso, Gilberto Gil, and Gal Costa, she toured Brazil with the show Os Doces Bárbaros, which yielded a film of the same name by Jom Tob Azulay and a double album released by Philips in November 1976.

On January 13, 1977, her show Pássaro da Manhã opened, released as a studio LP under the same title, which brought her second gold record. In May 1978, Bethânia released, with Veloso, a live show recorded in LP as Maria Bethânia e Caetano Veloso ao Vivo. Alibi In 1978, the LP Álibi was released (certified as a gold record before hitting the streets, making her the first Brazilian female singer to reach one million sold copies), producing a show with the same name in July of the next year. In December 1979, she released the album Mel, which also brought the show Mel in January 1980. The same year came the LP Talismã. In the next year, she opened her show Estranha Forma de Vida and released her album Alteza. In 1982, Bethânia performed in the show Nossos Momentos. In 1983, she took another turn in her career with the album Ciclo, branching out of her popular formula toward a new acoustic direction. In 1984, she performed in her show A Hora da Estrela, with songs especially written by Veloso and Chico Buarque. The album A Beira e o Mar followed. In 1985, the show 20 Anos opened.

The next year, Bethânia signed with RCA for the release of Dezembros, which contained unpublished songs by Tom Jobim, Chico Buarque, and Caetano Veloso, and "Canções e Momentos," written especially for her by Milton Nascimento. In 1988, she recorded Maria, with guest stars Jeanne Moreau and Gal Costa, which also was the name of her show which opened in that year. In 1989, the album Memória da Pele was released, and Bethânia presented the show Dadaya -- As Sete Moradas. Her 25th career anniversary was commemorated with the album and show 25 Anos, with participation from Nina Simone, Hermeto Pascoal, Egberto Gismonti, João Gilberto, and others. In 1982, she released the album Olho D'água, which was included in a major soap opera's soundtrack. Her 1993 album As Canções Que Cocê Fez Para Mim, also a show, was the best-selling record of that year (1,500,000 copies sold). For the label EMI/Odeon was recorded the album Âmbar, and also a show which was recorded live and released in 1997 as Imitação da Vida.

In 2015, her album Meus Quintais was nominated for the 16th Latin Grammy Awards in the Best MPB Album category.


xxxxx xxxxx xxxxx xxxxx xxxxx

This album from the mid seventies is one of the wildest live releases from Maria Bethânia. She is especially dramatic and expressive here, conveying in her songs the deepest emotions. Her forthright vocals range between tenderness and violence in a unique way, making this concert really thrilling. The repertoire is crazily diverse, but she sings it in such a consistent way! This album may sound a little bit rough for persons expecting something softer as the material Bethânia released in later years, but it won't deceive fans of her sixties and seventies stuff, her wildest moment. A stunning experience!



Maria Bethania - A Cena Muda  (flac  218mb)

01 Side 1 (19:58)
Luzia Luluza / Sinal Fechado / Roda Viva / Rosa Dos Ventos / Cala A Boca,
Bárbara / Conversação Entre João E Maria / A Sonhar Eu Venci Mundos/
Sonho Impossível (The Impossible Dream) / Taturamo / Galope / Quem Há De
Dizer / Demoníaca / Encouraçado / Resposta / Num Samba Curto / Tira As
Mãos De Mim / A Coroa Do Rei

02 Side 2 (22:31)
Eu Fui À Europa / Gás Neon / Luzes Da Ribalta (Limelight) / Espinita /
Disseram Que Voltei Americanizada / Lili (Hi Lili, Hi-Lo) / Não Tem Tradução /
Ator De Cinema / Desesperadamente / Dez Bilhões De Neurônios / Dos Pés
À Cabeça / Nossa Senhora Da Ajuda / Eu Vim Do Sertão / Midas / Maria, Maria /
Chão De Estrelas / Sinal Fechado

  Maria Bethania - A Cena Muda    (ogg  99mb)

xxxxx xxxxx xxxxx xxxxx xxxxx

For many observers, Alibi is her indisputable masterpiece, the album that brought him success (commercial and others) with more than one million copies sold and the recognition of her peers. Produced by a legend of bossa nova, Roberto Menescal, Alibi consists mostly romantic ballads flirting with Jazz and Pop. Arrangements strings and keyboards are quite sober and delicate, giving the whole a real sweet. The album, very well built, bit nevertheless appear a little smooth, no actual flight, the emotion is rather contained. I love it when Maria Bethania dare push her voice ( "Negue"). Some points of organs: the beautiful cover of "Alibi" (Djavan), the meeting "magic" of Maria Bethania e Gal Costa on "Sonho Meu" and the grandiose version of "Chalice" (Chico Buarque). The quality and homogeneity of the album makes it a real success.



Maria Bethania - Alibi  (flac  158mb)

01 Diamante Verdadeiro 2:04
02 Álibi 3:35
03 O Meu Amor 3:20
04 A Voz De Uma Pessoa Vitoriosa 2:44
05 Ronda 2:05
06 Explode Coração 2:06
07 Negue 3:58
08 Sonho Meu 3:03
09 De Todas As Maneiras 1:53
10 Cálice 3:19
11 Interior 2:40

    (ogg   mb)

xxxxx xxxxx xxxxx xxxxx xxxxx

Maria Bethânia is an expressive singer with a massive audience. Her romantic style coexists with a dramatic feel that blossoms in her live presentations, such as this one. An eclectic artist in regards to her repertoire, she may mix old-time strong values of Brazilian with the current fashionable composer, with critical results in her most recent releases, but always enchanting her fans, as can be heard through the enthusiastic applause. In this album she didn't go that far, and all compositions are good, even if they come from the brega Roberto Carlos; "Detalhes" is a beautiful song, after all. Supported by competent musicians and by the composer/pianist/ arranger Cristóvão Bastos, she also explores the old classics Ary Barroso, João de Barro, Paulo Vanzolini, and Chiquinha Gonzaga, together with contemporaries Milton Nascimento, her brother Caetano Veloso, Gonzaguinha, and Chico Buarque, revisiting songs already associated with her interpretation in a whole integrated by her charisma and highly personal singing.



Maria Bethânia & Caetano Veloso - Ao Vivo   (flac 194mb)

01 Tudo De Novo 4:15
02 Carcará 3:59
03 João E Maria 2:08
04 Número Um 2:25
05 Maria Bethânia 1:24
06 O Que Tinha De Ser 2:08
07 O Leãozinho3:13
08 Meu Primeiro Amor 4:45
09 Falando Sério 2:56
10 Reino Antigo and Adeus Meu Santo Amaro 4:58
11 Maninha 3:35
12 Doce Mistério Da Vida (Ah Sweet Mystery Of Life) 2:22

    (ogg  mb)

xxxxx xxxxx xxxxx xxxxx xxxxx

At first, this seems like an implausible meeting. Maria Bethânia, sister of Caetano Veloso, member of the iconoclast movement Tropicália since its inception, dedicated this album to the duo of songwriters Roberto Carlos/Erasmo Carlos, long since associated with a heavily romantic repertoire that makes the delights of their middle-aged feminine fan base. But, in fact, the songs by Roberto and Erasmo are quite poetic and well resolved in formal terms. If Roberto (and others) decided to profit on their jewels through condescending arrangements/renditions, it can't be assumed that their material isn't worth it, and Bethânia shows why. Deeply romantic, yes -- but extremely tasteful. The album sold 1.5 million copies.



Maria Bethania - As Cancoes Que Voce Fez Pra Mim (flac 255mb)

01 As Canções Que Você Fez Pra Mim 3:43
02 Olha 3:41
03 Fera Ferida 3:33
04 Você Não Sabe 3:10
05 Palavras 4:40
06 Costumes 2:49
07 Detalhes 5:09
08 Eu Preciso De Você 4:11
09 Seu Corpo 4:03
10 Você 3:00
11 Emoções 4:16

Maria Bethania - As Cancoes Que Voce Fez Pra Mim (ogg  100mb)

xxxxx xxxxx xxxxx xxxxx xxxxx

RhoDeo 1642 Aetix

$
0
0
Hello,

Today's post is about a label, 2 Tone was a late-1970s ska revival in the United Kingdom led by Jerry Dammers and The Specials. It fused traditional ska music with punk rock attitude, energy and musical elements. Its name came from the record label that Dammers founded, 2 Tone Records as well as a desire to transcend and defuse racial tensions in Thatcher-era Britain. Although 2 Tone's mainstream commercial appeal was largely limited to the UK, it influenced the North American ska punk movement (also known as third wave ska) in the 1980s and 1990s.....N'Joy

xxxxx xxxxx xxxxx xxxxx xxxxx

The 2 Tone sound was developed by young musicians in Coventry, West Midlands, England who grew up hearing 1960s Jamaican music. They combined influences from ska, reggae and rocksteady with elements of punk rock and new wave. Bands considered part of the genre include: The Specials, The Selecter, The Beat, Madness, Bad Manners and The Bodysnatchers.

Jerry Dammers of the ska revival band The Specials started the record label in 1979. It spawned the 2 Tone music and cultural movement, which was popular among skinheads, rudies and some mod revivalists. The label stopped operating when The Specials split in 1985. 2 Tone Records signed The Selecter, Madness and The Beat, but they all left within two years. 2 Tone Records acts signed a contract that allowed them to leave the label after releasing just one single, which was unusual in the record industry. Madness and The Beat both took advantage of this clause; the former to sign to Stiff Records, and the latter to start their own label, Go Feet Records.

Although 2 Tone Records was closely identified with the ska revival, efforts were made to broaden the label's musical output, releasing recordings by artists such as singer-songwriter Elvis Costello and the funk-punk band The Higsons. Two bands that almost made it onto the label were UB40 and Dexys Midnight Runners.

Jerry Dammers, with the assistance of Horace Panter, created artwork that was to become central to 2 Tone Records. The Walt Jabsco logo portrays a man in a black suit, white shirt, black tie, pork pie hat, white socks and black loafers. The fictional character was based on a photograph of Peter Tosh, a former member of The Wailers

On 1 October 2010, the 2-Tone Central museum, cafe and venue opened in the Coventry University Students' Union building, and by August 2011, it was moved to the 2-Tone Village in Stoke, Coventry It includes exhibition space, the Coventry Music Wall of Fame, a cafe, a gift shop, a Caribbean restaurant and a music venue. Many of the items on display are on loan from members of The Selecter, The Beat and The Specials.


xxxxx xxxxx xxxxx xxxxx xxxxx



The Compact 2 Tone Story 1   (flac  279mb)

01 The Special A.K.A. - Gangsters 2:49
02 The Selecter - The Selecter 3:01
03 Madness - The Prince 2:31
04 The Selecter - On My Radio 3:14
05 The Specials Featuring Rico - A Message To You Rudy 2:55
06 The Beat - Tears Of A Clown 2:43
07 Elvis Costello & The Attractions - I Can't Stand Up For Falling Down 2:07
08 The Specials - Too Much Too Young 2:06
09 The Selecter - Three Minute Hero 3:04
10 The Bodysnatchers - People Do Rock Steady 2:57
11 The Selecter - Missing Words 3:22
12 The Specials - Rat Race 3:10
13 The Bodysnatchers - Easy Life 3:14
14 The Specials - Stereotype 3:53
15 The Swinging Cats - Mantovani 3:17

The Compact 2 Tone Story 1   (ogg  103mb)

xxxxx




The Compact 2 Tone Story 2 (flac 383mb)

01  Rico - Sea Cruise 3:02
02 The Specials Feat. Rico With The Ice Rink String Sounds - Do Nothing 3:41
03 The Specials - Ghost Town 3:41
04 Rhoda With The Special A.K.A. - The Boiler 5:44
05 Rico & The Special A.K.A. - Jungle Music 4:02
06 The Appolinaires - The Feeling's Gone (Dance Mix)/The Feeling's Back 8:32
07 The Higsons - Tear The Whole Thing Down 3:31
08 The Appolinaires - Envy The Love 4:02
09 The Special A.K.A. - War Crimes (The Crime Remains The Same) 4:02
10 The Higsons - Run Me Down 3:52
11 The Special A.K.A. - Racist Friend 3:37
12 The Special A.K.A. - Nelson Mandela 4:15
13 The Special A.K.A. - What I Like Most About You Is Your Girlfriend 4:03
14 The Friday Club  - Window Shopping 3:53
15 J.B.'s Allstars - The Alphabet Army 3:08

The Compact 2 Tone Story 2  (ogg  143mb)

xxxxx


The Compact 2 Tone Story 3 (flac 353mb)

01 Madness - Madness 2:26
02 The Selecter - Too Much Pressure 2:51
03 The Specials Featuring Rico - Nite Klub 3:09
04 The Beat - Ranking Full Stop 2:51
05 Elvis Costello & The Attractions - Girls Talk 1:56
06 The Specials - Guns Of Navarone 2:20
07 The Specials - Longshot Kick The Bucket/Liquidator/Skinhead Moonstomp 6:40
08 The Selecter - James Bond 2:19
09 The Bodysnatchers - Ruder Than You 2:52
10 The Selecter - Carry Go Bring Come (Live 1979) 3:13
11 The Specials - Rude Boys Outa Jail 2:42
12 The Bodysnatchers - Too Experienced 2:34
13 The Specials - International Jet Set 4:16
14 The Swinging Cats - Away 3:14
15 Rico - Carolina 4:18
16 The Specials - Maggie's Farm 3:33
17 The Specials - Why 2:56
18 The Specials - Friday Night, Saturday Morning 3:33

The Compact 2 Tone Story 3 (ogg  133mb)

xxxxx



The Compact 2 Tone Story 4 (flac 465mb)

01 Rhoda With The Special A.K.A. - Theme From The Boiler 4:12
02 Rico And The Special A.K.A. - Rasta Call You 3:38
03 Rico And The Special A.K.A. - Easter Island 4:10
04 The Appolinaires - The Feeling's Gone 3:49
05 The Appolinaires - The Bongo Medley (Extremely Long Version) 2:51
06 The Higsons - Ylang Ylang 4:55
07 The Appolinaires - Give It Up 3:32
08 The Special A.K.A. - Version 3:44
09 The Higsons - Put The Punk Back Into Funk 5:25
10 The Special A.K.A. - Bright Lights 4:07
11 The Special A.K.A. - Rascist Friend (Instrumental) 4:07
12 The Special A.K.A. - Bright Lights (Instrumental) 4:38
13 The Special A.K.A. - Break Down The Door 3:49
14 The Special A.K.A. - Can't Get A Break 4:56
15 The Friday Club - Window Shopping (Instrumental) 3:17
16 J.B.'s Allstars - Al Arm 3:36
17 Roddy Radiation & The Specials - Braggin' And Tryin' Not To Lie 3:24
18 Neville Staples AKA Judge Roughneck - Rude Boys Outa Jail (Version) 4:07
19 The Special A.K.A. - Racquel 1:58
20 The Bodysnatchers - 007 3:32

The Compact 2 Tone Story 4   (ogg  176mb)

xxxxx xxxxx xxxxx xxxxx xxxxx

Viewing all 1571 articles
Browse latest View live