June 22, 2012

NICK LOWE - UNTOUCHED TAKEAWAY


For fans' eyes only-- Yep Roc Records is proud to present the first-ever live compact disc from musician, producer and raconteur Nick Lowe. Untouched Takeaway pulls you out of the cheap seats and escorts you direct to the front row for two evenings of Lowe's soulful and uniquely anecdotal compositions. These two tours find Lowe backed by The Convincers (2001) and The Impossible Birds (1995) whose members include Geraint Watkins, Steve Donnelly, Robert Trehern, Bill Kirchen and Paul Riley. Lowe's work as a producer has brought him great acclaim. He co-founded Stiff Records and in the process helped launch the British Indie label boom, as well as, the careers of artists such as Elvis Costello and The Pretenders. As a solo artist, Lowe has worn a variety of moods. These 17 tracks span the course of his multi-decade career and prove once and for all why he is the "Jesus of Cool."
Customer Reviews
Original Release Date: 2004
Number of Discs: 1
Format: Live
Label: Yep Roc

Track Listings
1. What's Shaking On The Hill
2. Faithless Lover
3. I Live On A Battlefield
4. You Inspire Me
5. Cruel To Be Kind
6. Indian Queens
7. Let's Stay In
8. Shting Shtang
9. The Beast In Me
10. What's So Funny 'Bout Peace, Love And Understanding?
11. 12 Step Program
12. Dream Girl
13. Without Love
14. 14 Days
15. Tombstone Every Mile
16. Shelley My Love
17. I'll Be There
http://fp.io/m36522ce/

LITTLE VILLAGE / LITTLE VILLAGE





Artist: Little Village
Album: Little Village
Release Date: 1992
Recording Date: 1991
Label: Reprise
Time: 46:24
Styles: Rock & Roll, Roots Rock

TRACKS
       1  Solar Sex Panel    3:47
       2  The Action    3:25
       3  Inside Job    4:17
       4  Big Love    6:26
       5  Take Another Look    3:40
       6  Do You Want My Job    5:36
       7  Don't Go Away Mad    3:39
       8  Fool Who Knows    3:46
       9  She Runs Hot    3:19
       10  Don't Think About Her When You're Trying to Drive    4:33
       11  Don't Bug Me While I'm Working    3:56
All Tracks by Cooder, Hiatt, Keltner, Lowe
-----
MUSICIANS
 Ry Cooder Guitar, Vocals, Vocals (bckgr)
 John Hiatt Guitar, Vocals, Vocals (bckgr)
 Jim Keltner Guitar, Percussion, Drums
 Nick Lowe Bass, Vocals, Vocals (bckgr)
 Lenny Waronker Guitar
http://fp.io/cb845m8d/

NICK LOWE - QUIET PLEASE... THE BEST OF NICK LOWE



Nicholas Drain Lowe, better known as Nick Lowe, is an English singer-songwriter, musician and producer. A pivotal figure in UK pub rock, punk rock and new wave,Lowe has recorded a string of well-reviewed solo albums. Along with vocals, Lowe plays guitar, bass guitar, piano and harmonica. He is best known for his songs "(What's So Funny 'Bout) Peace, Love, and Understanding" (a hit for Elvis Costello), "Cruel to Be Kind" (a U.S. Top 40 single), and "I Love the Sound of Breaking Glass", as well as his production work with Costello.

"Quiet Please...The New Best of Nick Lowe" is a 49 track career spanning collection of songs written by British songwriter Nick Lowe. As well as his solo work, it also features many of his collaborations with the likes of Rockpile, Brinsley Schwarz, Paul Carrack and Little Village. The compilation was released by Proper Records in the UK and Europe and by Yep Roc in the US. The collection was compiled by Gregg Geller.

DISC 1:
01. (What's So Funny 'Bout) Peace, Love And Understanding
02. So It Goes
03. Heart Of The City
04. Endless Sleep
05. Marie Provost
06. I Love The Sound Of Breaking Glass
07. Cracking Up
08. American Squirm
09. Cruel To Be Kind
10. Without Love
11. You Make Me
12. When I Write The Book
13. Play That Fast (One More Time)
14. Burning
15. Heart
16. Raining Raining
17. Ragin' Eyes
18. Mess Around With Love
19. Wish You Were Here
20. L.A.F.S.
21. Half A Boy And Half A Man
22. The Gee And The Rick And Three Card Trick
23. The Rose Of England
24. I Knew The Bride (When She Used To Rock And Roll)
25. Wishing Well

DISC 2:
01. Lovers Jamboree
02. Shting-Shtang
03. All Men Are Liars
04. What's Shakin' On The Hill
05. Don't Think About Her
06. Fool Who Knows
07. Soulful Wind
08. The Beast In Me
09. I Love On A Battlefield
10. Shelley My Love
11. You Inspire Me
12. Lonesome Reverie
13. Faithless Lover
14. What Lack Of Love Has Done
15. Man That I've Become
16. Lately I've Let Things Slide
17. Homewrecker
18. Has She Got A Friend?
19. Let's Stay In And Make Love
20. Indian Queens
21. I Trained Her To Love Me
22. People Change
23. Long Limbed Girl
24. Hope For All Of Us                                                                                                                        http://fp.io/568944aa/

HEART - Strange Euphoria







Artist: Heart

Album: Strange Euphoria

Released: 2012
Style: Classic Rock
Format: MP3 320Kbps
Size: 446 Mb


Tracklist:
01 – Through Eyes and Glass
02 – Magic Man – Demo
03 – How Deep It Goes – Demo
04 – Crazy On You – Demo
05 – Dreamboat Annie (Fantasy Child) + Dreamboat Annie Reprise – 2012 Remaster
06 – Love Alive – Album Version
07 – Sylvan Song – Album Version
08 – Dream Of The Archer – Album Version
09 – White Lightning & Wine – Live At The Aquarius
10 – Barracuda – Live
11 – Little Queen – Album Version
12 – Kick It Out – Album Version
13 – Here Song – Demo
14 – Heartless – Demo
15 – Dog & Butterfly – Acoustic Demo
16 – Straight On – Album Version
17 – Nada One – Album Version
18 – Bebe Le Strange – Album Version
19 – Silver Wheels – Album Version
20 – Even It Up – Album Version
21 – Sweet Darlin – Album Version
22 – City’s Burning – Album Version
23 – Angels – Album Version
24 – Love Mistake – Album Version
25 – Lucky Day – Demo
26 – Never – Live
27 – These Dreams
28 – Nobody Home
29 – Alone
30 – Wait For An Answer
31 – Unconditional Love – Demo
32 – High Romance – Demo
33 – Under The Sky – Demo
34 – Desire Walks On – Beach Demo Version
35 – Kiss
36 – Sand – Live
37 – Everything – Live
38 – She Still Believes – Live
39 – Any Woman’s Blues – Demo
40 – Strange Euphoria – Album Version
41 – Boppy’s Back – Demo
42 – Friend Meets Friend
43 – Love Or Madness – Live
44 – Skin To Skin
45 – Fallen Ones
46 – Enough
47 – Lost Angel – Live
48 – Little Problems, Little Lies
49 – Queen City
50 – Hey You
51 – Avalon – Reprise

http://fp.io/46b5m5m2/

LEFTOVER SALMON - The Ogden Theatre Denver, CO November 25, 2011



Leftover Salmon
The Ogden Theatre
Denver, CO
November 25, 2011

6 Channel SBD Matrix

01 Tangled Up In Blue
02 Sing The Blues
03 Two Trains
04 Sing The Blues
05 Everything Is Round
06 The Other Side
07 Just Keep Walkin'
08 Kentucky Sky
09 Doin' My Time
10 Euphoria
11 Dance On Your Head
12 Squirrel Heads & Gravy
13 Get 'Er Rollin
14 Liza
15 Light Behind The Rain
16 Fastest Song
17 Bend In The River
18 Junco Partner
19 I Don't Know You
20 Aint Gonna Work
21 Whole Lotta Love
22 Get No Better
23 Breaking Through
24 Better
25 Hot Corn, Cold Corn
26 Dead Flowers
27 Wake & Bake

http://fp.io/135a4153/

MAHAVISHNU ORCHESTRA - Avery Fisher Hall New York, NY - 12/27/1973


 Mahavishnu Orchestra
December 27, 1973
Avery Fisher Hall
New York, NY


01. Dream 27:13
02. Trilogy 18:47
03. Birds Of Fire 11:34
04. Sister Andrea 12:01
05. Dance of Maya 19:24


Billy Cobham - drums
Jerry Goodman - violin
Jan Hammer - keyboards
Rick Laird - bass
John McLaughlin - guitar

This Mahavishnu Orchestra performance, recorded on the first night of a two-night stand at New York City's Avery Fisher Hall, captures one of the very last performances ever by the legendary original lineup. This recording is a fascinating glimpse of the group at the tail end of their existence. In July of 1973, Mahavishnu Orchestra convened at London's Trident Studios to record their ill-fated third studio album. By this point, the relationships within the band were strained and the resulting recordings, which for the first time featured compositions by bandmembers other than McLaughlin, would not see the light of day for several decades. In August and September, McLaughlin and Cobham embarked on a tour with Carlos Santana, further straining the relationships within the band, which would dissolve by the end of the year. The initial classic lineup of the group lasted less than three years and only released two studio albums and one live recording during this era, but these recordings had a profound effect, redefining the jazz/rock fusion movement in the process. Combining the improvisational elements of jazz with the volume and energy of rock music, Mahavishnu Orchestra created music that was often intricate and complex, performed by musicians whose virtuosity thrilled audiences, musicians and critics alike.

Following the captivating take on "Dance Of Maya," they tackle another extended number, "Dream." Again, there is an abundance of exploratory and propulsive playing here, but one of the most interesting aspects of this performance is that McLaughlin plays the first sequence on acoustic guitar, and it is far more compelling than the live version featured on Between Nothingness And Eternity, recorded the previous August. Often this initial sequence was merely a dreamy contemplative introduction to the fireworks to come, but here it is absolutely beautiful and McLaughlin's playing has far more depth and character and Goodman's haunting violin phrases are all the more compelling for it. Despite hollering and rudeness from the audience (which is audible on the recording), McLaughlin remains focused. As the second, faster section begins, Hammer unleashes his trademark barrage of chords and arpeggios on his Fender Rhodes as the band begins building an elegant melody line. This becomes a head-spinning exercise as McLaughlin and Goodman lock together in unison driving the main section of the composition. This is fast and furious playing at its most intense, with various duets emerging in and out of the fray. This is a jaw-dropping performance that is simply overflowing with energy; seemingly superhuman in its seething intensity.

The recording ends with another track from the Trident sessions, "Trilogy." The first passage develops into an elaborate trade-off between McLaughlin and Hammer, with the guitar dominating. The second section features Goodman's violin dominating and Hammer providing birdcall effects with his synthesizers. Cobham's drumming is particularly impressive during this passage. Then the group suddenly launches into the third section—a aggressive hyperactive jam, first featuring a brief violin solo followed by a scorching solo from McLaughlin. The entire group develops an impressive repetition based on McLaughlin's lead riff that remains captivating as the tape stock unfortunately ran out shortly before the conclusion of the show.

This recording, paired with the following night's recording at the same venue, would be the original lineup's final performances in New York City. Taken together, they provide a wonderful picture of the band's later era material performed at the most extreme levels of improvisation.

Read more about the Mahavishnu Orchestra in Crawdaddy!:


This Mahavishnu Orchestra performance, recorded on the first night of a two-night stand at New York City's Avery Fisher Hall, captures one of the very last performances ever by the legendary original lineup. This recording is a fascinating glimpse of the group at the tail end of their existence. In July of 1973, Mahavishnu Orchestra convened at London's Trident Studios to record their ill-fated third studio album. By this point, the relationships within the band were strained and the resulting recordings, which for the first time featured compositions by bandmembers other than McLaughlin, would not see the light of day for several decades. In August and September, McLaughlin and Cobham embarked on a tour with Carlos Santana, further straining the relationships within the band, which would dissolve by the end of the year. The initial classic lineup of the group lasted less than three years and only released two studio albums and one live recording during this era, but these recordings had a profound effect, redefining the jazz/rock fusion movement in the process. Combining the improvisational elements of jazz with the volume and energy of rock music, Mahavishnu Orchestra created music that was often intricate and complex, performed by musicians whose virtuosity thrilled audiences, musicians and critics alike.

While an argument can be made that the band was more cohesive and eloquent earlier in their all-too-brief career, the performances toward the end of 1973 are simply staggering in their ferocity. This night's recording begins with Billy Cobham's massive gong, as McLaughlin's 12-string arpeggios begin washing over the audience. "Birds Of Fire" is a dramatic opener that unfolds into a dynamic exchange between guitar and drums versus violin, keyboards and bass. In the unusual time signature of 18/8, the interwoven nature of the arrangement makes for a thrilling and intense experience, although one unlike anything most jazz or rock music fans had ever heard before. This is followed by the Jan Hammer composition, "Sister Andrea." Uncharacteristically funky, this elastic groovefest features sizzling 12-string solos from McLaughlin, wild bursts of unorthodox sounds from Hammer and highlights the grittier side to Goodman's violin virtuosity, which sashays and swings, as he pumps his signal through a wah-wah pedal.

The group truly begin hitting their stride on "The Dance Of Maya," with its infectious rhythmic pattern complimenting the melodic line. The set continues with a heavily improvised version of "The Dance Of Maya." There are many moments of brilliance here, but what stands out overall is that here the group is obviously having a wonderfully joyous experience. Following the initial theme, the rhythm section drops out completely leaving the remaining trio. The interaction between Goodman's pizzicato violin, McLaughlin guitar and Hammer's electric piano is full of a humor and playfulness that is absolutely delightful. Cobham and Laird eventually join back in and after a few surprising stop/starts to jolt the audience, they launch into a cosmic jamfest with Jerry Goodman as the primary pilot, before McLaughlin rips into a pulverizing solo with Billy Cobham in tow. The unison playing here is thrilling. At times one can sense the musicians toying with each other. Despite McLaughlin's blazing speed and unpredictability, Cobham never misses a beat—another mind-blowing display of musical telepathy. This eventually becomes a delicate call and response with Hammer adding his gurgling mini-moog embellishments, before all converge and reinstate the song's theme, bringing it to a gloriously satisfying close nearly 20 minutes later.
    http://fp.io/e853m185/

LEFTOVER SALMON - The Ogden Theatre Denver, CO November 26, 2011



Leftover Salmon
The Ogden Theatre
Denver, CO
November 26, 2011

6 Channel SBD Matrix

01 Carnival Time
02 Gold Hill Line
03 Let's Give A Party
04 Shanendoah Breakdown
05 44 Blues
06 Highway Song
07 Dangerman *
08 She Caught The Katy *
09 Down In The Hollow
10 All Night Ride
11 Live It High
12 High On A Mountaintop
13 Almost Cut My Hair
14 Troubled Times
15 Ask The Fish
16 The Last Days of Autumn
17 Jokester
18 Bill's Boogie
19 Out In The Woods
20 Whipping Post
21 God Save The Queen
22 Nobody's Fault But Mine **

* with Silas Herman on mandolin
** with Silas Herman on guitar & Joe Lessard on fiddle
http://fp.io/a4e5b834/

BOB WEIR & BRUCE HORNSBY - Fox Theatre, Oakland, CA - 03/31/2012

http://fp.io/7d67m872/

BOB WEIR - Folks Festival, Planet Bluegrass Ranch, Lyons, CO - 08/20/2011

http://fp.io/ebc7113f/

LEFTOVER SALMON & STRING CHEESE INCIDENT -La Hood Park Cardwell, MT August 29, 1998


Leftover Salmon & String Cheese Incident
La Hood Park
Cardwell, MT
August 29, 1998

Soundboard

String Cheese Incident

Disc 1

01 - Sand Dollar ->
02 - Restless Wind
03 - Mouna Bowa ->
04 - La Hood Jam #1->
05 - That's What Love Will Make You Do *
06 - Lonesome Fiddle Blues *
07 - Good Times
08 - Impressions ->
09 - Work
10 - Galactic

String Cheese Incident

Disc 2

01 - Texas * ->
02 - Whiskey Before Breakfast *
03 - San Jose * ->
04 - Drumz *->

Leftover Salmon

Disc 3

01 - Drumz **->
02 - Ain't Gonna Work **->
03 - Rueben's Train **->
04 - I'm Just Here To Get My Baby Outta Jail **->
05 - Can't You Hear Me Callin' **->
06 - Freeborn Man **->
07 - Ain't Gonna Work **
08 - Up On The Hill Boogie
09 - Mama Boulet
10 - Hot Corn Cold Corn
11 - Headbag
12 - Get Me Outta The City
13 - Jokester
14 - Baby Hold On

Leftover Salmon

Disc 4

01 - Big Chief
02 - Rabbit In A Log
03 - Funky Mountain Fogdown
04 - Breakin' Through
05 - Ask The Fish
06 - Midnight Blues

Leftover Salmon

Disc 5

01 - Better
02 - Another Way To Turn
03 - Fastest Song ->
04 - Cactus Flower ->
05 - Psychadelic Stomp
06 - 4:20 Polka
07 - Bend In The River
08 - Squirrel Heads & Gravy
09 - Whispering Waters
10 - Danger Man (cut)
11 - La Hood Jam #2
12 - Reach
13 - Rocky Road Blues ->
14 - My Darling ->
15 - Old Kentucky ->
16 - The Shape I'm In ->
17 - Rocky Road Blues
---ENCORE---
18 - Wake & Bake
19 - Cheese Frog **


--show notes--
* with Leftover Salmon
** with String Cheese Incident

MAHAVISHNU ORCHESTRA - Palace Theater Waterbury, CT - 05/19/1973



Mahavishnu Orchestra
May 19, 1973
Palace Theater
Waterbury, CT


01. Meeting of the Spirits 14:26
02. Open Country Joy 8:37
03. Dream 28:32
04. One Word / Vital Transformation 16:44
05. Noonward Race 18:42


Billy Cobham - drums
Jerry Goodman - violin
Jan Hammer - keyboards
Rick Laird - bass
John McLaughlin - guitar

Musicians that recorded and performed with Miles Davis during his early explorations into electric instrumentation inevitably went on to form bands of their own, but few were as adept or as influential as the Mahavishnu Orchestra, a globally diverse group formed by legendary English guitarist, John McLaughlin. Combining the improvisational elements of jazz with the volume and energy of rock music, the group also brought elements of Far Eastern, R&B and Classical music to the table. The Mahavishnu Orchestra created music that was often intricate and complex, performed by musicians whose virtuosity thrilled audiences and critics alike. The group had a firm grip on dynamics and were equally adept at dense, aggressive flights of feverish intensity as they were at creating moments of passionate spiritual contemplation. This diversity and technical ability dazzled audiences the world over and helped expose jazz and world music to a younger audience. The initial "classic" lineup of the group lasted barely three years and only released two studio albums and one live recording, but these recordings had a profound effect, redefining the jazz/rock fusion movement in the process.

By 1973, the final year of the classic Mahavishnu Orchestra lineup, they had firmly established their reputation and were now a headline act. Their debut album, The Inner Mounting Flame, and its follow-up, Birds Of Fire, had mesmerized musicians and listeners alike and they had become one of the most exciting performing bands on the planet. Material from the group's sophomore studio effort, Birds Of Fire was now firmly ensconced into the live repertoire. Tracks destined for their ill-fated third studio album (released 26 years later as The Lost Trident Sessions) was also beginning to surface. The newer material was now formulated around riffs and repetitive patterns established by the various band members and was intentionally designed as a looser framework. As the Mahavishnu Orchestra began headlining more concerts, thus allowing them considerably more stage time, they were consciously taking a much more improvisational approach.

This May 1973 performance captures this looser approach and the group's breathtaking improvisational abilities are fully on display. Recorded at the Palace Theater in Waterbury, CT, this is one of the finest examples of the band's high energy and fluid virtuosity that anyone could hope to hear. They begin with the opening track of their debut album, Meeting Of The Spirits. Expanded to over twice the length of its studio counterpart, this now replaces Birds Of Fire as the standard opener for the duration of the group's existence. They follow with a thoroughly joyous take on the Birds Of Fire track, "Open Country Joy." This strutting, gradually intensifying urban blues is perhaps the least complex, most easily accessible music the classic lineup ever played. Vacillating between a laidback county feel and frenzied rocking power, its disarming rustic theme now provides the initial musical contrast within the set.

The version of "Dream" that follows begins taking the improvisational approach to the extreme. Soon to be recorded in the studio and for the entire second side of their live album, there is an abundance of exploratory and propulsive playing here. This remarkable composition is nearly half an hour long and qualifies as the mother of all Mahavishnu Orchestra epics. It begins in a dreamy contemplative manner, with an ostinato figure between Hammer and Laird. As the second, faster section begins, Hammer unleashes his trademark unusual chords and arpeggios on his Fender Rhodes as the band begins building an elegant melody line. This becomes a head spinning exercise as McLaughlin and Goodman lock together in unison driving the main section of the composition. At one point, Cobham and McLaughlin lock horns, firing phrases back and forth, recalling the explosive exchanges between John Coltrane and Elvin Jones a decade prior.

The equally devastating "One Word" is next. Here the group begins with a haunting and frightening sequence that gives way to a relatively straightforward jam, with McLaughlin adding delicious wah-wah guitar over a solid groove, while the other members trade solos. Billy Cobham gets a solo spot in the middle, which begins smoothly and escalates in both speed and dynamics, preparing one for the explosive second half of the piece. The group launches back in, playing in 13/8 time, continually increasing in speed, with McLaughlin, Goodman and Hammer blazing away, often in total unison. Within this complicated time signature, one will discover McLaughlin applying a technique where he reduces his guitar strokes by one with each proceeding line, playing six notes on the first line, five on the second and so on. Beneath all this, Laird and Cobham anchor things, while occasionally contributing to the overall searing effect. This segues directly into "Vital Transformation," which relentlessly maintains the energy level at full tilt. In 9/8 time, this piece contains some of the funkiest playing that the band would ever achieve. Charismatic, powerful and blazing with energy, this is a tour-de-force blend of all the elements that comprised the bands music, condensed into eight minutes of pure power.

This brings the performance to a close, but the Mahavishnu Orchestra return for an encore that must have left this audience, as well as the musicians, completely exhausted. "Noonward Race" is an absolute guitar shred-fest, with McLaughlin playing with such passion, dexterity, volume and sheer speed that makes most rock guitarists appear to be asleep in comparison. Charged violin lines from Goodman, tasteful keyboard embellishments from Hammer, and absolutely furious drumming from Cobham takes this piece blazing into the stratosphere. This is the Mahavishnu Orchestra at full throttle and playing at warp speed.

This Waterbury Palace recording is one of the greatest and certainly one of the most intense Mahavishnu Orchestra performances ever committed to tape. The words "awe inspiring" are totally applicable here, with every member of the band demonstrating an intensity far beyond what has been captured on their studio recordings. All the music performed on this very special evening burns with an intensity that will leave a lasting impression on anyone who listens.

http://fp.io/d73866c6/

MICK TAYLOR - The Iridium Jazz Club New York City, NY - 05/09/2012



MIck Taylor - 2012-05-09 - New York City
Mick Taylor
May 9, 2012
The Iridium Jazz Club
New York City, NY
(2nd Set)


01. Introduction
02. You Gotta Move
03. I Wonder Why
04. Twisted Sister
05. Losing My Faith
06. Blind Willie McTell
07. No Expectations  
08. Fed Up with the Blues


1st day of 6 @ the Iridium

Mick Taylor - Guitar/Vocals.
Max Middleton - Keyboards.
Wilbur Boscomb - Bass.
Bernard "Pretty" Purdie - Drums.
Hamish  Stuart - Rhythm Guitar.
Jeff Allen - Drums.
Arno Hecht - Saxophone.

http://fp.io/3a8abc2d/
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