Tuesday, February 6, 2007

Ultravox - the Collection

year 74-87
* Synth Pop

* New Wave
* New Romantic
* Pop/Rock
* Post-Punk
* Alternative Pop/ Rock
* Pop
review: Rejecting the abrasive guitars of their punk-era contemporaries in favor of lushly romantic synthesizers, Ultravox emerged as one of the primary influences on the British electro-pop movement of the early '80s. Formed in London in 1974, the group -- originally dubbed Ultravox! -- was led by vocalist and keyboardist John Foxx (born Dennis Leigh), whose interest in synths and cutting-edge technology began during his school years; with an initial line-up consisting of bassist Chris Cross, keyboardist/violinist Billy Currie, guitarist Steve Shears and drummer Warren Cann.. download rapidshare, megaupload torrent sendspace

Kate Bush - Never For Ever

year 80
* Prog-Rock/ Art Rock
* College Rock
review: When I listen to Never For Ever I feel haunted. I love it! Delius and Breathing are especially beautiful. And I recently discovered Blow Away and Night Scented Stock are one song. It's wild and surprising.

Monday, February 5, 2007

Lost In Translation - Soundtrack


year 2004 review: Every track is great, and there is a cool secret song on track 15 , There's absolutely no way this soundtrack could get any better. No soundtrack has ever brought the movie to life thru your ears. It's pure dream pop.

Stereophonics - You gotta go there to come back

year 2003
* Indie Rock
* Post-Grunge
* British Trad Rock
* Alternative Pop/ Rock
review: To say that Stereophonics are 'not a critics band' would be something of an understatement. It seems they haven't received a good review in something like three years - the mere sound of Kelly Jones none-more-grizzled larynx and thoughts of Richard Jones' cowboy boots with Stuart Cable's heroically unfashionable haircut sending journalists into a bilious state of '28 Days Later'-style rage.


The vitriolic 'Mr Writer' hardly endeared them further to your average music hack already champing at the bit to hurl that first stone. Radiohead they are not. But, despite all efforts at public execution, the Welsh three-piece perennially sell about ten squillion albums and headline several festivals each year. The record buying public clearly don't give a f*ck and love them regardless. Just as Sunday supplements would have us eating all that fancy foreign food it seems the majority of us prefer steak and chips doused with plenty of ketchup. Nothing too fancy like.

Musically however this is a no nonsense rock'n'roll record, and will be judged as such by those who will buy it. 'Madame Helga' is a storming slice of Black Crowes boogie and there are potential singles in the wistful 'Maybe Tomorrow', the brass-driven 'Climbing The Wall' and 'Nothing Precious At All' with its central Faces-like piano riff. You know the heavy songs will climax with guitar solos and wailing backing vocals, the slow ones are designed for a thousand lighters and phrases involving "flying high", "angels/devils" and "being alright" will be recurrent.
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Reamonn - Wish

year 2006
* rock
review: the German-based band released in 2006 what may well be the best album of their career. “We had 62 songs when we arrived and reduced that down to 13..." says frontman Rea Garvey. If albums were buildings, "Wish" would be a very tall one! It was recorded at LA’s Sound City Studios (their first recorded outside of Germany) with producer Greg Fidelman, who’s worked on albums by Johnny Cash, Red Hot Chilli Peppers, Slipknot and Jet. They recorded in the studio where Cash made his last album. All 5 band members found the environment highly conducive to their most creative work yet. “We came away with a Reamonn album which is in its best sense an international sound,” says Garvey, “it’s not an American album, it’s not a European album, it’s not a German or Irish album it is like I said a Reamonn album and that was what we set out to achieve".

Sunday, February 4, 2007

Roddy Woomble - My Secret Is My Silence

year 2006 review: The album's title and pastoral cover image are the first signs that Idlewild's Roddy Woomble has gone folk. And yes, a majority of My Secret Is My Silence sees Woomble operating in an acoustic folk vein and even recruiting the sweet-voiced folkie Kate Rusby to handle background vocals, harmonies, and occasional female counterpoints. But Woomble heading into pastures and fields shouldn't be a surprise. While Idlewild started out as a furious, messy indie rock band, Warnings/Promises, the group's most recent effort before this solo outing, sometimes skewed resolutely toward R.E.M.'s more jangly moments. Other than the somewhat out-of-place instrumental flute-fest "Whiskeyface," My Secret Is My Silence drifts between two poles. There are pensive, brittle ballads like the gorgeous, lilting "If I Could Name Any Name" and the introspective "I Came from the Mountain" on one hand, and on the other hand midtempo to urgent storming tracks indistinguishable from Idlewild fare other than the presence of fiddles and folksy percussion in the place of electric guitars and distortion pedals. download megaupload torrent rapidshare

Excalibur - Soundtracks OST


year 2006 review: I will call Wagner the soundtrack to Excalibur - you can't really find the Excalibur soundtrack any more, but the more you know about classical music, the more you realize that pretty much this entire movie was done to Wagner scoring. Wagner's Ride of the Valkries was also used (as the photo on the album indicates) in Apocolypse Now, when the helicopters were staging their attack. download rapidshare.com

Saturday, February 3, 2007

Devotchka - How It Ends


year 2004 review: Devotchka sticks to its formula of mixing pop tunes with Eastern European, Mariachi, and perhaps some Middle Eastern tinges in this release. However, it is their most powerful product to date-it is full of emotion, creative song-writing, and tight production. Although the tempo of this album is slower than their previous two, this album will beckon you for many repeat listens, and each time, you will be taken on a wonderful journey. In a year of many great indie rock releases, this album will probably make my top 10 list of 2004.

the Shins - Wincing The Night Away


year 2007 review: The shins continue to improve with each release. This album has better production than their previous releases and the songs are catchier. The shins lead singer still has an odd sounding indie voice, but good song writing makes up for the weak vocals. Still he sounds much better than he has on previous records. A good indie album but not an essential listen. download rapidshare torrent depositfiles

Thursday, February 1, 2007

Ben Harper - Fight for Your Mind


year 95 review: Ben Harper has made albums which change me every time I hear them. Not only an amazing and diverse musician, he is a beautiful and poignant songwriter as well. His music has inspired me to be a better person, and it will for sure change anyone who listens to it for the better.

New Order - Live

year 89 review: Rising from the ashes of the legendary British post-punk unit Joy Division, the enigmatic New Order triumphed over tragedy to emerge as one of the most influential and acclaimed bands of the 1980s; embracing the electronic textures and disco rhythms of the underground club culture many years in advance of its contemporaries, the group's pioneering fusion of new wave aesthetics and dance music successfully bridged the gap between the two worlds, creating a distinctively thoughtful and oblique brand of synth pop appealing equally to the mind, body, and soul. New Order's origins officially date back to mid-1976, when guitarist Bernard Sumner..

Wednesday, January 31, 2007

the View - Hats Off To The Buskers

year 2007 review: The View appeared on the scene in the early part of 2006, touring with Babyshambles and releasing a limited EP on the Two Thumbs label. They've since played shows in the US and Japan, supported Primal Scream and released two top-20 singles. After the band's first single Wasted Little DJs graced the indie radio waves, it became obvious that they'd go places rather fast.

Kyle Falconer's distinct tone shines through on every View song, blending his Scottish accent with a mixture of Bobby Gillespie and Robert Plant. Overall he's got a great rock 'n' roll voice which makes Superstar Tradesman and Wasted Little DJs far more interesting than they would otherwise have been.

The rest of the record throws up a few suprises. I’d never heard Scots do 2-tone until I’d heard the insanely catchy ‘Wasteland’ and ‘Face for the Radio’ is a witty and beautifully melodic number that recalls Hurricane #1’s brilliant but unappreciated ‘Monday Afternoon.’ But, for the most part, Hats Off To The Buskers is just two or three songs too long and one step off the pace set by Arctic Monkeys last year. The similarities between the two bands are uncanny at times but ultimately The View’s debut album is on the second tier, but demonstrates massive scope for improvement if tracks like ‘Face for the Radio’ and ‘Don’t Tell Me’ are anything to go by.

Kings of Convenience - Riot On An Empty Street

year 2004 review: Riot on an Empty Street ends a long period of inactivity for Kings of Convenience. During their three-year layoff Erlend Øye could be found making solo records and DJing while Eirik Glambek Boe was finishing his psychology degree. Luckily for fans of beautiful vocals and thoughtful indie pop, they decided to get back together. What this band is all about is the sound of Boe and Øye's voices blended together in harmony. Their first album (in both incarnations) erred on the side of consistency. Here the band seems to have learned the all-important lesson of pace and variety. The arrangements are fuller too with pianos, strings, the occasional electric guitar, and lovely guest vocals on two tracks from Broken Social Scene member Leslie Feist. Not to say that they have gone crazy with change. They still stick pretty closely to the acoustic guitars and vocals path, and the tone of the album is autumnal and restrained as before.

Tuesday, January 30, 2007

Sin City - Soundtrack


year 2005 info: Composers: Robert Rodriguez; John Debney; Graeme Revell. Recording information: Todd AO Scoring, Studio City, CA.

Husker Du - Everything Falls Apart

year 82 review: On their first studio recording, Everything Falls Apart, Hüsker Dü demonstrate a sharper sense of purpose than on their live debut, Land Speed Record, but that doesn't necessarily make the album a breakthrough. Indeed, the trio demonstrates that it's capable of powerful noise, but not songcraft -- the only song with a discernible hook is their thrashing cover of Donovan's "Sunshine Superman." Still, the band's hardcore is better than many of its contemporaries because its grasp of noise is superior. Even with the inconsistent songwriting, Everything Falls Apart rages with layers of blistering guitars and scorching rhythms that are exciting in their own right. download rapidshare.de megaupload torrent

Pere ubu - Modern Dance


year 78 review: Pere Ubu's Modern Dance is one of the most fully realized albums of the post-punk/new wave era. By mashing distorted guitar riffs with shrieking synths, Ubu's music transcended most other punk records of the day, and thanks to David Thomas' warbling delivery, it doesn't sound like anything else.

Monday, January 29, 2007

Sisters of Mercy - Vision Thing

year 90 review: The third Sisters Of Mercy album, VISION THING, makes a dramatic shift from its predecessor, introducing heavy metal riffs to the band`s genre-defining goth sound. Far from signifying a fundamental change in Andrew Eldritch`s sound (once again, he had a new group of musicians with him, keeping only the drum machine, Doktor Avalanche), this combination is an excellent sonic fit. The swaggering machismo of heavy metal sits nicely next to Eldritch`s studiously straight-faced delivery of his colossally egocentric (and intentionally funny) lyrics.
Opening with the monster riff of the title track, VISION THING is a note-perfect parody of metal, while also pushing the boundaries of goth, something the Sisters have done consistently with each of their releases. Standouts include "Ribbons," where the guitars alternately call to mind crashing waves and thunderclaps, and the caustic lyrics end in a desperate howl. "Doctor Jeep" is a jittery, caffeinated swipe at American commercialism, and "More," a masterpiece of bombast built on a big, chugging guitar riff, incorporates everything from sawing, synthesized violins and a piano fade out, to gloriously selfish lyrics and swooping backing vocals.

Radiohead - Live in Paris

year 2003 bio: Radiohead was one of the few alternative bands of the early '90s to draw heavily from the grandiose arena rock that characterized U2's early albums. But the band internalized that epic sweep, turning it inside out to tell tortured, twisted tales of angst and alienation. Vocalist Thom Yorke's pained lyrics were brought to life by the group's three-guitar attack, which relied on texture -- borrowing as much from My Bloody Valentine and Pink Floyd as R.E.M. and Pixies -- instead of virtuosity. It took Radiohead awhile to formulate their signature sound. Their 1993 debut, Pablo Honey..

Sunday, January 28, 2007

David Vandervelde - the Moonstation House Band


year 2007 review: Chicago native David Vandervelde obviously likes doing things his way -- why else would he play almost every single instrument heard on his full-length debut, 2007's The Moonstation House Band? While whirring electronics play a significant role in the proceedings, Vandervelde's Marc Bolan-esque vocals add an interesting spin on the whole one-man-band angle. A modern day T. Rex would be a fitting description overall, especially on the album-opening rocker, "Nothin' No," as well as the spacey ballad, "Feet of a Liar" (which sounds straight off of Tanx). Elsewhere, "Jacket" shows that Vandervelde has a pop sweet tooth, while he puts on his boogie woogie shoes for "Wisdom from a Tree." Marc Bolan reincarnated? It comes pretty darn close on The Moonstation House Band.

Iggy pop - New Values


year 79 review: This is still a great power pop album; almost every song is a gem. It's a lot more restrained than his Stooges work and even Lust for Life, so don't expect another Funhouse. Still, from the awesome title track to the slower Don't Look Down this is a very listenable and enjoyable album. Certainly better than anything that came after!

Saturday, January 27, 2007

Ray LaMontagne - Trouble


year 2004 review: This is a majestic and overwhelming piece of modern soul. Grainy voice and such a raw yet tender delivery provides an album of such beauty and majesty that its hard pressed to find anything with more emotion. Ray LaMontagne is a rare gem that should be cherished, treasured and cared for so that more gold silk can be spun from his golden writing machine. Ideal with wine and candles. Beautiful download rapidshare.de megaupload.com torrent

the Hold Steady - Seperation Sunday

year 2005 review: The Hold Steady's Almost Killed Me is their hands-down masterpiece. A swirling maelstrom of intense, hilarious, and breathtaking rock & roll, it should have been the album that knocked everything else into a cocked hat in 2004. Of course, it was mostly ignored outside the homes of a handful of indie snobs and adventurous punks, but it's there, it's amazing, and most likely the band will never be able to top it. Separation Sunday comes pretty damn close, though. It is a much darker record, revolving around drug casualties, broken lives, a hoodrat fixation, spiritual and physical dissipation, and general despair, and there aren't as many easy laughs this time out -- but instead the listener gets lots of head-shaking wonderment at Craig Finn's genius lyrics and voice. download rapidshare.de megaupload.com torrent

Friday, January 26, 2007

Belle & sebastian - For your hands

year 2000 review: When Belle & Sebastian canceled several dates on their 1998 North American tour after cellist Isobel Campbell fell ill, many fans cried foul; couldn't the rest of the group have gone on without her? Of course not -- Belle & Sebastian is a band in the most democratic sense of the word, a point reinforced by Fold Your Hands Child, You Walk Like a Peasant, their fourth and most ambitiously eclectic album to date. Nominal frontman Stuart Murdoch recedes into the background even more than on The Boy With the Arab Strap and , allowing bandmates like CampbellStevie Jackson to take on a greater share of the writing and vocal duties. Also like its predecessor, Fold Your Hands Child opts for a subtle, intimate palette that reveals its charms only in its own sweet time. It may be too subtle for its own good; even after repeated listens it fails to connect on any meaningful level. The record has many intriguing ideas (like the delicate "Beyond the Sunrise," which evokes the classic duets of Nancy Sinatra and Lee Hazlewood, and the vaguely rootsy "The Wrong Girl"), but few of the concepts seem fully developed.

Thursday, January 25, 2007

Jefferson Airplane - Surrealistic Pillow


year 67 review: This is the essential Jefferson Airplane album. Widely available in cut-out bins around the world, this cornerstone of Psychedelic music deserves to be listened to and absorbed by any fan of '60s rock. Most of their best-known songs come from this release, including "White Rabbit," "Somebody to Love," "Today" and "3/5 a Mile in 10 Seconds." download rapidshare.com megaupload.com sendspace.com

Audioslave - Audioslave


year 2002 review: Sadly, it seems that with 'Audioslave' these people who were involved in some very exciting rock records in the 1990s, now seem happy to be making some bad ones from the 1970s.

the Stranglers - Dreamtime

year 87 review: After Aural Sculpture, this came as a major disappointment. It's not awful, but neither is it in any way essential. The attempts to go ethnic on the likes of "Mayan Skies" and the title track (taken from the Aboriginal concept of an unconscious journey) are pretty embarrassing. There are a couple of good songs, like "Always the Sun" and "Nice in Nice" (a less than contrite look back at the riot in France which got the band thrown in jail for a few weeks), but that's simply not enough for a once great band. And Hugh Cornwell's rhyming of "And who gets the job?/Of pushing the knob" on the former turns an otherwise beautiful song into silliness.

Bob Seger & The Silver Bullet - Nine Tonight


year 81 review: Features the title-track contribution to the Urban Cowboy movie soundtrack and an effective cover of "Trying to Live My Life Without You."

Wednesday, January 24, 2007

the Decemberists - Her Majesty

year 2003 review: In the band photograph that accompanies Her Majesty the Decemberists, the Decemberists appear gathered around a piano, mugging histrionically for the camera. With their manic gesturing, costumes and absurd handlebar moustaches, they both mock and engage the performer’s frantic desire to entertain and please. Last years Castaways and Cutouts marked the appearance of the Decemberists before a national audience, and with it they laid out the aesthetic and approach that also characterizes Her Majesty the Decemberists.

Colin Meloy, the songwriter and lead singer for the band, has said that he is tired of writing about the angsty lovelives of twentysomethings. Here he turns to tropes of exoticism and the past that are even more tried – like clipper ships scented with cardamom and myrrh, and the seduction of young men by attractive Japanese geishas – proving that what may be played out in the context of an 18th century adventure novel for young boys is startlingly fresh material for a rock song. Meloy freely adopts historical personae and locales for his songwriting, placing the Decemberists out at sea in one song and picking up the part of a young gymnast in another.

Tuesday, January 23, 2007

Greg Koch - 4 Days In The South (2005)


Track list:
01 Bored To Tears
02 When Were The Good Old Days
03 Can't Get There From Here
04 Your Face
05 Thems The Breaks
06 Fool's Gold
07 Keep On Singin'
08 Love Contractor
09 Folsom Prison Blues
10 Chicken From Hell
11 JSK

Notes: An exceptional guitarist for any other guitarists out there besides myself. This is a fun bluesy to country rock album.

Ricky Martin - MTV Unplugged (Proper 2006)

1. Ricky Martin - Asignatura Pendiente (4:19)
2. Ricky Martin - Con Tu Nombre (4:20)
3. Ricky Martin - Fuego De Noche, Nieve De Dнa (5:12)
4. Ricky Martin - Gracias Por Pensar En Mi (4:38)
5. Ricky Martin - La Bomba (5:49)
6. Ricky Martin - Lola, Lola (4:20)
7. Ricky Martin - Marнa (5:31)
8. Ricky Martin - Perdido Sin Ti (4:26)
9. Ricky Martin - Pйgate (4:05)
10. Ricky Martin - Tu Recuerdo (4:07)
11. Ricky Martin - Volverбs (5:05)
12. Ricky Martin - Vuelve (5:35)

Jackie Brown - Soundtrack (o.s.t.)

year 96 info: On the soundtrack for Quentin Tarantino's long awaited follow-up to PULP FICTION, the director again turns to 1970s R&B classics, seasoning the mix with a touch of modern pop. As usual, Tarantino proves himself to be quite the soul connoisseur. This disc zeroes in on great old-school cuts like "Natural High" by the criminally underrated Bloodstone and "Inside My Love" by the late Minnie Riperton. Topping things off is a change-of-pace from, of all people, ex-Cars guitarist Elliot Easton and his group Tiki Gods.

Bobby Womack,Guess Who,Little Feat,Delfonics,Supremes & More

Monday, January 22, 2007

the Pogues - If I Should Fall From Grace With God


year 87 Album Genre British Folk: review: The rest of the album takes Celtic trad (fifes, accordions, bodhráns and all) into similarly uncharted stylistic waters, from the crazy cornball Orientalia of "Turkish Song of the Damned" and the effervescent pop of "The Broad Majestic Shannon" to the almost-out-of-control "Fiesta" (a sort of Spanish beer-hall raveup) and the bittersweet going-to-America anthem "Thousands Are Sailing." There are also straight trad snippets (most memorably the woozy "Worms"), a tumultuous big-band excursion ("Metropolis") and even a sod's lullaby (the gorgeous "Lullaby of London"). Obviously the Pogues can do it all. And it sounds as if they've only just begun.

Cars - Soundtrack

year 2006 review: Scorching southwestern summer temps always bust pistons on good ol' 66, so if you're planning on taking that California trip, gear up for them certain breakdowns with some hot tunes courtesy of the Cars soundtrack (Disney). A handful of new recordings on the album will move the downtime along (but we'll agree, not nearly fast enough when the barometer says 110!); classic tunes ("Sh-Boom," "Route 66") will keep our bop from being burnt, and Randy Newman's animated underscore keeps things... well, animated. In "Real Gone," Sheryl Crow's edge handles powerfully, knocking bicyclists right off the road and into the tumbleweeds (careful there, Lance... soft shoulder ahead); "Life is a Highway" maintains maximum speed with Rascal Flatt's new twang, while Brad Paisley's "Behind the Clouds" and Hank Williams' "My Heart Would Know" daydream us right into the dusty world of love gone missing. The highlight of this soundtrack, rightfully so, is Randy Newman's "Our Town," melancholily performed by beloved James Taylor. Touching on the idea that our own town changes for the worse over time, as does the world, perhaps it's not the world around us that changes but ourselves... and the best way to enjoy life is to love what we have, even if it's all caved in on us. Deeply beautiful songs like this, even though hidden in a wild comedy adventure movie about talking cars, can change lives. download depositfiles.com

Mojave 3 - Puzzles Like You


year 2006 review: Certainly a very different sound for Mojave 3. More conventional pop-crafted songs. If one can accept that the days of Ask Me Tomorrow are gone and go with the transition that Mojave 3 is making, they'll find a really well done, up-tempo album with that same twinge of melancholy that have defined the band.

Dead Can Dance - Aion

year 90 review: Their reputation growing by leaps and bounds, including a huge underground following in the U.S. -- they were able to tour there even without one domestic release available, while at one point Dead Can Dance was the biggest selling band in 4AD's history -- Perry and Gerrard once again did the business with Aion. Its cover taken from Bosch, Aion's medievalism was worn more openly than ever before, with songs adapted from centuries-old material. The beautiful, entrancing "Saltarello," with lead performance by what sounds like an old wind instrument, comes from an Italian dance of the 14th century, while the mysterious moods of "The Song of the Sibyl" derive from 16th-century Catalonia. The group's command of not merely recording possibilities -- witness the exquisite layering of vocals on the opening "The Arrival and the Reunion" -- but of musical traditions, instruments, and more from around the world was arguably never stronger. Gerrard's vocals in particular have an even stronger, richer feeling than before, not merely able to command with its power but softly calm and seduce. download torrent rapidshare

the knife - Silent Shout


year 2006 review: I love The Knife, and this album is quite decent. But "scary"? Absolutely not. This isn't "horror pop", it's "halloween pop". Anyone scared by this needs to listen to some Coil, Nurse With Wound, or even the newer Gary Numan releases... Overall worth hearing if not buying, but I wish Karin would write some lyrics that someone besides just HER would find emotional/intellectual merit in. download rapidshare.com megashares

Sunday, January 21, 2007

Tom Waits - Orphans

year 2006 review: There's so much more to enjoy here - the adaptations of Kerouac in "Home I'll Never Be" and "On The Road"; the caterwauling multi-tracked Tom choir bawling out "Goodnight Irene"; the prisoner in "Fish In The Jailhouse" bragging about his ability to pick locks with a fishbone; lines like "Well, the rat always knows when he's in with weasels"; and above all, the overarching humanism that enlightens even the most sombre corners of this massive project. It’s an attitude perhaps best encapsulated in "Bend Down The Branches", an allegorical observation about how trees (ie humans) may get old, but never ugly: "You're like a willow, once you were gold/We're made for bending, even beauty gets old". There's plenty that's old and beautiful about these Orphans.

Friday, January 19, 2007

Luke Haines - Off My Rocker At The Art School Bop


year 2006 review: Whether dwelling on the demise of tragic boxer Freddie Mills or spitting out sarcastic jibes about the former hunting ground of Jonathan King, Luke Haines can be relied upon to deliver unpleasantness in a bleakly comic fashion. The odd misstep notwithstanding, Off My Rocker at the Art School Bop casts a withering gaze across the unpalatable dregs of life and undermines their power to shock and offend with the deft application of twisted absurdity and wit. Not to mention a hummable chorus. All together now; “Gary Glitter / Is a bad bad man / Ruining the reputation of the Glitter Band.” Just because it’s serious, doesn’t mean it can’t be funny. download sendspace torrent rapidshare.de depositfiles

Neil Young & Crazy Horse - Greendale


year 2003 review: Neil Young has created a fictional place filled with characters and incidents and written an album about them. The album, and the place, is Greendale, and the people are the Green family. The songs are among the most personal he's ever penned, ranging from the dark and biting to the light and humorous. still surprising and still stirring it up, Young adds a stunning new album to his place in rock history. "One of the most ambitious works of his career...a great artist once again at the peak of his game."

Van Morrison - Avalon Sunset



year 89 review: Featuring such favourites as "Have I Told You Lately That I Love You", "Coney Island", "I'd Like To Write Another Song" and "Orangefield", it is not hard to see why this album is generally rated as one of his best of the 80's. "Whenever God Shines His Light" (the duet with Cliff Richard), however, s a little too sirupy to my taste.

Velvet Revolver - Contraband


year 2004 review: An aurally interesting album, that lets you hear not only how these guys have come together as a stomping rock band, but also the influence they had on the sound of their previous bands. Scott's vocals show that the trials and tribulations of his personal life have not affected his range or power of voice, and the command that slash and duff have over their instruments is impressive. The album rewards those fans like myself who have been waiting impatiently for the album since first hearing of the collaboration. Alongside Audioslave, these guys prove that super-bands are not the refuge of has-beens, but the future for great musicians whose growth leads them from their previous outfits. download rapidshare.com torrent depositfiles sendspace

Thursday, January 18, 2007

Abba - Greatest Hits Gold

1. Dancing Queen 3:51
2. Knowing Me, Knowing You 4:03
3. Take a Chance on Me 4:06
4. Mamma Mia 3:33
5. Lay All Your Love on Me 4:35
6. Super Trouper 4:13
7. I Have a Dream 4:42
8. The Winner Takes It All 4:54
9. Money, Money, Money 3:06
10. S.O.S. 3:20
11. Chiquitita 5:24
12. Fernando 4:14
13. Voulez-Vous 5:10
14. Gimme! Gimme! Gimme! (A Man After Midnight) 4:52
15. Does Your Mother Know 3:13
16. One of Us 3:57
17. The Name of the Game 4:53
18. Thank You for the Music 3:49
19. Waterloo 2:48

Robbie Williams - Greatest Hits


He’s the all round entertainer vvho has everything:_style, charisma and an uncanny knack for_knocking out killer_tune after killer tune. He is Robbie Williams;_probably the biggest_pop star to emerge_from the UK in the last twenty_years. This ‘Greatest Hits’ package features_so many chart-bothering super_songs that_every listen delivers absolute pop_perfection. From the_beautiful ballads ‘Angels’ & ‘Feel’ to the storming ‘Rock DJ’, ‘Old Before I Die’ and nevv single ‘Radio’, this record_proves once and for all_that Robbie Williams is a pop genius. If u only buy 1 record this year, make sure it’s this 1.

Clap Your Hands Say Yeah - Some Loud Thunder

year 2007 review: You've undoubtedly heard of these guys by now. They're all over the Net, and if you don't have a computer, someone who does told you about them. Their story is as much a testament to the power of the grassroots-indie-blog machine as it is a sign of crumbling major-label authority. Self-released, self-promoted, and self-distributed (right down to licking the stamps), Clap Your Hands Say Yeah's self-titled debut is well on its way to selling a respectable 40,000 copies as this review goes to press -- and they don't even have a record contract. These Brooklyn-based boys like it that way, too. If there were ever a band who could do a cover of Sinatra's "My Way," and mean it, it's these guys. Theirs is a template for success that every budding Shins or Modest Mouse could do well to follow: work hard, practice hard, play well, and write good songs -- the rest will take care of itself. And it did. Heavy hype on the Internet had the guys sending copies of this album to the four corners, just as they were settling into being a band, and when the labels came knocking, these guys just said, "Thank you, we're fine." They are fine. Fine and fun. Their sound is evocative of nearly every indie band you've ever heard of -- enough to flick a switch somewhere in your head, but not enough to call them guilty of derivation. A list could be made here, but it would be this reviewer's list -- yours would probably look a lot different, and that's fine, too. You might find Talking Heads in there, while someone else hears early solo John Cale. download rapidshare megaupload.com torrent

George Harrison - Living In The Material World

year 73 review: Living in the Material World (1973), George Harrison’s fourth solo album and second following the break-up of the Beatles, was a return to humble pop music after experimental asides (1968’s Wonderwall Music and 1969’s Electronic Sound) and sprawling artistic liberation (1970’s three-LP All Things Must Pass) were shaken from his then-prolific system. It was his second #1 album in three years (it would also be the last #1 album of his career), and in a year inundated with solo Beatles’ hit singles (Paul McCartney’s “Hi, Hi, Hi”, “Live and Let Die”, and “My Love”; Ringo Starr’s “Photograph"), boasted the effervescent “Give Me Love (Give Me Peace on Earth)”, a #1 single that remains one of Harrison’s most iconic and well-loved—both the album and the single knocked McCartney and Wings from the top of the charts.

Wednesday, January 17, 2007

Peter Gabriel - 1

year 77 review: According to legend, Peter Gabriel went to see a Bruce Springsteen concert towards the end of his tenure in Genesis and suddenly realized that he had to leave the band. It's a good story, certainly, but it was an even better idea. The prog rock ship was already taking on water when it was finally torpedoed by the Ramones, but by then Gabriel had already gotten his solo career underway. And though pop culture's memory of 1977 will forever be dominated by visions of Johnny Rotten and Joe Strummer, Gabriel started his own understated revolution in the same year, one that may not have set the music world alight in quite the same way as the celebrated punks, but an admirable one nonetheless. download rapidshare.com

the Stone Roses - the Stone Roses


year 89 review: The Stone Roses' affection for '60s-style hooks and House-inspired beats ignited the "baggy" movement that took over England in the late '80s. Songs such as "Elephant Stone," "I Am the Resurrection" and "She Bangs the Drums" are just three reasons why this record is a classic.

Tuesday, January 16, 2007

David Gilmour - David Gilmour

year 2006 review: In his work with Pink Floyd, David Gilmour's exact, blues-based guitar solos function as tense pivotal points that set the stage for the next revelation. On his first solo album, however, Gilmour simply flirts with his own crystalline perfection. Drummer Willie Wilson (from the Sutherland Brothers and Quiver) and bassist Rick Wills (a ubiquitous hack from Frampton's Camel, Roxy Music and the reconstituted Small Faces) are constrained to the sluggish tempos favored by Floyd, and Gilmour dives in like a duck to water. But the alien overview, the philosophical paradoxes that make Pink Floyd's lazy playing so poignant and pregnant, are sorely missed here. Gilmour affects a bland innocence in the face of earthly perversity in lyrics barely worthy of Samuel Beckett's shoeshine boy.

One cut stands out: "Short and Sweet," coauthored by muckraker Roy Harper. A long-time Floyd ally–he sang the biting "Have a Cigar" on Wish You Were Here–Harper is widely regarded as the most uncompromisingly honest songwriter in England. Here, he articulates the existential riddle of David Gilmour better than Gilmour himself can.

There's nothing amiss with David Gilmour as an immaculate guitar sampler, but as far as providing genuine ideas–forget it.

the Stranglers - Greatest Hits


year 77-90 review: I know that purists might disagree with the idea of a “Greatest Hits” album, and in some respects I share their opinion, I feel that in situations such as this where you’re talking about a band of such longevity, the only way for many to become aware of the earlier phases of the band’s career is through a collection such as this one. I’d definitely make the suggestion that if you’re interested in a GREAT punk rock album, you should get your hands on “Rattus Norvegicus”. If you’re more interested in the evolution of a great rock band, you can’t go wrong with this “Greatest Hits” album. I recommend it highly! download rapidshare

Monday, January 15, 2007

Portishead - Portishead

year 97 review: Portishead's mix of '60s soundtrack music, hip-hop beats, dub and detached female vocals became an instant reference point when their first album, Dummy, came out, in 1994. Three years later, with the very first notes of Portishead, the group easily re-establishes its mastery of the genre now known as trip-hop. Instrumentalists Geoff Barrow and Adrian Utley have refined their sound to an instantly identifiable essence: bleeps transmitted from outer space, familiar syncopation and turntable scratches.

When Beth Gibbons starts singing in a pinched, affected voice, we know that success hasn't improved the band's mood. "All Mine" may begin like a hiccuping James Bond theme, but it turns out to be a tale of coolly detached possessiveness: "There's nowhere to hide from me..../All mine, you have to be." In "Only You," the singer is imprisoned in a circle of abject dependence – love is never seen as liberating but as binding, confining. "Half Day Closing" is as chilly as a cold wind blowing on a desolate plain – the instruments sound as if they are miles behind Gibbons' voice, wrapped in a creepy gauze of vinyl hiss.

By the time we reach "Mourning Air," it becomes obvious that the Bristol, England, combo uses the same tricks on every song, and that's when morbid fascination turns into ennui. Paradoxically, the music can simultaneously sound huge (Barrow is an amazing sonic architect) and be tensely coiled onto itself. The entire record is an exercise in barren claustrophobia, as if Portishead had spent the past three years burrowing deeper and deeper into a self-obsessed, self-contained world. At this point, we can only hope – for their sake and for the listeners' – that they come up for air soon.

Lou Reed - New York

year 89 review: New York City figured so prominently in Lou Reed's music for so long that it's surprising it took him until 1989 to make an album simply called New York, a set of 14 scenes and sketches that represents the strongest, best-realized set of songs of Reed's solo career. While Reed's 1982 comeback, The Blue Mask, sometimes found him reaching for effects, New York's accumulated details and deft caricatures hit bull's-eye after bull's-eye for 57 minutes, and do so with an easy stride and striking lyrical facility. New York also found Reed writing about the larger world rather than personal concerns for a change, and in the beautiful, decaying heart of New York City, he found plenty to talk about -- the devastating impact of AIDS in "Halloween Parade," the vicious circle of child abuse "Endless Cycle," the plight of the homeless in "Xmas in February" -- and even on the songs where he pointedly mounts a soapbox, Reed does so with an intelligence and smart-assed wit that makes him sound opinionated rather than preachy -- like a New Yorker. And when Reed does look into his own life, it's with humor and perception; "Beginning of a Great Adventure" is a hilarious meditation on the possibilities of parenthood, and "Dime Store Mystery" is a moving elegy to his former patron Andy Warhol. Reed also unveiled a new band on this set, and while guitarist Mike Rathke didn't challenge Reed the way Robert Quine did, Reed wasn't needing much prodding to play at the peak of his form, and Ron Wasserman proved Reed's superb taste in bass players had not failed him. Produced with subtle intelligence and a minimum of flash, New York is a masterpiece of literate, adult rock & roll, and the finest album of Reed's solo career.download rapidshare megaupload torrent depositfiles

Sunday, January 14, 2007

Gwen Stefani - The Sweet Escape

Wind It Up
Thw Sweet Escape ft. Akon
Orange County Girl
Early Winter
Now That You Got It
4 In The Morning
Yummy ft. Pharrell
Flourescent
Breakin' Up
Don't Get It Twisted
U Started it
Wonderful Life
Wind It Up (Harajuku Lovers Live Version)

Nine Inch Nails - Pretty Hate Machine


year 89 review: Considered the breakthrough album that delivered a more palatable version of industrial music to the commercial audience, Pretty Hate Machine left its dingy mark on pop culture. The abrasive "sonarchy" of the album was first churned by despondent club-goers who roiled with the rhythms and aligned with the angst-ridden convictions.

Saturday, January 13, 2007

Mars Volta - Scabdates

year 00 review: Scab Dates' accompanying photography is a frenetic blur of instruments and sweaty hair. Singers stand on amplifiers, and keyboardists stare intently at the veins popping in their hands; drummers reach over snares to tweak guitar strings, and saxophones appear out of the ether. It's an accurate portrayal of the Mars Volta's collagist sound, their subtitled and bullet-pointed avant metal that increasingly seems like the soundtrack to a film only Omar Rodriguez-Lopez can see. Still, even at their most insular (some would say self-indulgent), the Mars Volta seethe with intensity. Scab Dates proves this. Most of the more wandering elements of De-Loused and Frances the Mute disappear for this live document, replaced by hails of screaming organ, increased thump to the rhythm section, and Cedric Bixler-Zavala showing off the insane volatility in his voice. They still get jammy in places, but the extended guitar solos and softer textures lead to inevitable explosions. As nothing's ever been traditional with the Mars Volta, it's no surprise that their live albums aren't, either. The songs flow seamlessly and take subtitled digressions just like the studio records. In the liners, Rodriguez-Lopez describes how field recordings he made while on tour found their way into the mix, and there are no "How ya doin', Phoenix?!" or "Let me see you jump, San Diego!" from Bixler-Zavala to discern where the songs were recorded. All you get are dates -- "recorded between May 2004 and May 2005" -- and the occasional bit of crowd chatter to tell you this is live.

Friday, January 12, 2007

Regina Spektor - begin to hope

year 2006 review: Begin to hope finds anti-folk chanteuse Regina Spektor taking a small step away from piano balladry into the brave new world of the pop song. And what pop songs they are. Spektor's voice takes the foreground over sparse arrangements of guitars, strings, some electronic beats, and yes, piano. Her singing, if you can believe it, is even better than it was on Soviet Kitsch : intimate, playful, and full of jazzy phrasings. She slips effortlessly into falsetto and scat in a manner reminiscent of Joni Mitchell. "Hotel Song" finds Spektor singing whispery and smooth over humming organs and a muted snare drum. In "On The Radio," she sings about hearing G'N'R's "November Rain" while plucked strings and synth arpeggios go noodling on behind her. This is an album full of surprises, not the least of which is how lovely the effect is overall.

Duran Duran - Astronaut

year 2004 review: As the premier ambassadors of the image-conscious, party-loving British New Romantic set in the early 1980s, Duran Duran duly conquered the pop world, with millions of teenage girls in their hook-filled thrall. After three albums, however, the original lineup splintered, and the band's profile began to fade. Two decades down the line, all five members of DD's vintage lineup finally reunited for Astronaut. Unlike the group's more "mature" '90s offerings, 2004's Astronaut eschews "adult alternative" trappings in favor of a return to their earlier bold, fun-loving sound, a move that couldn't have been better timed, considering the concurrent '80s-revival craze. Accordingly, Nick Rhodes's synthesizers buzz and zoom with reckless abandon, providing bright color and underlining the dance-rock beat. Guitarist Andy Taylor largely tones down the frantic fretboard exercises of his post-Duran days, opting for a chunkier, riff-oriented approach reminiscent of the glory days, and Simon LeBon comes off as every inch the rock star, his swagger, insouciance, and signature vocal style utterly undiminished by time. Astronaut appeared on the horizon as an alert to '80s-worshipping young bands that the men who wrote the book were back in action.

Faithless - To All New Arrivals


Off the back_their extremely successful greatest hits album, Forever Faithless (1.2 million sales), Faithless release_their nevv studio album, To All New Arrivals. A classic ‘the morning_after the night before’ album: melodic, but sonically_pushes the boat out. And in true_Faithless style, they’re not afraid of experimenting, or to say what_they think. It’s a big, warm, passionate album. Faithless_have teamed up vvith some amazing artists on this album (Cat Power, Robert Smith, One Eskimo, Dido), vvith the first_single to be released from the album, Bombs featuring Harry Collier. This track is hugely confident & emotionally alive, lush and emotional with hard hitting brutally honest lyrics.

Dancefloor Charts Vol.1

cd01:
01. Fedde Le Grande - Put Your Hands Up For Detroit 02:26
02. Beatfreakz - Superfreak 03:23
03. Rico Bass And Deejay Bonito - Cisko Disco 03:15
04. Paffendorf - La La La Girl 03:34
05. Tiesto Feat Maxi Jazz - Dance 4 Life 03:32
06. Cosmic Gate - Should Have Known 03:30
07. Tube Tobic And DJ Shandar - The Secret 03:49
08. Dj Dejan - Be My Dream 03:38
09. Club Robbers - Take Me Home Tonight 03:25
10. Sixty-9 Vs. Discodrive - Rainbow 02:55
11. Royal Gigolos - Tell It To My Heart 03:49
12. Groove Cats - Once In A Lifetime Groove 03:17
13. Nikita And Lance - Cant U See 03:37
14. Delano And Crockett - Walking On The Moon 02:46
15. Michael Gray Feat Shelly Poole - Borderline 03:14
16. The Caramel Club - Mama Say Mama Sa 03:07
17. Bodyrox - Yeah Yeah 03:04
18. Roger Sanchez - Lost (D Ramirez Lost In Rave Radio Mix)07:56
19. Mylo Feat Freeform Five - Musclecar 03:54
20. Supercharger - Cars And Girls 05:54

cd02:
01. Cascada - Cant Stop The Rain 03:57
02. Aycan - Seduced (Central Seven Remix) 03:32
03. Tunnel Allstars Feat DJ Yanny - Flug Auf Dem Gluecksdrachen02:59
04. Tv Junkeez - Knight Rider (Bangbros Remix Edit) 03:58
05. Central Seven - If I Where You 03:28
06. Beats Of Genesis Vs Legend B - Lost In Love (Sean Tyas Mix)07:27
07. Deep Spirit - No Cover Song 03:15
08. Brisby And Jingles - Eternity 04:18
09. Claus Van Haiden - 666 Part 2 03:25
10. Cerla Vs Manian - Jump 03:25
11. Sector One - Not Ashamed 03:48
12. Cc.K - Close To Me 03:56
13. Andre Visior - Skyline 03:49
14. Nature One Inc. - Live Your Passion 03:27
15. Ian Van Dahl - Just A Girl (Megara Vs. DJ Lee Remix Cut)03:58
16. Ron Van Den Beuken - Find The Way 03:05
17. Jealous Guy - Mr. Brightside 03:29
18. Dj Energy - Captain Future 03:24
19. H.A.B. Vs Rockets - Peacemaker 03:25
20. Floorfilla - Cyberdream 03:32

Thursday, January 11, 2007

The Afghan Whigs - Gentlemen

year 1993 review: Gentlemen is a rare thing in rock music, a "concept album" so personal and painful that listening to it gives the impression of being privy to something that should never have been made public. Greg Dulli's lyrics about male inadequacies and overcompensation ring with uncontainable self-hatred and loathing. The shifting of emotions--from the brittle and internal to the brutal and external--forms the basis for the stagnancy and decay of the male/female relationships described here. Opening with a claustrophobic swirl, "If I Were Going" sets the mood, a warm bassline picking at the scabs of Dulli's cracked intonation ("It's all a lie, it's nearly dead, it's in our hope, baby, it's in our bed"). Taking cues from blues, soul, and rock, the Whigs crank out a hybrid 'alternative' sound borne on the scorching guitars of Rick McCollum. After the summation of "Bit into a rotten one now, didn't you?" ("Now You Know") and "I Keep Coming Back," a cover of the Tyrone Davies soul classic, the instrumental "Brother Woodrow/Closing Prayer" adds violin and piano to the mix, finally offering a reprieve from the Whigs' poisonous psychic exorcism. Though not a record to listen to often, Gentlemen is a stunning achievement.

Muse - Showbiz


year 99 review: If you haven't got this album yet, buy it now. Muse have got to be the most talented and inspiring band ever. Showbiz is one of their best albums because it has so many great songs on it. They're all good songs but Sunburn, Muscle Museum, Cave, Showbiz, Unintended, Escape and Hate This & I'll Love You are the best. Once you've listened to this album you'll fall in love with their music, and then you'll have to buy Origin Of Symmetry, Hullabaloo and Absolution aswell. Muse are the bomb and they complete life. download rapidshare download megaupload download torrent

Wednesday, January 10, 2007

Marc Almond - The Stars We Are (remastered)


year 2002 description: Personnel includes: Marc Almond, Nico. This is a digitally remastered reissue of Soft Cell frontman Marc Almond`s 13-track solo album, STARS WE ARE. The reissue also features expanded liner notes. blog download megaupload

Van Morrison - Tupelo Honey


year 71 review: The kick-off tune "Wild Night" earned Van another deserved FM hit, while the rest of the album offers more mellow celebrations of nature and love. Folksier than Moondance, this delightful album finds Van exploring different sides of his musical and vocal talents. The title track is a flat out beauty. download blog rapidshare

Tuesday, January 9, 2007

Bob Seger & the Silver Bullet Band

year 1991 review:Michigan's Bob Seger is an American treasure, but he doesn't get the full respect or attention of, say, Bruce Springsteen or John Mellencamp because he wasn't as visible. His late-'70s prime was pre-MTV, New Jersey-born Springsteen had the fawning support of the New York-based media, and Mellencamp embraced high-profile political causes like Farm Aid and married model Elaine Irwin. 1991's The Fire Inside is credited to Bob Seger & the Silver Bullet Band, but that's misleading. Keyboardist Craig Frost plays on most of the songs, but saxophonist Alto Reed and bassist Chris Campbell are virtually MIA. Instead, Seger uses countless special guests. So many, in fact, that listing them all would eat up this review space, but they include Joe Walsh, Bruce Hornsby, Roy Bittan, Steve Lukather, Don Was, Waddy Wachtel, Rick Vito, Mike Campbell, Patty Smyth, Lisa Germano, and Kenny Aronoff. Overall, the 12-track album is a disappointing piecemeal effort with five different production credits, and Seger uses two Tom Waits covers and one other outside song to pad it. "The Real Love" was a Top 40 hit and this acoustic guitar-based song is indicative of Seger's gift for writing mid-tempo ballads.

Stereophonics - Just Enough Education To Preform

year 2001 review:Principally recorded at Real World Studios, Bath, England. On Just Enough Education To Preform, Brit-poppers Stereophonics offer another refreshingly unpretentious album in which frontman Kelly Jones sings about everyday topics and emotions in his inimitable winsome voice, the whole thing set to outrageously catchy melodies and driven by a strong guitar-based sound. Think a slightly grungier version of the La's and you're not far off the mark, although the album's far too stylistically varied to really be pigeonholed. "Have a Nice Day" could be Cheap Trick without the irony. Jones says the magnificent "Mr. Writer" was inspired by ELO and Stevie Wonder, although it could also pass for early-'70s John Lennon remade a la the Rutles. The exquisitely countryish "Step on My Old Size Nines" comes off as a modern alternative-rock take on early Brinsley Schwarz. Gorgeous stuff, and often rather uplifting.

Monday, January 8, 2007

Supertramp - Breakfast in America


year 79 review: Supertramp stands out at creating pop singles and still maintaining their own style and their own voice. I give them credit for doing that, but not much more. My father must have been taken aback by the occasional occurrences of harmonica and woodwind instruments, and thought he'd found himself a pretty cool band. He was right, in that Supertramp makes some of the better 70s pop songs, and some are still heard today.

Style Council - Greatest Hits


year 2000 notes: Digitally remastered reissue of 1991 'Best Of'. 18 hit singles including 'Long Hot Summer', 'You're The Best Thing', 'Speak Like A Child', 'My Ever Changing Moods' and 'Shout To The Top'. 2000 release. Standard jewelcase.

Sunday, January 7, 2007

Bonnie 'Prince' Billy - The Letting Go

year 2006 review: The distinctive female backing vocals that appear throughout 'The Letting Go' seem to have split opinion amongst fans. They are quite dominant at times with Will happy to drop into the background occassionally. I can see why this would upset some but I think it adds to this album's appeal - the songs are quite restrained and gentle and benefit from the extra vocals and atmospheric instrumental passages. I'm not sure this is a Will Oldham classic, it's missing a little variety perhaps, and the album gets a bit sleepy towards the end (although it redeems itself with the excellent 'I called You Back'). The only complete misfire for me is 'The Seedling' - most people seem to love this track but after listening to it about 10 times now I still can't warm to it. Oh, and I agree that the backing vocals are awful on this track (unless they are meant to be intentionally funny!) download rapidshare download megaupload torrent megashares sendspace depositfiles direct link