Thursday, January 7, 2010

Los bastardos finlandeses - el grandes saloon (2009) Illusion - enchanted

Part: 1 : Los bastardos finlandeses - el grandes saloon (2009)
Los Bastardos Finlandeses - El Grandes Saloon (2009)Mp3 | 320 Kbps | 51 MB | Finland
Hard Rock
El Grandes Saloon is the third album from this Finnish motor rock band, as they like to call themselves. Its a combination of old school Motцrhead, AC/DC and a little bit of Thin Lizzy to spice it up. Usually with Finnish bands the problem is the singer, either they cant sing in english at all, or then they lack the balls required for this kind of music. With Bryn El Taff Bastardo on vocals you have none of that. While the first full lenght album had great riff based hard rock, and the second album expanded on that a bit, while still keeping true to their style. This third album in just as many years seems to indicate that the band is running out of steam. After the very first listen, there was pretty much nothing memorable in it, apart from the title tracks hillbilly violins and banjos.
Part: 2 : Illusion - enchanted
Illusion - Enchanted Caress
Covers included
Progressive Rock | MP3 192 kbps | 51 MB | 1979
"Illusion was sort of a sequel band to the original lineup of Renaissance. In 1977, the surviving original Renaissance members -- singer/songwriter/guitarist Jim McCarty, vocalist Jane Relf, keyboardist John Hawken, and bassist Louis Cennamo -- added lead guitarist John Knightsbridge and drummer Eddie MacNeil to form Illusion. The band recorded two excellent progressive rock albums, Out of the Mist and Illusion (now both on the CD The Island Recordings). Unfortunately, they ran headlong into the Punk and New Wave acts that were then sweeping through British rock, and they were let go by Island Records.Enchanted Caress consists of demos, produced by Jim McCarty, which were used to try and get a new record contract for the group. After hearing them, it easy to understand why they werent able to do so. While some progressive bands (like Yes and Renaissance) responded to New Wave pop by trying to adopt that sound, McCarty decided to try and give the group a sound that we would! call adult contemporary/MOR today.Illusion certainly recorded some attempts at commercial love songs on their two albums, but they were produced with the same full, rich arrangements (dominated by Hawkens lush keyboards)as the groups longer, more prog material. Here, we get three minute pop songs with bland playing and trite lyrics, like Getting into Love Again, You are the One and Nights in Paris. The fact that these are demos excuse, in part, the lack of any instrumental excitement (and rumor has it that Hawken may actually not be on these demos), but not totally. The obvious attempt at commercial songwriting precludes any instumental stretching. The biggest attraction for many people to Illusion was the beautiful alto vocals of Jane Relf, but even she cant elevate the mediocre material. The closest track here to the classic Illusion sound is The Man Who Loved the Trees, with a fairly intricate piano part and an emotional Jane Relf vocal.The other two most worthwhile tra! cks arent even Illusion tracks, strictly speaking. John Knight! sbridge turns in a hard rock arrangement of Richard Rodgers classic Slaughter on 10th Ave. that is interesting (even if it may be patterned after Mick Ronsons version). And the CD concludes with the last recording of Renaissance founder Keith Relf, who died before Illusion formed. All the Fallling Angels is a haunting ballad which sounds oddly like a track from David Bowies Space Oddity phase, and easily outclasses the rest of this material. "

Europe - discography. part 1 Atomic roooster - atomic roooster

Part: 1 : Europe - discography. part 1
Europe - Discography. Part 1
7 CD | EAC FLAC, APE + CUE + Log + Scans | 2.93 Gb
Hard rock, Glam metal | Country: Sweden
Part: 2 : Atomic roooster - atomic roooster
Atomic Roooster - Atomic Roooster
EAC | ROCK | FLAC+CUE, LOG + Cover,Booklet | 469 MB
Label:Sanctuary | Release: 2004 | ue No: 186822| HFRS
Of the 15 songs and 72 minutes of these BBC sessions from 1970 to 1981, its good news for discriminating fans that, with the exception of three 1981 tracks, everything is from 1970 through 1972, the most interesting era of Atomic Rooster. It isnt such good news, perhaps, that the version of their 1971 British hit Devils Answer is one of those 1981 tracks, although at least the lineup on that performance — Vincent Crane, Paul Hammond, and John DuCann — is the same as the trio that comprised the Rooster during part of the early 70s. Crane, in fact, is the only musician to appear on every song. The styles drift from keyboard-dominated hard rock with similarities to his previous work in the Crazy World of Arthur Brown, through messy hybrids of metal and prog (and, when Chris Farlowe took lead vocals, some soul and funk) that become increasingly tedious as the disc progresses. Carl Palmer is on just two of the selections, both recorded in the mid-1970s just before he decamped! for ELP, and those certainly rate among the most listenable performances here. Tomorrow Night, their only big British hit save Devils Answer, is present in a 1971 version. If youre into the band, its hard to imagine you wanting your money back, since the sound is good. It is fair to observe, however, that the material and accompanists are not up to the level of Cranes skills, and Cranes playing isnt even all that interesting on the cuts of later vintage. And how did Chris Farlowe end up in Atomic Rooster anyway? (He is on the tracks from 1972, which comprise about half the CD.) The affectionate liner notes from Arthur Brown, who was never part of Atomic Rooster, but with whom Crane made his best music in the Crazy World of Arthur Brown, are interesting.Richie Unterberger -- Allmusic

Black sabbath - live evil Va - kuschelrock vol 14

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Va - one love smash your stereo 2009 Va - blowing the fuse 1959

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