Tuesday, January 22, 2008

Eight-X (15)

Hello, Eight-X ears its musical head again. One of those singer sonwriters that has been consistently putting out albums ever since his career started, when he was dubbed one of the angry young men, has been releasing albums for 32 years now, big success has eluded him, but then he kept his inspiration... And obviously an artist like that has his cult following, the album here was his third and has a strange story attached, after it all had been recorded and put to tape, it turned out the tape was rotten and they had to rerecord everything and quickly as tour obligations stood out, the result a semi live studio album, where frustration about so much incompetance from the studio, adds some venom. Alas knowledge of all this opened the door to critique on the album itself, yet i think it's a fine record by Graham Parker & The Rumour. Rupert Hine has been prominent on the background of musicscene, with his production work he scored some major accolades, his early eighties solowork is still seen as belonging to the best synth pop of the day, Immunity started off that run. EBM music came from mainland Europe, DAF laying out the path picked up by the likes of Front 242, and furthered by Nitzer Ebb who threw in some mean Killing Joke and evolved the path, here's their first album That Total Age.

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Parker, Graham - Stick to Me (77 ^ 96mb)

After spending much of his early adulthood working odd jobs, Parker began seriously pursuing a musical career in 1975. Until that time, he had played in a number of obscure pub rock groups, but it wasn't until Dave Robinson, one of the co-founders of the new independent label Stiff, heard one of Parker's demo tapes and encouraged the songwriter, helping him assemble a backing band called the Rumour. Robinson rounded up several stars of the pub rock scene -- guitarist Brinsley Schwarz and keyboardist Bob Andrews, guitarist Martin Belmont, drummer Steve Goulding, and bassist Andrew Bodnar -- to form the Rumour, and the band was soon supporting Parker on the dying pub rock scene. With the assistance of DJ Charlie Gillett, the group landed a record contract with Mercury by the end of 1975.

Graham Parker & the Rumour headed into the studio to cut their debut album with producer Nick Lowe, who gave the resulting record, Howlin' Wind, an appealingly ragged edge. Howlin' Wind was greeted with enthusiastic reviews upon its summer release, as did the similar Heat Treatment, which followed in the fall. Despite the positive press, Parker was growing frustrated with Mercury, believing that the company was not properly promoting and distributing his records. His third album, Stick to Me, had to be re-recorded quickly after the original tapes were discovered to be defective prior to its scheduled release. As a result, Stick to Me received mixed reviews upon its fall 1977 release, which derailed Parker's momentum slightly. Frustrated by his career hitting a standstill, Parker released the live double album "The Parkerilla" in the summer of 1978 in order to get out of his contract. Parker signed to Arista Records, where he released "Mercury Poisoning" -- a blistering attack on his former record label -- as the B-side of a promotional single as his first record for the label.

"Squeezing Out Sparks", Parker's first album for Arista, put a halt to that decline. Sporting a slicker, new wave-oriented production -- it was the first of his records not to have any involvement from Nick Lowe -- the album was greeted with terrific reviews and, on the strengths of radio hits like "Local Girls," it became his most successful album, selling over 200,000 copies. Parker was poised for a major breakthrough, but that didn't happen. He followed Squeezing Out Sparks in 1980 with the Jimmy Iovine-produced "The Up Escalator", which was considerably slicker than its predecessor. The Up Escalator didn't sell, and Parker decided to ditch the Rumour, who had already begun a solo career. For 1982's" Another Grey Area", he hired producer Jack Douglas and a team of session musicians, resulting in a radio-ready production that received mixed reviews, yet managed to peak at number 51. "The Real Macaw", which followed in 1983, suffered a similar fate. For 1985's "Steady Nerves", Parker moved to Elektra Records and formed a backing band called the Shot with guitarist Brinsley Schwarz, who helped him deliver his most radio-ready collection. This time, the pop move paid off.

Despite his moderate commercial success with Steady Nerves, he also ran into trouble with Elektra, leaving the label after just one record. Parker wasn't able to deliver another album until 1988, when he signed with RCA and released "The Mona Lisa's Sister" in the spring. Hailed as a comeback by several critics upon its release, instead of being the beginning of a comeback, the album turned out to be a last gasp -- " Live! Alone in America" (1989) , "Human Soul" (90), "Struck By Lightning" (91), all received good reviews but sales dissapointed, so RCA let him go-- Parker switched to Capitol and released "Burning Questions", which was ignored by all except his cult following.

Parker switched back to independent labels -- In 1994, he released the Christmas Cracker EP on Dakota Arts, and then he signed with " Razor & Tie" , where he released " 12 Haunted Episodes" in the spring. Like The Mona Lisa's Sister and Struck By Lightning before it, 12 Haunted Episodes was hailed as a comeback, and it sold in respectable numbers for an indie release. Parker followed it with two albums in 1996, " Live from New York, NY" and " Acid Bubblegum" . Parker continued to issue a steady stream of archive and live releases into the mid-2000s, and moved into singer/songwriter mode for the albums " Deepcut to Nowhere" and " Your Country" . The Figgs were back for 2005's Songs of No Consequence, an album that Parker declared "rocks like safari park chimp" , unreleased material, rare edits, and remixes were featured on "Official Art Vandelay Tapes, Vol. 2" , which appeared two weeks after Songs of No Consequence. Last year Parker released " Don't Tell Columbus " 2007.



01 - Stick to Me (3:26)
02 - I'm Gonna Tear Your Playhouse Down (3:25)
03 - Problem Child (3:24)
04 - Soul on Ice (2:58)
05 - Clear Head (2:55)
06 - The New York Shuffle (2:58)
07 - Watch the Moon Come Down (4:49)
08 - Thunder and Rain (3:15)
09 - The Heat in Harlem (6:52)
10 - The Raid (2:28)
--Xs--
11 - Hey Lord, Don't Ask Me Questions (3:51)

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Rupert Hine - Immunity (81 ^ 99mb)

Rupert Hine earned perhaps his greatest notoriety as one of the most successful and prolific producers of the synth-pop era, he has produced over 100 albums in total, many featuring songs written for and with the artists in question. In addition, Hine has recorded eleven albums as an artist himself. Hine was founder of the 1976's band Quantum Jump, releasing two albums Quantum Jump and Barracuda. Returning to solo work with 1981's Immunity,Immunity marked a return to solo work for Rupert Hine after a few years with Quantum Jump. Early-'80s synth-pop did not age very well as a genre, but this album is the exception. The disquieting moods, oblique accompaniments, poetic lyrics, and dramatic effects hold up the album thru time. Highlights include ...each of the album's original nine tracks is a gem, full of clever ideas and daring artistic choices, with Hine handling most instruments. . For anyone interested in Hine's singer/songwriter career, Immunity is the place to start.
His breakthrough year as a producer was 1984, when he helmed Howard Jones' smash Human's Lib, as well as Tina Turner's comeback smash Private Dancer; the Power Station's self-titled debut confirmed Hine's status as one of the hottest producers around. Under the guise of Thinkman, he returned to solo work in 1986, with The Formula, Life Is A Full Time Occupation (88) and Hard Hat Zone (90) .At the same time Hine also began working with Rush, producing their LP Presto as well as its 1991 follow-up Roll the Bones. His last solo effort was the ambient Deep End (95). He now releases records sporadically, always with poetic lyrics written by his wife, but has concentrated since on production, one of those people that have been greatly influencing modern pop music, but prefers to stay out of the limelight.



01 - I Hang On To My Vertigo (4:59)
02 - Misplaced Love (Voc. Marianne Faithfull) (4:10)
03 - Samsara (5:06)
04 - Surface Tension (4:12)
05 - I Think A Man Will Hang Soon (4:09)
06 - Immunity (3:50)
07 - Another Stranger (4:31)
08 - Psycho Surrender (4:05)
09 - Make A Wish (6:15)


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Nitzer Ebb - That Total Age (87 ^ 132mb)

Nitzer Ebb began when Douglas McCarthy met Bon Harris, they shared an interest in witchcraft, talking to trees, and collecting runestones in Chesterfield and Little Baddoe, England. They found inspiration in the punk ethos of bands such as DAF, Killing Joke, and Bauhaus. In August 1983, they recorded their first demo tape, Basic Pain Procedure. They released their debut single "Isn't It Funny How Your Body Works" (85) on their own label Power Of Voice Communications, and their music soon became a fixture on the club scene. two singles followed before signing to Mute. In May 1987, they released their debut album on Mute Records, That Total Age, which spawned a hit with the pounding bass rhythms and barked vocals of "Join In the Chant" and "Let Your Body Learn". What the Douglas McCarthy/Bon Harris duo did on their first full album was to give it a distinctly English-language bent, as well as drawing on some of the further developments of EBM over time. If the resultant debut was a bit one-note as an overall release, the duo already showed a bent for making sure their concoctions were instantly memorable and undeniably thrilling.

After the release of That Total Age, Nitzer Ebb toured Europe supporting label; mates Depeche Mode, and the pop sensibilities appeared to inspire them. By the time of their second album, Belief, Gooday had disappeared (to be replaced by Julian Beeston) and Flood had taken over the producer's role from Harding, nudging Nitzer Ebb closer to the dancefloor and shearing away the militaristic bent of much of their earlier recordings. Singles like "Hearts and Minds," "Shame," and "Lightning Man" were loaded with the cold aggression of earlier recordings, working well on dancefloors as well as college radio stations; the 1990 single "Fun to Be Had" even reached number two on the dance charts. The following year's Ebbhead was released in September 1991 and showcased a new confidence in the band's songwriting and production (ably assisted by Flood and Alan Wilder). A hugely successful world tour from Autumn 1991 to Summer 1992 spanning the US, Europe and Russia hinted that the band could potentially break into the mainstream and become a bona fide 'crossover' act. Meanwhile they had consolidated their position with alternative audiences, with at least two well-known singles, "I Give to You" and "Godhead." As a whole, though, the album showed Nitzer Ebb a bit confused as to where industrial music was going.Which became apparent when the follow up album took 3 years to record and a schism between Harris and McCarthy developped, they failed to deliver the album required to 'crossover'. The Nitzer Ebb machine ground to a halt towards the end of the Big Hit tour (final dates were advertised then cancelled). Although the group never officially split, Mccarthy and Harris both went their separate ways.The compilation Body of Work 1984-1997 appeared in 2006 and was immediately followed by set of new remixes titled Body Rework.



01 - Fitness To Purpose (5:00)
02 - Violent Playground (3:46)
03 - Murderous (5:40)
04 - Smear Body (5:40)
05 - Join In The Chant (6:01)
06 - Alarm (3:55)
07 - Let Your Body Learn (2:47)
08 - Let Beauty Loose (2:24)
09 - Into The Large Air (4:08)
10 - Join In The Chant (Metal Mix) (5:13)
11 - Fitness To Purpose (Mix Two) (4:54)
12 - Murderous (Instrumental) (5:02)


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All downloads are in * ogg-7 (224k) or ^ ogg-9(320k), artwork is included , if in need get the nifty ogg encoder/decoder here

Monday, January 21, 2008

Around the World (15)

Hello, Around The World returns to reggae UK style though Ghetto Priest parents are from Jamaica , Vulture Culture is a typical ON- U release with Adrian Sherwood producing the dub groove sound constructions. Available in two vibes...

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Ghetto Priest - Vulture Culture (03 * 99mb)

Throughout the history of On-U Sound its hallmark has always been one of originality and distinctiveness. Since its inception there have been several philosophies that Adrian Sherwood has always held close to his heart. Whilst gathering a core of multi-talented singers and players around him in his continuous musical experimentation, he has always striven to help establish these artists in their own right and to nurture new talents that join his fold. Known for some time now as a member of the On-U Sound family and collective and a former football hooligan turned Rastafarian preacher, Ghetto Priest (Wilbourn ' Squidly" Cole) is one such talent. Before making the move into grown-up crime and getting arrested. In prison he turned to Rastafarianism, began writing lyrics, and after his release became part of Sherwood's African Head Charge collective and started MC-ing on the producer's live DJ sets.

As a talented singer Asian Dub Foundation invited him to take on the vocals for the opening track of their "Enemy Of The Enemy" album in 2003, and for even a bigger role on Tank (05). More or lesser known artists like the Underwolves, Sinéad O'Connor, Groove Armada, James Hardway (aka David Harrow) and Little Axe have also flavoured their releases with his guest vocals.

Calling "Vulture Culture" (ON-U LP 1003) a Ghetto Priest album is slightly misleading, as it features 8 singers and 16 players. The album takes on board reggae, ragga and dub elements with a production style that is uniquely Sherwood’s. Sly & Robbie, Jazwad, Style Scott (Dub Syndicate), Keith LeBlanc and Skip McDonald are amongst the players providing the rock solid rhythms. Carlton "Bubblers" Ogilvie and Crucial Tony were also brought back on-ship to provide a turbulent bass vibration and textured guitar patterns. Ghetto Priest takes centre stage on most of the album but there is plenty of scope for other voices to add to the mix.

There is a dizzying apocalyptic air to many of the tracks, testaments to inner city neuroses. Dub funk grooves are in abundance amongst a blend of righteous incitements and damning indictments of Babylonian establishment. It's a powerful and compelling sound in which Skip McDonald really comes into his own, adding disorienting, searing and abrasive guitar edges to the sound constructions. In short a welcome reminder that the UK roots-reggae scene has not been entirely washed away by the tide of dancehall slackness and bling-obsession.



01 - Dungeon (Voc. Prince Far I) (3:53)
02 - Masters Of Deception (Voc.Omar Perry) (5:32)
03 - Dry Bone (Voc.Simon Bogle) (3:56)
04 - Strange Cargo (5:10)
05 - Earthquake In The Heart Of Rome (4:48)
06 - System Of The Lost Cause Man (Voc.Simon Bogle) (5:03)
07 - Minds (5:03)
08 - Show Them (5:15)
09 - Boom Fire (4:42)
10 - Visionary (4:40)
11 - Come Now (5:28)
12 - Rise Up (5:54)

Ghetto Priest - Vulture Culture (03 ^ 133mb)

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All downloads are in * ogg-7 (224k) or ^ ogg-9(320k), artwork is included , if in need get the nifty ogg encoder/decoder here

MLK Jr. Day

Martin Luther King Jr.'s final speech, courtesy of YouTube.

Sunday, January 20, 2008

Don't Panic ! (15)




Hello, it's time for The HitchHikers Guide To The Galaxy again that weekly half hour of everything you always wanted to know about aliens.

As usual a recap of last weeks fit;

Arthur and Ford arrive at Lord's Cricket Ground on the sofa that they had caught in the previous episode. They have arrived in the final Test Match in the Ashes, in the middle of the field. A policeman apprehends them, and they retire to the stadium.

Watching the match, Arthur drinks some tea and glances upon a newspaper. He notices the date on the newspaper, and realises that it was from the day before the Earth was demolished. A ball lands in Arthur's bag, and when the fielder comes to collect it, Arthur decides to keep it.

With the planet about to be demolished again, they then look for another lift from the planet. They discover a spaceship, hidden by a "Somebody Else's Problem field", hidden behind a screen.

The game finishes, with England winning the Ashes, and Slartibartfast joins Arthur and Ford. Slartibartfast explains that he has arrived because "something terrible is about to happen". He walks to the centre of the cricket pitch, and asks to be given the Ashes saying that they are "vitally important for the past, present and future safety of the Galaxy".

Another spaceship arrives. Eleven white robots, carrying bats and balls, and wearing rocket pads on their shins (dressed like cricketers), come suddenly out, and start attacking the spectators and players with their grenades. They take the Ashes, say "we declare", and go back into their ship. Ford and Arthur catch a lift with Slartibartfast on his ship.

Meanwhile, Marvin is once again making conversation with a mattress. A similar ship to before arrives, and white robots get out and take Marvin's one remaining leg. After a brief while, they return and decide to take all of Marvin instead.

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THHGTTG - Fit 15 (23mb)

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All downloads are in * ogg-7 (224k) or ^ ogg-9(320k), artwork is included , if in need get the nifty ogg encoder/decoder here

Saturday, January 19, 2008

Sundaze (15)

Hello SunDaze is still lingering in Clusterworld, today some solo-albums, Roedelius especially has been active and has released 30+ soloalbums over the years, here are tow of his early ones. Moebius to released some solo work, though solo..he seems more comfortable working with someone to bounce ideas off.. enjoy..

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Roedelius - Selbstportrait I (soft music) ( 79 ^ 93mb)

Selbstportrait was recorded by Roedelius during various Cluster sessions between 1973 and 1977, so the music actually predates the two previously released solo albums: Durch Die Wüste and Jardin Au Fou. Selbstportrait was recorded during the quiet hours when working with Cluster, Harmonia and Eno. All this material was spread over 3 albums, this the first "Selbstportrait" (Selfportrait) is picked by Roedelius on the basis of entertaining, commercial dare i say, as creating interest would enable the release of "Selbstportrait II & III". He used the Farfisa VIP 600 and a drum and echo tool by Excholette and recorded it all on a Revox A 77, first generation hi-end electronic tools. The music came about spontanously, impressed by the land scape , a lazy sunny afternoon, pastoral images filled with the sound of nightingales and frogs all impressed Roedelius to open up and inspire him in the quiet hours to create this musik



01 - In Liebe Dein (with love)(3:41)
02 - Girlande (3:43)
03 - Inselmoos (5:37)
04 - Fabelwein (4:58)
05 - Prinzregent (5:41)
06 - Kamee (3:34)
07 - Herold (3:54)
08 - Halmharfe (3:20)
09 - Arcona (5:01)
05 - Staunen Im Fjord (3:28)
06 - Minne (2:06)


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Roedelius - Jardin Au Fou (79 ^ 74mb)

Jardin Au Fou was recorded from April through July, 1978 at Paragon Studios in Berlin, Germany. It was produced by former Tangerine Dream member Peter Baumann and released by the French label Egg in 1979.
A circus in the parc, Jardin Au Fou a garden of whimsy and odd delight, it is simple melodious keyboard music whose character is imbued with unexpected chord progressions that don't resolve in traditional ways, a naive rhythmic sense, and melodic lines that go where you least expect. Jardin Au Fou was the first of a series of albums where Roedelius ventured firmly into ambient music.

Note; The French record label Jardin Au Fou named themselves after this Roedelius album.



01 - Fou Fou (3:59)
02 - Toujours (2:56)
03 - Rue Fortune (2:21)
04 - Balsam (2:16)
05 - Café Central (3:34)
06 - Le Jardin (4:28)
07 - Gloria Dolores (4:11)
08 - Étoiles (3:51)
09 - Schöne Welt (4:45)
10 - Final (0:46)

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Moebius & Beerbohm - Double Cut ( 84 ^ 96mb)

From his early work with the pioneering Krautrock band Cluster to his later solo recordings, Dieter Moebius remained one of the most innovative and prolific voices in contemporary electronic music, anticipating movements from ambient to techno years before the fact. Moebius studied art in Brussels and Berlin and met there Hans-Joachim Roedelius and Conrad Schnitzler (Tangerine Dream). They founded a band Kluster in 1969. After the departure of Schnitzler, they changed their name to Cluster. Later Moebius and Roedelius founded the band Harmonia with Michael Rother (Neu!), which also collaborated with Brian Eno.

Roedelius and Moebius subsequently worked with Eno on 1977's Cluster and Eno and 1979's After the Heat as well; in the wake of 1981's Curiosum, however, they dissolved Cluster, with both pursuing solo endeavors.
Moebius' first subsequent effort was 1981's Material, a second collaboration with Plank (his proper solo debut, Rastakraut Pasta, had appeared two years earlier); together, they produced some of the most experimental recordings of their respective careers, creating harsh mutant soundscapes which over time gave way to the proto-ambient textures of 1986's En Route, their final work before Plank's untimely death. Concurrently Moebius also teamed with Gerd Beerbohm for 1982's Strange Music and 1983's Double Cut, both explorations of pure noise; meanwhile, with the solo album Tonspuren (also from 1983), Moebius clearly anticipated the emergence of techno. Apart from teaming with Karl Renzeihuasen in the duo Ersatz, during the early '90s he also reunited with Roedelius to revive Cluster.



1 - Minimotion (6:58)
2 - Hydrogen (3:33)
3 - Narkose (6:37)
4 - Doppelschnitt (21:44)

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All downloads are in * ogg-7 (224k) or ^ ogg-9(320k), artwork is included , if in need get the nifty ogg encoder/decoder here

Thursday, January 17, 2008

Congrats to Denise Simmons!

SimmonsA very brief post, so much to readddddddd, as always.

Cambridge, Massachusetts, my former (very long ago) stomping grounds, now has the first out Black lesbian mayor of any US city, Denise Simmons! Congratulations, Ms. Simmons. Cambridge had previously seated the first out Black gay mayor, Ken Reeves (whom I've met; an impressive man). Pretty amazing.

On top of which, Massachusetts now has the nation's only Black governor, Deval Patrick, and only the second, I believe, since Reconstruction. (C and I lived in Virginia during the end of L. Douglas Wilder's term. I still can't believe he was elected there, at that time, but then they put George Allen in the governor's mansion, so go figure.) If I were to pick the state that might seat the first out Black LGBT governor, I'd say Rhode Island, or perhaps Massachusetts. Or if he were a liberal Republican, Connecticut. I think it's about time that a few more of these states of ours elected Black--and other people of color--Senators, and women. (More than 50% of the population...just saying.) If Frank Lautenberg were going to step down--please, Senator Lautenberg, take a hint--I'd say New Jersey Democrats should aim to be the next in line after Illinois; there are some progressive Black women in New Jersey's political system.

That also reminds me that DC should be given full voting rights and, for the purposes of fairness, elevated to state status, which would probably ensure at least one, if not two, more Black Senators. BTW, are the Republicans going to have any Black members in their caucus any time soon? As horrendous as their politics and policies are, there's always at least one or two Black people they can find to run on their ticket.

Into The Groove (14)

Hello, Into The Groove takes a dip into the jazzdance world, in fact what i have here is almost 4 hours of party music, Blue Break Beats album is an excellent warmer, it has plenty of recognition moments and elements to move the head or hips to, by the time you put on " It's Jazz Thing" dancing is almost ineveitable, 70 min later when you spin Verve remixed, the latin house of willy Bobo will keep those feet moving, but time is moving on , people get tipsy and sentimental, and when your girlfriend starts singing along with " Is You Is Or Is You Ain't My Baby " you know it's time to chill out and thats what you get. Seriously these albums do nicely at a small party at home or as background in a bar. Whatever there's plenty to compile your own set here.. Have yourself a great friday evening/night.

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VA - Blue Break Beats (92, 79min 185mb)

The music on Blue Break Beats dates from the late '60s and early '70s, when a large portion of Blue Note's soul-jazz artists began experimenting with funk and rock, creating dense electric fusions that concentrated on rhythm, not improvisation. None of this music has ever received much critical praise from jazz purists, but in the late '80s and early '90s, scores of hip-hop and dance DJs discovered these old records and began sampling the original tracks to use in new rap and dance songs. By the early '90s, this jazz-rap-funk fusion had become hip, which led Blue Note to assemble the Blue Break Beats compilations. All of the tracks feature multi-layered percussion, organs, and guitars. The deep funky grooves should appeal to appeal to fans of contemporary funk and rap, or rock-influenced soul-jazz.



01 - Richard "Groove" Holmes - Grooving With Mr. G (4:14)
02 - Grant Green - Sookie, Sookie (11:05)
03 - Lou Donaldson - Who's Making Love (6:45)
04 - Donald Byrd - Weasil (9:01)
05 - Eddie Henderson - Kudu (6:07)
06 - Bobbi Humphrey - Harlem River Drive (7:51)
07 - Jimmy McGriff - Blue Juice (5:03)
08 - Grant Green - The Final Comedown (3:28)
09 - Lou Donaldson - Turtle Walk (7:54)
10 - Three Sounds - Your Love Is Too Much (2:43)
11 - Donald Byrd - Black Jack (6:18)
12 - Herbie Hancock - Olilloqui Valley (8:26)

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VA - It's a Jazz Thing 2 ( 93, 70min. 159mb)

As a response to the dominating acid/house dancefloor dominance, The Jazz/rare groove scene started, playing funkier material, and opening up to rappers. DJ Gilles Peterson called this funky style Acid Jazz and the jazzdance movement was revived, purists lost ground and new artists found a platform to take the music , experiment and fuse the old with new technology. This is a compilation by Graham B an english jazzdance DJ who settled in Amsterdam in the late eighties.



01 - Brecker Brothers ft. Veera - Big Idea (4:43)
02 - Guru & Donald Byrd - Loungin (Jazz not Jazz mix) (3:45)
03 - Donald Byrd - Street Lady (5:39)
04 - Cymballistic - Blues for Sarah (4:42)
05 - US3 - Cantaloop (3:41)
06 - Mangu - La Playa (Pomo short mix) (4:25)
07 - Soon(e) MC - Sur le Boulevard du Rhythm' Funky (3:59)
08 - New Concept - What's Mine and What's Yours (4:47)
09 - Ronny Jordan ft. Dana Bryant - The Jackal (7:03)
10 - Grant Green - A Walk in the Night (6:44)
11 - Greg Osby - The Gutterman (4:08)
12 - Phillip Bent - World is a Ghetto (3:17)
13 - Take 4 - First Take (4:33)
14 - Ronny Jordan - So What (5:07)
15 - Corduroy ft. Sherine - Something in my Eye (3:22)

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VA - Verve Remixed 1 (02, 69min 161mb)

Verve Remixed tackles serious classics from the canon of vocal jazz, focusing especially on female vocalists: Billie Holiday (two songs), Ella Fitzgerald, Sarah Vaughan, Dinah Washington, Nina Simone, Carmen McRae, and Shirley Horn. As is nearly always the case with tributes or remix albums, the results are mixed; several productions triumph in either equalling or enhancing the intent of the original, but too often a complex arrangement of a pop standard is trampled by insistence on a constant groove, whether it's of downtempo or more clubby house origin. Well that is if you know the original, which is likely not the case, and thus the best soul / jazz artists from the Verve heyday, mixed with plentiful amounts of deep house and downtempo by some of the best remixers around result in this album to chill out after the beats clubbed your ears, or just like that on a sunny afternoon .



VA - Verve Remixed 1 ( ^ 74mb)

01 - Willie Bobo - Spanish Grease (Dorfmeister Con Madrid De Los Austrias Muga Reserva Mix) (7:23)
02 - Carmen McRae - How Long Has This Been Going On? (MJ Cole Remix) (4:56)
03 - Astrud Gilberto - Who Needs Forever? (Thievery Corporation Remix) (4:11)
04 - Dinah Washington - Is You Is Or Is You Ain't My Baby? (Rae & Christian Remix) (4:57)
05 - Nina Simone - Feelin' Good (Joe Claussell Remix) (6:03)
06 - Shirley Horn - Return To Paradise (Mark De Clive-Lowe Remix) (5:52)

VA - Verve Remixed 1 - 2 ( ^ 87mb)

07 - Ella Fitzgerald - Wait 'Till You See Him (De-Phazz Remix) (3:51)
08 - Billie Holiday - Don't Explain (dZihan And Kamien Remix) (4:49)
09 - Nina Simone - See-Line Woman (Masters At Work Remix) (10:04)
10 - Sarah Vaughan - Summertime (UFO Remix) (6:49)
11 - Billie Holiday - Strange Fruit (Tricky Remix) (3:18)
12 - Tony Scott - Hare Krishna (King Britt Funke Mix) (6:57)

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All downloads are in * ogg-7 (224k) or ^ ogg-9(320k), artwork is included , if in need get the nifty ogg encoder/decoder here