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Posted By : incerta | Date : 16 Oct 2007 04:48:00 | Comments : 6

Beethoven - String Quartets - Borodin String Quartet
Classical | EAC Secure Rip| FLAC+CUE lossless image or MP3 (V2 VBR) | Full Covers & Booklet
Rapidshare | RAR archive + 5% recovery record | 1.2 GB (FLAC) or 350 MB (MP3)


...The great F-Major Quartet, op. 59/1, is a highlight on the Virgin set: the Borodins take a lyrical, symphonic view with moderate tempos throughout the opening movement. Sforzandos and accents are never harsh; the dolce moments have memorable sweetness. In the Allegretto vivace, the Russian quartet realizes this somewhat unusual tempo marking without artifice or exaggeration, as 16th notes nimbly chase each other around the ensemble, perfectly matched and effortless.... Michael Fine, FANFARE
Posted By : incerta | Date : 19 Mar 2007 09:27:00 | Comments : 9

Haydn - Operas, Vol. 1 | 10 CD Box Set
Conducted by Antal Dorati | Philips
FLAC Images, embedded + external cuesheets | Covers, tracklist | RS | RAR (5% recovery record) | 28 parts, 2.8 GB
Posted By : incerta | Date : 15 Mar 2007 00:44:00 | Comments : 25

Schubert - The Piano Sonatas | 7 CD Box Set
Performed by Wilhelm Kempff | Deutsche Grammophon
EAC Secure Rip | FLAC images + embedded & external cuesheets | Covers, booklet, tracklist | RS | RAR (5% recovery record) | 18 parts, 1.7 GB
Posted By : incerta | Date : 14 Mar 2007 06:51:00 | Comments : 18

Chopin & Rachmaninov - Piano Sonatas
Performed by Helene Grimaud | Deutsche Grammophon
EAC Secure Rip | FLAC image | Embedded and external cuesheets | Front Cover | RS | RAR (5% recovery record) | 3 parts, 205 MB
Posted By : incerta | Date : 01 Oct 2006 11:38:00 | Comments : 15

Brahms: String Sextets, Op.18 & 36/Theme And Variations For Piano [2 CD]
Isaac Stern, Lin Cho-Liang, Michael Tree, Jaime Laredo, Yo-Yo Ma,
Sharon Robinson, Emanuel Ax


EAC Secure Rip | FLAC + CUE lossless images, embedded cuesheet | EAC log, covers, booklet
Rapidshare | RAR Archive | 3% recovery record
No password | 223 + 190 MB
Posted By : incerta | Date : 28 Aug 2006 03:26:00 | Comments : 7

Dutch Type Library (OpenType Font Collection)
14 Font Families | Rapidshare | 9,8 MB

One of my favorite font collections...
Posted By : incerta | Date : 03 Jul 2006 06:31:00 | Comments : 8

Endnote X (v10.0.0.2114) | Thomson ResearchSoft | Bibiliography manager
Windows version | Rapidshare | 73 MB


Retail Volume License

Millions of researchers, scholarly writers, students, and librarians use EndNote (patent pending) to search online bibliographic databases, organize their references, images and PDFs in any language, and create bibliographies and figure lists instantly. Instead of spending hours typing bibliographies, or using index cards to organize their references, they do it the easy way—by using EndNote!
Posted By : incerta | Date : 14 Jun 2006 03:33:00 | Comments : 0

Rush - Roll The Bones (1991)
EAC Secure Rip by incerta | Genre: Progressive Rock

Tagged MP3 | 320 kbps CBR | LAME 3.97b2 | Rapidshare (113 MB)
RAR Archive | 5% recovery record


Rush's return to progressive hard rock continued with Roll the Bones, though there's still a bit of synth work (notably on the title track). The music flows like a well-oiled machine, and with Rush, that's an asset, particularly when the material is this good. The songs are mostly up-tempo, with the intellectually oriented themes and musical structure that Rush is famous for. Especially memorable are "Dreamline," "Face Up," "Big Wheel," and "Neurotica," but everything here is good.
Posted By : incerta | Date : 14 Jun 2006 03:32:00 | Comments : 3

Rush - Chronicles (1990) (2 disc set)
EAC Secure Rip by incerta | Genre: Progressive Rock

Tagged MP3 | 320 kbps CBR | LAME 3.97b2 | Rapidshare (CD1 177 MB, CD2 177 MB)
RAR Archive | 5% recovery record
Best Internet Links
Posted by :: Alex | Date :: Aug 20, 2008 19:05:00 | [ 34 comments ]


Posted By : incerta | Date : 14 Jun 2006 03:32:00 | Comments : 1

Rush - A Show Of Hands (1989) [Live]
EAC Secure Rip by incerta | Genre: Progressive Rock

Tagged MP3 | 320 kbps CBR | LAME 3.97b2 | Rapidshare (177 MB)
RAR Archive | 5% recovery record


Although keyboards dominated Rush's 1988 double live set A Show of Hands, it's a definite improvement over its somewhat flat predecessor, 1981 's Exit...Stage Left. The band's music isn't as hard rock-based as it previously was, evidenced by the more modern-sounding compositions selected for this third live album (the first Rush album to be produced completely by the band). The only tracks from the pre-1982 period to be featured are "Closer to the Heart," which is expanded to include a jamming section at the end, and the spooky "Witch Hunt," originally from 1981's Moving Pictures. The remainder of the album's track list is comprised of Rush's best compositions from 1982-1987, such as "Subdivisions," "Distant Early Warning," "Force Ten," "Time Stand Still," and "Red Sector A," as well as several tracks that have been forgotten over time ("Marathon," "Turn the Page," "Mission," etc.). Also featured for the first time on a live Rush album is a completely unaccompanied drum solo by Neil Peart -- the intricate "Rhythm Method." The inspired A Show of Hands is an excellent snapshot of Rush in concert during the mid- to late '80s.
Posted By : incerta | Date : 14 Jun 2006 03:29:00 | Comments : 0

Rush - Power Windows (1985)
EAC Secure Rip by incerta | Genre: Progressive Rock

Tagged MP3 | 320 kbps CBR | LAME 3.97b2 | Rapidshare (105 MB)
RAR Archive | 5% recovery record


Like much of the band's '80s output, Power Windows finds Rush juggling their hard-rock heritage with new technology to mixed results. With Alex Lifeson choosing sparse, horn-like guitar bursts over actual crunch, Geddy Lee's synthesizers running rampant, and Neil Peart's crisp, clinical percussion and stark lyrical themes (evoking cold urban landscapes), the result just may be the trio's "coldest" album ever. Still, it does boast its share of important tracks in "Marathon" and "Manhattan Project," while offering an energetic, tongue-in-cheeck hit single in "The Big Money." In an album that rewards patience (repeated listens are the key), the most gripping moments are saved for last, with the beautifully eerie textures of "Mystic Rhythms," a song that was later used as a concert drum solo showcase for Peart.
Posted By : incerta | Date : 13 Jun 2006 01:09:00 | Comments : 3

Rush - Signals (1982)
EAC Secure Rip by incerta | Genre: Progressive Rock

Tagged MP3 | 320 kbps CBR | LAME 3.97b2 | Rapidshare (101 MB)
RAR archive | 5% recovery record

“Rush had already begun using electronics and synth in their music by the time Signals was released in 1982, so the synth-heavy opener, "Subdivisions" (a song that proves that high-school separatism is older than last year), wasn't that great a departure from their previous material. Signals also contains the single "New World Man," which still gets heavy radio airplay almost 20 years later, as well as groove-heavy, tech-savvy songs like "The Analog Kid" and "Digital Man"--prescient comments on the forthcoming information technology revolution if ever there were any. This was Rush's first studio album following Moving Pictures, which arguably remains their strongest and most well-known effort, after 2112. That's a tough act to follow, and Rush did it in the best possible way--by maintaining their distinctive sound while updating it with 1980s touches. Signals indicates that it was a good move”. – Genevieve Williams
Posted By : incerta | Date : 13 Jun 2006 01:07:00 | Comments : 1

Rush - Exit...Stage Left (1981)
EAC Secure Rip by incerta | Genre: Progressive Rock

Tagged MP3 | 320 kbps CBR | LAME 3.97b2 | Rapidshare (174 MB)
RAR archive | 5% recovery record

“Throughout their existence, the Canadian power-prog trio has steadfastly released a lengthy live collection every fifth album. Released in 1981, Exit is Rush's second (and best) such release, and it captures the band at the very top of its artistic (and commercial) curve--before keyboard and synthesizer work became central to its sound as opposed to providing mere accents. When they embarked on this tour, Rush had just released Moving Pictures, which continued their move away from longer suites and featured more streamlined song craft. Exit, however, offers a perfect blend of winding, fusion-leaning, virtuoso instrumentals ("YYZ," "La Villa Strangiato"), extended sci-fi epics ("Jacob's Ladder," "Xanadu"), sentimental ballads ("Closer to the Heart" in unison with the whole crowd, "The Trees"), and tauter songs ("Free Will," "Tom Sawyer," "Spirit of Radio") that represent the best of all worlds. Musically, they generated a huge amount of sound for three men (especially Geddy Lee's mammoth bass lines and Neil Peart's octopus-like percussion); lyrically, Peart's fantasia may be pseudo-poetry, but it is poetic, and it may be adolescent wisdom, but it is wise”. – Marc Greilsamer
Posted By : incerta | Date : 13 Jun 2006 01:07:00 | Comments : 2

Rush - Permanent Waves (1980)
EAC Secure Rip by incerta | Genre: Progressive Rock

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“One of Rush's finest moments, second only to Moving Pictures. This album includes two classic songs, "The Spirit of Radio" (which has one of the most recognizable guitar riffs in all of rock) and "Freewill." There's also the epic-feeling "Jacob's Ladder," as well as "Entre Nous," a sort of intellectual love song (if such a thing can be said to exist). The introspective "Different Strings" and the anthemic "Natural Science" (which clocks in at over nine minutes) close the album. Though there are only six songs on Permanent Waves, it's enough; the material is rich enough that more of it would be like overdosing on chocolate”. – Genevieve Williams
Posted By : incerta | Date : 13 Jun 2006 01:06:00 | Comments : 2

Rush - Hemispheres (1978)
EAC Secure Rip by incerta | Genre: Progressive Rock

Tagged MP3 | 320 kbps CBR | LAME 3.97b2 | Rapidshare (86 MB)
RAR archive | 5% recovery record

“Smart rockers Rush were just on the brink of being embraced by the album rock mainstream when they recorded Hemispheres. Already wildly popular with a certain corner of the intellectual crowd, thanks in part to drummer Neil Peart's Ayn Rand obsession, this CD marked a turning point for the Canadian trio. Hemispheres explores the political, social economic, and sci-fi themes prevalent on their early work, continuing the saga of "Cygnus" from A Farewell To Kings. Rush was fond of writing in movements, almost orchestrally, rather than the typical verse/chorus/verse/chorus structure, and Hemispheres has the usual opus-like compositions that perfectly displayed their chops. The CD features time changes that you'd need a calculator to crack, impossible guitar arpeggios from Alex Lifeson, and Geddy Lee's low end bass rumblings and high end vocal shriekings. Rush's lofty lyrics sometimes bordered on the ridiculous and, if for no other reason, Hemispheres deserves props for Lee's ability to sing the line, "There is unrest in the forest..." (from "Trees") while keeping a straight face. – Steve Gdula