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Posted By : llamamama | Date : 10 Jul 2006 02:42:00 | Comments : 9
Traffic

Traffic – Traffic – MFSL (1968)
EAC image file WAV
Rock | 40 Minutes | 276 MB

Traffics' second release has been given the ultimate overhaul by Mobile Fidelity Sound Labs. After dispensing with his services in December 1967, the remaining members of Traffic reinstated Dave Mason in the group in the spring of 1968 as they struggled to write enough material for their impending second album. The result was a disc evenly divided between Mason's catchy folk-rock compositions and Steve Winwood's compelling rock jams.

Attention all Traffic Fans: Peek Inside for an Extra Special Bonus!
Posted By : llamamama | Date : 08 Jul 2006 23:28:00 | Comments : 14
Mr. Fantasy Cover

Traffic – Mr. Fantasy – MFSL (1967)
EAC image file WAV
Rock | 34 Minutes | 234 MB

In 1967, when teenaged prodigy Steve Winwood left the Spencer Davis Group (for whom he'd sung lead on hits like "Gimme Some Lovin'" and "I'm a Man") to start a new band with guitarist Dave Mason, few observers thought their idea of blending pop, rock, and jazz would work. Immediately, though, Traffic scored giant UK hits with Winwood's east-meets-west "Paper Sun" and Mason's acid-jazzy "Hole in My Shoe." Between those songs, the smoking-guitar driven title track, the swinging instrumental "Giving to You" and the haunting ballad, "No Face, No Name, No Number," Traffic's debut established both players as elite members of the new guard of late 60s British rock. (Amazon
Posted By : llamamama | Date : 28 Jun 2006 07:49:00 | Comments : 16
Reckoning Cover

R.E.M. - Reckoning – MFSL (1984)
EAC image file WAV
Genre: Rock | 38 Minutes | 265 MB

It is my opinion that "Reckoning"-- with its jangling guitars, subdued vocals and oblique lyrics--truly stands as R.E.M.'s best album, bar none. There isn't a bad tune on "Reckoning", and "Harborcoat", "Don't Go Back to Rockville", "Pretty Persuasion" and "So. Central Rain" easily stand among the band's best work, EVER. (An Amazon Music Fan)
Posted By : llamamama | Date : 25 Jun 2006 05:58:00 | Comments : 25
R.E.M. MURMUR Cover

R.E.M. – MURMUR – MFSL (1983)
EAC image file WAV | Genre: Rock | 44 Minutes | 300 MB

R.E.M. mark the point when post-punk turned into alternative rock. When their first single, "Radio Free Europe," was released in 1981, it sparked a back-to-the-garage movement in the American underground. While there were a number of hardcore and punk bands in the U.S. during the early '80s, R.E.M. brought guitar pop back into the underground lexicon. Combining ringing guitar hooks with mumbled, cryptic lyrics and a D.I.Y. aesthetic borrowed from post-punk, the band simultaneously sounded traditional and modern. Though there were no overt innovations in their music, R.E.M. had an identity and sense of purpose that transformed the American underground. Throughout the '80s, they worked relentlessly, releasing records every year and touring constantly, playing both theaters and backwoods dives. Along the way, they inspired countless bands, from the legions of jangle pop groups in the mid-'80s to scores of alternative pop groups in the '90s, who admired their slow climb to stardom. It did take R.E.M. several years to break into the top of the charts, but they had a cult following from the release of their debut EP, Chronic Town, in 1982. Chronic Town established the haunting folk and garage rock that became the band's signature sound, and over the next five years, they continued to expand their music with a series of critically acclaimed albums. With major label success at the turn of the 90s, the band found themselves able to put forth political and environmental concerns from within a popular music scene that often chose not to take a stand.
Posted By : llamamama | Date : 16 Jun 2006 11:01:00 | Comments : 16
American Pie MFSL

Don McLean – American Pie - MFSL (1998)
EAC image file WAV | 259 MB | Genre: Rock
(All covers and lyrics included. Scans at 300 ppi)

"American Pie" is an eight-and-a-half minute long classic rock song about "the day the music died". Recorded in 1971 and released that year on the album of the same name, it was a number-one U.S. hit in 1972. It offers an allusive history of rock and roll, starting with the deaths of Buddy Holly, Ritchie Valens and J. P. Richardson, Jr. (a.k.a. The Big Bopper) in a plane crash in 1959. The song's lyrics remain the subject of much debate. Although Don McLean dedicated the American Pie album to Buddy Holly, none of the singers in the plane crash are identified by name in the song itself. Other famous performers are also alluded to with cryptically coded identifications, which led to many overly-analyzed discussions among both music lovers and the press... all of this hubbub encouraged by McLean's canny lifelong refusal to explain the lyrics.
Posted By : llamamama | Date : 06 Jun 2006 09:42:00 | Comments : 18
Queen-NewsoftheWorld-MFSL

Queen - News Of The World - MFSL (1993)
Lossless | MFSL | CloneCD Image | ~ 284 MB | Genre: Rock | 39 Minutes
(All covers and lyrics included. Scans at 300 ppi)

Few bands embodied the pure excess of the '70s like Queen. Embracing the exaggerated pomp of prog rock and heavy metal, as well as vaudevillian music hall, the British quartet delved deeply into camp and bombast, creating a huge, mock-operatic sound with layered guitars and overdubbed vocals. Queen's music was a bizarre yet highly accessible fusion of the macho and the fey. For years, their albums boasted the motto "no synthesizers were used on this record," signaling their allegiance with the legions of post-Led Zeppelin hard rock bands. But vocalist Freddie Mercury brought an extravagant sense of camp to the band, pushing them toward kitschy humor and pseudo-classical arrangements, as epitomized on their best-known song, "Bohemian Rhapsody.". Queen’s worldwide success would have been impossible without Freddie Mercury, one of the most dynamic and charismatic frontmen in rock history. Through his legendary theatrical performances, Queen became one of the most popular bands in the world in the mid-'70s; in England, they remained second only to the Beatles in popularity and collectability in the '90s. (All Music Guide)
Posted By : llamamama | Date : 01 Jun 2006 07:55:00 | Comments : 17
U2-War

U2 - War - (1983)
Rock | Lossless | MFSL | CloneCD Image | ~ 305 MB | 43:38
All Covers and Lyrics Included (Scans at 300ppi)

Through a combination of zealous righteousness and post-punk experimentalism, U2 became one of the most popular rock & roll bands of the '80s. Equally known for their sweeping sound as for their grandiose statements about politics and religion, U2 were rock & roll crusaders during an era of synthesized pop and heavy metal. The Edge provided the group with a signature sound by creating sweeping sonic landscapes with his heavily processed, echoed guitars. Though the Edge's style wasn't conventional, the rhythm section of Adam Clayton and Larry Mullen, Jr. played the songs as driving hard rock, giving the band a forceful, powerful edge that was designed for arena rock. And their lead singer, Bono, was a frontman who had a knack of grand gestures that played better in arenas than small clubs. It's no accident that footage of Bono parading with a white flag with "Sunday Bloody Sunday" blaring in the background became the defining moment of U2's early career -- there rarely was a band that believed so deeply in rock's potential for revolution as U2...
Posted By : llamamama | Date : 31 May 2006 13:53:00 | Comments : 13
Joe Jackson - Night And Day

Joe Jackson - Night And Day (1982)
Lossless | MFSL | CloneCD Image | ~ 304 MB | Genre: Rock | 41:54 Minutes
All Covers and Lyrics Included!

In his 1999 memoir, A Cure for Gravity: A Musical Pilgrimage, Joe Jackson writes approvingly of George Gershwin as a musician who kept one foot in the popular and one in the classical realms of music. Like Gershwin, Jackson possesses a restless musical imagination that has found him straddling musical genres unapologetically, disinclined to pick one style and stick to it. The word "chameleon" often crops up in descriptions of him, but Jackson prefers to be though of as "eclectic." Is he the Joe Jackson he appeared to be upon his popular emergence in 1979, a new wave singer/songwriter with a belligerent attitude derisively asking, "Is She Really Going Out With Him?" The reggae-influenced Joe Jackson of 1980's Beat Crazy? The jump blues revivalist of 1981's Joe Jackson's Jumpin' Jive? The New York salsa-styled singer of 1982's "Steppin' Out"? The R&B/jazz-inflected Jackson of 1984's Body & Soul? Or is he David Ian Jackson, L.R.A.M. (Licentiate of the Royal Academy of Music), who composes and conducts instrumental albums of contemporary classical music such as 1987's Will Power and 1999's Grammy-winning Symphony No. 1? He is all of these, Jackson himself no doubt would reply, and a few others besides.
Posted By : llamamama | Date : 31 May 2006 04:59:00 | Comments : 14
XTC - Skylarking - MFSL

XTC - Skylarking
Lossless | MFSL | CloneCD Image | ~ 340 MB
CD Release Date: Oct 27, 1986 / MFSL - Nov 15, 1994 / All Covers and Lyrics Included!

XTC was one of the smartest -- and catchiest -- British pop bands to emerge from the punk and new wave explosion of the late '70s. From the tense, jerky riffs of their early singles to the lushly arranged, meticulous pop of their later albums, XTC's music has always been driven by the hook-laden songwriting of guitarist Andy Partridge and bassist Colin Moulding. While popular success has eluded them in both Britain and America, the group has developed a devoted cult following in both countries that remains loyal over two decades after their first records.
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Posted by :: Alex | Date :: Aug 20, 2008 19:05:00 | [ 34 comments ]