Monday, 21 January 2008

Lee Rocker - Black Cat Bone




















http://rapidshare.com/files/85519370/Lee_Rocker_-_Black_Cat_Bone.rar
63.7 Mb - Bitrate 206 vbr

[Track List]
1. Gone
2. Crazy When She Drinks
3. One More Night
4. Black Cat Bone
5. Lost Highway
6. Rebel
7. Sold Us Down The River
8. What I Don't Know
9. String Bass, Guitar And A Drum
10.The Wall Of Death
11.Sometimes You Win
12.The Highway Is My Home
13.Free Bass

A varied set of rockabilly, roots-tinged tracks from the
bassist for the Stray Cats. Includes "Crazy When She Drinks,
" "Sold Us Down The River," a cover of Bob Dylan's "One More
Night," and more.

Bruce Cockburn - Dart To The Heart







http://rapidshare.com/files/85348227/Dart_to_the_Heart.part1.rar
http://rapidshare.com/files/85348778/Dart_to_the_Heart.part2.rar
Password: musicmaestro
113 Mb - Bitrate @ 320
  • Original Release Date: March 1, 1994
  • Number of Discs: 1
  • Label: Sony
  • ASIN: B00000295H


Track Listings
1. Listen for the Laugh
2. All the Ways I Want You
3. Bone in My Ear
4. Burden of the Angel/Beast
5. Scanning These Crowds
6. Southland of the Heart
7. Train in the Rain
8. Someone I Used to Love
9. Love Loves You Too
10. Sunrise on the Mississippi
11. Closer to the Light
12. Tie Me at the Crossroads

Bruce Cockburn is Canada's version of Richard Thompson, a brilliant folk-rock guitarist who also writes smart, acerbic lyrics about the twisted ways of modern society and modern romance. Never as vicious or as funny as Thompson, Cockburn is a more restrained, less obvious talent, but rewarding just the same. Dart to the Heart, free of political abstractions and filled with personal musings on love, is his best since 1985's World of Wonders. The first single, "Listen for the Laugh," is a boisterous hornªpowered rocker that insists good-naturedly that the surest sign of love is not sighing but laughter--and very specific sort of laughter, like "a chain saw in a velvet glove." That's a good description for Cockburn's guitar work, too, for he keeps it buried behind his deep, sleepy vocals, but if you listen closely you can hear just how his picking chews up chords and sends notes flying in all directions. --Geoffrey Himes

Sunday, 20 January 2008

Black Cat Bones




















Barbed Wire Sandwich
pw: musicmaestro


Tracks:
01 - Chauffeur
02 - Death Valley Blues
03 - Feelin' Good
04 - Please Tell Me Baby
05 - Coming Back
06 - Save My Love
07 - Four Women
08 - Sylvesters' Blues
09 - Good Lookin' Woman

The Black Cat Bones was a blues-rock group from London founded in the late '60s by Paul Kossoff (guitar), Stuart Brooks (bass), and Simon Kirke (drums). Kossoff and Kirke left to form Free, and Brooks recruited Brian Short (vocals), Derek Brooks (guitar), Rod Price of Savoy Brown & Foghat (guitar, vocals), and Phil Lenoir. This unit cut The Black Cat Bones' only album, Barbed Wire Sandwich, in 1970. Black Rose Records.

54.7 Mb - Bitrate @190 vbr

Seasick Steve & The Level Devils




















TITLE: Cheap
LABEL: Bronzerat
GENRE: Blues
BITRATE: 149 kbps avg
PLAYTIME: 59:53


Track List
----------

  • 1. Cheap 4:05
  • 2. Rockin' Chair 3:36
  • 3. Hobo Blues 3:01
  • 4. Story #1 5:45
  • 5. Sorry My Jesus 4:17
  • 6. Love Thang 3:44
  • 7. Dr Jekyll & Mr Hyde 5:14
  • 8. Story #2 7:07
  • 9. 8 Ball 3:41
  • 10. Xmas Prison Blues 4:16
  • 11. Levi Song 4:20
  • 12. Rooster Blues 10:47

Release Notes:


Resoundingly lo-fi and raw, this album from Seasick Steve and the Level Devils
thunders out of the speakers just like the late R L Burnside used to do. Ragged
and loud, it makes most other modern music sound distinctly artificial.

Interspersed with stories of his life as a hobo, he lays down a fearsome groove.
"Sorry Mr Jesus" and "8 Ball" hit you hard with their sheer intensity. "Xmas
Prison Blues" comes straight from the heart and "Rooster Blues" ends the album
with a slice of pure Chicago style blues. Not so much produced as persuaded on
to tape, this music sounds like it should be on an old 78 rather than the
pristine digital clarity of our modern age.

Raw and at the same time unassuming, Seasick Steve is about as far from the
commercial forefront as you can get these days. Maybe that explains his appeal.
Out of time but not out of place, who said a white man cannot feel the blues?
The truth is on show here and to (over) use a phrase the Bluesbunny is fond of,
Seasick Steve is the real deal.


www.seasicksteve.com