Wednesday, August 6, 2008
Download Link:
http://rapidshare.com/files/132702784/ClassicSoftRock-VA-2Cds.part1.rar
http://rapidshare.com/files/132698574/ClassicSoftRock-VA-2Cds.part2.rar
Music List:
http://rapidshare.com/files/132702784/ClassicSoftRock-VA-2Cds.part1.rar
http://rapidshare.com/files/132698574/ClassicSoftRock-VA-2Cds.part2.rar
Music List:
Disc: 1 |
---|
1. Into the Night - Benny Mardones |
2. It's a Heartache - Bonnie Tyler |
3. Drift Away - Dobie Gray |
4. Maggie May - Rod Stewart |
5. Your Song - Elton John |
6. How Long - Ace |
7. More Love - Kim Carnes |
8. I'm Not in Love - 10cc |
9. I Just Wanna Stop - Gino Vanelli, Gino Vannelli |
10. Babe - Styx |
11. Show Me the Way - Peter Frampton |
12. Fooled Around and Fell in Love - Elvin Bishop |
13. Lonesome Loser - Little River Band |
14. While You See a Chance - Steve Winwood |
15. Let's Make a Night to Remember - Bryan Adams |
Disc: 2 |
1. Daniel - Elton John |
2. I Need You - America |
3. Wild World - Cat Stevens |
4. Escape (The Piña Colada Song) - Rupert Holmes |
5. I'd Really Love to See You Tonight - John Ford Coley, England Dan & John Ford Coley |
6. On and On - Stephen Bishop |
7. Tempted - Squeeze |
8. Things We Do for Love - 10cc |
9. Best of Times - Styx |
10. Cry - Godley & Creme |
11. Your Wildest Dreams - The Moody Blues |
12. Higher Love - Steve Winwood |
13. I'd Do Anything for Love (But I Won't Do That) - Meat Loaf |
14. Please Forgive Me - Bryan Adams |
15. More Than Words - Extreme |
Lebels Various Artist
Thursday, July 31, 2008
Download Link:
http://rapidshare.com/files/128983173/RayCharles-Ray_RareAndLive.part1.rar
http://rapidshare.com/files/128978428/RayCharles-Ray_RareAndLive.part2.rar
Music List:
01. Confession Blues
02. Baby Let Me Hold Your Hand
03. It Should've Been Me
04. Don't You Know
05. Don't Put All Your Dreams in One Basket
06. Late in the Evening Blues
07. She's on the Ball
08. Sittin' on Top of the World
09. Can't You See Darlin'
10. A Sentimental Blues
11. Kiss Me Baby
12. Heartbreaker
13. I'm Movin' On
14. Talkin' About You
15. Tell Me How Do You Feel
16. You Be My Baby
17. I Got a Woman
18. What'd I Say
19. Georgia on My Mind
20. Some Day (Blues is My Middle Name)
21. Baby Won't You Please Come Home
22. Ain't That Fine
23. This Love of Mine
24. I'm Going Down to the River
http://rapidshare.com/files/128983173/RayCharles-Ray_RareAndLive.part1.rar
http://rapidshare.com/files/128978428/RayCharles-Ray_RareAndLive.part2.rar
Music List:
01. Confession Blues
02. Baby Let Me Hold Your Hand
03. It Should've Been Me
04. Don't You Know
05. Don't Put All Your Dreams in One Basket
06. Late in the Evening Blues
07. She's on the Ball
08. Sittin' on Top of the World
09. Can't You See Darlin'
10. A Sentimental Blues
11. Kiss Me Baby
12. Heartbreaker
13. I'm Movin' On
14. Talkin' About You
15. Tell Me How Do You Feel
16. You Be My Baby
17. I Got a Woman
18. What'd I Say
19. Georgia on My Mind
20. Some Day (Blues is My Middle Name)
21. Baby Won't You Please Come Home
22. Ain't That Fine
23. This Love of Mine
24. I'm Going Down to the River
Lebels Ray Charles
Download Link:
http://rapidshare.com/files/130211083/EmmylouHarris-AllIIntendedToBe.rar
Music List:
http://rapidshare.com/files/130211083/EmmylouHarris-AllIIntendedToBe.rar
Music List:
Editorial Reviews
Product Description
On her second Nonesuch disc, Emmylou Harris assembles an extraordinary cast of veteran musicians and fellow singers, all of them longtime friends, for a set that indeed showcases this Nashville icon, and 2008 CMA Hall of Fame inductee, as all she has intended to be - a singularly expressive vocalist, a brilliant interpreter of other people's songs, a graceful and confident songwriter. In particular, the album displays Harris's ability to bring new life to songs that may have been overlooked, forgotten or lost along the way. Some of the most affecting material here may be the least well-known - though not for long: John Wesley Routh's celtic/country "Shores Of White Sands" and trucker-poet Mark Germino's heartrending story-song, "Broken Man's Lament." Harris has chosen these songs with conceptual care. Like much of the gently uplifting All I Intended To Be, the stories may be bittersweet, the characters may be downtrodden, but somehow a sense of redemption always vanquishes regret. The shared history of all the artists involved deepens the feeling of hard-won wisdom that informs All I Intended To Be. Producer Brian Ahern was behind the boards for such early Harris classics as Elite Hotel, Pieces of the Sky and Blue Kentucky Girl. The players and guest stars are not only a veritable who's-who from the worlds of country, bluegrass and folk, but they have each intersected with Harris throughout her four-decade career as a recording artist. They include Dolly Parton, singers Pam Rose and Maryann Kennedy, dobro player (and longtime Seldom Scene member) Mike Auldredge, keyboardists Glenn D. Hardin (of Harris's Hot Band and Elvis Presley's legendary TCB combo) and Bill Payne (of Little Feat). Two songs - the June Carter tribute, "How She Could Sing The Wildwood Flower" and the breathtakingly beautiful "Sailing Round the Room" - were co-written by and performed with Kate and Anna McGarrigle. Singer-songwriter Karen Brooks, whose own eighties-era version of "Shores of White Sands" was the inspiration and thematic jumping-off point for this entire album, contributes backing vocals throughout; Randy Sharp, Brooks' singing partner, did the vocal arranging. (Harris won a 2005 Best Country Vocal Performance Grammy for her rendition of Sharp's "The Connection.") Harris's own songs, like the heartache ballad "Gold" and the elegiac "Not Enough," blend seamlessly with work by Patty Griffin ("Moon Song"), Merle Haggard ("Kern River") and Billy Joe Shaver ("Old Five and Dimers," from which the album title is taken). Harris revives what is arguably Tracy Chapman's most eloquent song, "Fast Car" notwithstanding - "All That You Have Is Your Soul," a cautionary tale with a simple but profound prayer of a chorus. Displaying the maturity, elegance and ease that distinguished All The Road Running, her best-selling 2006 collaboration with Mark Knopfler. Harris has created a riveting emotional and spiritual journey. All That I Intended To Be is everything a listener and fan could hope for.
On her second Nonesuch disc, Emmylou Harris assembles an extraordinary cast of veteran musicians and fellow singers, all of them longtime friends, for a set that indeed showcases this Nashville icon, and 2008 CMA Hall of Fame inductee, as all she has intended to be - a singularly expressive vocalist, a brilliant interpreter of other people's songs, a graceful and confident songwriter. In particular, the album displays Harris's ability to bring new life to songs that may have been overlooked, forgotten or lost along the way. Some of the most affecting material here may be the least well-known - though not for long: John Wesley Routh's celtic/country "Shores Of White Sands" and trucker-poet Mark Germino's heartrending story-song, "Broken Man's Lament." Harris has chosen these songs with conceptual care. Like much of the gently uplifting All I Intended To Be, the stories may be bittersweet, the characters may be downtrodden, but somehow a sense of redemption always vanquishes regret. The shared history of all the artists involved deepens the feeling of hard-won wisdom that informs All I Intended To Be. Producer Brian Ahern was behind the boards for such early Harris classics as Elite Hotel, Pieces of the Sky and Blue Kentucky Girl. The players and guest stars are not only a veritable who's-who from the worlds of country, bluegrass and folk, but they have each intersected with Harris throughout her four-decade career as a recording artist. They include Dolly Parton, singers Pam Rose and Maryann Kennedy, dobro player (and longtime Seldom Scene member) Mike Auldredge, keyboardists Glenn D. Hardin (of Harris's Hot Band and Elvis Presley's legendary TCB combo) and Bill Payne (of Little Feat). Two songs - the June Carter tribute, "How She Could Sing The Wildwood Flower" and the breathtakingly beautiful "Sailing Round the Room" - were co-written by and performed with Kate and Anna McGarrigle. Singer-songwriter Karen Brooks, whose own eighties-era version of "Shores of White Sands" was the inspiration and thematic jumping-off point for this entire album, contributes backing vocals throughout; Randy Sharp, Brooks' singing partner, did the vocal arranging. (Harris won a 2005 Best Country Vocal Performance Grammy for her rendition of Sharp's "The Connection.") Harris's own songs, like the heartache ballad "Gold" and the elegiac "Not Enough," blend seamlessly with work by Patty Griffin ("Moon Song"), Merle Haggard ("Kern River") and Billy Joe Shaver ("Old Five and Dimers," from which the album title is taken). Harris revives what is arguably Tracy Chapman's most eloquent song, "Fast Car" notwithstanding - "All That You Have Is Your Soul," a cautionary tale with a simple but profound prayer of a chorus. Displaying the maturity, elegance and ease that distinguished All The Road Running, her best-selling 2006 collaboration with Mark Knopfler. Harris has created a riveting emotional and spiritual journey. All That I Intended To Be is everything a listener and fan could hope for.
Lebels Emmylou Harris
Saturday, July 26, 2008
Download Link:
http://rapidshare.com/files/132105622/AmyWinehouse-TheSka.rar
Music List:
01. Monkey Man (Toots & The Maytals)
02. Hey Little Rich Girl (The Specials)
03. You're Wondering Now (Andy & Joe)
04. Cupid (Sam Cooke)
http://rapidshare.com/files/132105622/AmyWinehouse-TheSka.rar
Music List:
01. Monkey Man (Toots & The Maytals)
02. Hey Little Rich Girl (The Specials)
03. You're Wondering Now (Andy & Joe)
04. Cupid (Sam Cooke)
Highly limited 7 inch of Amy Winehouse doing covers of the Specials - Monkey Man and Hey Little Rich Girl and Youre Wondering Now, and Sam Cooke - Cupid. If theres one thing you cant deny about Ms Winehouse is that shes immensely talented, even when shes covering other peoples music.
Lebels Amy Winehouse
Wednesday, July 16, 2008
download Link:
http://rapidshare.com/files/46283859/Feist-TheReminder.rarMusic List:
1. So Sorry
2. I Feel It All
3. My Moon My Man
4. The Park
5. The Water
6. Sealion
7. Past In Present
8. The Limit To Your Love
9. 1234
10. Brandy Alexander
11. Intuition
12. Honey Honey
13. How My Heart Behaves
Leslie Feist (nasceu no dia 13 de fevereiro de 1976) é uma cantora canadense.
Ela apresenta com o nome Feist, e participa da banda Broken Social Scene.
Product Description
UK pressing of the 2007 album includes one bonus track: 'Honey Honey' (recorded live at Toronto's Danforth
Music Hall). Reminder was written and conceptualised during 33 months of touring and was recorded in just two
weeks in a 200-year-old manor house on the outskirts of Paris with players including Gonzales, Jamie
Lidell, Mocky and Erik Glambek Boe [Kings Of Convenience], and includes 'My Moon My Man',
with it's sucker-punch melody tumbling over hard-soul piano chords, and live favourite 'Sea Lion Woman'.
Universal. 2007.
Lebels Feist
Thursday, July 10, 2008
The Complete Million Dollar Quartet - Elvis, JL Lewis, C. Perkins, J. Cash
0 Reaction Posted by Unknown at 2:16 AM
Elvis Presley (Artist), Jerry Lee Lewis (Artist), Carl Perkins (Artist), Johnny Cash (Artist)
Download Link:
http://rapidshare.com/files/27788423/TheCompleteMillionDollarQuartet-Elvis__JLLewis__CPerkins__JCash.rar
Music List:
Download Link:
http://rapidshare.com/files/27788423/TheCompleteMillionDollarQuartet-Elvis__JLLewis__CPerkins__JCash.rar
Music List:
1. Instrumental |
2. Love Me Tender (Instrumental) |
3. Jingle Bells (Instrumental) |
4. White Christmas (Instrumental) |
5. Reconsider Baby |
6. Don't Be Cruel |
7. Don't Be Cruel |
8. Paralyzed |
9. Don't Be Cruel |
10. There's No Place Like Home |
11. When The Saints Go Marchin' In |
12. Softly And Tenderly |
13. When God Dips His Love In My Heart |
14. Just A Little Talk With Jesus |
15. Jesus Walked That Lonesome Valley |
16. I Shall Not Be Moved |
17. Peace In The Valley |
18. Down By The Riverside |
19. I'm With A Crowd But So Alone |
20. Farther Along |
21. Blessed Jesus (Hold My Hand) |
22. On The Jericho Road |
23. I Just Can't Make It By Myself |
24. Little Cabin Home On The Hill |
25. Summetime Is Past And Gone |
26. I Hear A Sweet Voice Calling |
27. Sweetheart You Done Me Wrong |
28. Keeper Of The City (Carl Lead) |
29. Crazy Arms |
30. Don't Forbid Me |
31. Too Much Monkey Business |
32. Brown Eyed Handsome Man |
33. Out Of Sight, Out Of Mind |
34. Brown Eyed Handsome Man |
35. Don't Forbid Me |
36. You Belong To My Heart |
37. Is It So Strange |
38. That's When Your Heartaches Begin |
39. Brown Eyed Handsome Man |
40. Rip It Up |
41. I'm Gonna Bid My Blues Goodbye |
42. Crazy Arms |
43. That's My Desire |
44. End Of The Road |
45. Black Bottom Stomp |
46. You're The Only Star In My Blue Heaven |
47. Elvis Says Goodbye |
Amazon.com
Fifty years after a 21-year-old Elvis Presley first shook the world comes a reissue of the famed Million Dollar Quartet recording, the off-the-cuff Sun Records jam session where Jerry Lee Lewis, Carl Perkins, and Johnny Cash joined Presley for a loose-jointed romp through 46 songs. Except that's not quite right--Cash either put down his part off-mic or rolled out his big baritone-bass when the tape wasn't rolling (the more likely explanation). So that, as Colin Escott writes in his liner notes, technically makes this a $750,000 Trio. And while this new edition is billed as the "complete" quartet--since 12 more minutes surfaced on a tape of superior sound quality found in Elvis's private collection, and the session is now in its right sequence--it obviously isn't the whole thing. (The 12 extra minutes are essentially four short instrumentals and "Reconsider Baby" at the start, as well as bits and pieces at different points throughout the CD.) But what survives is nevertheless fascinating, of course, not only for the historical record but for the fervor the three bring to a handful of spirituals (their finest moment) and how young Presley--who is already recording for RCA, and has just been dropped by Sun--presents himself. His new notoriety brings out a cocky charm, as he devotes much of these renditions of "Don't Be Cruel" and "Paralyzed" to an imitation of Jackie Wilson imitating him (Elvis knows Wilson only as one of Billy Ward's Dominoes), and boasting that Pat Boone recorded a song that Elvis wouldn't even audition. This fly-on-the-wall voyeurism should appeal to any student of rock 'n' roll history. But serious Elvisphiles will especially enjoy hearing Presley talk about the seeds of recording "That's When Your Heartaches Begin," mimic Hank Snow on "I'm Gonna Bid My Blues Goodbye," and express bemused ire over Faron Young, who had sent him a song ("Is It So Strange") he hoped Elvis would record. "He didn't want to give me none of it--he wanted it all, you know," Elvis says with a chuckle, supposedly referring to the publishing/writing credit, something Elvis's manager, the iron-fisted Colonel Tom Parker, demanded. As the trio moves through a plethora of material--Christmas songs, gospel, blues, R&B, country, pop, Dixieland, cowboy, and bluegrass--they become the hammer, anvil, and steel, forging a new form of music. What you have here, then, is no less than the sound of it, taking shape. --Alanna Nash
Fifty years after a 21-year-old Elvis Presley first shook the world comes a reissue of the famed Million Dollar Quartet recording, the off-the-cuff Sun Records jam session where Jerry Lee Lewis, Carl Perkins, and Johnny Cash joined Presley for a loose-jointed romp through 46 songs. Except that's not quite right--Cash either put down his part off-mic or rolled out his big baritone-bass when the tape wasn't rolling (the more likely explanation). So that, as Colin Escott writes in his liner notes, technically makes this a $750,000 Trio. And while this new edition is billed as the "complete" quartet--since 12 more minutes surfaced on a tape of superior sound quality found in Elvis's private collection, and the session is now in its right sequence--it obviously isn't the whole thing. (The 12 extra minutes are essentially four short instrumentals and "Reconsider Baby" at the start, as well as bits and pieces at different points throughout the CD.) But what survives is nevertheless fascinating, of course, not only for the historical record but for the fervor the three bring to a handful of spirituals (their finest moment) and how young Presley--who is already recording for RCA, and has just been dropped by Sun--presents himself. His new notoriety brings out a cocky charm, as he devotes much of these renditions of "Don't Be Cruel" and "Paralyzed" to an imitation of Jackie Wilson imitating him (Elvis knows Wilson only as one of Billy Ward's Dominoes), and boasting that Pat Boone recorded a song that Elvis wouldn't even audition. This fly-on-the-wall voyeurism should appeal to any student of rock 'n' roll history. But serious Elvisphiles will especially enjoy hearing Presley talk about the seeds of recording "That's When Your Heartaches Begin," mimic Hank Snow on "I'm Gonna Bid My Blues Goodbye," and express bemused ire over Faron Young, who had sent him a song ("Is It So Strange") he hoped Elvis would record. "He didn't want to give me none of it--he wanted it all, you know," Elvis says with a chuckle, supposedly referring to the publishing/writing credit, something Elvis's manager, the iron-fisted Colonel Tom Parker, demanded. As the trio moves through a plethora of material--Christmas songs, gospel, blues, R&B, country, pop, Dixieland, cowboy, and bluegrass--they become the hammer, anvil, and steel, forging a new form of music. What you have here, then, is no less than the sound of it, taking shape. --Alanna Nash
Lebels Carl Perkins, Elvis Presley, Jerry Lee Lewis, Johnny Cash
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