*THANKS TO THE ORIGINAL POSTER
It's a shame Rick Buckler has left us. I've always loved this band. See scans
*THANKS TO THE ORIGINAL POSTER
It's a shame Rick Buckler has left us. I've always loved this band. See scans
20/20 - 20/20 & Look Out!
Studio soundboard recordings
Out of Print @320
Some nostalgic L.A. Power Pop for You!!
Update...As pointed out by Anon in comments, the original post only contains the self titled recording 20/20 and various singles. The album Look Out is NOW included in this post. Sorry for the confusion. I have found the record Look Out and have added a new link!
Thanks to... You Know Who You Are!
pass-fbsvw
I don't know what the hell this is. But I know I like it.
Songs
1. Freeway Beggin Blues
2. I'm Lazy
3. Black Jesus Blues
4. Bog Body Blues
5. That Back Alley Door
6. Earache My Eye
7. Fake Fifty Dollar Bill Blues
Track List:
01 Shine On You Crazy Diamond (Parts 1-9)
02 Welcome To The Machine
03 Have A Cigar
04 Sheep (Raving and Drooling)
05 Dogs
06 Pigs (Three Different Ones)
07 Sheep Sound Effects
*Original Notes*
I received these files from a collector friend in the last couple of days. It sounds to me like Animals has been taken from an improved copy of the source used for the earlier 'Extraction Tapes' vinyl release. Sources appear to have been speed corrected.
Unfortunately I don't have artwork, other than that I've found on the web and embedded into the FLACs.
Sound is way better than the vinyl transfers I've heard. All in all an amazing release.
Beechwoods, 2nd March 2014
Review below from Collector's Music Review:
Soon to see release is this Pink Floyd disk “From Abbey Road to Britannia Row”. Subtitled ‘The Extraction tapes’ this CD features that rarest of beasts. Unissued Pink Floyd studio outtakes. Remember the fuss that came around the Beatles ‘John Barrett’ tapes or the ‘Revolution’ leak? This could, subjectively, be Pink Floyd’s answer to that.
Consisting of outtakes collected from both the “Wish You Were Here” and “Animals” albums, the disk is the first time that any of the outtakes have been released in this format.
A very exciting time for PF collectors.
Tracks
Let's Have A War
Fresh Flesh
I Love Livin' In The City
I Don't Care About You
I'm Back
Intro/Waiting For The Gas
Disconnected
Fetch Me One More Beer
Here We Go Again
Love The Girls
Three Blind Mice
Cat Fight
Fuel Injected Papa
Smashing Pumpkins - Reel Time Sessions 1989
Studio soundboard recordings @flac +vbr
Two bootlegs from early Smashing Pumpkins studio sessions - tracks 1-20 are full-band electric, tracks 21-33 are just Billy on acoustic. Some of the songs were used to make the Moon demo tape, others were released on Gish or as singles, and some have been left in the past.
****
More recording sessions with Mark Ignoffo, intended to constitute the first Smashing Pumpkins album. Fortunately for the future of the band, these sessions did not produce an album as anticipated but the second demo tape Moon. Billy Corgan also compiled a tape from these sessions called Gish, used for bookings and label solicitation in 1989 and 1990. Corgan also made a number of homemade mix tapes for friends and fans that featured different configurations of material from these sessions. While about half of the sessions have appeared on various releases, the remaining half can be found on bootlegs, the highest quality as unmastered final mixes compiled on a DAT tape that had belonged to Mike Potential.
According to Corgan, the album originally came from Smashing Pumpkins'
early vow of poverty. "The roots of Gish are the fact that the band had a
policy then that nobody made any money from the shows, so we could save
up to record," he explains. "It was amazing that everyone agreed to it
because none of us had any money back then. So by 1989 we had collected a
couple grand from playing club gigs. A guy named Mark Ignoffo, who
lived in the neighborhood near where I worked at the used record store,
had just graduated studio-engineering school. It turned out he had set
up a studio in his parents' basement, so in 1989 we took that saved
money and made an album — even though we had no one to make an album
for. There was absolutely nobody interested in our band. So we just made
an album-plus worth of material hoping somebody would become
interested. And if you listen to that material, it sounds very much like
Gish turned out. ~ More at Fandom