Size: 175,4 MB
Time: 75:51
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 1991
Styles: Blues
Art: Full
1. Colors Of Love (4:06)
2. Here Comes The Blues Again (4:37)
3. Nothing But Fine (Live) (3:30)
4. What's Going On (Live) (5:05)
5. Wild Eyed And Dangerous (Live) (4:54)
6. Just About Enough (Live) (5:34)
7. Ladies First (Live) (4:06)
8. She's Tuff (Live) (8:41)
9. She Does It Right (Live) (4:25)
10. Harp Breakdown (Live) (8:59)
11. Here Comes The Blues Again (Live) (8:09)
12. Losing Game (Live) (8:46)
13. Big Brown Eyes (4:52)
After being founded in 1979, B. Sharp quickly conquered all the clubs in and around Hamburg. With the release of their first LP in 1982 on the Line label, a series of tours through Germany began. The boys around Henry Heggen, the convincing frontman who sparked the audience from the very first moment, created a considerable fan base from Flensburg to Freiburg. With more than 200 performances a year, B. Sharp not only played their fingers sore, but at the same time in the hearts of many rhythm & blues friends, before the band recorded their 2nd LP in 1983 in Berlin, which was then saturated with German waves. Various TV appearances and radio broadcasts of their concerts carried the message of the toughest and at the same time most likeable rhythm & blues band in this country in all directions.
In April 1984, NDR recorded one of two sold-out concerts at the 'Fabrik' in Hamburg and broadcast it as a radio concert as part of 'Musik Für Junge People'. These recordings then slumbered in the NDR archive for almost 20 years, were then rediscovered by Günther Brackmann and, thanks to Lothar Liebetrau's wonderful commitment, were published in a small edition in 2003 after digital post-processing. In the late summer of 1984, B. Sharp made a change of drummer. From now until the end of the band, Roy Dyke played the drums. The first recordings with Roy Dyke were for the single 'Christmas', an adaptation of the old Phil Spector track 'Baby, Please Come Home'. The back of this single featured B. Sharp's proprietary track 'Alone Tonight'.
In May '91, the band recorded one of their concerts in the sold-out Fabrik/Hamburg to meet the wishes of many fans who were longingly waiting for a live recording. The result was a live CD, which, like the previous recordings, once again showed that B.SHARP was not only able to interpret cover versions excellently, but was also able to extract a modern originality from R&B through their own song material.
In April 1984, NDR recorded one of two sold-out concerts at the 'Fabrik' in Hamburg and broadcast it as a radio concert as part of 'Musik Für Junge People'. These recordings then slumbered in the NDR archive for almost 20 years, were then rediscovered by Günther Brackmann and, thanks to Lothar Liebetrau's wonderful commitment, were published in a small edition in 2003 after digital post-processing. In the late summer of 1984, B. Sharp made a change of drummer. From now until the end of the band, Roy Dyke played the drums. The first recordings with Roy Dyke were for the single 'Christmas', an adaptation of the old Phil Spector track 'Baby, Please Come Home'. The back of this single featured B. Sharp's proprietary track 'Alone Tonight'.
In May '91, the band recorded one of their concerts in the sold-out Fabrik/Hamburg to meet the wishes of many fans who were longingly waiting for a live recording. The result was a live CD, which, like the previous recordings, once again showed that B.SHARP was not only able to interpret cover versions excellently, but was also able to extract a modern originality from R&B through their own song material.
Here Comes The Blues Again mc
Here Comes The Blues Again zippy