Showing posts with label Jack Bruce. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Jack Bruce. Show all posts

Wednesday, June 27, 2018

The Graham Bond Organisation - Live At Klook's Kleek

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 41:14
Size: 94.4 MB
Styles: R&B, Blues
Year: 1986/1997
Art: Front

[2:45] 1. Wade In The Water
[5:00] 2. Big Boss Man
[4:16] 3. Early In The Morning
[5:15] 4. Person To Person Blues
[3:02] 5. Spanish Blues
[2:05] 6. Introduction (By Dick Jordan)
[5:12] 7. The First Time I Met The Blues
[4:17] 8. Stormy Monday
[3:54] 9. Train Time
[5:25] 10. What'd I Say

Bass Guitar, Harmonica, Vocals – Jack Bruce; Drums – Ginger Baker; Organ [Hammond], Saxophone [Alto Sax], Vocals – Graham Bond; Saxophone [Tenor Sax] – Dick Heckstall-Smith. Recorded live at Klook's Kleek Club in London, 15th October 1964.

This concert gig has appeared in various guises and through various labels (most notoriously Springboard International in the U.S. in the late '70s), and it has a dubious reputation on vinyl. In 1988, however, it appeared on CD under this title, and it finally seemed to justify the trouble it took to record. The Graham Bond Organization's studio recordings were admirable, sometimes impressive, but never essential parts of the British blues boom, leading one to wonder precisely what -- apart from the presence of two future members of Cream -- the group's reputation was based on. The answer is on these sides, recorded by Giorgio Gomelsky "under extreme difficulty." Listening to the band rumble and surge through standards like "Wade in the Water," "Big Boss Man," "Stormy Monday," and "Early In the Morning," it's easy to understand how they got signed and what the record companies were looking for, and also why they didn't get it -- this is gritty stuff, loud R&B with some jazz elements, Dick Heckstall-Smith blowing up a storm on sax, and more than a little stretching out (especially by Baker, whose solos here (check out "Early In the Morning") are more enjoyable than most of what he did with Cream), all of it pretty intense and none of it easy to capture in the studio. The audience and the urgency of concert work were both essential to the group's functioning. On the technical side, there's some distortion, even some overload, and Jack Bruce's bass isn't captured in its more resonant form (and what electric bass on any live recording before about 1968 ever was?), but the electricity is here, along with the immediacy, and this CD may be the way to best appreciate this band. ~Bruce Eder

Live At Klook's Kleek mc
Live At Klook's Kleek zippy

Sunday, June 3, 2018

Dickey Betts - Live At The Lone Star Roadhouse (2-Disc Set)

Bass – Marty Privette; Drums – Matt Abts; Guitar, Vocals – Dickey Betts, Warren Haynes; Keyboards, Vocals – Johnny Neel; Special Guests – Jack Bruce, Mick Taylor, Rick Derringer. Recorded live from the Lone Star Roadhouse, New York, NY, November 1, 1988. Dickey Betts maybe not have had the name but he was a co-founder and songwriter and the ongoing heart and soul of the Allman Brothers Band. This show was recorded in January 11, 1988 with what is now an all-star back-up band, at the Lone Star Roadhouse in New York City and simulcast on WLIR on Long Island. Band includes Warren Haynes and Matt Abts who would later form Gov't Mule. And Johnny Neel on keys who along with Haynes would join a reunited the Allman Brothers Band the next year.

Album: Live At The Lone Star Roadhouse (Disc 1)
Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 44:27
Size: 101.8 MB
Styles: Southern blues rock
Year: 1978/2018
Art: Front

[ 8:33] 1. Blue Sky
[14:30] 2. In Memory Of Elizabeth Reed
[ 6:34] 3. Duane's Tune
[14:49] 4. Jessica

Live At The Lone Star Roadhouse (Disc 1) mc
Live At The Lone Star Roadhouse (Disc 1) zippy

Album: Live At The Lone Star Roadhouse (Disc 2)
Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 41:42
Size: 95.5 MB
Styles: Southern blues rock
Year: 1978/2018
Art: Front

[ 7:16] 1. Statesboro Blues
[ 9:24] 2. One Way Out
[ 5:04] 3. Rock 'n Roll Hoochie Coo
[ 9:52] 4. Spoonful
[10:06] 5. Southbound

Live At The Lone Star Roadhouse (Disc 2) mc
Live At The Lone Star Roadhouse (Disc 2) zippy

Thursday, June 22, 2017

Ellen McIlwaine - The Real Ellen McIlwaine + Everyone Needs It

Size: 180,8 MB
Time: 76:19
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 1975/1982/1995
Styles: Blues Rock
Art: Front

01. I Want Whacha Got (2:55)
02. Say A Single Word (3:49)
03. Everybody Needs It (3:14)
04. Come Sit Down And Tell Me (2:44)
05. Danger Zone (4:18)
06. Nothing Left To Be Desired (3:17)
07. Regretting Blues (2:27)
08. Hang On To A Dream (3:45)
09. Cure My Blues (4:14)
10. Keep On (3:39)
11. Higher Ground (3:42)
12. Lazy Day (3:20)
13. He The Richmond (5:21)
14. Up In Heaven Shouting I'm So Glad (1:57)
15. Blueberry Hill (3:01)
16. The Secret In This Ladies Heart (3:47)
17. Virginia Creeper (3:03)
18. 30-Piece Band (2:21)
19. Crawling Kingsnake (2:09)
20. Down So Low (3:59)
21. Let's Go Down To The Ocean (2:34)
22. Born Under A Bad Sign (3:27)
23. Let Me Be (3:10)

Ellen McIlwaine's Everybody Needs It with Jack Bruce is a very special record by an artist who deserves tremendous recognition. A photo of the Cream bassist adorns the back cover -- McIlwaine on previous discs having covered Bruce's songs "Weird of Hermiston" and "Never Tell Your Mother She's Out of Tune." "I Want Whacha Got" explodes off the disc, her trademark slide guitar as vital -- and wild -- as her voice. Where George Thorogood plays his formula into the ground, McIlwaine offers a potpourri of sounds and ideas, and it is no wonder she is aligned here with Bruce. Along with her respect for his material, she does on one album what Bruce has done over an entire career -- found a way to be all over the map. "Say a Single Word" is told over a rolling piano, a song of desire that speaks volumes on the subject, as did the opening number. The title track, "Everybody Needs It," renews the musical assault, an earthy, bluesy come-on about using sex to replace commitment, or at least to disguise the fear of promise: "Don't bring your bad time with you, I've got mine...." There are four McIlwaine originals on side one, with the last of them, "Come Sit Down and Tell Me," being a slide guitar and vocal demand to know what the breakup is all about ("I might have done some damage, but I didn't know..."). Percy Mayfield's "Danger Zone" changes moods yet again, the low bass tones working with Paul Wertico's sparse percussion, allowing McIlwaine's voice to dominate over truly innovative music. Not content to limit herself, the singer takes Johnny "Guitar" Watson's "Nothing Left to Be Desired" and adds funkiness that takes it out of blues and out of folk, making for a riveting listening experience. The Bruce/Power composition "Regretting Blues" indeed has power, while McIlwaine takes Tim Hardin's "Hang on to a Dream" and just reinvents it, giving the tune a Grace Slick-style vocal and co-dedicating the disc to Hardin and Roy Byrd (aka Professor Longhair). This is a most unique record album, Bruce's bass bubbling up on Eric Katz's "Temptation Took Control" after a majestic "Cure My Blues." Everybody Needs It is one of those great, great, great, great albums that got away. Strangely reissued under the supervision of Holger Petersen for a 23-track CD version that includes an additional 13 cuts from 1975's The Real Ellen McIlwaine, the original vinyl album contains 11 tracks, the excellent "Temptation Took Control" not on the reissue. "Keep On," the fifth and final composition from the singer/songwriter, concludes the album with piano/bass-heavy accompaniment surrounding McIlwaine's positive message of tenacity and perseverance, words she can identify with, words that were created to describe her. This album is an absolute find you simply must hunt down, get, and treasure. ~by Joe Viglione

The Real Ellen McIlwaine + Everyone Needs It

Sunday, January 1, 2017

BBM (Baker, Bruce & Moore) - Around The Next Dream (Expanded)

Size: 178,9 MB
Time: 77:36
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 1994
Styles: Blues Rock
Art: Full

01. Waiting In The Wings (3:46)
02. City Of Gold (3:57)
03. Where In The World (5:22)
04. Can't Fool The Blues (5:18)
05. High Cost Of Loving (5:43)
06. Glory Days (4:23)
07. Why Does Love (Have To Go Wrong) (8:27)
08. Naked Flame (6:12)
09. I Wonder Why (Are You So Mean To Me) (4:59)
10. Wrong Side Of Town (4:04)
11. Danger Zone (Bonus) (5:59)
12. The World Keeps On Turnin' (Bonus) (7:52)
13. Sitting On Top Of The World (Live) (Bonus) (6:21)
14. I Wonder Why (Are You So Mean To Me) (Live) (Bonus) (5:08)

Any time Ginger Baker and Jack Bruce work together, comparisons to Cream are inevitable. Given that this album's opener, "Waiting in the Wings," bears a passing resemblance to "White Room," and that this is then followed by a "Crossroads" knockoff, perhaps the comparisons are justifiable. Unfortunately, BBM doesn't benefit from such self-plagiarism. The weak link is, surprisingly, not with the Clapton stand-in, Gary Moore -- it's in the underwhelming drumming and bass playing by the two bona fide Creamsters. Bruce's voice is as pleasing as ever, but his and Baker's merely competent English blues instrumental work will fall short of the expectations of fans who know what they're capable of. ~Review by Paul Collins

Around The Next Dream

Saturday, November 26, 2016

Vargas Blues Band - Vargas Blues Band & Company

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 69:44
Size: 159.6 MB
Styles: Blues rock
Year: 2012
Art: Front

[4:40] 1. Do You Think I'm Sexy (Feat. Javier Vargas, Carmine Appice, Paul Shortino)
[3:49] 2. Pretty Blue (Feat. Jack Bruce & Reese Wynans)
[5:48] 3. Parisienne Walkways (Feat. Javier Vargas, Tim Bogert, Carmine Appice, Paul Shoertino)
[4:07] 4. Rock Away The Blues (Feat. Junior Wells, Andres Calamaro)
[4:44] 5. Exotic Mambo (Feat. Alex Ligertwood & Reese Wynans)
[5:16] 6. Do You Believe In Love (Feat. Chris Rea)
[5:02] 7. Blues In My Soul (Feat. Devon Allman & Frank Marino)
[7:11] 8. Ridin' High (Feat Larry Thurston)
[4:19] 9. Body Shock (Feat. Larry Graham, Raimundo Amador, Chester Thompson)
[3:57] 10. Make Sweet Love 2 U (Feat. Bobby Alexander)
[5:13] 11. Blues For My Babe (Feat. Larry Mccray)
[4:24] 12. Man On The Run (Feat Tim Mitchell)
[5:34] 13. Blood Shot Blues (Feat. Preston Shannon)
[5:34] 14. Sad Eyes (Feat. Glenn Hughes)

Javier Vargas celebrates 20 years of collaborations on an album featuring Jack Bruce, Glenn Hughes, Chris Rea, Raimundo Amador and Double Trouble among others. Includes an amazing version of "Do Ya Think I'm Sexy" with Carmine Appice, Paul Shortino and Pat Travers.

Vargas Blues Band & Company mc
Vargas Blues Band & Company zippy

Monday, March 14, 2016

Jack Bruce - More Jack Than Blues


Released: 2015
Size: 138.2 MB
Time: 60:24
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Styles: Jazz, Rock
Art: Full

1. Never Tell Your Mother She's Out Of Tune [4:10]
2. Rope Ladder To The Moon [3:10]
3. Spoonful [8:50]
4. Smiles And Grins [7:12]
5. Born Under A Bad Sign [3:49]
6. Theme From An Imaginary Western [5:26]
7. Milonga [5:44]
8. The Consul At Sunset [4:33]
9. We're Going Wrong [5:57]
10. Deserted Cities Of The Heart [3:34]
11. Sunshine Of Your Love [7:53]

Reissue of a highly acclaimed 2006 concert which saw legendary Cream bassist, vocalist and composer Jack Bruce join forces with the HR-Bigband to perform at the 37th German Jazz Festival Frankfurt. He presents classic Cream songs and other landmarks of his career, in gripping new arrangements. It was a magic moment of dialogue between jazz and rock that roamed between composition, improvisation and vibrant, virtuoso performances. Bruce, who died in 2014 was an icon of the rock world: the legendary song writer, bassist, pianist and singer with the powerful trio Cream and in his countless subsequent projects over the last 50 years. The unorthodox Scot has earned himself an eternal place in rock's Hall of Fame. "Bruce is revelling in his new surroundings and his voice is as strong as ever...some superbly arranged dynamics."

More Jack Than Blues

Friday, December 11, 2015

Jack Bruce & Robin Trower - Songs From The Road

Size: 178,2 MB
Time: 77:06
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2015
Styles: Blues Rock
Art: Front

01. Seven Moons (5:24)
02. Lives Of Clay (5:36)
03. Distant Places Of The Heart (6:07)
04. Sunshine Of Your Love (8:09)
05. Carmen (4:55)
06. So Far To Yesterday (3:49)
07. Just Another Day (6:49)
08. Perfect Place (4:28)
09. Bad Case Of Celebrity (5:27)
10. The Last Door (5:22)
11. Come To Me (6:46)
12. White Room (7:16)
13. Politician (6:53)

The news of Jack Bruce and Robin Trower performing live for the first time spread like wildfire. For more than 40 years the legendary Cream bassist and singer and the immensely talented guitarist of Procol Harum made history in the Rock ‘n’ Roll business.

It was in the early 80s when they first collaborated, releasing two remarkable records (B.L.T. 1981 and Truce 1982). Then, 26 years later, Seven Moons was released (2008).
Together with drummer Gary Husband (Level 42, Gary Moore, John McLaughlin) they had formed a power trio that recorded only own material: Finest blues rock painted in psychedelic colours und wonderful sounds – Seven Moons became their masterpiece.

A few months later a fansite announced: “Bruce, Trower & Husband to take ‘Seven Moons’ into orbit! For a few nights only, Robin and Jack will get to play live together for the first time ever in late February 2009.”

After two gigs in Karlsruhe and Cologne the trio was ready to play the Dutch city of Nijmegen, where the concert was recorded. And indeed, this night was very special. Not because of the camera crew and the recording, but because Trower, Bruce and Husband had already formed a whole. They knew, they belonged here.

It´s 08:45 pm. The place: The old, majestic Concertgebouw De Vereeniging. Jack Bruce welcomes the audience and the band kicks off with the title track of Seven Moons. Four minutes later we hear Trower’s first solo. One can see that Bruce is elated by it. The next song is the bluesy “Lives Of Clay”. Bruce comments: “Now we are beginning to get somewhere.”

They play almost the complete Seven Moons album and also the track “Carmen” of their 1981 record B.L.T. And of course songs of Bruce’s famous catalogue from his time with Cream that cannot be left out: “Sunshine Of Your Love”, the song with the legendary bass riff, “White Room” that shows why Trower is called the “white Hendrix” in the States and the bonus track “Politician.”

The pleasure the guys had on stage makes this CD/DVD set a unique piece of rock music. Jack Bruce who died last autumn but had already suffered several strokes of fate at the time of the recording said during the show: “It is fantastic to be here. For me personally, it is fantastic to be anywhere, actually…”

In December 2015 this legendary concert will be re-released as a CD/DVD set as part of the Songs From The Road series.

Songs From The Road

Sunday, April 6, 2014

Jack Bruce - Silver Rails

Released: 2014
Size: 109.0 MB
Time: 47:36
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Style: Blues, Jazz Fusion
Art: Front, Back

1. candlelight [4:20]
2. reach for the night [6:19]
3. fields of forever [4:35]
4. hidden cities [5:01]
5. don't look now [5:06]
6. rusty lady [5:13]
7. industrial child [3:40]
8. drone [4:47]
9. keep it down [4:57]
10. no surrender [3:33]

Jack Bruce’s forthcoming Silver Rails isn’t a long-hoped-for return to his greatness with Cream, a fiery fusion excursion in the manner of his more recent work with Spectrum Road, or something else entirely. It’s actually a little of all of that, as the restless bass-playing singer-songwriter traverses a dizzying array of song styles — some blessedly familiar and some intriguingly new — while bravely facing his third act head on.

The thread holding this tapestry of textures, cadences and ambition together on Silver Rails is Bruce’s voice — both as a singer and as a storyteller. He sounds weathered, but never cowed — beaten up at times, but never beaten down. “I used to be somebody,” he admits in on the contemplative, piano-driven “Reach for the Night,” and as the long-awaited Silver Rails unfolds, you get a clear picture of why.

This is one of those tour-de-force recordings that record labels attempt to construct for people of Bruce’s vintage, the kind of versatile, endlessly engaging project that works both as valedictory for his legacy fans and as a window for the next generation. Except, unlike your typically pasted together all-star amalgam, Jack Bruce is front and center throughout. Even when famous names like Robin Trower, John Medeski, Cindy Blackman Santana and Phil Manzanera sit in, Bruce remains a centering force.

“Fields of Forever” has a frisky early-Who-esque groove, while “Don’t Look Now” allows Bruce to explore every element of his vocal range — all in service of a devastatingly honest look at life’s twists and turns. The gorgeous “Industrial Child” goes deeper still, getting quieter still, finding a home right next to Bruce’s heart. That’s balanced by a nasty menace of the aptly titled “Drone,” a song that takes his Spectrum Road collaboration with Medeski to its outside apex.

Silver Rails MC
Silver Rails ZS

Friday, March 7, 2014

Eric Clapton & Friends - Gunfight At The Apollo

Size: 165,4 MB
Time: 71:26
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 1995
Styles: Chicago Blues, Blues Rock
Art: Front & Back

01. Rock Me Baby (With B.B. King, Albert Collins & Buddy Guy) ( 6:29)
02. Sweet Little Angel/Tore Down (With B.B. King, Albert Collins & Buddy Guy) ( 6:25)
03. Let The Good Times Roll (With B.B. King, Albert Collins & Buddy Guy) ( 6:38)
04. Let The Good Times Roll Reprise (With B.B. King, Albert Collins & Buddy Guy) ( 1:59)
05. Why Does Love Got To Be So Sad (With Buckwheat Zydeco) ( 4:31)
06. Willpower (With Jack Bruce) ( 4:04)
07. Instrumental Jam #1 (Derek & The Dominoes Rehearsals) (12:34)
08. Instrumental Jam #2 (Derek & The Dominoes Rehearsals) (28:45)

Track 1/4: With B.B. King, Albert Collins & Buddy Guy. Celebration in honor of the 50th Anniversary of the famed Apollo Theatre in Harlem, NYC, June 15, 1993.
Track 5: With Buckwheat Zydeco, August 1988
Track 6: With Jack Bruce, February 15/16, 1987
Tracks 7/8: Derek & The Dominoes Rehearsals at Criteria Studios, Miami, Florida, August 1970.

Thanks to DrPeak.
Gunfight At The Apollo

Thursday, November 14, 2013

Jack Bruce & Friends - Alive In America 1980

Size: 224,8 MB
Time: 97:40
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2011
Styles: Blues Rock, Classic Rock
Art: Front

01. White Room ( 8:12)
02. Hit And Run ( 5:07)
03. Clem's Blues ( 3:09)
04. Born Under A Bad Sign ( 4:45)
05. Livin' Without Ja ( 4:09)
06. Dancing On Air ( 4:42)
07. Post War (10:46)
08. Theme From An Imaginary Western ( 5:07)
09. Face Lift 318 ( 5:27)
10. Escape To The Royal Wood ( 8:42)
11. Morning Story ( 1:49)
12. Traintime ( 3:13)
13. Politician ( 6:20)
14. Sunshine Of Your Love (10:31)
15. Bird Alone (15:35)

Although some may be tempted to call multi-instrumentalist, songwriter, and composer Jack Bruce a rock & roll musician, blues and jazz are what this innovative musician really loves. As a result, these two genres are at the base of most of the recorded output from a career that goes back to the beginning of London's blues scene in 1962. In that year, he joined Alexis Korner's Blues Incorporated. Throughout the following decades and into the 21st century, Bruce has always been a supreme innovator, pushing himself into uncharted waters with his jazz and folk-rock compositions.
Bruce's most famous songs are, in essence, blues tunes: "Sunshine of Your Love," "Strange Brew," "Politician," and "White Room." Bruce's best-known songs remain those he penned for Cream, the legendary blues-rock trio he formed with drummer Ginger Baker and guitarist Eric Clapton in July 1966. Baker and Bruce played together for five years before Clapton came along, and although their trio only lasted until November 1968, the group is credited with changing the face of rock & roll and bringing blues to a worldwide audience. Through their creative arrangements of classic blues tunes like Robert Johnson's "Crossroads," Skip James' "I'm So Glad," Willie Dixon's "Spoonful," and Albert King's "Born Under a Bad Sign," the group helped popularize blues-rock and led the way for similar groups that came about later on, like Led Zeppelin.
Bruce was born May 14, 1943, in Lanarkshire, near Glasgow, Scotland. His father was a big jazz fan, and so he includes people like Louis Armstrong and Fats Waller among his earliest influences. He grew up listening to jazz and took up bass and cello as a
teen. After three months at the Royal Scottish Academy of Music, he left, disgusted with the politics of music school. After traveling around Europe for a while, he settled into the early blues scene in 1962 in London, where he eventually met drummer Ginger Baker. He played with British blues pioneers Alexis Korner and Graham Bond before leaving in 1965 to join John Mayall's Bluesbreakers, whose guitarist was Eric Clapton. This gave him time to get his chops together without having to practice. With Manfred Mann, who he also played with before forming Cream.

Thanks MrWalker for the new link.
Alive In America 1980