Saturday, 31 December 2016

Michele O'Malley - Saturn Rings (1969) FLAC

Saturn Rings by Michele O'Malley, issued on ABC in 1969, is truly one of the lost psychedelic pop masterpieces. O'Malley was a member of the Ballroom, and was a session vocalist in Los Angeles, singing backup on Tommy Roe's It's Now Winters Day and Sagittarius' Present Tense. West Coast popster and legendary crazy man Curt Boettcher (leader of the Ballroom) was heavily involved, with arrangements by Michael Melvoin and session players including Lowell George (pre-Little Feat), Bobby Notkoff (pre-Rockets), Elliot Ingber, Gordon Alexander, and Bobby Jameson (aka songwriter Chris Lucey). Boettcher either wrote or co-wrote seven of the album's 11 cuts, and sings backup on the sessions as well. To say the album bombed is an understatement. It disappeared almost upon release, and O'Malley never made another one. While the sound here is dated, there are some truly amazing moments such as "Fallen Angel," with its beautiful sawing electric violin floating through the mix above the acoustic guitars, tabla drums, and electric bass. O'Malley's voice just soars and glides between Western melody and Eastern modalism effortlessly. Some of the psychedelic pop arrangements have the feeling of some stranger than strange nostalgia -- like a sound that is familiar, but its textures are strange and alien, such as on "Spinning, Spinning, Spinning," with a harpsichord and either an oboe or soprano saxophone and strings. O'Malley wrote "Song to a Magic Frog" for Sagittarius, and the arrangement on this version is lush, full of elegant textures and richly layered instrumentation. Her voice is where the real "magic" lies, however. She moves through the melody with a meld of passion and restraint and creates hooks where there are none. The truth of the matter is,
if Saturn Rings were released today it would be regarded as a quirky masterpiece. Its production and arrangement excesses for the time -- which made it inaccessible to the masses -- would now be heard as the work of genius. Three cheers for Fallout for making this little-known classic available again. (allmusic.com)

Like most of the productions where Curt Boettcher was involved, so i love this effort also. It's a pity that O'Malley only recorded this album as a solo artist. Anyway hope you have fun.
Cheers
            SB1

link is in the comments

Friday, 30 December 2016

The Romantics - The Romantics & National Breakout (1979, 1980) (FLAC)

Such power pop founders as the Raspberries and Big Star may have been woefully underappreciated during their initial run in the early '70s, but by the end of the decade, several of their offspring had taken the style to the upper reaches of the charts -- including Cheap Trick, the Knack, and the Romantics. But what set the group apart from their similarly styled peers was their inheritance of the high-energy attack of their Detroit forefathers, as well as their affinity for bouffant hairstyles and matching retro outfits. Formed on the east side of Detroit during 1977, the Romantics' original lineup consisted of singer/guitarist Wally Palmar, singer/drummer Jimmy Marinos, guitarist Mike Skill, and bassist Richie Cole.

 The band's self-titled full-length debut surfaced in 1980 (recorded in just three weeks) and is often considered to be the quartet's best due to the inclusion of such gems as "When I Look in Your Eyes," a cover of Ray Davies' "She's Got Everything," and one of the Romantics' best-known tracks: the power pop gem "That's What I Like About You." Although the latter track peaked at only number 49 when originally released as a single, it later became an early MTV favorite and classic rock radio standard and in the '90s, was used in several commercials.

 At its best, the Romantics' self-titled debut album sounds like the greatest album Shel Talmy never produced. The Detroit band's British Invasion-style power pop may not have been an especially original creation, but it was good enough that no one with a taste for high-voltage hooks would ever dream of complaining, and as a meeting of mid-'60s style and late-'70s volume and passion, it's all but flawless. Wally Palmar and Mike Skill and drummer Jimmy Marinos, are a glorious pastiche of period pop styles (think the Kinks and the Easybeats with a bit of the Hollies thrown in for melodic appeal) played with a hard-stomping energy and a genuine love for the vintage style that doesn't reek of nostalgia. The production by Peter Solley is simple but smart enough to put both the hooks at the energy up front where they belong, and the Romantics never had a set of tunes this strong again; "What I Like About You" richly deserved its status as a hit single, and "When I Look in Your Eyes," "Tell It to Carrie" and "Girl Next Door" would have followed it up the charts in a just world. The Romantics didn't exactly reinvent the wheel with this album, but they sure knew how to make it roll, and for sheer party enhancing energy, this album is hard to beat.


 A sophomore effort was issued the same year, National Breakout, which saw the band expand their sound to include such other styles as surf and classic Motown and was supported by an extensive world tour (including the Romantics' inaugural visits to both Europe and Australia).
 Mike Skill left the band after the release of the second album and was replaced by lead guitarist Coz Canler. Rich Cole left the band in '82 and was replaced by a returning Skill, who then became the band's bassist.
 In the late 1980s, the Romantics discovered that their managers had been misappropriating the profits earned by the band from its records and live performances. Additionally, one of their releases (the aforementioned "What I Like About You") had been licensed for use in television commercials without the band's knowledge or approval. Consequently, the Romantics filed a lawsuit against their management in 1987, and the legalities involved prevented the band from recording new music until the mid-1990s.
 The Romantics' fortunes began to rise again in the middle of the 1990s, as the band's success in its lawsuit against its former management freed the band to record again (and ensured that future earnings from the licensing of Romantics songs would go to the band).
 Rich Cole returned to the band after a long absence in 2010. Longtime lead guitarist Coz Canler left the band in 2011, allowing Skill to return to the original lead guitarist role he held in the band.


Yep, that's the reduced history of the Romantics (I used excerpts from Wiki and allmusic.com) . Hope you have fun with the music and i'll
see you later, Alligators.
Cheers
           SB1

links in ...bla...bla...

A Fragile Tomorrow - Be Nice Be Careful (2013)

The band's fourth studio album, titled Be Nice Be Careful and produced by Mitch Easter and Ted Comerford, was released on January 8, 2013 via the band's Piewillie Records. The album was also released in Japan on the same day as its US release via Powerpop Academy/Thistime Records. Initially, the album garned much critical acclaim, with Audiophile Reviews saying that "be nice be careful redefines powerpop for the 21st century"  and Musoscribe claiming "If this is the state of powerpop in early 2013, things look good for the future".

That's what the press said about the album. A lot of heavyweights are involved here. Names like Susan Cowsill, Don Dixon, Deb and Vicki Peterson, Shaun Rhoades speaks for itself not to forget
Mr Easter and Mr Comerford.
And yes this is a fine album. Give it a try and listen to it! Sorry but it's only VBR around 220 -
230. If anybody want come up with a better copy feel free and send me an email. dtbm63@gmail.com

See you next time
                              SB1



link in the comments

Thursday, 29 December 2016

Lasst die Sonne rein...here comes the Attic Lights - Super De Luxe (2013)

Attic Lights are a Scottish indie rock band from Glasgow, Scotland, formed in 2005 by Kev Sherry (vocals, guitar), Colin McArdle (vocals, bass) and Jamie Houston (guitar, keyboard, vocals), later joined by Tim Davidson (guitar, pedal steel) and Noel O'Donnell (drums, glockenspiel, vocals). The four-part harmonies in a number of their songs have led to critical comparisons with Teenage Fanclub and The Beach Boys. Their guitar heavy powerpop has been compared to alternative rock bands such as Weezer, R.E.M. and The Lemonheads.
A series of independent releases and live performances led to a bidding war between major labels. The band signed with Island Records, and released their debut album, Friday Night Lights, in October 2008. In 2013 followed the second album ''Super De Luxe.(excerpts from Wiki)


In 2012, the band signed with Elefant Records. On 1 April 2013, Attic Lights released new single, "Say You Love Me" on Elefant Records. This was followed in May 2013 by the release of the band's second album, Super De Luxe.

 Attic Lights' second full-length album, 2013's Super De Luxe, expands upon the melodic pop of their 2008 debut, Friday Night Lights, with a bigger, more robust production style. Working once again with producer and Teenage Fanclub drummer Francis MacDonald, Attic Lights have crafted an album that is as infectiously melodic as anything they've done before, but feels more mainstream -- in the best possible way. The album finds the band showcasing its love of Scottish pop bands like Pilot and Teenage Fanclub, while also delving into some more dance-oriented, disco-influenced sounds that bring to mind the work of their similarly inclined contemporaries Phoenix and MGMT. Kicking off with the gargantuan glitter rock-sounding anthem "Say You Love Me," the band lays out a bombastic rebuke of scene-weary naysayers -- the kind who hyper-focus on everything they don't like rather than championing what they do. Singer Kev Sherry croons "Your likes are all defined by all the things you hate/All you can talk about is what they are wrong about and all of their mistakes." With the band's triumphant lead guitar lines laid down thick as pub smoke and a chorus that jubilantly cries "Just saaayyy you LOVE ME," the song is a celebratory command to simply let go and give in to the positive pop vibes about to come your way. And boy, do they come! Bassist Colin McArdle takes the vocal spotlight on a few tracks, like "Future Bound" and "Stay Before You Leave," lending them a particular '70s bubblegum pop vibe. Elsewhere, Sherry's songs, like the romantic "Breathe for Me" and the equally passionate "Mona Lisa," with its cinematic keyboard swells, are so sweeping and grand, you immediately want to hear them again as soon as they end. As Sherry pleads on the opening cut, "I just want to hear you say you love me," with Super De Luxe, you're likely to give Attic Lights exactly what they want.allmusic.com

Ich kann mich noch genau daran erinnern, als ich das erste Mal die Platte hörte...und nicht mehr ruhig sitzen bleiben konnte, praktisch durchs Zimmer ''flog''. Glitter Band- mäßiger Beat zu Beginn von ''Say you love me'' und dann die komplette Scheibe durch sowas von allerfeinsten Zuckerwattegitarren und Hooks, gleich pfundweise mit jugendlichem Drive vorgetragen, machten ''Super De Luxe'' für mich zur Scheibe des Jahres. Und genau in die Richtung geht es immer noch wenn ich das Album heute höre. Für mich ist die Platte alles, was das Wort ''Pop'' in meinem Kosmos bedeutet.
Okidoki
            SB1                                                                mp3mp3mp3@320320320

Der link ist wie immer in den Kommentaren

Ken Stringfellow - Touched (2001) mp3


Though his name might be unfamiliar to all but the most dedicated indie rock geeks, Ken Stringfellow has been flirting with stardom for over a decade, first as one-half of the Posies, then as a member of Big Star, a sideman with R.E.M., and a producer for indie upstarts like Damien Jurado. With the Posies on temporary hiatus, Stringfellow went into the studio in the summer of 2000 with legendary producer Mitch Easter, and the result is an indie pop album with classic sound that falls somewhere between Matthew Sweet and Elliott Smith. The first thing you notice about Touch is that the devil lies in the details: Whether it's the pedal steel guitar that wails below the Eagles-style country-rock of "Down Like Me" or the retro organ that lends a Doors-like trippiness to "Spanish Waltz," Stringfellow makes all the little things count. Of course, the polished pop songcraft of songs like "This One's On You" and "Sparrow" proves that the singer/songwriter's sound would likely pack just as much punch even if he were rockin' it folkie style, with just an acoustic guitar and his elastic voice. But with Easter's nimble touch behind the boards, you'll be glad he didn't. allmusic.com
                                          
This guy is on the way to a legend! ''What ?'' i hear some people say and they shake her heads in disbelief. But imho all the musical things where Stringfellow was involved as the leading head had a great extraordinary quality. Basically in Indiepop, Power pop, alternative pop at home in all of his efforts you can hear his influences which often are not american. Nevertheless he always sounds like an american artist. And i think that is the real reward of his work.
Okay, enough blabbed. Enjoy the music and later more but before i have a date wih my doctor.
Cheers
           SB1


link in the comments

Wednesday, 28 December 2016

The Chevelles - Rollerball Candy 1995 (Flac)



Rollerball Candy was released by Running Circle in early 1995. The album was more varied than Gigantic, displaying a punk sound in "Delirium" and including a melodic ballad called "Fall". Its 15 tracks made it a long album for a pop group but in essence it was tailor-made for Spanish rock and roll fans.
Initial sales of the record in Spain and Portugal were encouraging. Response from Spanish press and radio was excellent. The record received strong reviews in established Spanish rock zines like Ruta 66, Beaten Generation and La Musica, in which the band were compared to DM3 and The Dubrovniks.

The Chevelles are a great Power Pop band from Australia. If you like melodies like candy with rockin guitars and a real rock attitude you are right here.
“It’s the Who meets the Ramones meets the Easybeats meets Beach Blanket Bingo! It’s the criminals Australia wants to ship back to England and call it even! It’s the High Priests of the Barbarella Girl God Love Cult!
It’s The Chevelles!”

- Little Steven Van Zandt 





















Nothing more to say...have fun
                                                SB1


link...ahh you know eeh?!

John Lennon - The Alternate Shaved Fish (2005) @320


Shaved Fishis a compilation album by John Lennon and the Plastic Ono Band, released in October 1975 on Apple Records. It contains all of the singles that he had issued up to that point in the United States as a solo artist, with the exception of "Stand by Me", which had been released earlier that year. The only compilation of his non-Beatles recordings released during his lifetime, it peaked at number 8 in the UK and number 12 in the US. It was also Lennon's final release on Apple Records.
The compilation includes many of Lennon's most popular solo recordings, five of which had not yet appeared on an album: "Cold Turkey", "Instant Karma!", "Power to the People", the holiday single "Happy Xmas (War Is Over)" and "Give Peace a Chance". The latter appeared in truncated form, split to begin side one and end side two. Eight of these singles made the Top 40 on the Billboard chart, with "Whatever Gets You thru the Night" going to number 1; five made the top ten in the United Kingdom. "Imagine", never previously released as a single in the UK, was issued as such concurrent to the release of this album. Several of the master tapes were unavailable for the compilation, and dubs were used, some with shorter fadeouts. A later compact disc issue used the original masters, restoring the full fadeouts of these songs.
Its release came less than three weeks after the resolution of Lennon's long-running immigration dispute and the birth of Sean Lennon. The name of the album originates from the Japanese food katsuobushi, a kind of dried fish.
 The album was released in the UK on 24 October 1975, peaking at number 8. Released from the album on the same day in the UK was the single "Imagine", backed with "Working Class Hero", charting at number 6. The single was also Lennon's last single for Apple Records. The album later re-charted in the UK on 17 January 1981, at number 11. After the release of the album, Lennon's recording contract expired, in February 1976; Lennon was uninterested in re-signing with EMI/Capitol.

''The Alternate Shaved Fish'' contains 23 tracks with some interesting stuff. For me as Beatles fan i answered the call of duty when it was released:-). Hope you like it.

Cheers
          SB1

link in the comments

Tuesday, 27 December 2016

Duncan Browne - Journey - The Anthology 1967-1993 (2004)


Here is the wonderful anthology of Duncan Browne from the time of '67 to '93. This guy was heavily underrated.

Browne attended the London Academy of Music and Dramatic Art, studying both music theory and drama. He chose to become a musician when, in 1967, he met Andrew Loog Oldham, and signed with his Immediate Records label. His debut album Give Me Take You was issued in 1968.
His choral arrangement was used on the Tim Hardin penned "Hang On to a Dream" on the album Nice, as recorded by The Nice in 1969.
Browne's biggest hit in the UK was the song "Journey" (UK number 23),[4] and was as televised on Top of the Pops in 1972. The song was included on Browne's second album Duncan Browne in 1973.
In the 1970s, Browne formed the band Metro with Peter Godwin and released some records in the US on the Sire label. He released two solo albums: The Wild Places and Streets of Fire. The song "The Wild Places" was a hit single in the Netherlands. From the same period, "Criminal World", co-written by Browne with Peter Godwin, was recorded by David Bowie on his 1983 Let's Dance album.
In 1984–85 Browne composed and performed the music for the British television series Travelling Man, in collaboration with the programme's producer Sebastian Graham-Jones. The soundtrack was released on vinyl and CD. The track reached number 68 in the UK Singles Chart in December 1984.[4]
Browne also composed "Salva Me", the theme tune of the BBC series Shadow of the Noose in 1989, and it appeared on a compilation album with 19 other television theme tunes.
Browne died of cancer in 1993, aged 46.[3]  
taken by wikipedia

The album is in FLAC.

Greetings
               SB1

link in the comments

Ocean Colour Scene - 21 (Four Disc Box Set)


Falling between the energetic pop/rock of mod revival and the psychedelic experimentations of Traffic, Ocean Colour Scene came to be one of the leading bands of the traditionalist, post-Oasis British rock of the mid-'90s. Although they had formed in the late '80s and had several hits during the height of Madchester in the early '90s, the band didn't earn a large following until 1996, when their second album, Moseley Shoals, became a multi-platinum success story in the U.K. Their ascent was greatly aided by Paul Weller and Oasis' Noel Gallagher, who both publicly praised Ocean Colour Scene for keeping the flame of real rock & roll burning during the '90s. And, according to one specific definition, they were right, since Ocean Colour Scene was nothing if not rock & roll traditionalists, drawing heavily from British Invasion pop, psychedelia, soul, R&B, and blues-rock to create a reverential homage to classic rock. Their devotion to trad rock may have earned them decidedly mixed reviews, but that was the very thing that earned them a sizable following.
Ocean Colour Scene is comprised of Steve Cradock (lead guitar, keyboards, vocals), Simon Fowler (lead vocals, guitar), Damon Minchella (bass), and Oscar Harrison (drums). Prior to forming in 1990, the members of the band had played in a variety of other groups. During the late '80s, Cradock played in a mod revival band called the Boys. Though they released an independent EP called Happy Days and supported former Small Faces frontman Steve Marriott, the band never gained much of an audience. At the same time the Boys were active, Fowler and Minchella were in a Velvet Underground-influenced group called Fanatics, who released an EP, Suburban Love Songs, on the independent label Chapter 22 in the spring of 1989. Following the release of the single, the group's original drummer, Caroline Bullock, was replaced by Harrison, who had previously played with a reggae/soul band called Echo Base. Shortly after Harrison joined Fanatics, the group split up. Several months after their disbandment, Fowler, Minchella, and Harrison formed Ocean Colour Scene with Cradock, whom they met at a Stone Roses concert.
Appropriately, Ocean Colour Scene was initially heavily influenced by the Stone Roses. After performing a few concerts, the group built a small fan base and signed with a local indie label, !Phfft. Shortly after signing with !Phfft, Ocean Colour Scene became hyped as "the next big thing" by the British music weekly press, as their live shows and debut single, "Sway," earned extremely positive reviews during the first half of 1990. In the spring of 1991, they headed into the studio to record the debut album with Jimmy Miller, who worked on the Rolling Stones' classic albums of the late '60s and early '70s. Instead of concentrating on work, the band essentially drank away their hours in the studio, resulting in a batch of uneven recordings. Unsatisfied by the tapes, the band headed back into the studio with Hugo Nicolson, who had previously worked with Primal Scream.
By the time they completed the record, !Phfft had been acquired by Fontana Records, who bought the indie with the intent of owning the rights to Ocean Colour Scene. Despite their enthusiasm for the band, the label's head of A&R, Dave Bates, rejected the group's first attempt at the album and asked them to re-enter the studio to re-record most of the album with another producer, Tim Palmer, who had previously worked with Tin Machine. Palmer also remixed the remaining cuts, resulting in a slick, over-produced debut album that was delivered belatedly in the spring of 1992. By that time, the music press had abandoned the Madchester scene that the Stone Roses spawned and, in turn, they rejected the return of Ocean Colour Scene. The public also refused to buy the record and it sank upon its release. The band made some headway on an American tour, but tensions with Fontana continued to increase throughout the year.

Ocean Colour Scene returned to England halfway through the year, planning to record a new album quickly, but Bates rejected their new material. Soon, the band sued to get out of its Fontana contract. By the time it was settled in early 1993, the group owed hundreds of thousands of pounds to the label and they were back on the dole. Ocean Colour Scene continued to rehearse, often supported by their manager (and Steve's father), Chris Cradock, who put the family house up for mortgage. The band converted their rehearsal space into a recording studio and began recording constantly, but their break didn't arrive until they played a gig supporting Paul Weller's new band in early 1993. Weller was impressed with Steve Cradock's playing, and asked him to play on his forthcoming single, "The Weaver." Cradock gradually became part of Weller's backing band, performing on much of Weller's second solo album, Wild Wood. However, the guitarist didn't abandon Ocean Colour Scene -- all the money he was making was funneled back into the band, and he landed Fowler a gig as a backing vocalist for Weller. By the end of the 1993, Cradock, Fowler, and Minchella were all playing in Weller's band. The next break for Ocean Colour Scene arrived in late summer of 1994, when Noel Gallagher, the leader of Oasis, heard the band's tape in the offices of his record label. Gallagher offered OCS the opening slot for Oasis' breakthrough fall 1994 tour, which provided the group with needed exposure. Soon, the group was subject to a bidding war among several major labels, all of whom wanted the band to change their name. Eventually, the band signed with MCA in the summer of 1995; they were one of the few labels not to insist that the group change their name.
During early 1996, the hype machine began to go into overdrive for Ocean Colour Scene, as Gallagher proclaimed them the best band in Britain in several interviews and Chris Evans, a DJ on BBC's Radio 1, constantly played OCS's comeback single, "The Riverboat Song," essentially using it as his theme song. "The Riverboat Song" entered the charts at number 15 early in 1996. Moseley Shoals, the band's second album, was released in April of 1996, unexpectedly entering the charts at number two. The album was a fixture in the British Top Ten throughout 1996, spending six months total in the upper regions of the charts. Two subsequent singles from the record, "You've Got It Bad" and "The Day We Caught the Train," reached the Top Ten and the album continued to sell strongly throughout 1996, going multi-platinum in the U.K. Ocean Colour Scene also became a popular live attraction in Britain, selling out concerts during their summer tour. Moseley Shoals was released in America during the summer, but it failed to make much of an impact in the U.S.

As they were working on their third album, Ocean Colour Scene released the rarities compilation B-Sides: Seasides & Freerides in March 1997. By the late summer they had completed the album and had released "Hundred Mile City" as a single; it debuted at number two on the U.K. charts. Marchin' Already, OCS' third album, was released in September 1997 and debuted at number one in the U.K., knocking Oasis' Be Here Now off of the top slot. One from the Modern arrived in 1999, followed by Mechanical Wonder and the greatest-hits collection Songs for the Front Row: The Very Best of Ocean Colour Scene in 2001. North Atlantic Drift was released in 2003, followed by Hyperactive Workout for the Flying Squad in 2005. Live Acoustic: At the Jam House arrived in 2006, followed by a collection of all-new material, On the Leyline, in 2007. On February 1, 2010, to mark the 21st anniversary of the band, Ocean Colour Scene released an all-new collection of studio recordings called Saturday, which was followed later in the year by the box set retrospective 21. OCS spent a fair chunk of 2011 celebrating the 15th anniversary of Moseley Shoals -- their 1996 breakthrough that saw a double-disc deluxe reissue in 2011 -- and then in the next year they started work on a new album called Painting, which was released in February 2013.
Stephen Thomas Erlewine allmusic.com

21:
A four-disc box celebrating the band's 21st birthday, OCS21 is heavy on rarities -- BBC sessions, single versions, edits, live tracks, alternate takes, and demos -- the kinds of things that are full-blown collector bait. Anchoring these oddities are the staples -- album versions of "The Riverboat Song," "The Day We Caught the Train," "Hundred Mile High City" -- but don't think of this set as a way for a somewhat casual fan to get Ocean Colour Scene's 86 greatest songs in one fell swoop. This is a gift for the dedicated fans, the ones who have been with them since the beginning, and they'll find plenty of offbeat gems to cherish here.
86 songs on four discs from two decades. mp3@320
Hope you have fun

Cheers
          SB1

link in the comments

Monday, 26 December 2016

Billy Thermal - Billy Thermal 2014 Power pop @320

In the late '70s and early '80s, seemingly every person in Southern California with the ability or ambition to write a pop hook got a haircut, put on a skinny tie, and formed a new wave band, figuring that the West Coast power pop boom was going to be their ticket to the big time. With the exception of the Knack, the Motels, and a few other stragglers, not many of those bands struck gold, but plenty of folks devoted a few years to prospecting, and years before Billy Steinberg started writing hits for Madonna, Whitney Houston, and Cyndi Lauper, and Bob Carlisle topped the charts with "Butterfly Kisses," the two were playing L.A. clubs in a band called Billy Thermal. Billy Thermal's self-titled album for Planet Records was shelved when the power pop boom went bust in 1980, but heard more than 30 years later thanks to an archival release from Omnivore Records, it certainly points to the success Steinberg would later enjoy as a songwriter; if his new wave moves seem more than a bit stiff, he certainly knew where to put the angular melodic accents and how to make his songs sound just a bit edgy without saying much that might actually threaten anyone's sensibilities. If you were looking for made-to-order new wave/power pop tunes, Steinberg had the skills to deliver them, and the fact that seasoned pros Linda Ronstadt and Pat Benatar both cut songs from the unreleased Billy Thermal album demonstrates his craft was already quite solid in 1980. The band was also very good; Craig Hull's guitar work is taut and imaginative if sometimes more hard rock than new wave, and bassist Carlisle and drummer Efran Espinosa were a tight, wiry, versatile rhythm section. Billy Thermal weren't one of the L.A. power pop bands that transcended the genre, like the Plimsouls or the Beat, but if they don't often sound at all innovative, their craft is truly impressive. If you were a fan of the West Coast new wave boom of the late '70s and early '80s, this lost artifact will probably be right up your alley, and fans of Steinberg's later work as a tunesmith may not be bowled over by it, but they won't be let down, either. Mark Deming allmusic.com


Imho this is an above-average piece of music. Catchy melodies, great background vocals, tasty different arrangement of the songs, fine guitarwork. Powerpop with a New Wave feel...

Cheers
          SB1



link in the comments

Baby Lemonade - 68% Pure Imagination (1996) @320

A gleefully silly romp through the more twee side of '60s pop culture, the full-length debut by Los Angeles' Baby Lemonade is like their compatriots the Wondermints (most of whom guest here) on a laughing-gas jag. Co-leaders Mike Randle and Rusty Squeezebox have a thing for silly puns (what child of the '70s didn't call Little Miss Physical "Oblivion Neutron Bomb" at least once?) and goofy nods to popular culture of all stripes ("Santanaclaus," anyone?), the group is also capable of direct, no-nonsense pop songs like the rattling "Shake the Shelter" and the lovely ballad "Luminosity." The best songs, however, are those on which Randle and Squeezebox let their pop-freak flags fly, as on the Smile-like suite "Brooke and the Sandman" and a lovely, gentle recasting of Love's "You Set the Scene" that transforms the song into an extended, almost Brazilian groove. The closing "Open Up," a ten-and-a-half-minute stab at a heavier psychedelia, falls flat in comparison.allmusic.com

Cheers
          SB1

link in the comments



Sunday, 25 December 2016

Bubblegum Lemonade - Some Like It Pop (2013)

For me this is a great piece of pop music and i love this kind of music. Let us hear what the prof's from radio show and blog '' The Sound Of Confusion'' says about it:

Releasing an album that's short on surprises isn't often seen as a bonus, more a lack imagination or ideas, or worse still, a retread of what the band in question has done before. This third full-length from Lawrence McClusky's Bubblegum Lemonade project doesn't offer much that you won't have heard from previous records, including those by his other band, Strawberry Whiplash. In this instance, this familiarity is a blessing, not a curse, as the prolific songwriter never fails to write strong tracks and, as the title suggests, pop melodies are not in short supply; obviously a crucial factor when making music that fits the indiepop bracket. Given the fact that 'Some Like It Pop' was released just a fortnight after Lou Reed's passing, the Velvet Underground-inspired artwork probably wasn't planned as a tribute to a lost legend, it was planned as a nod to a living great and a influence, and has now become more poignant than intended.


It's difficult not to fall back on chalices such as "honeyed" when describing just how pretty a song like 'Don't Hurry Baby' is, but from the backing vocals to the layers of guitar to (that word again) the melody, that's exactly what this is. The title could be a reference to the similarly perfect pop of The Beach Boys' 'Don't Worry Baby'; they're another influence it's difficult to avoid. 'Dead Poets Make Me Smile' is pure '80s guitar-pop that would probably be considered a classic had it been released in that decade. It's not all sunshine and flowers though; 'First Rule Of Book Club' has a more pensive vibe and 'You Can't Go Back Again' talks about the destruction of someone's past that has "turned to dust", however this is quickly followed by the splendid, dreamy single 'Have You Seen Faith?' which again sparkles like a glitter ball in the bright daylight. Another particularly bright spot is 'Your Valentine (Takes me Back In Time)' which has an extra buzz about it and is perfect single material, oh, and you don't go calling a song 'She Brings The Sunshine' if it's to be downbeat and sorrowful. 'Some Like It Pop' won't change the world, but it will make it seem like a better place for forty minutes or so.
Musically, you could take the twinkling opening of first track 'This Is The New Normal' and find a direct lineage back to songs like 'Sunday Morning', but the jangling guitars follow a different path, proving that the usual reference points of The Byrds, Big Star, Flying Nun Records and C86 are as important as the Velvets. Plus there's something distinctly Scottish feeling about adding violin to guitar tunes of this nature, thanks in part to Belle & Sebastian. While we're on the subject of common references, the lovely 'It's Got To be Summer' has a Jesus & Mary Chain feel, minus the feedback overload. All of the above could indicate that this is just another decent indiepop album, and in a way that's true, yet the calibre of songs is what will make you keep returning for repeat helpings, and the lack of filler is also a crucial factor. This is a solid collection, with the only real criticism being that some of the melodies are close to other McClusky compositions, but on the flip side, it shows that there is a definite individuality here, and being able to blindly recognise a band fairly quickly in a scene as crowded as the indiepop world can only be a good thing.



Hope you have the same fun with this record like i do and i think you know where the link is...

Cheers
           SB1

The Yearning - Dreamboats & Lemonade (2014)

British orchestral indie entity styled after early girl group melodrama and '60s chamber pop.
 
British songwriter/producer Joe Moore began the Yearning in 2012, modeling his orchestral pop songs after the teenage tragedies and melodramatic heartbreaks of early girl groups and '60s chamber pop. Moore enlisted lead vocalist Maddie Dobie to bring his songs to life and crafted his nostalgic studio compositions in the style of Bacharach and the Beach Boys, enlisting a host of session musicians. The Yearning first appeared in the form of several mini-LPs, beginning with 2012's Jukebox Romance and following it in 2013 with Still in Love, both on Elefant Records. A full-length surfaced in 2014 in the glowing harmonies and throwback tones of Dreamboats & Lemonade. It was followed in 2016 by the more melancholy Evening Souvenirs, which featured the Cotswold Voices choir on select tracks.
The album is in m4a format.

Cheers
           SB1


New Link m4a

Saturday, 24 December 2016

Ho Ho Ho Merry Christmas!






Hello everybody out there on this very special day (whatever this means for every individual person). For me the day began after a cup of coffee immediately with work. My lovely wife gave the  instructions and i had to do it...last arrangements in the living room (where we will celebrate the christmas eve) like decorate the room and the christmas tree and any other little things.
But i like to do things like that, because it is for a great lovely and beautiful meeting in the evening with the family and beloved friends. The good news for me is: It is strictly forbidden for me to enter the kitchen. :-) !!!

Okay Ladies and Gentleman i wish all of you a wonderful Christmas celebration with good friends and family. Full of harmony and good good good GOOD VIBRATIONS. I hope all will have a nice day.


 My post for today is a collection of Power pop songs . I did the collection by myself. It's called ''SB's Power pop Collection Vol.1''. I think it is a little bit more personally post for this special day.
If you like it grab it - if not take my best wishes for christmas.

Here is the tracklist for the collection:


01 The Finkers - This Time It's Love
02 Feel - She Makes the Make-Up Look Good.mp3
03 Martin Luther Lennon - I Own the World.mp3
04 The Shazam - The Concept.mp3
05 Starclock - Yo Pussycat.mp3
06 The Royalties - Bring It On.mp3
07 The Syrups - Miss I Don't Understand You.mp3
08 Turnback, The - Beyond Belief.mp3
09 Brainpool - Ready! Steady! Go!.mp3
10 Big Kid - When I Met the Girl.mp3
11 The Shelters - Birdwatching.mp3
12 Farrah - Do You Ever Think of Me.mp3
13 The Innocents - Your Precious Touch.mp3
14 Brainpool - Holidays.mp3
15 The Waking Hours - Whispered News.mp3
16 The Struts - Put Your Money On Me.mp3
17 Jason Falkner - Do Ya.mp3
18 Lisa Mychols - Hearts Beat in Stereo.mp3
19 The Struts - Put Your Money On Me.mp3
20 Myhr, David - Loveblind.mp3
21 Ashley, Corin - Geez Louise.mp3
22 Merrymakers, The - I'll Feel a Whole Lot Better.mp3
23 DM3 - Can't Get What You Want.mp3
24 Millard Powers - She's So Clean.mp3
25 The Sun Kings - Only a Night.mp3


Okay, the link is in the comments

Three cheers
See you
             SB1



Friday, 23 December 2016

Bobby Jameson - Color Him In (1967) (produced by Curt Boettcher) [FLAC][2006 Reissue]

Jameson was a mysterious figure who might be most known for recording a Mick Jagger-Keith Richards composition that the Rolling Stones never released, "All I Want Is My Baby," on a 1965 single. This is one of his two albums, and it's much more a Californian-sounding, faintly psychedelic-speckled pop/rock record than a British Invasion one. Produced by Curt Boettcher, it's an odd LP, not so much for its weirdness -- it's not that weird -- as its strange juxtaposition of 1966-1967 rock styles. Jameson writes intense songs of soul-searching and questioning, yet the tunes are dressed up in rather normal good-time Southern California pop/rock arrangements, with cheerful female backing vocals that verge on the too-chipper, sometimes to the point of annoyance.
At times, his sly, mind-rushing-to-keep-pace-with-the-tongue lyrics recall early Arthur Lee, particularly on "The New Age," where the phrasing is extremely similar to the kind Lee used on early Love tracks like "You I'll Be Following." "Windows & Doors" also bears an early Love influence. Yet "I Love You More Than You Know" could almost be Philadelphia blue-eyed soul, so straight-sounding is it, while "Jenny" isn't far from easy listening lounge lizard crooning, without much apparent irony. It's an interesting, but not terribly interesting, mildly eccentric pop/rock album with a dash of flower power. It's not, incidentally, nearly as good (or Love-influenced) as another rare LP of roughly the same time, Chris Lucey's Songs of Protest and Anti-Protest, that is apparently the work of Jameson under a pseudonym.

West Coast folk-rocker Bobby Jameson is best known -- or, perhaps, not known at all -- for Songs of Protest and Anti-Protest, the sought-after cult LP he recorded under the alias Chris Lucey. Born Robert Parker Jameson in Geneva, Illinois, Jameson cut his debut single, "I Wanna Love You," for the Talamo label in early 1964. The record was a regional hit, and even earned him an appearance on American Bandstand. Although the follow-ups "Okey Fanokey Baby" and "All Alone" went nowhere, Jameson nevertheless captured the attention of Rolling Stones producer Andrew Loog Oldham, and in late 1964 he flew to London to record the Decca single "All I Want Is My Baby," co-written by Oldham and Stones guitarist Keith Richards. (The B-side, "Each and Every Day of the Year," credits authorship to Richards and Mick Jagger.) After a 1956 one-off for the Brit imprint, "I Wanna Know," Jameson returned to Los Angeles, where he befriended producer Marshall Lieb. At this time Lieb was in the midst of helming the debut Surrey Records release by folkie Chris Ducey, but with the album covers already printed and the disc ready to ship, contractual snafus forced the project into limbo. Lieb coerced Jameson into writing and recording a new batch of tunes based on Ducey's existing song titles, and after some creative tinkering with the cover art, Songs of Protest and Anti-Protest -- now credited to Chris Lucey and, for reasons unknown, featuring a photo of Rolling Stone Brian Jones -- finally hit retail. Promoted via what was then the most expensive and lavish Billboard advertising supplement ever printed, the album -- a deeply idiosyncratic psych-folk opus closely resembling the classic early LPs by Arthur Lee and Love -- nevertheless proved a commercial flop; in the U.K., it appeared under Jameson's own name and a different title, Too Many Mornings, but still stiffed. Jameson did not resurface until mid-1966, releasing "Gotta Find My Roogalator" -- arranged by Frank Zappa, and recorded with L.A. session virtuosos including Carol Kaye on bass and Larry Knechtel on piano -- on Pat Boone's Penthouse label. He then signed to Verve, where the Our Productions team of Curt Boettcher, Jim Bell, and Steve Clark helmed his 1967 LP Color Him In.


But that's not the end of the story of Bobby Jameson.This guy had a really hard life .He told his story from his view on his blog. Take a look. The adress is bobbyjameson.blogspot.com. Bobby Jameson died in may 15th 2015 at the age of 70.





I will post the ''Chris Lucey's Songs of Protest and Anti-Protest'' at a later date if there is any interest.
The link as always in the comments


Cheers
           SB1






The Astral Projection - The Astral Scene (1968) Sunshine Psychedelic Pop (Flac)

 



Heavily orchestrated and glistening with birdsong harmonies and melodies, The Astral Scene rests firmly on the soft-rock wing occupied by the Cowsills, the Association and the Blades of Grass. The production values are clean and sparkly, the structures are adventurous enough to prompt repeated spins, and the performances are disciplined and proportioned.
Tracks like “(Mind Flight) Overture – The Airways Of The Imagination,” “The Happening People,” “Accordion Pleated Mind” and “(Astral Exploration)…Overtures, Dreams, Shadows And Illusions” illustrate the group’s positive affirmations to solid effects. Rhythms drift, float and soar, and the textures of the tunes are flush with color and motion. Pumping big brass sounds, string arrangements and flower pop motifs into a single blender, The Astral Scene rolls in as an early indication of new age music. Brain food for the ears, the disc is certainly a curious period piece.
In my opinion this a completely underrated album. Great arrangements paired with good songs and fine vocals. Please give it a try.You want be disappointed if you like this genre.
Cheers
           SB1



link in the comments

Thursday, 22 December 2016

The Oxfords - Flying Up Through The Sky Vol. One & Two '66-'72 Flac




When Gear Fab Records re-released the Oxfords' sole LP from 1970 called Flying Up Through the Sky, fleshing it out with various band ephemera in 2001, it was assumed that it was the last word on the Louisville group, amounting to a complete recorded works. Turns out it wasn't. When the Allen-Martin Recording Studio where the Oxfords tracked their LP (it was called Sambo Recording Studio when the Oxfords worked there) was demolished in 2006, local session musicians Marvin Maxwell and Walker Ed Amick rescued the studio's master tape library from a cruel and forgotten fate at the bottom of the corner dumpster and began the long task of transferring the multi-track masters into the digital domain. One of their discoveries was that the Oxfords had recorded a fair amount of material that hadn't appeared on Flying Up Through the Sky, leading to this second volume of Oxfords tracks from Gear Fab.
Although generally remembered as a sunshine pop band with some psychedelic overtones, the Oxfords emerge on this second helping as a much more versatile band than that, touching down at times close to jazz and what could almost be deemed a kind of proto-country-rock. At other times they sound like a southern version of early Jefferson Airplane, thanks in no small part to the strong and often sultry vocals of lead singer Jill DeMarco. That diversity is impressive, and one can't help but wonder what might have developed had the band stayed together and not called it quits in 1972.
Among the clear highlights on this addenda volume are a speeded up and rocked out version of Richard & Mimi Fariña's "Reno, Nevada," the wonderfully atmospheric "I Can't Remember Your Name," the hard driving "Year of Jubilo" (based on a Civil War-era song by Henry Clay Work), a Mamas & Papas-like cover of Del Shannon's "Runaway," and the very pretty and jazz-inflected backing track called "Underscore" that concludes this collection (and provides a possible clue to what direction the Oxfords may have taken if they had remained together). In all, it makes a nice coda to the first volume and helps paint a larger, clearer picture of what the band was all about.allmusic.com

Yep, that's what allmusic says about it. First time i heard about a second volume i was really surprised because i never had heard about it. I post the both voplumes in one rar file. I hope you like it.
'till next time
                     SB1



link in the comments