Donovan ‎- Universal Soldier (1967) (UK Mono Pressing) (24-Bit/96Khz + 16-Bit/44.1Khz) (Vinyl Rip)

Donovan ‎– Universal Soldier
Vinyl | LP Cover (1:1) | FLAC | 24bit/96kHz & 16bit/44kHz
Label: Marble Arch Records ‎/ MAL 718 | UK Release: 1967 | Genre: Country-Folk

Previously I talked about to the country-folk era from Donovan (an era that I revere), and which are 3 LPs exactly: “What’s Bin Did And What’s Bin Hid” (1965), “Fairytale” (1965) and that I present today “Universal Soldier” (1967), which is not exactly an official LP, because is a compilation of various singles that appeared between his two first albums.
And it is really interesting because there are different versions of their well known folk hits. For example, here appears one version of “Catch the Wind” accompanied by an
String orchestra, also the first take of “Colours” monophonic with harmonica. A very good album, is one of my favorites.
Ah! Put attention to the interpretation of a song by Bert Jansch “Do you hear me now”, really good.

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David Gates – First (1973) (US Pressing) (24-Bit/96Khz + 16-Bit/44.1Khz) (Vinyl Rip)

David Gates – First (Featuring “Suite: Clouds, Rain”)
Vinyl | LP Cover (1:1) | FLAC | 24bit/96kHz & 16bit/44kHz
Label: Elektra / EKS-75066 | Release: 1973 | Genre: Country-Rock

The first solo David Gates’s album. This LP is great from start to finish and shows that the group “Bread” was David Gates, 5 tracks on this album are indispensable, led by the famous “Suite: Clouds and rain” as a child listening to this song made ​​me dream (and still does, I am a child yet, heh). Good mix of country, pop and rock.

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Buck Clayton – The Complete CBS Buck Clayton Jam Sessions 1953-1956 (1993) (200g 8LP BOX Mosaic) (24-Bit/96Khz) (Vinyl Rip)

Buck Clayton – The Complete CBS Buck Clayton Jam Sessions 1953-1956 (1993) {200g 8LP BOX Mosaic}
Vinyl rip @ 24/96 | FLAC(tracks) – 6.79 Gb | Full Scans – 57 Mb | Label: Mosaic Records
Genre: Jazz | Rec. CAT #MQ8-144

The Complete CBS Buck Clayton Jam Sessions (extremely rare & limited 1993 US 32-track Mosaic audiophile 8-LP box set) is a superlative package contains all the jam session recordings for CBS, plus alternate takes and originals restored to their full length, with soloists including Joe Newman, Ruby Braff, Urbie Green, Coleman Hawkins, Woody Herman & more. Housed in a beautifully presented textured outer black box with front pasted picture cover, complete with an informative 20-page LP sized booklet, featuring stunning black & white session photographs and extensive liner notes). (more…)

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Coupé Cloué ‎- The Preacher (1978) (US Pressing) (24-Bit/96Khz) (Vinyl Rip)

Coupé Cloué ‎– The Preacher
Vinyl | LP Cover (1:1) | FLAC | 24bit/96kHz
Label: Mini Records / MRS 1062 | Release: 1978| Genre: Martinique-French Antilles

An enigmatic guitarist and singer, Coupé Cloué acquired this nickname (translated as “kickout”) from his prowess on the soccer field. He is famous, or rather notorious, for his lyrics containing sexual double-entendres, long “raps” ranging from risqué to romantic, and social satire.
His “compas mamba” (peanut compas) seem very African, with a guitar style resembling West African highlife and the use of Cuban bongo drums and bamboo tubes played with sticks in addition to the standard conga and drum kit. Appearing on many album covers wearing African clothing, Coupé Cloué, with his shaved head, cuts a striking figure. This may explain why he was given the title “Le Roi” (the king) when he played in the Ivory Coast, West Africa, in 1975. Of all the electric Caribbean bands, Coupé Cloué has the strongest African sound, which shows the strength of his roots, for he claims he never heard African music before his 1975 trip. Son Haiti: Best of Coupe Cloue was released in 1999 by Arcade.

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Bob Dylan – Pat Garrett & Billy The Kid (1973) (24-Bit/96Khz + 16-Bit/44.1Khz) (Vinyl Rip)

Bob Dylan – Pat Garrett & Billy The Kid (Featuring the smash hit “Knockin’ on Heaven’s Door”)
Vinyl | LP Cover (1:1) | FLAC | 24bit/96kHz & 16bit/44kHz
Genre: Counrtry-Folk/Soundtrack | Label: Columbia PC 32460 | Release: 1973

Today I move to the ‘Far West’, heh, heh. Nothing less than the teacher-poet and the most influential country-rock singer of the last century: Bob Dylan. For this, I checked in my collection and not to repeat what others have shared (a round of applause for them), I took this great soundtrack (curiously little known). My edition is the original, that the letters in ‘dry stamp’.
Well, I saw this movie, being a bit slow maintains interest. Good performance, James Coburn (Pat Garrett) is remarkable. Besides acting another singer Kris Kristofferson (Billy the Kid) appears and. .. Dylan, as a certain ‘Alias’.
After seeing the movie I immediately went to buy the LP … and get 5 seconds later, one buyer is between his fingers. Another story, there arose a great friendship.
Music: great, great melodies (yes, Dylan is an excellent composer). Well and not less that this LP appears one of the great Dylan’s song “Knockin ‘on Heaven’s Door”. Who owns the press, already has an important part of the venerable Bob Dylan discography.

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Black Widow ‎– Sacrifice (1970) (1st UK Pressing) (24-Bit/96Khz + 16-Bit/44.1Khz) (Vinyl Rip)

Black Widow ‎– Sacrifice (Featuring “Come To The Sabbat”)
Vinyl | LP Cover (1:1) | FLAC | 24bit/96kHz & 16bit/44kHz
Label: CBS ‎/ S 63948, CBS / 63948 | Release: 1970 | Genre: Heavy-Progressive

Essential: a masterpiece of progressive rock music.
I got acquainted by this band a very long time ago. A friend of mine lend me once a CBS compilation called Fill Your Head With Rock in 1971. One song of theirs was featured (I guess that you all can imagine which one).
The opening track In Ancient Days is a mix of psychedelia combined with heavy keys. Invading brass can be heard as well. Such a song might sound outdated but it is always a pleasure to listen to. It is very much in the style available during that period. I quite like the song.
When you would listen to the most famous piece from this album, you will notice some evident Tull influences. There are fine fluting, good harmony and hypnotic rhythm: all this being topped by some now famous lyrics. I have loved this track instantly; at the time (I was twelve years old) the lyrics remained alien to me, but I was already attracted by, let’s say, a special mood. This is the second highlight.
This album is a long blend of heavy sources (bass and brass combined with strong drumming) and more sophisticated (prog) moments.
The most delicate in the genre is Seduction which starts very gently. Almost a pastoral affair: the sweet fluting is definitely providing this lighter aspect and the use of some orchestrations only adds to the feeling. An instrumental and jazzy part takes the relay at half time but the psyche taste is still noticeable. The song beautifully ends as it had started: almost Trespass-esque. Another good song after all.
This album is rather pleasant: no weak tracks are to be found and it should be appealing to the ones interested in the early seventies. Heavy psychedelic? Maybe. But prog for sure (Attack Of The Demon).
The closing track also has a lot to share with Tull (who released Benefit the same year as this album). The backing band is excellent and I am quite found of the great fluting during the middle part. The whole song (over eleven minutes) is an ode to heavy music. It is a solid boogie track and it is is a great way to close. It is my preferred track of this album. Seven out of ten. OK, I’ll upgrade it to four stars.

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Barclay James Harvest ‎– Everyone Is Everybody Else (1974) (24-Bit/96Khz + 16-Bit/44.1Khz) (Vinyl Rip)

Barclay James Harvest ‎– Everyone Is Everybody Else (Featuring “For No One”)
Vinyl | LP Cover (1:1) | FLAC | 24bit/96kHz & 16bit/44kHz
Label: Polydor / 2383 286 | UK Release: 1974| Genre: Progressive-Rock

About ‘Barclay James Harvest,’ I can safely say they’ve 2 works to the best progressive rock I have ever heard and are the following: I am presenting today ‘Everyone Is Everybody Else’ and the double live LP called ‘Barclay James Harvest – Live ‘, both published in 1974, a key date for me.
In ‘Everyone Is Everybody Else’, BJH debut on Polydor. I well remember how it got this LP in my hands, I went to a shop specializing in all rock’s types to buy the double LP “Live”. On that day the salesman LP awarded a gift, nothing less than ‘Everyone Is Everybody Else’! It was an excellent day and the music of this LP is round. Excellent arrangements, exquisite Mellotron use (which instrument, Lord). BJH without great voices achieve proper harmony with those features of the Beatles at times.
The songs left in 1st. rise to ‘For no one’, beautiful, I think here all his BJH’s genius. Another I like is ‘See me see you ‘,’ Negative Earth ‘,’ Paper wings’, also of course ‘Child of the universe’.
In fact, any big hits are three or four songs on this album.
Well, well! is the word.

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Ambassadeurs ‎- Best Of Ambassadeurs (1983) (FR Pressing) (24-Bit/96Khz) (Vinyl Rip)

Ambassadeurs ‎– Best Of Ambassadeurs
Vinyl | LP Cover (1:1) | FLAC | 24bit/96kHz
Label: Celluloid / CEL 6640 | FR Release: 1983 | Genre: African-Roots

In 1973 Salif Keita joined the group, Les Ambassadeurs. Keita and Les Ambassadeurs fled political unrest in Mali during the mid-1970s for Abidjan, Ivory Coast and subsequently changed the group’s name to “Les Ambassadeurs Internationaux”. The reputation of Les Ambassadeurs Internationaux rose to the international level in the 1970s, and in 1977 Keita received a National Order award from the president of Guinea, Sékou Touré.
He is the father of Paralympian athlete Nantenin Keita.
Keita moved to Paris in 1984 to reach a larger audience. His music combines traditional West African music styles with influences from both Europe and the Americas. Musical instruments that are commonly featured in Keita’s work include balafons, djembes, guitars, koras, organs, saxophones, and synthesizers. In 1990, Keita contributed “Begin the Beguine” to the Cole Porter tribute/AIDS benefit album Red Hot + Blue, produced by the Red Hot Organization.
Keita found success in Europe as one of the African stars of world music, but his work was sometimes criticised for the gloss of its production and for the occasional haphazard quality.[citation needed] However, shortly after the turn of the Millennium he returned to Bamako in Mali to live and record. His first work after going home, 2002’s Moffou was hailed as his best album in many years[citation needed], and Keita was inspired to build a recording studio in Bamako, which he used for his album M’Bemba, released in October 2005.
Guest artists on his albums have included Weather Report founders Joe Zawinul and Wayne Shorter, drummer Paco Sery, guitarist Carlos Santana, and percussionist Bill Summers.
Keita’s album, La Différence, was produced around the end of 2009. The work is dedicated to the struggle of the world albino community (victims of human sacrifice), for which Keita has been crusading all his life. In one of the album’s tracks, the singer calls others to understand that “difference” does not mean “bad” and to show love and compassion towards albinos like everyone else:”I am black/ my skin is white/ so I am white and my blood is black [albino]/…I love that because it is a difference that’s beautiful…”, “some of us are beautiful some are not/some are black some are white/all that difference was on purpose…for us to complete each other/let everyone get his love and dignity/the world will be beautiful.”
La Différence is unique in that for the first time Keita has clearly and boldly combined different melodic influences to produce a highly original musical feel, with a wide range of appeal[citation needed]. The album was recorded between Bamako, Beirut, Paris, and Los Angeles. This unique musical feel is reinforced by soulful pitches in the track “Samigna” emanating from the trumpet of the great Lebanese jazzman Ibrahim Maaluf.
La Difference won Keita one of the biggest musical awards of his career: the Best World Music 2010 at the Victoires de la musique.

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Alan Stivell ‎- Reflets (1970) (FR Pressing) (24-Bit/96Khz + 16-Bit/44.1Khz) (Vinyl Rip)

Alan Stivell ‎– Reflets
Vinyl | LP Cover (1:1) | FLAC | 24bit/96kHz & 16bit/44kHz
Label: Fontana / 6312 011 | French Pressing | Release: 1970 | Genre: Progressive-Folk

Another must from Alan Stivell, is this album “Reflets”.
If I may give an opinion, this LP has among its top albums: excellent harp arrangements with electric instrumentation (guitar, organ, etc.), recording the year 1970. I mean we are facing that exquisite progressive sound of those years. In my walk to Stivell’s discography, I think the best of it ends up in his LP “Live in Dublin” (and I’ll rip, maybe in the next future). 😉
5 stars, no doubt.

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SBB – Nowy Horyzont (1975) (Polish Pressing) (24-Bit/96Khz + 16-Bit/44.1Khz) (Vinyl Rip)

SBB – Nowy Horyzont
Vinyl | LP Cover (1:1) | FLAC | 24bit/96kHz & 16bit/44kHz
Label: Polskie Nagrania Muza / SX 1206 | Polish Pressing | Release: 1975 | Genre: Progressive-Rock

I believe this was the first studio album they released back in 1975, although they did release “Pamiec” later the same year. I actually like this one better then “Pamiec”. I just feel they impliment a lot of good ideas on this album and for the most part they are all a success. Lots of experimental meandering and of course all three of these guys play like they’re from another planet, especially the drummer. “Na Pierwszy Ogien” has an amazing intro before steady drums take over with guitar soloing over top. Check out the drumming 3 minutes in ! A calm with piano follows. “Blysk” is uptempo as drums lead the way.The guitar is lighting it up big time a minute in. Some nice organ runs later. Piano ends it. “Nowy Horyzont” is the longest track on side one at 8 1/2 minutes. It opens with pounding drums and synths before a calm with gentle guitar takes over before a minute. It starts to build before 3 minutes. Nice bass. Great sound 5 minutes in as guitar, bass and drums all shine. Synths before 6 1/2 minutes and piano ends it.
“Ballada O Pieciu Glodnych” is experimental as we hear waves of sound with spoken words coming in. “Wolnosc Nami” is the 20 minute side long ending tune. We begin with an experimental intro with piano finally coming out of it. Vocal melodies 4 1/2 minutes in. Drums and a gorgeous soundscape take over 6 1/2 minutes in. This is so emotional, especially after what has gone on before. Some nice piano melodies 10 1/2 minutes as it calms right down. It gets experimental again then drums come pounding in at 13 1/2 minutes. It turns dark and ominous 15 1/2 minutes in as drums pound away (any excuse). A change after 17 minutes as piano arrives and tinkles away to the end of the song.
This was a pleasant surprise for me, it kept my interest throughout and it can be quite challenging at times.

progarchives.com

Side A
1. Na Pierwszy Ogień (Curtain Raiser) 3:15
2. Błysk (A Flash) 2:45
3. Nowy Horyzont (The New Horizon) 7:47
4. Ballada O Pięciu Głodnych (A Ballad About The Five Hungry Ones) 3:55
Side B
1. Wolność Z Nami (Freedom With Us) 20:00


Bass Guitar, Piano, Synthesizer [Moog], Vocals – Józef Skrzek
Guitar – Antymos Apostolis
Percussion – Jerzy Piotrowski

Download:

http://usenet.fun/2e79a55efcc0/SBBNowyHoryzontLPDVD.part1.rar (24-96)
http://usenet.fun/2f627a041ebe/SBBNowyHoryzontLPDVD.part2.rar

http://usenet.fun/2e79a55efcbe/SBBNowyHoryzontLPCD.rar (16-44)

or

http://usenet.fun/plzc61g5k612/SBBNowyHoryzontLPDVD.part1.rar.html
http://usenet.fun/zqgxwjxgvzew/SBBNowyHoryzontLPDVD.part2.rar.html

http://usenet.fun/ialt7nns5zz9/SBBNowyHoryzontLPCD.rar.html

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Ralph Towner ‎- Solo Concert (1980) (US Pressing) (24-Bit/96Khz + 16-Bit/44.1Khz) (Vinyl Rip)

Ralph Towner ‎– Solo Concert
Vinyl | LP Cover (1:1) | FLAC | 24bit/96kHz & 16bit/44kHz
Label: ECM Records / ECM 1173 | Release: 1980 | Genre: Acoustic-Jazz Fusion

Ralph Towner’s Solo Concert holds a special place in my ECM-adoring heart, for it was my introduction to a guitarist whose skills have since become staples of my listening life. Lovingly recorded in the open concert spaces of Munich and Zurich, Solo Concert is to the guitar what Keith Jarrett’s The Köln Concert is to the piano. It’s that good.
Towner’s own compositions make up the bulk of the album. The opening “Spirit Lake” is the most transcendent of these and exemplifies Towner’s craft as both technician and melodic wellspring. Notes drip from his 12-string with shimmering lucidity, dipping below every motif it can swing from as it blossoms into a brilliant flourish of an ending. What at first seems an abstract improvisational exercise in “Train Of Thought” reveals the instrument’s hidden voices, in which a pulsing bass lingers and harmonic clusters soar. The staggered melodies and banjo-like articulations of “Zoetrope” contrast superbly with “Chelsea Courtyard,” in which dissonant arpeggios lie in the grass, above which the clouds are so thin they’re barely visible, and motivations even more so. Still, the music offers more than enough provocation as nostalgias flit by the windows of our attention, the curtains of which Towner opens to let in the light of a half-remembered day.
Towner also lays his hands on a pocketful of sparkling covers. Of these, the two by John Abercrombie—“Ralph’s Piano Waltz” and “Timeless”—are notable for their use of thumbed anchors, which provide a ghostly counterpoint to wider runs in the upper registers. Lilting syncopations trade places with jazzier throwbacks, packing melodic energy into increasingly compact cells. Yet it is with “Nardis” (Davis/Evans) that Towner truly enthralls. Played on classical guitar, it is a vivid standout that jumps headfirst into its themes before unraveling them in a blissful wave. Towner’s deft harmonies and prowess at the fingerboard leap with the precision of synchronized swimmers about to clinch a gold.
This is an intelligently assembled program of complementary music that shows the depth and breadth of Towner’s abilities more than any single disc. My only complaint is the applause that breaks the spell of every piece when it ends. Then again, I’d have done the same had I been there.
If you’ve ever wondered just how high a guitar can fly, then here’s your plane ticket.

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Mr. Bloe – Groovin’ With Mr. Bloe (1970) (24-Bit/96Khz) (Vinyl Rip)

Mr. Bloe – Groovin’ With Mr. Bloe (1970)
Vinyl rip @ 24/96 | FLAC | Artwork | 744mb
Pop, Instrumental | 1970 UK LP | DJM DJLPS 409

Background
The tune “Groovin’ With Mr. Bloe” was written for the US studio group Wind, by Bo Gentry, Paul Naumann and Kenny Laguna. They released it as the B-side of their single “Make Believe” which, with Tony Orlando as lead singer, was a chart success in the US in 1969. According to co-writer Kenny Laguna:
“When “Make Believe”, the first Wind single was ready to be released, we needed a B-side. Our Buddah releases were known for their ridiculous B-sides, like A-side played backwards in order for the business dudes to copyright something with themselves as writers, even though they couldn’t write songs. We dusted off a backing track from a “Yummy Yummy”, “Chewy Chewy”, “Sugar Sugar”, “Money Money” wannabe song that was called something like “Bingo Bingo” and improvised a haphazard harmonica and melodica overdub for the B-side….”
Success in the UK
BBC Radio in the UK then unwittingly played the wrong side of the Wind single. It was heard by Stephen James, of Dick James Music, who wanted to release the tune in the UK but could not obtain the rights. He had the tune covered by other musicians including Elton John on piano, but did not like that version. It was then rearranged by Zack Laurence and re-recorded with Laurence replacing Elton John on piano.
The tune was released in the UK on 9 May 1970, reaching number 2 in the UK Singles Chart on 4 July, 1970. Zack Laurence then appeared to perform on Top of the Pops with the other musicians — Ian Duck (harmonica), Dee Murray (bass), Roger Pope (drums) and Caleb Quaye (guitar) who went on to form the band Hookfoot. The harmonica part is somewhat mysterious, and some sources credit it to Harry Pitch – the harmonica player who went on to perform the theme tune for Last of the Summer Wine. In total, “Groovin’ With Mr Bloe” spent 18 weeks on the UK chart. The lack of an obvious performer made it mysterious and it became a favourite of Morrissey who was then 11 years old.
The follow up single “Curried Soul”, failed to chart, and an album, also entitled Groovin’ with Mr. Bloe, was released in 1970 but flopped, leaving the act as a one-hit wonder.
Later uses
After the tune’s success in Britain, the original version of “Groovin’ With Mr. Bloe” was reissued in the US in August 1970, credited to Cool Heat. It reached #89 on the Billboard Hot 100.
“Groovin’ With Mr. Bloe” was used as the theme music to the 2009 BBC TV series, Oz and James Drink to Britain. It was also used in the early 1970s by Argentine television as the introduction music for football broadcasting.
“Groovin’ With Mr. Bloe” is also a lyric in the song, “I Was a Mod Before You Was Mod”, by the band Television Personalities. The B-side to Madness’ “Our House” single was “Walking With Mr Wheeze”, another instrumental with occasional scratch mix effects. The tune’s title was an asthmatic parody of “Groovin’ With Mr Bloe”. The song was partly recorded by The Fall in 2003, for a Peel session as the beginning of their song, “Green Eyed Loco Man”. The tune was covered on a B-side by Associates in 1990, and Robert Johnson and the Punchdrunks in 2002. Wikipedia.

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Michael Hedges ‎- Watching My Life Go By (1985) (US Pressing) (24-Bit/96Khz + 16-Bit/44.1Khz) (Vinyl Rip)

Michael Hedges ‎– Watching My Life Go By (Appearing “Woman Of The World”)
Vinyl | LP Cover (1:1) | FLAC | 24bit/96kHz & 16bit/44kHz
Label: Open Air Records ‎/ OA-0303 | Release: 1985 | Genre: Country-Folk

Following the success of Michael Hedges’ Grammy-nominated Aerial Boundaries, the guitarist took on a new challenge and released Watching My Life Go By, his first recording to feature the musician taking on vocal as well as instrumental duties. Subdued, almost uncharacteristically restrained, Hedges the singer/songwriter doesn’t quite live up to Hedges the avant-garde or self-proclaimed “violent acoustic” guitarist. This being the artist’s first attempt at a vocal recording, it is understandable that what amounts to a musical learning curve sometimes gets the better of him. But that is not to say that the music of this 1985 Windham Hill release is substandard in a general sense — quite the opposite, really. However, when compared to Hedges’ brilliant instrumental work, there exists only the slightest discrepancy. That being said, there are still moments worth mentioning on this release, chief among them being “Woman of the World” and “Streamlined Man.” Both of these tracks feature more confident vocal performances and very insightful lyrics. A bit of a learning experience, Watching My Life Go By might not be Hedges’ finest offering; however, the record still features plenty of great performances of heartfelt material.

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Michael Hedges ‎- Aerial Boundaries (1984) (24-Bit/96Khz + 16-Bit/44.1Khz) (Vinyl Rip)

Michael Hedges ‎– Aerial Boundaries
Vinyl | LP Cover (1:1) | FLAC | 24bit/96kHz & 16bit/44kHz
Label: Windham Hill Records / WH-1032 | Release: 1984 | Genre: Acoustic-Fusion

It’s a pleasure to introduce one of the brightest members of the Windham Hill label, Michael Hedges. “Aerial Boundaries” is the most important works of this curious guitarist. I say curious about this strange way of playing the guitar, with a good friend called this way of playing as “percussive guitar” (for those strums and blows the lid, and use the guitar like a piano). In a clean technique in implementation, apart from playing a strange guitar called “harp guitar”. The album is very even with well-known pieces from his repertoire (the album that should be a fan of Hedges). A few days ago, reviewing Youtube submissions of this guitar player, I found that has a string of clones … but Hedges, is one.
Ah! and on top, is a great singer.

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Jan Akkerman ‎- Profile (1972) (US Pressing) (24-Bit/96Khz + 16-Bit/44.1Khz) (Vinyl Rip)

Jan Akkerman ‎– Profile
Vinyl | LP Cover (1:1) | FLAC | 24bit/96kHz & 16bit/44kHz
Label: Sire Records Company / SAS 7407 | Release: 1972 | Genre: Progressive-Rock

What can a man do with a guitar?
Being referred to as one of the best guitarist on the globe this moment had to come: the ultimate guitar solo record. To be more specific: the ultimate guitar side of a record.
Side one is filled with the Fresh Air piece, roughly based on some strange concept I don’t understand really well. The sub-parts itself however correlate with their titles. The song opens with psychedelic keys played by Akkerman himself on Fender piano, a great atmospheric start. Soon the Wrestling to get out part begins and a non-melodic jazz extravaganza is about to unfold. The title being the best way to discribe Akkerman’s guitarplaying: it’s like a mad rage to do the extreme. You will hear sound you’ve never heard before and speed beyond the imaginable. The basslines by Bert Ruiter (Focus) and drums by the masterfull Pierre van der Linden guide us to the best of hard jazz/rock or heavy fusion (which do you prefer?). I love the groovin’ bassplaying. Fresh air – blue notes for listening is again a track with a title that doesn’t need no explanation when you’ve heard it. One of the few relaxing tracks of the album. Jan Akkerman drops the speed for atmospheric guitar play, reminding me a bit of Robert Fripp. This is a welcome piece of music between two storms. For after this we’ll get to hear some more Akkerman solo’s of mad musicianship. This is the best track Jan Akkerman ever recorded in my opinion.
Side two. I don’t listen to it very often but it is a midiocre collection of lute and blues songs which don’t mach at all. I’m not even goin to tell something about it.
Conclusion. Now.. can a one side record make a masterpiece. I think in this case it does. The Fresh Air suite is a progressive masterpiece, a Fusion end point (this is fusion in the extreme) and a guitar axeman track of the highest skill. One of my most important records in my collection. Five stars! (but just for side one).

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