Pacho Flores – Cantar (2013) [Official Digital Download 24bit/96kHz]

Pacho Flores – Cantar (2013)
FLAC (tracks) 24-bit/96 kHz | Time – 01:07:40 minutes | 1,19 MB | Genre: Classical
Studio Master, Official Digital Download – Source: HighResAudio | © Deutsche Grammophon
Recorded: Konzerthaus Berlin, 2 & 3/2013

“The trumpet has a great advantage: it’s very versatile. It can sound like a voice, a violin, an oboe, a bass flute…. The most important thing for me in making music is to dream.”
Pacho Flores

“Pacho plays the trumpet the way a singer uses his voice. The music Pacho makes is like that of a soul expressing itself.”
Rolando Villazón

(more…)

Read more

Galliard – New Dawn (1970) (2012 EU Reissue) (24-Bit/96Khz) (Vinyl Rip)


Galliard – New Dawn (1970)
Vinyl rip @ 24/96 | FLAC | Artwork | 924mb
Jazz, Folk, Rock, Psychedelia | 2012 EU reissue | Sweet Dandelion SWDDL 726

Galliard were in on the ground floor of the British progressive rock movement, releasing their debut album, Strange Pleasure, in 1969 and mixing jazz, rock, folk, and psychedelic influences. The following year, New Dawn pretty much picked up where its predecessor left off, with one key exception. The band had initially featured two wind players, Dave Caswell and John Smith; though Smith was absent from New Dawn, a whole brace of additional horn players had been brought in to augment the sound. This was during the period when the likes of Chicago and Blood, Sweat & Tears (and their British equivalents) were starting out, and brass-rock was all the rage. That’s not to suggest that Galliard were trying to ride the brass-rock gravy train — their work is too skilled and varied for that — but simply that they were right in time for the Zeitgeist. Some cuts, like “New Dawn Breaking” and “Open Up Your Mind,” make full use of the horn section, coming off like a cross between early Chicago and jazzy U.K. prog rockers Colosseum, but that’s far from the dominant sound on this eclectic outing.
Lead guitarist Richard Pannell’s sitar work on “Ask for Nothing” contributes to a swirling Eastern atmosphere that seems soaked in a kind of psychedelic afterglow from the late ‘60s. “Winter — Spring — Summer” is an ambitious suite full of shifting dynamics and settings, while the gentle, acoustic-based “And Smile Again” echoes Jethro Tull or the more folk-oriented moments of Traffic. “Premonition” is a straight-up jazz-rock instrumental pushed along by Tommy Thomas’ congas, where Pannell and the horns get to stretch out a bit. Closing track “In Your Minds Eye” opens with a couple of minutes of atmospheric, otherworldly tones before bringing things home with a blast of bold-faced, brass-filled prog rock. The striking thing is just how good Galliard were at all of the varied styles they attempt on New Dawn, but sadly, it was to be their last album. James Allen, Allmusic.

(more…)

Read more

Eric Burdon & The Animals – Eric Burdon & The Animals (1976) (24-Bit/96Khz) (Vinyl Rip)


Eric Burdon & The Animals – Eric Burdon & The Animals (1976)
Vinyl rip @ 24/96 | FLAC | Artwork | 1335mb
Rock, Pop, Psychedelia | 1976 UK LP | Metro 2356 142

Burdon was lead singer of The Animals, formed during 1962 in Newcastle, England. The original band was the Alan Price Combo which formed in 1958. They became the Animals shortly after Burdon joined the band. They combined electric blues with rock and in the USA were one of the leading bands of the British Invasion.
By late 1966 the other original members, including keyboardist Alan Price, had left. Burdon and drummer Barry Jenkins reformed the group as Eric Burdon and The Animals. This more psychedelic incarnation featured future Family member John Weider and was sometimes called Eric Burdon and the New Animals. Keyboardist Zoot Money joined during 1968 until they split up in 1969. This group’s hits included the ballad “San Franciscan Nights”, the grunge–heavy metal-pioneering “When I Was Young”, “Monterey”, the anti-Vietnam anthem “Sky Pilot” and the progressive cover of “Ring of Fire”. Wikipedia.

(more…)

Read more
%d bloggers like this: