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Pink Floyd - 09 August 1969Mic difficulties led to an all instrumental, 40 min. set.Commercial release audio quality, FLAC'd soundboard.
track list
I have that, it's excellent!
i just picked this up and am having my 1st listen ... i'm digging it
ELO - Eldorado, original LP
There used to be a joke that UB40 stood for the "Unemployed Birmingham 40", because there were so many band members in their videos, and none of them looked exactly sharp-suited. In fact the pop-reggae band did name themselves after an unemployment benefit form, though there was never 40 members - only eight, plus guests. They formed in 1979 ...
side stepping my way through this inbetween the commercials of Lost and V... http://www.amazon.com/Cover-Up-UB40/dp/B00005QHVNUB40, cover up
With two successful singles under their belt, the group's debut album, Revolution, followed in 1966. Revolution was a powerful blues-rock album that included a snarling rendition of Willie Dixon's "Down in the Bottom," a rendition of Dixon's "Spoonful" that boasted gloriously crunchy acoustic guitars behind a raspy vocal worthy of Howlin' Wolf himself, and a funky version of Allen Toussaint's "Get Out of My Life, Woman," and a handful of originals that were fully competitive with the covers. The highlight, however, was a riveting 14-minute version of Sonny Boy Williamson II's "Bring It on Home." The album sold 3,5000 copies, a respectable number in the Netherlands, and established the group sufficiently to rate a spot playing with the Small Faces, the Spencer Davis Group, the Kinks, and the Pretty Things when they toured Holland.