Lee Ritenour On The Line Rar

Wow, so many great albums! So many great candidates for reissue -- if fusion ever comes back into style and can sell more than a dozen copies.:) -------------------- P.S. - That Suntreader LP above is some hot shit -- great percussion work by Pert, great keyboards by Robinson and great bass by Alyn Ross. I made myself a CD-R of it a few years ago, and included a 30' live Suntreader track, 'Chromospheres,' that Morris had released on one of his self-marketed CD-Rs. BTW the clip above is out of phase -- the LP sounds much better! [Edit: No, I take it back, the live track was released on a Pert LP. Not a CD-R.].

Genesis Discography (1969 – 2014). The Dividing Line 08. Uncertain Weather 09. Small Talk 10. There Must Be Some Other Way 11. One Man's Fool Compilations.

Love that Dauner album. I've had the LP for years. I wish it would get reissued on CD, along with its ridiculously rare companion album Rischka's Light Faces, of which - like just about everyone else on the planet - I haven't heard. On the theme of albums without a CD, here's another from my vinyl collection.

This is one of those killer tracks you never want to end. Chinese mp3 song free download. Fine early 70s jazz rock featuring Henry Lowther on flugelhorn.

Coley - Goodbye Brains (1972 England) http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KD1deypjrLs. Love that Dauner album. I've had the LP for years. I wish it would get reissued on CD, along with its ridiculously rare companion album Rischka's Light Faces, of which - like just about everyone else on the planet - I haven't heard.

On the theme of albums without a CD, here's another from my vinyl collection. This is one of those killer tracks you never want to end. Fine early 70s jazz rock featuring Henry Lowther on flugelhorn. Coley - Goodbye Brains (1972 England) I'd love to get this album, but it's sooooo expensive. Today's entry is another really obscure one.

I just heard this last night for the first time in fact (I have a CD-R), and hope to post it on my CDRWL blog soon. Mosaic were from Peoria, Illinois, and have that sweet jazz funk sound that we so often find from this era. Perhaps Embryo's 'Apo Calypso' or even the Ville Emard Blues Band can provide you some context. Lovely female vocals, Fender Rhodes, sax, and guitar. Guaranteed to put a smile on your face for the start of the weekend.:) It took me forever to find a sample on YouTube. Amazing just how much stuff is out there if you know where to look. Mosaic - s/t (1978 USA) http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=g4LxkuCopSY.

Today's entry is another one of my all-time favorite obscurities that I own on LP. This isn't squarely in the jazz rock idiom - you'll hear psychedelic, progressive, and horn rock on this piece (and other various progressive styles throughout the album), but there most certainly is a jazzy undertone helped along by the trumpet playing. And they credit Return to Forever on the back of the LP, though I'm still not convinced they mean the Return to Forever, or even a music group at all, but thought I'd mention it. Probe 10 were from the Lehigh Valley area of East-Central Pennsylvania, and are truly one of a kind. The good news here is the CD (and LP) reissue is imminent, and should be released within the next couple of months on Lion Productions. Probe 10 - There is a Universe (1975 USA) https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=g1K804MHMMo.

I missed the memo, but I thought the thread started about a Lost Fusion Album, and it seemed to morph into this thread, some of the Coster lps are great btw. My turn to apologize. There was no memo - neither in the thread title, nor in the OP. I just deducy-ted ala Holmes/Watson that this was reserved to 70's JR/F given the sheer amount of 70's stuff featured in the thread. So mea culpa;) ================= About Coster: most of his solo career is post 70's and pre-95, sio in the rather poor production values.

It tends to ruin it enough for me to ever enjoy the music for itself BTW, I always thought that Coster album title absolutely ridiculous. As if the notes of the those keytars were in ivory and ebony.

This is the second version of this tune, recorded & released ½ a year later with a different singer. First released twice under the band name Rainbow band. I absolutely love the liveliness (no pun!) of this track; I can listen to the whole thing several times in a row and remain happy throughout. The rest of this album is OK, but their following releases were rather tedious IMHO. Especially compared to countrymen like Burnin' Red Ivanhoe, Secret Oyster, Coma, Thors Hammer and Dr. Rainbow Band, although practically the same lineup (except for the singer), were really quite different from Midnight Sun and more akin to other Danish late-era psych groups such as Days, Blast Furnace et al. Me and Nosebone have posted clips from this band in other threads, but it seems fitting to post this here.From The Netherlands,two keyboard players and a drummer.The band/cd is The Keyboard Circle-1976.The cd is available.I dig.