Donnerstag, 14. März 2019

Heimat, für dich unser Lied (Eterna, 1984, vinyl rip)

"Heimat, für Dich unser Lied" is an album released in 1984 on the Eterna label in the GDR featuring 16 songs with the Erich-Weinert-Ensemble of the Nationale Volksarmee (NVA).

The Erich-Weinert-Ensemble was a cultural institution in the GDR, performing all around the country and being a ideological propaganda tool for the government. It was also a stepping stone for the career of a lot of musicians, dancers and singers.

Erich Weinert (August 4th, 1890 - April 20th, 1953 in Berlin) was a German writer, Communist, and member of the KPD/SED.


Trackliste:

01 - Lützows wilde verwegene Jagd
02 - Mein Land ist gut
03 - Lukullische Soldatenträume
04 - Kein schöner Land
05 - Der offene Aufmarsch
06 - Was weiß man in den Staaten schon vom Krieg
07 - Kamen in das Land, das große
08 - Hörst du den Schritt (Solidaritätsmarsch)
09 - Ohne dich zu lieben
10 - Zärtlichkeit
11 - Das Paar
12 - Urlaubsabschied
13 - Ballade vom Kommissar
14 - An der Höhe 103
15 - Angriff
16 - Der Tag hat sich gelohnt

Erich-Weinert-Ensemble - Heimat, für Dich unser Lied
(320 kbps, cover art included)

Der Sound des Untergangs (The Sound of Doom)

"Der Druck war nicht zu halten, es hätte nur eine militärische Lösung gegeben." (Egon Krenz)

"Alle standrechtlich erschießen, die unsere Partei in eine solche Schmach gebracht haben!" (Bernhard Quandt)

"Wenn ich ein Idiot bin, muss die Partei darüber befinden." Wolfgang Junker

Following World War II, the area that was Germany was divided into four military sectors controlled by France, the United Kingdom, the United States and the Soviet Union. On May 23, 1949, the sectors controlled by France, the United Kingdom and the United States became the Federal Republic of Germany. On October 7, 1949, the sector controlled by the Soviet Union became the German Democratic Republic, which in Germany is generally referred to as the DDR (Deutsche Demokratische Republik).
The two countries developed very different political and economic systems and, due to the political tensions in post-war Europe, there was little contact between the inhabitants of the two countries. Life in the DDR was characterized by harsh repression against political adversaries. Thousands of inhabitants were kept under intimate surveillance by the infamous East German secret police, the Stasi (Staatssicherheit). At least 137 people died trying to escape from the DDR.
On September 4, 1989 citizens of Leipzig protested peacefully against the DDR government. More so-called “Monday demonstrations” soon took place in other cities across the DDR. The protests called for political reform and to open the borders.

Quite unexpectedly, on November 9, 1989, the checkpoints between the two countries were opened and people were allowed to travel freely. This date marked the "fall" of the Berlin Wall. In no time, the GDR collapsed like a house of cards. These events lead to fundamentally political change in the GDR. Finally, Germany's unification became official on October 3, 1990.

"Der Sound des Untergangs" is a compilation of audio recordings from the last meetings of the SED Central Committee from October to December 1989: Tumultuous scenes, emotional speeches, dramatic debates, desperate rescue attempts... documents from the inner circle of the SED power before the fall of their leaders.

Der Sound des Untergangs (The Sound of Doom)
(256 kbps, front cover included)

Mittwoch, 13. März 2019

VA - The Famous Spiritual + Gospel Festival 1965

'An Authentic Documentation of Black Church Music in Concert' - live Jan. 25th, 1965 in the Glocke, Bremen - with the Original Five Blind Boys of Mississippi, Inez Andrews And The Andrewettes and Bishop Samuel Kelsey And His Congregation From Washington D.c. ... - fantastic and rare album released in 1965 on the Fontana label - and re-released in the 1990s on CD.
Horst Lippmann and Fritz Rau organized thie Gospel Festival as a counterpart to their American Folk Blues Festival tours.

Tracklist:
A1Jesus Said If You Go
A2Lord Send The Rain
A3Travelling Shoes
Preaching:
A4Exodus, 3rd Chapter
A5I Cried, He Delivered Me
A6Tell Me How Long The Train Been Gone
B1It's A Needed Time
B2It's In My Heart
B3What Love
B4A God Somewhere
B5John Saw The Number
B6O Why
B7Lord You've Been Good To Me


VA - The Famous Spiritual + Gospel Festival 1965
(256 kbps, cover art inlcuded)

Peter, Paul & Mary - Moving (1963)

The trio's second album is a little less distinctive than its predecessor, which doesn't mean that it isn't a beautiful record - just less obviously compelling in its melodies, and perhaps slightly less optimistic in mood.

Having expended some of their best material on their debut, the trio reached further for songs here, including the Paul Stookey co-authored "Big Boat" and Mike Settle's "Settle Down (Goin' Down That Highway)," neither of which clicked as singles, despite rousing vocals on both and some distinctive guitar virtuosity on the former. The group once again reached back to the 1940s activist folk song tradition with Woody Guthrie's "This Land Is Your Land," but the track that everyone ended up knowing from "Moving" was from a very different corner of the folk tradition - "Puff, the Magic Dragon" was introduced here and rose to number one as a single (and even made the Top 10 in the R&B charts), helping to propel "Moving" to number two as part of a 99-week chart run; and in those days, it was taken as a beautiful and gentle children's song that adults could enjoy, the myth of the song's supposed "drug" message not appearing until 1966.

Other highlights include the haunting "Pretty Mary" and the startlingly intricate "A 'Soalin'," which became a highlight of their live act as well. Peter Yarrow remixed this album for reissue on CD in 1989, along with much of the rest of the group's classic Warner Bros. catalog, which has resulted in spectacular clarity and immediacy.      

Tracklist:
A1Sette Down
A2Gone The Rainbow
A3Flora
A4Prettyv Mary
A5Puff
A6This Land Is Your Land
B1Man Come Into Egypt
B2Old Coat
B3Tiny Sparrow
B4Big Boat
B5Morning Train
B6A' Soalin


Peter, Paul & Mary - Moving (1963)
(192 kbps, front & back cover included)

Chad Mitchell Trio - Singin' Our Mind (1963)

"Singin' Our Mind" is perhaps the most interesting album of the Chad Mitchell Trio's career. The record was released in 1963, smack dab in the middle of a profound shift in the landscape of American popular music.

With the growing mass appeal of Bob Dylan and his interpreters (most notably Peter, Paul & Mary), the mainstream folk scene was swelling with a newly embraced social consciousness. The album's title reflects the Chad Mitchell Trio's efforts to firmly establish themselves as part of the new movement. The liner notes make this abundantly clear, purposely distancing the group from "button-down" folkies and describing Mitchell and his compatriots as "young men of conscience, with a serious purpose."

Luckily, however, the album is no mere marketing ploy. The material here is truly first rate, and is performed with loads of enthusiasm as well as the typically impeccable technique that has always made aficionados single out the Mitchell Trio as musically the best of their breed. In this respect, each member gets his spot in the limelight. The often-underrated Michael Kobluk gives the album's most stirring performance on Ian Tyson's now classic "Four Strong Winds." Mitchell himself gives a surprisingly hip and jazzy reading of the Bessie Smith tune "Nobody Knows You When You're Down and Out," and Joe Frazier's powerful tenor soars above it all, giving an extra boost of energy to even the weakest tunes. The only heavy-handed moment comes in a parody of "The Twelve Days of Christmas" inspired by the death of a Nazi war criminal. Though somewhat embarrassing due to the use of stereotyped German accents, the performance is also a fascinating glimpse into the early '60s, when wartime bitterness remained fresh in the American consciousness, nearly twenty years after the conflict's end.   


Tracklist
1Dubarry Done Gone Again2:24
2Ain't No More Cane On This Brazos3:02
3Four Strong Winds3:34
4Alma Mater2:59
5An Irish Song2:39
6I Feel So Good About It (Sin Bound Train)2:07
7The Marvelous Toy2:46
8Maladyozhenaya (The Young Ones) 2:28
9Nobody Knows You When You're Down And Out3:31
10Bonny Streets Of Fyve-Lo3:08
11Willie Seton2:18
12Twelve Days5:33

Chad Mitchell Trio - Singin' Our Mind (1963)
(256 kbps, cover art included)

Dienstag, 12. März 2019

Maxi Wander - Guten Morgen, Du Schöne (LITERA, 1988)

Originally posted in March 2015:
This year the official Germany will celebrate the 25th anniversary of the reunification in the year 1990. This may be a good occasion to feature Maxi Wander, an important female writer from the former German Democratic Republic.

“Wir suchen nach neuen Lebensweisen, im Privaten und in der Gesellschaft. Nicht gegen die Männer können wir uns emanzipieren, sondern nur in der Auseinandersetzung mit ihnen. Geht es doch um die menschliche Emanzipation überhaupt.”

"We are searching for a new way of living, in private and as a part of a community. Our emancipation cannot be attained through opposition to men, only by engaging them in debate. It is a question of the emancipation of all human beings." 

— from Guten Morgen, du Schöne! by Maxie Wander (excerpt from Good Morning, You Beauty!)


Maxie Wander (1933 - 1977) came to fame as an author with just one book: Guten Morgen, Du Schöne; Good Morning, My Lovely. Born Elfriede Brunner in a proletarian quarter of Vienna, she left school at the age of seventeen, and did a number of jobs as a factory worker, a secretary and a writer of film scripts. In 1956 she married the Austrian-Jewish writer Fred Wander with whom she moved to East Berlin.
This move was largely motivated by Fred Wander’s experience as a Holocaust survivor and bound up with the anti-fascist founding myth of the GDR. In the couple’s view, both Austria and West Germany lacked sufficiently strong anti-fascist conviction. They were not blind to the faults of the GDR, but their basic agreement with the principle embodied in that state outweighed the points of very real criticism. In East Berlin, they brought up three children, wrote travel books and did journalistic work. They were part of a large artistic circle and particularly close friends with Christa Wolf and Gerhard Wolf.
In the early and mid-1970s, Maxie Wander conducted a large number of interviews with women of all ages and from all walks of life. In 1975, having finished collecting her material, she embarked on a book that was to become an important part both of documentary literature (in East and West Germany) and of women’s literature in the GDR – while outstripping either. Guten Morgen, Du Schöne appeared in 1977, by which time Wander was suffering from incurable cancer. Before her early death in November 1977, she did experience the immediate positive reception of the book, but not the immensity of its success. In the GDR alone, 60,000 copies were sold within one year, but it also became a success when it was published in West Germany in 1978. Moreover, a dramatisation of it took the theatres by storm.
Guten Morgen, Du Schöne is in the form of 19 monologues by women, talking about their day-to-day lives and expressing their opinions and concerns. These turn out to be highly diverse and even contradictory; and the range of topics covered is impressively wide. One recurrent theme pertains to the stress placed on women by the persistence of sexist attitudes in an allegedly egalitarian society. Another, related one, is the question of how to deal with the “Doppelbelastung” (double burden) of being a wife and mother as well as being in full time employment, as was the case for more than 90% of women in the GDR. The book also touches on the sensitive subjects of suicide, mental breakdown and psychosomatic illness, which are seen in a social context and not as the exclusive responsibility of the afflicted individual, and is not afraid to include the most intimate and private details of women’s lives.
The voice of the interlocutor or interviewer of these women is not explicitly present, although it can be deduced from various asides and modes of address in the texts. Thus, as Christa Wolf suggests, the 20th protagonist in the book can be seen as Wander herself. Equally, the number 19 can be read as an invitation to the (implicitly female) reader to insert herself into the text, and hence to participate in the dialogue instigated by Wander. For indeed, Guten Morgen, Du Schöne, so far from being a random or a representative collection of discrete interviews, has been carefully composed to instigate and thematize a series of dialogues both between the protagonists themselves and between them and the reader. The voices of many more than just 19 women have gone into it, and the protagonists in it are not traceable, individual women, but composite characters whose personalities and opinions have been carefully calibrated to produce a highly complex texture that defies the monochrome tendencies of “socialist realism”. It is thus less the book’s content (i.e. aspects of GDR society that were rarely talked about before) but rather the intensity of its articulation of these themes that make it outstanding. And though it did ‘give women a voice’, as was often said of it, this should not be taken to mean simply taping and repeating these voices.
However, some of the book’s stylistic features, particularly the mode of orality, were taken as signs of straightforward authenticity (i.e. the protagonists being ‘real’ women), and the further reception of Guten Morgen, Du Schöne was very much marked by this. Thus, when it appeared in 1978 with Luchterhand Verlag in West Germany, the book bore the subtitle: “Frauen in der DDR” (Women in the GDR). It was shorn of one of its two epigraphs, the number of monologues had gone down to 17, and their order and title lines had changed. Titles that in Wander’s original had often been poetically suggestive (e.g.: “Brot und Kaviar” – bred and caviar) and accompanied simply by a first name (e.g. “Steffi”) turned into what looked like the elements of a sociological study: first name, initial of surname, age, profession, marital status, number of children plus a title with social impact (e.g.: “Die Ehe abschaffen” – let’s abolish marriage). As a result, the impression arises that this book might be used as a source of sociological information: look for, say, women of a certain age, or profession, marital status etc., read the appropriate interviews, and you have all the first-hand information you need.
In literary terms, this was a decisive step away from the poetic qualities of Guten Morgen, Du Schöne and towards the antipoetic jargon of documentary literature. The book was thus re-constricted to fit the confines of the genres it had deliberately exceeded. Interestingly, in successive GDR editions, too, the sociological information was added to the title lines, but Wander’s poetic titles remained.
Be that as it may, the book enjoyed a huge and long-lasting success, and Maxie Wander remained an important figure in GDR literature long after her early death. In 1979, her widower Fred Wander published some of her diaries and letters (Tagebücher und Briefe, later re-issued as Leben wär eine prima Alternative; Life would be a great Alternative), and in 1996 more material followed under the title: Ein Leben ist nicht genug; One Life is not Enough. But her greatest contribution to German literature is her silent presence in Guten Morgen, Du Schöne.
The LITERA label released recordings from stage performances at Deutschen Theaters Berlin
with Regina Griebel and Gabriele Heinz as executive producers on a double album.


Tracklist:

01 Eröffnungslied
Kurt Böwe
Komposition: Uwe Hilprecht
Gitarre: Brigitte Breitkreuz

02 Rosi
Das Haus, in dem ich wohne
Jutta Wachowiak

03 Ruth
Warten auf das Wunder
Simone von Zglinicki

04 Erika
Marx und Scheherezade
Lissy Tempelhof

05 Ute
Großfamilie
Katrin Klein

06 Lena
Das Schiff fahren lassen und in den Sonne schauen
Gabriele Heinz

07 Karoline
Das Kupferdach
Elsa Gruber-Deister

(224 kbps, cover art included)

The Ex - Aural Guerrilla


Dutch anarchists "The Ex", formed by guitarist Terrie and vocalist Sok, had started out in the militant vein of "Crass" but would continuously improve the quality of their cacophonous, incoherent bacchanals via increasingly challenging albums.

This anarcho-punk collective adheres to only the purest ideals in rock music. Starting in 1980, "The Ex" uncorked an endless stream of do-it-themselves vinyl and tapes on a variety of label names (finally settling on Ex Records in '88). Following "Crass'" example (if not quite that group's sound; "The Ex" has a cutting "Gang of Four" rhythmic edge and something of a Fall-like declamatory style), "The Ex" use their work as a sonic and graphic vehicle to promote a wide range of left-wing socio-political causes. Along with the piercing and articulate punk rock, most of "The Ex's" albums contain vast amounts of printed material.

Jon Langford recorded and produced "Aural Guerrilla" at Studio Suite 16 in Rochdale, England. The album was released in July 1988: An evocative and tightly crimped knot about a variety of righteous causes. A bracing blast of barbed wire guitar delivered at reasonable speed with clear (but passionate) vocals, "Aural Guerrilla" is one of "The Ex's" best; potent highlights include the pro-animal ecology of "Evolution (?)," the anti-rock-star venom of "Meanwhile at McDonna's" and "Welcome to the Asylum," an attack on Holland's shoddy treatment of refugees.

More infos and downloads on http://www.theex.nl/. Check it out!

The Ex - Aural Guerrilla
(192 kbps, ca. 55 MB, front cover included)

"The Ex are a regression to the pop of rage. They understand that punk's form of protest was to amplify your alienation and disposession. (...) The Ex are best when they're the sound of a collapsing system, a catastrophic fury that's senseless and unnegotiable. That's their lure in this era of pragmatic reformers."

Montag, 11. März 2019

Lee Morgan ‎– Search For The New Land (1964)

This set is one of the finest Lee Morgan records. The great trumpeter contributes five challenging compositions ("Search for the New Land," "The Joker," "Mr. Kenyatta," "Melancholee," and "Morgan the Pirate") that deserve to be revived. Morgan, tenor saxophonist Wayne Shorter, guitarist Grant Green, pianist Herbie Hancock, bassist Reggie Workman, and drummer Billy Higgins are all in particularly creative form on the fresh material, and they stretch the boundaries of hard bop (the modern mainstream jazz of the period). The result is a consistently stimulating set that rewards repeated listenings.          

Tracklist:
  1. Search for the New Land – 15:45
  2. The Joker – 5:04
  3. Mr. Kenyatta – 8:43
  4. Melancholee – 6:14
  5. Morgan the Pirate – 6:30

Lee Morgan ‎– Search For The New Land (1964)
(320 kbps, cover art included)

Floh De Cologne - Prima Freiheit (1978)

Floh De Cologne was a collective unit of creative musicians and actors, who continually dared to take chances, provoke and surprise their audience via a blend of rock, satire, political statements and theatre. The band was formed 20 January 1966 in Cologne, Germany and disbanded in 1983.

"Prima Freiheit" is a live recording from the "Junges Forum der Ruhrfestspiele" in 1978.       

Tracklist:
A1Ich kenne ein Land3:16
A2Ich steh´ so rum3:07
A3Ballade vom Studenten aus den kleinen Verhältnissen5:28
A4Zwischenspiel7:57
B1Eddi, der Bär7:27
B2Was ist der Fortschritt3:54
B3Prima Freiheit9:54

Floh De Cologne - Prima Freiheit (1978)
(256 kbps, cover art included)

Sonntag, 10. März 2019

Utah Phillips - Good Though! (1973)

Bruce Duncan "Utah" Phillips (May 15, 1935 – May 23, 2008) was an American labor organizer, folk singer, storyteller, poet and the "Golden Voice of the Great Southwest". He described the struggles of labor unions and the power of direct action, self-identifying as an anarchist.  
He often promoted the "Industrial Workers of the World" in his music, actions, and words.

This 1973 Philo album includes a mix of Phillips originals with traditional tunes like "Cannonball Blues," the notorious "Moose Turd Pie" (from whence comes the album's title), and "Wabash Cannonball."     


Utah Phillips - Good Though! (1973)
(224 kbps, cover art included)


 Tracklist:
1Cannonball Blues6:46
2Queen Of The Rails2:57
3Going Away3:59
4Frisco Road4:21
5Starlight On The Rails3:50
6Calling Trains0:49
7Daddy, What's A Train?3:11
8Moose Turd Pie5:23
9Old Buddy Goodnight2:36
10Phoebe Snow4:38
11Nickel Plate Road No. 7591:07
12Wabash Cannonball/Tolono5:26

Nina Simone - Wild Is The Wind (1966)

This album was apparently a bit of a pastiche of leftovers from sessions for Nina Simone's four previous albums on Philips. But you'd never guess from listening; the material is certainly as strong and consistent as it is on her other mid-'60s LPs.

As is the case with most of her albums of the time, the selections are almost unnervingly diverse, ranging from jazz ballads to traditional folk tunes ("Black Is the Color of My True Love's Hair") to the near calypso of "Why Keep on Breaking My Heart" to the somber, almost chilling title track. Highlights are two outstanding pop-soul numbers written by the pre-disco Van McCoy ("Either Way I Lose," "Break Down and Let It All Out") and "Four Women," a string of searing vignettes about the hardships of four African-American women that ranks as one of Simone's finest compositions.

Tracklist:    

I Love Your Lovin' Ways2:35
Four Women4:20
What More Can I Say2:45
Lilac Wine (From "Dance Me A Song")4:14
That's All I Ask2:28
Break Down And Let It All Out2:45
Why Keep Breakin My Heart2:30
Wild Is The Wind6:53
Black Is The Color Of My True Love's Hair3:25
If I Should Lose You3:55
Either Way I Lose2:44


Nina Simone - Wild Is The Wind (1966)
(320 kbps, cover art included)

Samstag, 9. März 2019

Miriam Makeba - Comme Une Symphonie D'amour (1979)

South African diva Miriam Makeba is well known throughout the world as Mama Africa and the Empress of African Song. She is African music's first and foremost world star. She is a pioneer who played her early songs and blended different styles long before anyone even began to talk about “world music.”

Her record production is spread across many companies all over the world - so far and wide that it's difficult to get a panoramic view of it. But no collection of African music should be without one or more of Miriam Makeba's recordings.

Comme une symphonie d'amour is a 1979 album by South African singer Miriam Makeba. The album has been published in several editions, some are entitled Malaisha.

Tracklist:

  1. "Comme une symphonie d'amour" (3:45)
  2. "Malaisha (Bring the Axe)" (3:40)
  3. "Iyaguduza" (5:38)
  4. "Chicken (Kikirikiki)" (4:22)
  5. "Ndibanga Hamba" (3:25)
  6. "Sabelani" (4:46)
  7. "Ngewundini" (4:32)
  8. "African Convention" (5:05)
  9. "Murtala" (6:20)

Miriam Makeba - Comme Une Symphonie D'amour (1979)
(192 kbps, cover art included)

Jesse Fuller - Railroad Worksong

Equipped with a band full of instruments operated by various parts of his anatomy, Bay Area legend Jesse Fuller was a folk music favorite in the '50s and '60s. His infectious rhythm and gentle charm graced old folk tunes, spirituals, and blues alike. One of his inventions was a homemade foot-operated instrument called the "footdella" or "fotdella." Naturally, Fuller never needed other accompanists to back his one-man show. His best-known songs include "San Francisco Bay Blues" and "Beat It on Down the Line" (the first one covered by Janis Joplin, the second by The Grateful Dead).

Born and raised in Georgia, Jesse Fuller began playing guitar when he was a child, although he didn't pursue the instrument seriously. In his early twenties, Fuller wandered around the southern and western regions of the United States, eventually settling down in Los Angeles. While he was in Southern California he worked as a film extra, appearing in The Thief of Bagdad, East of Suez, Hearts in Dixie, and End of the World. After spending a few years in Los Angeles, Fuller moved to San Francisco. While he worked various odd jobs around the Bay Area, he played on street corners and parties.

Fuller's musical career didn't properly begin until the early '50s, when he decided to become a professional musician - he was 55 years old at the time. Performing as a one-man band, he began to get spots on local television shows and nightclubs. However, Fuller's career didn't take off until 1954, when he wrote "San Francisco Bay Blues." The song helped him land a record contract with the independent Cavalier label, and in 1955 he recorded his first album, Folk Blues: Working on the Railroad with Jesse Fuller. The album was a success and soon he was making records for a variety of labels, including Good Time Jazz and Prestige. ´

In the late '50s and early '60s Jesse Fuller became one of the key figures of the blues revival, helping bring the music to a new, younger audience. Throughout the '60s and '70s he toured America and Europe, appearing at numerous blues and folk festivals, as well as countless coffeehouse gigs across the U.S. Fuller continued performing and recording until his death in 1976.

Tracklist:
1Move On Down The Line
2Stealing
3Ninety-Nine Years And One Dark Day
4Animal Fair
5Sleeping In The Midnight Cold
6Stagolee
7Bill Bailey
8San Francisco Bay Blues
9Crazy Waltz
10Railroad Worksong
11Meet My Loving Mother
12I Love My Baby
13Tune (Creole Love Call)
14Running Wild
15Stranger Blues
16Hanging Around A Skin Game
17The Monkey & The Engineer
18Buck Dancer's Jump

Jesse Fuller - Railroad Worksong
(320 kbps, cover art included)

Donnerstag, 7. März 2019

Revernd Gary Davis - Ragtime Guitar

In his prime of life, which is to say the late '20s, the Reverend Gary Davis was one of the two most renowned practitioners of the East Coast school of ragtime guitar; 35 years later, despite two decades spent playing on the streets of Harlem in New York, he was still one of the giants in his field, playing before thousands of people at a time, and an inspiration to dozens of modern guitarist/singers including Bob Dylan, Taj Mahal, and Donovan; and Jorma Kaukonen, David Bromberg, and Ry Cooder, who studied with Davis.

The Reverend Gary Davis left behind a fairly large body of modern (i.e. post-World War II) recordings, well into the 1960s, taking the revival of his career in his stride as a way of carrying the message of the gospel to a new generation. He even recorded anew some of his blues and ragtime standards in the studio, for the benefit of his students.



Tracklist:

A1 Cincinnati Flow Rag 4:39
A2 West Coast Blues 2:13
A3 Buck Rag 2:37
A4 St. Louis Tickle 4:34
A5 Two Step Candyman 2:29
B1 Walkin' Dog Blues 5:09
B2 Italian Rag 3:16
B3 C-Rag 2:56
B4 Waltz Time Candyman 1:53
B5 Make Believe Stunt 4:21


Revernd Gary Davis - Ragtime Guitar (1971)
(320 kbps, cover art included)

Mittwoch, 6. März 2019

Grauzone - Grauzone (1981, 1991)

Grauzone (German for grey area) was a band from Berne, Switzerland, that was active and disbanded in the early 1980s.

This self-titled debut album was originally released as a vinyl album released on Off Course Records (ASL 3304) in 1981. Ripped here from a 1991 compact disc reissue. It has reappeared in a multitude of guises over the years, also know as "Die Sunrise Tapes". 

"Eisbär" is the shining song on this album, good enough to play at any party, anywhere in the world if you get your hand on the aux cord. For personal listening, "Hinter den Bergen" has a mysterious and exciting edge to it (what is that identity if not confined to an alpine enclosure). "Marmalade und Himbereeis" is so charming too. The fact that Stephan Eicher just screams out ‘Angst’ over and over again really speaks to that lost teenage fear. Eicher’s later pop stuff is fine, but it never reached those startling and cold peaks from this singular Grauzone lp release.

01 Film 2
02 Eisbär
03 Hinter den Bergen
04 Maikäfer flieg
05 Marmelade und Himbeereis
06 Wütendes Glas
07 Kälte kriecht
08 Kunstgewerbe
09 Der Weg zu zweit
10 In der Nacht

Grauzone - Grauzone (1981, 1991)
(320 kbps, cover art included)

Dienstag, 5. März 2019

VA - Word Sound 'ave Power - Dub Poets and Dub

Dub poetry, a unique reggae subgenre characterized by political poetry delivered over an instrumental backdrop, has never really gained full acceptance in the reggae community. Although its urgent political messages and straightforward roots rhythms make it seem like a natural fit for fans of conscious reggae, dub poetry has too often come across as a dysfunctional marriage of convenience between words and music.

This CD brings together two LPs previously released in the early '80s: "Word Sound 'Ave Power" was an anthology of singles by such notable dub poets as Mutabaruka and Breeze (aka Sister Breeze), as well as more obscure artists like Glenville Bryan and Navvie Nabbie, while "Dub Poets Dub" was a companion dub version of that album.

The combined collection could be used as an argument for either side of the dub poetry debate. On the one hand, you have incisive commentary from Breeze, whose views on foreign aid can be summed up in one couplet: "They come, they work, they smile so pleased/ They leave and you discover a new disease." And Mutabaruka is his usual sharp-eyed self on "Set de Prisoners Free" and "Out of Many One." But then you have lines like "I'm a victim, a victim/ A victim of de stinkin' system" from Malachi Smith, and the painfully pedestrian anti-drug pronouncements of Tomlin Ellis. These are not "poems" that deserve to be recited. They could possibly be redeemed by strong melodies, but without such support they sound like eighth-grade social studies essays. The dub versions all vary from good to excellent. This one is recommended, but so is the judicious use of the skip button. 

VA - Word Sound 'ave Power - Dub Poets and Dub 
(192 kbps, cover art included)

VA - First Steps - First Recordings From The Creators Of Modern Jazz (Savoy)

Savoy Records established its reputation by being first to present some of the all time greats of modern jazz: Charlie Parker, Dizzy Gillespie, Miles Davis and Dexter Gorden. These are the radical sounds which set the jazz world on fire.

In the early 1940s, these mostly 20-something musicians, among others, were the rebels of their time. They were part of the movement that begat bebop - a swirling, improvisational, and sometimes drug-influenced reaction to the sterilized sway of the erstwhile mainstream swing sound.

For today’s young rebels who wish to reject established modes while at the same time appreciating their forbears, Savoy Jazz is re-releasing a truckload of old recordings by these seminal musical iconoclasts. First Steps captures some of bebop’s earliest and finest practitioners in the act of inventing a brusquely expressive and stylistically irreverent genre.

A fairly balanced mix of well-known and obscure names appears here, resulting in an engaging cross-section of artists with varying styles and dispositions. To uninitiated ears, it may come off as homogenous at first, but for jazz aficionados and neophytes with patience, this is a veritable minefield of sonic jewels, each one possessing the singular personality of the different performers who carved them out.

VA - First Steps - First Recordings From The Creators Of Modern Jazz (Savoy)
(320 kbps, front cover included)

André Heller - Im Konzerthaus (1979)

André Heller is an Austrian chanson singer, performance actor, composer, writer and cultural managar, born 22 March 1947,  in Vienna,
In his early years, he was attracted by Vienna's literature scene, where he met Helmut Qualtinger and H.C. Artmann. In 1967 he co-founded the austrian radio station Ö3.

One year later, in 1968 he released his first LP, mostly singing his own lyrics and combining them with typical viennese music and jazz. First success came with his second album "Platte" in 1970. In his career he worked with Astor Piazzolla, Freddie Hubbard and Chaka Khan, just to name a few. He also collaborated with the greatest singers and musicians of Austria and Germany, including Helmut Qualtinger, Ingfried Hoffmann and Peter Wolf. From 1970-1984 he was married to Erika Pluhar, who also released a couple of records with Hellers lyrics.

In 1982, he stopped his musical career due to too much success, cause he didnt want to perform for audiences just because they had paid for it and not getting at the same time anymore fun out of it for himself. He released 14 albums. Afterwards he focused on theatre, what he had started parallel to his singing career. He activly played in several movies and theatre productions, as well realized own projects. He also founded "Zirkus Roncalli", designed "Swarovski Kristallwelten", created sculptures for the "World Cup 2006 in Germany" and worked on projects worldwide in countries like India, Israel, Morocco, Hongkong and Japan.



André Heller - Im Konzerthaus (1979)
(320 kbps, cover art included)

Violeta Parra - 1971 - Recordando a Violeta Parra

From the early folkloric documentation of Violeta Parra in Chile´s countryside to "Venceremos", the triumphant anthem of Salvador Allende´s Popular Union Coalition, the music of Chile´s Nueva Canción was shaped by the larger history occuring all around it. Within the songs, all the hopes, dreams and apprehensions of the nation were reflected. 

At the same time, as its influence grew, the cultural movement claimed its own principal space as catalyst of not only Chile´s musical but its political future as well. So dangerous were its creations that the Pinochet dictatorship censored and attempted to destroy them. Most tragically, Victor Jara´s life was taken in the bloody repression that immediately followed the coup. But his recordings were released and circulated among both Latin and Anglo-Americans and Europeans and actually gained greater popularity than during his lifetime. At the same time, his compatriots in Chile had to hide their LPs, and the government sought the master tapes of his sessions in an attempt to permanetly erase his presence form the planet. 


Tracklist:

A1Que Pena Siente El Alma
A2La Pericona Dice
A3Salga El Sol, Salga La Luna
A4La Mazamorrita De Cuatro Pies
A5A Cantarle A Los Porte...
A6Levantate Huenchullan
A7Cantaron Los Pajaritos
B1Arriba Quemando El Sol
B2Parabienes Al Reves
B3Cristo Cuando Vino A Nuestro
B4Vengo Toda Avergonzada
B5Segun El Favor Del Viento
B6Una Flor Voy A Nombrar
B7A La Una Naci Yo

Violeta Parra - 1971 - Recordando a Violeta Parra
(256 kbps, cover art included)

Montag, 25. Februar 2019

Lightnin' Hopkins & Sonny Terry - Last Night Blues (1960)

Outside of Blind Lemon Jefferson, Lightnin' Hopkins may be Texas's most distinctive and influential blues export. His easy, fluid fingerpicking and witty, extemporaneous storytelling are always a delight, and his performances on "Last Night Blues" are no exception. The album is spare and acoustic, with Hopkins's voice and guitar accompanied by minimal percussion and Sonny Terry's harmonica.

Terry's contributions really add a lot to these tunes, threading a high, lonesome whine on the downtempo tunes and a chugging, propulsive shuffle on the faster ones. Hopkins is, of course, one of the kings of the blues boogie, but he's equally compelling on the slow blues, and he never missteps throughout this fine set. All told, this dynamite disc represents what the blues should be: stripped-down, soulful, and full of truth.

"...there's a relaxed intimacy and trust here born of musicians sharing a similar vision and experience in the blues....lyrically, Hopkins' ability to poetically improvise without noticeable limits keeps each song interesting..." ~ Living Blues - Jan/Feb 93, pp.84-85


Tracklist:                           
A1Rocky Mountain
A2Got To Move You Baby
A3So Sorry To Leave You
A4Take A Trip With Me
B1Last Night Blues
B2Lightnin's Stroke
B3Hard To Love A Woman
B4Conversation Blues

Lightnin' Hopkins & Sonny Terry - Last Night Blues (1960)
(320 kbps, cover art included)