Sonntag, 15. Dezember 2024

Os Mutantes - Tecnicolor (1970)

"Tecnicolor" would have been the fourth album by the Brazilian band Os Mutantes. The album was intended to be their introduction in the English-speaking world and included English versions of songs from the albums "Os Mutantes" and "A Divina Comédia ou Ando Meio Desligado", re-recordings in Portuguese and French and several new songs.

It was recorded in Paris in 1970, the tapes were lost until writer Carlos Calado, working on an Os Mutantes biography, uncovered them. Another version of the myth is that they were unsatisfied with many of the recording and abandoned the project to return to Brazil, explaining why three of the recordings were used later that year for their album "Jardim Elétrico".

It was released in 2000 on Universal Records, with artwork by Sean Lennon, in order to capitalize on the growing interest in Os Mutantes following the re-release of their early albums in the late 1990s.
By no means did Mutantes commercialize their sound. The tape-music experimentation and freak-out guitar lines are, if anything, farther out than the first few Mutantes LPs.

Though a few of the tracks -- "Panis Et Circenses" especially -- lose much of their cache with the addition of English lyrics, for the most part these versions equal or even better the originals.


Tracklist:

Panis Et Circenses 2:12
Bat Macumba 3:16
Virginia 3:23
She's My Shoo Shoo (A Minha Menina) 2:52
I Feel A Little Spaced Out (Ando Meio Desligado) 2:51
Baby 3:36
Tecnicolor 3:54
El Justiciero3:52
I'm Sorry Baby (Desculpe, Babe) 2:42
Adeus, Maria Fulo 2:39
Le Premier Bonheur Du Jour 2:46
Saravah 2:59
Panis Et Circenses (Reprise) 1:23


Os Mutantes - Tecnicolor (1970)
(192 kbps, cover art included)

Samstag, 14. Dezember 2024

Ijahman Levi‎ – Are We A Warrior (1979)







The title track and "Moulding" are two of reggae's most haunting meditations ever.

Tracklist:

A1Are We A Warrior
A2Moulding
A3The Church
B1Miss Beverly
B2Two Sides Of Love


Ijahman Levi‎ – Are We A Warrior (1979)
(192 kbps, cover art included)        

Freitag, 13. Dezember 2024

Prince Buster - The Outlaw (1969 Blue Beat, vinyl rip)

Cecil Bustamente Campbell, O.D. (born 28 May 1938), better known as Prince Buster and also known by his Muslim name Muhammed Yusef Ali, is a musician from Kingston, Jamaica is regarded as one of the most important figures in the history of ska and rocksteady music. The records he made on the Blue Beat label in the 1960s inspired many reggae and ska artists.

Like "Wreck a Pum Pum" before it, "The Outlaw" could reasonably claim to stand among rock's first-ever concept albums, a collection of songs built (for the most part) around the legend of the American west, bad men and, indeed, outlaws.

"The Cincinnati Kid" and a tight remake of "Al Capone," the thumping "Gun the Man Down" and "The Baddest," the driving "It's Burke's Law," with its bemusing vocal premonition of Eek-A-Mouse and "The Outlaw" itself all feed into the album's overall theme and, if the likes of "Happy Reggae" and "Fever" seem a little out of place, the blazing take on "Phoenix City" that closes the set swiftly restores the concept's equilibrium.

Prince Buster - The Outlaw (1969, vinyl rip)
(256 kbps, cover art included)

Donnerstag, 12. Dezember 2024

Os Mutantes - Mutantes (1969)


Here´s another fine album by Os Mutantes, the Brazilian rockers who blended pop packaging, avant-garde experimentation, and an irreverent attitude during the late-'60s tropicalia movement

One album into their career in 1969, "Mutantes" showed few signs of musical burnout after turning in one of the oddest LPs released in the '60s. Similar to its predecessor, "Mutantes" relies on an atmosphere of experimentation and continual musical collisions, walking a fine line between innovation and pointless genre exercises. The lead track ("Dom Quixote") has the same focus on stylistic cut-and-paste as their debut LP's first track ("Panis et Circenses"). Among the band's musical contemporaries, "Mutantes" sounds similar only to songs like the Who's miniature suite "A Quick One While He's Away" -- though done in three minutes instead of nine, and much more confusing given the language barrier.
The album highlights ("Nao Va Se Perder por Ai") and ("Dois Mil e Um") come with what sounds like a typically twisted take on roots music (both Brazilian and American), complete with banjo, accordion, and twangy vocals. Though there are several other enjoyable tracks, including "Magica" and a slap-happy stomp called "Rita Lee," there's a palpable sense that the experimentation here isn't serving much more than its own ends.       

Tracklist

A1 Dom Quixote 3:53
A2 Não Vá Se Perder Por Aí 3:15
A3 Dia 36 4:00
A4 2.001 3:56
A5 Algo Mais 2:39
A6 Fuga N° II Dos Mutantes 3:44
B1 Banho De Lua 3:40
B2 Rita Lee 3:09
B3 Mágica 4:43
B4 Qualquer Bobagem 4:47
B5 Caminhante Noturno 5:09


Os Mutantes - Mutantes (1969)
(320 kbps, cover art included)      

Mittwoch, 11. Dezember 2024

Fabrizio De André - Vol. 1 (1967)

Fabrizio Cristiano De André (18 February 1940 – 11 January 1999) was an Italian singer-songwriter.
Known for his sympathies towards anarchism, left-libertarianism and pacifism, his songs often featured marginalized and rebellious people, Romani, prostitutes and knaves, and attacked the Catholic Church hierarchy.

Fabrizio De André was in many ways already a seasoned veteran when he released his first album in 1967. He was 27 years old, he had a wife and child, and he had been writing and recording singles for the small Karim label since 1961. While recognition took a while, by late 1966 De André was hot news. His last singles had done well, Mina was about to record one of his songs, and Karim was quick to put out an LP compilation of his early songs, "Tutto Fabrizio De André". In the meantime, De André broke with Karim and signed a record deal with renowned producer Antonio Casetta, who offered him much better production values, as well as proper national distribution. De André was even given his choice of musical producers, and he picked top Ricordi arranger Giampiero Reverberi. Casetta's gamble paid off, with "V.1" reaching number two in the Italian charts, and winning the Italian Music Critics' Album of the Year award. Since most of his early material was being released almost simultaneously in the Karim compilation, De André was forced to write entirely new material for his debut album - something that didn't always came easy for the hardly prolific Genovese songwriter. Indeed, "V.1" included two Georges Brassens translations and a previously released song co-written with Paolo Villaggio to complement the seven brand new De André originals.

Having to come up with new material may ultimately have made the album stronger, since many of the new songs shared similar themes and De André was always at his best when making concept- or theme-based albums. Whether it was intended or not, the album seemed designed for maximum controversy, with every song questioning or mocking established values of the Italian conservative bourgeoisie, notably on the issues of religion and sex. Even the sequencing contributes to this impression, as "V.1" seems to comprise two mini-suites: songs one through four deal with Catholic doctrine's taboos (including suicide, the desacralization of marriage, and the humanity of Christ), while songs five through eight propose casual sex and prostitution as better, or more sincere, alternatives to the stifled sexuality of bourgeois marriage. Among the latter songs are the classics "Bocca di Rosa" and "Via del Campo," both offering a glimpse into one of De André's favorite galleries of characters, the world of prostitutes, their customers, and the town's zealous bigots. The first is a raucous tarantella and the second a solemn waltz: these two songs constitute an excellent example of De André's range of expression as he manages to examine the same subject from the compassionate to the farcical. The highlight of the record, however, is a stunning rendition of Georges Brassens' "La Marche Nuptiale." In his exquisite Italian translation, De André replaces the gentle irony of the original with a mixture of world-weariness and sympathy for humanity that renders the song achingly moving. De André was the first to recognize that he had a veritable Brassens obsession, and the influence of the legendary French songwriter in De André's early work is unmistakable. In this light, "Marcia Nunziale" is one of those instances when the disciple surpasses the master.

Uncommon in Italy at the time, "V.1's" sleeve included the songs' full lyrics, thus reinforcing the image of De André as a "singer-poet." Again, this was pretty much an unheard of concept in Italy back then, where music, and particularly, vocal prowess (a heritage of opera) normally took precedence over lyrics. While not the only one starting to work in that vein, (the names of Gino Paoli, Francesco Guccini, or Luigi Tenco also come to mind; Tenco committed suicide; one of the songs on "V.1" is dedicated to him). De André's provocative yet cultivated style was immediately perceived as uniquely different, if not revolutionary. If controversy was his original goal for his debut album, he more than successfully achieved it, as several of his pieces were banned by the RAI. Furthermore, the song "Carlo Martello" was briefly brought to trial on charges of obscenity because of its irreverent portrait of the hapless King Charles Martel coming back from the war horny as a toad. Nothing came out of the trial but excellent publicity for De André as the enfant terrible of the new Italian song. In fact, "V.1" was instrumental in modernizing Italian popular music and establishing the singer/songwriter (cantautori) genre that would dominate the 1970s and beyond.    

Tracklist:

Preghiera In Gennaio
Marcia Nuziale
Spiritual
Si Chiamava Gesù
La Canzone Di Barbara
Via Del Campo
Caro Amore
Bocca Di Rosa
La Morte
Carlo Martello Ritorna Dalla Battaglia Di Poitier

Fabrizio De André -  Vol. 1 (1967)
(320 kbps, cover art included)    

Dienstag, 10. Dezember 2024

The Residents - Commercial Album (1980)

Commercial Album is the seventh studio album released by art rock group the Residents in 1980. It is commonly considered a follow-up to their 1978 album Duck Stab/Buster & Glen, in that it retains the former album's pop-oriented song structures. The album contains 40 songs, each lasting exactly one minute - a deliberate allusion to Top 40 mainstream radio. The album's liner notes state that, to form a complete pop song, tracks from the album should be played three times in a row.

"Here's the concept: The structure of most pop songs consists of only two parts, the verse and the chorus. Since the verse and chorus usually repeat three times in a three-minute song, a pop tune really only consists of one minute of music. Cut out the repetition and you can, therefore, fit 40 pop songs onto a 40-minute record. And that's exactly what the Residents have done on The Commercial Album, the title of which comes from the band's deduction that since pop songs only consist of one minute of music and most advertisements are about a minute long also, ad jingles are "therefore the music of America." Got it? Whatever the concept behind it, this album is not only weird in that special way that only Residents albums are, but it's also surprisingly musically satisfying. A few of its 40 tracks ("Secrets" and "The Simple Song," for example) feel like throwaways, but most of them are surprisingly well organized and complete. The instrumental "Japanese Watercolor" is particularly impressive, as are the songs "Picnic Boy" and "Troubled Man." This album would make a great introduction to the Residents for anyone who hasn't yet been exposed to the band's unique brand of whimsy." - allmusic.com

Tracklist:

Easter Woman 1:00
Perfect Love 1:00
Picnic Boy 1:00
End Of Home 1:00
Amber 1:00
Japanese Watercolor 1:00
Secrets 1:00
Die In Terror 1:00
Red Rider 1:00
My Second Wife 1:00
Floyd 1:00
Suburban Bathers 1:00
Dimples And Toes 1:00
The Nameless Souls 1:00
Love Leaks Out 1:00
Act Of Being Polite 1:00
Medicine Man 1:00
Tragic Bells 1:00
Loss Of Innocence 1:00
The Simple Song 1:00
Ups And Downs 1:00
Possessions 1:00
Give It To Someone Else 1:00
Phantom 1:00
Less Not More 1:00
My Work Is So Behind 1:00
Birds In The Trees 1:00
Handfull Of Desire 1:00
Moisture 1:00
Love Is... 1:00
Troubled Man 1:00
La La 1:00
Loneliness 1:00
Nice Old Man 1:00
The Talk Of Creatures 1:00
Fingertips 1:00
In Between Dreams 1:00
Margaret Freeman 1:00
The Coming Of The Crow 1:00
When We Were Young 1:00

(plus bonus tracks)

(320 kbps, cover art included)

Os Mutantes - Os Mutantes (1968)

The band's debut album, "Os Mutantes", is far and away their best — a wildly inventive trip that assimilates orchestral pop, whimsical psychedelia, musique concrète, found-sound environments — and that's just the first song!

Elsewhere there are nods to Carnaval, albeit with distinct hippie sensibilities, incorporating fuzztone guitars and go-go basslines. Two tracks, "O Relogio" and "Le Premier Bonheur du Jour," work through pastoral French pop, sounding closer to the Swingle Singers than Gilberto Gil.

Though not all of the experimentation succeeds — the languid Brazilian blues of "Baby" is rather cumbersome — and pop/rock listeners may have a hard time finding the hooks, Os Mutantes' first album is an astonishing listen. It's far more experimental than any of the albums produced by the era's first-rate psychedelic bands of Britain or America.

Os Mutantes - Same (1968)
(320 kbps, front cover included)

Montag, 9. Dezember 2024

Last Poets - At Last (1976)

It was the combination of poetry with almost-frighteningly intense rhythm tracks, mostly done on hand drums, that helped create the Last Poets' reputation for being way ahead of the curve on the entire development of what would come to be called rap music.

With their politically charged raps, taut rhythms, and dedication to raising African-American consciousness, the Last Poets almost single-handedly laid the groundwork for the emergence of hip-hop. The group arose out of the prison experiences of Jalal Mansur Nuriddin, a U.S. Army paratrooper who chose jail as an alternative to fighting in Vietnam; while incarcerated, he converted to Islam, learned to "spiel" (an early form of rapping), and befriended fellow inmates Omar Ben Hassan and Abiodun Oyewole.

Tracklist:

A1In Time And Space
A2The Courtroom
A3Death Row
A4Picture In Blue
B1Tranquility
B2Reflections
B3Uncle Sam's Lament
B4The African Slave
B5Ode To Saphcallah
B6In Search Of Knowledge

Last Poets - At Last (1976)
(192 kbps, cover art included)

Sonntag, 8. Dezember 2024

Skin, Flesh & Bones - Fighting Dub (1975)

"Fighting Dub" is a collection issued on the Love label in 1975. The album's original mix was done by Errol "E.T." Thompson at Joe Gibbs' studio. Basically, these dubs were of Lloyd "Spiderman" Campbell's hits at the time, such as "Jacket" and "First Cut Is the Deepest."

This album was seen as the forerunner to the 'rockers' sound made famous by Sly Dunbar. Sly is in the band alongside Jackie Jackson, Hux Brown, Rad Bryan and Ansell Collins.


Tracklist:

Boxer Dub
Slavery Dub
Third Cut Dub
Jack Ruby Special
Scotch Dub
In Tone Rock
Spider Man Web
Run Run Dub
Baby Face Dub
Harbour View Rock

Skin, Flesh & Bones - Fighting Dub (1975)
(320 kbps, cover art included)

Samstag, 7. Dezember 2024

Rita Lee - Fruto Proibido (1975)

Rita Lee, a former member of the seminal rock band Os Mutantes, always had lots to say about Brazilian rock, but she spent most of her post-Mutantes career on innocuous dance grooves. 

On this album recorded in 1975, she is a truthful rock artist. Backed by the strong grip of her rock band Tutti Frutti, she delivers some of her biggest hits here: "Agora Só Falta Você," "Esse Tal de Roque Enrow" (composed with mega-selling esoteric writer Paulo Coelho, when he was an alternative rock composer [he was the main partner of the late rocker Raul Seixas]), and the eternal "Ovelha Negra," the anthem of the rebellious youngsters in Brazil. 

Lee can be a singer as competent in wild rock as in softer ballads when she acquires a girlish, tender quality. The album is a document of a time when she could be truthful about her ideals.


Tracklist:

A1 Dançar Prá Não Dançar 2:47
A2 Agora Só Falta Você 2:46
A3 Cartão Postal 2:46
A4 Fruto Proibido 2:47
A5 Esse Tal De Roque Enrow 2:47
B1 O Toque 2:47
B2 Pirataria 2:48
B3 Luz Del Fuego 2:47
B4 Ovelha Negra 2:47

(192 kbps, cover art included)

Inti-Illimani-1975-Canto de Pueblos Andinos (Inti-Illimani 3)

Inti-Illimani, from the Aymara dialect, means "Sun of the Illimani", in reference to a mountain at La Paz, Bolivia. It is the name of  a Latin American folk music ensemble from Bolivia & Chile. The band was formed in 1967 by a group of university students: Pedro Yañez (musical director), Jorge Coulon, Max Berrú, Horacio Durán, Oscar Guzmán, Luis Cifuentes and Ciro Retamal. That same year Luis Cifuentes was replaced by Luis Espinoza, and Ciro Retamal and Oscar Guzmán quit the band, joining them Horacio “Loro” Salinas. Pedro Yáñez also left the band in 1968.

They acquired widespread popularity in Chile for their song "Venceremos" (We shall win!) which became the anthem of the Popular Unity government of Salvador Allende. At the moment of September 11, 1973's Chilean coup they were on tour in Europe and were unable to return to their country where their music was proscribed by the ruling military junta. In Europe their music took on a multifarious character, incorporating elements of European baroque and other traditional music forms to their rich and colourful Latin American rhythms - creating a distinctive fusion of modern world music. They are perhaps the best internationally known members of the nueva canción movement.

Owing to personal problems, in 2001 they split in two bands (as Quilapayún): Inti Illimani Histórico (directed by Horacio Salinas, with H. Salinas, J. Seves, H. Durán, Jorge Ball, Fernando Julio, Danilo Donoso and Camilo Salinas) and Inti-Illimani "Nuevo" (Jorge and Marcelo Coulón, Manuel Meriño, Daniel Cantillana, Efrén Viera and César Jara).





Tracklist:

1 Huajra 3:46
2 Tema De La Quemada De Humahuaca 2:58
3 Dolencias 3:08
4 Lamento Del Indio 2:14
5 Taita Salasca 2:12
6 La Mariposa 2:09
7 Tinku 3:25
8 Amores Hallaras 1:59
9 Papel De Plata 2:42
10 Flor De Sancayo 2:30
11 Mis Llamitas 2:47
12 Sicuriadas 3:10


Inti-Illimani-1975-Canto de Pueblos Andinos (Inti-Illimani 3)
(192 kbps, cover art included)