MP3 Djerdan vol.9

Diskusije o bh. i inostranim izvođačima, razmjena pjesama, CD-ova, muzičke oprema...

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victory
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#251

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Burning Spear - Marcus Garvey/Garvey's Ghost (1990)

http://rapidshare.de/files/3412360/Burn ... t.zip.html
This was where it all started for Burning Spear, in those days a vocal trio of Winston Rodney, Delroy Hines, and Rupert Milligton. And what a bomb to drop for a debut! It was heavier, and more militant, than anything that had ever been heard in reggae before, taking elements of the music and combining them in a new way. A concept album of sorts, it helped raise awareness of the black leader while still keeping a strong Rasta vibe to the sound, hypnotic and dread. Time has shown it to be one of the classic albums of reggae, charged and powerful.
1. Marcus Garvey
2. Slavery Days
3. Invasion
4. Live Good
5. Give Me
6. Old Marcus Garvey
7. Tradition
8. Jordan River
9. Red, Gold and Green
10. Resting Place
11. Ghost
12. I and I Survive
13. Black Wadada
14. John Burns Skank
15. Brain Food
16. Farther East of Jack
17. 2000 Years
18. Dread River
19. Workshop
20. Reggaelation

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victory
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#252

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odlican novi My Morning Jacket album koji bi zvanicno trebao da bude objavljen krajem godine. jos mi u usima fino zuji od sjajnog Jim Jamesovog falsetta :-D

My Morning Jacket - Z (10/2005)

My Morning Jacket takes its Southern-tinged rock'n'roll to new and exciting places on its fourth studio album, "Z." As previously reported, the 10-track set will be released Sept. 20 via ATO/RCA and was produced by John Leckie (Radiohead, New Order).

The addition of new members Carl Broemel (guitar) and Bo Koster (keyboards) has helped broaden the band's sound, with more keyboards and overall sonic texture in the nooks and crannies than on 2003's "It Still Moves." That set debuted at No. 2 on Billboard's Heatseekers chart and has sold more than 127,000 copies in the United States, according to Nielsen SoundScan.
The album opens with the vintage keyboard bounce of the aptly named "Wordless Chorus," which immediately reintroduces frontman Jim James' reverb-drenched voice. "We are the innovators / they are the imitators," he sings, eventually rising to a full-on falsetto of "hoos" as the song concludes.

James reaches back for chill-inducing wordless vocalizations on the stellar space rocker "Gideon" and shines on the piano- and pedal steel guitar-tinged ballad "Knot Comes Loose."

The band works up a top-notch rock/reggae groove on "Off the Record," which morphs into a smoky, soul-driven instrumental interlude with shades of the Rolling Stones' "Can't You Hear Me Knockin'," replete with backward vocal snippets.

A "Take Me Out to the Ballgame"-style organ and the sounds of children playing outside usher in the amusingly strange "Into the Woods," while the sparse seven-minute-plus closer "Dondante" builds to a tense climax that ends the album on a spooky note.

But MMJ saves room for several satisfying rockers, including the ripping, chipper "What a Wonderful Man" and "Anytime," both of which capture the power of the band's live shows.
"Wordless Chorus"
"It Beats for You"
"Gideon"
"What a Wonderful Man"
"Off the Record"
"Into the Woods"
"Anytime"
"Lay Low"
"Knot Comes Loose"
"Dondante"

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#253

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Novi Super Furry Animals :)


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Super Furry Animals - Love Kraft (23/08/2005)
The first sound on Love Kraft is a splash caused by Super Furry Animals guitarist Huw 'Bunf' Bunford plunging into a Spanish swimming pool. Recorded in Catalunya and mixed in Rio de Janeiro, the album finds the Welsh band in self-professed 'decadent' mode, living the high life in the Latin sunshine.
Getting out of Cardiff seems to have suited the Super Furries: Love Kraft's 12 tracks ooze languid loveliness. Taking their cue from the playful melodicism of the Beach Boys' Seventies albums, it extends the band's magical pranksterism to include songs by all five Furries bar bassist Guto Pryce. It's also the first instance of the group - under the aegis of sometime Beastie Boys producer Mario Caldato Jr - creating songs in rehearsal before entering the studio.

Brian Wilson and brothers make their presence felt. 'Atomic Lust' steals the serene keyboard riff of Surf's Up's 'Feel Flows', while 'Cabin Fever' could be an outtake from Dennis Wilson's 1977 sunset masterpiece Pacific Ocean Blue

Whatever it is that gives Gruff Rhys and chums a melodic edge over their hip-Brit contemporaries, it's here in abundance: on the gorgeous opening epic 'Zoom!', with its descending/ascending keyboard chords, billowing guitar fills and 100-strong Catalan choir; on the slowly unfolding 'Walk You Home', with its Sean O'Hagan-arranged MOR strings and slick Steely Dan backing vocals; on the overlapping choruses of 'Frequency' and the hymnal solemnity of 'Cloudberries'. (The latter's middle section is the only moment at which any Latin flavour seeps into Love Kraft - odd considering it was mixed on the very desk where the likes of Antonio Carlos Jobim did their great bossa nova work.)

Naturally, there are examples of the group's jauntier side. 'The Horn' is a Beatlish waltz-time romp featuring la-la-las aplenty; 'Lazer Beam' is like Phantom Power's 'Golden Retriever' via Beck's Guero; 'Oi Frango' climaxes in a gaggle of mad voices.

Eschewing the band's usual political agenda, Love Kraft is purportedly about just that: the craft of 'love and how it goes wrong' (in Gruff's words). But even here Rhys can't resist the paranoid wordplay of 'Kiss me with apoca-lips' ('Zoom!').

As if they were the UK's own Flaming Lips, Super Furry Animals make music that has heart and soul but is never trite. Love Kraft is another helping of alterna-pop that makes a mockery of every fad band in the land.
1. Zoom!
2. Atomic Lust
3. The Horn
4. Ohio Heat
5. Walk You Home
6. Lazer Beam
7. Frequency
8. Oi Frango
9. Psyclone!
10. Back On A Roll
11. Cloudberries
12. Cabin Fever

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victory
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#254

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Constantines - Tournament of Hearts (11/10/2005)
News of a new Constantines record has been dangled tantalizingly in front of fans of the Toronto band for months now, and all the details are finally out now. It’s still a long way off, but Tournament of Hearts has been given an official release date of October 11th.

Not only will Tournament be released through celebrated Canadian indie label Three Gut Records, but it will sadly be the last record the company puts out, as they’ve decided to close their doors. Those who live outside of the Great White North can get the band’s third full-length through Sub Pop.
“Draw Us Lines”
“Hotline Operator”
“Love In Fear”
“Lizavetta”
“Soon Enough:
“Working Fulltime”
“Good Nurse”
“Thieves”
“Conductor”
“Windy Road”
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#255

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Go-Betweens - 16 Lovers Lane (1988)

http://rapidshare.de/files/3453430/LL1.zip.html
http://rapidshare.de/files/3453852/LL2.zip.html
Arguably Australia's greatest pop group ever, The Go-Betweens seemed to save the best for last when they split in 1989. (They reunited in 1999, and have issued two more studio recordings since that time). 16 Lovers Lane is simply breathtaking; it is a deeply moving, aurally sensual collection of songs about relationships and the broken side of love that never lapses into cheap sentimentality or cynicism. Songwriters Robert Forster and Grant McLennan had always been visionary when it came to charting personal and relational melancholy and heartbreak, but here, their resolve focused on charting the depths of the romantic's soul when it has been disillusioned or crestfallen, is simply and convincingly taut. While it's true that the group was going through its own version of a soap opera-styled romantic saga, that emotional quagmire seemingly fueled its energies and focus, resulting in an album so texturally rich, lyrically sharp, and musically honest, its effect is nothing less than searing on an any listener who doesn't have sawdust instead of blood in his or her veins.

Opening with McLennan's "Love Goes On," the stage is set for a kind of refined yet primal emotional transference that pop music is rarely capable of revealing. As he sings: "There are times when I want you/I want you so much I could bust/I know a thing about lovers/Lovers lie down in trust/The people next door they got problems/They got things they can't name/I know about things about lovers/ Lovers don't feel any shame/Late not night when the light's down low/The candle burns to the end/I know a thing about darkness/Darkness ain't my friend/Love goes on anyway," the doorway to the heart and its secrets opens. In the grain of his voice lie the flowers in the dustbin whose names are desperation and affirmation. With its hyperactive acoustic guitars, Amanda Brown's cooing string arrangements, and the deftly layered, subtly played brass instruments, the tune becomes a gauzy anthem; it celebrates the ravaged heart as a beacon of strained hope in the entryway to a hall of bewilderment. He follows it with "Quiet Heart," a song whose opening was admittedly influenced in structure by U2's "With Or Without You," but blows it away lyrically and with its subtly shifting melody and harmony between the guitars. Brown's multi-layered strings actually stride the backbeat's pulse. His protagonist speaks to an absent lover. His ache offers a view of his own weakness, desperation, and an all-consuming tenderness: "I tried to tell you/But I can only say when we're apart/How I miss your quiet, quiet heart."

Forster seems to underline McLennan' s raw emotionalism with his painterly, nearly baroque, "Love Is A Sign," where images from visual art, remembered scenarios, and real life brokenness intermingle effortlessly with the elegance of mandolins, a string orchestra, and a shimmering bassline. With "Streets Of Your Town," the Go-Betweens scored a minor hit in the U.K., and even got played on American radio for a moment, but despite the fact that it has the most memorable hook on a record filled with them, it merely underscores how constant the quality is on the record. Evidenced further by "The Devil's Eye," and the shattering closer "Dive For Your Memory," 16 Lovers Lane is melancholy and somber in theme, but gloriously and romantically presented. Despite the fact that band has but a cult following, even in the 21st century, the Go-Betweens have nonetheless given us a far more literate, magnificently written, performed, and produced slab of pop classicism, than Fleetwood Mac's wonderfully coked out, love as co-dependency fest, Rumours.

Thom Jurek, All Music Guide
The Go-Betweens: Amanda Brown (vocals, guitar, violin, oboe); Robert Forster (vocals, guitar, harmonica); Grant McLennan (vocals, guitar); John Willsteed (piano, Hammond B-3 organ, bass); Lindy Morrison (drums).

Recorded at Studio 301, Sydney, Australia in May 1988.

The sixth Go-Betweens record (and their last before a 12-year hiatus), 16 LOVERS LANE, is not only one of the band's finest albums, it's a remarkable collection of love songs. Focusing on the bittersweet side of romance, vocalist/guitarists Grant McLennan and Robert Forster write with a clear-eyed, unflinching intensity that draws listeners into their narratives of loss and redemption. Moving back to their native Australia, the group abandoned a short-lived experiment with programming and synthesizers begun on their previous album, and returned to a more organic sound that, accompanied by crisp production, gives this outing a bracing, undated immediacy.

Everything here is a gem (including the supremely catchy near-hit "Streets of Your Town"), but perhaps shining most brightly are "Love Is a Sign" and "Dive for Your Memory." The first features Amanda Brown's violin intertwining with chiming guitars as Forster's lyrics depict the vapor trail of a collapsing long-distance relationship. The second, a tale of poignant longing, has harmonized vocals and a mournful oboe coloring the spare, largely acoustic arrangement. One of pop music's masterpieces, 16 LOVERS LANE is a record that people with even a passing interest in the form owe it to themselves to own.
1. Love Goes On! - The Go-Betweens
2. Quiet Heart - The Go-Betweens
3. Love Is a Sign - The Go-Betweens
4. You Can't Say No Forever - The Go-Betweens
5. Devil's Eye - The Go-Betweens
6. Streets of Your Town - The Go-Betweens
7. Clouds - The Go-Betweens
8. Was There Anything I Could Do? - The Go-Betweens
9. I'm Allright
10. Dive for Your Memory - The Go-Betweens

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Laurie Anderson - Strange Angels (1989)

http://rapidshare.de/files/3442188/L_An ... s.rar.html
Laurie Anderson's third studio release, 1989's "Strange Angels", is the pinnacle of this artist's achievement; it's a brilliant, intelligent, and coherent masterwork that she's been unable to equal either before or since. Lyrically, the songs are much more optimistic than previous efforts, many of them reading like Tama Janowitz short stories. Others are firmly rooted in classic literature ("Monkey's Paw", "The Dream Before" and "Hiawatha" being the most obvious examples). The supporting music is ethereal, almost otherworldly, and works to unify the whole in a beautiful tapestry of sound. Best (and perhaps most surprising) of all, Anderson makes an honest attempt to sing in these tracks, and the effect is absolutely gorgeous. There's still plenty of wry spoken commentary throughout, but Anderson's melodic voice is definitely the focus, and it is a joy to hear. The overall accessibility of "Strange Angels", along with its fully-realized vision, makes this the one Laurie Anderson CD every serious music lover should own. Personal Favorites: the hauntingly melodic title track, and the stunning beauty of "My Eyes". Representative Lyrics: "She said: What is history?/ And he said: History is an angel/ being blown backward into the future" ("The Dream Before"); "They say that Heaven is like TV/ A perfect little world/ That doesn't really need you" ("Strange Angels")
1. Strange Angels
2. Monkey's Paw
3. Coolsville
4. Ramon
5. Babydoll
6. Beautiful Red Dress
7. Day the Devil
8. Dream Before
9. My Eyes
10. Hiawatha

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#257

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Jah Shaka - Jah Shaka Presents Dub Symphony (1990)

http://rapidshare.de/files/3461122/JSdubsym.zip.html
http://rapidshare.de/files/3461213/JSphony.zip.html

The full instrumental story to "Commandments Of Dub 9", as mentioned, a collaboration between Shaka and one Andy Mozart, a keyboard player and resident engineer for the studio used. The combination of ideas, part hummed to Andy in the studio by Shaka to give him the idea for melody and part from Andy`s own abilities and with Shaka at the keys also, the rhythms come abundant with melody and constructive modern rhythmic ideas. Many of these rhythms were later taken by Shaka to King Tubby`s studio down in Kingston, Jamaica and many were voiced by artists such as Willie Williams, Icho Candy, Prince Junior and others as specials for Shaka`s sound and were played with devastating effect, but since the passing of Tubby, Shaka has kept them under wraps.
The first few times I listened to this album, I loved it; the jazzy, masterful musicianship had me transfixed; a definite five star--er, head album. But the next few times, it seemed sub-par; the beats were bland and repetitive; a two head album. The truth of how Dub Symphony is is somewhere in between these two extremes. The title is appropriate, as these tracks have a distinguished, airy feel, incorporating live instruments alongside digital elements. The title track is particularly symphonic, utilizing classical strings to great effect. Perhaps a better title for the album would be Dub Jazz, however, for the instruments -- from the melodicas to the strings to the horns -- are played with an improvisational, free-flowing flair, as exemplified on "Dance Wicked" and "Immortal Dub." Adding to the jazz style is the absence of standard dub sounds like echoed vocals, zany digital blips, etc. Because of this, however, the songs sometimes seem a bit dull and repetitive -- particularly "Come and Get Dub" and "Mystic Dub." The best tracks, then, are the ones with the strongest musical identities, like "Black Steel," "Sound Clinic Dub," and "Cryptic Dub."
1. Black Steel
2. Dance Wicked
3. Dub Symphony
4. Come and Get Dub
5. Sound Clinic Dub
6. Cryptic Dub
7. True Independence
8. Mystic Dub
9. Immortal Dub
10. Earth Rightful Dub
11. Fasimbas Swing

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MrSini
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#258

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Kome nije važan kvalitet (wma):
http://24.163.170.35/Music/
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#259

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@victory

Da li mozes doci do Alarm Will Sound covering Richard D. James, alias Apex Twin. Album se zove Acoustica
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Red House Painters - Red House Painters 1 (aka Rollercoaster) [1993]

http://rapidshare.de/files/3501196/Roll ... 1.rar.html
http://rapidshare.de/files/3501419/Roll ... 2.rar.html
http://rapidshare.de/files/3500226/Roll ... 3.rar.html
The first of the group's two eponymously titled 1993 efforts is a sprawling, remarkable set distinguished by Mark Kozelek's continuing maturation as a songwriter; far removed from the uniform darkness of Down Colorful Hill, Red House Painters offers an expansion of both emotional and musical possibilities. Working outward from the cutting "Mistress" -- included as both a Spartan piano ballad and as a gauzy rock number -- the record moves through a shifting, impressionistic backdrop of textures and sounds; from the luminous folk-pop of "Grace Cathedral Park" to the epic dissonance of the gut-wrenching "Strawberry Hill," the songs resonate with depth and poignancy, and rank as Kozelek's most fully realized collection of compositions. ~ Jason Ankeny, All Music Guide
There are only two bands in the world who had been able to
put up rage, melancholy, frustration, beauty in music.
Madness... Nirvana...
Sadness... Red House Painters
Nirvana chose the destructive, final, aggressive outlet to their world pain.
Red House Painters will slowly scrape down your back and awake your inner dreams and past longings, your senses long gone bye will be recreated. This is a true masterpiece.

This band is the most amazing I have ever heard, and I heard everything.
It will be something so thrilling to your musicial experience -
I really must say I heard a lot but this is... klix in beauty.
To describe this sound...
I'd say add up... Neil Young, The Smiths, The Verve and some
New Wave/post punk played by Sigur Rós - but still it is hard to describe. Every song is a journey.
One of my favourite all-time albums ever to be released.
Mark Kozelek you are a God.
"Grace Cathedral Park" - 3:52
"Down Through" - 2:38
"Katy Song" - 8:25
"Mistress" - 4:05
"Things Mean a Lot" - 3:24
"Funhouse" - 9:18
"Take Me Out" - 4:48
"Rollercoaster" - 4:17
"New Jersey" - 4:26
"Dragonflies" - 3:58
"Mistress" (piano version) - 4:33
"Mother" - 13:06
"Strawberry Hill" - 7:35
"Brown Eyes" - 1:48

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Billie Holiday - Lady in Satin (1958)[1997] zip, 90 MB
A harrowing classic, Billie Holiday's personal favorite among her '50s albums captures the singer 17 months before her death, her once honeyed voice, scarred and weakened from punishing life, its ravages highlighted by the 1958 session's crisp sonics and the contrasting "satin" of Ray Ellis' sleek string arrangements. Yet it is that very contrast that explains the power of these performances: In revisiting its torchy standards, Holiday reduces them to their core of pain and longing, transforming "I'm a Fool to Want You," "You Don't Know What Love Is," and "You've Changed" into naked declarations as mesmerizing and unsettling as a horrific accident. Any postrocker that presumes pop standards and string sections automatically translate to "easy listening" hasn't listened to this. This 1997 version adds unreleased takes and a beautiful 20-bit digital transfer to extract every shivering pang of Holiday's music.
1. I'm a Fool to Want You [Edited Master] [Edit]
2. For Heaven's Sake
3. You Don't Know What Love Is
4. I Get Along Without You Very Well
5. For All We Know
6. Violets for Your Furs
7. You've Changed
8. It's Easy to Remember
9. But Beautiful
10. Glad to Be Unhappy
11. I'll Be Around
12. End of a Love Affair [Mono Version]
13. I'm a Fool to Want You [Take 3]
14. I'm a Fool to Want You [Take 2 - Alternate Take] [Alternate Take]
15. End of a Love Affair: The Audio Story
16. End of a Love Affair [Stereo]

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Louis Armstrong & Ella Fitzgerald - Our Love Is Here To Stay: Ella & Louis Sing Gershwin zip, 87 MB
When Ella and Louis recorded a series of albums together for Verve in 1956 and 1957, George Gershwin's songs were a constant theme, including a double LP of Porgy and Bess that delighted Ira Gershwin. This 1998 compilation pulls together material from those recordings to celebrate a union of jazz's greatest singers with a songwriter who had been an essential resource for jazz since the 1920s. The chemistry is consistently inspired, with Armstrong's gravelly voice, perfect rhythmic sense, and still-eloquent trumpet providing a fine complement to Fitzgerald's consummately smooth delivery and extraordinary range. Also included are Ella and Louis's own takes on Gershwin from contemporary sessions, including Fitzgerald's Jazz at the Philharmonic version of "Oh, Lady, Be Good!" (from At the Opera House) that includes Lester Young, Coleman Hawkins, and Stan Getz among the tenor saxophonists. Collectors will want the CD reissues of the original albums to get a complete picture of the Fitzgerald and Armstrong partnership, or Fitzgerald's own extended encounter with Gershwin in the Songbook series; nevertheless, this is a delightful introduction to an inspired collaboration.
1. I Got Plenty O' Nuttin'
2. He Loves and She Loves
3. Woman Is a Sometime Thing Listen
4. They Can't Take That Away from Me
5. Let's Call the Whole Thing Off
6. Strike up the Band Lis
7. Things Are Looking Up
8. They All Laughed
9. Foggy Day Listen
10. How Long Has This Been Going On?
11. Summertime
12. Love Is Here to Stay Lis
13. There's a Boat Dat's Leavin' Soon for New York
14. 'S Wonderful Listen
15. I Was Doing All Right
16. Oh, Lady Be Good

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