Ar9Jim 6,512 Posted May 2, 2015 Posted May 2, 2015 Audio Adrenaline---Some kind of Zombie..Picked it out of the disc exchange just because the name sounded cool.So far it's good.
Sagamore2007 71 Posted May 3, 2015 Posted May 3, 2015 Still my favorite version of China Cat Sunflower - I Know You Rider medley 1
evilmainer 137 Posted May 3, 2015 Posted May 3, 2015 picked this up Fri for a few bucks and it is very cool. Not my favorite arrangements but cool sound for a recording made in the 40's and the updated producation sounds great and the presentation is impressive. Informative pics and background story of producation.
Belvedere2 232 Posted May 4, 2015 Posted May 4, 2015 Nickelback-No idea what the CD is got it from an ex of mine. Running thru the AR-90s but using the VTLs for power. Sounds alot better than I remember. Gotta love tube amps.
evilmainer 137 Posted May 4, 2015 Posted May 4, 2015 Calling all non-dead fans, please check out CD2, also many free copies streaming on line. Topnotch interplay between musicians with a strong understanding of one anothers abilities and tendencacies, with major ingredients of jazz, traditional country, and rock . All of this is being conducted by impressive bass leads, which are some of the best my ears have ever heard live in a "rock-n-roll" recording. AllMusic review: Apart from the usual host of originals and lively covers, they dedicate no less than 40 minutes of their set to playing one of their only occasionally offered "palindromic" medleys, beginning with "Playing in the Band," transitioning into "Uncle John's Band," centering with "Morning Dew," then jamming backwards again into "Uncle John's Band" before ending with four more minutes of "Playing in the Band." 1
dcl 3,276 Posted May 4, 2015 Posted May 4, 2015 "Long held as a talisman by Santana fans, who had to buy it as a triple-LP Japanese import before Columbia finally issued it on CD in 1991, Lotus is a live album that finds Carlos Santana and his octet (a.k.a. the New Santana Band) at a nexus between rock, Latin music, jazz fusion, and spiritually driven communiqués to the gods. Some of the early hits are performed, such as "Black Magic Woman" and "Oye Como Va," but long, intense instrumentals are the order of the day, as on the breathtaking "Incident at Neshabur," "Every Step of the Way," and "Toussaint L'Overture."
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