Showing posts with label Soundgarden. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Soundgarden. Show all posts

Chris Cornell – Songbook (2011) [24-192]


Songbook is an acoustic live album by American musician and Soundgarden vocalist Chris Cornell, released on November 21, 2011. The live album features songs recorded during Cornell's Songbook Tour, an acoustic solo tour which took place from March to May 2011 in the US and Canada, and is his first live album as a solo artist.

The songs on the tour varied in every show, and the album was recorded during various shows on the tour, and includes songs from Cornell's whole career: solo material, Soundgarden songs, Audioslave songs, Temple of the Dog songs, as well as covers of Led Zeppelin's "Thank You" and John Lennon's "Imagine". 

01. As Hope And Promise Fade (03:47)
02. Scar On The Sky (03:40)
03. Call Me A Dog (04:52)
04. Ground Zero (02:59)
05. Can't Change Me (04:19)
06. I Am The Highway (04:57)
07. Thank You (04:48)
08. Cleaning My Gun (05:19)
09. Wide Awake (03:33)
10. Fell On Black Days (05:05)
11. All Night Thing (03:25)
12. Doesn't Remind Me (04:08)
13. Like A Stone (04:04)
14. Black Hole Sun (04:38)
15. Imagine (04:07)
16. The Keeper (03:58)



Soundgarden – Superunknown: The Singles (RSD 2014) [24-192]


RSD 2014 release. Limited edition of 3500
contain singles :
  • Spoonman
  • The Day I Tried To Live
  • Black Hole Sun
  • My Wave
  • Fell On Black Days 

Spoonman

A1 Spoonman
A2 Fresh Tendrils
B1 Cold Bitch
B2 Exit Stonehenge

The Day I Tried To Live

C1 The Day I Tried To Live
C2 Like Suicide (Acoustic Version)
D1 Kickstand (Live)
D2 Limo Wreck

Black Hole Sun

E1 Black Hole Sun
E2 Jesus Christ Pose (Live)
F1 Beyond The Wheel (Live)
F2 Fell On Black Days (Live)

My Wave

G1 My Wave
G2 Spoonman (Steve Fisk Remix)
H1 Birth Ritual (Original Demo Version)
H2 My Wave (Live)

Fell On Black Days 
I1 Fell On Black Days
I2 Kyle Petty, Son Of Richard
I3 Ghostmotorfinger
J1 Fell On Black Days (Video Version)
J2 Girl U Want
J3 Black Days III

Soundgarden - Superunknown (20th Anniversary Super Deluxe Edition) [4 CD, 2014] [FLAC]

 


In 2014 we celebrated the 20th anniversary of Soundgarden's massive album Superunknown which to date has sold 9 million albums worldwide and is certified five times platinum by the RIAA in the US. Both a critical and commercial success, in 1994 Superunknown debuted at #1 on the Billboard charts and earned the band two Grammys for the singles 'Black Hole Sun' and 'Spoonman' in 1995. As relevant today as they were in 1994, the multi-platinum-selling Soundgarden continues to be in the Top 10 most played artists on Active Rock radio and the band's top 4 most played radio songs - accumulating over 1 million in total airplay and 4 billion in total audience to date - are all from this very beloved album: 'Black Hole Sun', 'Fell on Black Days', 'Spoonman' and 'The Day I Tried To Live'. In 2003, Rolling Stone ranked the album as one of the 500 Greatest Albums of All Time and the 100 Greatest Albums of the Nineties.




Soundgarden - Badmotorfinger (4 CD Super Deluxe 2016/FLAC)

 

Soundgarden‘s third studio album, 1991’s Badmotorfinger, is to be reissued as an extensive seven-disc super deluxe edition with an enormous amount of unreleased tracks, two DVDs with video material and a blu-ray audio with a 5.1 surround sound mix.

The four CDs in this package include the remastered album, a disc of studio outtakes (newly mixed from the multi-tracks) and the complete Paramount Theatre Concert from March 6, 1992 (across two CDs).




The CD audio content includes the original album newly remastered; 15 previously unreleased studio outtakes newly mixed from the original analog multi-tracks plus the track 'New Damage' featuring Brian May from Queen; and Live at the Paramount: Soundgarden's first-ever complete concert album newly mixed from the original analog multi-tracks and recorded at the Paramount Theatre in Seattle on March 6, 1992.



Soundgarden - Telephantasm (2010 bonus DVDRIP video)

 

Telephantasm is a compilation album by the American rock band Soundgarden. Featuring songs that span 23 years of the band's career, it was released on September 28, 2010, through A&M Records.

This is the bonus DVD (featuring all their music videos) from Deluxe Edition.





 

Soundgarden discography [1987-1996] (FLAC)


Soundgarden was an American rock band formed in Seattle, Washington, in 1984 by singer and rhythm guitarist Chris Cornell, lead guitarist Kim Thayil (both of whom are the only members to appear in every incarnation of the band), and bassist Hiro Yamamoto. Matt Cameron became the band's full-time drummer in 1986, while bassist Ben Shepherd became a permanent replacement for Yamamoto in 1990. The band dissolved in 1997 and re-formed in 2010. Following Cornell's death in 2017 and a year of uncertainty of the band's future, Thayil declared in October 2018 that the band was finished; they did, however, reunite in January 2019 for a one-off concert in tribute to Cornell. 






 

Soundgarden - The Classic Album Selection (5 CD, 2012/FLAC)

 




1989 - Louder Than Love
1991 - Badmotorfinger
1994 - Superunknown
1996 - Down On The Upside
2011 - Live On I-5

Temple of the Dog - Temple of the Dog (1991) [25th anniversary Deluxe Edition 2016/FLAC]


Featuring members of Soundgarden and what would soon become Pearl Jam, Temple of the Dog's lone eponymous album might never have reached a wide audience if not for Pearl Jam's breakout success a year later. In turn, by providing the first glimpse of Chris Cornell's more straightforward, classic rock-influenced side, Temple of the Dog helped set the stage for Soundgarden's mainstream breakthrough with Superunknown. Nearly every founding member of Pearl Jam appears on Temple of the Dog (including the then-unknown Eddie Vedder), so perhaps it isn't surprising that the record sounds like a bridge between Mother Love Bone's theatrical '70s-rock updates and Pearl Jam's hard-rocking seriousness. What is surprising, though, is that Cornell is the dominant composer, writing the music on seven of the ten tracks (and lyrics on all). Keeping in mind that Soundgarden's previous album was the overblown metallic miasma of Louder Than Love, the accessibly warm, relatively clean sound of Temple of the Dog is somewhat shocking, and its mellower moments are minor revelations in terms of Cornell's songwriting abilities. It isn't just the band, either — he displays more emotional range than ever before, and his melodies and song structures are (for the most part) pure, vintage hard rock. In fact, it's almost as though he's trying to write in the style of Mother Love Bone — which makes sense, since Temple of the Dog was a tribute to that band's late singer Andrew Wood. Not every song here is directly connected to Wood; once several specific elegies were recorded, additional material grew quickly out of the group's natural chemistry. As a result, there's a very loose, jam-oriented feel to much of the album, and while it definitely meanders at times, the result is a more immediate emotional impact. The album's strength is its mournful, elegiac ballads, but thanks to the band's spontaneous creative energy and appropriately warm sound, it's permeated by a definite, life-affirming aura. That may seem like a paradox, but consider the adage that funerals are more for the living than the dead; Temple of the Dog shows Wood's associates working through their grief and finding the strength to move on.