Battleground Korea - Sounds and Songs of America's Forgotten War (4 CD, 2018/FLAC)
After its epic Next Stop Is Vietnam collection, Germany's Bear Family Records and producer Hugo A. Keesing quickly came up with their next collection of war music.
Battleground Korea: Songs And Sounds Of America's Forgotten War with its four CDs offering a genre-spanning gathering of 121 tracks about or inspired by the war, ranging from the likes of blues and R&B stalwarts John Lee Hooker, Fats Domino. Sister Rosetta Tharpe and Lightnin' Hopkins to country artists such as Ernest Tubb, Gene Autry, Merle Travis and Jimmie Osborne, whose 1953 song 'The Korean Story,' which Keesing calls 'a three-minute summary of the war,' is below.
The Velvet Underground - TVU [45th Anniversary Super Deluxe Edition] (6 CD, 2014/FLAC)
This band’s eponymous 1969 release, so different from 1968’s White Light/White Heat, is the sound of a band finding clarity through subtraction. Gone was John Cale, and with him the grinding viola and most of the avant-garde leanings he brought to the forefront. Gone were — according to guitarist Sterling Morrison — all the effects pedals that allowed for the distortion and feedback so prevalent on White Light/White Heat, stolen at the New York airport as the band flew to Los Angeles to record. Gone was the Verve label, with the band moving up to parent company MGM’s main label. Gone was New York itself, and all but the last tenuous threads of its connection to Andy Warhol and The Factory. The result is the barest Velvet Underground record, stripped down to its skin.
The Velvet Underground – 45th Anniversary Super Deluxe Edition is much more than just the single album, though it does contain three distinct mixes of the record itself. First is the “Val Valentin Mix”, which is the one referenced for the above description. Valentin was the engineer for the recordings, and his mix was the one released overseas and eventually on compact disc. Second is what became known as “The Closet Mix”, which was done by Lou Reed himself and was used for the initial vinyl release in the United States. Its nickname comes from Sterling Morrison, who said, ”I thought it sounded like it was recorded in a closet. I guess he [Lou] felt the real essence of the tracks was the lyrics.” Besides the band being pushed far to the back, a different vocal take of “Some Kinda Love” was used on “the Closet Mix”. That track also has a single guitar track instead of the two on the Valentin mix. Preference between the two versions is left to the individual; there is no definitive version, though it’s easy to see why some people side with Lou’s mix. It makes an intimate album all the more personal. However, the Valentin mix gives the band greater prominence as a whole, and the contribution of the other members is not to be underplayed. Both are worth having at hand, depending on the listener’s mood.
Gov't Mule - Dub Side Of The Mule (3 CD, 2015/FLAC)
Dub Side of the Mule, 3 hours of music including a
45-minute set of reggae songs with special guest Toots Hibbert, leader
of Toots & The Maytals. Recorded on New Year’s Eve 2006 at the
Beacon Theatre in New York City, the newly mixed and mastered live album
is available in a deluxe version (3 CD’s of the entire performance and
1-DVD of the special 45-minute reggae set), along with a standard
version (1 CD featuring the reggae set) and a Double Vinyl Version as
well.
Peter Frampton Band - Frampton Forgets The Words (2021 FLAC)
Released on the heels of his New York Times Best Selling memoir, 'Do You Feel Like I Do?', the rock 'n' roll legend and Grammy winning artist Peter Frampton turns his focus back to music with the studio album 'Frampton Forgets the Words'. With his 1954 Les Paul Phenix, Frampton brings virtuosic guitar playing to 10 instrumental tributes to some of his favourite songs, including 'Isn't It a Pity' by George Harrison, 'Reckoner' by Radiohead, 'Loving the Alien' by David Bowie, and more.
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