Baker Gurvitz Army discography [1974-1976/FLAC]

 

Baker Gurvitz Army were an English rock group. Their self-titled debut album featured a blend of hard rock laced with Ginger Baker's drumming. The lengthy "Mad Jack" was that album's outstanding track, and the album hit the US Billboard 200 chart, and peaked at #22 in the UK Albums Chart. The two following albums contained similar material, although neither charted in the UK nor the US.

VA - The Sound Of Funk Volume 01 -10 (2000 - 2005)

 

If you like uncut funk, you'll love this compilation of obscure 70's funk sounds

Grateful Dead - Complete Live Rarities Collection [2013]

  

Grateful Dead - Complete Live Rarities Collection Includes every bonus live track featured on the expanded reissues from 2001 and 2004.

Rick Springfield - Original Album Classics (5 CD, 2014/FLAC)

 



CD1 - Comic Book Heroes (1973)
CD2 - Working Class Dog (1980)
CD3 - Success Hasn't Spoiled Me Yet (1982)
CD4 - Living In Oz (1983)
CD5 - Tao (1985)

Georgia White - Complete Recorded Works, Vols. 1-4 [1930-1941] (4 CD, 1994/FLAC)


 Barrelhouse blues vocalist Georgia White recorded mildly risqué blues songs from the mid-30s through the early '40s including "I'll Keep Sitting on It," "Take Me for a Buggy Ride," "Mama Knows What Papa Wants When Papa's Feeling Blue," and "Hot Nuts." She reportedly moved to Chicago in the 1920s and began working as a singer in the nightclubs during the late '20s. Georgia White first recorded in May 1930 for the Vocalion label with Jimmie Noone's Apex Club Orchestra when she sang just one song, "When You're Smiling, the Whole World Smiles With You." White didn't return to the studios until 1935, but recorded regularly from then on through the early '40s for the Decca label. In 1935, she also recorded a couple of songs, including "Your Worries Ain't Like Mine," under the alias Georgia Lawson. From her first sessions until the late '30s, White was accompanied by pianist Richard Jones. The late '30s found White accompanied by blues guitarist Lonnie Johnson. In the late '40s, Georgia White formed an all-women band. She also worked with Big Bill Broonzy from 1949-1950, and returned to singing in the clubs during the 1950s. Georgia White's last known public performance was in 1959, after which she retired from the music business.