Tag Archives: ROCK

No Doubt – The Beacon Street Collection

No Doubt – The Beacon Street Collection
FLAC, EAC, LOG & CUE | Lossless Artwork | Size: 358 MB
Label/Cat#: Interscope INTD 90156 | Country/Year: US 1995
Genre: Indie Rock | Hoster: Filesonic/Uploaded

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No Doubt – The Beacon Street Collection

Label: Interscope Records
Catalog#: INTD 90156
Format: CD, Album
Country: US
Released: 1995
Genre: Pop, Rock
Style: Pop Rock, Ska

Tracklist:

1 Open The Gate
2 Blue In The Face
3 Total Hate 95
4 Stricken
5 Greener Pastures
6 By The Way
7 Snakes
8 That’s Just Me
9 Squeal
10 Doghouse

Credits:

Mastered By – Robert Vosgien
Mixed By – Colin Mitchell, No Doubt
Trombone – Gabrial McNair
Trumpet – Phil Jordan

Notes:

licensed from Sea Creature Records

Review

by John Bush

When No Doubt’s debut album proved a disappointment to Interscope executives, the label withdrew support from the band and refused to release them from their contract. Ironically, the group’s self-produced reply, recorded during several sessions from 1993 to early 1995, turned out to be finer than the debut. The synth and new wave influences of the debut are pushed to the background and replaced by a raw sound inspired more by punk.

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Billy Idol – Cyberpunk

Billy Idol – Cyberpunk
FLAC, EAC, LOG & CUE | Lossless Artwork | Size: 541 MB
Label/Cat#: Chrysalis CDCHR6000 | Country/Year: UK & Europe 1993
Genre: Rock | Hoster: Filesonic/Uploaded

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Billy Idol – Cyberpunk

Label: Chrysalis
Catalog#: 0946 3 26000 2 8
Format: CD, Album
Country: UK & Europe
Released: 1993
Genre: Electronic, Rock
Style: Pop Rock, Punk, Synth-pop

Tracklist:

1 Intro 1:01
2 Wasteland 4:35
3 Interlude 0:19
4 Shock To The System 3:33
5 Tomorrow People 5:07
6 Adam In Chains 6:24
7 Neuromancer 4:36
8 Power Junkie 4:46
9 Interlude 0:27
10 Love Labours On 3:53
11 Heroin 6:57
12 Interlude 0:22
13 Shangri La 7:24
14 Concrete Kingdom 4:52
15 Interlude 0:38
16 Venus 5:47
17 Then The Night Comes 4:37
18 Interlude 0:25
19 Mother Dawn 5:03
20 Outro 0:56

Notes:

Recorded at Golgotha Studios and Ameraycan Studios on 48 track Sony Digital.
Mixed at A&M Studios on SSL 6000 E.
Mastered at Precision Mastering.
Segues recorded using the Binaural System.
Album recorded by Roland Sound Space so this album is headphone friendly.

“Heroin” originally performed by The Velvet Underground.
“Mother Dawn” originally performed by Blue Pearl.

Made in Holland.
UK: CDCHR6000
F: PM 520

Chrysalis Records, Inc.
a division of EMI Records Group.

Barcode and Other Identifiers:

Barcode: 0 9463 26000 2 8
Matrix / Runout: EMI 326002 CDM01
Other (Label Code): LC 1626
Other (Rights Societies): BIEM/STEMRA
Matrix / Runout: EMI UDEN 326002 @1

Cyberpunk is a concept album by English rock musician Billy Idol, released in 1993 by Chrysalis Records. Inspired by his personal interest in technology and his first attempts to use computers in the creation of his music, Idol based the album on the cyberdelic subculture of the late 80s and early 90s. Heavily experimental in its style, the album was an attempt by Idol to take control of the creative process in the production of his albums, while simultaneously introducing Idol’s fans and other musicians to the opportunities presented by digital media.

The album featured a cyberpunk-styled narrative as well as synthesized vocals and techno influences. Despite the critical and financial failure of the album, Billy Idol set several precedents in the process of promoting the album. These included his use of the internet, e-mail, virtual communities, and multimedia software – each a first for a mainstream celebrity. Idol also based his fashion style, music videos, and stage shows on cyberpunk themes and aesthetics.

Released to negative reviews, Cyberpunk polarized the internet communities of the period. Detractors viewed it as an act of cooptation and opportunistic commercialization. It was also seen as part of a process that saw the overuse of the term “cyberpunk” until the word lost meaning. Alternatively, supporters saw Idol’s efforts as harmless and well-intentioned, and were encouraged by his new interest in cyberculture.

During the release of 1990’s Charmed Life, Idol suffered a broken leg in a motorcycle accident. While in recovery, he was interviewed by Legs McNeil. McNeil noticed the electronic muscle stimulator on Idol’s leg and referred to him as a “cyberpunk”, citing the cyborg qualities of his appearance. This led to Idol taking a serious interest in the works of William Gibson for the first time, although he had read Neuromancer in the mid-80s. In the following months, Idol continued to investigate cyberpunk fiction and technology. He also read Neal Stephenson’s Snow Crash, works by Robert Anton Wilson, and others.

At approximately the same time, he began to work with Trevor Rabin to create his music, having parted ways with his former producer, Keith Forsey. Rabin introduced Idol to his home studio, which was centralized around Rabin’s Macintosh computer and music software. The ability to personally produce music from his home, rather than at a professional studio, appealed to Idol’s “do it yourself” ethic. He felt that working through a team of producers and sound engineers cut into his personal vision for previous albums, and was interested in being more directly in control of his future work. Idol asked his producer, Robin Hancock, to educate himself and his guitarist, Mark Younger-Smith, on the use of software for musical production.

With his increasing exposure to technology and science fiction, Idol decided to base his upcoming album on the cyberpunk genre, and quickly set about educating himself in Cyberdelic counter culture.[2] Idol saw the convergence of affordable technology with the music industry and anticipated its impact on a new era for DIY punk music. “It’s 1993,” Idol said during a New York Times interview. “I better wake up and be part of it. I’m sitting there, a 1977 punk watching Courtney Love talk about punk, watching Nirvana talk about punk, and this is my reply.”
Gareth Branwyn (left) and Mark Frauenfelder (right) were two consultants from the cyberdelic print culture tapped by Idol for consultation.

Reading Mondo 2000 and Gareth Branwyn’s 1992 manifesto, “Is There A Cyberpunk Movement?”, Idol resolved to base an opening sequence on Branwyn’s essay, contacting the writer for permission. He also read Branwyn’s Beyond Cyberpunk! HyperCard stack, a collection of essays based on fanzines, political tracts, conspiracy theories, and which referred to itself as “a do-it-yourself guide to the future.” Idol proceeded to consult with various writers familiar with the computer related magazines, such as Mondo 2000, and bOING bOING. Idol also hosted a “cyber-meeting” attended by the likes of Timothy Leary, famed counterculture guru; Jaime Levy, author of books published on disks under the “Electronic Hollywood” imprint; R. U. Sirius, co-founder of Mondo 2000; and Brett Leonard, director of The Lawnmower Man.

Asked by Idol about how he could become further involved in cyberculture, Branwyn and Mark Frauenfelder advised him to investigate The WELL, one of the oldest online communities.[9] Idol did so, discussing the album project online with WELL users, and creating a personal e-mail account which he released on printed advertisements for the upcoming album, so that fans could communicate with him. Idol also made occasional postings to alt.cyberpunk, a Usenet newsgroup. Later in an interview for MTV News promoting the album, Idol expressed excitement over the medium. “This means I can be in touch with millions of people, but on my own terms. wikipedia

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The Alarm – King Biscuit

The Alarm – King Biscuit
FLAC, EAC, LOG & CUE | Lossless Artwork | Size: 545 MB
Label/Cat#: King Biscuit 70710-88049-2 | Country/Year: US 1999
Genre: Alternative Rock | Hoster: Filesonic/Uploaded

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Alarm, The – King Biscuit

Label: King Biscuit Flower Hour Records
Catalog#: 70710-88049-2
Format: CD, Album
Country: US
Released: 1999
Genre: Rock
Style: Alternative Rock

Tracklist:

1 For Freedom
2 Marching On
3 Reason 41
4 Up For Murder
5 The Deceiver
6 The Stand
7 Blaze Of Glory
8 3rd Light
9 Tell Me
10 Across The Border
11 68 Guns
12 Unsafe Buildings
13 Marching On
14 We Are The Light
15 (Bonus Interview)

Barcode and Other Identifiers:

Barcode: 707108804928

Review

by Steve Huey

Recorded at Boston’s Paradise Theatre in 1983, King Biscuit Flower Hour is a typically passionate performance by the Alarm, which was broadcast on the titular syndicated radio program. Even though the group had yet to issue a full-length album in the United States, their frequent U.K. single releases already provided a vast majority of the material needed to fill out a standard-length concert. The band’s performances strike a nice balance between tight professionalism and raw vigor, and their commitment to the material is total (if unsubtle), making this an exciting listen for devoted fans. allmusicguide

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Chris Cornell – Carry On

Chris Cornell – Carry On
FLAC, EAC, LOG & CUE | Artwork | Size: 541 MB
Cat#: Interscope 0602517348837 | Country/Year: Europe 2007
Genre: Alternative Rock | Hoster: Filesonic/Uploaded

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Chris Cornell – Carry On

Label: Interscope Records
Cataloq#: 0602517348837
Format: CD, Album
Country: Europe
Released: 2007
Genre: Rock
Style: Alternative Rock

Tracklist:

1 No Such Thing 3:44
2 Poison Eye 3:57
3 Arms Around Your Love 3:34
4 Safe And Sound 4:16
5 She’ll Never Be Your Man 3:24
6 Ghosts 3:51
7 Killing Birds 3:38
8 Billie Jean 4:41
9 Scar On The Sky 3:40
10 Your Soul Today 3:27
11 Finally Forever 3:37
12 Silence The Voices 4:27
13 Disappearing Act 4:33
14 You Know My Name 4:01
Bonus Track
15 Today 3:03

Credits:

Engineer [Assistant] – Dave Colvin
Lyrics By, Music By – Michael Jackson (tracks: 8)
Mastered By – Stephen Marcussen
Producer, Mixed By – Steve Lillywhite
Recorded By, Mixed By – Todd Parker
Written-By – Chris Cornell (tracks: 1 to 7, 9 to 15), David Arnold (tracks: 14)

Notes:

(P) & (C) 2007 Suretone / Interscope Records
Made in the EU

Recorded and mixed at NRG Recording studios, No. Hollywood, CA. Mastered at Stephen Marcussen Mastering, Hollywood, CA.

Review

by Stephen Thomas Erlewine

Chris Cornell’s first solo album, Euphoria Morning, was released just after Cornell had shaken the shackles of Soundgarden and he was making a definitive break from their heavy heavy sound by indulging in bucolic singer/songwriter clichés. It went nowhere commercially but led him toward Audioslave, where he spent three albums pushing and pulling against the core of Rage Against the Machine. If Euphoria Morning was breaking from the past, Carry On is about reconnecting to it, returning Cornell to music that feels more comfortable than Tom Morello’s staccato riffs. Right from the beginning, he pushes out arena-filling riffs that feel more at home on a Soundgarden record — not as heavy and certainly not as tortured, but something more mature and more recognizably of Cornell’s lineage than much of Audioslave. It sets the stage for a record that’s seems like a rare hard rock maturation, but soon Cornell returns to the singer/songwriter mannerisms that seemed appropriate on his first debut — he was stretching his legs after Soundgarden, after all — but now feel anemic, particularly because they’re executed with quivering sensitivity and a near belligerent tunelessness. These are the songs that feel forced — as affected as his coffeehouse cover of “Billie Jean” — but when Cornell loosens up and gives the music backbone (and a backbeat), he not only comes alive as a performer but the writing is sharper and better, pointing a way toward an artistic middle age that’s richer and more compelling than what’s heard on the bulk of Carry On. allmusicguide

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