New EA sendspace thread

3013
Minotaur029 wrote:1 ) Thelonious Monk - Monk's Dream
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http://www.sendspace.com/file/cn2032


2 ) Thelonious Monk - Brilliant Corners
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http://www.sendspace.com/file/ffkjtd


3 ) Thelonious Monk - Misterioso
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http://www.sendspace.com/file/rgwt22


As a rather casual jazz listener, I've got to thank you for these. There is so much Monk, and so much of it varies in terms of performance/etc., that it's hard to know where to look. I'm looking for the vinyl on these now, although it looks like a potentially pricey proposition.

New EA sendspace thread

3015
cheers for that orb/fripp thing. i stopped following fripp after he did that thing with the damned.

also, a request. anyone have captain sensible's "revolution now" that can be posted? i've got the lp and would love to hear it in my car.

cheers.
To me Steve wrote:I'm curious why[...] you wouldn't just fuck off instead. Let's hear your record, cocksocket.

New EA sendspace thread

3016
A while ago I promised to upload New Kingdom's Paradise Don't Come Cheap, then forgot all about it.

sparky wrote:New Kingdom are a hip hop group that seem to have dropped off the map, which is a shame as they were ace. I listened to Paradise Don't Come Cheap for the first time in about a decade the other week, and I felt stupid for not having listened to it in the interim.

It's a very bizarre record, heavy, full of very distorted soul, wah wah, general guitar noise, and growling vocals. The beat makes it hip hop, I guess, but it is stuff that's gone gonzo.

I'm having annoying problems with the hard drive with all the records I've left at home, but I'll try and upload Paradise Don't Come Cheap some time. I just did an Amazon search for it and it looks like it is out of print.


It still looks out of print in the States, so here you go.

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Gib Opi kein Opium, denn Opium bringt Opi um!

New EA sendspace thread

3018
sparky wrote:A while ago I promised to upload New Kingdom's Paradise Don't Come Cheap, then forgot all about it.

sparky wrote:New Kingdom are a hip hop group that seem to have dropped off the map, which is a shame as they were ace. I listened to Paradise Don't Come Cheap for the first time in about a decade the other week, and I felt stupid for not having listened to it in the interim.

It's a very bizarre record, heavy, full of very distorted soul, wah wah, general guitar noise, and growling vocals. The beat makes it hip hop, I guess, but it is stuff that's gone gonzo.

I'm having annoying problems with the hard drive with all the records I've left at home, but I'll try and upload Paradise Don't Come Cheap some time. I just did an Amazon search for it and it looks like it is out of print.


It still looks out of print in the States, so here you go.
Oooh! I'd been wanting to check that out! I like strange rap. Thanks!
http://www.myspace.com/leopoldandloebchicago

Linus Van Pelt wrote:I subscribe to neither prong of your false dichotomy.

New EA sendspace thread

3019
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From allmusicguide:

Formed at the University of Detroit in 1967, Index cut one of the most excruciatingly rare psychedelic albums of all time, pressed in an edition of a mere 100 copies. No, it's not worth the $3,000 it lists for in Goldmine's price guide, but it's certainly a nifty, even one-of-a-kind curiosity (and fortunately, it was reissued in the 1980s).

A power trio with more or less equal links to the garage and psychedelic eras, Index enhanced their astral aspirations with an unholy amount of reverb drone. One reviewer likened their debut LP, pretty accurately, to sounding as if it had been recorded in a freight elevator. For a psychedelic act, Index's sound was uncommonly morose and minimalistic. They were prone to eerie, repetitious ragas, the reverb giving them a surfing-on-the-moon feel. Their originals were based around modal melodies and mournful, almost Nico-like vocals (although they were entirely male), and they wreaked slow-torture havoc with their drawn-out ragazations of "Eight Miles High," "John Riley," and "You Keep Me Hangin' On." Weirdest of all were their instrumentals, where melody took a distant second to cascading walls of reverb, wah-wah, and shrieking feedback that verged on the avant-garde...


The album starts out with an amazing cover of the Byrd's "Eight Miles High," which far surpasses the original version. Also, the guitar playing on "Feedback" is fucking insane. Download it.
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New EA sendspace thread

3020
Antero wrote:
sparky wrote:A while ago I promised to upload New Kingdom's Paradise Don't Come Cheap, then forgot all about it.

sparky wrote:New Kingdom are a hip hop group that seem to have dropped off the map, which is a shame as they were ace. I listened to Paradise Don't Come Cheap for the first time in about a decade the other week, and I felt stupid for not having listened to it in the interim.

It's a very bizarre record, heavy, full of very distorted soul, wah wah, general guitar noise, and growling vocals. The beat makes it hip hop, I guess, but it is stuff that's gone gonzo.

I'm having annoying problems with the hard drive with all the records I've left at home, but I'll try and upload Paradise Don't Come Cheap some time. I just did an Amazon search for it and it looks like it is out of print.


It still looks out of print in the States, so here you go.
Oooh! I'd been wanting to check that out! I like strange rap. Thanks!
I'm really liking this so far. It's kind of like what I'd imagine Tom Waits making if he was a rapper.

And hah! Big 10 1/2 samples Betty Davis! "If I'm In Luck I Might Get Picked Up"
http://www.myspace.com/leopoldandloebchicago

Linus Van Pelt wrote:I subscribe to neither prong of your false dichotomy.

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