ROIO: audio and/or video recording of a performance that was not officially released by the artist, or under other legal authority.
Soundboards, Quality Audience Recordings, FM Broadcasts, Concert Videos and Out of Print Recordings.
Alice Cooper - Live At The Garden Cincinnati, OH. March 6, 1987 Soundboard @192
Band Line Up: Alice Cooper - vocals Kip Winger - Bass Derek Sherinan - keyboards Kane Roberts - Guitar Ken Mary - Drums
Setlist:
01 - Welcome To My Nightmare 02 - Billion Dollar Babies 03 - No More Mr Nice Guy 04 - Be My Lover 05 - Eighteen 06 - The World Needs Guts 07 - Give It Up 08 - Cold Ethyl 09 - Only Women Bleed 10 - Go To Hell 11 - Ballad Of Dwight Fry 12 - Elected 13 - Under My Wheels 14 - Sick Things 15 - I Love The Dead 16 - School's Out
Angels of Light - Everything Is Good Here / Please Come Home
(2003)
(For sample purposes only)
"While his countless post-punk contemporaries wallow in self-misery and miserable poetry, Michael Gira - the former leader of avant-noise-droners Swans - creates a ruptured synthesis of blues, folk, and rock with his new acoustic-based group." - SAN FRANCISCO WEEKLY
This is the third Angels of Light album to be released in limited edition on Important. Like the first two, it is limited to 500 copies on deluxe double virgin vinyl. According to Michael Gira, this album "started, innocently enough, with the intent of being a simple collection of well-written songs performed by the musicians who played them live for the last few years, with the addition of a few acoustic songs, lightly colored. Instead, as things often seem to go around here, I ended up saturating every available molecule of the recording tape with sound, then hacked, cut, poured sonic fertilizer/salt on the resultant wounds, and it finally metastasized into this raging/weeping beast, which in the end succeeded in slowly biting off my head, leaving this album behind as evidence."
New York, New York For broadcast on April 5th, 1981
Pre-FM @320
(Vinyl Rip)
Track List
1. Intro
2. Commercial 3. Breakdown Dead Ahead
4. What Can I Say
5. Hard Times
6. You Got Some Imagination
7. Station Break
8. Commercial
9. Station Break 10. Georgia
11. Jump Street
12. Lido Shuffle
13. Station Break
14. Commercial
15. Commercial
16. Station Break 17. Middle Man
18. Lowdown
19. Outro
20. Commercial
21. Commercial
22. Station Credits
23. Boz Scaggs Promo
24. Boz Scaggs Promo
Set List: All That I Need
Made Up Mind
Until You Remember
Get What You Deserve
Do I Look Worried
Idle Wind
Learn How To Love
Shelter
I Pity The Fool
Midnight In Harlem
More & More
Bound For Glory
E
Let Me Get By
Break In The Road
Derek's guitar is sharp enough to cut hair on this one! One of the best recordings I've heard in a long time!
Taper:Teddy Ballgame Time:41 minutes Rating: 5 out of 5 Hear a Sample:Sin, 2 minutes Added to Archive: September 19th, 2015 Comments:
I’m absolutely floored to see this recording.. This master has been uncirculated for over 24 years! Probably unplayed as well, as the tape was still at the end of the recording! As many of you know the quality of Teddy Ballgame’s recordings, this one does not disappoint!! In the last year, we have seen this recording and the Stanhope 1991 recordings surface. Both are the best in quality of very early Nine Inch Nails and I am so excited to add this to the archive! Big thanks to Teddy for literally going out and taping everything! Also, thank you to Ellaguru for taking the time to transfer this DAT master and sending me the recording! Insane to hear early NIN on Schoeps… This is also the first source from the 2nd day of the Lollapalooza Fest from Shoreline! Performance is great! Seems like the intro of Head Like a Hole had some problems and Jeff Ward improvised on drums! Enjoy.
Originally posted by Jobe, Sunday, October 21, 2012
I find the first two Joe Jackson records to be some of the finest "new wave" records that came out. But by Beat Crazy it seems that either he had lost interest or had just ran out of ideas. Cause next up was Jumpin Jive and he pretty much abandoned rock music all together. But he had a kick-ass band when he did "rock" Hey, Jesus I actually tried to write a straight review. What the fuck is wrong with me? You can be sure that shit will never happen again. @320 See scans
As requested: Originally posted Saturday, October 9, 2010 by Mitch Lopate
Our buddy Snowmonkey came up with this for us a while ago, and after enough friends of mine yelled that they wanted a copy, it's time to be sure you get yours from us! Yes, it's a fantasy mix--but someone had some determination and knowledge of splicing and dicing in order to do this. And since it was John's birthday yesterday...well, it's just the right thing to do.
Four Guys Talking to Myself Anybody Else Sick To Death Jenn I'm Just Sitting Here Soldier Boy Over the Ocean Days Like These Saturday Night Mr. Gators Swamp Jamboree
The Beatles "Everyday Chemistry" On Sept. 9, 2009 I experienced something that I still am having trouble believing happened to me. I came into the possession of a cassette tape containing a Beatles album that was never released.I dont expect you to believe what happened to me, I sure wouldn't, but that's why I grabbed the tape as proof that my experience was real. ~ James Richards
Otis Redding Sings Soul is the third album by soul singer Otis Redding and is considered by many critics to be Redding's first great album. Recorded in April and July of 1965, it was released September 15th of that same year. Otis Blue includes covers of three songs by Sam Cooke, Redding's idol, who died the previous December in 1964. Their styles couldn't have been more different; Cooke smooth and sure, Redding raw and pleading. But Redding's versions of "Shake" and "A Change Is Gonna Come" show how Cooke's sound and message helped shape Redding's Southern soul sound. Redding's singing reaches a new level of expressiveness with this as well as with covers of B.B. King's "Rock Me Baby" and the Motown hit "My Girl".
Track List:
1. Ole Man Trouble
2. Respect
3. A Change Is Gonna Come
4. Down in the Valley
5. I've Been Loving You Too Long
6. Shake
7. My Girl
8. Wonderful World
9. Rock Me Baby
10. (I Can't Get No) Satisfaction
11. You Don't Miss Your Water
First of all, the sound quality is top-notch. This is from my master copy of the broadcast, recorded on metal bias Maxell MX-S 100 cassettes. I ran two cassettes in a dual deck so there’s no tape flip, and it was a straight shot across San Francisco Bay from the Sutro Tower to my receiver. Great reception. There’s one four-second drop of the right channel on “Sick & Tired,” but that’s due to an engineer messing with the mix and was on the original broadcast. The concert itself was part of a ten-night stand at the Fillmore. Scaggs was promoting his “Come On Home” album, which had been released earlier in the year. “Come On Home” saw Scaggs returning to his blues roots, tossing in a handful of new originals into an album’s worth of covers of old blues songs. With such a blues based album to promote, it meant that a blast through “Loan Me A Dime” is pretty much required. Sure enough, we get an extended, fifteen minute version. A few of the disco era white-soul songs get tossed to the crowd like raw meat, but this is mainly Scaggs singing the blues.