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viewing 1 To 22 of 22 items
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AC 8087LP
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Françoise Hardy, live at L'Olympia, Paris, France; 1963-1965. This remarkable collection of live performances, originally broadcast on French Radio Europe 1's "Musicorama" Special, between 1963 and 1965, captures the iconic Françoise Hardy in her early prime. It includes many of her best-known songs, and confirms her position at the vanguard of contemporary yé-yé singers. The entire original French Radio Europe 1 broadcast is presented here, professionally remastered, together with background notes and images. The entire original French Radio Europe 1 broadcast is presented here, professionally remastered, together with comments by Jean-Claude Brialy, background notes, and images.
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AC 8085CD
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Copperhead with John Cipollina, live at Pacific High Studios, San Francisco in 1972. After leaving Quicksilver Messenger Service near the end of 1970, John Cipollina also played lead guitar with Copperhead, who issued just one 1973 album before disbanding. Performed at Pacific High Studios in San Francisco, this January 23, 1972 KSAN-FM broadcast, includes several songs from that LP, as well as eight the band did not release in studio versions. Also in Copperhead, was future Jefferson Starship bassist Pete Sears and guitarist-keyboardist-singer Gary Philippet, later (as Gary Phillips) in the Greg Kihn Band. The entire original broadcast is presented here, professionally remastered, with background liners and rare archival photos.
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AC 8087CD
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Françoise Hardy, live at L'Olympia, Paris, France; 1963-1965. This remarkable collection of live performances, originally broadcast on French Radio Europe 1's "Musicorama" Special, between 1963 and 1965, captures the iconic Françoise Hardy in her early prime. It includes many of her best-known songs, and confirms her position at the vanguard of contemporary yé-yé singers. The entire original French Radio Europe 1 broadcast is presented here, professionally remastered, together with background notes and images.
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AC 8083CD
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Etta James live at the Chicago Blues Festival, Grant Park on June 7th, 1985. Etta James needs no introduction to lovers of soul, blues, and R&B. Her long career began way back in the 1950s, and she was a legend by the age of 21. Thereafter she experimented with funk and rock, and toured with the Rolling Stones in 1978, but sank into drug addiction and alcoholism. Originally broadcast on WXRT-FM, this superb set captures her on terrific form, performing a selection of her best-loved songs in front of a delighted crowd. The entire original broadcast is presented here, professionally re-mastered, together with background liner notes and rare archival photos.
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AC 8083LP
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LP version. Etta James live at the Chicago Blues Festival, Grant Park on June 7th, 1985. Etta James needs no introduction to lovers of soul, blues, and R&B. Her long career began way back in the 1950s, and she was a legend by the age of 21. Thereafter she experimented with funk and rock, and toured with the Rolling Stones in 1978, but sank into drug addiction and alcoholism. Originally broadcast on WXRT-FM, this superb set captures her on terrific form, performing a selection of her best-loved songs in front of a delighted crowd. The entire original broadcast is presented here, professionally re-mastered, together with background liner notes and rare archival photos.
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AC 8070LP
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LP version. The Runaways, live at the New York Palladium, on January 7th, 1978. A few months after the release of their third album Waitin' For The Night (1977), The Runaways started a tour with The Ramones. Their first performance was at the Palladium, New York on January 7, 1978 and it was broadcast on the King Biscuit Flower Hour. Featuring future solo stars Joan Jett and Lita Ford, the band burn through songs from each of their first three albums, as well as a few that had, at this point, only been heard on their Live In Japan LP (1977). The entire original King Biscuit Flower Hour broadcast is presented here, professionally re-mastered, with background liners and rare archival photos.
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AC 8037CD
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Mother Earth, live at A&R Studios in New York on June 23rd, 1971. By 1971, Mother Earth were based in Nashville, but touring widely. In support of their newly released Bring Me Home album (1971), on June 23, they played a special radio concert at A&R Studios for broadcast on New York's WPLJ-FM. Fronted by Tracy Nelson's impassioned vocals, the set superbly captures the band's blend of R&B, gospel, folk, and rock. The entire WPLJ-FM broadcast is presented here, professionally re-mastered, together with background notes and images.
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AC 8022CD
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Son Seals with Johnny Winter, live at Wise Fools Pub in Chicago, Illinois, August 1978. Son Seals was one of the biggest blues stars to emerge from Chicago in the 1970s, esteemed for both his guitar work and commanding singing. Broadcast on WXRT, this performance at Chicago's Wise Fools Pub includes highlights from his 1970s albums, as well as several classic blues covers that didn't make it onto those LPs. Blues-rock star Johnny Winter guests on Son's lengthy versions of "Stormy Monday" and Muddy Waters's "You Can't Lose What You Never Had". The entire original WXRT-FM broadcast is presented here, professionally remastered, with background liners and rare archival photos.
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AC 8038CD
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The Joy Of Cooking, live from the Fillmore West, San Francisco, May 1971. Unusual for the era, this Berkeley quintet centered on two women, Toni Brown and Terry Garthwaite. Formed in the late '60s, they shared bills with all the leading underground bands of the day, and released their classic debut in February 1971. This superb live set was recorded for radio broadcast on KSAN-FM at the legendary Fillmore West that May, and finds them tackling several of their best-loved tracks. The entire original KSAN-FM broadcast is presented here, professionally re-mastered, with background notes and images.
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AC 8032CD
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Mike Bloomfield and Mark Naftalin, live at the Record Plant, Sausalito on April 22nd, 1973. Although blues-rock guitar great Mike Bloomfield had retreated from the spotlight in the early 1970s, he continued to play in low-key settings such as the performance on this CD. Recorded at Sausalito's Record Plant on April 22, 1973 for broadcast on KSAN-FM in San Francisco, the performance also feature longtime collaborator Mark Naftalin on piano. Only one of the songs from the set would make its way to a later release from Bloomfield. The entire broadcast is presented here, digitally remastered, with background liners and rare archival photos.
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AC 8064CD
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Delanie & Bonnie And Friends, live from the A&R Recording Studios, New York on July 22nd, 1971. By the summer of 1971, Delaney and Bonnie were internationally renowned for their exciting rock/soul hybrid, and their uncanny ability to attract collaborators of the highest ability. This remarkable session was captured live at A&R Studios in New York for broadcast on WABC-FM. It finds them supported by a host of fine musicians, including Duane Allman (giving one of his last performances), Gregg Allman, and King Curtis, and culminates in an epic rendition of "Only You Know & I Know". Duane Allman is featured on "Come On In My Kitchen", "Goin' Down The Road Feeling Bad", "Poor Elijah", and "The Ghetto". The entire original WABC-FM broadcast is presented here, professionally remastered, with background notes and images.
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AC 8057CD
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James Brown, live on Soul Train, America's leading TV showcase for soul, funk and R&B. By 1973, James Brown was known as "the Godfather of Soul", reflecting his huge influence over a new generation of black singers. It was therefore inevitable that he would appear on Soul Train, America's leading TV showcase for soul, funk and R&B acts, broadcast on WCIU-TV. This album presents the entire original WCIU-TV broadcast of two stupendous performances captured on February 10th 1973 and September 14th 1974, showcasing material from his remarkable back catalog, as well as his hugely popular The Payback LP (1973). Presented here with background notes and rare archival photos.
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AC 8016CD
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On October 27, 1979 at New York's Trax club, southern soul duo, Sam & Dave, performed a mixture of their hits and less celebrated vintage B-sides. Broadcast on WPIX in New York, these tracks include versions of their smashes "Soul Man", "Hold On, I'm Comin'", "I Thank You", and "You Got Me Hummin'", as well as a ten-minute arrangement of the soul classic "Bring It On Home to Me". The entire broadcast is presented here, professionally re-mastered. Includes background liner notes and rare archival photos.
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AC 8054CD
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Joan Baez, live from the S.N.A.C.K. Benefit at Kezar Stadium in San Francisco, on March 23rd, 1975. 1975 would herald Joan Baez's greatest commercial success, with the April release of her Diamonds & Rust album. By that time she was firmly established as one of America's leading folk singers, and one of its most conscientious campaigners. On March 23rd, she joined a bill including Bob Dylan, Neil Young and The Band at a benefit for the S.N.A.C.K. charity ("Students Need Activities, Culture and Kicks") in San Francisco. Presented here is her entire set, originally broadcasted on K101-FM. Professionally re-mastered with background notes and images.
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AC 8008LP
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Following the summer 1970 split of Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young, Stephen Stills quickly formed Manassas with former Byrd and Flying Burrito Brother, Chris Hillman, as well as guitarist Al Perkins, fiddler Byron Berline, keyboardist Paul Harris, singer and percussionist Joe Lala, bassist Calvin "Fuzzy" Samuels, and drummer Dallas Taylor. Playing a potent blend of blues, folk, country, Latin, and rock, they were an instant success. This superb set at the Bananafish Garden in Brooklyn on April 16, 1973, took place shortly before the release of their second album, Down the Road, in May of that year, and features material from both of their LPs, as well as material by Buffalo Springfield, The Byrds, and CSNY. The complete WBCN-FM broadcast is presented here in digitally remastered sound with background notes and images. 180-gram LP.
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AC 8025CD
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Kate & Anna McGarrigle, live at the University of Toronto, Canada on May 29th, 1982. On this CBC broadcast of a Toronto concert, Kate and Anna McGarrigle presented highlights of their first two critically-acclaimed albums, as well six songs from their most recent LP, Love Over and Over. The eclectic folk duo also performed a couple of traditional folk songs, "Johnny's Gone to Hilo" and "Dig My Grave," that would not appear on one of their albums for another fifteen years.
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AC 8018CD
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The McGuinn, Clark & Hillman project came when the three founding members of The Byrds undertook a triple-bill tour with their respective solo bands in Europe in 1977. The subsequent reunion two years later was felt to be an extension of what the original band had accomplished -- and no disco lick from their latest album could dilute it. Their legendary appearance together at the famed Armadillo World Headquarters in Austin, Texas, on May 22, 1979, survives as one of only a handful of FM broadcasts that capture the pivotal essence of the legendary Byrds. The return of Gene Clark alongside Chris Hillman and Roger McGuinn was a profound chapter in the later careers of these seminal figures who choose to showcase their new album in true Byrds fashion with a glorious smattering of classics from The Byrds songbook. Air Cuts proudly presents the entire original broadcast in professionally remastered sound with background liners and rare archival photos.
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AC 8023CD
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As Cream's "fourth member," Felix Pappalardi was already a rock legend by the time he founded Mountain in 1969. Having enjoyed worldwide success with them, in 1973 he departed to collaborate with Japanese rockers Creation. This superb live set at the Ebbets Field club in Denver, Colorado, on July 30, 1976, was broadcast on KCUV-FM shortly after the release of their first album together, and includes contemporary material as well as an epic 20-minute rendition of Mountain's classic "Nantucket Sleighride." The complete broadcast is presented here in professionally remastered sound with background notes and rare archival photos.
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AC 8034CD
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Having made his name with psychedelic fusion pioneers Kaleidoscope in the late '60s, this virtuoso guitarist played with Terry Reid and Jackson Browne the following decade, before embarking on a solo career as the '80s dawned. Broadcast on WNEW-FM, this brilliant live set with his band El Rayo-X at The Bottom Line in New York City on June 30, 1981, includes "Brother John," his tribute to John Lennon, as well as two tracks featuring his longtime collaborator Jackson Browne. The complete broadcast is presented here in digitally remastered sound with background notes and images.
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AC 8019CD
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On October 18, 1970, John Hartford, Joni Mitchell, and Pete Seeger shared the stage for the TV special Gentle on My Mind, broadcast on KCOP-TV in Los Angeles. The 12 tracks on this CD include five spotlighting Hartford, five featuring Mitchell, and a couple sung by Pete Seeger. Of special interest is a six-minute version of "Both Sides Now" that includes a verse Seeger wrote and sang especially for this performance, as well as a rare Mitchell cover of Bob Dylan's "Mr. Tambourine Man." The complete audio from the broadcast is presented here in professionally remastered sound with background liners and rare archival photos.
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AC 8008CD
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Following the summer 1970 split of Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young, Stephen Stills quickly formed Manassas with former Byrd and Flying Burrito Brother Chris Hillman, as well as guitarist Al Perkins, fiddler Byron Berline, keyboardist Paul Harris, singer and percussionist Joe Lala, bassist Calvin "Fuzzy" Samuels, and drummer Dallas Taylor. Playing a potent blend of blues, folk, country, Latin, and rock, they were an instant success. This superb set at the Bananafish Garden in Brooklyn on April 16, 1973, took place shortly before the release of their second album, Down the Road, in May of that year, and features material from both of their LPs, as well as material by Buffalo Springfield, The Byrds, and CSNY. The complete WBCN-FM broadcast is presented here in digitally remastered sound with background notes and images.
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3CD
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AC3 7001CD
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Taped for New York's WLIR-FM just after the release of Johnny Winter's classic 1978 album White, Hot & Blue, this epic performance at My Father's Place, Old Roslyn, NY, on September 8, 1978, captures the Texan blues great in fiery form, backed by new cohorts Jon Paris (bass, harmonica, vocals) and Bobby Torello (drums). Despite -- or because of -- his inebriated state, Winter turns in remarkably extended performances of numerous tracks, including what might just be the longest version of "Bony Moronie" ever recorded! The complete original radio broadcast is presented here with digitally remastered sound, and comes complete with background notes and rare images.
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