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viewing 1 To 5 of 5 items
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KL 5081CD
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Third World, live at Paul's Mall, Boston in 1976. Third World is one of Jamaica's most consistently popular crossover acts among international audiences. While they were reliable for authentic roots reggae, they usually preferred to mix in elements of R&B, funk, pop, and rock (and, later on, dancehall and rap). Purists would often confuse authenticity in terms of the band's commercial success. As regular visitors to the American and British charts throughout the 1980s, it could be assumed that maybe they knew exactly what they were doing. Klondike Records present an uncompromising Third World, energized by the release of their debut self-titled album (1976) and fresh from a European tour with Bob Marley and The Wailers. This is Third World captured live in 1976 at Paul's Mall, Boston, USA. The entire, original WBCN-FM broadcast is presented here, professionally remastered, with interviews, background liners, and rare photographs.
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KL 5076CD
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Alex Chilton, live from VFW Hall, Baton Rouge on September 27th, 1985. When Tom Waits once described Alex Chilton as "the Thelonius Monk of the rhythm guitar", he was being very Tom Waits and simultaneously, both sincere and astute. The Box Top bad boy was influencing a new wave of bands in the early 1980s on the independent scene at home and in the UK. With shades of Syd Barrett and other Anglophile figures, Chilton's adoption of obscure blues, R&B, soul, and the American songbook provided an interesting and provocative return to form with 1985's Feudalist Tarts EP (1985). Here, Chilton's famed excesses are firmly denied, as he delivers a blistering set with all the Big Star trademarks firmly intact. Klondike presents the entire Louisiana Public Broadcast (WLPB) of Alex Chilton, live from the VFW Hall in Baton Rouge, Louisiana on September 27th, 1985. Professionally remastered original broadcast with interviews, background liners, and rare archival photos.
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KL 5079CD
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Link Wray, live at My Father's Place, Roslyn on June 22nd, 1979. Link Wray's legacy lies in the power chord that inspired such luminaries as Pete Townshend, Bob Dylan, Neil Young, Ray Davies, Jeff Beck, and Jimi Hendrix. Ground-breaking hits ("Rumble", "Rawhide", "Jack The Ripper", and "Ace Of Spades") make a welcome return in Wray's second coming in the 1970s. Wray's incendiary distortion and unorthodox techniques gave way to the Sonics, Wailers, and The Cramps, iconic names that owe much to their idol. Wray's resurgence in the 1970s invited new listeners and made new fans across Europe and the USA where he continued to "rumble" in his unique and immaculate style. Klondike present the entire WLIR-FM broadcast of Link Wray, live from My Father's Place, Roslyn, New York on June 22nd, 1979. Professionally remastered original FM broadcast with expansive liners and rare archival photos.
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KL 5086CD
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John Hartford, live in Cincinnati on WABN-FM, November 9th, 1971. After success as a country-pop songwriter in the late 1960s, John Hartford applied his compositional wit to purer bluegrass in the early 1970s. Broadcast on WABN-FM in Cincinnati, these recordings from a November 9th, 1971 performance features musicians from his acclaimed album of the same year, Aereo-Plain. Several songs from that record are performed on this 70-minute disc, along with some traditional folk tunes and a couple songs from Hartford's late-'60s LPs. The entire WABN-FM broadcast is included here, digitally remastered, and includes background liners.
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KL 5037CD
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A rich combination of blues talent and spice assembled in West Hollywood in June 1995 at the House of Blues for a spectacular display of collaborations with equally impressive names from the blues scene. John Lee Hooker's own daughter Zakiya opened the event backed by the Duke Robillard Band. Added to the day's event was a prized collection of genial giants in Charlie Musselwhite, Taj Mahal, Ry Cooder, John Hammond, Lazy Lester and, of course, the boom boom blues of the legendary John Lee Hooker. Robillard's band offered a prominent backing for most of the guests and sealed the day with Cooder's subliminal workout alongside Hooker for his signature R&B romp, "Boom Boom." The entire WLUP-FM broadcast of this performance, a gathering of genial blues giants and friends of John Lee Hooker, is presented here in professionally remastered sound with background liners and rare archival photos.
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