| | Holly Wilson Pink Floyd En Bossa Nova CD - Import Holly Wilson Discography of CDs
Ten of Pink Floyd's most famous songs get the Bossa Nova treatment courtesy of Holly Wilson. If the band had originated in Brazil instead of England, perhaps their classics would have sounded like this! Tracks include 'Another Brick In The Wall', 'Money', 'Wish You Were Here', 'Brain Damage' and more. Barca. 2006. Pink Floyd En Bossa Nova Music Pink Floyd En Bossa Nova Review
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| | Trance Plants It's Time CD (2007)
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$9.65 In Portland, OR, 1996, anyone who knew about The Trance Plants thought they were definitely one of those \"next big thing\" bands. The group was founded by singer/songwriter and guitarist Geoff after he left Tribe from the Oasis. Brian and Chris (the Sheckies) were the percussion section, and Kevin played flute, oboe, clarinet, and saxophone. Original bass player Dave (yes, him, the guy who builds really awesome bass guitars) joined when he answered an ad, and was also the one who found the drummer, Matt, a recent Reed College graduate. The band was hot from the very beginning, and as the gig schedule got heavy, Dave realized he didn\'t have time for both playing bass and building basses. Thus, another bassist, Scott, was invited to see the band play, at the Egyptian Room, and after the show (opening act was Shredded Lettuce) he made his intention clear--the line-up was complete. From early 1995, through January 1996, The Trance Plants played almost every week, at venues like The Tugboat, Berbati\'s Pan, Laurelthirst Pub, The Caribou, Moody\'s, and Mt. Tabor Theatre, building a loyal following, and a reputation for amazing improvisational journeys intermixed with psychedelic reggae-rock-funk-raga songcraft. \"George the Butcher\" (a bluesy ska indictment of the original President Bush), \"Don\'t Play it Safe\", and their cover of Miles Davis\' \"Bitches Brew\" were particular crowd-pleasers. Another was \"Terwilliger Curves\", a fantastic piece of original ska written by Kevin. Their journey reached perhaps its highest point when they appeared as the final act of the 1995 Harvest Jam (Silver Falls State Park, Silverton, OR) in September, where hundreds of festival-goers were treated to a mindblowing set--certain bandmates blew their own minds as well, including Geoff, who managed to re-arrange the setlist on the spot in order to play a few songs sitting down. The band was accompanied on percussion by about fifty hand drummers, as many audience-members had brought their own djembes and congas to the festival. Somewhere a videotape exists of this show (ask Stoneground Productions). Other gigs followed, but the overabundance of combustible plants, plus friction between bandmates began to wear away at the fabric of the band. After their run of playing a month of Sundays (5) at the now defunct Belmont\'s Inn in January 1996, the end was near. Geoff pulled the plug shortly thereafter. Not wanting to go down without a struggle, he decided to carry on with the band\'s name, and with Kevin pledging support, he went into the studio to record a stack of new songs that hadn\'t yet made it into the ...
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