Blues on Fire CD music. Track Listing of songs: Teardrops; Just Suppose; Clock; Bluebird of Happiness; Try the Impossible; Bells of St. Mary's; Long Lonely Nights; Lonely Room; Fairest; Glad to Be Here; Maybe You'll Be ...
Blues on Fire music CDs. The gold-disc reissue of R&B FROM THE MARQUEE contains an extra track, "I'm Built For Comfort."
Alexis Korner's Blues Incorporated: Alexis Korner (guitar); Cyril Davies (vocals, harmonica); Dick Heckstall-Smith (tenor saxophone); Keith Scott (piano).
The most important of Blues Incorporated's albums, this record features Davies all over it, and is his one reasonably representative album. He may be the best thing here, his blues harp the most accomplished and authentic sounding instrument, and his vocals are quite convincing and natural as well. ~ Bruce Eder
Recorded in 1962.
Additional personnel: Long John Baldry (vocals); Spike Heatley (bass); Graham Burbidge (drums).
Blues on Fire album. Track Listing of songs: Toledo; Perfect; Souvenir; Home; Tennessee Tobacco; Bones; When I Get Out; Black Tornados; Elgin Ave.; The Invisible Man; Young Man; Old Tattoo; Bremen; White Lightening; The End Of The World; Snowglobe; Beautiful Nothing; Into The Flame; The Valley Of Doom; I Will Love You For Miles;
Blues on Fire album. Track Listing of songs: Home Sweet Home; Gone a Negril; She's Mine; Let Me Love You Down; Friends For Life; Going to the Chapel; Lazy Body; Missing You; Tarzan; Solitary Confinement; Young Love; Nah Sleep a Jail House;
Blues on Fire CD music. Metal historians have offered a long list of possible reasons why, in the '80s and early '90s, British thrash metal/speed metal veterans Onslaught were not as well known as Slayer, Metallica, Testament, Megadeth, Anthrax or Exodus -- and those reasons range from uneven, inconsistent albums to inadequate promotion to lineup changes to less than stellar production. Whatever the reason (or reasons), most of those headbanger historians naturally assumed that Onslaught would never be heard from again after disbanding in 1991. But in 2005, Onslaught surprised metalheads by getting back together. That is, they surprised the metalheads who were actually familiar with their old '80s output; a lot of folks had never heard of them (especially on the U.S. side of the Atlantic Ocean). Killing Peace is Onslaught's comeback album and their first recording since 1989's In Search of Sanity, and there is nothing uneven or inconsistent about this CD; the material is excellent, the performances ...
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