What are you listening to?

Still smoke over the Lac Léman and Montreux.
It seems Apple is in pole position for another remix/remaster/rererelease. The music survives it all.

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To end the day.
#65
1978 (P) Tony Visconti & Thin Lizzy
The overdubs were done in the studio. Fixes of live albums have been normal for long and still are.

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Morning tunes
 

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Normally an artist I don't lend an ear and time. The hype was great over the last weeks and today it is finally released. And it is damned good, already with the first listening in quick pass-through.
It is reminiscent of the black roots of the country. This will not please the still damn big, damn conservative and damn white part of the community.
The cover, I think, is pure sarcasm.

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Back to daily routine.
#64
1970 (P) Derek & The Dominos & Tom Drowd
A supergroup! Recorded amid drink and drug abuse and undiagnosed schizophrenia. Great music out of tragedy.

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#63
1980 (P) Vic Maile
Although Lemmy always baulked at the notion of Motörhead being described as a heavy metal band, with AoS they delivered what more than a few still call the greatest heavy metal album of all.

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The list brought back to my mind that the part of the collection I really take of the shelf quite regular is not so big. Could easily be happy with roughly 250 albums for the rest of my life. The appearance of new artists and albums what touches me is decreasing more and more. Only a matter of my age? For all the younger ones I hope so ;-) Enough silly thoughts.

#61
1977 (P) George Young & Harry Vanda
In January 1977 AC/DC entered Alberts Studios in Sydney and spent two weeks recording their first utterly explosive album.

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#60
1983 (P) "Mutt" Lange
During one amazing period in August '83, Pyromania was selling 100,000 a day in the US and reached No. 2 in Billboard charts. Topped only from Thriller.

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