Showing posts with label George Harrison. Show all posts
Showing posts with label George Harrison. Show all posts

Saturday, September 9, 2017

Traveling Wilburys - 2 albums: The Traveling Wilburys Vol. 1 / The Traveling Wilburys Vol 3

Reversing the usual process by which groups break up and give way to solo careers, the Traveling Wilburys are a group made up of solo stars. The group was organized by former Beatle George Harrison, former Electric Light Orchestra leader Jeff Lynne, Bob Dylan, Tom Petty, and Roy Orbison, thus representing three generations of rock stars. In 1988, the five (who had known each other for years) came together to record a Harrison B-side single and ended up writing and recording an album on which they shared lead vocals. It turned out to be a way to transcend the high expectations made of any of them as individuals, and a delighted public sent the album to number three, with two singles, "Handle With Care" and "End of the Line" hitting the charts. Unfortunately, Orbison died of a heart attack only a few weeks after the album's release.

Two years later, the remaining quartet released a second album, inexplicably titled Vol. 3. Although it didn't match the success of the first Wilburys album, it was another million-selling hit. Throughout the '90s, there were rumors of another Traveling Wilburys record in the works, but no new albums from the group surfaced. Harrison and Lynne did re-team in 1995, when Lynne produced and reworked two John Lennon demos with the Beatles for their Anthology rarities collection.

The Traveling Wilburys albums drifted out of print in the late '90s, making the 2007 release of The Traveling Wilburys Collection -- a double-disc set containing both albums, plus a bonus DVD -- a noteworthy affair. It debuted at number one in the U.K. and nine in the U.S., eventually earning platinum and gold certifications in the respective countries. In 2016, the collection saw a re-release on Concord. ~William Ruhlmann

Album: The Traveling Wilburys Vol. 1
Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 36:14
Size: 82.9 MB
Styles: Roots, Rock
Year: 1988
Art: Front

[3:18] 1. Handle With Care
[3:28] 2. Dirty World
[2:58] 3. Rattled
[3:50] 4. Last Night
[3:23] 5. Not Alone Anymore
[3:30] 6. Congratulations
[3:35] 7. Heading For The Light
[3:16] 8. Margarita
[5:27] 9. Tweeter And The Monkey Man
[3:26] 10. End Of The Line

The Traveling Wilburys Vol. 1

Album: The Traveling Wilburys Vol 3
Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 36:02
Size: 82.5 MB
Styles: Roots, Rock
Year: 1990
Art: Front

[3:13] 1. She's My Baby
[3:34] 2. Inside Out
[3:12] 3. If You Belonged To Me
[3:18] 4. The Devil's Been Busy
[3:18] 5. T7 Deadly Sins
[3:14] 6. Poor House
[3:04] 7. Where Were You Last Night
[3:33] 8. Cool Dry Place
[3:16] 9. New Blue Moon
[3:19] 10. You Took My Breath Away
[2:55] 11. Wilbury Twist

The Traveling Wilburys Vol 3

Sunday, September 25, 2016

George Harrison - Let It Roll

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 80:03
Size: 183.2 MB
Styles: Contemporary Pop/Rock, Album rock
Year: 2009
Art: Front

[3:50] 1. Got My Mind Set On You
[3:35] 2. Give Me Love
[3:45] 3. Ballad Of Sir Francis Crisp (Let It Roll)
[4:37] 4. My Sweet Lord
[4:46] 5. While My Guitar Gently Weeps
[3:44] 6. All Things Must Pass
[3:50] 7. Any Road
[3:45] 8. This Is Love
[3:43] 9. All Those Years Ago
[3:38] 10. Marwa Blues
[4:20] 11. What Is Life
[5:24] 12. Rising Sun
[3:51] 13. When We Was Fab
[3:10] 14. Something
[3:58] 15. Blow Away
[4:05] 16. Cheer Down
[2:54] 17. Here Comes The Sun
[2:51] 18. I Don't Want To Do It
[7:08] 19. Isn't It A Pity
[2:59] 20. Isn't It A Pity (Demo Vers)

George Harrison had two periods of great commercial success, separated by 15 years and two record labels. This extended gap is the chief reason there hasn't been a career-spanning Harrison collection until 2009's Let It Roll: Songs By George Harrison, the first-ever disc to gather songs from George's stints at both Apple and Dark Horse, and only his third-ever hits collection, following 1976's Beatles-heavy The Best of George Harrison and The Best of Dark Horse, released in 1989 in the afterglow of Cloud Nine's comeback success. Let It Roll balances these two periods, swapping any Beatles-era song ("Something," "Here Comes the Sun," "While My Guitar Gently Weeps") for a live version from The Concert for Bangladesh, then mixing it all up chronologically, so the set starts with the pristine bounce of "Got My Mind Set on You" before giving way to "Give Me Love (Give Me Peace on Earth)" If anything jars, it's the sounds of times, as Jeff Lynne's clean, manicured arrangements don't necessarily fit with Phil Spector's lush, magisterial productions, but that's a minor quibble about a useful compilation that consolidates all of Harrison's signature tunes on one very enjoyable disc. ~Stephen Thomas Erlewine

Let It Roll