Ray Brown - Don't Forget the Blues Jazz | EAC | FLAC (Compressed CD Image), CUE, LOG, Rapidshare, 3 parts, 233 MB. total Complete Scans: Unmodified (4,67 MB.) & Modified (8,88 MB.) WinRar Archive with 5% recovery record included Audio CD (October 25, 1990), Label: Concord Records, Original Release Date: May 1985, 1 CD
Ray Brown (bass) with; Ron Eschete (guitar), Al Grey (trombone), Gene Harris (piano & Fender Rhodes), and Grady Tate (drums).
Produced by Bennett Rubin. Recorded at Classic Sound Studio, New York City, May 1985.
I'm happy to commemorate another unforgettable master of jazz; dear Ray Brown, with this beautiful blues album... A friend of mines, once said to me: "He is such a phenomenon that, where a pianist that can't play good, can play good by Ray Brown...". I believe this definition. Friends will easily remember Ray Brown, from Oscar Peterson groups. He played with many great jazz artists, during his life also...
Hope you will like this enjoyable album, also... Regards...
Paul McCartney - Live In Los Angeles (2010) Pop Rock | 1CD | FLAC, CUE, LOG, Cover, M3U | 302MB EAC Rip | 42:00min | Label: MPL Communications Ltd.
“ Release Date: 17th January 2010 (UK & Ireland only via the Mail On Sunday) brings you another amazing musical treat – Paul McCartney singing the Beatles on a unique FREE CD. Designed, chosen and approved by Paul McCartney himself, this is a CD that is unavailable anywhere else – and every Beatles fan will want it in their collection. The album features seven fantastic classic Beatles tracks – including I Saw Her Standing There, Lady Madonna, Get Back, Blackbird and the iconic Hey Jude. Homepage
The New Yankee Workshop - Cupola 2009 | DivX | 1300 kbps | 640x480 | MP3 128 kbps | 25 min. | 245 MB
In a surprise twist, Norm opens this New Yankee Workshop from This Old House's job site in Milton, Massachusetts. While building a new “dream workshop” on the footprint of the old barn’s demolished shell, Norm decides to replicate a version of the antique cupola that once adorned its roof back in the New Yankee Workshop. With help from coppersmith Larry Stearn, Norm recreates a copper-roofed version of the original design. Calling it a “true carpentry project which entails every mitre box application,” Norm expertly crafts the cupola’s louvers and hip roof.