Friday, March 13, 2026

The Jam - Session (1976)

The Jam formed at Sheerwater Secondary School in Woking, Surrey, England, in 1972, with a line-up consisting of Paul Weller on bass and lead vocals, along with various friends. The name 'The Jam' was reportedly suggested by Weller's sister, Nicky, and the band played their first gigs at Michael's, a local club. The line-up began to solidify in the mid-1970's with Weller, guitarist/vocalist Steve Brookes and drummer Rick Buckler, and in their early years their sets consisted of covers of early American rock and roll songs by the likes of Chuck Berry and Little Richard. They continued in this vein until Weller discovered the Who's debut album 'My Generation' and became fascinated with mod music, thinking that becoming a mod would give him a base and an angle to write from. Their set list changed from rock'n'roll to Motown, Stax and Atlantic covers, and Weller bought a Rickenbacker guitar, a Lambretta GP 150, and tried to style his hair like Steve Marriott's circa '66. Eventually Brookes left the band, but although they advertised for a new guitarist, he was not replaced, and Weller persuaded the band's second guitarist Bruce Foxton to take over bass duties so that he could swap from bass to lead guitar, and this line-up of Weller, Foxton, and Buckler would persist until the end of The Jam's career. In March 1975 the group decamped to TW studios in Fulham and laid down four demo tracks, and over the rest of the year they recorded a couple of tracks at Bob Potter's Studio in May, and a further four songs in December. In September 1976 they visited Bob Potter again and recorded three more tracks, and with their manager John Weller, Paul's father, hawking around the demos, by February 1977 Chris Parry had signed the band to Polydor Records. In April 1977 Polydor released the Jam's debut single, 'In the City', which charted in the Top 40 in the UK, and in May the band released their debut album of the same name, with their career taking off from that point, to become one of the best and most admired outfits of the punk era. To hear what they sounded like before they hit the big time, give this "Jam session" a listen, and see if you can hear the burgeoning sound of what was to come. 



Track listing

01 100 Ways 
02 Forever And Always
03 I Will Be There
04 Walking The Dog
05 Non-Stop Dancing
06 Takin' My Love
07 Left, Right & Centre
08 Again
09 When I Needed You
10 Please Don't Treat Me Bad
11 Soul Dance
12 I Got By In Time
13 Back In My Arms Again

Monty The Moron - Acorn Beer And Chestnut Wine (1984)

Here's another early offering from Monty The Moron, a decade before he changed his name and joined The Damned. It was recorded two years before the previous post, and rather oddly I think it shows a more mature side of him, with songs like 'Little House By The Sea' and 'Falling Rose' being heartfelt ballads, somewhat at odds with his more off-beat offerings like 'The Dentist Song' and 'Collecting Plastic Monsters'. However, there is much to enjoy on this album, although the distortion on 'The Dentist Song' does seem to be on all copies of the tape, but to make up for it I somehow have a rather lovely untitled extra song at the end of my copy, which might make it a unique item. If that isn't enough I've also enhanced and coloured the picture of a young Monty sitting on a motorcycle in his garden, which makes this version of the album a one-of-a-kind. It's just a shame that this is the only other tape that I own.  


Original full cassette cover


Track listing

01 The Dentist Song
02 Monty's Lament
03 Rocking Horse
04 Little House By The Sea
05 Piano Concerto No. 3
06 Collecting Plastic Monsters
07 Sometimes You Just Can't Win
08 Living My Life Backwards
09 Falling Rose
10 A Gentle Robot (Dedicated To The Soft Machine But You Weren't Listening)
11 Untitled Bonus Track 

Kanye West - In A Perfect World (2025) **UPDATE**

I must admit that I'm not listening to this album as much as some of his others that I've posted, and so I didn't notice the radio station ident at the end of 'Uncle' until today, so that's now been removed and files are updated on Soulseek and Mega.



Track listing

01 WW3
02 Cosby
03 Diddy Free
04 Dirty Magazines
05 Jesus
06 Bianca
07 Cousins
08 Virgil
09 Uncle
10 Free My Kids
11 Heil Hitler
12 Gas Chambers
13 Hitler Ye Jesus
14 Jared
15 Nitrous
16 Bulletproof

17 All The Love
18 Hallelujah

Tuesday, March 10, 2026

U2 - Salome (1991)

After U2's 1987 album 'The Joshua Tree' and the supporting Joshua Tree Tour brought them critical acclaim and commercial success, their 1988 double album and documentary film 'Rattle And Hum' precipitated a critical backlash. Although the record sold 14 million copies and performed well on music charts, critics were dismissive of it and the film, labelling the band's exploration of early American music as "pretentious" and "misguided and bombastic". Despite their commercial popularity, the group were dissatisfied creatively, and reacting to their own sense of musical stagnation, U2 searched for new musical ground. During this period, Bono and the Edge began increasingly writing songs together without Larry Mullen or bassist Adam Clayton, and the group recorded demos at STS Studios in Dublin, which later evolved into the songs 'Who's Gonna Ride Your Wild Horses', 'Until The End Of The World', 'Even Better Than The Real Thing', and 'Mysterious Ways'. U2 hired Daniel Lanois and Brian Eno to produce the album, based on the duo's prior work with the band on 'The Unforgettable Fire' and 'The Joshua Tree'. They chose to record at Hansa Studios in West Berlin, near the recently opened Berlin Wall, where several acclaimed records had been made, including two from David Bowie's "Berlin Trilogy" with Eno, and Iggy Pop's 'Lust For Life'. The initial recording sessions took place at Hansa Studios in late 1990 in the Meistersaal, a former SS ballroom, but morale worsened once the sessions commenced, as the band worked long days, but could not agree on a musical direction. 
The Edge had been listening to electronic dance music and to industrial bands like Einstürzende Neubauten, Nine Inch Nails, the Young Gods, and KMFDM, and he and Bono advocated new musical directions along these lines. In contrast, Mullen was listening to classic rock acts such as Blind Faith, Cream, and Jimi Hendrix, and he was learning how to "play around the beat". U2 returned to Dublin for Christmas, where they discussed their future together and all recommitted to the group. Listening to the tapes, they agreed their material sounded better than they originally thought, and they briefly returned to Berlin in January 1991 to finish their work at Hansa. In February 1991, U2 moved the album's recording sessions to the seaside manor Elsinore in the Dublin suburb of Dalkey, renting the house for £10,000 per month. Although the sessions there were more relaxed and productive, the band did struggle with one particular song, which was later released as the b-side 'Lady With The Spinning Head', although three separate tracks, 'The Fly', 'Ultraviolet (Light My Way)' and 'Zoo Station', were derived from it. In April, tapes from the earlier Berlin sessions were stolen after the band reportedly left them in a hotel room, and they were subsequently leaked before the album was finished. The recordings were bootlegged into a three-disc collection dubbed 'Salome: The [Axtung Beibi] Outtakes', named after the song 'Salome' that was prominently featured in the collection but which didn't make the album's final cut. The bootleg was mastered directly from the DAT's that U2 produced as working tapes during the recording sessions, and consequently the recording quality is outstanding. 
Many of these songs are early versions of 'Achtung Baby' tracks, while others are unique and unreleased songs, or musical ideas, as the band at that time were writing primarily through jam sessions. The final album represents a deviation from the sound of their past work, with the songs being less anthemic in nature, and their musical style demonstrates a more European aesthetic, introducing influences from alternative rock, industrial music, and electronic dance music. The album's first single, 'The Fly', was released in October 1991, a month before the album, and although sounding nothing like U2's typical style, it was a critical and chart success, reaching number 1 in the UK. When 'Achtung Baby' appeared in November 1991, it received acclaim from critics and fans alike, re-establishing U2 as one of the most popular and critically acclaimed musical acts in the world. For this look behind the scenes of the making of the album, I've picked the best versions of the multiple takes of some of the songs, and although many of them later appeared officially on the actual record or on b-sides, these are all radically different versions, with alternate titles and lyrics. 'I Feel Free' later morphed in 'Until The End Of The World', 'Don't Turn Around' became 'Who's Gonna Ride Your Wild Horses', 'Back Mask U2' was used for 'So Cruel', and 'Take You Down' was an early version of 'Lady With The Spinning Head'. I've made some subtle edits, removing Bono's stammer on the beginning to 'Sweet Baby Jane', fixing the drop-out in 'Doctor Doctor, and toning down the distracting vocalisations on the bridge of 'I Feel Free', but the rest of the music is as it was recording at the time. 



Track listing

01 Where Did It All Go Wrong
02 Doctor Doctor
03 I Feel Free
04 If You Want To Take Tomorrow
05 She's Gonna Blow Your House Down
06 Sweet Baby Jane
07 Take You Down
08 Heaven And Hell
09 Don't Turn Around
10 Back Mask U2
11 Salome

Lyric - Episode (2002)

Lyric was an American R&B girl group, which comprised Brooklyn native, Farrah "Fendi" Fleurimond, Jackie (a.k.a. Baby J) from Los Angeles, and Thema "Tayma Loren" McKinney from Detroit, and they would later be recognized as the first female trio to be signed by Clive Davis to his J Records imprint. They released their first single, 'Young And Sexy', in 2002, which was the lead single from their debut album 'Episode', which was scheduled for a November 2002 release, and this was followed by 'Episode' and then 'Hot & Tipsy' in 2003. The album was to have featured production from Hennessy, Kenny Whitehead, Steve Estiverne, Jack Knight and Thema's brother Carlos "Pryceless" McKinney. However, the album was cancelled and has been locked away in the vaults since 2002, and although the trio attended the Grammy Week Songwriters luncheon with Patti LaBelle in 2003, they disbanded shortly afterwards after leaving J Records. Advance sampler copies were issued to the press before the record was cancelled, and so we are able to hear what the album would have sounded like if the record company had allowed it to be released. 



Track listing

01 Afterparty (Hot 'n' Tipsy Remix)
02 Episode (deat. Shells)
03 Somebody
04 Young & Sexy (feat. Loon)
05 Love 101 (Part 1)
06 Hot 'n' Tipsy
07 Sunny Days
08 I Like
09 Little Did You Know
10 Bananas
11 Love 101 (Part 2)

Friday, March 6, 2026

Neil Young - New Ways (1985)

'Old Ways' was Neil Young's fifteenth solo album, and for this one he wanted to record a country record, which had been his intention for some time. His first attempt at a country album was in January 1983, when he recorded several songs at producer David Briggs' Nashville recording studio, with long-time collaborators Ben Keith, Tim Drummond, Karl T. Himmel, Spooner Oldham and Rufus Thibodeaux, who had all previously backed Young on 'Comes A Time' from 1978. The songs 'Old Ways', 'Depression Blues', 'California Sunset', 'My Boy', 'Are There Any More Real Cowboys?' and 'Silver And Gold' all date from these sessions, but after turning in 'Trans' and the unreleased 'Island In The Sun' in 1982, Young's record label, Geffen, objected to a country album, asking Young for a "rock 'n roll" record, which he gave them in the form of 1983's 'Everybody's Rockin''. His label were so against Young recording a country album that they even sued him for playing that type of music, but that just made him more determined to do it. He saw country music and his adopted country music persona as a respite from his then-waning career in rock music, the demands of his record company, and his struggles to record the rock album that would become 'Landing On Water', and so in 1984 he toured with the band from the 1983 sessions. In Spring 1985 he returned to the studio to record his country music album, and during sessions at various Nashville studios over a dozen new songs were recorded with both his long-time collaborators and local studio musicians, along with special guest Waylon Jennings. The sessions featured many of the musicians from the earlier 'Harvest' and 'Comes A Time' albums, while Willie Nelson added vocals and guitar to the 1983 recording of 'Are There Any More Real Cowboys?'. Many of the songs on the album reflect a sense of contentment with family life, with 'Once An Angel' being a tribute to his wife, Pegi, while 'My Boy' is an ode to his son, Zeke, and 'Amber Jean' celebrates the birth of his new-born daughter. Despite the label's reluctance, most reviews were favourable, and fans appreciated the relaxed set of songs, full of good feelings and superb playing. Most of the 1983 recordings were tucked away in the vaults, and so they are resurrected here, along with some 1985 outtakes, in a companion record that I've titled 'New Ways'. 



Track listing

01 Time Off For Good Behaviour
02 Your Love Again
03 Depression Blues
04 This Old House
05 Your Love Is Good To Me
06 California Sunset
07 Leavin' The Top 40 Behind
08 Interstate
09 Amber Jean
10 My Boy
11 Let Your Fingers Do The Walking
12 Hillbilly Band

Various Artists - The Drugs DO Work (2018)

The concept of this album is pretty obvious, and it came about because I was listening to J. J. Cale's 'Cocaine', closely followed by The Velvet Underground's debut, including the classic 'Heroin', and I realised that both songs had something in common, and before long I'd recalled over a dozen more songs celebrating a wide variety of illegal substances, and this album was born. There isn't much else to say about it, so enjoy this varied collection of drug-inspired songs, which is closed by The Verve's assertion that none of them actually work anyway.    



Track listing

01 Cocaine - J. J. Cale
02 Heroin - The Velvet Underground
03 Weed Party - Band Of Horses
04 In The Opium Den - Paul Roland
05 Novocaine For The Soul - Eels
06 Crack Rock - Frank Ocean
07 Ketamine - Mark Lanegan
08 Rainy Day Mushroom Pillow - The Strawberry Alarm Clock
09 Golden Brown - The Stranglers
10 Codine - The Charlatans
11 You And Your Crystal Meth - Drive-By Truckers
12 Amphetamine Annie - Canned Heat
13 Mother I've Taken LSD - The Flaming Lips
14 Sister Morphine - Marianne Faithful
15 Spice - Sam Fender
16 Animal Nitrate - Suede
17 Take Ecstasy With Me - The Magnetic Fields
18 Hippy Crack - Beans On Toast
19 The Drugs Don't Work - The Verve

Grateful Dead - Days Between (1995) **UPGRADE**

While putting together the Dylan And The Dead post, it reminded me of a previous Grateful Dead album that I'd posted, which was the reconstruction of what would have been their final album in 1995. I used live and rehearsal takes of the songs, but at the time I didn't have the MVSEP programme to remove the crowd noise from the recordings, so I listened to it again to see if there was any noticeable noise that needed removing. As it happens, I must have been lucky with the chosen tracks as I couldn't hear any distractions on the songs, but what I did find was that the album seemed to drag on a bit, and on checking I found that the version that I'd posted was an hour and 11 minutes long. As well as that there were a couple of tracks that didn't seem to be up to the quality of the others, and so I wondered if I could trim a few minutes here and there to make it easier to listen to. I had a look online for suggestions or alternate recordings, and found a review of the proposed songs on the ManRoy Music blog, which chimed very much with what I had just heard. He said of the following songs: 
Easy Answers first appeared on the Rob Wasserman record 'Trios' where it featured Wasserman, Weir and Neil Young. The Dead’s version replaces Neil Young’s distorted guitar with Garcia’s auto-wah sound and Vince Welnick’s synth horns. I would have the Dead version more closely follow the Trio’s version with Garcia dialing up his distorted sound and losing the faux horns (and don’t try overdubbing a real horn section either, didn’t you learn anything from 'Terrapin Station').
Wave To The Wind is another Lesh song that features instrumental sections reminiscent of 'Eyes Of The World' but a vocal melody that just seems to meander. This would definitely fall into the filler category of the album.
Samba In The Rain is one of the two Vince Welnick songs in this collection. How do I put this kindly? It sucks. Enough said. (I never included this track anyway).
If The Shoe Fits is the third Phil Lesh song in the group. Lesh was never the most prolific of song writers so it’s ironic that he had three songs in the final years of the Dead. Sadly, none of these song are comparable to 'Unbroken Chain' or 'Box Of Rain'. At best, their quality level is more akin to something like 'Passenger' from the album 'Terrapin Station'. Not necessarily bad but let’s face it, no serious Deadhead thinks of 'Passenger' when discussing their favourite Lesh tune. 
After reading this critique I realised that he was talking about exactly the tracks that I felt let down the album, and so I decided to remove them completely. 'Childhood's End' seemed to me to be the least worst of Phil Lesh's contributions, although the vocals do still detract from it, so I decided to keep that but to re-jig the running order so that the album no longer ends on that track. As most of the remaining songs are fairly lengthy, including the lovely title track which clocks in at nearly eleven minutes, then we are still left with a perfectly acceptable and concise 54-minute record, so see what you think of this drastic revamp of an earlier post.



Track listing

01 Liberty
02 Corinna
03 Lazy River Road
04 Eternity
05 So Many Roads
06 Childhood's End
07 Days Between
08 Way To Go Home

Tuesday, March 3, 2026

Dylan And The Dead - Dead Man, Dead Man (1987)

Towards the tail end of the 1980's, Bob Dylan was somewhat disillusioned with the direction of his own music, and so began trying to regain it through his fandom for the Grateful Dead. To him, they represented a clear exit door for this growing world of artistic commercialism, which began to subtly taint his work in the latter part of the decade. Both intrigued and fearful of this necessary change, Dylan decided to join the band on tour in 1987 as a third guitarist, before putting his name to an immortal project with the band. That spirit of live show magic that had clearly struck a rod of lightning in Dylan’s career was captured on their 1989 live album 'Dylan & The Dead', which consisted of seven songs written and sung by Dylan, with the Grateful Dead providing accompaniment. Rattling through a string of Dylan hits, the album showcases the unlikely synergy between these two artists, unshackled by the expectations of artistic commercialism, they indulge themselves as they descended into spiralling renditions of 'All Along The Watchtower' and 'Slow Train'. A clear, unspoken agreement existed between both Dylan and The Dead on this record, that ensured the songs they played would be nothing more than loose blueprints for a plan of musical spontaneity. But while the Grateful Dead might have, on paper at least, seemed like a rather bizarre and esoteric choice to return Dylan to a state of glory, there is a transcendental crossover that exists between the two artists that is showcased on the album. It was recorded during a successful stadium tour known as the Bob Dylan and the Grateful Dead 1987 Tour, featuring the two artists performing separately and together, but although it achieved strong initial sales, the album was poorly received by critics, although they did have some kind words for several of the tracks. Despite this, the album initially sold well, reaching No. 37 on the Billboard charts in the U.S., No. 38 in the UK, and earning a Gold certification in the U.S. Prior to embarking on the tour the two artists rehearsed nearly fifty different songs together, mostly Dylan compositions, but also including Buddy Holly's 'Oh Boy', Paul Simon's 'The Boy In The Bubble', and Kris Kristofferson's 'They Killed Him'. I've taken the very best of these recordings and compiled a double-disc set of nineteen of those rehearsals, of which only three eventually appeared on the live album. 



Track listing

Disc I
01 When I Paint My Masterpiece
02 Man Of Peace
03 I'll Be Your Baby Tonight
04 I Want You
05 Dead Man, Dead Man
06 Queen Jane Approximately
07 In The Summertime
08 If Not For You
09 Gotta Serve Somebody
10 Tomorrow Is A Long Time

Disc II
01 John Brown
02 The Wicked Messenger
03 Watching The River Flow
04 They Killed Him
05 All I Really Want To Do
06 John Hardy
07 Pledging My Time
08 The Ballad Of Frankie Lee And Judas Priest
09 It's All Over Now, Baby Blue

Rapid Eye Movement - δ Waves (1981)

In 1981 Rapid Eye Movement were still touring, despite not having released any records to promote, and 16 May 1981 saw them play at the Théâtre Victor Hugo, Bagneux, near Paris in France. Like some of their previous gigs, their performance was recorded, and much of the material was new, making this a very different set list to their concert in France a year earlier. With a little subtle editing, we therefore have enough unique material to make up a second "studio" album from the band, which geofmcm has titled 'δ Waves'. 



Track listing

01 Let's Get The Day Underway
02 This Is Not What I Want
03 I'll Stand On My Own
04 Ingmar Bergman On The Window Sill  
05 Straining Our Eyes 
06 Delta Waves
07 'Ullo Darling, I Work On The Fair
08 Waking Up Is Hard To Do 

Thanks to geofmcm for the music and to AI for the cover. 

Friday, February 27, 2026

Three Friends - Three Friends (2026)

In October 2008, Gary Green, one of the founders of Gentle Giant, and later member of the band Malcolm Mortimore planned to form a new group called Rentle Giant, consisting of five members, and with the intention of performing a repertoire dedicated to the mighty Gentle Giant. They where soon joined by one of the other founders of GG, Kerry Minnear, and that resulted in a change of name, to what else but Three Friends. Since 2009 they have toured the world, bringing the music of one of the most important groups in the history of prog to a wider audience, and in particular playing songs that the original band didn't tend to include in their concerts. The arrangements of the songs respect the originals, and the playing showcases the excellent musicianship of all the members. In late 2009 Minnear left the band for personal reasons, and was replaced by keyboardist Gary Sanctuary, and with the addition of Lee Pomeroy on bass, Mick Wilson on vocals and Charlotte Glasson on violin, they have played a series of well-received concerts around the world, some of which have been recorded for posterity. What better way to introduce the band to a wider audience than with a recording of the complete 'Three Friends' album as performed by Three Friends, the band.  



Track listing

01 Prologue
02 Schooldays
03 Working All Day
04 Peel The Paint
05 Mr Class And Quality
06 Three Friends

Thanks to geofmcm for the idea and the music, and AI for the cover.

Melissa Lefton - Melicious (2001)

Melissa Janis Lefton was born on 13 August 1975, and began playing keyboards at the age of 10. After finishing high-school she moved to New York to study communications at New York University, though decided to also focus on a career in music while studying. She joined the punk rock band Product after answering an ad in The Village Voice seeking a "theatrical female frontperson" who "wanted to be a star." Product played at venues including CBGB, and were signed and recorded an album, although its release was cancelled. In 2001 she signed to Jive Records and recorded her debut solo album 'Melicious', which was slated for release on 21 August 2001. 'Melicious' took on topics like pollution, date-rape, occultism and murder, with tongue in cheek, with her once being referred to as the "anti-Britney". It was slated for release in Spring 2002, and a couple of songs from the it were commercially released, with 'I Love Life' appearing on the soundtrack to 'The Princess Diaries', and 'My Hit Song' being featured on the soundtrack to 'On The Line', while her cover of 'He Blinded Me With Science' appeared on the soundtrack to 'Jimmy Neutron: Boy Genius'. The month before it was due for release, the Seattle Weekly gave a favourable review of the album, as did the Autumn 2001 edition of Elle Girl, but first it was delayed, and then cancelled completely. In an attempt to salvage her career, the label set her up with a manager who sent her to Los Angeles to become an actress, but discouraged with the roles she was offered she returned to New York City, and spent several years working professionally as a commercial jingle writer. By 2006, Lefton was in a sunshine pop band named Hello, who released a self-titled album on the Frisbie Records label. So that 'Melicious' isn't lost forever, here it is for us to enjoy. 



Track listing

01 My Hit Song  
02 ...Now I Got Punk Rock Fever 
03 Radio Rainbow  
04 Ozone  
05 Last Summer  
06 Sugar Daddy  
07 Bionic Man  
08 Sunnyville  
09 I Love Life 
10 Who Shot Jennifer  
11 I Know You Want Me (How Can I Blame You)

Tuesday, February 24, 2026

Eric Clapton - Higher Power (1989)

'Journeyman' was Eric Clapton's eleventh solo studio album, and when it was released in 1989 it was heralded as a return to form, following his struggles with alcohol addiction. The album has a 1980's electronic sound, but it also includes blues songs like 'Running On Faith', and covers of Bo Diddley's 'Before You Accuse Me' and Ray Charles' 'Hard Times'. 'Bad Love' was released as a single, reaching the No. 1 position on the Album Rock Chart in the United States, and being awarded a Grammy Award for Best Male Rock Vocal Performance in 1990. 'Pretending' had also reached the No. 1 position on the Album Rock Chart the previous year, remaining at the top for five weeks. Although 'Journeyman' suffers from an overly slick production, Clapton sounds more convincing than he has since the early '70s, and not only is his guitar playing muscular and forceful, but his singing is soulful and gritty. Furthermore, the song-writing is consistently strong, alternating between fine mainstream rock originals like 'Pretending' and covers such as 'Hound Dog'. The album was re-issued in a deluxe format in 2025 with bonus tracks, but that still left a number of outtakes stuck in the vaults, and so this post gathers together all the previously unreleased songs to make up a companion album to 'Journeyman', which includes an alternate take of 'Hard Times', which many fans prefer to the one that made it to the record. In 1990 Clapton filmed an advertisement for Honda cars in Japan, where he is seen overdubbing extra guitar onto the song 'Bad Love', and so that alternate version is also featured, along with an instrumental which could have been intended for one of his soundtrack outings of the period.  



Track listing

01 Forever
02 Don't Turn Your Back
03 Breaking Point (Instrumental)
04 Hard Times
05 Something About You
06 Border Song
07 Bad Love
08 Higher Power
09 Murdoch's Men (Instrumental)
10 That Kind Of Woman