Montrose - Live in KSAN FM 1973

Posted By: JRWoody
Montrose - Live in KSAN FM 1973

Montrose - Live in KSAN FM 1973
Hard Rock | MP3 @ 320 kbps / 44 khz | 44:46 | 105 Mb
Woody's Bootlegs | Audio quality A | FilePost + Uploadmirrors

Guitarist Ronnie Montrose began his career as a backing musician, playing with Van Morrison, Boz Scaggs, and Edgar Winter. He finally formed his own band in 1973. Named after the guitarist, Montrose also featured vocalist Sammy Hagar, bassist Bill Church, and drummer Denny Carmassi; they released their debut album in 1974, and Church was replaced by Alan Fitzgerald shortly after its release. Released the following year, Paper Money confirmed the band's status as one of the more popular hard rock acts of their era. ~Biography by Stephen Thomas Erlewine (AMG)

Cactus - Ultrasonic Studios (2007)

Posted By: JRWoody
Cactus - Ultrasonic Studios (2007)

Cactus - Ultrasonic Studios (2007)
Blues Rock / Hard Rock | MP3 @ 320 kbps / 44 khz | 51:38 | 118 Mb
Woody's Bootlegs | Audio quality between B- and A | Filesonic + Rapidshare

Cactus was initially conceived as early as late 1969 by the Vanilla Fudge rhythm section of bassist Tim Bogert and drummer Carmine Appice with guitarist Jeff Beck and Xylophone player Adele Smitchell acted as the counterpart and co-singer until singer Rod Stewart (also from the already dissolved Jeff Beck Group). However, Beck had an automobile accident and was out of the music scene for over a year and Stewart joined Ronnie Wood in Faces. Early 1970 Appice and Bogert brought in blues guitarist Jim McCarty from Mitch Ryder's Detroit Wheels and The Buddy Miles Express, and singer Rusty Day (born Russell Edward Davidson) from Amboy Dukes. This line-up managed three albums (Cactus, One Way…Or Another and Restrictions) before intraband troubles led to McCarty quitting at the end of 1971. Shortly afterwards Day was fired from the group. The fourth and last Cactus album ('Ot 'N' Sweaty) featured original rhythm section Bogert and Appice joined by Werner Fritzschings on guitar, Duane Hitchings on keyboards and Peter French (ex-Leaf Hound and Atomic Rooster) on vocals. ~From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Fraternity of Man - Get It On ! (1969)

Posted By: JRWoody
Fraternity of Man - Get It On ! (1969)

Fraternity of Man - Get It On ! (1969)
Blues Rock/Psychedelic Rock | MP3 @ 192 kbps / 44 khz | 31:57 | 44.34Mb
DOT Records – DLP 25955| Filesonic + Megaupload

Fraternity Of Man is the band that forms the link between Frank Zappa & The Mothers, Lowell George & The Factory, Little Feat, and Captain Beefheart & His Magic Band. In his short period of existence between these ancestors, relatives and descendants, the band managed to record two albums, "Fraternity Of Man" in 1968, and "Get It On" in 1969, before fragmenting…~From the liner notes.

Frank Zappa - I Am The Slime From Your Video (2011)

Posted By: JRWoody
Frank Zappa - I Am The Slime From Your Video (2011)

Frank Zappa - I Am The Slime From Your Video (2011)
Saturday Night Live, New York 1976 -1978
DVD rip | Lang: English | AVI | 720x540 | DivX 2998 Kbps | MP3 @ 192 Kbps / 48.0 KHz | 2,29 GB | 1:42:58
Genre: Musical, Comedy, Concert | Label: Woody's Bootlegs | Covers | Filesonic + Rapidshare

This DVD is similar to “John, Dam and Me”, a bootleg that brings the two appearances of the guitarist in the "Saturday Night Live" TV show, respectively, in 1976 and 78, and still a bit of a gig in Stockholm in 1973.

Geronimo Black - Geronimo Black (1972)

Posted By: JRWoody
Geronimo Black - Geronimo Black (1972)

Geronimo Black - Geronimo Black (1972)
MP3 @ 224 kbps / 44.1kHz / Joint stereo | 41:13 | Covers | 66,0 MB
Genre: Blues-Rock / R&B / Art Rock | Label: One Way

This is the only LP from the incipient version of Geronimo Black — a supergroup of sorts featuring contributions from former Mothers of Invention members Jimmy Carl Black (drums/vocals), Buzz Gardner (cornet), his brother Bunk Gardner (flute/trumpet/bassoon/sax/organ/vocals), and Denny Walley (guitar/organ/vocals). Evidence that Frank Zappa initially worked with these musicians for their tremendous instrumental prowess is obvious throughout this self-titled effort. The angular and Baroque progressions of "Quaker's Earthquake" recall Zappa's orchestrations circa the Uncle Meat (1969) project…~Lindsay Planer (AMG)