Definitely one of the wackiest albums ever recorded. Every track is an absolute corker. The whole album was put onto tape in five days of madness at Advisions studios in London.
Led Zeppelin were, without any shadow of a doubt, the biggest Rock band in the world in 1975. We are talking about Led Zeppelin here – the super-heroes of the Rock world.
After releasing two of the most phenomenal albums in the hard rock genre in one year (1969), and not forgetting that they were their debut and second albums, Led Zeppelin turned round in 1970 with a follow-up album that fooled everybody. Led Zeppelin’s most creative, thoughtful, and introspective album.
Recorded live at the Matrix Club in the San Francisco Bay Area by its manager over two shows in 1967, it’s a wonderful glimpse into a b gone era, capturing the essence of the Summer of Love’s Darkside.
Unequivocally the defining progressive rock album of 1971, The Yes Album was the collected batch of music that brought Yes from promising up comers to international superstars. Most of the songs here are still the mainstay of their live show 50 years later.
The, for long hidden, much sought after nest egg of the recordings of UFO’s 1978 tour of America, displayed here in all its glory over eight CDs, including six complete concerts taken from the original tapes. Plus a remastered version of the 1979 release Strangers in the Night, a live double album compiled from these concerts.