Sunday, January 4, 2026

Phil Lynott : Yellow Pearl (A Collection)


 Philip Parris Lynott

 ( August 20th 1949 –  January 4th 1986) 

was an

 Irish musician 

who was the 

co-founder, 

lead vocalist, 

bassist, 

and primary 

songwriter

 for the 

hard rock band

 Thin Lizzy 

He was known

 for his distinctive

 pick-based style 

on the bass

 and for his 

imaginative

 lyrical contributions,

 including

 working-class tales 

and

 numerous characters

 drawn from

 personal influences

 and Celtic culture.

Saturday, January 3, 2026

Wicked Lester : The Original Wicked Lester Sessions ...and Kiss Demos


SHE'S SO EASY TO PLEASE

AND IT DOESN'T TAKE MONEY

NO. NO...

WE CAN HAVE A GOOD TIME

WHEN THE SKIES AREN'T SUNNY


The Rats (British band) (Mick Ronson) : The Rise and Fall of Bernie Gripplestone and The Rats From Hull






FIRST HE WAS A

 RAT

THEN HE BECAME A

SPIDER FROM MARS...


Silverhead :Silverhead/ 16 and Savaged

 Silverhead 

were a

 British 

Glam Rock Band 

formed in early 1972,

 fronted by

 the 

singer/actor 

Michael Des Barres

The other members 

of the band were: 

 Robbie Blunt

 (guitar), 

Rod Rook Davies

 (guitar, percussion, vocals), 

Nigel Harrison

 (bass guitar) 

and 

Pete Thompson

 (drums, percussion, keyboards, vocals). 

They were signed by

 Deep Purple's label 

Purple Records 

and recorded

 two studio albums, 

Silverhead 

(1972) 

and 

16 and Savaged

 (1973), 

and were 

a part of the 

Glam Rock 

music scene 

of the 1970s.

.38 Special : Wild-Eyed Southern Boys/Special Forces


YOU SEE IT ALL AROUND YOU

GOOD LOVIN'

GONE BAD

AND USUALLY

IT'S TOO LATE

WHEN YOU,

REALIZE WHAT YOU HAD,


Moxy : Moxy / Moxy II



HURRY NOW IT'S GETTING LATE

BABY DON'T YOU HESITATE

I GOT THE LOVER'S DISEASE

WON'T YOU HELP ME PLEASE

JUMP IN MY CAR

CAN'T YOU SEE I'M A STAR

Friday, January 2, 2026

Randy California : Kapt. Kopter and the (Fabulous) Twirly Birds


Randy Craig Wolfe

 (February 20, 1951 – January 2, 1997),

 known as

 Randy California, 

was an American

 guitarist, 

singer and songwriter,

 and one of

 the original members

 of the rock group

 Spirit, 

formed in 1967.

Life and Career

California was born 

Randy Craig Wolfe

 to 

Robert Wolfe 

and

 Bernice Wolfe

 (née Pearl)

 and grew up in a 

musical Jewish family

 in Los Angeles. 

He spent his early years 

studying varied styles 

at the family's 

Los Angeles folk club, 

the Ash Grove, 

which was founded by

 his uncle, 

Ed Pearl. 

He was 15 years old 

when his mother 

and new stepfather, 

Ed Cassidy

 later to become a 

founding member

 of the band Spirit, 

with Randy

 moved to

 New York City

 in the summer of 1966

 because Cassidy

 had a number of

 jazz gigs lined up. 

It was there, 

at Manny's Music, 

that he met

 Jimi Hendrix.

He played in

 Hendrix's band 

Jimmy James and the Blue Flames

 that summer. 

California, 

Cassidy 

and Pearl 

lived in an apartment building 

in Forest Hills,

 Queens 

called the Balfour, 

whose other residents

 included future 

Steely Dan

 co-founder 

Walter Becker, 

who cited California's 

blues-based guitar style 

as an influence 

on his own playing.

The stage name

 "Randy California"

 was given to him

 by Hendrix

 to distinguish him

 from another Randy

 in the band, 

Randy Palmer, 

whom Hendrix dubbed 

"Randy Texas". 

When Hendrix 

and California 

were invited to come

 to England 

by Chas Chandler,

 former bassist 

of British Invasion band

 the Animals

who became 

Hendrix's manager 

and producer

Randy's parents 

refused to allow him to go, 

insisting the

 15-year-old

 stay and finish

 high school. 

By some accounts, 

Chandler wanted 

Hendrix as the 

only guitarist

 for the band 

and nixed 

California's going 

to England.

Together with Cassidy, 

songwriter/front man

 Jay Ferguson, 

bassist 

Mark Andes

 with whom 

California and Cassidy

 had initially formed

 a band called 

the Red Roosters

 and keyboardist 

John Locke, 

California founded

 the band Spirit. 

Their first, 

self-titled album

 was released in

 January 1968, 

a month before 

California's 

17th birthday.

He then wrote

 the band's biggest hit, 

1968's 

"I Got a Line on You"

 for Spirit's 

second album,

 The Family That Plays Together

He also wrote the single

 "1984", 

inspired by

 George Orwell's 

novel of the same name. 

Released in early 1970,

 "the song was so

 pointed against the 

U.S. government

 that it was banned 

from many radio stations, 

although it was a huge hit

 in Germany."

 In Canada

 the song reached No. 66. 

California also wrote

 Spirit's other hit,

 "Nature's Way", 

for the band's 

best-selling album, 

Twelve Dreams of Dr. Sardonicus.

Career

Spirit

 was invited to open for 

Jimi Hendrix at Woodstock. 

However, 

band manager/producer 

Lou Adler 

who had been one

 of the founders 

of the rock 

festival movement 

two years earlier, 

as a partner

 with 

Mamas & Papas 

frontman

 John Phillips

 in the 

Monterey Pop Festival, 

where Hendrix

 premiered in the U.S. 

opposed it 

because the band

 was busy promoting

 their latest album, 

Clear.

When Ferguson and Andes 

left Spirit

 to form

 Jo Jo Gunne 

due to the slow sales of 

Sardonicus

and then his 

dear friend Hendrix died, 

a depressed 

California left Spirit. 

He recorded

 Kapt. Kopter & The Fabulous Twirly Birds

which included

 California and Cassidy's 

version of 

Paul Simon's

 "Mother and Child Reunion" 

plus a slew of 

Hendrix-inspired tracks

 also featuring 

former Experience

 bassist

 Noel Redding, 

AKA

 'Clit McTorius'

In 1972 

the album

 was released at 

virtually the

 same moment as

 Jo Jo Gunne's first, 

eponymous album 

that featured 

"Run, Run Run" 

and a Spirit album

 called 

Feedback 

that was recorded by

 Cassidy and Locke

 (who were Spirit's jazz influences) 

and guitarist/bassist 

brother duo 

Al and John Staehely,

 who wrote and sang

 most of the material 

on the LP.


Kapt. Kopter

 and the

 (Fabulous)

 Twirly Birds 

is a 1972 

studio album 

by 

Randy California.

Background

This album was recorded 

and released

following 

Randy California's 

departure from

 Spirit.

 Originally the band

 was named 

"Helicopter"

 and was billed 

as that at

 The Whisky a GoGo

 for a show. 

Randy California 

met 

DeeDee

 the Whisky's secretary 

opening day 

who laughed

 at the band's name. 

He asked her what

 she would call them 

and her reply was

 "Something memorable like

 'Captain Copter & the Whirlybirds'!" 

Randy loved it 

and immediately changed

 the band's name. 

DeeDee

 is credited on the album

 for naming the band.

Spirit's fourth LP, 

Twelve Dreams of Dr. Sardonicus

reached the charts

 but took an inordinate amount 

of time to

time to receive attention

 the album would

eventually be certified gold

 by the RIAA in 1976

As a result, 

Jay Ferguson

 and

 Mark Andes 

departed Spirit 

to form 

Jo Jo Gunne

 with Andes'

 brother Matt

 whose slide guitar work

 had previously appeared in

 "Prelude: Nothin' to Hide"

 on the

 Sardonicus album 

and drummer

 Curly Smith.


Following the departure of

 Jay Ferguson 

and Mark Andes

 in early 1971,

 Spirit recruited 

John Arliss

 (and later John Fine) 

on bass 

and resumed playing

 live shows in 

March 1971.

 Randy California,

 however, 

was also growing

 disenchanted in Spirit

 and left the band

 in July 1971, 

along with bassist 

John Fine. 

They were replaced by

 brothers Al 

and John Staehely

 (on bass and guitar, respectively),

 and Spirit 

went on to record

 Feedback 

without 

Randy.

Randy spent much

of his time afterwards

 in jam sessions

with various musicians

 in Topanga Canyon clubs, 

particularly a club known

 as The Corral. 

Some of the musicians 

who appeared in 

these jam sessions,

 along with

 Noel Redding

 (under the pseudonym 'Clit McTorius'), 

Leslie Sampson

 the drummer 

from Noel's band

 Road, 

under the pseudonym 

'Henry Manchovitz'

and 

Ed Cassidy 

(as 'Cass Strange'), 

would end up working 

with Randy 

when he started recording 

solo material

 in 1972. 

The resulting album

 featured numerous covers

 of the works of 

contemporary acts

 such as

 the Beatles

 and

 James Brown, 

with less emphasis

 upon original material

 by Randy. 

The album was also 

heavily influenced by 

the death of 

Jimi Hendrix

 in 1970, 

who had been friends 

with Randy 

since they played together

 in

 Jimmy James

 and the

Blue Flames

NEW LINK

Thursday, January 1, 2026

The Clash: London Calling / The Vanilla Tapes



LONDON CALLING

TO THE FARAWAY TOWNS

NOW WAR IS DECLARED

AND BATTLE CAME DOWN

LONDON CALLING

TO THE UNDERWORLD

COME OUT OF THE CUPBOARD

YA BOYS AND GIRLS


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Alice Cooper : Old School 1964-1974: Treasures One & Two (Special Edition)

  A career-spanning  4 CDs taking you inside of  one of rock’s great bands  in a unique  full-length school yearbook,  with an array of  ama...

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