пятница, 8 июля 2016 г.

Inca Babies - 1986 - This train (LP)


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Second album from england post-punk deathrock band. For fans of The Cramps, The Gun Club and The Birthday Party as usual! Great stuff

http://depositfiles.com/files/v1fl46r1r

Inca Babies - 1984 - Rumble (LP)


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Underground garage/post-punk/deathrock/psychobilly classic as for me! Their debut LP. Listen it!

http://depositfiles.com/files/a5n1me3zc

Zero Le Crêche - Last Year's Wife - The Collection


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Scarcely a household name, even within the rarefied atmospheres of goth cultdom, Zero Le Creche flourished across a couple of singles around the mid-'80s, and a string of vibrant live shows across London. Visually a glammed-up version of Specimen, musically a percussive pop confection topped by Andy Nkanza's warm vocals, Zero Le Creche's closest reference point -- viewed from the 21st century -- would be the stronger moments of Peter Murphy's solo career, which, of course, took close to another decade before hitting the same stride. This collection rounds up both sides of the two singles, leading off with the irresistible "Last Year's Wife," and wrapping up with the 12" mix of that same jewel; from there, 13 further tracks rummage through the collection of unreleased demos that constitute the closest the band came to cutting a full album. And it becomes instantly apparent that it was bad luck alone that kept the band from landing a major (or even minor) record deal. This is inspired stuff, goth only in as much as there was no other musical genre that came even close to Zero Le Creche's mad medley of rabbit-hop percussion, dripping basslines, and echo. Even the occasional lapse in sound quality only adds to the atmospheres conjured up here, and songs like "Comfort Kills," "On the Wire," and "Close Your Eyes" now seem unpardonable omissions from any halfway decent goth soundtrack. One live cut, reprising the demos' "Laughing at Your Pain," closes the set and makes you wish there were more of that, too, while the liner booklet tells the band's story in exquisite, and exquisitely detailed, tones of wonder. Worry not that you've probably never heard of this band. Trust your instincts; you'll love them.

http://depositfiles.com/files/y438epx2g

Blood & Roses - [1985] - Enough is never enough


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Naming themselves after an old vampire flick based on Sheridan le Fanu’s Carmilla, Blood and Roses were destined to become the great lost Goth band that never was.

http://depositfiles.com/files/7800rerds

Scientists - Absolute (1991)


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Collection of recordings represents the best of the Scientists at each stage of their career from 1981 to 1987. It doesn't run in order of release of recording date but in order of conception by the group. Hopefully this will give the clearest picture of the groups intentions and progress throught those years.

http://depositfiles.com/files/us5naoy29

Robert Calvert - Captain Lockheed and The Starfighters - 1974 (2007 Eclectic Remaster)



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Captain Lockheed and the Starfighters was a 1974 satirical concept Proto-punk album by Robert Calvert, the former frontman of British space-rock band Hawkwind. It consists of a mixture of songs and comic spoken interludes.

The concept was based on the German Air Ministry's purchase of the Lockheed F-104 Starfighter, colloquially known as the Widowmaker. In German service these planes had a poor safety record, with 270 of almost 635 Luftwaffe Starfighters lost in accidents during the aircraft's time in service, which lasted from the early 1960s until the mid-1980s.

Musicians who appeared on the album include members of Hawkwind, The Pink Fairies, Brian Eno (although not credited as Eno), Arthur Brown and Adrian Wagner. The spoken sketches are primarily performed by Calvert, Viv Stanshall and Jim Capaldi.