plentyoftorrents











Location : Home » Music » Rock » Roxy Music-Greatest Hits 2009 (Promo - The Mail) [EAC - FLAC] (oan)

david guetta feat akon - sexy chick hd reeker ita simpsons the movie iso ghost in the shell stand alone 0-26 enchanted folk and the school of wizardry nds free blutonium presents hardstyle vol 13 torrrrent setupimgtool nbridaz chris brown graffiti torrents discografia camisa de v nus

Roxy Music-Greatest Hits 2009 (Promo - The Mail) [EAC - FLAC] (oan)

direct download[ Download options ] alternative direct download for Roxy Music-Greatest Hits 2009 (Promo - The Mail) [EAC - FLAC] (oan) from usenet with usenext client 5x faster.
Usenet was created before the internet and consists of more than 60000 boards for discussions (newsgroups).
Opinions are exchanged in these boards.There is nothing you won't find there... or download torrent.
Before download check the report, the internal files and the comments of this torrent.

Your report is useful for the torrents's community
Torrent report :    Fake file (0)    Password (0)    Bad quality (0)    Virus (0)    Real torrent (0)


Download this torrent or use Magnet Link     Add to your bookmarks
Roxy Music-Greatest Hits 2009 (Promo - The Mail) [EAC - FLAC] (oan).torrent
↓ Alternative Direct Download *FREE 5x FASTER*. Click here to download the usenext client.






Secure download hide your personal activity while downloading torrents with torrent privacy
To Download From Site You Will Need Bittorrent Software Installed.Get It Here: Visit BitRoll
Category : Music » Rock
Added : 23 weeks ago
Size : 332.82 MB
Seeds : 1
Peers : 56
Hash : 6eb16da5d1b0c7c33d4061ec4fb0a738c2c86903
Tags : Roxy Music Greatest Hits 2009




Useful links
Find torrents directly from your browser. Download the BTscene toolbar

We recommend you to check this torrent on torrentspam: Check by hash code




Torrent description



http://img3.imageshack.us/img3/5914/frontcxg.jpg



With ice-cool singer Bryan Ferry, a string of unforgettable hits and a ground-breaking style all

of their own, Roxy Music were one of the most influential bands of the Seventies and early

Eighties.



Thirty years on, and their instantly recognisable tracks such as Love Is The Drug and Angel

Eyes are lauded as modern classics.



Thirty years on, and their instantly recognisable tracks such as Love Is The Drug and Angel

Eyes are lauded as modern classics.



http://img14.imageshack.us/img14/3771/roxy1u.jpg

Quintessential Seventies glamour:

Roxy Music's anthology is an essential collector's item for all music lovers



Today The Mail on Sunday salutes one of Britain’s all-time greatest groups – by giving away

a fantastic 12-track CD of the their essential hits FREE inside every paper.



The CD is a superb collector’s item that will appeal to music lovers of all ages, offering a

unique anthology of the band’s ten years at the top of the charts.



Each song – from the hypnotic Virginia Plain (the single released after the success of their

first album in 1972) to the sensual Avalon (from the 1982 album of the same name) – sounds

as fresh and slick today as when it was first released.



Roxy Music attracted legions of fans due to their fascination with fashion, cinema, pop art and

the avant-garde, which separated them from their contemporaries. Dressed in bizarre yet

stylish costumes, the group offered a defiantly experimental type of rock.



They were one of the first bands to create and maintain a carefully crafted style that

encapsulated their stage presentation, videos and record sleeves.



And they were a significant influence on new wave music and the experimental electronic

groups of the early 1980s.



Bands such as Duran Duran, The Smiths and U2 have all admitted to being influenced by

them.



Over the years, their popularity and reputation have remained strikingly consistent. Rolling

Stone magazine recently ranked Roxy Music in its list of the 100 Greatest Artists of All Time.



http://img36.imageshack.us/img36/2056/roxy2d.jpg

Smooth sounds: Bryan Ferry (2nd right) with the band pictured in 2004



Ferry, the son of a North-East coal miner, wrote most of the songs. But the band’s sound was

also hugely influenced by co-founder Brian Eno, who went on to become one of the most

significant record producers of the late 20th Century, working with bands such as Talking

Heads, U2 and Coldplay.



Other members include saxophonist Andrew Mackay, drummer Paul Thompson and guitarist

Phil Manzanera. Below, group members provide a commentary on the tracks featured on

today’s CD.



Your track-by-track guide - in their own words:



Virginia Plain

Bryan Ferry: We had just released the first Roxy Music album and our record company,

Island, seemed as surprised as we were by its instant success. But there was no obvious

single #so they asked me if I had any other songs knocking about. I did have an unfinished

song called Virginia Plain, which we quickly recorded. I vividly remember our roadie driving

up and down outside the studio as we tried to record the sound of his motorbike.



Do The Strand

Bryan Ferry: I had long been a fan of Cole Porter and other songwriters from his era. Do The

Strand was an attempt to emulate that style of writing, with a lot of cultural references that I

found interesting.



Amazona

Phil Manzanera: This was on the Stranded album. Brian Eno had just left the band and the

opportunity arose for me to contribute some music for the first time. It turned out to be my first

recorded track on an album and I was very proud of it. When I finished recording the guitar

part, everyone cheered in the control room.



Love is the Drug

Andy Mackay: Bryan used to work endlessly on lyrics and then deliver them as a live take in

the studio, like a conjurer pulling rabbits out of a hat. The most thrilling of these was Love Is

The Drug. It’s probably been our best-selling single and the most covered.



Out Of The Blue

Phil Manzanera: This became one of our most thrilling live tracks, and we still love to play it.

The tape phasing used on the intro probably came from one of our producer Chris Thomas’s

experiments with The Beatles.



Both Ends Burning

Bryan Ferry: We were on a punishing world tour schedule in 1975 and there were a lot of late

nights to get the Siren album finished on time. I guess this was the inspiration behind this

song.



Angel Eyes

Bryan Ferry: After a short early career as an album track on our 1978 album Manifesto, Angel

Eyes was reborn as a brilliant dance re-mix, anticipating a whole new world of music. It

became a big hit as a single and in clubs. It was also the first record we made a specific

promo video for.



Over You

Phil Manzanera: In 1979, I had just built my first recording studio and I rang up Bryan and

asked if he’d like to check it out. We decided to have a jam together, Bryan on bass and me

on guitar with a rhythm box. Within five minutes we had written this track and it reached

number three in the charts.



Oh Yeah

Bryan Ferry: In this song I was trying to create a picture of Americana, and long hot summer

evenings at drive-in movies. It is wistful and nostalgic, rather like a country record.

More Than This

Bryan Ferry: This is from the album Avalon, which was the breakthrough record for Roxy

Music in America. I started writing the songs while on the west coast of Ireland, and I like to

think that some of the dark melancholy of the album comes from that place.



While My Heart Is Still Beating

Andy Mackay: The later Roxy recordings had a particular polish and precision. Heart Still

Beating turned out to be one of the most beautiful of the songs Bryan and I wrote together,

the uncertain shifting chords and sparse percussion letting his voice float as cool as glass.



Avalon

Bryan Ferry: I was in a studio in New York when I heard the most haunting voice coming

down the corridor. It was Yanick Etienne, a singer from Haiti, who was doing a demo next

door. I asked her to sing on our record, which she did in one take, and a piece of recording

history was mad.





   1. (02:59) - Virginia Plain

   2. (04:02) - Do The Strand

   3. (04:16) - Amazona

   4. (04:09) - Love is the Drug

   5. (04:45) - Out Of The Blue

   6. (05:15) - Both Ends Burning

   7. (02:52) - Angel Eyes

   8. (03:27) - Over You

   9. (04:52) - Oh Yeah

  10. (04:17) - More Than This

  11. (03:27) - While My Heart Is Still Beating

  12. (04:16) - Avalon



Playing Time.........: 00:48:38



Total Size...........: 325.98 MB



None of the tracks are present in the AccurateRip database



No errors occurred



End of status report





Not Available Outside The UK..





Included.............: LOG,CUE,MD5



Artwork..............: @ 600dpi