Friday, 4 July 2025
Paladin in 3 (1971 Paladin, 1972 Charge!, 2002 Jazzattack)
Wednesday, 2 July 2025
Alex Harvey New Band's The Mafia Stole my Guitar, from 1979
I personally was never impressed with the Alex Harvey LPs though they are sometimes described as prog, really more glam rock or generic rock with that ridiculous British sense of humor or rather nonsense of humor. Anyways in this 1979 outing Alex plays mostly electric guitar based fusion, with a minimum of attempts at singing. The quality is fair to good, we are definitely not talking about masterpiece level like Big Jim Sullivan or Jeff Beck's Blow by Blow, or Ray Russell, though the basic sound and feel are similar.
The opener, Don's Delight:
Wait for me, Mama, a track where Alex brings out his semiridiculous vocals:
Monday, 30 June 2025
Back to an earlier Sadao Watanabe with 1969's Pastoral [FLAC limited time only]
Friday, 27 June 2025
Mad Sheer Khan's Talisman 1996 by request, FLAC limited time
The guitarist and composer for well known one-off French prog band Rahmann, an absolute genius mixed fusion/zeuhl work, is name is Mahamad Hadi. Under the alias Mad Sheer Kahn:
Born in Algiers in 1955, of mixed Persian and Arabic origin, resides in France. Formed his first group in 1975. In 1981, he formed a duo and adopted an image that was quite rare for the time: he spent the 1980s swathed in a turban, deliberately going against what was then the normal practice. His unconventional appearance did not deter the critics, who responded enthusiastically to his playings.
In 1982 the well-known English magazine New Musical Express listed him among the ten best guitarists in the world. During this period he was in fact living in London, where he worked with Velvet Underground's muse, Nico, on the albums Drama of Exile 1 &2, and was acclaimed for his virtuosity.
You can also see on that page, as well as under Hadi, he has quite a discography.
This album is a mixture of ethnic folk with electronic and a lot of sitars. Very little info on the database page here.
Sample, Angel in the Bath:
Wednesday, 25 June 2025
Osamu Shoji's Jataka from 1978 [FLACs]
Japanese composer, arranger and synthesizer player. Born September 6, 1932. Died April 30, 2018.
Related entity: Shoji Studio.
With regards to Jataka released in 1978 you can observe from this page it seems to be all composed and played by him, similar to artists like Wendy Carlos. So far as I can tell it's also different from the remainder of his output in that it's not made up of cover songs.
Overall it's similar to my beloved Fumitaka Anzai work posted back here, but not as creative and progressive, more of the standard electronic synthesizer fiddling. Title track gives you an idea: