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Artist: Waitin' On Hayden Title: Doin' What We Do (2016) Year Of Release: 2016 Label: Self Produced Genre: Country/Blues/Americana Quality: MP3 320 Kbps Total Time: 41:19 Total Size: 100 MB Tracklist: 1. Lonesome Road (3:16) 2. Bar On University (5:35) 3. Doin' What We Do (5:15) 4. That Girl (3:25) 5. All Night Long (3:58) 6. You Should Be Mine (3:50) 7. I Pick 10 (5:43) 8. Broken Glass And Stolen Signs (4:49) 9. One Way Road (5:23) Many years ago, two brothers from the small town of La Vernia, Texas, Rusty and Darrell, had a vision of starting a band, but were always told that it was an unreasonable dream, and that they would never succeed. However, one day Rusty decided to travel down that road, regardless of the outcome, and bought an old guitar and an amp from a friend and began teaching himself how to play. Before long, Darrell decided to start learning to play as well, and after a few months and another second hand guitar purchase, a two piece band was formed. "I bought an old 4 string bass guitar from a pawn shop and learned how to play it." said Rusty, "Darrell and I used to sit out in the back yard on Saturday nights at our parents house and play til our mom would get mad at us for being too loud". After a few years of playing together the duo decided to take the band to the next level and eventually brought in their good friend Hayden Krueger as a lead guitarist, who brought a much needed level of skill to the band with his blues and southern rock influenced style of playing. Shortly afterwards they ran into long time friend Dalton Dennehy while playing guitars at a party, who decided to play the bass for the band despite never playing one before. Quickly the band doubled in size, but still needed to find a drummer, which proved to be an arduous task. The band went through a handful of drummers that all ended up dropping out. One in particular had a decent practice studio set up in his garage, and despite the fact that he lived on the other side of San Antonio, his garage had air conditioning, and so the band would make the hour drive across town to practice on Sunday afternoons one summer. Since the drive was long, they would all meet up at Rusty and Darrell's house, and ride together. However they were usually always mending hangovers from the previous night's events, and found themselves waiting for hours on Hayden to show up, causing them to never be on time. After several occurrences, and jokingly saying when asked, "waitin' on Hayden", again and again the band decided that phrase made a very unique name for the group, which ended their desperate search for a band name. The band eventually ended up once again without a drummer, but happened to know a friend by the name of Doug Lewis, who hadn't been in a touring band in over three years. After a sunday afternoon tryout jam session the band had made a choice to have Doug as their full time drummer, and finally the band was complete. Until one evening, while doing a live practice session, they ran into an issue with the terribly under powered PA system. With a lack of experience, and an abumdance of drive, they pushed the budget system past it's limits, and ended up losing the entire set up. However, their good friend, Ben Stanush witnessed the disaster, and offered a reasonable solution to the problem. The band managed to round up donors from the community to help fund a suitable system, and with Ben having enough knowledge of technology to properly run everything, the band had finally found someone to sculpt their sound for live performances. As the band started getting more busy with playing shows, it had become a hassle to keep up with marketing, and after there good friend Dariel Raygoza sat in studio with the band one weekend with a go-pro camera recording behind the scenes action, the band decided to bring him in for social media marketing. Dariel also doubles as the band's keyboard player. With months of trial and error practice, the band Waitin' On Hayden, has become a local favorite, playing at several venues and events in the area. With a wide range of instrumental and vocal talent, the band plays many styles of music from Merle Haggard to Lynyrd Skynyrd. Be sure to come see them play. You won't be disappointed. http://rapidgator.net/file/745dbde13bf992bdea39242ebafd69ad/Waitin__On_Hayden_-_Doin__What_We_Do_2016.rar.html http://ssh.tf/q7lqTFjdg/Waitin__On_Hayden_-_Doin__What_We_Do_2016.rar http://uploaded.net/file/dg8bqoq4/Waitin__On_Hayden_-_Doin__What_We_Do_2016.rar
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Artist: Soulive Title: Doin' Something Year Of Release: 2001 Label: Blue Note Records Genre: Funk / Soul / Jazz Quality: FLAC (tracks) / MP3 Total Time: 55:01 min Total Size: 365 MB / 128 MB Tracklist: 01. Hurry Up ... And Wait [04:04] 02. Doin' Something [06:44] 03. Evidence [04:31] 04. One In Seven [05:16] 05. Bridge To 'Bama [07:23] 06. Canonball [05:41] 07. Shaheed [05:37] 08. Romantic [04:52] 09. Solid [05:24] 10. Roll The Tape [05:23] Personnel: Eric Krasno - guitar; Neal Evans - Hammond B-3 organ; Wurlitzer - piano; Alan Evans - drums. Guest artists: Fred Wesley - trombone; Jeremy Pelt - trumpet; Jacques Schwarz-Bart - tenor sax; Sam Kininger - alto sax; Stephanie McKay - vocals. Doin' Something, Soulive's Blue Note debut and second album overall, sees the organ-based groove-jazz trio creatively stretching beyond their heralded debut, Turn It Out. Where that session was a lean, live cooker that cemented the trio's appeal to the acid-jazz and jam-band crowd, Doin' Something reaps the rewards of time spent in the studio--there are overdubs and, more importantly, an ambitious, varied overall vision. Rather than just rattling off a dozen jams based on a single line, the tunes here are actual songs with memorable melodies that draw upon hip-hop, soul, funk, and pop to go along with the rump-shaking jazz grooves. Furthering the funk foundation, the trio--guitarist Eric Krasno and brothers Neal and Alan Evans on organ and drums, respectively, also brought in James Brown-veteran trombonist Fred Wesley to lead a four-piece brass section (and contribute horn arrangements) on a few tracks. This is the sound of a hot young band putting its best foot forward, and the great thing is, you won't be able to keep your foot from bouncing along. -- Tad Hendrickson ~ Amazon.com http://rapidgator.net/file/f55ae7e79bae726a82a1f53dbcac4c9e/SODOSOM.rar.html http://ssh.tf/wzYk4hv7L/SODOSOM.rar http://uploaded.net/file/0qd7qc84/SODOSOM.rar
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Artist: Walter 'Wolfman' Washington Title: Doin' The Funky Thing Year Of Release: 2008 Label: Zoho Roots Genre: Blues, New Orleans Blues, Funk, Jazz Quality: Mp3/320 kbps Total Time: 49:26 Total Size: 122 Mb Tracklist: 1. Shake Your Booty / Funky Thing Pt.1 (7:51) 2. I'm Back (5:48) 3. Tweakin' (4:30) 4. One Day From Being A Fool (4:06) 5. Crescent City Starlights (3:51) 6. Just Like That (4:27) 7. Only You (5:44) 8. Wolf Jazz (4:27) 9. Landslide (5:13) 10. Shake Your Booty / Funky Thing Pt.2 (3:24) Walter 'Wolfman' WASHINGTON - Guitars, lead Vocals The Roadmasters: James Carpenter - Tenor & Baritone Saxophones John Cruz - Bass Kevin O'Day - Drums with: Dr. John - Hammond B3 on tr.2 Trombone Shorty - Trumpet tr.6 and others... Look no further than the title to summarize this New Orleans veteran's music on his first studio set in nearly a decade. Bookending the album with the two-part "Shake Your Booty/Funky Thing" ensures that the proceedings start and end with the rump-shaking, horn-propelled R&B that, along with jazz, soul, and blues, makes Walter "Wolfman" Washington's music so much a part of his Crescent City home. He's never been particularly prolific, but after the long span between releases - partially due to the effects and aftereffects of Hurricane Katrina - the Wolf sounds electrified and inspired here. The second track, "I'm Back," tells that story against an urgent groove that keeps the party atmosphere while recounting the hurricane's devastation and his attempts to get the city and its people to return to a place that will never be the same. Wolf emits one of his patented howls on "Tweakin'," pushing the bumping rhythm into overdrive as the horns punctuate the choruses. His nimble guitar licks, somewhat similar to those of George Benson, offset the harder edge, bringing sensitivity and subtlety to the upbeat, get-down proceedings. Bluesy ballads "One Day from Being a Fool" and the low-key second line of "Crescent City Starlights" vary the mood while allowing Washington to explore his considerable vocal chops, which range from smooth to gritty. He swings like "Gatemouth" Brown on "Just Like That," a song from bassist Jack Cruz, who co-wrote four others with the guitarist. It's these tunes that make this arguably the finest entry in Washington's catalog. Each boasts hummable melodies and finger-snapping arrangements that play to the artist's strengths without overwhelming them. Wolfman (wearing his producer hat) and saxophonist Jimmy Carpenter (who also arranged the horns so integral to the sound) can take credit for much of this project's success by keeping the vibe taut yet raw enough to let the considerable soul shine through. The album doesn't break new ground, but shows Washington to be on top of his game with an invigorating set that will make you move your body with music that connects on every level. At this stage in his long career, that counts as a resounding success. http://rapidgator.net/file/061ec40b1f3e7087a4a675e922293e35/wwwdtft2.rar.html http://ssh.tf/qj1yCBCu7/wwwdtft2.rar http://uploaded.net/file/fhd8o[beeep]/wwwdtft2.rar