![]() I like to goof on the Time Life cd's that sell for hundreds of dollars and the songs are all common songs! There are some big time Time Life collectors on Ebay, that is for sure. The records title may recall an infomercial compilation disc series. Once I had the complete set then I started listening to them.Īs far as prices, once in awhile I search "Time Life" in the cd section, then go to "sold" and then sort by highest. With Pure Moods, Chicagos Cave mingles the spirits of mid-70s Can with Midwestern. ![]() In the end I got my factory sealed complete set for 140 bucks! It only took me 2.5 years to do it. I contacted him directly and sold him the extra 13 that I had in one shot. Once he paid me then I had his email address in my Paypal account. First I bought a Blues Christmas that was super cheap and flipped it back onto Ebay to this collector. Along the way I ended up buying a lot of 21 to get 8 that I needed, so I sold off the rest of them in one shot to a major collector. My goal was to get a complete set factory sealed. I started collecting the Living The Blues series on Apand made my last sale on December 3, 2015. I could burn my own CD's!Ĭlick to expand.Wow, 100 bucks for the BB King. With all the recent infomercials, I don't need them because I've already got most everything they put in their collections. I remember the commercial for this cd and thought it was weird they chose the X Files theme for a cd that was about relaxing. Pure Moods was the first United States release of a series of compilation albums of new-age music released by Virgin Records. Mostly good ole days songs and novelty songs, they put out a couple 2CD sets which I bought. But, just like watching a porno movie, just how many times can you re-package the same material with the same outcome?Īnother "As Seen On TV" mailorder only company was Heartland Music. RCA got involved directly and released compilation after compilation on CD's, including first-time rarities. Put out after "The King" died, it was one of the first of many to follow of Elvis collections. Pressed by RCA using the great stereo masters, where available, was a worthwhile set. Now, their claim to fame was the 5LP boxed set "The Elvis Presley Story" and the bonus LP's that they included. I ordered their "Country Music Cavalcade" introductory boxed set of LP's, pressed by CBS, and when it came, al the music was in mono, so I immediately cancelled my subscription. Some of the CD's have gone for big bucks,compared to the average CD.Īnother mailorder company was Candlelite Music. The CD's I've acquired stepped this up having exclusive top quality tracks that you can't find anywhere else. The mastering wasn't very good and many times they didn't use the best versions of songs. I never bought any when they were advertised on TV but have acquired a bunch in the last few years for $1. Time-Life put out many different series of LP's, Cassettes and into CD's. It is surprising how many they put out and I find them all the time that I didn't even know they existed. Rare stereo single versions were often used and sometimes the only way that the public could buy the stereo versions. Sound quality was decent but a little low in volume due to cramming atleast 10 songs on each side. Most of the songs were complete versions by the original artists. ![]() ![]() With its release, Cave once again proves that it possesses an unusual knack for genuinely compelling instrumental rock music, an increasingly impressive quality in our age of ever-decreasing attention spans.Back in the 70's, K-tel was king of the music collections. The drums change tack for the comedown, emerging through the sheen of glittering guitar delay for a meditative epilogue in 7/4 time.Īll in all, Pure Moods represents yet another intriguing twist in the psych-rock storyline. It’s all sharp angles at first, before peaking in a haze of tremolo and cymbal crashes at its midpoint. A thirteen-minute affair, the track reveals itself slowly. “Teenager” perpetuates the frantic theme, stuttering along with thumping toms and adolescent intensity, while “Brigette’s Trip,” which constitutes the record’s second half, is a guitar-led piece reminiscent of Kraftwerk. It’s a frenetic piece of music with aggressive rhythmic patterns anchored by the sound of a phone off its hook. “Hot Bricks” is the glitchy lead-off, driven by a propulsive kraut-rock beat. ![]() The record’s title may recall an infomercial compilation disc series featuring Enya, latter day Sting, and the theme from X-Files, but its contents are considerably more engaging than mere Hallmark bargain bin miscellany. With Pure Moods, Chicago’s Cave mingles the spirits of mid-70s Can with Midwestern garage and psych-rock to create a tight, 25-minute swirl of mesmeric rhythms and primal vocalization. Nombre de Archivo E:UploadsFLACRIPSVarious Artists - Pure Moods - Celestial Celebration.wav Nivel Pico 97.7 Gama de Calidad 100. ![]()
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