70's Pop

New Arrivals

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    Tramps Like Us
     
    Wishful Thinking
    A complilation of some of my songs... soft rock to hard rock and inbetween... I am most proud of the lyrics and the messages they convey....
    Pop: 70's Pop
     
     
    Victorio Pezzolla
     
    Cruising
    I always was thinking about composing an immaginary soundtrack of a cruise on board of a wonderful cruise ship with the girl of your dreams...In the style of "Love Boat", the famous Tv series at the end of the seventies.
    Pop: 70's Pop
     
     
    Jake Reichbart
     
    16 Songs
    Solo fingerstyle acoustic guitar arrangements of some of the greatest pop songs of the 60's through the 90's
    Pop: 70's Pop
     
     
    Sarah Swanson
     
    Dark Sunshine
    Soulful, moody, and intense songs with a West Coast 70's rock tinge. This CD will calm you and rock you! Come along for the ride.
    Pop: 70's Pop
     
     
    Horace Reeves
     
    Memories
    Horace Reeves beautifully covers some of America's greatest hits of the 50s, 60s, and 70s on his "Memories" CD. His distinct, strong and incredible baritone voice pay homage to the greatest vocalists and songwriters of that era.
    Pop: 70's Pop
     
     
    Wendy Liew & Scott Williams
     
    SW Songs and Publishing II
    The 2nd release from Australia's most promising songwriting and production duo. A fresh take on soft Adult Contemporary.
    Pop: 70's Pop
     
     
    Soul Survivors
     
    City of Brotherly Love
    This is the Original recording of this classic song "City of Brotherly Love" Sampled on at least three major contemporary Rap Artists CD's. Now Available for download. Check it out.
    Pop: 70's Pop
     
     
    DR.V
     
    DR.V
    Psychedelic power pop with deep tones and urban edge, served Chicago-style.
    Pop: 70's Pop
     
     
    Mid-Life Crisis
     
    It's Always Something
    Pop: 70's Pop
     
     
    Anne-Lise Larsen
     
    Planets Aligned
    Intense torch. Imagine Dusty Springfield, Grace Jones and Goldfrapp all stuck in an elevator with no escape and you're getting close. Edgy 70s inspired cocktail music with a modern electronic twist.
    Pop: 70's Pop
     
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    Top Albums

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    Run 229
    Mod-eration
    A recent review of the album by the modpoppunk archives says- 'Moderation" is the complete history of '79 mod revival band RUN 229 's recordings. One of the most brilliant self-reissue record you'll hear this year Post New Wave Pop power pop mod music
    Review 1 A recent review of the album by the modpoppunk archives says- 'Moderation" is the complete history of '79 mod revival band RUN 229 's recordings. One of the most brilliant self-reissue record you'll hear this year Review2 Read this review by Tim Peacock http://www.whisperinandhollerin.com/home.asp 'RUN 229' 'MOD-ERATION' - Label: 'MM RECORDS (www.run229.com)' - Genre: 'Rock' - Release Date: 'July 2009' Our Rating: 5 Stars RUN 229? To my shame, I wouldn't have been any the wiser either until very recently when a discerning friend of mine provided me with this compilation of one of the UK'S great lost bands from that all-important Post-Punk era when the 70s collided with the starkness of the early 1980s. Cannily subtitled “the complete history of the band's recordings”, 'Mod-Eration is exactly that: all 15 songs recorded professionally by the band during their brief, but creatively rich existence from approximately 1979 – 82. The sound quality is sometimes lower than you'd hope for, but bearing in mind Run 229 only ever released one official single ('Soho') and that some of these songs have been mastered from cassettes and other less than pristine sources, that they are here at all is little short of miraculous. So who the devil were Run 229? Well, as the collection's title, Pop art touches and scooter graphics suggest, anyone growing up with the Mod resurgence of 1979 will already be well acquainted with them. They hailed from Shotton, a town on the border of Cheshire and North Wales (which means we can't quite claim them as a Liverpool band) and adhered to a hard-gigging attitude which ensured they were regulars on Merseyside and North Wales, not to mention crucial London hang-outs like The 101 in Clapham and Canning Town's Bridge House. Along the way, virtually all the other nascent Mod outfits around (barring Secret Affair) would go on to share a stage with them. The band's instigator was drummer Ray Bibby, a long-time Who fanatic keen to put together an outfit capable of similar incendiary power. Some of 229's songs suggested his wish was granted in spades, as sharp, aggressive tunes like 'Say That It's Hard', the strident state of the nation address 'In This Day & Age' and the dramatic, chorus-heavy anthem 'We Can Dance Forever' are surely good enough to have followed The Jam up the charts in a fairer world. Despite the amphetamine energy of these songs and Bibby's Moon-esque drum clatter, to label Run 229 as merely a 'Mod' band is to do them a grave disservice, not least because the group's personnel hailed from a variety of backgrounds. Charismatic singer Mark Allen and guitarist/ songwriter John Tallon Jones had both done time in a Hippy outfit called Hybrid, scarily youthful bassist Nick Carr was already well-versed in the Dub'n'spliffs lifestyle of the hard line Reggae head and guitarist Steve Eaton Jones openly flaunted a Flying V copy: hardly the guitar of choice for the Rickenbacker-obsessed Mod brigade. These diverse backgrounds nonetheless blended beautifully to create a body of work which passes the test of time with flying colours. Although 229 never wrote obvious love songs per se, tunes like 'Emily' come with an undertow of lovelorn resignation, while eerie, edgy tracks like 'Realise' and the snotty, Joe Jackson-isms of 'Growing Up' showcase a band with a firm grasp of dynamic Power Pop. Elsewhere, Carr's Reggae leanings stick their head over the parapet on the spacier likes of 'Don't Say You'll Go' and 'Shell Shock' and – perhaps most intriguingly – Tallon Jones' violin adds rich, 'Baba O'Riley”-ish textures to the punchy 'Soho' (their lone 45) and the storming energy unleashed by 'Listen To The Radio.' Despite a few near misses like slots on Granada TV's influential 'What's On' and a brief spell on Pye Records' subsidiary label Baal, Run 229 never quite fulfilled their potential. There's nothing unusual in that old story, yet the potent contents of 'Mod-Eration' suggest quality was very much their watchword and that they could just as easily have enjoyed the fruits of a bright future had the run of the green been theirs. Regardless of the 'what if”s, though, 'Mod-Eration' is a splendid archival release from a band who are ripe for re-discovery. author: Tim Peacock -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- This is a compilation album of 70's mod band RUN229 which has been loving remastered by the band. The CD contains the now cult single 'soho' which is a vary rare and sought after addition to any mods collection.There are also a few surprise extra tracks on this CD including the band playing live in the late 70'S IN The Bridge House Canning Town. For anybody that saw the band this is a must trip down memory lane and for those that didn't an excursion into the atmosphere of the 1970's where punk and scooter met heavy metal, rock and roll and the emerging sound of reggae. Run229 captured all of the fusion of the era and more, and where the forerunners of the 'white reggae' sound that catapulted the Police to stardom. The band drew it's roots from just about every conceivable direction and the songs are unlike other mod band's of the time because of their dark and slightly ironic look at growing up in the 70's.Any one who saw RUN229 in North Wales London and Liverpool in the late 70's or early 80's will know what a fine outfit they were and what a great live sound they had. The band was formed out of a mismatch of other bands in the post punk 'New Wave' era. Founder member Ray Bibby (drums) wanted to put together a Mod Band like his idols The Who. He started looking in the spring on 1979 and brought in Singer Mark Allen from an old Hippy Rock band called Hybrid. Steve Jones on Lead guitar fresh from playing with himself in front of his bedroom mirror. Nick Carr who had just started playing bass in between rolling spliffs and finally John Tallon Jones Guitarist and songwriter also from Hybrid. RUN229 Myth- Everybody assumes that the band got it's name off the numberplate of their van. The band told it differently. Ray decided on the name after a piss up and made the rest of the band search around for the number Plate.
    Pop: 70's Pop
     
    Aubrey Mann
    Forty Years of Love & Soul
    Pop: 70's Pop
     
    Al McKay Allstars
    The Earth Wind & Fire Experience Live In Europe
    Pop: 70's Pop
     
    Lazlo Bane
    Guilty Pleasures
    Pop: 70's Pop
     
    Pete Huttlinger
    Fingerpicking Wonder: The Music of Stevie Wonder
    Pop: 70's Pop
     

    Editor's Picks

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      Artists You May Know

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      Laura Nyro
      Season Of Lights...Laura Nyro In Concert
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      America
      Live In Concert: Wildwood Springs
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      Nested
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      Seals & Crofts
      Traces
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      Top Songs

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      1.
      Summer Breeze
      Seals & Crofts
      Pop: 70's Pop
       
       
      2.
      We May Never Pass This Way Again
      Seals & Crofts
      Pop: 70's Pop
       
       
      3.
      Hummingbird
      Seals & Crofts
      Pop: 70's Pop
       
       
      4.
      Scarborough Fair
      Emile Pandolfi
      Pop: 70's Pop
       
       
      5.
      Golf Is Such An Easy Game
      Glen Everhart
      Pop: 70's Pop
       
       
      6.
      Pick up the Pieces
      Kenny Lee Lewis
      Pop: 70's Pop
       
       
      7.
      Rearview
      Amy Loftus
      Pop: 70's Pop
       
       
      8.
      Love Again
      Pico vs. Island Trees
      Pop: 70's Pop
       
       
      9.
      More Than You Could Know (alt. version)
      Pico vs. Island Trees
      Pop: 70's Pop
       
       
      10.
      Dancing Queen
      Wing
      Pop: 70's Pop