Showing posts with label 2015. Show all posts
Showing posts with label 2015. Show all posts

Friday, November 21, 2025

Bill Wyman (The Rolling Stones) - Back To Basics (2015)

Year: 22 June 2015 (CD Jun 22, 2015)
Label: Ripple Productios Ltd (UK), PRDCD125
Style: Pop Rock, Blues Rock, Classic Rock
Country: Lewisham, London, England (24 October 1936)
Time: 43:19
Format: Flac Tracks 16/44,1 kHz
Size: 300 Mb

When Bill Wyman left his post as bassist for the Rolling Stones in 1993 after thirty years, it wasn’t a departure from the musical world. He’s been recording and touring with his band the Rhythm Kings since then, but now is releasing a new solo album; the first UK release under his own name in thirty three years! Back To Basics is aptly named, as it is totally stripped back, while touching on the easy-going feeling that the Rhythm Kings give off. Its strength is in its unashamed simplicity.
A large part of this comes from the fact that Wyman’s vocals are just so chilled. The opening track What & How & If & When & Why, for example, is an instrumentally upbeat blues-rock track with a brass section and recurring guitar, but the delivery of the lyrics subdues the overall tone. It’s a raspy, half talking, half singing kind of delivery that feels intimate and very honest; there’s nothing pretentious going on here.
Every track is fluid, instrumentally, and adds various extras to develop its own character. We get some call and response with a female vocalist in Seventeen, flamenco style Spanish guitar in November and some sultry blues harmonica  and melancholy organ in the closer I Got Time, which ends the album on a bit of a downer.
As a whole, though, everything is really cohesive, and Wyman sounds totally at home with the songwriting and delivery. The lyrics are simple, and can be easily comprehended. It’s nice to be able to hear every single word without having to even concentrate, and the themes are relatable “We had it all when we were together/We had it all, thought it was forever” (from Running Back To You). Although it’s an enjoyable listen top to bottom, Stuff (Can’t Get Enough) is definitely a stand out track for me. The rhythm of the vocals in the chorus over straight instrumental backing is a contagious and playful combination that is sure to follow you around for the rest of the day.
Back To Basics isn’t a novel release that breaks into new territory, but if it were, the album would be falsely named. It is a record that reflects the extensive musical career of a man who has nothing to prove. This is not a release aimed at boosting Bill Wyman’s profile, it’s an expression of one of the man’s passions that is still burning bright.
(renownedforsound.com/album-review-bill-wyman-back-to-basics/)

01. What & How & If & When & Why (03:37)
02. I Lost My Ring (03:36)
03. Love, Love, Love (03:40)
04. Stuff (Can't Get Enough) (04:05)
05. Running Back to You (04:00)
06. She's Wonderful (03:56)
07. Seventeen (03:49)
08. I'll Pull You Through (03:06)
09. November (03:44)
10. Just a Friend of Mine (03:41)
11. It's a Lovely Day (02:05)
12. I Got Time (03:54)

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Thursday, November 20, 2025

Keith Richards (The Rolling Stones) - Crosseyed Heart (2015)

Year: 18 September 2015 (CD Sep 18, 2015)
Label: Mindless Records (US), 602547394002
Style: Blues Rock, Classic Rock
Country: Dartford, Kent, England (18 December 1943)
Time: 58:07
Format: Flac Tracks 16/44,1 kHz
Size: 405 Mb

The Rolling Stone’s first solo album in 23 years contains exactly what one might hope for. There are beautifully played old blues songs, storming Stonesy rockers (Heartstopper, the ferocious Blues in the Morning), a sublime Gregory Isaacs reggae cover (Love Overdue) and outlaw songs about evading the authorities (Trouble). There’s dry humour in a touching lament about, ahem, the theft of a “stash” (Robbed Blind, in which he cackles: “The cops, I can’t involve them”) and the jerkily funny Amnesia, about the 2006 incident in which he fell out of a tree (“Thought I met my mother / She said: ‘You don’t belong to me’”). Contrarily, there are also several beautiful, heartfelt ballads. Richards’ fag-soaked voice isn’t as conventionally strong as Mick Jagger’s, but it is rich with character and knowing. The gorgeous Nothing on Me – about surviving whatever life throws at him – is as great a song as the 71-year-old has put his name to in decades. A terrific album, worthy of one of rock’s founding fathers.
(theguardian.com/music/2015/sep/17/keith-richards-crosseyed-heart-review)

01. Crosseyed Heart (01:52)
02. Heartstopper (03:04)
03. Amnesia (03:35)
04. Robbed Blind (04:00)
05. Trouble (04:17)
06. Love Overdue (03:28)
07. Nothing On Me (03:47)
08. Suspicious (03:42)
09. Blues In The Morning (04:26)
10. Something For Nothing (03:28)
11. Illusion (03:48)
12. Just A Gift (04:01)
13. Goodnight Irene (05:46)
14. Substantial Damage (04:21)
15. Lover's Plea (04:23)

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Saturday, September 27, 2025

Hollywood Vampires (Alice Cooper, Johnny Depp, Joe Perry) - Hollywood Vampires [Japanese Ed. SHM-CD] (2015)

Year: September 11, 2015 (CD Sep 11, 2015)
Label: Universal Music (Japan), UICY-15428
Style: Hard Rock
Country: U.S. / UK
Time: 51:13
Format: Flac Tracks 16/44,1 kHz
Size: 380 Mb

Hollywood Vampires is the self-titled debut studio album by American rock supergroup Hollywood Vampires, formed in 2015 by Alice Cooper, Johnny Depp and Joe Perry to honor the music of the rock stars who died from excess in the 1970s. Released on September 11, 2015 for Republic Records, the album features guest appearances by Paul McCartney, Robby Krieger, Orianthi, Dave Grohl, Christopher Lee, Slash, Brian Johnson, Joe Walsh, Perry Farrell, and Zak Starkey amongst others.
At his shows, Alice Cooper often performs cover songs as a tribute to his drinking buddies The Hollywood Vampires. For an album of covers based on the latter, Cooper wanted songs specific to their early 70s era. "Jim Morrison and Jimi Hendrix of course were before the Vampires," he conceded. "But they were, like, early, early-breed Vampires. They would have been there every single night."
The songs duly hail from acts who fit the original group's "lore", with the exception of two new tracks by Cooper and Depp titled "My Dead Drunk Friends" and "Raise the Dead". "My Dead Drunk Friends" is named after Cooper's recent favorite turn of phrase. Of that, Cooper says "'My dead drunk friends', they would have laughed at that. It was their sense of humor."
Of McCartney's appearance, Depp recalled: "We're recording live… Alice looks at me with this befuddled little look and he's mouthing the words, 'Oh my god, that's Paul McCartney!' to me… Then I look over at Joe Perry – one of my guitar heroes from when I was a kid – and he looks at me and he says, mouthing it, 'Jesus – look, man, it's Paul McCartney!' It was great to see those two huge stars being starstruck."
The lead track is a spoken word piece titled "The Last Vampire" voiced by Christopher Lee, in which he recites a passage from Bram Stoker's Dracula. This was Lee's final recording for a musical album before his death in June 2015.
(en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hollywood_Vampires_(Hollywood_Vampires_album))

01. The Last Vampire (01:35)
02. Raise The Dead (03:31)
03. My Generation (02:47)
04. Whole Lotta Love (04:13)
05. I Got A Line On You (02:48)
06. Five To One - Break On Through (To The Other Side) (04:17)
07. One - Jump Into The Fire (05:07)
08. Come And Get It (02:59)
09. Jeepster (02:42)
10. Cold Turkey (03:07)
11. I'm A Boy (02:37)
12. Manic Depression (02:43)
13. Itchycoo Park (02:55)
14. School's Out - Another Brick In The Wall part 2 (05:14)
15. My Dead Drunk Friends (04:30)

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