The Horse Flies : Human Fly (1987) and Gravity Dance (1992)

Posted By: hapwill

The Horse Flies : Human Fly (1987) and Gravity Dance (1992)

The Horse Flies - Human Fly (1987)
Folk-Bluegrass_alternative | 1CD | MP3 320kbps - 44kHz | 93 Mb
Source - Personal CD collection | 5% Recovery Record | Rapidshare | Covers Included


The Horse Flies : Human Fly (1987) and Gravity Dance (1992)

The Horse Flies - Gravity Dance (1992)
Folk-Bluegrass-Alternative | 1CD | MP3 320kpbs - 44kHz | 100 Mb + 32 Mb
Source - Personal CD collection | 5% Recovery Record | Rapidshare | Covers and Booklet Scan Included


One of the earliest bands to bring truly inventive ideas and energy to traditional American fiddle music, The Horse Flies have created a unique sound that remains fresh, powerful and captivating. Artful original songs, a wild groove-oriented approach to fiddle music, esteemed instrumental skills, and emotive singing come together as old-time fiddle music meets alternative rock, minimalism, modern songwriting and world percussion.

Mose Jones - Blackbird - (1978)

Posted By: hapwill

Mose Jones - Blackbird - 1978
Vinyl Rip | MP3 256 kbps 44.100khz | 68 MB
Southern Rock / Jazz / Blues - and a few other styles as well

Released in 1978, this was to be the last album from Mose Jones, although there remains hope that the final album - recorded live - which is said to have truly caught what it was like to be at a Mose Jones gig - (i.e., their truly southern rock sound) - will one day be released.

Mose Jones - "Mose Knows" - 1974

Posted By: hapwill
Mose Jones - Mose Knows - 1974
Vinyl Rip | MP3 256 kbps 44.100 kHz | 75 Mb
Southern Rock - Jazz - and a few other styles as well

This is the second album released by the original line-up of the Atlanta group Mose Jones. Produced by Al Kooper & Charles Calello. Released 1974 on Song of The South Records.

Mose Jones "Get Right" (1973)

Posted By: hapwill
Mose Jones - Get Right (1973)
Vinyl Rip | MP3 256 kbps 44.100 kHz | 85 Mb
Southern Rock 'n' Boogie

"Producer-performer Al Kooper had been visiting Atlanta since he played the first Atlanta Pop Festival in 1969. The southern rock scene was exploding, and Kooper had noticed the abundance of talent in and about Atlanta. With the backing of MCA Records, he launched the Sounds Of The South label with the initial deal calling for four new artists - three of which turned out to be Los Angeles funk band Elijah, Kooper's own reformed Blues Project, and the Atlanta bar band Mose Jones."