User (active/rating) | Media / # | Show | Sound | Details | DB Source | User Source |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
New Jersey Funk (2/5) | CDR / 1 | A | A | View | SBD | |
Houndog56 (2/5) | CDR / 1 | View | ||||
David (1/5) | CDR / 1 | A+ | View | FM | ||
Kevin Boland (1/4.7) | CDR / 1 | View | ||||
phil (1/5) | CD-R / 1 | A | View | sbd | ||
Notes: | sbd | |||||
Mike Kelly (1/4.3) | CDR / 1 | View | board/broadcast | |||
Brian C (1/4.7) | FLAC / 1 | A | A | View | fm | |
Notes: | w/gd 4/19/86 | |||||
Dan Anderson (1/4.9) | CD-R / 1 | View | FM Broadcast | |||
deathglider (1/5) | CD-R / 1 | View | ||||
Notes: | FM broadcast. Recording process & lineage info are unclear. FLAC[sg1500b] | |||||
Curtis Ensler (1/0) | CDR / 1 | View | ||||
Notes: | "Live In Montreaux" | |||||
Curtis Ensler (1/0) | CDR / 1 | View | ||||
Curtis Ensler (1/0) | CDR / 1 | View | ||||
Mark McGinnis (1/5) | CDR / 1 | A+ | View | |||
Donny Taylor (1/5) | cdr / 1 | A | View | SBD | ||
Notes: | Very nice | |||||
STLBlues (1/5) | MKV File / 1 | A+ | A+ | View | Pro-Shot (HD) - click on "view" for complete source info | |
Notes: | Pro-Shot - 720p High Definition - 114 minutes (Official Release - Not For Trade) | |||||
Drew (1/5) | CDR / 1 | A+ | A+ | View | SBD | |
Notes: | * | |||||
Malibu Jesus (1/5) | 1 cd / 1 | A+ | View | FM Broadcast | ||
Notes: | "Live In Montreaux"; absolutely fantastic show in every way possible | |||||
BluesFan (1/5) | FLAC / 0 | View | FM | |||
tee-waii (1/5) | CDR / 1 | View | SBD | |||
kwidgeon (1/0) | CD-R / 1 | View | ||||
Phil (1/5) | CD/R / 1 | A | A | View | ||
R Lewis (1/5) | CDR / 1 | A | View | |||
whammer (1/5) | CD / 1 | View | SBD | |||
Howard Leach (1/5) | CDR / 1 | View | ||||
Drew (1/5) | cdr / 1 | View | ||||
Michael Tatlow (1/5) | cdr / 1 | A | A | View | ||
Greg (1/5) | Audio CDR / 1 | View | ||||
Notes: | Riley B. King, at age 76, is still light on his feet, singing and playing the blues with relentless passion. BB was born September 16, 1925 on a Mississipi plantation near Indianola. As a youth he played street corners for dimes and often traveled to up to four different towns a night to perform. In the 1950s, while B.B. was performing at a dance in Twist, Arkansas, two men got into a fight and knocked over a kerosene stove, setting fire to the hall, and the place was evactuated. Realizing that he had left his beloved $30 acoustic guitar inside, he rushed back inside the burning building to retrieve it, narrowly escaping death. When he later found out that the fight had been over a woman named Lucille, he decided to give the name to his guitar to remind him never to do a crazy thing like fight over a woman. Ever since, each one of B.B.'s trademark Gibson guitars has been called Lucille. BB's reign as King of the Blues has been as long as that of any monarch on earth. Long live the King! Thanks Adam | |||||
Libby (1/5) | cd-r / 1 | A++ | A++ | View | ||
Notes: | SBD | |||||
Andy Kim (1/4.6) | flac / 1 | View | ||||
Gilberto Walker (1/5) | SHN / 1 | A+ | View |