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Adam Faith - The Best Of Adam Faith (1997)

Posted By: Designol
Adam Faith - The Best Of Adam Faith (1997)

Adam Faith - The Best Of Adam Faith (1997)
EAC | FLAC | Tracks (Cue&Log) ~ 322 Mb | Mp3 (CBR320) ~ 158 Mb | Scans ~ 55 Mb
Label: EMI Music For Pleasure | # CD MFP 6380/7243 857413 2 6 | Time: 00:56:08
British Invasion, AM Pop, Early British Pop/Rock

Adam Faith was a contemporary of early British rock & rollers like Cliff Richard and Billy Fury, but Faith's sound was less Elvis Presley-derived and more aligned with teen idol pop such as that of Bobby Vee (who covered Faith's number one U.K. hit "What Do You Want?"). John Barry had a hand in Faith's early efforts, and the instrumental arrangements are truly remarkable, from the surprising hoedown-style fiddling on "Don't That Beat All" to the musical saw on "What Now." In fact, it is the arrangements that elevate this music above standard teen idol fare. Faith rocked occasionally, as on "Made You," had moderate success adapting to the changes wrought by the Beatles, and later worked with folk-pop material. The Very Best of Adam Faith tracks his evolution by collecting 26 U.K. chart hits from 1959-1966, four of which were recorded with the Roulettes. Faith had two minor hits in the U.S. in 1965 that aren't included, but The Very Best of Adam Faith is otherwise an exemplary and essential anthology of an early British pop star.

Adam Faith - I Survive (Deluxe) (1974/2023)

Posted By: Rtax
Adam Faith - I Survive (Deluxe) (1974/2023)

Adam Faith - I Survive (Deluxe) (1974/2023)
WEB FLAC (tracks) - 254 MB | MP3 CBR 320 kbps - 124 MB
46:22 | Rock & Roll | Label: Cherry Red Records

Once one of Britain's most reliable hit-makers, Adam Faith slipped out of the recording studio in 1965, and did not return for another decade, a period during which he established himself as both an actor (well-received roles in That'll Be the Day and Stardust) and a manager – he was part of the team that launched Leo Sayer to fame. 1974, however, brought him back to a recording career, with a comeback album that now stands as one of the great unsung records of the 1970s – and one of the last great "super-sessions" of the age as well. Co-produced by Faith and David Courtney, I Survive was engineered by Deep Purple faithful Martin Birch, mastered by Mickie Most, and draws in guest appearances from Ritchie Blackmore, Russ Ballard and Argent's Bob Henrit, with Blackmore's lead guitar flourishes through the title track the match of anything he'd done with his own band lately.