Wednesday 3 September 2008

Mp3 music: Thin Lizzy






Thin Lizzy
   

Artist: Thin Lizzy: mp3 download


   Genre(s): 

Rock
Rock: Hard-Rock

   







Thin Lizzy's discography:


Greatest Hits (cd2)
   

 Greatest Hits (cd2)

   Year: 2007   

Tracks: 17
Greatest Hits (cd1)
   

 Greatest Hits (cd1)

   Year: 2007   

Tracks: 19
Rare, Unreleased
   

 Rare, Unreleased

   Year: 2003   

Tracks: 17
Wild One - The Very Best Of Thin Lizzy
   

 Wild One - The Very Best Of Thin Lizzy

   Year: 1996   

Tracks: 17
Whiskey In The Jar
   

 Whiskey In The Jar

   Year: 1996   

Tracks: 16
Thunder and Lightning
   

 Thunder and Lightning

   Year: 1983   

Tracks: 9
Renegade
   

 Renegade

   Year: 1981   

Tracks: 9
Lizzy Killers
   

 Lizzy Killers

   Year: 1981   

Tracks: 11
Chinatown
   

 Chinatown

   Year: 1980   

Tracks: 9
Black Rose: A Rock Legend
   

 Black Rose: A Rock Legend

   Year: 1979   

Tracks: 9
Live and Dangerous
   

 Live and Dangerous

   Year: 1978   

Tracks: 17
Bad Reputation
   

 Bad Reputation

   Year: 1977   

Tracks: 9
Johnny The Fox
   

 Johnny The Fox

   Year: 1976   

Tracks: 10
Jailbreak
   

 Jailbreak

   Year: 1976   

Tracks: 9
Fighting
   

 Fighting

   Year: 1975   

Tracks: 10
Night Life
   

 Night Life

   Year: 1974   

Tracks: 10
Vagabonds Of The Western World
   

 Vagabonds Of The Western World

   Year: 1973   

Tracks: 12
Shades of a Blue Orphanage
   

 Shades of a Blue Orphanage

   Year: 1972   

Tracks: 9
Thin Lizzy
   

 Thin Lizzy

   Year: 1971   

Tracks: 14
New Day
   

 New Day

   Year: 1971   

Tracks: 4






Despite a brobdingnagian hit single in the mid-'70s ("The Boys Are Back in Town") and comely a popular act as with strong rock/heavy alloy fans, Thin Lizzy ar still, in the pantheon of '70s john Rock bands, underappreciated. Formed in the late '60s by Irish singer/songwriter/bassist Phil Lynott, Lizzy, though non the beginning band to do so, combined romanticized propertyless sentiments with their furious, twin-lead guitar attack. As the band's originative crowd out, Lynott was a more than insightful and sound writer than many of his like, preferring slice-of-life propertyless dramas of love and hatred influenced by Bob Dylan, Bruce Springsteen, and virtually all of the Irish literary tradition. Also, as a sour man, Lynott was an anomaly in the nearly all-white public of hard rock, and as such imbued much of his form with a sense of estrangement; he was the outsider, the sentimentalist guy from the other side of the tracks, a soi-disant poet of the unbeloved and downtrodden. His wholesale vision and writerly impulses at multiplication gave way to pretentious songs wishful to clichéd notions of literary implication, but Lynott's limitless personal appeal made even the about misguided moments worth audience.


Later on a few early records that hinted at the band's voltage, Lizzy released Fighting in 1975, and the band (Lynott, guitarists Brian Robertson and Scott Gorham, and drummer Brian Downey) had molded itself into a pretty close recording and acting unit. Lynott's thick, soulful vocals were the perfect fomite for his tightly written melodic lines. Gorham and Robertson generally played lead lines in harmonic tandem, piece Downey (a swell drummer world Health Organization had equal amounts of ability and style) drove the engine. Lizzy's large break came with their next album, Jailbreak, and the record's first individual, "The Boys Are Back in Town." A pean to the joys of working-class guys rental loose, the sung resembled standardized odes by Bruce Springsteen, with the exclusion of the Who-like powerfulness chords in the chorus. With the support of radiocommunication and every fraternity boy in America, "Boys" became a immense hit, enough of a hit as to see platter contracts and media attention for the side by side decennium ("Boys" is now used in beer advertising).


Ne'er the toast of critics (the bulk penning in the '70s detested laborious john Rock and grievous metal), Lizzy toured unrelentingly, building an watertight reputation as a terrific live stria, despite the jumper lead guitar berth becoming a revolving door (Eric Bell, Gary Moore, Brian Robertson, Snowy White, and John Sykes all stood next to Scott Gorham). The records came fast and savage, and despite attempts to duplicate the recipe that worked like a charm with "Boys," Lynott began written material more ambitious songs and swathe them up in vaguely articulate concept albums. The large fan pedestal the band had built as a resolution of "Boys" off into a littler, yet still enthusiastic caboodle of tough bikers. Adding affront to trauma was the move up of punk rocker rock, which Lynott smartly supported, just made Lizzy appear too traditional and besides much like shopworn old stone stars.


By the mid-'80s, resembling the dinosaur that punk rocker john Rock wanted to eliminate, Thin Lizzy called it a life history. Lynott recorded solo records that more explicitly examined issues of course and race, promulgated a now-out-of-print book of verse, and sadly, became a victim of his longtime clapperclaw of diacetylmorphine, cocain, and intoxicant, dying in 1986 at long time 35. Since the mega-popular alternative stone bands of the mid-'90s appropriated numerous melodic messages from their '70s forebears, the work of Phil Lynott and Thin Lizzy will hopefully continue to be seen for the influential rock & wrap it is.


In 1999, Thin Lizzy reunited with a lineup featuring guitarists Scott Gorman and John Sykes, and keyboardist Darren Wharton, which was rounded out by a journeyman rhythm section of bassist Marco Mendoza and drummer Tommy Aldridge. The quintet's ensuing European circuit produced the live album One Night Only, which was released in the summer of 2000 to set the stage for a subsequent American concert circuit.





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