The Secret Vault presents hard to find, unofficial or deleted albums for review or research purposes only. All images, audio, video, text is copyrighted. Apart from fair dealing for the purposes of private study, research, criticism or review as permitted under the Copyright Act 1968, no part may be reproduced, copied, transmitted in any form without the prior written permission of the copyright holder.
Monday, November 27, 2006
Sunday, November 05, 2006
I'm taking a break.
8 Days In April
6070Rock
7 Black Notes
Acid Dazed
All imperfect things
Alma Matters
Autres Grooves
Barbecue Bods
Basichip
Bastet & Corwyn's Music
Bedazzled
Bellybongo
Bending Corners
Blood On The Tracks
Blues Town
Bring Me The Heads
Br-Instrumental
C.G.R.
California Harmony
Cheap Children's Soundtracks
Chocoreve
Chris Goes (psych rock)
Cities On Flame With Rock n Roll
Clickredblue
Coffee Messiah
Crap I Found at the Library
Crud Crud
Decoder
Der Likedeeler
Down In The Groove
Dust to Dust
Dutch Originals
Eddie's Riffs
Electro Domestique
Endless Mike
Ernie(Not Bert)
Esprito Publico
Ezhevila
Floodlit Footprint
From The Negative Zone
Fudgeland
Funk Boutique
Hall Of Records
Hangover Heart Attack
Hanszunblog
Happy Dreamer's Time
Hard Blog
Headfonehaus
Hombreencelo
Home Of The Groove
Houseplant Studio
I Know You Got Soul!
It's Psych
Jazz-Rock-Fusion-Guitar
Jester57/Shelter for the storm
Kyotokaimasu [JAPANESE]
Latimo's Psychedelicatessen
Lazar's Lounge
Licorice Pizza / A Taste of Vinyl
LightMuzik
Live and Otherwise
London Lee
Lost-In-Tyme
LoungeTracks
Luxusborg
Meester Music
Metal MP3 - Classic Rock
Metal Music
MetalDlz
MetalHead
Mexicovers
Moog Power
Motel de Moka
Mundo Mp3
Music Eldorado
Musicmans place
Musicology
Musicotheca
Nong Sey Nyo
Not So Plenary
Opendir®
Open Your Arms And Welcome
Oquemedernatelha
Orang Aural
Orgy In Rhythm
PCL LinkDump
Peanut's World of Music
Penthouse Safari
Perimetric
PhazeMp3
Pinicchio's easy-listening
Planet Xtabay
Play It Again, Max
Pop77
Pops & Scratches
Prog Not Frog
Psychoplasmica
Punk Sucks
Quite Quite Fantastic
Radiant silvergun
Rangeraver's Departure Lounge
Rare and OOP Soundtracks
Rato Records
Razzle Tazzle
Recordbrother
Regnyouth
Remixes & Other Fagulous Thangs
Revolution On The Radio
Rockshot
RoyalGroove
Sandgropers Surfspot
Scar Stuff
http://schika.blogspot.com/
Schrikdraad
Score*Blog
ScoreBaby Annex
Snow-Day
Soundtrack Sharity
Space Debris
Spacedebris
Spamfree Music
Spiked Candy
Tam Tam & Melodie
Tanglesburrow
The Boogiee Files
The Indie Connection
The Metal Archive
The Orange Cornflake Zoo
tHe SkY iS sO bLuE
The Sky Moves Sideways
The Tuna Melt
The bbs musicfactory
These Records Are BenT!
Time Has Told Me
Time Traveller
Totally Fuzzy
Twilightzone
Varysound
Violão Velho
Way Out Junk
Weapon of sound
Weirdomusic
Written In The Water
XXXRockRula
Xyplex
X-Y-Z-Cosmonaut
You Don't Have To Visit This Blog
Zinhof
Sunday, October 15, 2006
Eric Stewart - The Original Sountrack Of "Girls"
However, during this successful time for the band, Eric had a car accident and needed time to recover from serious injuries.
When Eric started to work again, he was asked to write the soundtrack for the film "Girls" and this project resulted in the release of his first solo album in Februari 1980.
Eric Stewart: Guitars, Bass, Fender Electric Piano / Duncan Mackay: Grand Piano, Clavinet, Yamaha CS80, Taurus Bass Pedals, Rolland Vocorder Strings and Choir / Paul Burgess: Drums, Percussion / Rick Fenn: Guitar Solo / Simon Philips: Drums / Alan Jones: Bass Guitar / Graham Gouldman: Acoustic Guitars, Autoharp (Make the pieces fit)
Tracklisting:
Girls Opening Music (Mackay/Stewart) / Girls (Stewart) / Disco Grindin' (Mackay/Stewart) / Witch Le Bitch (Stewart/Mackay) / Disco Bumpin' (Mackay/Stewart) / Aural Exciter (Stewart/Mackay) / Warm, Warm, Warm (Stewart) / Tonight (Stewart/Mackay) / Snatch The Gas (Stewart/Mackay) / Your Touch Is Soft (Mackay/Stewart) / Trouble Shared (Stewart/Mackay) / Discollapse (Stewart/Mackay) / Make The Pieces Fit (Stewart)
Thursday, September 07, 2006

She resembles a bit early Nanci Griffith and her voice is at times like Lucinda Williams. She sings relaxed like she's sitting right beside you and seems really to enjoy herself. You can't quite classify Cantrell's music or vocal style but it's sure a departure from the overproduced all-sound-alike stuff on the radio. I hope she becomes a big commercial success but in the same time let's hope Nashville keeps its hands off her sound. One Shania is more than enough.
Sampler with some live recordings, demo's, radio performances and album tracks.
01 14th Street
Sunday, September 03, 2006
Emmit Rhodes - The American Dream
Billboard magazine called him "one of the finest artists on the music scene today" in 1971 and in 1996 referred to his debutalbum as one of the "best albums of the decade".
The American Dream is released in 1971 and is considered his third album. It is, in fact, his first. All recordings were made in 1967-1970. He recorded some of them with his previous band the Merry Go Round and some solo. The influence of Paul McCartney (Mother Earth / Someone Died) and Harry Nilsson (The Man He Was / In The Days Of The Old) can definitely be felt here. If you want to know what kind of music the beatles would have made if Harry was one of them you should listen to Holly Park. He doesn't copy them but there's a big resemblance. If you are a 10cc fan than "Mary Will You Take My Hand" will sound familiar.
Tracks: 1. Mother Earth / 2. Pardon Me / 3. Textile Factory / 4. Someone Died / 5. Come Ride, Come Ride / 6. Let's All Sing / 7. Holly Park / 8. You're a Very Lovely Woman / 9. Mary Will You Take My Hand / 10. Man He Was / 11. In the Days of the Old / 12. 'Til the Day After
Thursday, August 17, 2006
POPEYE - Original Soundtrack - Music by Harry Nilsson
Track listing:
2. He Needs Me (03:31)
3. Swee'Pea's Lullaby (02:02)
4. Din' We (03:03)
5. Sweethaven (02:53)
6. Blow Me Down (04:07)
7. Sailin' (02:46)
8. It's Not Easy Being Me (02:17)
9. He's Large (04:19)
10. I'm Mean (02:34)
11. Kids (04:24)
12. I'm Popeye The Sailor Man (01:20)
Tuesday, August 15, 2006
Popeye - The Movie 1980
Starring: Robin Williams, Shelley Duvall
Screenplay by: Harry Nilsson Music
Directed by: Robert Altman
Friday, August 11, 2006
Mike Oldfield And FriendsTubular Bells Live
Until he started touring regularly in the late 1970s, Mike Oldfield built up a reputation for reclusiveness that verged on hermit-hood - rarely interviewed, seldom seen, he simply sat in the studio, constructing his latest one man masterpiece, and apparently turning down some fabulous offers to go on the road. In fact, given the extraordinary complexity of the three albums he recorded during this period (Tubular Bells, Hergest Ridge and Ommadawn), his reluctance to perform live was scarcely surprising. If the Beatles didn't think it possible to recreate some of their stuff on stage, what hope did Kevin Ayers' old bassist have?
Just twice did Oldfield stir, once for a BBC TV performance of side one of Tubular Bells, and once for a full-fledged live presentation of the entire disc, shortly after the album's release in June 1973. Surrounding himself with friends - Ayers, David Bedford, Mick Taylor, Steve Hillage, Fred Frith, Pierre Moelin and Ted Speight (Steve Winwood dropped out after missing rehearsals), Oldfield then took over London's Queen Elizabeth Hall for a show that highlights both the strengths and the weaknesses of Tubular Bells.
The strengths are in the so-called main themes, the series of disparate melodies that give the piece its body. But the links that thread them together on vinyl are treated somewhat less forgivingly on stage. Side two of the album certainly drags, with the musicians apparently abandoning any hope of capturing its intricacies, and drowning instead in a self-inflicted sea of noodles.
The less than pristine sound quality exacerbates this problem, more so than it might on a "conventional" live performance - of course Tubular Bells was only ever conceived as a studio experience, and flaws that one might forgive on, say, a Stones live recording are amplified here to deafening proportions. At the end of the show, said one review, "the entire audience rose to its feet and hollered for more. It was one of those rare spontaneous outbursts of appreciation." Oldfield, on the other hand, swore never to play another show again.
Track 01
(39.6MB)
Track 02
(39.2MB)
Tuesday, June 27, 2006
Wednesday, May 24, 2006
Emitt Rhodes - Emitt Rhodes
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia:
Emitt Rhodes is Rhodes' self-titled debut album, released in 1970.
Rhodes recorded the album in his home studio. At the time, union rules required that recordings released on major labels must be recorded in proper studios, so the fact that this was a home recording could not be mentioned on the cover. The runout groove of the original LP release on Dunhill Records contained a decorative banner proclaiming, "Recorded at Home." Rhodes wanted to call the album Homecooking, but Dunhill decided to title it Emitt Rhodes.
Rhodes recorded the instruments on a four-track recorder and then approched Dunhill, who gave him a contract. He transferred the four-track instrumental recordings to an eight-track recorder to add the vocals on the four additional channels (and using a better microphone).
The album reached number 29 on the Billboard album chart. The single "Fresh as a Daisy" just missed the top forty. Billboard later called the album one of the "best albums of the decade". The song "Lullabye" was featured in the film The Royal Tenenbaums.
01 With My Face On The Floor / 02 Somebody Made For Me / 03 She's Such A Beauty / 04 Long Time No See / 05 Lullabye / 06 Fresh As A Daisy / 07 Live Till You Die / 08 Promises I've Made / 09 You Take The Dark Out Of The Night / 10 You Should Be Ashamed / 11 Ever Find Yourself Running? / 12 You Must Have

Wednesday, May 03, 2006
Keats - By the members of The Alan Parsons Project
Colin Blunstone(vocals), Ian Bairnson (guitars), David Patton (bass, synthesizers, backing vocals), Stuart Elliott (drums, percussion), Pete Bardens (keyboards, piano), Richard Cottle (synthesizer, saxophone).
Tuesday, May 02, 2006
Traffic - Last Exit
Last Exit is a kind of goodbyealbum from the original Traffic Steve Winwood, Dave Mason, Chris Wood, Jim Capaldi. The band broke up while recording the album and only a few songs were finished. That's the reason why it's filled with some liverecordings. The livetracks are without Dave Mason and are more
Saturday, April 22, 2006
Lindsey Buckingham and Stevie Nicks - UCKINGHAM NICKS
Monday, February 20, 2006
The Idle Race - The Birthday Party
Jeff Lynne is well known for his work with Roy Wood in the Move and the Electric Light Orchestra. Jeff did play in another band before he joined the Move; Idle Race.
Jeff's first record with Idle Race was "(Here We Go 'Round) The Lemon Tree" written by Roy Wood. The single doesn't hit the charts. Idle Race tries again and released "The Skeleton And The Roundabout", "End Of The Road" and "I Like My Toys". None of the singles sells but together with the flipsides they got half an album and so all of them can be found on "the birthday party" from 1968.
Tracks: Skeleton & The Roundabout / Happy Birthday/The Birthday / I Like My Toys / Morning Sunshine / Follow Me Follow / Sitting In My Tree / On With The Show / Lucky Man / Don't Put Your Boys In The Army, Mrs. Ward / Pie In The Sky / The Lady Who Said She Could Fly / End Of The Road
Wednesday, February 15, 2006
Harry Nilsson - Popeye (The Original Demotapes)
The live action version of Popeye sees the light in 1980. It's the first movie for Robin Williams. Although Robin is very populair in 1980 (Mork) nobody went to the theater to watch the movie. The original soundtrack (upload later...) isn't a succes either. Not that odd if you keep in mind that the songs were sung by the actors Robin Williams, Shelly Duval en Paul L Smith and not by their writer Harry Nilsson.
Tracks: