Have everything from Jazz, Dub, Rock, Trance, Blues, Downtempo, Dubstep, Pop and everything inbetween!! I am currently selling a whole lot of CDs, vinyl, DVDs and video on my Discogs site. Thank you for taking the time of reading my lenghty post, and I am looking forward to hear what you would say. If you were to write a post card to the GD, what would you say? So when it came to designing a post card describing home, I though of the Grateful Dead. Going to festivals and shows, meeting beautiful people and most of all beeing touched by the music have been life changing events.I regain direction and hope in life and mankind. I was not born in a time or place that allowed me to ever see a true Grateful Dead show, but the spirit, the acceptance and the love I feel while listening to their music has trully given me the support of a family. except for the music of the Grateful Dead. ![]() The past couple of years have been tumoltuous, and therefore I feel that I do not have a home. We separated 6 months after the move, and I now have a roomate situation, while pursuing my degree. This touched me at a profoundly emotional level, since I feel that I am very much "in between places": I was born and raised in Eastern Europe, but I haven't been there in about 7 years I lived in Maryland with my husband for about 5 years, and we moved together to New England 2 years ago. I am studying architecture, and my recent assignment was designing a post card that would describe home. Hello friends!I am new to the website, and this might be out of line but I am looking for your help. Order this Seafood Records release at and “Much of my early music was influenced by Middle Eastern music, which becomes immediately apparent were you to see me with Country Joe in the 1967 movie Monterey Pop.” Danish bassist Charles Jannic and French drummer Christophe Rossi excel at everything – hats off to these guys, as well as to Melton and Missri for their fine, fine playing and producing. ![]() “This was truly a trans-Atlantic effort for me,” says Melton, who’s worked as a public defender in northern California. Rhythms and melodies seamlessly embrace rock, blues, psychedelic, Middle Eastern, and African influences. Algerian-born Missri sings mostly in French, with a smooth, smoky voice. ![]() They freak-out Hendrix-style on “Vert,” and Barry resurrects his wicked vibrato of yore for “Le Dernier Homme en Ville.” His sea shanty-cum-ecological call to arms “Shady Grove” recalls his Country Joe & The Fish era and then segues into one of the album’s best jams. Deadheads – Garcia freaks in particular – will love Melton and Missri’s flowing solos, epitomized by the Jerry-esque joyride of “Jamasutra Mantra.” Like the early Allman Brothers Band and Steve Hunter-Dick Wagner with Lou Reed, Melton and Missri create intriguing two-guitar interplay without venturing into overkill. It’s trippy, politically and socially conscious, and brilliantly played. His new “neo-psychedelic” release with Parisian guitarist/vocalist Stephan Missri and band is, in a word, extraordinary. First, a quick background check: Barry “The Fish” Melton played lead guitar on the San Francisco scene’s first psychedelic record, and went on to play the Monterey and Woodstock festivals.
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