ylliX - Online Advertising Network New Flac & mp3@320 Rip of ''Paul Jones - The Paul Jones Collection Vol.2 - Love Me Love My Friends'' 1967 (1996 RPM Records) ~ FLAC FILE

New Flac & mp3@320 Rip of ''Paul Jones - The Paul Jones Collection Vol.2 - Love Me Love My Friends'' 1967 (1996 RPM Records)


Hello Folks, most of you know that i posted some days ago mp3 rips of the albums from the Paul Jones collection. Today some albums i ordered arrived. Also the Paul Jones Vol.2.
Here is now the Flac rip and a mp3@320 rip. I will do that also with Vol.1. I hope the album will arrive tomorrow. Please don't ask for Vol. 3. I don't found Vol.3 for a correct price. Maybe some of you boys & girls have a good rip of Vol. 3. It would be much appreciated  :-). I will add again a review for the folks who maybe don't know anything about Paul Jones.

Enjoy it
             Frank  Flac p1  & Flac p2  & Flac p3 -         mp3@320 p1  -  mp3 p2




As lead singer of Manfred Mann from 1963 to 1966, Paul Jones was one of the best vocalists of the British Invasion, able to put over blues, R&B, and high-energy pop/rock with an appealing mix of polish and soul. That made the mediocre, at times appalling quality of his late-'60s solo recordings, on which he pursued a far more MOR direction, an all the more perplexing disappointment.

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As early as 1965, the press was speculating that Jones -- the only one of the Manfreds with any conventional heartthrob appeal -- would be leaving the group for a solo career. Jones and the group denied these rumors for quite some time, but Paul did in fact hand in his notice around late 1965, although he stayed with Manfred Mann through much of 1966 while they arranged for a replacement. The lure of going solo was not purely musical; Jones also wanted to pursue opportunities in the acting field, landing a big role right away as a lead in the '60s cult movie Privilege, which unsurprisingly cast him as a pop singer. Jones also sang a few songs in the film, the best of which was the ominous, hymn-like "Set Me Free," which was covered by Patti Smith in the mid-'70s.


Jones rang up a couple of British Top Ten hits in late 1966 and early 1967 with "High Time" and "I've Been a Bad Bad Boy," although his solo recording career would never get off the ground in the U.S. Both of these were straight MOR pop tunes that sounded much closer to Tom Jones than the Paul Jones of old. Unfortunately, the brassy British pop arrangements of Mike Leander (most noted for his work on Marianne Faithfull's early records) and weak -- at times perversely selected -- material characterized his late-'60s records. After those first two Top Ten singles, he wasn't even that successful in Britain, let alone America, where he was soon forgotten.



Jones at least wasn't starving for work, moving his focus from records to acting in the theater, which he continued to do steadily over the next few decades. He did eventually re-embrace his blues roots as singer for the low-key Blues Band, as well as participating in some Manfred Mann reunion performances. A new album, Showcase, appeared in 2001 from Hallmark Records, followed eight years later in 2009 by Starting All Over Again from Collectors' Choice.
Starting All Over Again was the first of two new Paul Jones albums produced by Carla Olson. The second, Suddenly I Like It, followed in 2009. Both albums featured the same backing band: Jake Andrews on guitar, Tony Marsico on bass, Mike Thompson on keyboards and Alvino Bennett on drums and were recorded in Los Angeles. Both combined R&B, blues and pop songs and featured guests including Eric Clapton, Joe Bonamassa and Jools Holland.(allmusic)


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