Jan Akkerman & Thijs Van Leer - Focus
Vinyl | LP Cover (1:1) | FLAC + cue | 24bit/96kHz | 900mb
Label: Vertigo/824 524-1 | Released: 1985 | Genre: Progressive-Fusion
Side A
Russian Roulette 5:54
King Kong 3:55
Le Tango 4:55
Indian Summer 5:50
Side B
Beethoven's Revenge (Bach-One-Turbo-Overdrive) 10:47
Ole Judy 3:52
Who's Calling? 7:30
Bass – Tato Gomez (tracks: A1, A4)
Bass [Big Bass] – Ruud Jacobs (tracks: B1)
Co-producer – Jan Akkerman, Theo Balijon, Thijs Van Leer
Drums [Fills] – Sergio Castillo (tracks: A3)
Guitar, Synthesizer – Jan Akkerman
Keyboards, Flute, Vocals – Thijs Van Leer
Mixed By – Emile Elsen, Jan Akkerman, Theo Balijon
Producer – Ruud Jacobs
Synthesizer [Fairlight Synthesizer Programming] – Ed Staring
Tabla – Ustad Zamir Ahmad Khan (tracks: A4)
Vinyl | LP Cover (1:1) | FLAC + cue | 24bit/96kHz | 900mb
Label: Vertigo/824 524-1 | Released: 1985 | Genre: Progressive-Fusion
Side A
Russian Roulette 5:54
King Kong 3:55
Le Tango 4:55
Indian Summer 5:50
Side B
Beethoven's Revenge (Bach-One-Turbo-Overdrive) 10:47
Ole Judy 3:52
Who's Calling? 7:30
Bass – Tato Gomez (tracks: A1, A4)
Bass [Big Bass] – Ruud Jacobs (tracks: B1)
Co-producer – Jan Akkerman, Theo Balijon, Thijs Van Leer
Drums [Fills] – Sergio Castillo (tracks: A3)
Guitar, Synthesizer – Jan Akkerman
Keyboards, Flute, Vocals – Thijs Van Leer
Mixed By – Emile Elsen, Jan Akkerman, Theo Balijon
Producer – Ruud Jacobs
Synthesizer [Fairlight Synthesizer Programming] – Ed Staring
Tabla – Ustad Zamir Ahmad Khan (tracks: A4)
This Rip: 2013 With milimetrical manual DeClick for 2018
This LP: NM- / From my personal collection
Cleaning: RCM Moth MkII Pro Vinyl
Direct Drive Turntable: Marantz 6170
Cartridge: SHURE M97xE
Amplifier: Sansui 9090DB
ADC: E-MU 0404
LP Rip & Full Scan LP Cover: Fran Solo
Password: WITHOUT PASSWORD
This self-titled reunion album is fantastic and one of my favorites in the Focus catalog for the same reason that it is mostly ignored: it only features two important members of the original band and the music is based much more in jazz-fusion and heavy new age.
I will admit that the percussion often seems cheesy sounding (this is an '80s release), but that doesn't detract from the overall musicianship on this album. Definitely different than their previous albums, this definitely doesn't include any of whatever potential accessibility that Focus' earlier releases had, and is definitely less rock and blues inspired. "Who's Calling?" is probably my personal favorite on the album and is a beautiful, classically inspired new age fusion track. It's fairly straight forward, but still undeniably progressive.
I recommend this only to fans of jazz fusion or new age. As I stated before, this doesn't really garner much appeal to earlier Focus fans.progarchives.com
Welcome to the Dark Side of the Vinyl
Silent spaces haven't been deleted in this rip
Silent spaces haven't been deleted in this rip
Vinyl / CUE/ FLAC/ High Definition Cover: