Badfinger - Without You-The Tragic Story Of Badfinger [2000][320 KBPS][2nd Edition]seeders: 10
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Badfinger - Without You-The Tragic Story Of Badfinger [2000][320 KBPS][2nd Edition] (Size: 177.43 MB)
Description
Track Listings: 01 Man Without A Heart 02 Taxi 03 Take Good Care Of My Baby 04 She Came Out Of The Cold 05 Knocking Down Our Home 06 Clown Of The Party 07 Maybe Tomorrow 08 Midnight Sun 09 Take It All 10 Pete Ham Radio Interview 11 Blind Owl 12 Pete Ham/Tom Evans Interview 13 Pete Ham/Steve Craiter Phone Call 14 Hey Mister Manager 15 Ringside 16 I Believe In Love 17 Tom Evans Phone Call May '83 18 Tom Evans/Steve Craiter Phone Call Aug. '83 19 Over You -------------------------------------------------- **320 KBPS CBR **Cover Art ---------------------------------------------------------- Badfinger were a British rock band that originally consisted of Pete Ham, Mike Gibbins, Tom Evans and Ron Griffiths. The band evolved from an earlier group called The Iveys that was formed in 1961 by Ham, Ron Griffiths and David "Dai" Jenkins in Swansea, Wales. They were signed by the Beatles' Apple label in 1968 as The Iveys. In 1969, Griffiths left and was replaced by Joey Molland, and the band renamed itself Badfinger. In 1970, the band engaged American businessman Stan Polley to manage their commercial affairs. Over the next five years the band recorded several albums for Apple and toured extensively, before they became embroiled in the chaos of Apple Records' dissolution. Badfinger had four consecutive worldwide hits from 1970 to 1972: "Come and Get It" (written and produced by Paul McCartney), "No Matter What", "Day After Day" (produced by George Harrison) and "Baby Blue". In 2013, "Baby Blue" made a resurgence onto the "Hot Rock Songs" Billboard 100 chart at number 14, due to its featuring at the end of the series finale of the hit TV show Breaking Bad. Their song "Without You" has been covered many times, including a Billboard number one hit for Harry Nilsson. They signed to Warner Bros., but Polley's financial machinations resulted in a lawsuit by Warner over missing escrow account money. Warner's consequent withdrawal from market of the 1974 album, Wish You Were Here (seven weeks after its release), cut off the band's income. Three days before his 28th birthday, on 24 April 1975, Ham committed suicide by hanging himself, leaving a note that included damning comments about Polley. Over the next three years, surviving members struggled to rebuild their personal and professional lives against a backdrop of lawsuits. The albums Airwaves (1978) and Say No More (1981) floundered, as Molland and Evans see-sawed between co-operation and struggle in attempts to revive and capitalise on the Badfinger legacy. Having seen Ham's body after Ham's wife had called him, Evans reportedly never got over his friend's suicide, and was quoted as saying in darker moments, "I wanna be where he is." On 19 November 1983, Evans also took his own life by hanging Sharing Widget |