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The Easybeats - Steady On FLAC album

Tracklist Hide Credits

A1 Steady On
A2 I Believe I You
A3 Mama
A4 I'm In Love With You
A5 No One Knows
Written-By – George Young, Stevie Wright
A6 I Know Something
A7 Keep Your Hands Off My Baby
Written-By – George Young, Stevie Wright
A8 I'm Happy
Written-By – George Young, Stevie Wright
B1 I Know It
B2 The Bell
B3 How You Doin' Now
B4 Every Night
B5 I Don't Agree
Written-By – George Young, Stevie Wright
B6 I Can Still See The Sun
B7 Hey! Babe
Written-By – George Young, Stevie Wright
B8 Woe Is Me

Notes

Reputedly only a dozen copies or so were made - eleven of the tracks have not been released elsewhere. Cover says stereo, but it's mono...

Not an official Albert Productions release nor pressed by Albert Productions. This album was privately pressed by a collector.


The Easybeats - Steady On FLAC album

Musician performer: The Easybeats

Title: Steady On

Date of release: 1978

Style: Garage Rock, Beat

Genre: Rock / Pop

Size FLAC: 1599 mb

Rating: 4.7 / 5

Votes: 258

Other Formats: AAC DMF TTA FLAC WMA AU ADX

Related to The Easybeats - Steady On FLAC Albums

Mazuzahn
Please disregard any claims that this is a "lost album" of The Easybeats. It is a privately pressed collection, from Easybeats superfan George Crotty, of demos, 2UW recordings and studio tracks that was never meant to be publicly released. As such, the audio quality is very lo-fi. Some of these tracks (No One Knows, How You Doin' Now, Hey! Babe) have seen official releases on the Raven EP's and Repertoire CDs.
Mazuzahn
Please disregard any claims that this is a "lost album" of The Easybeats. It is a privately pressed collection, from Easybeats superfan George Crotty, of demos, 2UW recordings and studio tracks that was never meant to be publicly released. As such, the audio quality is very lo-fi. Some of these tracks (No One Knows, How You Doin' Now, Hey! Babe) have seen official releases on the Raven EP's and Repertoire CDs.
Xanzay
I bought this in a Bomp Records auction circa 1981. My copy has the back cover but not the colour front cover insert. As with the scan, a catalog number has been scratched over on the back cover under the STEREO notation as well as credits at the bottom. It arrived from the US in a plastic White Light Records bag (Sydney record store of the era).Seeking information on the album I asked George Crotty who was MOST unhappy that I'd scored a copy (I had no idea he'd done it in the first place). He told me 12 copies had been pressed but only 7 had been distributed. Presumably he was sitting on the remaining 5.
Xanzay
I bought this in a Bomp Records auction circa 1981. My copy has the back cover but not the colour front cover insert. As with the scan, a catalog number has been scratched over on the back cover under the STEREO notation as well as credits at the bottom. It arrived from the US in a plastic White Light Records bag (Sydney record store of the era).Seeking information on the album I asked George Crotty who was MOST unhappy that I'd scored a copy (I had no idea he'd done it in the first place). He told me 12 copies had been pressed but only 7 had been distributed. Presumably he was sitting on the remaining 5.
Onnell
This is not a test pressing; nor is it an official album. This is a "pirate" release put together by the late George Crotty from acetates he found at Alberts whilst visiting the studios. He put together the album as a thank you to studio and label staff for letting him listen to the material; inevitably, a copy or rwo leaked out onto the collectors' market. But this is in no way an official release; nor was it ever intended to be one. The sound quality, to judge from the tracks that are on the similarly-named CD, is shocking, even for a bootleg. Which is not to say that fans wouldn't welcome an official Alberts release of this material.
Onnell
This is not a test pressing; nor is it an official album. This is a "pirate" release put together by the late George Crotty from acetates he found at Alberts whilst visiting the studios. He put together the album as a thank you to studio and label staff for letting him listen to the material; inevitably, a copy or rwo leaked out onto the collectors' market. But this is in no way an official release; nor was it ever intended to be one. The sound quality, to judge from the tracks that are on the similarly-named CD, is shocking, even for a bootleg. Which is not to say that fans wouldn't welcome an official Alberts release of this material.