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Steve Tibbetts - Steve Tibbetts FLAC album

Tracklist

Sunrise
The Secret
Desert
The Wonderful Day
Gong
Jungle Rhythm
Interlude
Alvin Goes To Tibet
How Do You Like My Buddha?

Versions

Category Artist Title (Format) Label Category Country Year
BZZ-77, 29629 Steve Tibbetts Steve Tibbetts ‎(LP, Album) Not On Label (Steve Tibbetts Self-released), Not On Label (Steve Tibbetts Self-released) BZZ-77, 29629 US 1977
BZZ-77 Steve Tibbetts Steve Tibbetts ‎(LP, Album) Frammis Rekords BZZ-77 US 1977
55009 Steve Tibbetts Steve Tibbetts ‎(CD, Album, RE) Cuneiform Records 55009 US 1995
55009 Steve Tibbetts Steve Tibbetts ‎(CD, Album, RE, RP) Cuneiform Records 55009 US Unknown


Steve Tibbetts - Steve Tibbetts FLAC album

Musician performer: Steve Tibbetts

Title: Steve Tibbetts

Country: US

Date of release: 1977

Style: Acoustic, Prog Rock, Experimental

Genre: Rock

Size FLAC: 1638 mb

Rating: 4.5 / 5

Votes: 965

Other Formats: VQF VOC ASF AC3 DTS FLAC WMA

Related to Steve Tibbetts - Steve Tibbetts FLAC Albums

Kesalard
This album is not part of the original pressing of 500 copies. It is most likely from the 2nd pressing of 2500 copies. It is the Frammis Rekords (Steve Tibbetts-owned) edition of 1977.
Kesalard
This album is not part of the original pressing of 500 copies. It is most likely from the 2nd pressing of 2500 copies. It is the Frammis Rekords (Steve Tibbetts-owned) edition of 1977.
Gralsa
Absolutely incredible LP. Continues to amaze me to this day. Contains some completely unexpected twists and turns, like very skilled (and pretty) acoustic guitar fingerpicking that melts into electric, almost Prog-like shredding, with washes of mind boggling tape effects and bizarre percussion. An intriguing early use of electronic experimentation puts Tibbetts in a category all his own. Seriously, listen to this and his second album, "YR", and you might just have your feelings changed about music in general. These are two of the few albums that I will classify under pure genius.
Gralsa
Absolutely incredible LP. Continues to amaze me to this day. Contains some completely unexpected twists and turns, like very skilled (and pretty) acoustic guitar fingerpicking that melts into electric, almost Prog-like shredding, with washes of mind boggling tape effects and bizarre percussion. An intriguing early use of electronic experimentation puts Tibbetts in a category all his own. Seriously, listen to this and his second album, "YR", and you might just have your feelings changed about music in general. These are two of the few albums that I will classify under pure genius.