Rainbow - Down To Earth (Deluxe Edition) (1979/2020)

  • 01 May, 14:31
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Artist:
Title: Down To Earth (Deluxe Edition)
Year Of Release: 1979/2020
Label: Polydor
Genre: Classic Rock, Hard Rock, Heavy Metal
Quality: 320 kbps | FLAC (tracks)
Total Time: 01:45:21
Total Size: 247 mb | 741 mb
WebSite:

Tracklist:

CD1

1. Rainbow - All Night Long
2. Rainbow - Eyes Of The World
3. Rainbow - No Time To Lose
4. Rainbow - Makin' Love
5. Rainbow - Since You Been Gone
6. Rainbow - Love's No Friend
7. Rainbow - Danger Zone
8. Rainbow - Lost In Hollywood
9. Rainbow - Bad Girl
10. Rainbow - Weiss Heim

CD2

1. Rainbow - All Night Long (Instrumental Outtake)
2. Rainbow - Eyes Of The World (Instrumental Outtake)
3. Rainbow - Spark Don’t Mean A Fire
4. Rainbow - Makin' Love (Instrumental Outtake)
5. Rainbow - Since You Been Gone (Instrumental Outtake)
6. Rainbow - Ain’t A Lot Of Love In The Heart Of Me
7. Rainbow - Danger Zone (Instrumental Outtake)
8. Rainbow - Lost In Hollywood (Instrumental Outtake)
9. Rainbow - Bad Girl (Instrumental Outtake)
10. Rainbow - Ain’t A Lot Of Love In The Heart Of Me (Alternative Outtake)
11. Rainbow - Eyes Of The World (Instrumental Outtake Take 2)
12. Rainbow - All Night Long (Cozy Powell Mix)

The departure of Ronnie James Dio gave Ritchie Blackmore a chance to reinvent Rainbow, which he does to a certain extent on Down to Earth. Adding former Deep Purple colleague Roger Glover as bassist and Graham Bonnet as vocalist, Blackmore tones down some of the excess of the Dio years, particularly in terms of fantastical lyrics, and turns to straight-ahead hard rock, only occasionally adorned by prominent synthesizers. In general, their material is fairly solid, and "Since You Been Gone" easily ranks among the band's best songs, but overall the record is a little generic and sounds very much of its time namely, the late '70s, when album rock still ruled the arenas. Nevertheless, Rainbow has a distinct idea, primarily through the guitar artistry and mystical sensibility of Ritchie Blackmore. He sounds invigorated on the album, turning in muscular performances and strong solos on each cut; clearly, the reunion has revitalized him. Unfortunately, Bonnet tends to oversell his vocals, screaming a little bit too often, but he doesn't distract from the fact that Blackmore, Glover, and drummer Cozy Powell turn Down to Earth into a fine hard rock platter. It might not offer anything unique, but it delivers the goods.


  • zorro96
  •  15:05
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many thanks
  • mufty77
  •  21:24
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Many thanks for lossless.