b/worldprince by worldprince

Midnight Oil - Punter Barrier BPM (Live) (2017)

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Midnight Oil - Punter Barrier BPM (Live) (2017)

MP3 CBR 320 kbps | Rock, Rock and Roll, Alternative Rock | 01:11:36 | 1CD | 167 Mb

Tracklist
1. Midnight Oil - Stand In Line (Live at Parramatta Park, 2JJ 1981)
2. Midnight Oil - Brave Faces (Live at Tanelorn Music Festival 1981)
3. Midnight Oil - Lucky Country (Live at Tanelorn Music Festival 1981)
4. Midnight Oil - No Reaction (Live at Tanelorn Music Festival 1981)
5. Midnight Oil - Back on the Borderline (Live at Tanelorn Music Festival 1981)
6. Midnight Oil - Koala Sprint (Live at Tanelorn Music Festival 1981)
7. Midnight Oil - Section 5 Bus to Bondi (Live at Tanelorn Music Festival 1981)
8. Midnight Oil - Don't Wanna Be the One (Live at Tanelorn Music Festival 1981)
9. Midnight Oil - Powderworks (Live at Tanelorn Music Festival 1981)
10. Midnight Oil - Eye Contact (Live at The Narrabeen Sands Hotel 1996)
11. Midnight Oil - Pictures (Live at The Narrabeen Sands Hotel 1996)
12. Midnight Oil - E Beat (Live at Penrith Leagues Club 1998)
13. Midnight Oil - Comfortable Place On the Couch (Live at Penrith Leagues Club 1998)
14. Midnight Oil - What Goes On (Live at Penrith Leagues Club 1998)
15. Midnight Oil - Concrete (Live at Penrith Leagues Club 1998)
16. Midnight Oil - Redneck Wonderland (Live at Penrith Leagues Club 1998)
17. Midnight Oil - Burnie (Live at Alberts Studios Sydney 1992)

After some 15 years away from active duty at the musical coalface, legendary Australian rockers Midnight Oil have reformed in 2017 for a world tour that has prompted almost unparalleled levels of excitement and anticipation amongst both fans and pundits old and new. Together these two beautifully-packaged new collections remind more than anything that Midnight Oil are at their core an incredible rock’n’roll band, in terms of both live and studio musicianship as well as songwriting. These traits drew the hordes to their live gigs for the first decade and beyond but over time became increasingly overshadowed by both the magnitude of their political conscience – and continual quest to act upon rather than bleat about these beliefs – and also the towering bald singer out in front of them dancing as if electricity was being coursed through his veins.