Torrent details for "Bobby & The Midnites - Where The Beat Meets The Street (1984…" Log in to bookmark
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Total Size:
845.7 MB
Info Hash:
C452A9D24CE141D98DAFF94030F65764415CD178
Added By:
Added:
March 2, 2026, 4:34 a.m.
Stats:
|
(Last updated: March 2, 2026, 4:38 a.m.)
| File | Size |
|---|---|
| 07. Life Line.flac | 97.6 MB |
| 08. Falling.flac | 95.6 MB |
| 03. She's Gonna Win Your Heart.flac | 89.5 MB |
| 10. Gloria Monday.flac | 89.3 MB |
| 05. Lifeguard.flac | 86.9 MB |
| 04. Ain't That Peculiar.flac | 83.1 MB |
| 09. Thunder & Lightning.flac | 78.4 MB |
| 02. Where The Beat Meets The Street.flac | 78.2 MB |
| 01. (I Want To Live In) America.flac | 76.6 MB |
| 06. Rock In The 80's.flac | 69.5 MB |
| front.jpg | 857.2 KB |
| foo_dr.txt | 1.4 KB |
| play.m3u | 287 bytes |
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SOURCE: Bobby & The Midnites - Where The Beat Meets The Street (1984) [FLAC 24-96]
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COVER

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MEDIAINFO
01. (I Want To Live In) America (3:24)
02. Where The Beat Meets The Street (3:36)
03. She's Gonna Win Your Heart (3:59)
04. Ain't That Peculiar (3:52)
05. Lifeguard (3:55)
06. Rock In The 80's (3:13)
07. Life Line (4:27)
08. Falling (4:24)
09. Thunder & Lightning (3:38)
10. Gloria Monday (4:12)
If Bobby & The Midnites' debut album represented a half-hearted attempt to go pop on the part of Grateful Dead guitarist/singer Bob Weir, "Where The Beat Meets The Street", The Midnites' second and final album, saw the group going for mid-'80s radio acceptance with a vengeance. As he had in his '70s group, Kingfish, Weir began to take a backseat in his own band, leaving most of the singing up to Bobby Cochran and bringing in a host of outside songwriters. Jeff Baxter provided a sharp production sound keyed to Billy Cobham's driving drums, and what you got was, as one song put it, "Rock In The '80s," a set of frisky toe-tappers that concerned themselves mostly with the magical world of rock & roll. What can Deadheads have made of this, especially at a time when the mother group seemed to have given up making its own records? Actually, probably only a few of them (or anyone else, for that matter) got to hear this album, which sank without a trace after four weeks at the bottom of the charts, followed by the demise of the group itself
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