🐰 Welcome to MyBunny.TV – Your Gateway to Unlimited Entertainment! 🐰
Enjoy 10,000+ Premium HD Channels, thousands of movies & series, and experience lightning-fast instant activation.
Reliable, stable, and built for the ultimate streaming experience – no hassles, just entertainment! MyBunny.TV – Cheaper Than Cable • Up to 35% Off Yearly Plans • All NFL, ESPN, PPV Events Included 🐰
🎉 Join the fastest growing IPTV community today and discover why everyone is switching to MyBunny.TV!
To start this P2P download, you have to install a BitTorrent client like
qBittorrent
Category:Music Total size: 273.16 MB Added: 1 month ago (2025-07-28 17:29:01)
Share ratio:8 seeders, 0 leechers Info Hash:A5DA014193677C7BB46A8EB8D60DA8FD837A5D63 Last updated: 7 hours ago (2025-09-18 22:08:23)
Report Bad Torrent
×
Description:
Artist: Silk
Title Of Album: Smooth As Raw Silk
Year Of Release: 1969/2012
Label: Kismet – KISCD4034
Country: US
Genre: Psychedelic Rock, Folk Rock, Baroque Pop, Heavy Psychedelic
Quality: FLAC (tracks+scans)
Duration: 38:14
Tracklist:
1. Introduction - 1:05
2. Foreign Trip - 4:11
3. Long Haired Boy - 3:36
4. Not A Whole Lot I Can Do - 3:04
5. Custody - 2:18
6. Scottish Thing - 4:44
7. Skitzo Blues - 4:37
8. Hours - 3:13
9. Walk In My Mind - 3:47
10. Come On Down Girl - 3:41
11. For All Time - 4:14
Personnel:
Michael Gee - Bass
Chris Johns - Guitar
Courtney Johns - Drums
Randy Sabo - Keyboards
American band from 1969. They play dynamic hard rock with occasional forays into brass rock, tasty instrumental psychedelia, guitar-and-organ hard rock, and even folk rock with bagpipes and female backing vocals. It is obvious that the band was at a crossroads - in the period of forming their own style. On the other hand, the record is very good, despite the cut-up and motley nature of the material. Among the guests are a violinist, a trumpeter, and a bagpiper. The interaction of keyboards (organ and piano) and electric/acoustic guitars is also very competent. The musicians are trying to break away from psychedelia and play something new. This trend was typical of many bands on both sides of the ocean at the turn of the 60s and 70s. Some tracks fit into the proto-prog category