-extra Quality- Tommy Bolin 1966 1976 Fever Box Set 15 Cdsl [ TRUSTED — CHECKLIST ]
The box set grows heavy with the weight of expectation. It’s 1975, and Tommy is stepping into Ritchie Blackmore's shoes in . The "Fever" collection captures the frantic, cocaine-fueled energy of the Come Taste the Band sessions. There are whispered conversations between tracks, the sound of a band trying to reinvent itself around a guitar player who played like he was on fire. The Final Fade (1976)
The middle discs shift into high fidelity. You’re in the room for the rehearsals, where Tommy blends blues with a terrifyingly sophisticated jazz fusion. These discs track his meteoric rise—the moment Billy Cobham tapped him for Spectrum , the album that would change jazz-rock forever. You hear outtakes where Tommy’s improvisations go so far off the map they loop back into the future. The Deep Purple Storm (1975) -Extra Quality- Tommy Bolin 1966 1976 Fever Box Set 15 Cdsl
The "Fever" Box Set meticulously chronicles Bolin's remarkable career, featuring: The box set grows heavy with the weight of expectation
Ensure the set is the original 2009 release by checking for the Crimson Records or Discogs listings for specific matrix numbers. There are whispered conversations between tracks, the sound
The Fever box set is particularly valued for its inclusion of rare, unreleased material that highlights Bolin's improvisational genius.
This is where the "Extra Quality" remastering earns its price tag. Billy Cobham’s Spectrum (1973) is represented not just by the final mix, but by the . Listening to “Stratus” without the horns or drums reveals Bolin’s right-hand picking technique: a percussive, almost flamenco-style attack that turned his Les Paul into a drum kit.