"Satch’s tone on 'Alright, Alright' is worth the price of admission alone. Thanks for the EAC rip, my CD is scratched!"
With Chickenfoot III , the band proved they weren’t just a one-off barroom jam. Released in 2011, this album sheds the self-titled debut’s "getting to know you" vibe and replaces it with pure, unadulterated swagger. It is loud, it is fun, and it is for your lossless library.
When you take a vocalist from Van Halen (Sammy Hagar), a guitarist from Joe Satriani’s disciple tree (actually, just Joe Satriani himself), the Red Hot Chili Peppers’ bass wizard (Michael “Flea” Anthony—wait, no, that’s not right… oh, right: Michael Anthony), and a drummer who has literally played with everyone (Chad Smith), you expect fireworks.
Lossless Legends: Chickenfoot – Chickenfoot III (2011) [EAC-FLAC]
(Note: In a real blog, you would insert your Mega.nz, Google Drive, or Dropbox link here. For this example, I will obscure it.)
"Satch’s tone on 'Alright, Alright' is worth the price of admission alone. Thanks for the EAC rip, my CD is scratched!"
With Chickenfoot III , the band proved they weren’t just a one-off barroom jam. Released in 2011, this album sheds the self-titled debut’s "getting to know you" vibe and replaces it with pure, unadulterated swagger. It is loud, it is fun, and it is for your lossless library.
When you take a vocalist from Van Halen (Sammy Hagar), a guitarist from Joe Satriani’s disciple tree (actually, just Joe Satriani himself), the Red Hot Chili Peppers’ bass wizard (Michael “Flea” Anthony—wait, no, that’s not right… oh, right: Michael Anthony), and a drummer who has literally played with everyone (Chad Smith), you expect fireworks.
Lossless Legends: Chickenfoot – Chickenfoot III (2011) [EAC-FLAC]
(Note: In a real blog, you would insert your Mega.nz, Google Drive, or Dropbox link here. For this example, I will obscure it.)