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Tom Cochrane and Red Rider - Discography [FLAC] Kitlope
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Tom Cochrane Tom Cochrane and Red Rider Red Rider 1980\'s 80s 1990\'s 90s 2000\'s 00s Greatest Hits FLAC Kitlope
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BA9D81CA90881EF411F5C98C752965A4DFD73C34




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PC Software: Windows 7 Ultimate Build 7600 
File Type: FLAC Compression 6
Cd Hardware: Plextor PX-716SA 
Plextor Firmware: 1.11 (Final)
Cd Software: Exact Audio Copy V0.99 prebeta 5
EAC Log: Yes
EAC Cue Sheet: Yes
Tracker(s):https://tracker.openbittorrent.com/announce;
Torrent Hash: BA9D81CA90881EF411F5C98C752965A4DFD73C34
File Size: 5.27 GB
Label: Capitol, Universal, RCA



Years, Albums & Catalog # in this Torrent:



	1979 - Don't Fight It (Red Rider) E2 28973 7243 8 28972 2 *
	1981 - As Far as Siam (Red Rider) C2 95938 *
	1983 - Neruda (Red Rider) C2 48450 *
	1984 - Breaking Curfew (Red Rider) E2 28972 7243 8 28972 2 4 *
	1986 - Tom Cochrane & Red Rider (w Red Rider) C2 0 7777 46432 2 1 *
	1987 - Over 60 Minutes with Red Rider (w Red Rider) C2 46886 *
	1988 - Victory Day (w Red Rider) C2 526570 788554T *
	1989 - The Symphony Sessions (w Red Rider) C2 0 7777 26574 2 8 *
	1991 - Mad Mad World (solo) C2-97723 *
	1995 - Ragged Ass Road (solo) 7243 8 32951-28 *
	1997 - Songs of a Circling Spirit (solo) 72438 37239 0 4 *
	1998 - X-Ray Sierra (solo) 7243 8 93924 27 *
	2002 - Trapeze (best of) 7 24354 17542 8 *
	2006 - No Stranger (solo) 0251706042 *



* Denotes my Rip.




The only album missing from this is 1974's "Hang on to Your Resistance" that is next to impossible to find in lossless and, I'm assuming, goes for big bucks. 


Please help seed these FLACs! 




From Wiki:


Tom Cochrane, OC (born May 14, 1953) Canadian musician and humanitarian, best known for his hit songs "Life Is a Highway", "Lunatic Fringe" and "I Wish You Well". Cochrane fronted the Canadian rock band Red Rider and has won seven Juno Awards. He is a member of the Canadian Music Hall of Fame, an Officer of the Order of Canada, has an Honorary Doctorate from Brandon University and is an Honorary Colonel in the Canadian Air Force. In September 2009, he was inducted onto the Canadian Walk of Fame.








With Red Rider


Red Rider was a Canadian rock band popular in the 1980s. While the band achieved great success in Canada, in the US, the band never had a song in the Top 40.

In 1978, Tom Cochrane joined up with Rob Baker on drums, Jeff Jones on bass, Peter Boynton on keyboards and Ken Greer to form Red Rider. They were signed to Capitol Records and released their first album Don't Fight It in 1980. With the singles "White Hot" and "Don't Fight It", the album quickly reached gold status. Their second album As Far as Siam was released in 1981 and featured the hit "Lunatic Fringe" which was used in the 1985 movie Vision Quest and which is now a mainstay on American classic rock radio. The song also saw high rotation on the United States cable network MTV. Two other tracks, "Cowboys in Hong Kong" and "What Have You Got To Do" were featured in an episode of Miami Vice. Boynton was replaced by keyboardist Steve Sexton on Red Rider's third album Neruda, released in 1983. The track "Napoleon Sheds His Skin" would become one of the more popular songs from the album.

For their 1984 album Breaking Curfew, John Webster replaced Sexton on keyboards. The album did not sell as well as Neruda and a dispute with Capitol Records over the future direction of the band resulted in Red Rider being dropped from the record label later in 1984.

The band subsequently signed with RCA. In what became a strong signal regarding the future of the band, they officially became known as Tom Cochrane and Red Rider, and released their self-titled fifth album in 1986 which included Ken "Spider" Sinnaeve on bass.

In 1987, Capitol released a compilation CD titled Over 60 Minutes with Red Rider, covering the band's first four albums.

In the fall of 1988, the band released their sixth album Victory Day which contained the track "Big League," about the death of a young hockey player. The young man's father approached Cochrane on the day of a concert, mentioning that his son was a big fan of Red Rider's song, "Boy Inside The Man." Cochrane asked the man if his son was going to be attending the concert, and the man responded that his son had recently died in a car accident.[1] Another note about "Big League" is that Cochrane and Greer played it at GM place at the start of the 08/09 hockey season to commemorate the passing of Luc Bourdon, a member of the Vancouver Canucks. The song was featured in a segment on CBC Television's Hockey Night in Canada.

Red Rider's final album, The Symphony Sessions, was released in 1989 and saw the band performing with the Edmonton Symphony Orchestra, as Procol Harum had done seventeen years before. Cochrane's solo career was taking off and the band broke up shortly after the album was released.

The three-CD box set Ashes to Diamonds, which includes material by both Red Rider and Cochrane as a solo artist, was released in 1993. Professional wrestler Kurt Angle uses an instrumental version of Lunatic Fringe as his entrance music in TNA. UFC fighter and former Pride Champion Dan "Hendo" Henderson uses Lunatic Fringe as his intro song.

Cochrane, Greer and Jones reunited in 2002, and have been touring as Tom Cochrane and Red Rider since.








Don't Fight It 1980


Don't Fight It is the debut album for the Canadian rock band Red Rider, which was released in 1980 (see 1980 in music). With the singles "White Hot" and "Don't Fight It", the album quickly reached gold status. The album was re-issued on CD July 29, 1994.

The album reached #146 on Billboard's Pop Albums chart while "White Hot" reached #20 on the Canadian charts and #48 on the Pop Singles chart in 1980 and "Don't Fight It" reached #75.

The song "White Hot" is about poet Arthur Rimbaud and his travels through Africa.[1]


Tracks: 


1.	"Don't Fight It" (Cochrane) – 4:25
2.	"How's My Little Girl Tonight" (Cochrane) – 4:05
3.	"Iron in the Soul" (Cochrane) – 3:00
4.	"Make Myself Complete" (Cochrane) – 3:40
5.	"Good News" (Boynton, Jones) – 3:59
6.	"White Hot" (Cochrane, Greer) – 5:07
7.	"Talkin' to Myself" (Boynton) – 3:39
8.	"Just the Way it Goes" (Cochrane, Greer) – 3:46
9.	"Look Out Again" (Boynton, Cochrane) – 3:47
10.	"Avenue 'A'" (Cochrane) – 3:23









As Far As Siam 1981


As Far as Siam is the second studio album by the Canadian rock band Red Rider, which was released in 1981. The album was recorded at Sunset Sound in Los Angeles. The album reached #65 on Billboard's Pop Albums chart in 1981. The single "What Have You Got to do (To Get Off Tonight)" peaked at #16 on the Canadian charts.

"Lunatic Fringe", the band's most famous song, is about what composer Tom Cochrane saw as an alarming rise of anti-Semitism in the 1970s, and was inspired by a book he read about Raoul Wallenberg.[1] The song is featured in the 1985 high-school wrestling movie Vision Quest, the Miami Vice episode Smuggler's Blues, and the My Name is Earl episode Bounty Hunter. The beginning of the song is used as a part of a bump for the Cincinnati radio station, WEBN. It is also the inspiration for Kurt Angle's entrance theme in Total Non-Stop Action Wrestling. It is also used as American Mixed Martial Artist Dan Henderson's entrance theme as of late. American guitarist Gary Hoey covered "Lunatic Fringe" on his 2006 album American Made. The distinctive guitar solo in "Lunatic Fringe" was performed by Kenny Greer on a lap steel, also seen in the song's music video.


Tracks: 

1.	"Lunatic Fringe" – 4:20
2.	"Cowboys in Hong Kong (As Far as Siam)" (Cochrane/Greer/Baker) – 4:06
3.	"Only Game in Town" – 3:18
4.	"Thru the Curtain" (Cochrane/Baker/Jones/Boynton/Greer) – 3:17
5.	"What Have You Got to do (To Get Off Tonight)" – 3:18
6.	"Ships" – 4:36
7.	"Caught in the Middle" – 4:25
8.	"Don't Let Go of Me" – 3:56
9.	"Laughing Man" (Cochrane/Jones) – 3:36









Neruda 1983


Neruda is the third studio album by the Canadian rock band Red Rider, released in 1983 (see 1983 in music). The album was recorded at Metalworks Studios in Toronto, Ontario. The figure on the album cover was inspired by Denise Sexton.

Neruda reached #66 on Billboard's Pop Albums chart in 1983 assisted by the singles "Crack The Sky (Breakaway)" and "Power (Strength In Numbers)" which reached #39 and #13 respectively on Billboard's Mainstream Rock chart. "Human Race" reached #29 in Canada. The album is named after Chilean poet Pablo Neruda.


Tracks: 


1.	"Light in the Tunnel" – 2:25
2.	"Power (Strength in Numbers)" – 3:53
3.	"Human Race" – 2:55
4.	"Can't Turn Back" – 3:50
5.	"Napoleon Sheds His Skin" – 5:40
6.	"Walking the Fine Line" – 4:40
7.	"Winner Takes All" – 3:55
8.	"Sights on You" – 3:27
9.	"Crack the Sky (Breakaway)" – 3:53
10.	"Work Out" – 3:22
11.	"Light in the Tunnel/Human Race" – 4:39
12.	"White Hot" – 5:09 (originally from Don't Fight It)
13.	"Lunatic Fringe" – 4:21 (originally from As Far as Siam)








Breaking Curfew 1984


Breaking Curfew is the fourth studio album by the Canadian rock band Red Rider, released in 1984 (see 1984 in music). The album was recorded and mixed at Metalworks Studios and E.S.P. Studio in Toronto, Ontario and Startling Studios in England.

Breaking Curfew reached #137 on Billboard's 200 chart in 1984 assisted by the single "Young Thing, Wild Dreams (Rock Me)" which hit #44 on the Canadian charts and #71 on Billboard's Hot 100 chart. "Breaking Curfew" also hit #93 in Canada.

Tracks: 


1.	"Whipping Boy" – 3:12
2.	"Young Thing, Wild Dreams (Rock Me)" – 3:32
3.	"One Way Out" – 3:53
4.	"Among the Ruins (I'll Be Here)" – 4:34
5.	"Breaking Curfew" – 3:43
6.	"Someone's Watching" – 4:00
7.	"Shake Monster" – 4:45
8.	"Beacon Hill" – 4:51
9.	"Hold Tight" – 4:38









Tom Cochrane & Red Rider 1986


Tom Cochrane & Red Rider is the fifth studio album by the Canadian rock band Red Rider, released on May 7, 1986 (see 1986 in music). A remastered CD was released by EMI in 2004.

The album reached #116 on Billboard's 200 chart in 1986. In Canada "Boy Inside the Man" reached #27, "The Untouchable One" hit #70, "One More Time (Some Old Habits)" hit #85, and "Ocean Blues (Emotion Blue)" made #88.


Tracks: 

1.	"Boy Inside the Man"
2.	"Love Under Fire" 
3.	"The Untouchable One"
4.	"Lasting Song"
5.	"Citizen Cain"
6.	"Ashes to Diamonds"
7.	"The Loading" 
8.	"Ocean Blues (Emotion Blue)"
9.	"River of Stone"
10.	"One More Time (Some Old Habits)" 









Over 60 Minutes with ... 1987


Over 60 Minutes with Red Rider is a compilation album for the Canadian rock band Red Rider, which was released in 1987 (see 1987 in music).


Tracks: 


1.	"Light in the Tunnel"
2.	"Power (Strength in Numbers)"
3.	"Human Race"
4.	"Can't Turn Back"
5.	"Napoleon Sheds His Skin"
6.	"Walking the Fine Line"
7.	"Winner Take All"
8.	"Crack the Sky (Breakaway)"
9.	"Lunatic Fringe"
10.	"Cowboys in Hong Kong (As Far as Siam)"
11.	"Thru the Curtain"
12.	"What Have You Got to Do"
13.	"White Hot"
14.	"Don't Fight It"
15.	"Avenue "A""
16.	"Young Thing, Wild Dreams (Rock Me)"
17.	"Breaking Curfew"









Victory Day 1988


Victory Day is an album for the Canadian rock band, Tom Cochrane & Red Rider, which was released in 1988 (see 1988 in music).

Tracks:


1.	"Big League"
2.	"Victory Day"
3.	"Sons Beat Down"
4.	"Different Drummer"
5.	"Good Times"
6.	"Saved by the Dawn"
7.	"Calling America"
8.	"Vacation (In My Mind)"
9.	"Good Man (Feeling Bad)"
10.	"Not So Far Away"








The Symphony Sessions 1989


The Symphony Sessions was a live album released in 1989 by Tom Cochrane and Red Rider. It was the band's seventh and final album. The album was recorded with the Edmonton Symphony Orchestra at the Northern Alberta Jubilee Auditorium in Edmonton, Alberta. Following this album, Tom Cochrane pursued a solo career, releasing Mad Mad World in 1991.

The album was recorded by Biff Dawes and the Westwood One mobile unit over two days and featured on one of the "Westwood One live" concert series shows. Two tracks recorded during these sessions were featured on the Westwood One concert but did not make the final album cut: "Ocean Blues (Emotion Blue)" and "The Untouchable One". Both songs are from the 1986 self-titled Tom Cochrane & Red Rider album.

Tom Cochrane explained the idea behind the album: "When we put our songs together... Kenny (Greer) has sort of a classical background, as I do... we never had the budget or the means to do it with these kind of players, plus you want to keep it intact as a band, so we've always done it with synthesizers and whatever we had at hand, so it's nice to go in with a real complement of players and have them contribute like they did. In our music, "Lunatic Fringe," for example, there are parts implied that we thought should be transposed from keyboard to orchestral instruments, and then in other areas we gave George (Blondheim) carte blanche and said, 'Do what you want, add some creative input'. "
The concerts were recorded live with a 56-piece orchestra and then mixed down at the Metalworks Studios in Toronto.


Tracks:

 
1.	"Light in the Tunnel" (instrumental) - 2:28
2.	"Human Race" - 3:48
3.	"Can't Turn Back" - 10:22
4.	"Napoleon Sheds His Skin" - 6:19
5.	"White Hot" (T. Cochrane, K. Greer) - 6:18
6.	"Big League" - 5:37 +
7.	"Calling America" - 4:53 +
8.	"Avenue 'A' " - 3:57
9.	"Bird on a Wire" (Leonard Cohen) - 3:21
10.	"Boy Inside the Man" - 9:49
11.	"Lunatic Fringe" - 5:01
12.	"Good Times" - 4:53 +
13.	"The Next Life" - 3:41 *








Mad Mad World 1991


Mad Mad World is the first solo album by Canadian singer Tom Cochrane, originally released in 1991. The first single from the album, "Life Is a Highway", became a hit in late 1991, reaching #1 in Canada and #6 on the Billboard Hot 100 in the United States.[1]

The album earned Cochrane four Juno Awards including Album of the Year, Single of the Year, Male Vocalist of the Year, and Songwriter of the Year. In addition, Cochrane won two SOCAN Awards and an ASCAP Award. Mad Mad World achieved a Diamond sales award in Canada for selling more than 1 million copies in Cochrane's native Canada.

The album also included the hits "No Regrets" (#3 RPM Canadian Charts), "Sinking Like a Sunset" (#2 RPM Canadian Charts), "Washed Away" (#7 RPM Canadian Charts), "Bigger Man" and the title track "Mad Mad World". The album was produced by Joe Hardy and was recorded in Memphis, Tennessee and at three different Ontario studios: Metalworks in Mississauga, Hungry Hollow Studio in Georgetown and at Cochrane's cabin in Oakville.


Tracks: 


1.	"Life Is a Highway" – 4:24
2.	"Mad Mad World" – 4:56
3.	"No Regrets" – 4:38
4.	"Sinking Like a Sunset" (Annette Ducharme) – 5:45
5.	"Washed Away" – 5:20
6.	"Everything Comes Around" – 4:32
7.	"The Secret is to Know When to Stop" (Cochrane, John Cody) – 4:19
8.	"Brave and Crazy" – 5:51
9.	"Bigger Man" – 4:26
10.	"Friendly Advice" – 4:27
11.	"Get Back Up" – 4:39
12.	"Emotional Truth" – 5:59
13.	"All the King's Men" – 4:33








Ragged Ass Road 1995


Ragged Ass Road is the second solo album album by former Red Rider frontman Tom Cochrane, released in October of 1995. The album was named for Ragged Ass Road, a street in Yellowknife, Northwest Territories. Songs from the album include "I Wish You Well", which became the first Canadian song to debut at #1 on the RPM Canadian Singles Charts, as well as three other Top 20 hits in Canada: "Wildest Dreams" (#5 RPM Canadian Charts), "Dreamer's Dream" (#4 RPM Canadian Charts) and "Crawl" (#11 RPM Canadian Charts). Ragged Ass Road earned two Juno award nominations and achieved Platinum sales status in Canada. The album was produced by Cochrane and John Webster at Metalworks Studios and Ragged Ass Road Studios.


Tracks: 


1.	"I Wish You Well" (Cochrane) – 4:24
2.	"Wildest Dreams" (Cochrane) – 4:12
3.	"Just Scream" (Cochrane) – 4:53
4.	"Paper Tigers" (Cochrane) – 3:56
5.	"Crawl" (Bell/Cochrane) – 4:15
6.	"Ragged Ass Road" (Cochrane) – 4:45
7.	"Flowers in the Concrete" (Ducharme) – 4:02
8.	"Dreamer's Dream" (Cochrane) – 4:57
9.	"Message (Rise Up Again)" (Cochrane) – 4:33
10.	"Best Waste of Time" (Ducharme) – 4:36
11.	"Will of the Gun" (Ducharme) – 4:46
12.	"Song Before I Leave" (Cochrane) – 4:34








Songs of a Circling Spirit 1997


Songs of a Circling Spirit is an album by Canadian musician Tom Cochrane released in 1997 (see 1997 in music). The album contains newly-recorded acoustic versions of selected songs written by Cochrane, and previously recorded either by Cochrane or Red Rider.


Tracks: 

1.	"Lunatic Fringe" – 4:37
2.	"Paper Tigers" – 3:39
3.	"Good Man Feeling Bad" – 4:11
4.	"Brave and Crazy" – 4:30
5.	"All the King's Men" – 4:11
6.	"Dreamer's Dream" – 4:53
7.	"Human Race" – 3:18
8.	"Napoleon Sheds His Skin" – 5:47
9.	"White Hot" – 4:39
10.	"Boy Inside the Man" – 3:40
11.	"Washed Away" – 5:20
12.	"I Wish You Well" – 4:44








X-Ray Sierra 1999


Released in February 1999, X-Ray Sierra was a critically acclaimed solo album by former Red Rider frontman Tom Cochrane. It featured the hits "I Wonder", "Willie Dixon Said", "Heartbreak Girl" and "Stonecutters Arms". Cochrane received a Best Male Vocalist Juno nomination for X-Ray Sierra. The album was recorded at Metalworks Studios in Toronto and Hipposonic Studios in Vancouver and was produced by Cochrane and John Webster.


Tracks: 


1.	"I Wonder" – 3:44
2.	"Stonecutter's Arms" – 4:54
3.	"Art of Listening" – 4:17
4.	"Heartbreak Girl" – 4:21
5.	"Willie Dixon Said" – 4:06
6.	"Marianne and Lenny" – 5:25
7.	"Beautiful Day" – 4:54
8.	"Windy Night in Fall" – 4:50
9.	"Piece of Your Soul" – 4:11
10.	"This is the World" – 4:08
11.	"Northern Frontier" – 4:19








Trapeze 2002



Disc: 1


1. White Hot 
2. Avenue a 
3. Lunatic Fringe 
4. Light in the Tunnel 
5. Power (Strength in Numbers) 
6. Human Race 
7. Can't Turn Back 
8. Napoleon Sheds His Skin 
9. Neruda 
10. Young Thing, Wild Dreams (Rock Me) 
11. Boy Inside the Man 
12. Untouchable One 
13. Ocean Blues (Emotion Blues) 
14. Big League 
15. Victory Day 
16. Good Times 
17. Just Like Ali 


Disc: 2


1. Life Is a Highway 
2. Mad Mad World 
3. No Regrets 
4. Sinking Like a Sunset 
5. Washed Away 
6. Brave and Crazy 
7. I Wish You Well 
8. Wildest Dreams 
9. Paper Tigers 
10. Dreamer's Dream 
11. I Wonder 
12. Stonecutter's Arms 
13. Pictures from the Edge 


Disc 3 - Limited Edition Live Disc


1. This is The World
2. Big League
3. Good Times
4. No Regrets
5. Life Is a Highway
6. Lunatic Fringe
7. Boy Inside the Man








No Stranger 2006


No Stranger is Canadian singer Tom Cochrane's first album for Universal Music Canada released in October 2006. No Stranger included the hits "Didn't Mean", "The Party's Not Over", "Northern Star", "Out of My Head", and a cover version of Norman Greenbaum's "Spirit in the Sky". Former Red Rider bandmates Ken Greer and Jeff Jones performed on the album.

Recording took place at Metalworks and Layastone. Cochrane produced the album and mixed it at his studio in Northern Ontario. No Stranger received a Juno Award nomination for Canadian Adult Alternative Album of the Year.


Tracks: 

1.	"The Party's Not Over" – 3:30
2.	"Glide" – 4:12
3.	"While You are Young" – 3:54
4.	"White Horse" – 4:34
5.	"Didn't Mean" – 4:08
6.	"Rough and Tumble" – 4:29
7.	"Out of My Head" – 3:49
8.	"Deep Breath" – 4:13
9.	"Northern Star" – 4:44
10.	"Since You Left Me" – 3:32
11.	"Colour Blue" – 1:15
12.	"Spirit in the Sky" – 3:12




Enjoy Tom Cochrane & Red Rider :)

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