-extra Quality- Tommy Bolin 1966 1976 Fever Box Set 15 Cdsl [portable] -

Tommy Bolin — “Extra Quality: Fever (1966–1976)” 15-CD Box Set

Is It Worth the Collector's Price?

  1. The Source Material: Unlike previous reissues which used vinyl rips or second-generation tapes, the producers located the original 16-track and 24-track masters from the now-defunct Nimbus 9 and TK Records vaults. The low-end response on “Bustin’ Out For Rosey” will rattle your subwoofer in a way you have never heard.
  2. The Booklet: A 200-page hardbound book. Not glossy PR photos, but contact sheets, roadie itineraries, and handwritten letters from Bolin to his mother discussing his fear of flying. There is a two-page spread dedicated to his pedalboard in 1976, annotated by his guitar tech.
  3. The Unreleased Mixes: Disc 7 is entirely dedicated to the "Quadrophonic Mixes" of Come Taste the Band, which isolate Bolin’s guitar in the rear channels. If you have a surround sound system, you can finally play air guitar along to “Getting Tighter” with the actual stem.

The beauty of Fever is its chronological audacity. It refuses to separate the sideman from the solo star, instead showing how a 14-year-old garage rocker in Sioux City, Iowa, became the man who replaced both Joe Walsh (in the James Gang) and Ritchie Blackmore (in Deep Purple).

Historical Jams:

Features rare collaborations such as a Jeff Beck Jam and recordings with flutist Jeremy Steig and drummer Billy Cobham. -Extra Quality- Tommy Bolin 1966 1976 Fever Box Set 15 Cdsl

For guitar enthusiasts and fans of classic rock, blues, and jazz, the "Tommy Bolin 1966-1976 Fever Box Set" is a dream come true. This comprehensive 15-CD collection is a meticulously curated tribute to the life and work of Tommy Bolin, a legendary guitarist, singer, and songwriter who left an indelible mark on the music world during his tragically short career. The Source Material: Unlike previous reissues which used

Availability: Limited to 5,000 numbered copies. Check the official Tommy Bolin archives for the 2026 re-pressing. The beauty of Fever is its chronological audacity