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The Kinks - Discography -flac Songs- -pmedia- --- Here

The "The Kinks - Discography -FLAC Songs- -PMEDIA- ---" represents a commitment to musical preservation. For fans of Ray and Dave Davies, listening to these albums in FLAC is not just about file formats; it is about experiencing the British Invasion, the swinging sixties, and the height of rock storytelling in the highest quality possible.

Recommendation: If you locate this archive, ensure you verify the integrity of the files (check for .log files) and ensure you have a sound system or high-quality headphones that can actually reproduce the detail that FLAC files offer.


Title: The Last Kinks Archive

Marco ran a private music blog called PMEDIA, known among audiophiles for one thing: perfect FLAC rips of albums that had never seen a proper digital release. His crowning achievement was nearly complete—the complete discography of The Kinks, from their 1964 debut to the ragged 1990s swansong.

But not just any Kinks files. These were sourced from a forgotten DAT tape collection owned by a former Pye Records engineer. Every crackle of Ray Davies’ acoustic guitar on Waterloo Sunset, every snarled guitar feedback on You Really Got Me—captured in 24-bit FLAC, untouched by remastering compression.

One night, Marco received a private message on PMEDIA from an account named villagegreen. No avatar, no prior posts. The message read:

“You have the 1968 sessions for ‘The Kinks Are the Village Green Preservation Society.’ Track 13 on your rip—‘People Take Pictures of Each Other’—there’s a fade-out at 2:10. My copy doesn’t fade. It keeps going. Ray whispers something after the band stops. Want to hear it?” The Kinks - Discography -FLAC Songs- -PMEDIA- ---

Marco’s heart pounded. He’d compared his FLACs to every known vinyl rip, CD, and bootleg. There was no hidden audio. He typed back: “Send proof.”

The user attached a 30-second FLAC snippet. In the silence after the song’s final chord, a faint voice—unmistakably Ray Davies—murmured:
“They never found the master tape for this bit. Tell PMEDIA to keep digging.”

Then the account vanished. Deleted.

Marco never found that extended version. But he kept the snippet, hidden in a folder named “Kinks_Discography_FLAC_PMEDIA_Private.” And every time he played it, he wondered what other secrets were buried in the grooves of the world’s most underrated band.

Some said villagegreen was the engineer’s ghost. Others said it was Ray himself, trolling collectors from a seaside café. Marco didn’t care. He had the whisper. And the whisper said the music was never finished.



Title: The Kinks – Complete Discography (FLAC) – PMEDIA Preserve The "The Kinks - Discography -FLAC Songs- -PMEDIA-

Subtitle: From "You Really Got Me" to "To the Bone" – The Ultimate Audiophile Collection

Body:

For decades, Ray Davies has been lauded as rock’s sharpest social commentator, and brother Dave Davies provided the grittiest guitar riffs of the British Invasion. If you have been searching for the definitive digital archive of The Kinks’ studio output, this PMEDIA curated collection is the gold standard.

This isn’t just a best-of playlist. This is a complete chronological deep dive into one of the most eclectic, underrated, and brilliant catalogs in rock history.

All files are presented in FLAC (Free Lossless Audio Codec) format, sourced from PMEDIA standards—ensuring bit-perfect rips of original master tapes, high-quality vinyl rips (where appropriate), and official CD pressings. No transcodes, no degraded MP3s.

  • The Village Green Period (1968–1972)

  • The Arena Rock Era (1972–1979)

  • The 80s & Beyond (1980–1994)

  • Bonus Material: To the Bone (1994 acoustic/live) and B-side collections.

    1. Kinks (1964)

    2. Kinda Kinks (1965)

    3. The Kink Kontroversy (1965)

    4. Face to Face (1966)

    5. Something Else by The Kinks (1967)