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Mostrando postagens com marcador Pop. Mostrar todas as postagens

3.12.18

REBEKKA BAKKEN & WOLFGANG MUTHSPIEL - Daily Mirror Reflected [2001]

If you found Daily Mirror, the avant-garde jazz song project of singer Rebekka Bakken and guitarist Wolfgang Muthspiel, to be just a bit too abstract, then you might want to take a stroll through this album, which consists of sometimes drastically remixed versions of songs from Daily Mirror. Many of these reworkings are no less challenging than the original songs. Ashley Slater and Tom Gandey's treatment of "Wonders," for example, takes bizarre electronic liberties with Bakken's voice and creates a strange digital collage using delay and a cheesy beatbox rhythm; "Emotions on a Lazy Day" is given a trip-hop setting by Gregor Hibe in which Muthspiel's guitar lines are torn to pieces and then thrown into a vortex of jungly breakbeats while Bakken sings sweetly above the fray. "Drawing Lines" gets a jazzy house mix at the hands of DJ Jeremiah, while the "Air of Decay Beatbox Mix" of "Angela" comes out sounding like an outtake from My Life in the Bush of Ghosts. Avant-garde dance music simply doesn't get much better than this. by Rick Anderson
Tracklist
1     Wonders (Ashley Slater & Tom Gandey Remix)    7:15
    Remix – Ashley Slater, Tom Gandey
2     Smack Of Dogskin (Godskin Remix)    5:11
    Remix – aleXdrum, Karl MöstlTrumpet – Matthieu Michel
3     Emotions On A Lazy Day (Emotions-Drumboi-Remix)    5:23
    Remix – Gregor Hilbe
4     Angela (Plush Mix)    6:39
    Remix – Steve Argüelles
5     It's OK (TeddyBut Remix)    6:34
    Remix – Teddy Kumpel
6     Nowhere (Hollywood Voodoo Lounge Remix)    6:41
    Remix – Frank Rothkamm
7     Drawing Lines (House Remix)    4:25
    Remix – DJ Jeremiah
8     Smack Of Dogskin     5:17
    (Remix With Aleatoire Programmation By Frederic Galliano)
9     Angela (An Air Of Decay Beatbox Mix)     4:21
Credits
    Lyrics By – Bernd Hagg (tracks: 2 to 4, 6 to 9)
    Music By – Wolfgang Muthspiel (tracks: 2 to 4, 6 to 9)
    Producer – Wolfgang Muthspiel
    Written-By – Rebekka Bakken (tracks: 1, 5)
 REBEKKA BAKKEN & WOLFGANG MUTHSPIEL
 Daily Mirror Reflected
 [2001] Material Records / CBR320 / scans
O Púbis da Rosa

10.6.18

ANN-MARGRET - On the Way Up [1962] RCA / FLAC

Ann-Margret's RCA Victor debut album, And Here She Is..., didn't get much attention in 1961, but she did better with her bluesy single "I Just Don't Understand," which peaked in the Top 20 in September. That set up this, her second solo LP, which featured "I Just Don't Understand," and like it was recorded partially in Nashville under the aegis of Chet Atkins and Dick Pierce. The two naturally brought a slight country feel to some of the tracks, notably the remakes of Don Gibson's 1958 hit "Oh, Lonesome Me" and the 1960-1961 hit "My Last Date (With You)" (aka "Last Date"). But the closest approximation of the sound was the kind of country-inflected pop/rock being pursued by Elvis Presley around the same time, which made a rendition of Presley's first major hit, "Heartbreak Hotel," an appropriate choice. At 20, Ann-Margret was an effective singer, if something of a chameleon, seeming to adopt a different persona for each number. She was at her most seductive singing Otis Blackwell's "Slowly," and she came on like a Latin fireball on "Fever," but was demure on the singles-chart entry "What Am I Supposed to Do" and ingenuously winning on "Moon River." RCA Victor appears to have been hoping it had found a distaff Presley, and it's possible Ann-Margret might have justified such a hope if her film acting career hadn't quickly outpaced her recording career; by the time this album was released, her movie debut, Pocketful of Miracles, had been out for several months and State Fair, which would establish her as a redheaded bombshell, was just getting into theaters. (She was still a mousy brunette on the album cover.) On the Way Up was an appropriate title, but records would soon take a back seat to other career goals.  by William Ruhlmann 
Track Listing
 1 Oh, Lonesome Me 2:37
Don Gibson
2 Slowly 2:07
Otis Blackwell
 3 Fever 2:52
Eddie Cooley / John Davenport
 4 What Do You Want From Me 2:32
Mike Cain
 5 Heartbreak Hotel 2:28
Mae Boren Axton / Tommy Durden / Elvis Presley
 6 I Just Don't Understand 2:40
Kent Westberry / Marijohn Wilkin
 7 His Ring 2:23
William Katz / Ruth Roberts
 8 Could It Be?  2:13
Patti Ferguson / Barry De Vorzon
9 What Am I Supposed to Do 2:48  
Helen Carter
 10 Let Me Go, Lover! 3:00
Jenny Carson / Al Hill
 11 Moon River 2:30
Henry Mancini / Johnny Mercer
 12 My Last Date (with You) 2:37
Boudleaux Bryant / Floyd Cramer / Skeeter Davis
 Credits
Producer – Chet Atkins, Dick Pierce

ANN-MARGRET - On the Way Up
[1962] BMG / FLAC / scans
O Púbis da Rosa

25.12.17

DAVID BOWIE - Space Oddity [1969]


When David Bowie's second album appeared in late 1969, he was riding high. His first ever hit single, the super-topical "Space Oddity," had scored on the back of the moon landing that summer, and so distinctive an air did it possess that, for a moment, its maker really did seem capable of soaring as high as Major Tom. Sadly, it was not to be. "Space Oddity" aside, Bowie possessed very little in the way of commercial songs, and the ensuing album (his second) emerged as a dense, even rambling, excursion through the folky strains that were the last glimmering of British psychedelia. Indeed, the album's most crucial cut, the lengthy "Cygnet Committee," was nothing less than a discourse on the death of hippiness, shot through with such bitterness and bile that it remains one of Bowie's all-time most important numbers -- not to mention his most prescient. The verse that unknowingly name-checks both the Sex Pistols ("the guns of love") and the Damned is nothing if not a distillation of everything that brought punk to its knees a full nine years later. The remainder of the album struggles to match the sheer vivacity of "Cygnet Committee," although "Unwashed and Slightly Dazed" comes close to packing a disheveled rock punch, all the more so as it bleeds into a half minute or so of Bowie wailing "Don't Sit Down" -- an element that, mystifyingly, was hacked from the 1972 reissue of the album. "Janine" and "An Occasional Dream" are pure '60s balladry, and "God Knows I'm Good" takes a well-meant but somewhat clumsy stab at social comment. Two final tracks, however, can be said to pinpoint elements of Bowie's own future. The folk epic "Wild Eyed Boy from Freecloud" (substantially reworked from the B-side of the hit) would remain in Bowie's live set until as late as 1973, while a re-recorded version of the mantric "Memory of a Free Festival" would become a single the following year, and marked Bowie's first studio collaboration with guitarist Mick Ronson. The album itself however, proved another dead end in a career that was gradually piling up an awful lot of such things.   by Dave Thompson 
Tracklist  
1 Space Oddity 5:14
Arranged By – David Bowie, Paul Buckmaster
Producer – Gus Dudgeon
2 Unwashed And Somewhat Slightly Dazed 6:11
3 (Don't Sit Down) 0:40
4 Letter To Hermione 2:31
5 Cygnet Committee 9:31
6 Janine 3:21
7 An Occasional Dream 2:55
8 Wild Eyed Boy From Freecloud 4:47
9 God Knows I'm Good 3:16
10 Memory Of A Free Festival 7:08
Credits
Acoustic Guitar – Keith Christmas
Arranged By – David Bowie (tracks: 1 to 10), Paul Buckmaster (tracks: 1), Tony Visconti (tracks: 2 to 10)
 Bass – Herbie Flowers, John Lodge,  Tony Visconti
Cello – Paul Buckmaster
Drums – John Cambridge, Terry Cox
Flute – Tim Renwick, Tony Visconti
Guitar – Mick Wayne, Tim Renwick
Harmonica – Benny Marshall And Friends
Harpsichord [Electric Harpsichord] – Rick Wakeman
Kalimba – David Bowie
Organ [Rosedale Electric Chord Organ] – David Bowie
Stylophone – David Bowie
Twelve-String Guitar – David Bowie
Vocals – David Bowie
Written-By – David Bowie (tracks: 1 to 10)
Notes
This album has been released and re-released with various titles and various cover-designs over time. It's generally considered Bowie's first rock album.

The 1969 original versions were released on Philips and titled "David Bowie" while the concurrent North American (US and Canada) releases on Mercury had a strap line "Man of Words/Man of Music" at the top of the album. Although Mercury still cataloged it as "David Bowie" it was commonly called by the strap line and when RCA repackaged and re-released it in 1972, they erroneously referred to this advertising title. Both Philips and Mercury releases use images from the same 1969 portrait photo-shoot on the front cover, but as the Mercury image is a different frame and enlarged the artwork surrounding the portrait was not included.

The 1969 North American Mercury release removes a short hidden track, between track 2 and 3. On the UK Philips edition this piece of music was, as indicated by the groove rills, at the beginning of the third track "Letter to Hermione", yet was timed as being part of the second track.

In 1972 following Bowie's commercial breakthrough, the North American version, without the hidden track, was re-released by RCA titled after the album's hit, "Space Oddity", and with a then current facial portrait photo on the cover. Rear cover art, when including timings, still included the hidden track even though it was not present on any RCA issue. This title and cover art version had international re-releases in 1984 by RCA.

In 1990, using the same front cover as the 1972 RCA issue, the album was issued by RYKO and subsequently EMI with the hidden track subsequently restored and named for the first time - "Don't Sit Down".

All later official editions contain the music as presented on the original 1969 UK Philips album - and post 1997 most do not name the hidden track.

In 1999 EMI and Virgin re-released the album with the 30 year old 1969 cover but with the 1972 title.

Finally, in 2009 for the 40th Anniversary edition it was re-released by EMI and Virgin with title and cover art exactly as the original UK release.


The musicians on the album were hired for the sessions and included among others Herbie Flowers, Rick Wakeman, Tony Visconti and members of the band Junior's Eyes, who would act as Bowie's band promoting the album. While the album didn't chart in 1969 and was considered a commercial failure, the 1972 re-release charted in 17th position on the UK charts
 DAVID BOWIE - Space Oddity
 [1969] Philips / CBR320 / scans

5.9.17

SHOCKING BLUE - At Home [1969] Netherlands / FLAC

American listeners tend to remember Shocking Blue as the one-hit wonder behind the chart-topper "Venus," a melting pot of rock rhythms, country guitar licks, organ riffs, and Mariska Veres' heavily accented vocals. Sounding something like a cross between "96 Tears" and "Sugar, Sugar," "Venus" was not entirely representative of the group's first album, At Home. Like their fellow countrymen Golden Earring, Shocking Blue purveyed a mild strain of psychedelic rock, but leaned more toward country and folk music than bubblegum. Guitarist and principal songwriter Robby Van Leeuwen was already preoccupied with Americana at this early stage, from "Harley Davidson" and "California Here I Come" to a surprising rendition of the folk song "Boll Weevil" that sets the traditional lyrics to music reminiscent of the Easybeats' "Good Times." (The group's country music fixation would manifest itself more overtly on later albums). Van Leeuwen's sitar is pictured on the album cover and dominates the instrumental "Acka Raga," but, thankfully, is not overused. "Mighty Joe" and "Never Marry a Railroad Man" were minor U.S. chart hits that few people remember, but "Love Buzz" gained a measure of fame decades later when Nirvana covered it. Veres has great presence -- like a gypsy incarnation of Grace Slick -- but Van Leeuwen's English-language lyrics can be awkward at times. On "Venus," all the components clicked perfectly into place, but there is much more to Shocking Blue than their biggest hit.
Track List:
1. Boll Weevil [02:43]
2. I'll Write Your Name Through The Fire [02:59]
3. Acka Raga [03:08]
4. Love Machine [03:21]
5. I'm A Woman [03:03]
6. Venus [03:08]
7. California Here I Come [03:17]
8. Poor Boy [02:28]
9. Long And Lonesome Road [02:50]
10. Love Buzz [03:46]
11. The Butterfly And I [04:05]
12. Harley Davidson [02:41]
13. Fireball Of Love [03:04]
14. Hot Sand [02:41]
15. Wild Wind [02:12]
Total Time: 00:45:19
Cor v. d. Beek
Klaasje v. d. Wal
Mariska Veres
Robby van Leeuwen

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