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王菲 (Faye Wong) – Di-Dar [SACD DSD DFF]

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專輯名稱:Di-Dar SACD
專輯演出:王菲
發行公司:新藝寶
采樣率:DSD 2.8224 MHz
比特率:5645kbps
聲道:2聲道
采樣比特:1bits
編碼:DSD64

專輯介紹:

她于1995年推出粵語新專輯《Di-Dar》,在音樂、造型和音樂錄像帶中都體現出一種頹廢灰暗的氛圍。大碟共10首歌曲,曲目名字全部是兩個漢字或音節(如《Di-Dar》),除國語歌《流星》外的9首粵語歌都是香港知名詞作人林夕負責。王菲自己譜曲《Di-Dar》和《假期》兩首作品:在《Di-Dar》中又一次運用了卷舌拖音的技巧,後者的旋律則十分詭異。由C.Y.Kong作曲的《無題》和《迷路》有濃厚的中東風味。抒情類的歌曲有《享受》、《一半》等,但都是慢熱型的曲目。《暧昧》是翻唱台灣女音樂人黃莺莺的《情雪》,也是此碟中知名度最高的獲獎歌曲。王菲的另類風格,已經從《討好自己》中的逃避態度轉化爲頹廢兼詭異,滲透著很濃的異域風情。音樂錄像帶中,她在淩亂的房間中無所事事、鏡頭不停搖擺晃動,呈現出無助、壓抑和躁悶的心態。但在專輯的封面和內頁中,她的發型與服裝則用蝴蝶背景襯托,十分華麗。

這是王菲最後一張也是她最出色的粵語專集,在出了這張唱片後王菲宣布以後再也不出粵語唱片,這也爲她的粵語專集劃上了一個完美的句號。10首歌曲9首粵語一首國語《流星》,沒有一首不動聽,沒有一首有湊數之嫌,王菲的粵語歌曲在95年達到了最高峰。風格上,仍是以英式迷幻爲主,濃重的迷幻色彩是這張專集的最大特色,制作上極度精致優雅,林夕首次在包辦全部9首粵語歌詞,字字珠玑,美不勝收,特別《迷路》一曲,詞曲唱編全部無懈可擊,也有流行曲如《暧昧》。此版是香港發行,2003年采用SACD制式由德國重新壓制。

專輯曲目:

Di-Dar
假期
迷路
暧昧
或者
我想
享受
一半
無題
流星

Download:

mqs.link_DiDar.part1.rar
mqs.link_DiDar.part2.rar

SACD ISO

http://mqs.link/%E7%8E%8B%E8%8F%B2-faye-wong-di-dar-sacd-iso/


Mark Knopfler – Tracker (2015) [Qobuz FLAC 24bit/192kHz]

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Mark Knopfler – Tracker (2015)
FLAC (tracks) 24 bit/192kHz  | Time – 01:14:40  minutes | 2,71 GB | Genre: Rock
Official Digital Download – Source: Qobuz | © Will D. Side Limited
Recorded: British Grove Studios, London

You won’t be seeing Mark Knopfler in melodramatic newspaper headlines or on talent show panels. The much-travelled craftsman prefers to reside wherever the song takes him, from writing room to rehearsal space, recording studio to concert hall. He is, as tirelessly and inquisitively as ever, on the trail of some musical truth, just as he has been since the 45s of Ricky Nelson and Lonnie Donegan, or the playing of Hank Marvin and Duane Eddy, sent him down a path that led to 125 million record sales.

That approach to his life’s work is how the title of his new, eighth solo album (not counting a myriad of collaborations, productions and film soundtracks) came into being. It’s the other half, if you like, of his typically acclaimed double set Privateering, which graced top tens throughout Europe and beyond in 2012.
“Privateering came about because, in a sense, that’s how I saw the whole thing, my operation,” he muses. “Tracker is a very similar sort of thing. You’re involved in tracking down subject matter, tracking down an idea, investigating the whole thing. Sometimes you’re not exactly sure what it is you’re tracking, and you find out as you’re circling it, and getting closer to it. That’s part of the thrill.”
Hence a delightful, deeply rewarding new batch of creations to captivate Knopfler’s millions of devotees, and to bewitch the next generation. Co-produced with his longtime confidant Guy Fletcher, it features an A-list of frequent collaborators, such as John McCusker on fiddle and cittern, Mike McGoldrick on whistle and flute, bassist Glenn Worf and drummer Ian ‘Ianto’ Thomas.
Tracker also contains a new cast of characters drawn from Mark’s endless fascination with people, both real and imagined, and places and times in his own life. “You’re also tracking back in time, and to me the question of time is much more important as I’ve got older,” he says. “Some of the songs will, I hope, reflect all that. Sometimes, as well, you’re tracking around the world playing to people.”
The prolific Knopfler set to work on this new endeavour after being asked by his old friend Bob Dylan to tour with him, not once, but twice, on a European jaunt in autumn 2011 and a North American equivalent a year later. There was also the little matter of Mark’s own Privateering tour, which as usual took him and his bespoke band all over Europe, with 70 shows over three months in 2013. The itinerary included another six nights at what has almost become his second home in London, the Royal Albert Hall.
“The tours with Bob, I hadn’t expected to turn up but they did, so that changed the recording schedule, and it’ll probably have changed the album, too, when I eventually got back into the studio. So I’m glad all of that happened, because I think that will have informed some of the stuff on Tracker too.”
The relationship with Dylan is an example of the way that Knopfler moves, with a marked absence of self-importance, in only the most distinguished musical circles. Their story goes back to the early days of Dire Straits, whom Dylan came to see in Los Angeles as they toured their first, self-titled album there in 1979, after which Mark co-produced Bob’s 1983 album Infidels.
Tracker also features the fruits of newer friendships, for example on two elegant saxophone cameos by Nigel Hitchcock on ‘River Towns’ and ‘Wherever I Go.’ The latter song is the graceful ballad that closes the album and features Mark duetting with singer-songwriter Ruth Moody.
“I came across Ruth through hearing her singing with the Wailin’ Jennys, her Canadian three-piece girl outfit,” he explains. “They always sounded great, and I saw Ruth singing on The Transatlantic Sessions. Then I realised that, of course, she was making her own records, and that they were beautiful. There’s just something celestial about her voice. It’s quite clear that she’s the right stuff. I guess it’s just something you recognise.”
The lead single is the sparky, uptempo ‘Beryl,’ inspired by one of his favourite authors. “Beryl Bainbridge was a marvellous writer, as many people know, but the fact that she was a self-deprecating, working class girl from Liverpool — and her publisher was a man who didn’t have a very high opinion of the novel — all of those things conspired for her never to be given the Booker Prize, although she was nominated five times.
“Beryl never went to university, and I really think the literary establishment back then tended to favour people who came from a different background, and had a different kind of education. There was an ‘Oxbridge’ prejudice against people like her, which existed only at that time, thankfully it doesn’t now.”
Of all the songs on Tracker, this one has the loudest echoes of the early days of Dire Straits, and it’s intentional. “I think there was a definite nod to the early Straits with ‘Beryl,’” he agrees. “That was a deliberate thing, going back to a period because it seemed to suit the song. I took a sort of ‘Sultans of Swing’ approach to it for that reason, because it’s something you’d associate with a time. So in your head, there’s an appropriateness to the style. You just hope you can bring it off.”
Also among the highlights is another vivid character song drawn from real life, ‘Basil,’ about the poet Basil Bunting. “When I was 15, I was a copy boy on the Evening Chronicle in Newcastle, it was a Saturday afternoon job that I had,” explains Mark. “I’d go in to the newspaper office, and you’d deal with all the sports copy coming in, and you’d be putting them in tubes, down to the printer’s, or going over to the sub’s desk.
“There was a chap working there who was very different from the others. He was grumpy and he was older, and differently dressed, and I learned that that was Basil Bunting. It was very clear that he’d rather be writing poetry than writing copy for the Evening Chronicle, and he didn’t really fit. So in a way it was the contrast between him and me, because at that age I had the whole world in front of me. I had a different way of looking at the world entirely, you’re thinking it’s all rosy promise. So he fascinated me.”
Another character acknowledged, if not by name, is one of Knopfler’s favourite musicians, the late and great JJ Cale, who did so much to inform the early Dire Straits sound. “‘Broken Bones’ is similar to a JJ production in the sense that I was just using a tiny little amp, without the band, more like a demo, and a lot of JJ’s things were done that way.
“It was an honour to play on the tribute to JJ [‘The Breeze’] that Eric Clapton just made. When Eric asked if I would play on a couple of those things, that was very nice to be able to do that. JJ was playing in our rented rooms a lot in those early days, as were a lot of other artists. So you look back on those records with a lot of affection. The sounds that you grow up with, they’re just there all the time. That music is very important.”
That feeling of observing his younger self is also present on Knopfler’s opening composition for the album, ‘Laughs and Jokes and Drinks and Smokes.’ “That was what it was all about when you were young,” he says. “You’re so resilient, you don’t even think about the wear and tear, at all. I certainly didn’t.
“Back in those days, I’d be listening to a lot of Van Morrison, and Dylan and all the rest of it. So when I hear it now, it just takes you back, it’s like food you used to eat as a kid. They’re wonderful signposts, in your life, some of these songs.”
Knopfler has been providing those signposts in a creative voyage of almost 40 years, which will put to sea again soon, as Mark and his band begin another huge international tour. They’ll introduce new songs from Tracker to old friends from a truly distinguished catalogue, and he can’t wait.
“As soon as there’s a soundcheck or a rehearsal, and the band’s there, you’re putting it all together, and I feel very at home. It’s something I can do. I like all the banter. Part of the joy of it is getting that little crew together and setting sail once more.”

Tracklist:
1. Laughs And Jokes And Drinks And Smokes 06:40
2. Basil 05:45
3. River Towns 06:17
4. Skydiver 04:38
5. Mighty Man 05:55
6. Broken Bones 05:30
7. Long Cool Girl 05:06
8. Lights Of Taormina 06:09
9. Silver Eagle 05:02
10. Beryl 03:11
11. Wherever I Go 06:25
12. .38 Special 02:47
13. My Heart Has Never Changed 03:49
14. Terminal Of Tribute To 05:52
15. Heart Of Oak 01:44

Personnel:
Mark Knopfler – vocals, guitars
Guy Fletcher – keyboards, vocals
Bruce Molsky – fiddle, rhythm guitar, banjo
John McCusker – fiddle, cittern
Mike McGoldrick – whistle, wooden flute
Phil Cunningham – accordion
Glenn Worf – bass
Ian Thomas – drums
Nigel Hitchcock – saxophone
Tom Walsh – trumpet
Ruth Moody – vocals

Download:

mqs.link_MarkKnpflerTracker201519224.part1.rar
mqs.link_MarkKnpflerTracker201519224.part2.rar
mqs.link_MarkKnpflerTracker201519224.part3.rar

Mark Knopfler – Privateering (2012) [HighResAudio FLAC 24bit/96kHz]

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Mark Knopfler – Privateering (2012)
FLAC (tracks) 24 bit/96 kHz | Time – 1:29:51 minutes | 1,82 GB | Genre: Rock
Official Digital Download – Source: HighResAudio.com | Front cover | © Verve Records

2012 two CD release from the British guitarist, songwriter, producer and former Dire Straits leader. Privateering is Knopfler’s first double album, each song an original. They cover a wide range of locations and characters from both sides of the Atlantic and move through a number of genres which include several new Blues originals. The album is a soulful and heartfelt collection masterfully performed by a group of world class players.
In addition to what has become Knopfler’s long-time band, hand-picked guest aces include Kim Wilson (harp) of the Fabulous Thunderbirds, Tim O’Brien (mandolin), singer Ruth Moody of The Wailin’ Jennys, Paul Franklin (pedal steel) and Scotland’s Phil Cunningham (accordion). Twenty new titles were recorded at the artist’s British Grove Studios in London with the following players: Richard Bennett (guitar), Jim Cox (piano) Guy Fletcher (keyboards), John McCusker (fiddle), Mike McGoldrick (whistle and flute), Glenn Worf (bass) and Ian Thomas (drums). Knopfler was assisted by co-producers Guy Fletcher and Chuck Ainlay.

Since officially embarking on a solo career in 1995, former Dire Straits frontman Mark Knopfler has been quietly and consistently amassing an unassuming horn of plenty, maintaining his prior outfit’s penchant for fusing meticulously crafted English blues-rock with sardonic, radio-ready AOR pop, while introducing elements of traditional folk and country with the effortless gait of an artist who has spent his years as both a student and a professor. On Privateering, his seventh solo outing, Knopfler has crafted his most ambitious and pugnacious set to date, going all in on a two-disc set that pits all of the aforementioned influences against each other without ever succumbing to the convenience of their architectures. Upon first spin, Privateering feels a little like a garage sale, offering up long cold plates of once warm, late-night porch jams that feel like pre-studio session warm-ups, but the album’s stately, yet schizophrenic nature, which pits lo-fi, studious, yet ultimately forgettable exercises in rote American blues like “Hot or What” and “Gator Blood” with amiable, highway-ready rockers (“Corned Beef City”) and incredibly affecting, spooky folk-pop ballads like “Redbud Tree,” “Kingdom of Gold,” and the magnificent “Dream of the Drowned Submariner,” all three of which owe a couple of polite high fives to Dire Straits songs like “The Man’s Strong” and “Brothers in Arms,” reveals an artist in complete control of his arsenal. Could the album use some trimming? Sure, but Knopfler is that rare gunslinger who can make even the wildest shot look like it was completely intentional, and his steady voice, mercurial lyrics, and instantly recognizable guitar tone, that latter of which falls somewhere between the rich, lucid beauty of David Gilmour and the Pan-like spell-casting of Richard Thompson, provide just the right amount of ballast to keep a ship as big as Privateering buoyant.”

Tracklist:
01 – Redbud Tree
02 – Haul Away
03 – Don’t Forget Your Hat
04 – Privateering
05 – Miss You Blues
06 – Corned Beef City
07 – Go, Love
08 – Hot Or What
09 – Yon Two Crows
10 – Seattle
11 – Kingdom Of Gold
12 – Got To Have Something
13 – Radio City Serenade
14 – I Used To Could
15 – Gator Blood
16 – Bluebird
17 – Dream Of The Drowned Submariner
18 – Blood And Water
19 – Today Is Okay
20 – After The Beanstalk

Download:

mqs.link_MarkKnpflerPrivateering2012HiRes2496.part1.rar
mqs.link_MarkKnpflerPrivateering2012HiRes2496.part2.rar

Mark Knopfler & Evelyn Glennie – Altamira (2016) [AcousticSounds FLAC 24bit/96kHz]

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Mark Knopfler & Evelyn Glennie – Altamira (2016)
FLAC (tracks) 24-bit/96 kHz | Time – 26:01 minutes | 564 MB | Genre: Soundtrack
Studio Master, Official Digital Download – Source: AcousticSounds | Artwork: Front cover | © Verve International

2016 soundtrack score composed by ex-Dire Straits mainman, with percussionist Evelyn Glennie & others. Knopfler, who’s composed scores for “The Princess Bride” and “Wag the Dog”, now brings his unique sound to “Altamira”.

Mark Knopfler returns to the world of film music with this soundtrack for the period drama Altamira, directed by Hugh Hudson and starring Antonio Banderas and Rupert Everett. Highly decorated Scottish composer and percussionist Evelyn Glennie plays marimba and co-wrote most of these pieces, which were recorded at Knopfler’s studio in London and co-produced by his longtime associate Guy Fletcher.

“It was my pleasure working on Altamira with Evelyn, Hugh and Guy … there is nothing better than working with a talented and motivated team”. – Mark Knopfler

Tracklist:
01 – Altamira
02 – Maria
03 – Dream Of The Bison
04 – By The Grave
05 – Onward
06 – Marcelino’s Despair
07 – Farewell To The Bison
08 – This Is Science
09 – Glory Of The Cave
10 – Farewell To Altamira

Download:

mqs.link_MarkKnpflerEvelynGlennieAltamira2016AcusticSunds2496.rar

Mark Knopfler – Shangri-La (2004) {SACD ISO + FLAC 24bit/88,2kHz}

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Mark Knopfler – Shangri-La (2004) [2.0 & 5.1]
PS3 Rip | SACD ISO | DST64 2.0 & 5.1 > 1-bit/2.8224 MHz | 66:00 minutess | Scans included | 3,76 GB
or FLAC 2.0 Stereo (converted with foobar2000 to tracks) 24bit/88,2 kHz | Scans included | 1,3 GB
Genre: Rock

Shangri-La, Mark Knopfler’s fourth solo release and his first since breaking his collarbone, shoulder, and seven ribs in a motorcycle crash in March 2003, finds the eternally laid-back Dire Straits frontman in familiar territory. Instead of constructing a song cycle about his brush with mortality — the wry “Don’t Crash the Ambulance” aside — he uses his warm baritone and effortless guitar work to ruminate on everything from the plight of the modern fisherman — the beautiful and rustic “Trawlerman’s Song” — to the entrepreneurial skills of McDonald’s founder Ray Kroc (“Boom, Like That”). Knopfler has more or less abandoned the British folk and Celtic-influenced pop that began to surface on his previous two recordings, opting instead for a full-blown yet quiet and considerate collection of country-folk ballads and bluesy, midtempo dirges that revel in their uncharacteristic sparseness — one of the better examples of the latter is the gutsy, backwoods boxing tale “Song for Sonny Liston.” Knopfler spent seven months away from the guitar in physiotherapy, but his melancholic slow-burn tone is as peat-smoked as ever, and his penchant for wrapping Americana-gothic folk around subjects that are uniquely English — colliers, cockneys, the one-armed bandit man who meets his maker in the atmospheric opener, “5:15 A.M.” — is evident throughout. Dynamically, Shangri-La loses steam about three-quarters of the way through — the cringe-inducing “Whoop De Doo” and the sweet but dull “All That Matters” bring things to a sleepy halt — but Knopfler fans and lovers of Chet Atkins, Gordon Lightfoot, and J.J. Cale, as well as late-night poker players and early risers with an acerbic streak, will find much to love here.

Tracklist:
01. 5:15 A.M.
02. Boom, Like That
03. Sucker Row
04. The Trawlerman’s Song
05. Back To Tupelo
06. Our Shangri-La
07. Everybody Pays
08. Song For Sonny Liston
09. Whoop De Doo
10. Postcards From Paraguay
11. All That Matters
12. Stand Up Guy
13. Donegan’s Gone
14. Don’t Crash The Ambulance

SACD ISO

mqs.link_MarkKnpflerShangriLa2004SACDIS.part1.rar
mqs.link_MarkKnpflerShangriLa2004SACDIS.part2.rar
mqs.link_MarkKnpflerShangriLa2004SACDIS.part3.rar
mqs.link_MarkKnpflerShangriLa2004SACDIS.part4.rar

FLAC 24bit/88,2kHz

mqs.link_MarkKnpflerShangriLa2004FLACStere2488.2.part1.rar
mqs.link_MarkKnpflerShangriLa2004FLACStere2488.2.part2.rar

Mark Knopfler – Shangri-La (2004) [HDTracks FLAC 24bit/96kHz]

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Mark Knopfler – Shangri-La (2004)
FLAC (tracks) 24 bit/96 kHz | Time – 1:05:54 minutes | 1,45 GB | Genre: Rock
Official Digital Download – Source: HDTracks.com | Front cover | © Warner Bros. Records

The fourth solo excursion from acclaimed singer-songwriter-guitarist Mark Knopfler, Shangri-La is perhaps his most rocking album since his halcyon days in Dire Straits. A four- time Grammy winner who has sold some 110 million albums worldwide with that group and solo and whose signature guitar sound, instantly recognizable vocals and smart lyrics have made him one of rock’s most admired artists. On Shangri-La, his storytelling is as sophisticated and emotional as ever.

Shangri-La, Mark Knopfler’s fourth solo release and his first since breaking his collarbone, shoulder, and seven ribs in a motorcycle crash in March 2003, finds the eternally laid-back Dire Straits frontman in familiar territory. Instead of constructing a song cycle about his brush with mortality — the wry “Don’t Crash the Ambulance” aside — he uses his warm baritone and effortless guitar work to ruminate on everything from the plight of the modern fisherman — the beautiful and rustic “Trawlerman’s Song” — to the entrepreneurial skills of McDonald’s founder Ray Kroc (“Boom, Like That”). Knopfler has more or less abandoned the British folk and Celtic-influenced pop that began to surface on his previous two recordings, opting instead for a full-blown yet quiet and considerate collection of country-folk ballads and bluesy, midtempo dirges that revel in their uncharacteristic sparseness — one of the better examples of the latter is the gutsy, backwoods boxing tale “Song for Sonny Liston.” Knopfler spent seven months away from the guitar in physiotherapy, but his melancholic slow-burn tone is as peat-smoked as ever, and his penchant for wrapping Americana-gothic folk around subjects that are uniquely English — colliers, cockneys, the one-armed bandit man who meets his maker in the atmospheric opener, “5:15 A.M.” — is evident throughout. Dynamically, Shangri-La loses steam about three-quarters of the way through — the cringe-inducing “Whoop De Doo” and the sweet but dull “All That Matters” bring things to a sleepy halt — but Knopfler fans and lovers of Chet Atkins, Gordon Lightfoot, and J.J. Cale, as well as late-night poker players and early risers with an acerbic streak, will find much to love here.

Tracklist:
01 – 5:15 A.M.
02 – Boom, Like That
03 – Sucker Row
04 – The Trawlerman’s Song
05 – Back to Tupelo
06 – Our Shangri-La
07 – Everybody Pays
08 – Song for Sonny Liston
09 – Whoop De Doo
10 – Postcards from Paraguay
11 – All That Matters
12 – Stand Up Guy
13 – Donegan’s Gone
14 – Don’t Crash the Ambulance

Download:

mqs.link_MarkKnpflerShangriLa2004HDTracks2496.part1.rar
mqs.link_MarkKnpflerShangriLa2004HDTracks2496.part2.rar

Milestones – Un Incontro In Jazz (2008) {SACD ISO + FLAC 24bit/88,2kHz}

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Milestones – Un Incontro In Jazz (2008)
PS3 Rip | SACD ISO | DSD64 2.0 > 1-bit/2.8224 MHz | 63:04 minutes | Scans included | 2,54 GB
or FLAC(converted with foobar2000 to tracks) 24bit/88,2 kHz | Full Scans included | 1,27 GB
Genre: Jazz

Milestones: Un Incontro In Jazz è la registrazione di un concerto tenuto al Teatro Soresina di Cremona nel 2007 da un supergruppo formato da Gino Paoli e alcuni dei nomi più importanti del jazz italiano. Accompagnato da Danilo Rea, Enrico Rava, Roberto Gatto, Rosario Bonaccorso e Fabio Boltro, il venerato cantautore interpreta le sue canzoni più famose come “Il cielo in una stanza” o “La gatta” inoltre a standard jazz come “I Fall in Love Too Easily” o “Stardust”.

Tracklist:
01. Time After Time
02. Sapore Di Sale
03. Vivere Ancora
04. I Fall In Love Too Easily
05. La Gatta
06. Che Cosa C’È
07. Una Lunga Storia D’amore
08. Stardust
09. Quando
10. Il Cielo In Una Stanza
11. Jasmiinikukat
12. Senza Fine

SACD ISO

mqs.link_MilestnesUnIncntrInJazz2008SACDIS.part1.rar
mqs.link_MilestnesUnIncntrInJazz2008SACDIS.part2.rar
mqs.link_MilestnesUnIncntrInJazz2008SACDIS.part3.rar

FLAC 24bit/88,2kHz

mqs.link_MilestnesUnIncntrInJazz2008FLAC2488.2.part1.rar
mqs.link_MilestnesUnIncntrInJazz2008FLAC2488.2.part2.rar

Sina Vodjani – Zarathustra (2006) {SACD ISO + FLAC 24bit/88,2kHz}

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Sina Vodjani – Zarathustra (2006) [2.0 & 5.1]
PS3 Rip | SACD ISO | DST64 2.0 & 5.1 > 1-bit/2.8224 MHz | 72:06 minutes | Covers included | 4,19 GB
or FLAC 2.0 Stereo (converted with foobar2000 to tracks) 24bit/88,2 kHz | Covers included | 1,44 GB
Genre: World

Artist Sina Vodjani (known through his recordings for the Buddha Bar, among other productions) travelled for many weeks through his native country of Iran, following in the tracks of the Persian prophet Zarathustra – often under the most adverse of conditions. He met up with priests and local musicians in Iran and captured the audio and visual impressions using microphones, video equipment and camera.

Just who was Zoroaster? The search for the answer to this question took the Hamburg musician Sina Vodjani back to the land of his birth, Iran. Following in the tracks of the ancient Persian founder of Zoroastrianism, Sina crossed deserts and mountain regions, wandered through fertile valleys, travelled wonderful coastal regions and visited towns and cities steeped in history. He met priests and local musicians and captured the sights and sounds with microphone, camcorder and camera – creating a fascinating illustrated book beyond the “Also sprach Zarathustra” of Nietzsche and Strauss.

Tracklist:
01. Prelude
02. Choupan
03. Ashem Vohu
04. Dear friend
05. Sacred fire
06. Don´t Sleep
07. Persepolis
08. Chak Chak
09. Dashti
10. Wings of Love
11. Be the one
12. Emptiness
13. Zarathustra
14. Ahura & the Rising Sun
15. Asha

SACD ISO

mqs.link_SinaVdjaniZarathustra2006SACDIS.part1.rar
mqs.link_SinaVdjaniZarathustra2006SACDIS.part2.rar
mqs.link_SinaVdjaniZarathustra2006SACDIS.part3.rar
mqs.link_SinaVdjaniZarathustra2006SACDIS.part4.rar
mqs.link_SinaVdjaniZarathustra2006SACDIS.part5.rar

FLAC 24bit/88,2kHz

mqs.link_SinaVdjaniZarathustra2006FLACStere2488.2.part1.rar
mqs.link_SinaVdjaniZarathustra2006FLACStere2488.2.part2.rar


Water Falls: Inspired By The Art Of Bishin Jumonji (2004) {SACD ISO + FLAC 24bit/88,2kHz}

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Water Falls: Inspired By The Art Of Bishin Jumonji (2004) [2.0 & 5.1]
PS3 Rip | SACD ISO | DST64 2.0 & 5.1 > 1-bit/2.8224 MHz | 60:01 minutes | Scans included | 3,71 GB
or FLAC 2.0 Stereo (converted with foobar2000 to tracks) 24bit/88,2 kHz | Scans included | 1,19 GB

This complilation is a four 15 Minute tracks of the sounds of Japanese waterfalls in 5.1 surround sound inspired by the work of Japanese artist Bishin Jumonji, based on his composite photographs of four Japanese waterfalls at the Shiseido Gallery (Ginza) in June and July 2004.

Tracklist:
01.華厳の滝 (Kegon No Taki),栃木県日光市 大谷川 (Daiya River, Nikko, Tochigi)
02.震動の滝 (Shindou No Taki),大分県玖珠群九重町 鳴子川 (Naruko River, Kuju-cho, Kusu-gun, Oita)
03.鵜の子滝 (Unoko Daki),熊本県上益城群矢部町田所 笹原川 (Sasahara River, Tadokoro, Yabemachi, kamimashiki-gun, Kumamoto)
04.称名滝 (Shohmyoh Daki),富山県中新川群立山町 称名川 (Shohmyoh River, Tateyama-Cho, Nakaniigawa-gun, Toyama)

SACD ISO

mqs.link_WaterFallsInspiredByTheArtfBishinJumnji2004SACDIS.part1.rar
mqs.link_WaterFallsInspiredByTheArtfBishinJumnji2004SACDIS.part2.rar
mqs.link_WaterFallsInspiredByTheArtfBishinJumnji2004SACDIS.part3.rar
mqs.link_WaterFallsInspiredByTheArtfBishinJumnji2004SACDIS.part4.rar

FLAC 24bit/88,2kHz

mqs.link_WaterFallsInspiredByTheArtfBishinJumnji2004FLACStere2488.2.part1.rar
mqs.link_WaterFallsInspiredByTheArtfBishinJumnji2004FLACStere2488.2.part2.rar

Dexter Gordon – Go (1962) [Analogue Productions 2010] {SACD ISO + FLAC 24bit/88,2kHz}

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Dexter Gordon – Go (1962) [Analogue Productions 2010]
PS3 Rip | SACD ISO | DSD64 2.0 > 1-bit/2.8224 MHz | 37:41 minutes | Scans included | 1,67 GB
or FLAC(converted with foobar2000 to tracks) 24bit/88,2 kHz | Scans included | 1,09 GB
Genre: Jazz

From the first moments when Dexter Gordon sails into the opening song full of brightness and confidence, it is obvious that Go! is going to be one of those albums where everything just seems to come together magically. A stellar quartet including the stylish pianist Sonny Clark, the agile drummer Billy Higgins, and the solid yet flexible bassist Butch Warren are absolutely crucial in making this album work, but it is still Gordon who shines. Whether he is dropping quotes into “Three O’Clock in the Morning” or running around with spritely bop phrases in “Cheese Cake,” the album pops and crackles with energy and exuberance. Beautiful ballads like “I Guess I’ll Hang My Tears Out to Dry” metamorphosize that energy into emotion and passion, but you can still see it there nonetheless. Gordon had many high points in his five decade-long career, but this is certainly the peak of it all.

Tracklist:
01. Cheese Cake
02. I Guess I’ll Hang My Tears Out to Dry
03. Second Balcony Jump
04. Love for Sale
05. Where Are You?
06. Three O’Clock in the Morning

SACD ISO

mqs.link_DexterGrdnG1962APRemaster2010SACDIS.part1.rar
mqs.link_DexterGrdnG1962APRemaster2010SACDIS.part2.rar

FLAC 24bit/88,2kHz

mqs.link_DexterGrdnG1962APRemaster2010FLAC2488.2.rar

Dexter Gordon – A Swingin’ Affair (1962/2015) [Qobuz FLAC 24bit/192kHz]

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Dexter Gordon – A Swingin’ Affair (1962/2015)
FLAC (tracks) 24-bit/192 kHz | Time – 00:38:15 minutes |  1,53 GB | Genre: Jazz
Studio Master, Official Digital Download |  Source:Qobuz |  Front cover
Label: © Blue Note Records | Recorded at the Van Gelder Studio in Englewood Cliffs, New Jersey on August 29, 1962.

Dexter Gordon was on a roll in 1962 when he recorded A Swingin’ Affair. Two days earlier he and this same quartet recorded his classic album Go!; the band included pianist Sonny Clark, bassist Butch Warren, and drummer Billy Higgins. Gordon wrote two of the set’s six tunes, the first of which, the Afro-Cuban-flavored “Soy Califa,” is a burner. Higgins’ drumming double-times the band as Gordon lays out the melody — even his solo doesn’t stray far from it and he returns to it repetitively. Clark vamps with beautiful minor-key chords that he then adds to his own solo, moving all around the lyric with his right hand. And Higgins and Warren are truly wonderful on this one. There are also three standards here. Gordon was always a master of them because his own approach to improvisation was essentially one of melodic invention. “Don’t Explain” is ushered in by Clark stating the changes; Gordon’s low and slow playing is romantic and sensual. On “You Stepped Out of a Dream,” Gordon and Clark take the melody and invert it in the bridge; they turn it into a kind of groove as Higgins plays Latin-tinged rhythms throughout. Warren’s “The Backbone” is a hard bop groover with a bossa nova flavor, as he and Gordon twin on the tune’s head before Dex moves off into his solo. It’s easily the best thing here. This is a hot hard bop band, playing a program that’s relaxed and mostly upbeat; they even manage to stretch a bit. –Thom Jurek

Tracklist:
1 Soy Califa 6:25
2 Don’t Explain 6:04
3 You Stepped Out Of A Dream 6:30
4 The Backbone 6:46
5 Until The Real Thing Comes Along 6:47
6 McSplivens 5:43

Personnel:
Dexter Gordon – tenor saxophone
Sonny Clark – piano
Butch Warren – bass
Billy Higgins – drums

Download:

mqs.link_DexterGrdnASwinginAffair196219224.part1.rar
mqs.link_DexterGrdnASwinginAffair196219224.part2.rar

Dexter Gordon – Clubhouse (1979/2015) [Qobuz FLAC 24bit/192kHz]

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Dexter Gordon – Clubhouse (1979/2015)
FLAC (tracks) 24-bit/192 kHz | Time – 00:39:08 minutes |  1,49 GB | Genre: Jazz
Studio Master, Official Digital Download |  Source:Qobuz |  Front cover
Label: © Blue Note Records | Recorded May 27, 1965 at the Van Gelder Studio, Englewood Cliffs, New Jersey.

In a three day period 25th – 27th May in 1965 Dexter Gordon returned from “exile” in Europe to make two jazz albums with Barry Harris (piano), Bob Cranshaw (bass) and Billy Higgins (drums), the powerhouse rhythm trio behind Lee Morgan’s 1963 album “The Sidewinder”, who appear together with surprising infrequency considering the success of the Lee Morgan album.
On the first of those days, joined by Freddie Hubbard on trumpet, the material for “Clubhouse” was recorded. In the second two days, with Bobby Hutcherson replacing Freddie Hubbard in the same quintet, material for the album “Gettin’ Around” was recorded in that same long run of sessions. “Clubhouse” remained unreleased until 1979. “Gettin’ Around” was released back in 1965.
The opener “Hanky Panky”, a Dexter Gordon original, starts poorly with a theme of near remedial simplicity and is a reminder of Alfred Lion’s insistence on an attempt at one new “Sidewinder” on just about every Blue Note album in the period. However, it rapidly becomes clear that the interplay of Dexter Gordon and Freddie Hubbard is going to be no subdued and tentative affair like “Gettin’ Around”. Freddie Hubbard is at a peak of his abilities and musical imagination at this time and there is a real rapport with Dexter Gordon that lifts the sax player into creative territory. (Listen to “Generation”, an Original Jazz Classics from 1972, where Freddie Hubbard and Dexter Gordon play off each other to even better effect on top of Billy Higgins’ ever so solid drumming to hear an even better example of the rapport between these two great jazz musicians). “Hanky Panky” develops as a genuine jazz piece as soon as Dexter Gordon’s solo first breaks the ice and Freddie Hubbard’s solo is clearly breaking out of the groove and determined to challenge any easy orthodoxy.
“I’m A Fool To Want You”, a Sinatra ballad, conforms to the Blue Note formula of a “tender ballad to shift the mood from the bracing opener” but again goes well beyond any mere formula. Dexter Gordon is melodically inventive in a way that keeps open the thought that all along he may have been an influence on John Coltrane. Freddie Hubbard is once again superb and insightful. “Devilette” is a modal piece reminiscent of “Tanya” or “Coppin’ The Haven” from Dexter Gordon’s 100 Greatest Jazz album “One Flight Up”. Written by Ben Tucker who sits in on bass in place of Bob Cranshaw on this track, “Devilette” explores more of the openness that is available in modal jazz.
The title track “Clubhouse”, Dexter Gordon’s second composition on the album, is a good vehicle for sustained blowing by sax and trumpet and provides space for a typically spiny piano solo by Barry Harris. “Lady Iris B” is a second ballad, not as convincing as “I’m A Fool To Want You” but still strong in the interplay between Dexter Gordon and Freddie Hubbard. The final track “Jodi”, the third Dexter Gordon composition is a good gospel tinged blues piece with plenty of drive and emotion.

Although tenor saxophonist Dexter Gordon had moved to Europe in 1962, he made a return visit to the U.S. in 1965 that resulted in both this album and Gettin’ Around. Gordon teams up with trumpeter Freddie Hubbard, pianist Barry Harris, bassist Bob Cranshaw and drummer Billy Higgins for three of his originals, two obscurities, and a standard that ended up being the date’s most memorable performance: “I’m a Fool to Want You.” The CD reissue is a reproduction of the original LP which was not issued until the mid-’70s. It is excellent music if not quite essential. –Scott Yanow

Tracklist:
1 Hanky Panky 6:30
2 I’m a Fool to Want You 6:43
3 Devilette 7:04
4 Clubhouse 7:35
5 Jodi 5:41
6 Lady Iris B. 5:41

Personnel:
Dexter Gordon – tenor saxophone
Freddie Hubbard – trumpet
Barry Harris – piano
Bob Cranshaw, Ben Tucker – bass
Billy Higgins – drums

Download:

mqs.link_DexterGrdnClubhuse197919224.part1.rar
mqs.link_DexterGrdnClubhuse197919224.part2.rar

Dexter Gordon – Daddy Plays The Horn (1955/2013) [HighResAudio FLAC 24bit/96kHz]

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Dexter Gordon – Daddy Plays The Horn (1955/2013)
FLAC (tracks) 24-bit/96 kHz | Time – 00:41:39 minutes | 866 MB | Genre: Jazz
Studio Master, Official Digital Download |  Source: highresaudio.com | © Bethlehem Records / Verse Music Group
Recorded: Hollywood, CA, September 18, 1955

During a period of Dexter Gordon’s (tenor sax) life — when he was deep in the throws of chronic drug addiction — the artist was miraculously able to reignite his career during the latter part of 1955. After several years of being out of the spotlight, Gordon resurfaced on the Big Apple-based indie Bethlehem imprint with the half-dozen sides that comprise Daddy Plays the Horn (1956). Joining him as key constituents of the credited Dexter Gordon Quartet are Kenny Drew (piano), Leroy Vinnegar (bass), and Larry Marable (drums). While the support team provides Gordon top-notch contributions throughout, it is unquestionably Drew who offers the most in terms of active interaction and his prominence can not be overstated. Nowhere is that as noticeable as the good-natured interaction heard on the disc’s opener, the Gordon-penned title composition “Daddy Plays the Horn.” In fact it could be argued that Drew enhances the tenor to the point of practically being a co-leader. The update of Charlie “Bird” Parker’s bop standard “Confirmation” is taken at a steady mid-tempo pace, allowing plenty of room for the participants to have their say and not get in the way of the melody. Gordon seems considerably more relaxed and comfortable as he spreads line upon line of inspired improvisation. Drew is once again a real treat to hear briefly taking charge of the rhythm section. The pair of ballads on Daddy Plays the Horn are nothing short of stellar and stand as simple, emotive expressions unto themselves. “Darn That Dream” embraces the warmth of Gordon’s tenor as his sensual phrasing leaves just enough space for Drew to sonically bridge the gap with his own unhurried and stylish chords. The generically monikered “Number Four” is anything but ordinary. The Gordon original jumps right from the opening and the ensemble lets loose with equally solid licks beneath his cool tone. Drew gets in the driver’s seat missing nary a measure to reveal what could easily be his most tasteful contributions to date. The same can be said of bassist Vinnegar, who is briefly spotlighted on an efficient (if not somewhat sparse) solo. “Autumn in New York” — the album’s other essential ballad — is proof that despite Gordon’s addiction, he had retained his singular and precious sense of lyricism. Indeed, the Great American Songbook entry has rarely been permeated in such a meaningful way. The seamless transitions between Gordon and Drew are further evidence of their undeniable bond. Saving what may be the best example of the gathered instrumentalists flexing their respective be-bop muscle, “You Can Depend on Me” rounds out the platter with a bang. Each bandmember gets a final opportunity to shine — which they individually take full advantage of. In 2005, the Shout! Factory label reissued Daddy Plays the Horn, placing the six selections in the correct running order, and the digital remastering by Randy Perry has the classic sounding better than ever. –AllMusic Review by Lindsay Planer

Tracklist:
1. Daddy Plays The Horn 04:51
2. Confirmation 06:30
3. Darn That Dream 08:59
4. Number Four 09:08
5. Autumn In New York 07:50
6. You Can Depend On Me 04:21

Personnel:
Dexter Gordon, tenor saxophone
Kenny Drew, piano
Leroy Vinnegar, bass
Larry Marable, drums

Download:

mqs.link_DexterGrdnDaddyPlaysTheHrn19559624.rar

Dexter Gordon – Doin’ Allright (1961/2015) [Qobuz FLAC 24bit/192kHz]

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Dexter Gordon – Doin’ Allright (1961/2015)
FLAC (tracks) 24-bit/192 kHz | Time – 00:41:05 minutes |  1,55 GB | Genre: Jazz
Studio Master, Official Digital Download |  Source:Qobuz |  Front cover
Label: © Blue Note Records | Recorded: May 6, 1961 at the Van Gelder Studio, Englewood Cliffs, New Jersey.

The title of this Blue Note set, Doin’ Allright, fit perfectly at the time, for tenor saxophonist Dexter Gordon was making the first of three successful comebacks. Largely neglected during the 1950s, Gordon’s Blue Note recordings (of which this was the first) led to his rediscovery. The tenor is teamed with the young trumpeter Freddie Hubbard, pianist Horace Parlan, bassist George Tucker, and drummer Al Harewood for a strong set of music that is highlighted by “You’ve Changed” (which would become a permanent part of Gordon’s repertoire), “Society Red” (a blues later used in the film Round Midnight), and “It’s You or No One.” –Scott Yanow, AllMusic

That opener, “I Was Doing All Right,” lilts along with a nice ‘n’ easy, early 1960s treatment of an insistently positive George Gershwin melody. Gordon doesn’t rush his solo, but allows it to intensify naturally from the surrounding breeze. He explores the entire range of his instrument, allowing his pace to ebb and flow while never jettisoning himself from the track of comfortable swing. Trumpeter Freddie Hubbard enters on—and retains—a brasher course, slashing through a stream of jagged, harmonic lines. Pianist Horace Parlan goes farther afield, injecting the tune with some passing abstract figures.
Coming back from the R&B-tinged fade with which he ends the first track, Gordon enters “You’ve Changed” with acrobatic flips and spirals before settling his horn into the rhythm’s crackling warmth. Again, the saxophonist leaves no point on his horn’s tonal spectrum untouched, all along dipping into the sugary pools of regret left by the passage of time. Hubbard traces the low, stretched breaths of drummer Al Harewood’s brushes, then works the harmony and, later, moans along with Gordon as the leader makes his return.
“For Regulars Only,” the first of two Gordon originals, lifts the record’s spirits back to its opening contentment. Together, Gordon and Hubbard graph a sharp-toothed, yet pleasant, bop melody. Alone, Gordon’s tone is bright and forceful, his lines angular and dancing. Hubbard, for whom this racing, riff-heavy tune seems tailor-made, surprises a bit by softening the edges of his blowing, rather than cutting into the listener with the expected blare. It’s a relaxed, somewhat against-type approach that works to excellent effect. Parlan, for his part, operates here like a film editor, attaching several unresolved passages into a series of piano jump-cuts before the horns return to restate the theme.
Yet, despite the solid work heard throughout the first three numbers, the album’s lasting value resides on what originally constituted its second side (and which here comprises the second disc). “Society Red,” the second Gordon original, is a relaxed, yet powerful, blues that first hands the solo reins to Hubbard. He’s in no hurry to jolt the listener, but rides the relaxed vibe awhile. Soon, however, he enters his familiar blowing terrain, spitting piercing shots to the heavens. Gordon revisits some of these volleys with a deeper, warmer sound and the occasional growl. Much as in the album’s opener, he steadily builds his story, ever filling the available space with more information—more details—without ever disrupting the flow, like a boxer expertly working the speed bag. Parlan applies a soft, rolling touch, skewing the blues into an abstract take on ragtime. This nice recollection of jazz’s first steps gives way to bassist George Andrew Tucker’s only individual statement on the record: a loping bend to the space-time continuum.
“It’s You or No One,” brings all the aforementioned together to close the album. A burning bop pow-wow, it’s awash with quick, flowing lines, staccato shots, trills and R&B warble. Gordon turns in what may be his best solo of the set here, augmenting the curls of his Spirograph drawing with sharp cutbacks and drooping sighs. While brief, Hubbard’s sprinting effort also impresses, retaining through the speed the kind of warmth that made Miles Davis’ trumpet smile. Parlan spins a spiked wheel, twirling through cyclical motifs with a cubist touch. The horns blow in to clear the field, then trade with Tucker’s bass before giving way to Harewood’s brief, but aggressive drum solo. Gordon and Hubbard then join forces a last time to see the album out with a final battle charge. It’s a glorious send-off for an album that’s rote procedure in spots, but comes on in the second half with two inspired hard bop attacks. –Matt Marshall, All About Jazz

Tracklist:
1 I Was Doing All Right 9:16
2 You’ve Changed 7:23
3 For Regulars Only 5:42
4 Society Red 12:18
5 It’s You Or No One 6:12

Personnel:
Dexter Gordon – tenor saxophone
Freddie Hubbard – trumpet
Horace Parlan – piano
George Tucker – bass
Al Harewood – drums

Download:

mqs.link_DexterGrdnDinAllright196119224.part1.rar
mqs.link_DexterGrdnDinAllright196119224.part2.rar

Dexter Gordon – Go (1962/2013) [HDTracks FLAC 24bit/192kHz]

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Dexter Gordon – Go (1962/2013)
FLAC (tracks) 24 bit/192 kHz | Time – 37:38 minutes | 1,61 GB | Genre: Jazz
Official Digital Download – Source: HDTracks.com | Digital booklet | © Blue Note Records

Go is the sensational masterpiece by Dexter Gordon. Gordon was one of music’s leading tenor saxophonists, joined here by virtuosos: Sonny Clark, Butch Warren and Billy Higgins. This record has been deemed one of Gordon’s finest Blue Note releases. The master of bebop tenor saxophone performs hits including “Cheese Cake,” a Latin-tinged version of Porter’s “Love for Sale,” a breathtaking reading of “Where Are You?” and “I Guess I’ll Hang My Tears Out to Dry”.

From the first moments when Dexter Gordon sails into the opening song full of brightness and confidence, it is obvious that Go! is going to be one of those albums where everything just seems to come together magically. A stellar quartet including the stylish pianist Sonny Clark, the agile drummer Billy Higgins, and the solid yet flexible bassist Butch Warren are absolutely crucial in making this album work, but it is still Gordon who shines. Whether he is dropping quotes into “Three O’Clock in the Morning” or running around with spritely bop phrases in “Cheese Cake,” the album pops and crackles with energy and exuberance. Beautiful ballads like “I Guess I’ll Hang My Tears Out to Dry” metamorphosize that energy into emotion and passion, but you can still see it there nonetheless. Gordon had many high points in his five decade-long career, but this is certainly the peak of it all.

Tracklist:
01 – Cheese Cake
02 – I Guess I’ll Hang My Tears Out to Dry
03 – Second Balcony Jump
04 – Love for Sale
05 – Where Are You?
06 – Three O’Clock in the Morning

Musicians:
Dexter Gordon – tenor sax
Sonny Clark – piano
Butch Warren – bass
Billy Higgins – drums

About the Mastering:
High Resolution Mastering by Alan Yoshida and Robin Lynn at Blanche DuBois, April 2012.
“In preparing these hi def remasters, we were very conscientious about maintaining the feel of the original releases while adding a previously unattainable transparency and depth. It now sounds like you’ve set up your chaise lounge right in the middle of Rudy Van Gelder’s studio!” — Blue Note President, Don Was.
The album is accompanied by its original sleeve notes plus additional photos and newly-written package essays.

Download:

mqs.link_DexterGrdnG19622013HDTracks24192.part1.rar
mqs.link_DexterGrdnG19622013HDTracks24192.part2.rar


Dexter Gordon – Gettin’ Around (1965/2015) [Qobuz FLAC 24bit/192kHz]

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Dexter Gordon – Gettin’ Around (1965/2015)
FLAC (tracks) 24-bit/192 kHz | Time – 00:41:19 minutes |  1,64 GB | Genre: Jazz
Studio Master, Official Digital Download |  Source:Qobuz |  Front cover
Label: © Blue Note Records | Recorded: May 28 & 29, 1965 at the Van Gelder Studio, Englewood Cliffs, New Jersey.

Dexter Gordon’s mid-’60s period living in Europe also meant coming back to the U.S. for the occasional recording session. His teaming with Bobby Hutcherson was intriguing in that the vibraphonist was marking his territory as a maverick and challenging improviser. Here the two principals prove compatible in that they have a shared sense of how to create sheer beauty in a post-bop world. Add the brilliant Barry Harris to this mix, and that world is fortunate enough to hear these grand masters at their creative peak, stoked by equally extraordinary sidemen like bassist Bob Cranshaw and drummer Billy Higgins, all on loan from Lee Morgan’s hitmaking combo. The subtle manner in which Gordon plays melodies or caresses the most recognizable standard has always superseded his ability to ramble through rough-and-tumble bebop. It’s hard to resist how Gordon massages the light and sweet bossa nova “Manha de Carnaval” hand in hand with Hutcherson, the heartfelt way “Who Can I Turn To?” or “Everybody’s Somebody’s Fool” is turned into a personalized statement, or how the co-leaders take Frank Foster’s Count Basie staple, “Shiny Stockings,” beyond a classic and into immortal territory. Where Gordon and Hutcherson’s true strength lies is in their ability to listen and balance their sound into a unified whole beyond any other tenor sax-vibraphone combination you might care to name, unless it’s Hutch’s partnership in the ensuing years with Harold Land. Picking up on a Sonny Rollins idea, “Heartaches” is a loping cowboy-type swinger with some lustrous comping from Hutcherson and Harris, while the light, cat-prancing “Le Coiffeur” is the highlight among highlights, a stealth calypso with Gordon’s deftly rendered staccato notation. One has to listen closer to the pianist on this date, as he buoys the others without demanding equal space, but he is just as reverberant. While this is not Gordon’s ultimate hard bop date, it is reflective of his cooling out in Europe, adopting a tonal emphasis more under the surface than in your face. It’s not essential, but quite enjoyable, and does mark a turning point in his illustrious career. –Michael G. Nastos, AllMusic

An arterial link between Lester Young and the hard bop tenor saxophonists of the late ’50s and early ’60s, Dexter Gordon’s brilliance and significance are today remembered mostly as an afterthought. Partly this is Gordon’s own fault: after his prolific vanguard activities of the ’40s, the ’50s were for him a wasteland of heroin addiction, with few recording sessions or landmark live appearances. He’s off the page of most jazz chronicles from the period.
Happily, though, Gordon’s most on-fire recordings survive. Gettin’ Around was made during his unexpected and magnificent renaissance on Blue Note in the mid ’60s. Its inclusion in the Rudy Van Gelder remaster programme is great news for anyone who enjoys the eternal verities of American jazz—and who relishes in particular the tenor saxophonist as unruly sonic gunslinger.
Gordon’s playing was an extension of his six and a half foot stature. His sound was big, his notes were big, and his lyricism was rough-hewn. His influences were one part Young and one part Charlie Parker. From Parker he took a hard and deliberate tone, vibrato-less except in the most intimate moments, and from Young he took a horizontal approach to improvisation, though gruffer and more bass register-rooted. Drop all that into the studio along with the rhythm section that helped make Lee Morgan’s The Sidewinder as bad-ass as it was, stir in rising vibraphone star Bobby Hutcherson, and you have real voodou.
Most of the album is mid to up-tempo, hot, broad, careless, exuberant, and vigorously swinging. The pieces range from the wittily codified bossa nova “Manha De Carnaval” to the booting romps “Heartaches” and “Shiny Stockings” and the ten-minute blues jam “Flick Of A Trick.” Gordon’s only original, the pretty and balletic “Le Coiffeur,” is clearly influenced by French chanson—by the time this album was recorded, Gordon had been resident in Europe for three years—but the only real ballad is “Who Can I Turn To” (check the vibrato-as-foreplay). The leader takes most of the solo space, but Harris and Hutcherson each get chances to shine. Harris’ solo on “Le Coiffeur” is lovely, as are Hutcherson’s pre-Leary but trippy sonics on “Flick Of A Trick.”
Along with ’63’s Our Man In Paris and the original ’61 comeback album Doin’ Alright, this is one of three immortal works in the Gordon canon. –Chris May, All About Jazz

Tracklist:
1 Manha De Carnaval 8:26
2 Who Can I Turn To (When Nobody Needs Me) 5:15
3 Heartaches 7:46
4 Shiny Stockings 6:18
5 Everybody’s Somebody’s Fool 6:45
6 Le Coiffeur 7:01

Personnel:
Dexter Gordon – tenor saxophone
Bobby Hutcherson – vibes
Barry Harris – piano
Bob Cranshaw – bass
Billy Higgins – drums

Download:

mqs.link_DexterGrdnGettinArund196519224.part1.rar
mqs.link_DexterGrdnGettinArund196519224.part2.rar

Dexter Gordon – One Flight Up (1964/2015) [Qobuz FLAC 24bit/192kHz]

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Dexter Gordon – One Flight Up (1964/2015) 
FLAC (tracks) 24-bit/192 kHz | Time – 00:37:11 minutes |  1,25 GB | Genre: Jazz
Studio Master, Official Digital Download |  Source:Qobuz |  Front cover
Label: © Blue Note Records | Recorded: June 2, 1964 at CBS Studios, Paris, France.

When he expatriated to Scandinavia just before this session in Paris was recorded, Dexter Gordon said he was liberated in many ways, as a jazz musician and as a human being. This is reflected in the lengthy track on this album, a testament to that newly found freedom, addressing the restrictions the American music scene placed on artists to do the two- to three-minute hit. With the nearly 18-minute “Tanya” and the 11-minute “Coppin’ the Haven,” Gordon and his quintet, featuring trumpeter Donald Byrd, were able to jam at length with no thought of being edited, and they fully prolong their instrumental remarks in a way few other musicians — jazz or otherwise — would allow themselves. Yes, it would be difficult to hear these tracks on the radio, but the tradeoff was a listening experience for their fans that would also showcase a rare commodity in the lexicon of their style of post-bop mainstream jazz — consistency. The simple, sweet, and lightly swinging “Tanya” has become a classic song, and it is a staple in most saxophonists’ diets, even though the supportive chord structures from pianist Kenny Drew and Byrd’s up-front brass are more attractive or noticeable than Gordon’s bluesy tenor. Memorable for many reasons, Drew’s brilliant composition “Coppin’ the Haven” is textbook modern jazz, a modal minor-key delight as Byrd again dominates with a shining, gliding melody tacked on to an easy swing that exemplifies the song form for jazz in its best sense. Gordon steps up apart from the trumpeter on the great ballad “Darn That Dream,” and is at his best, wringing every regretful emotion out of his horn as only he can. At around 37 substantive minutes of music, One Flight Up stands as a testament to Dexter Gordon’s viability as a bandleader and teammate, while his individualism is somewhat sublimated. It’s a good listen to digest all the way through, especially if you are as patient as the performers, who have a lot to say. –Michael G. Nastos,

Dexter Gordon is often cited as a major influence on John Coltrane. He was the first to take Charlie Parker’s alto sax bebop breakthroughs and understand how to develop them for tenor. Not that he is aiming at the same transcendent themes as Coltrane but rather that his musical understanding is a spur to playing sax in a more open and responsive way than heard before.
This openness and invention is heard at its best on “One Flight Up”. The album is remarkable for a host of reasons. It was recorded in Paris (not New Jersey) by musicians who had established themselves outside of the United States. On its initial release on vinyl, a single 18 minute track (“Tanya”) took up the whole of the first side – this some two years before Bob Dylan’s “Sad Eyed Lady of the Lowlands” amazed the pop world by taking up a whole side of the album “Blonde on Blonde”. And “One Flight Up” marks the early and definitive appearance of one of the few European jazz players to make it on a truly international stage – bass player Niels-Henning Orsted Pedersen, unsurprisingly known for short as NHOP.
Dexter had been successful with the 1963 Blue Note release “Our Man In Paris” (with Bud Powell (piano), Pierre Michelot (bass) and Kenny Clarke (drums), recorded at CBS studios Paris, as the title suggests. This in itself is often regarded as one of the great jazz albums in which Dexter’s style fully and freely emerges. Francis Wolff was keen to get more of Dexter’s output on disc and went to Paris to produce the “One Flight Up” sessions.
Leonard Feather’s original album liner notes for “One Flight Up” and the additional notes prepared by Bob Blumenthal for the RVG edition in 2003 both refer to a round table discussion for “Down Beat” in 1964 in which Dexter Gordon and Kenny Drew (who plays piano on the album) talk about the advantages of being expatriates. Dexter had left the US in 1962 to take up a permanent residency at the Montmatre Club in Copenhagen. There he had recruited NHOP (then aged just 16) as bass player in his trio. Kenny Drew had moved to Paris in 1960, staying on after a six week role in the play “The Connection”. Both point out the freedom that they were able to discover in playing jazz away from the pressures of being back home. The most obvious advantage was the absence of racism – still a major problem for African Americans in the 1960s, as we have pointed out in discussing John Coltrane’s music. Miles Davis had had a similar experience when he had lived for awhile in Paris in 1957, shortly after recording ‘Kind Of Blue”.
He was there to make the soundtrack of Louis Malle’s film noir “Ascenseur Pour L’Echafaud (Lift To The Scaffold)”, joining the Left Bank artistic set (which included Albert Camus, Jean-Paul Sartre and Simone de Beauvoir) and, by all accounts, having an affair with movie actress Juliette Grecco. (All this is documented in the remarkable book by Boris Vian – “Manual of Saint Germain-Des-Pres”). Miles has remarked on the shock of being for the first time looked upon as a musician and a person about whom his race was not the most important thing. Seven years later, Dexter Gordon experienced the same freedom that could enter his music once that context of racism has been removed: “I felt that I could breathe, and just be more or less a human being, without being white or black….”
But there was a second aspect of the freedom of being in Europe that was equally important; working at the same location with continuity of employment in the same job (Dexter at the Montmatre, Drew with long residencies in Paris) created the space in which artistic expression could flower away from the constant pressure of touring at home. The music of “One Flight Up” fully reflects this newfound freedom.
Formally, this is expressed in the way the open, mainly modal, structures of “Tanya” and “Coppin’ The Haven” allow space for each musician to express himself, unhurried, untroubled by conventions of time and length, able to take just as much room as they wish to get their musical ideas over. The sound and feel is remarkably similar to that achieved on Miles’ “Kind of Blue”; the clarity of Donald Byrd’s trumpet and Dexter Gordon’s sax echoing Miles’ and John Coltrane’s earlier masterpiece.
“Tanya”, a Donald Byrd composition, is built around a heavy asymmetrical beat from Art Taylor and features two counterposed themes, the first modal and free flowing and the second more structured and conventional. The modal theme tends to stoke up tension, the more conventional theme serving as release, capturing that early ‘sixties jazz urban optimism. The overall feel is one of well-being, of being at peace and in harmony with whatever life brings.
As in Lee Morgan’s “The Sidewinder” there is the feeling that for all the lack of restriction on what each soloist will contribute, every note is somehow necessary and that though the piece is indeed 18 minutes long, that length is fully justified. “Coppin’ The Haven” (a Kenny Drew composition) is very similarly structured and executed except that the pace is quicker and the sense of well-being is infused with a sense of urgency. On both tracks the quintet is heard in full. “On Darn That Dream” and the RVG “bonus track” “Kong Neptune” (a Dexter Gordon composition that did not make it the original release) Donald Byrd is absent.
A key player here is Niels-Herring Orsted Pedersen. Indeed, following his death aged 58 in April this year (2005), the whole album could be taken not only as a fitting tribute to Dexter Gordon’s legacy (he died in 1990) but also to NHOP’s legacy. Barely 18 at the time of recording “One Flight Up”, NHOP already displays those hallmarks that would lead to his long and illustrious career in jazz, most notably his long membership of the Oscar Peterson Trio. As John Fordham notes in his obituary for “The Guardian”, where most bass players pluck the strings with a single finger (or a single clump of fingers) NHOP has the strength and dexterity to pluck the strings with four fingers individually, much as a guitar player would pick the strings of that instrument. The result is a fluency and an ability to develop bass line runs with rapidity and complexity that is seldom heard on the instrument. This is heard to full effect on “Tanya” and “Coppin’ The Haven” where the bass forms almost a fourth solo instrument at the same time as it also takes up its rhythm duties. Indeed, so strong is the rhythm taken on by bass that Art Taylor’s drumming is freed up to launch into all sort of increasingly complex cross rhythms that build on the feeling of openness as the song progresses.
“Darn That Dream” is a more conventional take on the jazz standard, taken as a late night, after hours piece. Donald Byrd is absent; there is more opportunity for Dexter to show off his lyrical side and excellent sax technique. Richard Cook and Brian Morton note that this track in particular shows the influence of Dexter’s playing on John Coltrane’s harmonic development at this time.
Overall, this a great album, catching five fine musicians at a moment in their careers when the pressure was off and the barriers to creative expression had been lowered. Over forty years later that discovery they found in this music still shines through. –The 100 Greatest Jazz Albums

Tracklist:
1 Tanya 18:15
2 Coppin’ The Haven 11:14
3 Darn That Dream 7:24

Personnel:
Dexter Gordon – tenor saxophone
Donald Byrd – trumpet (tracks 1 & 2)
Kenny Drew – piano
Niels-Henning Orsted Pedersen – bass
Art Taylor – drums

Download:

mqs.link_DexterGrdnneFlightUp196419224.part1.rar
mqs.link_DexterGrdnneFlightUp196419224.part2.rar

Dexter Gordon – Our Man In Paris (1963/2013) [HDTracks FLAC 24bit/192kHz]

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Dexter Gordon – Our Man In Paris (1963/2013)
FLAC (tracks) 24 bit/192 kHz | Time – 38:05 minutes | 1,61 GB | Genre: Jazz
Official Digital Download – Source: HDTracks.com | Digital booklet | © Blue Note Records

This 1963 date is titled for Dexter Gordon’s living in self-imposed Parisian exile and recording there with two other expatriates and a French native. Along with Gordon, pianist Bud Powell and Kenny “Klook” Clarke were living in the City of Lights and were joined by the brilliant French bassist Pierre Michelot.

This is a free-wheeling bop date with the band working out on such categoric standards as “Scrapple from the Apple,” and “A Night in Tunisia.” In addition, American vernacular tunes such as “Willow Weep for Me” and “Stairway to the Stars” are included. Gordon is at the very top of his game here. His playing is crisp, tight, and full of playful fury. Powell, who at this stage of his life was almost continually plagued by personal problems, never sounded better than he does in this session. His playing is a tad more laid-back here, but is nonetheless full of the brilliant harmonic asides and incendiary single-note runs he is legendary for. The rhythm section is close-knit and stop-on-a-dime accurate.

This 1963 date is titled for Dexter Gordon’s living in self-imposed Parisian exile and recording there with two other exptriates and a French native. Along with Gordon, pianist Bud Powell and Kenny “Klook” Clarke were living in the City of Lights and were joined by the brilliant French bassman Pierre Michelot. This is a freewheeling bop date with the band working out on such categoric standards as “Scrapple from the Apple,” and “A Night in Tunisia.” In addition, American vernacular tunes such as “Willow Weep for Me” and “Stairway to the Stars” are included. Gordon is at the very top of his game here. His playing is crisp, tight, and full of playful fury. Powell, who at this stage of his life was almost continually plagued by personal problems, never sounded better than he does in this session. His playing is a tad more laid-back here, but is nonetheless full of the brilliant harmonic asides and incendiary single-note runs he is legendary for. The rhythm section is close-knit and stop-on-a-dime accurate.

Tracklist:
01 – Scrapple From The Apple
02 – Willow Weep For Me
03 – Broadway
04 – Stairway To The Stars
05 – A Night In Tunisia

Musicians:
Dexter Gordon – tenor sax
Bud Powell – piano
Pierre Michelot – bass
Kenny Clarke – drums

Download:

mqs.link_DexterGrdnurManInParis19632013HDTracks24192.part1.rar
mqs.link_DexterGrdnurManInParis19632013HDTracks24192.part2.rar

Gabriel Castagna, Württembergische Philharmonie Reutlingen – Astor Piazzolla: Orchestral Works (2000) [Reissue 2003] {SACD ISO + FLAC 24bit/88,2kHz}

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Gabriel Castagna, Württembergische Philharmonie Reutlingen – Astor Piazzolla: Orchestral Works (2000)
PS3 Rip | ISO | SACD DST64 2.0 & 5.0 > 1-bit/2.8224 MHz | 56:34 minutes | Scans included | 3,07 GB
or FLAC 2.0 Stereo (converted with foobar2000 to tracks) 24bit/88,2 kHz | Scans included | 1,08 GB
Features 2.0 Stereo and 5.0 multichannel surround sound | Reissue 2003 | Label: Chandos # CHSA 5006

Astor Piazzolla become hugely popular thanks to his ‘tango nuevo’ band and his short tango pieces. This disc shows his other, more serious side in some of his symphonic music, still mostly inspired by tango rhythms and catchy tunes. It is a great joy to have this music so well recorded and performed, and if you like Piazzolla’s music, you should definitely check this one out.

Piazzolla wanted to be a ‘serious’ classical composer and ready to throw away his Argentinian musical heritage, but under the influence of Nadia Boulanger he used his tangos to create some truly original and engaging symphonic music. The best example for that is the first piece, Tangazo, which meanders between Bartok, Stravinsky, Shostakovich and many others till it turns all powers of full symphony orchestra into a truly magnificent tango-like theme. The rest is just as brilliant.
Three symphonic tangos are more like what we would expect from this composer, in a regular exchange between the orchestra and solo groups. “Milonga del Angel” is probably my favourite of all Piazzolla’s tangos, and even if it looses some of it’s edge in a full orchestral version, it gains some other aspects, it sounds HUGE and even more sensual.
Last piece, sinfonietta, is the earliest composed piece on here, from 1953, written before Boulanger’s advice. Piazzolla is exiting as ever, the music swings wildly around solo clarinet jazzy tune, with dance rhythms always present. The slow movement is a sombre grieving tune, owing much of its musical language to Bartok’s “Music for strings, percussions and celesta”. The finale is still in Bartok’s domain, but with ever present rhythmic twists and turns and unusual colours. It is definitely the piece you wouldn’t expect from a tango master.
Recording is (like all other Chandos SACDs) fantastic, orchestra’s sound is solid and detailed, stage huge (in surround), solo passages focused and clear, dynamic range natural. As I said, if you like Piazzolla and feel like exploring more, go for it. This disc is a perfect accompaniment to his chamber-tango discography.

Tracklist:
01. Tangazo: Variations on Buenos Aires
02. Tres movimientos tanguísticos porteños – Tango No. 1
03. Tres movimientos tanguísticos porteños – Tango No. 2
04. Tres movimientos tanguísticos porteños – Tango No. 3
05. Milonga del Angel
06. Sinfonietta Movt I Dramatico. Allegro marcato, un poco pesante
07. Sinfonietta Movt II Sobrio. Andantino, Poco più mosso, Tempo I
08. Sinfonietta Movt III Jubiloso. Vivace

SACD ISO

mqs.link_GabrielCastangaAstrPiazzllaSymphnicWrks2000Reissue2003SACDIS.part1.rar
mqs.link_GabrielCastangaAstrPiazzllaSymphnicWrks2000Reissue2003SACDIS.part2.rar
mqs.link_GabrielCastangaAstrPiazzllaSymphnicWrks2000Reissue2003SACDIS.part3.rar
mqs.link_GabrielCastangaAstrPiazzllaSymphnicWrks2000Reissue2003SACDIS.part4.rar

FLAC 24bit/88,2kHz

mqs.link_GabrielCastangaAstrPiazzllaSymphnicWrks2000Reissue2003FLACStere2488.2.part1.rar
mqs.link_GabrielCastangaAstrPiazzllaSymphnicWrks2000Reissue2003FLACStere2488.2.part2.rar

Jack White – Acoustic Recordings 1998-2016 (2016) [HDTracks FLAC 24bit/96kHz]

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Jack White – Acoustic Recordings 1998-2016 (2016)
FLAC (tracks) 24-bit/96 kHz | Time – 1:26:03 minutes | 1,70 GB | Genre: Rock, Alternative
Studio Master, Official Digital Download – Source: HDTracks | Artwork: Front cover | © Third Man Records / Columbia

John Anthony “Jack” White is an American musician, singer, songwriter, record producer and actor. He is known as the lead singer and guitarist of duo The White Stripes, and has had success in other bands and as a solo artist. Here’s a special release – compilation of acoustic tracks from one of today’s most talented rockers.

Tracklist:
01 – Sugar Never Tasted So Good [The White Stripes]
02 – Apple Blossom (Remixed) [The White Stripes]
03 – I’m Bound to Pack It Up (Remixed) [The White Stripes]
04 – Hotel Yorba [The White Stripes]
05 – We’re Going To Be Friends [The White Stripes]
06 – You’ve Got Her In Your Pocket [The White Stripes]
07 – Well It’s True That We Love One Another [The White Stripes]
08 – Never Far Away [Jack White]
09 – Forever For Her (Is Over For Me) [The White Stripes]
10 – White Moon [The White Stripes]
11 – As Ugly As I Seem [The White Stripes]
12 – City Lights (Previously Unreleased) [The White Stripes]
13 – Honey, We Can’t Afford To Look This Cheap [The White Stripes]
14 – Effect and Cause [The White Stripes]
15 – Love Is the Truth (Acoustic Mix) [Jack White]
16 – Top Yourself (Bluegrass Version) [The Raconteurs]
17 – Carolina Drama (Acoustic Mix) [The Raconteurs]
18 – Love Interruption [Jack White]
19 – On and On and On [Jack White]
20 – Machine Gun Silhouette (Acoustic Mix) [Jack White]
21 – Blunderbuss [Jack White]
22 – Hip (Eponymous) Poor Boy (Alternate Mix) [Jack White]
23 – I Guess I Should Go To Sleep (Alternate Mix) [Jack White]
24 – Just One Drink (Acoustic Mix) [Jack White]
25 – Entitlement [Jack White]26 – Want and Able [Jack White]

Download:

mqs.link_JackWhiteJackWhiteAcusticRecrdings199820162016HDTracks2496.part1.rar
mqs.link_JackWhiteJackWhiteAcusticRecrdings199820162016HDTracks2496.part2.rar

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