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Waylon Jennings – Analog Pearls Vol.1 (2014) {SACD ISO + FLAC 24bit/88,2kHz}

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Waylon Jennings – Analog Pearls Vol.1 (2014) 
PS3 Rip | ISO | SACD DSD64 2.0 > 1-bit/2.8224 MHz | 30:53 minutes | Scans NOT included | 1.25 GB
or FLAC(converted with foobar2000 to tracks) 24bit/88,2 kHz | Scans NOT included | 576 MB
Genre: Folk, Country

Stockfisch-Records is releasing a new series called ‘Analog Pearls’ with the artist Waylon Jennings. These old analogue recordings were chosen because of the fantastic sound. For the new series Günter Pauler is looking in archives and is searching for grantors of a license. Before releasing as “Analog Pearls” the tracks have been carefully remastered at Stockfisch-Records.

1964 – A large recording room in the “AUDIO RECORDERS” studio in Phoenix, Arizona. The sound engineer FLOYD RAMSEY sets up a selection of ribbon microphones (RCA 44 / RCA KU-3a) for a recording session with WAYLON JENNINGS. The producer is HERB ALPERT.

Waylon Jennings stands in front of his band and a choir. Within a few hours they create a 4-track recording typical for this era. From todays perspective the sound equipment is very rudimentary, but the result is extremely convincing and clean tube sound. The quality of these recordings is exemplary.

Tracklist:
01. Stepping Stone
02. The Real House Of The Rising Sun
03. Just To Satisfy You
04. Kisses Sweeter Than Wine
05. Unchained Melody
06. Four Strong Winds
07. Sing The Girls A Song, Bill
08. Don’t Think Twice It’s Alright
09. River Boy
10. The Twelfth Of Never
11. Sally Was A Good Ole Girl
12. Charly Lay Down The Gun

SACD ISO

mqs.link_StckfischRecrdsAnalgPearlsVl.1WaylnJennings2014SACDIS.part1.rar
mqs.link_StckfischRecrdsAnalgPearlsVl.1WaylnJennings2014SACDIS.part2.rar

FLAC 24bit/88,2kHz

mqs.link_StckfischRecrdsAnalgPearlsVl.1WaylnJennings2014FLAC2488.2.rar


Toby Keith – Shock’n Y’all (2003) {SACD ISO + FLAC 24bit/88,2kHz}

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Toby Keith – Shock’n Y’all (2003) [2.0 & 5.1]
PS3 Rip | ISO | SACD DST64 2.0 & 5.1 > 1-bit/2.8224 MHz | 51:12 minutes | Artwork | 3,97 GB
or FLAC 2.0 Stereo (converted with foobar2000 to tracks) 24bit/88,2 kHz | 50:22 mins | Art | 996 MB
Genre: Country

Since Toby Keith not only can come across as a loudmouth redneck but seems to enjoy being a loudmouth redneck, it’s easy for some listeners to dismiss him as a backwoods right-wing crank — particularly when he succumbs to such easy impulses as mocking Dixie Chick Natalie Maines in concert and naming his 2003 album Shock’n Y’All, not so cleverly spinning the military catch phrase from the second Iraq war into a bad pun. Those listeners aren’t entirely wrong, since he can succumb to reactionary politics, as on swill like “Beer for My Horses,” but Keith isn’t coming from a didactic right-wing standpoint. He’s an old-fashioned, cantankerous outlaw who’s eager to be as oversized and larger than life as legends like Waylon Jennings, Merle Haggard, and Willie Nelson, who bucked conventions and spoke their minds. Sure, Keith enjoys pandering to the Fox News Republicans “Courtesy of the Red, White and Blue” won him, and his jingoistic ventures don’t have the humanity and humor of Haggard’s protest songs (although to Keith’s credit they display far more humanity than Sean Hannity and are much more genuine than Steve Earle’s post-9/11 songs), but that doesn’t mean Keith doesn’t have a big, warm heart. In fact, on every album prior to Shock’n Y’All he’s displayed a taste for mawkish sentiment, but what makes this album work is that he’s turned that sentiment into warmth while making the record into the hardest, toughest set of songs he’s yet made. Unleashed gave him the clout to make any kind of music he wanted, and left to his own devices, he’s lonesome, on’ry, and mean, a cheerful advocate of redneck libertarianism with a sly sense of humor. All of which wouldn’t mean much if he wasn’t a strong songwriter, and more than any of his previous works, Shock’n Y’All proves that he’s a steady-handed journeyman, crafting songs in the tradition of classic outlaw country. It’s a deliberately hard-driving, hard-drinking, gutsy country album, yet it doesn’t shy away from modernism, best illustrated on “Sweet,” with its funky rhythms and use of “babelicious” (which rhymes with “delicious,” btw). Even with these modern flourishes, the album is firmly within the hard country tradition, with lots of barroom humor, propulsive rhythms, hearty humor, and a humanity that contradicts the rabble-rousing of Unleashed. And if Keith is more of a party-hearty hound than a profound singer — even when he imagines “If I Was Jesus,” it’s only so he can turn water into wine at parties — that’s now an attribute, not a deficiency, since it gives him focus and sensibility. Keith is happy to be a dirty old SOB, cracking jokes, drinking beer, and flirting with the ladies, and that makes Shock’n Y’All a fun, rough, rowdy album that wins you over despite your better impulses. It’s not polite, but Shock’n Y’All is pure Toby Keith, and the best album he’s done to date.

Tracklist:
01. I Love This Bar
02. Whiskey Girl
03. American Soldier
04. If I Was Jesus
05. Time For Me To Ride
06. Sweet
07. Don’t Leave, I Think I Love You
08. Nights I Can’t Remember, Friends I’ll Never Forget
09. Baddest Boots
10. The Critic
11. The Taliban Song
12. Weed With Willie

SACD ISO

mqs.link_TbyKeithShcknYAll2003SACDIS.part1.rar
mqs.link_TbyKeithShcknYAll2003SACDIS.part2.rar
mqs.link_TbyKeithShcknYAll2003SACDIS.part3.rar
mqs.link_TbyKeithShcknYAll2003SACDIS.part4.rar
mqs.link_TbyKeithShcknYAll2003SACDIS.part5.rar

FLAC 24bit/88,2kHz

mqs.link_TbyKeithShcknYAll2003FLACStere2488.2.rar

The Cal Tjader Quintet – Latin + Jazz = Cal Tjader (1968) [Audio Fidelity 2003] {SACD ISO + FLAC 24bit/88,2kHz}

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The Cal Tjader Quintet – Latin + Jazz = Cal Tjader (1968) [Audio Fidelity 2003]
PS3 Rip | SACD ISO | DSD64 2.0 > 1-bit/2.8224 MHz | 44:54 minutes | Scans included | 1,8 GB
or FLAC(converted with foobar2000 to tracks) 24bit/88,2 kHz | Full Scans included | 874 MB
Remastered by Steve Hoffman | Audio Fidelity # AFZ-004 | Genre: Jazz

TVibraphonist Cal Tjader is in typically fine form on this live set from 1968. His quintet at the time featured Armand Perazza on congas and pianist Joe Kloess and his repertoire ranged from Afro-Cuban jazz to occasional straightahead tunes. Six of the eight selections on this date are originals by band members or Gary McFarland. Although Tjader had been playing this style of music for 15 years by this time, he still was quite creative and enthusiastic, and is heard throughout in excellent form.

Tracklist:
01. Armando’s Quajira
02. Armando’s Bossa
03. Why Did I Choose You
04. Milo’s Other Samba
05. Song For Pat
06. The Touch
07. Colorado Waltz
08. Nica’s Dream

Cal Tjader – vibes
Armando Perazza – congas
Joe Kloess – piano
Paul Warburton – bass
Mike Buono – drums

Remastered by Steve Hoffman at Kevin Gray’s AcouTech Mastering, Camarillo, CA.

SACD ISO

mqs.link_TheCalTjaderQuintetLatinJazzCalTjader1968AudiFidelity2003SACDIS.part1.rar
mqs.link_TheCalTjaderQuintetLatinJazzCalTjader1968AudiFidelity2003SACDIS.part2.rar

FLAC 24bit/88,2kHz

mqs.link_TheCalTjaderQuintetLatinJazzCalTjader1968AudiFidelity2003FLAC2488.2.rar

VA – Master Music: Female Audiophile (2005) {SACD ISO + FLAC 24bit/88,2kHz}

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VA – Master Music: Female Audiophile (2005)
PS3 Rip | SACD ISO | DST64 2.0 > 1-bit/2.8224 MHz | 65:40 minutes | Scans included | 1,06 GB
or FLAC(converted with foobar2000 to tracks) 24bit/88,2 kHz | Scans included | 1,19 GB

This Master Music Female Audiophile SACD sampler includes the beautiful and timeless voices of Radka Toneff, Simone, Lisa Wahlandt, Katinka Wilson, Kari Bremnes, Inger Marie Gundersen, Kate Purcell, Chie Ayado and more! It is an Asian production and release, not found on Western webpages and outlets.

Tracklist:
01. A Lover In Berlin – Kari Bremnes
02. Tennessee Waltz – Chie Ayado
03. Let It Be Me – Inger Marie Gundersen
04. The Void – Ab Und Zu
05. How Do You Keep The Music Playing – Simone
06. Reasons To Leave – Kate Purcell
07. Estrana – Carmen Cuesta~Loeb
08. Wild Is The Wind – Niki King
09. Somewhere Over The Rainbow – Lisa Wahlandt
10. Gate Ved Gate – Kari Bremnes
11. Did You Fly – Katinka Wilson
12. Moon River – Solveig Slettahjell
13. I Got A Name – Chie Ayado
14. Love Hurt – Strengemusikken
15. The Moon Is A Harsh Mistress – Radka Toneff
16. Haugtussa – Lynni Treekrem

SACD ISO

mqs.link_V.A.MasterMusic.FemaleAudiphile2005SACDIS.part1.rar
mqs.link_V.A.MasterMusic.FemaleAudiphile2005SACDIS.part2.rar

FLAC 24bit/88,2kHz

mqs.link_V.A.MasterMusic.FemaleAudiphile2005FLAC2488.2.part1.rar
mqs.link_V.A.MasterMusic.FemaleAudiphile2005FLAC2488.2.part2.rar

The Gene Harris Trio – Plus One (1985) [Reissue 2003] {SACD ISO + FLAC 24bit/88,2kHz}

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The Gene Harris Trio – Plus One (1985) [Reissue 2003]
PS3 Rip | SACD ISO | DSD64 Stereo > 1-bit/2.8224 MHz | 48:05 minutes | Scans included | 1,92 GB
or FLAC 2.0 Stereo (converted with foobar2000 to tracks) 24bit/88,2 kHz | Scans included | 929 MB
Genre: Jazz

This superb album (reissued on SACD) solidified pianist Gene Harris’ return to the jazz major leagues. Teamed up with bassist Ray Brown, drummer Mickey Roker, and tenor saxophonist Stanley Turrentine, Harris stretches out on such songs as Ray Brown’s blues “Gene’s Lament,” “Things Ain’t What They Used to Be,” “Yours Is My Heart Alone,” and “Battle Hymn of the Republic.” Harris and Turrentine work together so well on this soulful blues/bop date that one wishes they had teamed up much more often.

Tracklist:
01. Gene’s Lament
02. Misty
03. Uptown Sop
04. Things Ain’t What They Used To Be
05. Yours Is My Heart Alone
06. Battle Hymn Of The Republic

SACD ISO

mqs.link_TheGeneHarrisTriPlusne1985Reissue2003SACDIS.part1.rar
mqs.link_TheGeneHarrisTriPlusne1985Reissue2003SACDIS.part2.rar
mqs.link_TheGeneHarrisTriPlusne1985Reissue2003SACDIS.part3.rar

FLAC 24bit/88,2kHz

mqs.link_TheGeneHarrisTriPlusne1985Reissue2003FLAC2488.2.rar

The Gene Harris Quartet – Listen Here! (1989) [Reissue 2003] {SACD ISO + FLAC 24bit/88,2kHz}

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The Gene Harris Quartet – Listen Here! (1989) [Reissue 2003]
PS3 Rip | SACD ISO | DST64 2.0 & 5.1 > 1-bit/2.8224 MHz | 53:50 minutes | Scans included | 3,35 GB
or FLAC 2.0 Stereo (converted with foobar2000 to tracks) 24bit/88,2 kHz | Scans included | 1,00 GB
Genre: Jazz

Although often associated with the blues, only one of the ten selections on this quartet set by pianist Gene Harris (who is joined by guitarist Ron Eschete, bassist Ray Brown, and drummer Jeff Hamilton) is technically a blues. On this excellent all-around showcase for the soulful pianist, Harris sounds in prime form exploring such tunes as “This Masquerade,” “Don’t Be That Way,” Eddie Harris’ “Listen Here,” and “The Song Is Ended.” Listen Here! gives listeners a pretty definitive look at Gene Harris’ accessible and swinging style.

Tracklist:
01. This Masquerade
02. Don’t Be That Way
03. I’ve Got A Feeling I’m Falling
04. Listen Here
05. This Can’t Be Love
06. To You
07. Blues For Jezebel
08. Sweet and Lovely
09. Lullabye
10. The Song is Ended

SACD ISO

mqs.link_TheGeneHarrisQuartetListenHere1989Reissue2003SACDIS.part1.rar
mqs.link_TheGeneHarrisQuartetListenHere1989Reissue2003SACDIS.part2.rar
mqs.link_TheGeneHarrisQuartetListenHere1989Reissue2003SACDIS.part3.rar
mqs.link_TheGeneHarrisQuartetListenHere1989Reissue2003SACDIS.part4.rar

FLAC 24bit/88,2kHz

mqs.link_TheGeneHarrisQuartetListenHere1989Reissue2003FLACStere2488.2.part1.rar
mqs.link_TheGeneHarrisQuartetListenHere1989Reissue2003FLACStere2488.2.part2.rar

The Gene Harris & Scott Hamilton Quintet – At Last (1990/2004) [HDTracks FLAC 24bit/88,2kHz]

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The Gene Harris / Scott Hamilton Quintet – At Last (1990/2004)
FLAC (tracks) 24 bit/88,2 kHz | Time – 59:16 minutes | 1,19 GB | Genre: Jazz
Studio Master, Official Digital Download –Source:HDTracks | Artwork: Digital booklet | @ Concord Jazz

Originally released in 1990, this spectacular album boasts the allstar cast of bassist Ray Brown, guitarist Herb Ellis (Oscar Peterson Trio), saxophonist Scott Hamilton, piano great Gene Harris (Ray Brown Trio), and drum legend Harold Jones (Duke Ellington, Count Basie). This hi-res release lends a startling sense of depth and detail to the sound, making for an immensely enjoyable and intimate listen.

If anyone ever asks you what jazz is, words won’t do. Just play this music. -Nat Hentoff, former music columnist of The Washington Post and The New Yorker

Tracklist:
01 – You Are My Sunshine
02 – It Never Entered My Mind
03 – After You’ve Gone
04 – The Lamp Is Low
05 – At Last
06 – Blues For Gene
07 – I Fall In Love Too Easily
08 – Some Of These Days
09 – Stairway To The Stars
10 – Sittin’ In The Sandtrap

Download:

mqs.link_TheGeneHarrisScttHamiltnQuintetAtLast19902004HDTracks24882.part1.rar
mqs.link_TheGeneHarrisScttHamiltnQuintetAtLast19902004HDTracks24882.part2.rar

Gene Harris Quartet – Live in London (2008) [HDTracks FLAC 24bit/44,1kHz]

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Gene Harris Quartet – Live in London (2008)
FLAC (tracks) 24-bit/44,1 kHz | Time – 1:02:31 minutes | 653 MB | Genre: Jazz
Studio Master, Official Digital Download – Source: HDTracks | Artwork: Front cover | © Resonance Records

Live in London is the exhilarating recording of previously unreleased tapes provided by Harris’ widow Janie Harris. The album is the only available album of Harris in action with his British quartet. The musicians rise to the standards set by Harris’ previous works. Many of the tracks have never been recorded by Harris and none have been recorded in a quartet setting.

Gene Harris recorded extensively from the time he came out of retirement to his untimely death in early 2000. This previously unissued concert, from 1996 at London’s Pizza Express, features the pianist with a group of British musicians (guitarist Jim Mullen, bassist Andrew Clyendert, and drummer Martin Drew, the latter worked extensively with Oscar Peterson) who were chosen prior to his arrival in England. Though the musicians had not played together as a regular group, they gelled rather well as a unit. This hour-plus set starts with an invigorating, extended workout of “(There Is) No Greater Love.” His jaunty, rollicking setting of Thelonious Monk’s “Blue Monk” is bluesy and swinging. Harris changes gears to offer a subtle, lyrical, solo interpretation of “My Funny Valentine”; from there he segues into Duke Ellington’s “In a Mellow Tone” and slowly builds it from a whisper to the boiling point. A shimmering “Misty” and a lively impromptu blues close this excellent set. ~~ AllMusic Review by Ken Dryden

Tracklist:
1 No Greater Love 13:26
2 In a Mellow Tone 11:19
3 My Funny Valentine 6:05
4 Blue Monk 15:18
5 Misty 9:02
6 Blues Closer 7:21

Credits
Gene Harris – Piano
Andrew Cleyndert – Bass
Jim Mullen – Guitar
Martin Drew – Drums

Download:

mqs.link_GeneHarrisQuartetLiveinLndn2008HDTracks2444.1.rar


Gene Harris Quartet – Another Night in London (2010) [HDTracks FLAC 24bit/44,1kHz]

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Gene Harris Quartet – Another Night in London (2010)
FLAC (tracks) 24-bit/44,1 kHz | Time – 1:01:09 minutes | 699 MB | Genre: Jazz
Studio Master, Official Digital Download – Source: HDTracks | Artwork: Front cover | © Resonance Records

Another Night in London is the follow-up to Resonance’s bestselling release Live in London. The album marks only the second-ever release by Gene Harris’ European quartet. Another Night in London features unreleased recordings from a 1996 concert at London’s Pizza Express. With incredible sound quality, the release features versions of songs never cut in a quartet setting or recorded by Gene Harris.

Lured out of retirement by bassist Ray Brown after taking extensive time off from the road, pianist Gene Harris recorded extensively from the mid-’80s until shortly before his untimely death in early 2000. This is the second Resonance CD to come from a 1996 engagement at London’s Pizza Express, features the pianist with a group of European musicians (Scottish guitarist Jim Mullen plus two Englishmen, bassist Andrew Clyendert and drummer Martin Drew, the latter of whom worked extensively with Oscar Peterson). While they had not played together prior to this engagement, they are very much on the same wavelength. “Sweet Georgia Brown” opens softly, with Mullen showing a funky touch, but as the piece develops Harris takes hold with his driving soulful technique. The breezy setting of Antonio Carlos Jobim’s bossa nova “Meditation” sounds like the musicians have spent a lot of time in Rio de Janeiro, swinging it with boundless energy. Harris injects a good deal of humor into his bluesy take of the standard “Lady Be Good,” with ample use of tremolo. The set closes with a rollicking, blues-drenched interpretation of “Georgia on My Mind” (which Mullen manages to fill with hilarious quotes, including John Philip Souza’s “The Stars and Stripes Forever”) that must have left the audience begging for more. One can only hope more music from this booking emerges on Resonance in the near future. ~~ AllMusic Review by Ken Dryden

Tracklist:
1 Sweet Georgia Brown 9:28
2 Meditation 8:39
3 That’s All 8:01
4 Lady be Good 10:06
5 This Masquerade 11:26
6 Georgia on My Mind 13:29

Personnel:
Gene Harris, piano
Jim Mullen, guitar
Andrew Clyendert, bass
Martin Drew, drums

Download:

mqs.link_GeneHarrisQuartetAntherNightinLndn2010HDTracks2444.1.rar

Art nouveau – Songs by Strauss, Zemlinsky, Ravel, Respighi – Teodora Gheorghiu, Jonathan Aner (2013) [eClassical FLAC 24bit/88,2kHz]

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Art nouveau – Songs by Strauss, Zemlinsky, Ravel, Respighi – Teodora Gheorghiu, Jonathan Aner (2013)
FLAC (tracks) 24 bit/88.2 kHz | Time – 59:18 minutes | 777 MB | Genre: Classical
Official Digital Download – Source: eClassical | Cover

Beauty, Myth, Dream. Young women dressed loosely wrapped in soft tissue and fluids covered flowers and arabesques, this is what you can see on the posters of Alfons Mucha, whose cover evokes the style. The staging of beauty, the removal of a realistic representation, the stylization of man and nature in a sensual aesthetic ideal is typical of this time of the turn of the 20th century and is reflected in the art in all areas. Vienna, Paris and Munich centers are a current pictorial and literary evolving towards art pour l’art.
This is what tells the new disc and the booklet of the new expanded recording of Teodora Gheorghiu, undoubtedly one of the greatest sopranos of her generation.

No, she’s not Angela’s sister, cousin, or secret daughter, although being called Gheorghiu can’t have hurt a young singer’s lonely path of rejections, rigged auditions, and raised hopes. There’s even a nice photo of both singers hugging on Teodora’s website. Teodora Gheorghiu is a rising name in major European opera houses, like Vienna and Geneva, and she crops up in Naïve’s Vivaldi series. Discovered by   José Carreras, she gained some attention with her intriguing first album of music written for Anna de Amicis, and with this second album, she seems still keen not to flood the market with yet more Puccini arias. Although darkish in timbre, hers is a very different lyric soprano to Angela’s, with less covering and with a pleasing Slavic edge to the sound. The latter could become strident if she is not careful, but here it is a delight, compared to the watery, neither-here-nor-there sopranos that colleges are churning out. More than once in this enterprising multilingual album, her detailed, lively approach reminded me of the versatile Sicilian soprano Nuccia Focile, and for me compliments don’t come higher.
This program is a pan-European take on Art Nouveau, with four contemporary but seemingly disparate composers. The Strauss items are familiar enough. We start with his early set, Mädchenblumen , where the florid, sensual texts are tastefully handled, with that clean, refreshing tone of hers keeping any sugariness at bay. I have heard more involved accounts of the later Ophelia  songs, but it is hard not to admire Gheorghiu’s taste and refusal to overplay these “mini operas.” Although steeped in a similar romanticism, the lovely set of Zemlinsky songs brings out the best in this young singer, her simple, direct approach being ideal for what are essentially sophisticatedly written arrangements of Tuscan folk texts. Although an early work, there are clear hallmarks of what Zemlinsky’s romantically developed Modernism would become.
We step back a bit, tonally, into Ravel’s Five Popular Greek Melodies, sensually done and providing a good introduction to the four single Ravel songs that follow. Her Rêves  is poised and sincere, but the florid and dramatic Tripatos  takes Gheorghiu’s voice to its limit, with the runs not bang on. Her strengths lie in the more smoothly poised songs like the Ballade de la reine morte d’aimer . The early Respighi cycle Dieta silvane  is a light but utterly delightful discovery, with the texts of his artist/contemporary, Antonio Rubino, depicting a very modern take on classical imagery such as fauns and Pan. The final song, Crepuscolo (Twilight), is as fine a lament as any for the Art Nouveau movement in general.
Gheorghiu’s Italian and French are excellent; in fact she is convincing in all three languages, although I would like her German diction to be placed more forward vocally, as that gets cloudy. Perhaps Gheorghiu missed a trick by not visiting Spain on this European journey of early 20th-century song writing, as there is just enough room for some Falla items, for instance. Jonathan Aner’s playing is superb throughout, never cloying in the Ravel, nor overbearing in the Strauss songs. The Respighi, though, is what makes this album extremely valuable. Aparte is spending money on her with a lavish presentation and booklet, which contains not only full texts and translations but also biographies and an interview. Sound is excellent, airy but focused. We vocal collectors end up with hundreds of pleasing but same-y recital programs, so it is nice to see this singer stick out for mainly the right reasons. –Barnaby Rayfield, Fanfare

No, not Angela Gheorghiu. This is her Romanian compatriot Teodora, who launched her musical career as a flautist, became a company principal at the Vienna State Opera and in 2011 released a well-received disc dedicated to the soprano Anna De Amicis (2/12).
There are times at the start of this new disc when it is debatable that her light soprano is equally suited to the heavier demands of something such as Strauss’s ‘Wasserrose’ from the Mädchenblumen, Op 22. But then, even in that song, with Jonathan Aner supplying a shimmering soundscape in the piano accompaniment, one warms to Gheorghiu’s interpretative personality. When it comes to the playful ‘Guten Morgen, ’s ist Sankt Valentinstag’ from Strauss’s Drei Lieder der Ophelia, Op 67, or the lilting ‘Fensterlein, nachts bist du zu’ from Zemlinsky’s Walzer-Gesänge, Op 6, Gheorghiu is thoroughly in her element. She can certainly soar gloriously to the vocal stratosphere, but the tenderness of expression in Zemlinsky’s ‘Blaues Sternlein’ from the same waltz set reveals a poignantly sensitive streak to Gheorghiu’s singing as well. As the programme courses through Ravel’s Cinq Mélodies populaires grecques, a Ravel group and then Respighi’s ‘Deità silvane’, Gheorghiu’s ability to discern and convey the appropriate vocal style and to encapsulate the essence of a song is matched by her appealing timbre and sense of drama to strike home winningly. –Geoffrey–Norris, Gramophone.

Tracklist:

Richard Strauss – Mädchenblumen Op. 22
01 I. Kornblumen 01:48
02 II. Mohnblumen 01:41
03 III. Epheu 02:55
04 IV. Wasserrose 03:20

Richard Strauss – Drei Lieder der Ophelia Op. 67 No. 1-3
05 I. Wie erkenn ich mein Treulieb vor andern nun? 02:58
06 II. Guten Morgen’s ist SanktValentinstag 01:24
07 III. Sie trugen ihn auf der Bahre bloß 03:40

Alexander Zemlinsky
Walzer-Gesänge nach toskanischen Volksliedern von Ferdinand Gregorovius Op.6
08 I. Liebe Schwalbe 01:31 $ 0.41 USD
09 II. Klagen ist der Mond gekommen 01:24
10 III. Fensterlein, nachts bist du zu 01:05
11 IV. Ich geh’ des Nachts 00:59
12 V. Blaues Sternlein 01:52
13 VI. Briefchen schrieb ich 01:00

Maurice Ravel – Cinq mélodies populiares grecques
14 I. Le Réveil de la Mariée 01:29
15 II. Là-bas, vers l’église 01:48
16 III. Quel galant m’est comparable 00:58
17 IV. Chanson des cueilleuses de lentisques 02:41
18 V. Tout gai! 00:54

Maurice Ravel
19 Ballade de la reine morte d’aimer 04:30
20 Rêves 01:29
21 Manteau de fleurs 03:39
22 Tripatos (Danse chantée) 01:43

Ottorino Respighi – Deità silvane
23 I. I Fauni 02:00
24 II. Musica in horto 02:01
25 III. Egle 03:19
26 IV. Acqua 03:20
27 V. Crepuscolo 03:50

Personnel:
Teodora Gheorghiu, soprano
Jonathan Aner, piano

Download:

mqs.link_ArtnuveauSngsbyStraussZemlinskyRavelRespighiTedraGherghiuJnathanAner201388.224.rar

Joseph Arthur – Redemption City (2012) [B&W FLAC 24bit/48kHz]

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Joseph Arthur – Redemption City (2012)
FLAC (tracks) 24 bit/48 kHz | Time – 112:25 minutes | 1,5 GB | Genre:Rock/Pop
Official Digital Download – Source: bowers-wilkins.com

If there’s such a thing as the opposite of writer’s block, Joseph Arthur has it. The Akron, Ohio-bred/Brooklyn, NY-resiciing singer/songwriter, who once released four EPs in the span of as many months, has demonstrated his unwavering proclivity yet again with the release of Redemption City, a 24-song double album.

Here, Arthur explains why the album sounds the way it does:
“Redemption City started out as an attempt to make a spoken word album with some minimal and mostly electronic background but wound up being a discovery of a different kind of songwriting and a playground for musical exploration.
Most of the tracks started out as electronic compositions or came from programming drum machines but evolved into tracks with real drums usually blending with the machines or coming in later to suit the arrangement. Likewise electronic or Moog bass often became Tele bass and vice versa. Also I used Moog guitar and plenty of electric and acoustic. This gave me more dynamics to play with and more options as to where the tracks could go. Many of the compositions are based around one progression with no changes so the dynamics of the songs had to come from how the instrumentation was arranged and led me to blend electronic with acoustic instruments, and which is why I was very wrong when I initially thought that it was near done in two weeks.
The whole time I worked on the record I was never sure when, if or how it would ever come out. The truth is I don’t really like spoken word albums so for the life of me I don’t know why I set out to make one, but my disdain for the form I was attempting led me to sneak choruses and singing into the mix and I think I got to something like songs. I hope you enjoy them/it and thank you for allowing me to be a part of your Society of Sound.”
The LSO Live release this month is Mahler’s 4th Symphony, perhaps the most familiar of the nine Mahler symphonies.
Though the Fourth is predominantly light in character – and famously opens with sleigh bells – Mahler finds room for dark whimsy, particularly in the second movement which features a skeleton playing a danse macabre on a violin.
The performance profits from some marvellous solos by flautist Gareth Davies and oboist Emanuel Abbühl, two of the many delightful songbirds in this Mahler forest. The soprano in this recording is the very fine Laura Claycomb, who achieves just the right balance of expressivity and innocence Mahler calls for.

Tracklist:
01 – Travel As Equals
02 – Wasted Days
03 – Mother of Exiles
04 – Yer Only Job
05 – I Miss the Zoo
06 – There With Me
07 – No Surrender Comes For Free
08 – Night Clothes
09 – Redemption City
10 – Barriers
11 – You’re Not The Only One
12 – So Far From Free
13 – Surrender To The Storm
14 – Fractures
15 – Free Freedom
16 – Touched
17 – Follow
18 – Kandinsky
19 – Humanity Fade
20 – Sleepless
21 – It Takes A Lot Of Time To Live In The Moment
22 – Visit Us
23 – I Am The Mississippi
24 – Travel As Equals (Reprise)

Download:

mqs.link_JsephArthurRedemptinCity2012BWSSMusic51HiRes2448.part1.rar
mqs.link_JsephArthurRedemptinCity2012BWSSMusic51HiRes2448.part2.rar

Mozart: Le Nozze Di Figaro – Teodor Currentzis, Musicaeterna (2014) [Qobuz FLAC 24bit/192kHz]

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Mozart: Le Nozze Di Figaro – Currentzis, Musicaeterna (2014)
FLAC (tracks) 24 bit/192 kHz | 3 CDs | Front Cover | 5.30 GB | Genre: Classical
Official Digital Download – Source: Qobuz | © Sony Classical

Sony Classical announces a major new Mozart opera project with conductor Teodor Currentzis and his orchestra & choir MusicAeterna. A ‘no-compromise’ studio recording cycle of Mozart’s three Da Ponte operas. Living in a unique artistic community established on the edge of Siberia, the musicians work and record under ideal conditions towards Currentzis’ stated goal “to show what can be achieved if you avoid the factory approach of the classical music mainstream”.

For Currentzis, these recordings represent the culmination of a decade-long research project dedicated to the discrepancies between the composer’s will and what our ears have become used to. About his Figaro, he says: “The radicality of this recording is its precision. It is through strictest discipline that you unlock the perfume, bring the composer’s text into real life, create all these colours that are impossible on the stage. This is why we spent such a significant amount of time in the studio – because we were pushing to reach our limits, to jump above our limit and reach a new understanding of this music. That is the privilege of a ‘no-compromise’ studio recording. There are so many recordings which convey the general spirit of Mozart’s music. The only point in making a new one is to give the audience a chance to hear and learn about all the magic which this score holds. I made this recording because I wanted to show what can be achieved if you avoid the factory approach of the classical music mainstream. My credo is that every performance you give has to be like a pregnancy. You have to dream and you have to wait until the time comes when you see the miracle happening. If you’re not like that in music, you lose the central idea of music. Music is not a profession and it’s not about reproduction. It’s a mission”.

Currentzis chooses the orchestra’s instruments depending on repertoire. For the Da Ponte cycle, historic instruments were chosen because, as Currentzis explains: “They give me the vibrancy, the speed, the taut, tight, crisp sound which fully delivers the thrill of this music. I use them because they sound better. If I thought this music sounds better on electric guitars, I would perform it on electric guitars”. The soloists’ vocal technique is also markedly different to modern operatic interpretation, with a focus on intimacy and clarity, a use of vibrato remarkably restrictive even by today’s ‘period practice’ standards as well as an approach to melodic ornamentation derived from historic sources which cannot be heard in other performances of these works.

Composer: Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart
Conductor: Teodor Currentzis
Orchestra/Ensemble: MusicAeterna

Reviews:

“Currentzis’s cast has a character and blend of its own. A premium has been put on crackling recitative, deft vocalisation (limited vibrato) and dramatic truthfulness: the sense of ensemble is palpable. The field of Figaro recordings is crowded, but Currentzis’s deserves a special space.”

“a lively performance, decently sung and conducted. Currentzis is much concerned with dynamic contrast…’Dove sono’ is a true soliloquy. Most effective of all is the Sextet, where all the characters…sound appropriately stunned…Three cheers for the appoggiaturas, cadenzas and embellishments…What will, I fear, pall on repetition…is the hyperactive continuo.”

Tracklisting:
CD 01
1 Sinfonia (3:59)
2 Atto Primo : Cinque… dieci… venti… (No. 1, Duettino: Susanna, Figaro) (2:47)
3 Cosa stai misurando (Recitativo: Susanna, Figaro) (0:44)
4 Se a caso madama la notte ti chiama (No. 2, Duettino: Susanna, Figaro) (2:41)
5 Or bene; ascolta, e taci! (Recitativo: Susanna, Figaro) (1:50)
6 Bravo signor padrone! (Recitativo: Figaro) (0:49)
7 Se vuol ballare signor Contino (No. 3, Cavatina: Figaro) (2:40)
8 Ed aspettaste il giorno fissato a le sue nozze (Recitativo: Bartolo, Marcellina) (1:09)
9 La vendetta, oh la vendetta (No. 4, Aria: Bartolo) (3:06)
10 Tutto ancor non ho perso (Recitativo: Marcellina, Susanna) (0:42)
11 Via, resti servita, madama brillante (No. 5, Duettino: Susanna, Marcellina) (2:14)
12 Va’ la, vecchia pedante (Recitativo: Susanna, Cherubino) (2:05)
13 Non so piu cosa son, cosa faccio (No. 6, Aria: Cherubino) (2:43)
14 Ah son perduto! (Recitativo: Cherubino, Susanna, Il Conte, Basilio) (1:49)
15 Susanna, il ciel vi salvi (Recitativo: Basilio, Susanna, Il Conte) (2:10)
16 Cosa sento! tosto andate (No. 7, Terzetto: Susanna, Basilio, Il Conte) (4:09)
17 Basilio, in traccia tosto di Figaro volate (Recitativo: Il Conte, Susanna, Cherubino, Basilio) (0:57)
18 Giovani liete fiori spargete (No. 8, Coro) (1:13)
19 Cos’e questa commedia? (Recitativo: Il Conte, Figaro, Susanna) (1:27)
20 Giovani liete fiori spargete (No. 9, Coro) (0:57)
21 Evviva! (Recitativo: Figaro, Susanna, Basilio, Cherubino, Il Conte) (1:10)
22 Non piu andrai farfallone amoroso (No. 10, Aria: Figaro) (4:08)
23 Atto Secondo : Porgi amor qualche ristoro (No. 11, Cavatina: La Contessa) (3:21)
24 Vieni, cara Susanna (Recitativo: La Contessa, Susanna, Figaro) (3:51)
25 Quanto duolmi, Susanna (Recitativo: La Contessa, Susanna, Cherubino) (1:27)
26 Voi che sapete che cosa e amor (No. 12, Arietta: Cherubino) (2:57)
27 Bravo! che bella voce! (Recitativo: La Contessa, Susanna, Cherubino) (1:08)
28 Venite, inginocchiatevi (No. 13, Aria: Susanna) (2:30)
29 Quante buffonerie! (Recitativo: La Contessa, Susanna, Cherubino [Il Conte]) (2:53)

CD 02
30 Che novita (Recitativo: Il Conte, La Contessa) (1:18)
31 Susanna or via sortite (No. 14, Terzetto: Susanna, La Contessa, Il Conte) (3:25)
32 Dunque voi non aprite? (Recitativo: Il Conte, La Contessa) (0:53)
33 Aprite presto aprite (No. 15, Duettino: Susanna, Cherubino) (0:54)
34 Oh guarda il demonietto! (Recitativo: Susanna) (0:23)
35 Tutto e come il lasciai (Recitativo: Il Conte, La Contessa) (1:17)
36 Esci omai garzon malnato (No. 16, Finale: Il Conte, La Contessa) (2:34)
37 Signore, cos’e quel stupore? (Susanna, Il Conte, La Contessa) (1:29)
38 Susanna, son morta: il fiato mi manca (La Contessa, Susanna, Il Conte) (2:58)
39 Signori, di fuori son gia i suonatori (Figaro, Il Conte, La Contessa, Susanna) (1:03)
40 Conoscete, signor Figaro (Il Conte, Figaro, La Contessa, Susanna) (2:15)
41 Ah signor… signor… Cosa e stato … Vostre dunque saran… (Antonio, Il Conte, La Contessa, Susanna, Figaro) (5:38)
42 Voi signor, che giusto siete … Son confusa, son stordita (Marcellina, Basilio, Bartolo, Il Conte, La Contessa, Figaro, (3:48)
43 Atto Terzo : Che imbarazzo e mai questo! (Recitativo: Il Conte) (1:05)
44 Via fati core (Recitativo: La Contessa, Il Conte, Susanna) (1:39)
45 Crudel! perche finora (No. 17, Duettino: Susanna, Il Conte) (2:55)
46 E perche fosti meco (Recitativo: Il Conte, Susanna, Figaro) (0:59)
47 Hai gia vinta la causa! (No. 18, Recitativo: Il Conte) (1:17)
48 Vedro mentre io sospiro (No. 18, Aria: Il Conte) (3:26)
49 E decisa la lite (Recitativo: Don Curzio, Marcellina, Figaro, Il Conte, Bartolo) (2:18)
50 Riconosci in questo amplesso (No. 19, Sestetto: Susanna, Marcellina, Don Curzio, Il Conte, Bartolo, Figaro) (5:42)
51 Eccovi, oh caro amico (Recitativo: Marcellina, Bartolo, Susanna, Figaro) (1:15)
52 Andiam, andiam, bel paggio (Recitativo: Barbarina, Cherubino) (0:44)
53 E Susanna non vien! (No. 20, Recitativo: La Contessa) (1:47)
54 Dove sono i bei momenti (No. 20, Aria: La Contessa) (4:41)
55 Io vi dico signor (Recitativo: Antonio, Il Conte) (0:36)
56 Cosa mi narri (Recitativo: La Contessa, Susanna) (0:25)
57 Sull’aria… Che soave zeffiretto (No. 21, Duettino: Susanna, La Contessa) (3:00)
58 Piegato e il foglio (Recitativo: Susanna, La Contessa) (0:30)
59 Ricevete, oh padroncina (No. 22, Coro) (1:12)
60 Queste sono, madama (Recitativo: Barbarina, La Contessa, Susanna, Antonio, Il Conte, Cherubino, Figaro) (3:12)
61 Ecco la marcia, andiamo (No. 23, Finale: Susanna, La Contessa, Il Conte, Figaro) (2:03)
62 Amanti costanti (Coro) (1:08)
63 Eh gia, solita usanza (Il Conte, Figaro) (1:45)
64 Andate amici! … Amanti costanti (Il Conte, coro) (1:13)

CD 03
65 Atto Quarto : L’ho perduta … me meschina (No. 24, Cavatina: Barbarina) (2:13)
66 Barbarina, cos’hai (Recitativo: Figaro, Barbarina, Marcellina) (2:01)
67 Presto avvertiam Susanna (Recitativo: Marcellina) (0:34)
68 Il capro e la capretta (No. 25, Aria: Marcellina) (3:31)
69 Nel padiglione a manca (Recitativo: Barbarina, Figaro, Basilio, Bartolo) (2:01)
70 In quegl’ anni, in cui val poco (No. 26, Aria: Basilio) (3:50)
71 Tutto e disposto (No. 27, Recitativo: Figaro) (1:15)
72 Aprite un po’quegl’occhi (No. 27, Aria: Figaro) (2:41)
73 Signora, ella mi disse (Recitativo: Susanna, Marcellina, La Contessa, Figaro) (0:50)
74 Giunse alfin il momento (No. 28, Recitativo: Susanna) (1:21)
75 Deh vieni, non tardar (No. 28, Aria: Susanna) (3:11)
76 Perfida, e in quella forma meco mentia? (Recitativo: Figaro, Cherubino, La Contessa) (0:45)
77 Pian pianin le andro piu presso (No. 29, Finale: Susanna, La Contessa, Cherubino, Il Conte, Figaro) (3:22)
78 Partito e alfin l’audace (Susanna, La Contessa, Il Conte, Figaro) (2:15)
79 Tutto e tranquillo e placido (Figaro, Susanna) (4:13)
80 Pace, pace, mio dolce tesoro (Figaro, Susanna, Il Conte) (1:50)
81 Gente, gente, all’armi, all’armi (Il Conte, Figaro, Basilio, Antonio, Susanna, Barbarina, Cherubino, Marcellina, La Contessa) (1:29)
82 Contessa perdono (Il Conte, La Contessa, Susanna, Barbarina, Cherubino, Marcellina, Basilio, Antonio, Figaro) (2:48)
83 Questo giorno di tormenti (Susanna, La Contessa, Barbarina, Cherubino, Marcellina, Basilio, Il Conte, Antonio, Figaro) (1:19)

Download:

mqs.link_MzartLeNzzeDiFigarCurrentzisMusicaeterna2014.part1.rar
mqs.link_MzartLeNzzeDiFigarCurrentzisMusicaeterna2014.part2.rar
mqs.link_MzartLeNzzeDiFigarCurrentzisMusicaeterna2014.part3.rar
mqs.link_MzartLeNzzeDiFigarCurrentzisMusicaeterna2014.part4.rar
mqs.link_MzartLeNzzeDiFigarCurrentzisMusicaeterna2014.part5.rar
mqs.link_MzartLeNzzeDiFigarCurrentzisMusicaeterna2014.part6.rar

Piers Lane, Howard Shelley – Williamson: Complete Piano Concertos (2014) [FLAC 24bit/96kHz]

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Piers Lane, Howard Shelley – Williamson: Complete Piano Concertos (2014)
FLAC (tracks) 24 bit/96 kHz | Digital Booklet | 2.14 GB
Genre: Classical | Official Digital Download – Source: Hyperion

A real rarity from Hyperion’s Anglo-Australian artistic collaboration: music by an Australian composer who was once at the heart of the English establishment. Malcolm Williamson was one of many Australian creative artists who relocated to Britain in the mid-twentieth century. Within a decade of settling in London he had established a reputation as one of the most gifted and prolific composers of his generation. His stature as a leading figure within the British music scene was publicly acknowledged in 1975 when he was appointed to the esteemed post of Master of the Queen’s Music in succession to Sir Arthur Bliss. But today he is almost forgotten and his music virtually never performed.

This double-album set of the complete Piano Concertos is therefore an important document as well as a compendium of deeply appealing music. Williamson wrote with a generosity of emotion and melodic flair rare in the mid-twentieth century, in a forward-looking idiom.

The third concerto is perhaps the masterpiece, a huge and complex work. The fourth was written in 1993/4 and appears here as its world premiere performance and recording.

Piers Lane, the Tasmanian Symphony Orchestra and Howard Shelley are the ideal performers of these unjustly neglected works.

Composer: Malcolm Williamson
Performer: Mark Bain, Piers Lane, Yoram Levy, Martin Phillipson, …
Conductor: Howard Shelley
Orchestra/Ensemble: Tasmanian Symphony Orchestra

Reviews:

Malcolm Williamson (1931–2003) was one of many Australian creative artists who relocated to Britain in the mid-twentieth century, yet few expatriates were able to match the level of success that he achieved abroad. Within a decade of settling in London he had established a reputation as one of the most gifted and prolific composers of his generation and was commonly referred to in the 1960s as the ‘most commissioned composer in Britain’. His stature as a leading figure within the British music scene was publicly acknowledged in 1975 when he was appointed to the esteemed post of Master of the Queen’s Music in succession to Sir Arthur Bliss. Although he lived most of his life in England and drew on various European and British musical influences, Williamson maintained what he identified as a ‘characteristically Australian’ style of composition, stating in the 1960s: ‘Most of my music is Australian in origin … not [inspired by] the bush or the deserts, but the brashness of the cities, the sort of brashness that makes Australians go through life pushing doors marked “pull”.’ Indeed, the ‘forcefulness’, ‘brashness’ and ‘direct warmth of approach’ that Williamson recognized as distinctively Australian qualities are some of the elements that are most characteristic of his personal musical language. While encompassing a broad stylistic range, or—as Williamson preferred to call it—a variety of different ‘densities’, it is the forthright ebullience and emotional directness of his music that sets it apart from that of most other composers who were active in Britain, Europe and Australia in the latter half of the twentieth century.

Born in Sydney, Williamson began playing the piano and composing at an early age and took lessons with the Russian émigré pianist Alexander Sverjensky from the age of twelve. Three years later he was awarded a full scholarship to study the piano, French horn and violin at the New South Wales State Conservatorium, where he met and began composition lessons with its Director, Eugene Goossens. Although Williamson later came to the realization that the training he received in Australia was of a standard equal to the finest offered in the world, his studies under Goossens inspired him to seek further study abroad, and after a trial visit to London with his family in 1950, he settled there permanently in 1953. Soon thereafter he commenced lessons with Elisabeth Lutyens, a pioneer of serial composition in England, and Erwin Stein, a former pupil of Schoenberg and friend of Benjamin Britten. Not surprisingly, Williamson’s compositions from this period show an adherence to serial methods; however, there were a number of other formative influences that encouraged him to modify his compositional approach in the search for a more inclusive idiom.

Williamson’s conversion to Roman Catholicism in 1953 led to an intensive study of the music of the Middle Ages and pre-Reformation, in particular the music of English composer John Dunstable, and he also developed what would become a lifelong affinity with the religious music and theories of fellow Catholic composer Olivier Messiaen. Other stylistic influences came from the positions of employment that Williamson undertook during the mid- to late 1950s, including working as a piano teacher, a music proofreader, a vocal coach, a nightclub pianist and as a church organist. Each of these musical experiences left its mark on his mature compositional voice and inspired him to develop an inclusive musical language that could communicate instantly with listeners of all ages and backgrounds. Consequently, he began to modify his approach to serialism, which he now viewed as an ‘exclusive’ idiom, and to write music in a language that was fundamentally tonal, and above all lyrical.

During his first decade in Britain Williamson focused primarily on composing music for the instruments he could play himself, producing a large number of solo and concertante works for piano and organ. His ability to perform his own keyboard works (including the piano parts of some of the works on the present recording) was an important component in his rise to prominence as a composer and performer during the 1950s and early 1960s, and he was successful in gaining the attention of influential individuals within London’s musical society, including Benjamin Britten and Adrian Boult, who then became powerful advocates for his music. Most of the concertante works that he composed for the piano were written during this early period, and indeed his considerable skills and prowess as a pianist, as well as a composer, can be gauged from listening to the present collection of concertos, which contain fearsomely difficult parts for the piano soloist.

By the mid-1960s Williamson had extended his compositional range to encompass operatic, symphonic, chamber, solo vocal, choral, religious and educational music, as well as scores for ballet, musical theatre, film, television and radio, and over his lifetime he produced more than 250 works in a wide range of styles and genres. The creative impetus for many of these compositions stemmed from his deep interests in literature, religion, politics and humanitarian issues, and musically they incorporate influences from figures as diverse as Messiaen, Boulez, Stravinsky, Bartók and Britten, as well as from jazz and popular music, especially that of George Gershwin, Richard Rodgers, Jerome Kern and Leonard Bernstein.

Typically, Williamson’s compositional process began with the construction of a melodic idea, a ‘tiny musical germ’ or ‘melodic fragment’, as he described it, which could then be ‘used and exploited in every possible way and transformed and used within a tonal context’. This compositional approach, which is evident in each of the works included here, allowed Williamson to incorporate a considerable degree of rhythmic, harmonic and textural variety. Although he was frequently criticized in the press for attempting to integrate multifarious stylistic elements into his music, and particularly for juxtaposing the ‘serious’ and the ‘popular’ within a single work, many of his compositions achieved widespread popularity and success with performers and audiences alike.

Williamson’s creative impact was recognized during his lifetime through numerous awards, posts, fellowships and honours; he was made a Commander of the British Empire in 1976, an Officer of the Order of Australia in 1987, awarded the Bernard Heinze Award in 1989, and received honorary doctorates from a number of academic institutions, including Westminster Choir College (Princeton), the Universities of Melbourne and Sydney, and the Open University of Great Britain. He was also deeply proud to be the youngest composer and first Australian to be named Master of the Queen’s Music in the 350-year history of the post.

The Piano Concerto No 1 in A major was composed between 1957 and 1958 and is dedicated to Clive Lythgoe, who gave the first performance of the work at the Cheltenham Festival in July 1958 with the Hallé orchestra conducted by Sir John Barbirolli. Lythgoe was contracted to perform the work again the following year at the BBC Proms; however, immediately prior to the event he sustained an arm injury, leaving Williamson with little option but to fulfil the role of soloist himself, which he did with great aplomb. He described the concerto as ‘lightweight’ compared to his other works of the period; indeed, it was among the first tonally oriented works that he produced following his studies with Lutyens.

The first movement, which opens and closes Poco lento, is built upon a single melodic idea that is first introduced by the strings in the slow introduction. In the main Allegro section, this theme is presented in various guises—at first it appears in a lively syncopated passage written for the piano and later it is transformed through the inversion of some of its intervals into a striking, lyrical melody that is passed between various instruments in the orchestra. The same series of pitches is also used as the primary source material for each of the remaining two movements. In the Andantino, the series is used to create a darker, brooding character, while in the lively rondo finale (Poco presto), it appears in the grandiose main theme, which itself reflects Williamson’s exposure to popular music in London’s nightclubs and recalls the tunefulness of his overture Santiago de Espada (1957). Although the concerto is essentially monothematic, the diverse treatment of the initial germinal idea shows Williamson’s ingenuity and his already abundant skills as a melodist and as a writer of challenging, idiomatic music for the piano.

In the Concerto in A minor for two pianos and string orchestra Williamson again employed a series or ‘row’ as a structural device—this time a lengthier one that derives its pitch content from the letters of the names of the two American pianists who premiered the work, Charles H Webb and Wallace Hornibrook. The concerto is in fact dedicated to another duo of American pianists—Alice and Arthur Nagle, who performed the piano duo part in the composer’s In place of belief (with chorus) in Washington in 1971. The concerto was commissioned by the Australia Council and the Astra Chamber Orchestra and was premiered in Melbourne in 1972 by Webb and Hornibrook with the Astra Chamber Orchestra and conductor George Logie-Smith.

The first movement, Allegro ma non troppo, is in 5/4 time and shows the influence of Bartók in its folk-like rhythms and in the texture of its main theme, with its busy string accompaniment and octaves in the piano line. The ‘cipher-row’, as Geoffrey Álvarez terms it in his insightful analytical essay on the work (‘Malcolm’s Dancing Numbers: a study of Malcolm Williamson’s Concerto for two pianos and string orchestra’, 2008; see freespace.virgin.net/geoffrey.alvarez/malcolmsdancingnumbers.pdf), is heard in full in the first entry of Piano I and is subsequently used to form a basis for the entire concerto. It appears in each movement in an intriguing array of forms and, along with a modal ascending and descending scalic theme, creates unity from one movement to the next. In the first movement, the cipher-row is developed into an elaborate canon, while in the central Lento movement, which Williamson described as ‘plainsong-esque’, it is employed in the manner of a cantus firmus. In the final movement, a lively and percussive Allegro vivo, it is heard first in the bass line as an accompaniment to a new theme, then in a contrasting chorale-like passage, before bringing the work to a definitive conclusion when it is condensed into a final accented chord.

Williamson composed the Piano Concerto No 2 in F sharp minor over a period of just eight days in late 1960 for a competition requiring a concerto for piano and string orchestra sponsored by the Department of Music and the Choral Society of the University of Western Australia. To his delight, it won a prize and in May 1962 it was premiered by Michael Brimer and the University of Western Australia String Orchestra conducted by Frank Callaway. At this time Williamson’s career as a pianist was at its height, and he subsequently performed the work himself in venues across the world. He described the concerto as ‘an overtly Australian work aiming at spontaneity and vigour rather than profundity’, and in his preface to the revised score he conceded: ‘For me this concerto is a serious parody, a necessary reaction at the time of my First Symphony, my Sinfonia concertante and other works of a more serious interior nature. I mean no parody of any classic, of mediæval music or even a parody of the parodists; it is a parody of myself.’ The original version is recorded here.

Although fundamentally a monothematic work, this concerto incorporates a range of musical styles, or ‘densities’, that can be seen as broadly representative of Williamson’s eclectic musical language. His encounters with the music of George Gershwin and Richard Rodgers, for example, are evident in the exuberant outer movements (marked Allegro con brio and Allegro con spirito, respectively) with their lively, syncopated rhythms and catchy melodies. Simultaneously, the crisp, transparent textures and rhythmic inflections in these movements reflect the influence of Stravinsky and Bartók. In fact, one of the themes in the final movement quotes the finale of Stravinsky’s Firebird directly, a particularly apt borrowing given that the concerto was composed exactly fifty years after the ballet was written and premiered. In contrast, the central Andante lento movement is more introspective and reflective; it opens with a solemn canon for the strings before ushering in a poignant chant-like theme, which was perhaps inspired by the Jewish heritage of the work’s dedicatee, Elaine Goldberg, a talented pianist and the cousin of Williamson’s wife, Dolly.

The Piano Concerto No 3 in E flat major was composed just two years after No 2 and also had its premiere in Australia (in June 1964 by John Ogdon, the dedicatee, and the Sydney Symphony Orchestra conducted by Joseph Post). The work was commissioned by the Australian Broadcasting Commission and the Australasian Performing Right Association and was later made into the ballet Have steps will travel, which was choreographed for the National Ballet of Canada by John Alleyne and first performed in 1988. The third concerto is the largest—and in many respects the most complex—of Williamson’s piano concertos. He chose to write it in four movements in order to avoid scherzo-like figurations in the outer movements and to balance out the substantial slow movement, which he felt would otherwise ‘up-end its neighbours’.

The thematic material of the entire concerto derives from the interval of a perfect fifth and a selection of the intervallic relationships that fall within this interval. This creates a coherent relationship between each of the movements, helping to fuse together materials of widely disparate styles. The opening Toccata, marked Allegro, is so-named because of its motoric rhythms and the varied types of keyboard touch required of the pianist. It is in the traditional bravura style associated with the form and features two clearly contrasted themes that are in themselves related intervallically. The virtuosic second movement is a brilliant scherzo, marked Allegro (Allegretto), that features unconventional time signatures such as 11/16 and 10/16 and shifting divisions of the bar. In contrast, the slow third movement (Molto largo e cantando) does not stray from its basic 3/2 time signature. It is cast as a set of variations on a gentle cantilena theme played at the outset by the piano, with a cadenza inserted before the final variation. The finale (Ben allegro) is again rhythmically elaborate, but is more obviously melodic and extroverted in character than the first movement, as—in Williamson’s words—‘the piano engages a more buoyant orchestra in a combative dance’.

Williamson composed the Sinfonia concertante in F sharp major between 1958 and 1962 and originally intended it to be his Symphony No 2 (Laudes); however, the concertante-like nature of the solo piano and trumpet trio pitted against the string orchestra, as well as the comparative brevity of the work, led to a reconsideration of the title. As with the first symphony, each movement of the proposed second originally carried a religious superscription on the manuscript: ‘Gloria in excelsis Deo’, ‘Salve Regina’, and ‘Gloria Patri’, respectively. Williamson dedicated the work to his wife, Dolly, and it was premiered in May 1964 in Glasgow by pianist Julian Dawson and the BBC Scottish Symphony Orchestra conducted by Norman Del Mar. One of Williamson’s more ‘serious’ or introspective works, it is characteristic of his compositional language in its employment of serial devices within a tonal framework, as well as in its tight thematic organization and rhythmic vitality.

The sonata-form first movement opens with a chant-like motif which is played by the piano in octaves and supported by sustained chords from the trumpets. This motif, which sounds out the syllabic pattern of the original subtitle ‘Gloria in excelsis Deo’, contains the principal material for the entire work. The strings join the texture in the percussive section that follows, which bears a striking similarity to the ‘Danse des adolescentes’ from Stravinsky’s Le sacre du Printemps (1911–13) in its emphatic off-beats and static harmonies. The chant-like theme is inverted to form the quieter second subject and in the recapitulation the thematic material of the exposition appears in reverse order. The slow movement, Andante lento, is in 3/8 throughout and presents its material in one lengthy melodic arc—beginning with muted strings and gradually building to a powerful climax for the full ensemble, before decreasing in volume and intensity to bring the movement to a tranquil conclusion. The finale, marked Presto, is the longest movement and is essentially a rondo, with variations to its recurring material. Like the first movement, it is highly rhythmic and reiterates the tonality of F sharp, as well as making reference to the ‘Gloria in excelsis Deo’ motif. Following a restless piano cadenza, the work draws to a close with an extended coda, in which the ‘Gloria in excelsis Deo’ motif again reigns supreme.

Williamson commenced work on the Piano Concerto No 4 in D major in 1993—more than thirty years after finishing his third solo piano concerto—and it was completed in the following year. The first three solo piano concertos follow a pattern of tonalities separated by descending minor thirds: A, F sharp and E flat (enharmonically D sharp). Had the composer stuck to this pattern for the fourth concerto, it would have been in C (whether major or minor); however, in the event, Williamson cast his Piano Concerto No 4 in D major as a tribute to Dolly Wingate, who died in the late 1980s. Dolly was the sister of the renowned pianist Marguerite Wolff, for whom the concerto was written and to whom it is dedicated. Marguerite died in 2011 without having performed the work. The current recording provides its first public airing.

The first movement, Allegro, is highly rhythmic and again reminiscent of Stravinsky in its percussive chords and dissonant sound world, with accents commonly occurring on unexpected beats in the bar. Such passages are offset by contrasting phrases of unrestrained lyricism. The interval of a fourth, a favourite of Williamson (and particularly appropriate given the concerto’s number), dominates this and the remaining two movements. The central Andante piacevole is notable for its attractive main theme, which is introduced in a brief germinal fragment played by the woodwinds, brass and percussion before it is taken up by the piano and given a full statement—complete with embellishments—to an accompaniment of triplet quavers. The movement gradually increases in intensity, before drawing to a serene close, and is followed by a brief finale, Allegro vivo con fuoco, which returns to the high energy and chromaticism of the opening movement.

Tracklist:

CD 01
1. Piano Concerto No 1 in A major | Poco lento Allegro Poco lento [6’53]
2. Piano Concerto No 1 in A major | Andantino [6’06]
3. Piano Concerto No 1 in A major | Poco presto [5’10]
4. Concerto for two pianos and string orchestra in A minor with HOWARD SHELLEY piano | Allegro ma non troppo [7’07]
5. Concerto for two pianos and string orchestra in A minor with HOWARD SHELLEY piano | Lento [7’46]
6. Concerto for two pianos and string orchestra in A minor with HOWARD SHELLEY piano | Allegro vivo [4’57]
7. Piano Concerto No 2 in F sharp minor | Allegro con brio [4’23]
8. Piano Concerto No 2 in F sharp minor | Andante lento [7’09]
9. Piano Concerto No 2 in F sharp minor | Allegro con spirito [4’15]

CD 02
1. Piano Concerto No 3 in E flat major | Toccata | Allegro [7’02]
2. Piano Concerto No 3 in E flat major | Allegro (Allegretto) [5’40]
3. Piano Concerto No 3 in E flat major | Molto largo e cantando [12’32]
4. Piano Concerto No 3 in E flat major | Ben allegro [4’51]
5. Sinfonia concertante in F sharp major | Crotchet = 76 [5’29]
6. Sinfonia concertante in F sharp major | Andante lento [5’33]
7. Sinfonia concertante in F sharp major | Presto [6’45]
8. Piano Concerto No 4 in D major | Allegro [5’39]
9. Piano Concerto No 4 in D major | Andante piacevole [5’44]
10. Piano Concerto No 4 in D major | Allegro vivo con fuoco [3’29]

Download:

mqs.link_PiersLaneHwardShelleyWilliamsnCmpletePianCncerts2014.part1.rar
mqs.link_PiersLaneHwardShelleyWilliamsnCmpletePianCncerts2014.part2.rar
mqs.link_PiersLaneHwardShelleyWilliamsnCmpletePianCncerts2014.part3.rar

VA – Dr. Chesky’s Sensational, Fantastic, and Simply Amazing Binaural Sound Show (2012) [HDTracks FLAC 24bit/96kHz]

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VA – Dr. Chesky’s Sensational, Fantastic, and Simply Amazing Binaural Sound Show (2012)

FLAC (tracks) 24 bit/96 kHz | Time – 01:15:21 minutes | 1,52 GB | Genre: Miscellaneous
Official Digital Download – Source: HDTracks.com |  Digital Booklet | © Chesky Records

Chesky Records would like to introduce its new Binaural+ Series. Binaural sound has been around for a long time, but until now it was just for headphones and could not be enjoyed on speakers. Our Binaural+ Series recordings sound great on headphones and speakers, and capture the sound of music as you would if you were sitting in front of the band. The Binaural+ Series sessions were recorded in high-resolution 192-kHz/24-bit sound with a special Binaural head (a “dummy” human head with specially calibrated microphones where the ears would be).

Now headphone users will hear the same three-dimensional sound and imaging as audiophiles have for the past 25 years with Chesky Recordings. Also these new Binaural+ Series albums capture even more spatial realism for the home audiophile market, bringing you one step closer to the actual event.

Tracklist
Part 1: The Music
1 Storms Are On The Ocean Amber Rubarth 3:34
2 Back Home Again In Indiana Wycliffe Gordon & Friends 4:54
3 Phrases White,Sherman & Haddad 2:39
4 Pamafunk The Brooklyn Funk Band 4:04
5 Sami Bayyati Sukoon 6:03
6 Bach Toccata And Fugue Gregory D’Agostino 3:30
7 Westside Blues Westside Jazz Quartet 3:50
8 Bach Suite no.2 for unaccompanied cello: Sarabande; Suite no.1 for unaccompanied cello: Prelude Dave Eggar 3:00
9 Drum Solo Todd Turkisher 1:07
10 Binocerous The Widgets 3:27
11 Mozart Divertemento in D Mov 1 The Manhattan Chamber Ensemble 4:35
12 Raqs el-hawanim Sukoon 4:05
13 Crazy Kids Armand Hirsch Trio 3:32
14 Bach Jesu Joy Of Man’s Desiring Choir of the Church of the Blessed Sacrament 3:00
15 Mozart Ave Verum Choir of the Church of the Blessed Sacrament 3:12
16 Dancing Flute & Drum Anne Drummond & Dr. Chesky 3:55
17 This Little Light Of Mine The West New York Spiritual Choir 2:44
18 Tranquility White,Sherman & Haddad 4:29

Part 2: The Tests
19 One Meter Microphone Test 0:26
20 Right Channel ID Test 0:34
21 Left Channel ID Test 0:34
22 Electric Bass Guitar Scale 1:10
23 Acoustic Bass Scale 0:25
24 Organ Pedal Scale 4:37
25 Edgar The Barber 0:32
26 Dr. Chesky’s Shave 0:47

Download:

mqs.link_VADr.CheskysSensatinalFantasticandSimplyAmazingBinauralSundShw20122496.part1.rar
mqs.link_VADr.CheskysSensatinalFantasticandSimplyAmazingBinauralSundShw20122496.part2.rar

Marta Gomez – Cantos De Agua Dulce (Songs Of The Sweet Water) (2004) {SACD ISO + FLAC 24bit/88,2kHz}

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Marta Gomez – Cantos De Agua Dulce (Songs Of The Sweet Water) (2004)
PS3 Rip | SACD ISO | DSD/DST64 2.0 & 5.1 > 1-bit/2.8224 MHz | 53:34 minutes | Scans included | 3,7 GB
or FLAC(converted with foobar2000 to tracks) 24bit/88,2 kHz | Full Scans included | 941 MB
Features 2.0 Stereo & 5.1 multichannel Surround sound | Chesky Records # SACD285 | Genre: Jazz, Latin

This is the record that brought this Colombian-born songstress widespread critical acclaim. Cantos De Agua Dulce charted on Billboard’s Top 10 Jazz Albums tally, the CMJ New World Chart and the World Music Europe Chart. On the strength of this recording, Gomez was nominated for Best Latin Jazz Vocalist of 2005 by Billboard’s Latin Music Awards and was described by the magazine’s reviewer as “… the essence of Latin cool”.

With her velvety voice and jazz infused arrangements, Marta Gómez takes South American indigenous folk music into a hip new realm. Marta not only traverses a whole range of rhythms based on South American folklore, she also writes melodies and refrains that translate across all languages. “With an exquisite voice, Marta manages to sound like a pure folk-traditionalist and jazzy pop adventurer at the same time”. — The Boston Herald

Tracklist:
01. La Finca
02. Eso Pido Yo
03. Seis
04. Cancion De Cuna
05. Bolero
06. La Flor
07. Canta
08. Receta
09. El Pueblo
10. Tonada De La Luna Liena
11. El Hormiquero
12. Confesion
13. Dejalo Ir
14. Aguellas Pequenas Cosas

SACD ISO

mqs.link_MartaGmezCantsDeAguaDulce.SngsfTheSweetWater2004SACDIS.part1.rar
mqs.link_MartaGmezCantsDeAguaDulce.SngsfTheSweetWater2004SACDIS.part2.rar
mqs.link_MartaGmezCantsDeAguaDulce.SngsfTheSweetWater2004SACDIS.part3.rar
mqs.link_MartaGmezCantsDeAguaDulce.SngsfTheSweetWater2004SACDIS.part4.rar

FLAC 24bit/88,2kHz

mqs.link_MartaGmezCantsDeAguaDulce.SngsfTheSweetWater2004FLACStere2488.2.rar


Marta Gomez – Cantos De Agua Dulce: Songs Of The Sweet Water (2004) [HDTracks FLAC 24bit/96kHz]

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Marta Gómez – Cantos De Agua Dulce: Songs Of The Sweet Water (2004)
FLAC (tracks) 24 bit/96 kHz | Time – 49:51 minutes | 1,05 GB | Genre: Jazz Vocal
Official Digital Download – Source: HDTracks.com | Digital Booklet | © Chesky Records

This is the record that brought this Colombian-born songstress widespread critical acclaim. Cantos De Agua Dulce charted on Billboard’s Top 10 Jazz Albums tally, the CMJ New World Chart and the World Music Europe Chart. On the strength of this recording, Gomez was nominated for Best Latin Jazz Vocalist of 2005 by Billboard’s Latin Music Awards and was described by the magazine’s reviewer as “… the essence of Latin cool”.

With her velvety voice and jazz infused arrangements, Marta Gomez takes South American indigenous folk music into a hip new realm. Marta not only traverses a whole range of rhythms based on South American folklore, she also writes melodies and refrains that translate across all languages. “With an exquisite voice, Marta manages to sound like a pure folk-traditionalist and jazzy pop adventurer at the same time”. — The Boston Herald

Tracklist:
01 – La Finca
02 – Eso Pido Yo
03 – Seis
04 – Cancin De Cuna
05 – Bolero
06 – La Flor
07 – Canta
08 – Receta
09 – El Pueblo
10 – Tonada De La Luna Llena
11 – El Hormigueo
12 – Confesin
13 – Djalo Ir
14 – Aguellas Pequenas Cosas

Main Artist Marta Gomez
Fernando Brandao,  flute
Evan Harlan, accordion
Fernando Huergo, bass (electric), guitar (bass)
Alejandra Ortiz, percussion, vocals (background)
Franco Pinna, drums, percussion
Julio Santillan, arranger, guitar, vocals (background)

Producer David Chesky, Julio Santillan
Executive Producer Norman Chesky
Co-Producer Matthew Epstein, Lisa Hershfield
Engineer Rick Eckerle, Barry Wolifson
Assistant Engineer Matthew Epstein, Aaron Freeman, Milton Ruiz
Editing Engineer Nicholas Prout
Mastering Engineer Nicholas Prout
Recorded May 24-26, 2004.

This album was made with the purest audio path, using the very best microphones, mic preamps, analog-to-digital converters, recorders, and cables with careful attention to detail to produce the most transparent and natural sound available today.

Download:

mqs.link_MartaGmezCantsDeAguaDulce2004HDTracks2496.part1.rar
mqs.link_MartaGmezCantsDeAguaDulce2004HDTracks2496.part2.rar

Marta Gomez – Entre Cada Palabra (2006) [HDTracks FLAC 24bit/96kHz]

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Marta Gómez – Entre Cada Palabra (2006)
FLAC (tracks) 24 bit/96 kHz | Time – 50:42 minutes | 1,07 GB | Genre: Jazz, Latin
Official Digital Download – Source: HDTracks.com | Digital booklet | © Chesky Records

Chesky Records release. Colombian singer/songwriter Marta Gomez is a wonderful, enigmatic talent. Her voice has the lulling softness that evokes Brazil’s female vocal icons, yet there’s a depth to her writing that goes far beneath the surface. She’s also something of an expert on Latin rhythms — there are 13 different ones on this disc, all of them rooted in different cultures, from Colombian bambuco to Argentine chamame. But everything is so perfectly put together that you forget the academic side, pulled along by the music and voice. Recorded over just three days, it’s a small masterwork. It doesn’t matter if you don’t understand Spanish, as Gomez evokes delicate moods in her work, each piece beautifully arranged and shaded, with a very live sound. Her last album saw her labeled as a jazz singer, but there’s little evidence of that here, possibly quite deliberately. Instead it’s an album of low-key Latin music that at times edges toward a more straightforward singer/songwriter stance — albeit a very classy one (think Joni Mitchell, for example). On the evidence of this and her previous disc, Gomez is a rapidly rising star of genuine quality and inspiration.

Tracklist:
01 – Maria Mulata
02 – Doña Luisa
03 – De Amarillo se viste la tarde
04 – Mar Adentro, despacito
05 – Casi
06 – Un pedacito de tu amor
07 – ¿Quién se acordará?
08 – Está Linda la Mar
09 – Lucía
10 – Negrito
11 – Cielito Lindo
12 – Como un Secreto
13 – Entre Cada Palabra
14 – Pececito de agua

Download:

mqs.link_MartaGmezEntreCadaPalabra2006HDTracks2496.part1.rar
mqs.link_MartaGmezEntreCadaPalabra2006HDTracks2496.part2.rar

李宗盛 「既然青春留不住-還是做個大叔好」演唱會巡迴影音紀錄LIVE [WAV 24bit/44,1kHz]

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專輯名稱:既然青春留不住,還是做個大叔好! 演唱會巡回影音紀錄 – 李宗盛越過山丘Live Tour 全紀錄
歌手名稱:李宗盛
制作發行:相信音樂
發行日期:2016年11月18日
專輯語言:國語

「做為一個音樂人,很開心我寫的東西能感動你,謝謝大家喜歡我寫的歌,從小李的青春年少,聽到我的兩鬢斑白,所以,我肯定有更珍貴的東西還與你們分享,無以為謝,唯有寫歌,給在乎自己的人,和自己在乎的人聽。」

“每個人心裡都有自己的一首李宗盛”。從華語樂壇經典級「情歌大師」到人生淬鍊傳奇性「心靈導師」,李宗盛2013/9/28在台北小巨蛋首演首場《既然青春留不住》世界巡迴演唱會,巡迴35場,穿越21個月,橫跨28個城市。從「給自己的歌」唱到「給每顆心的歌」,李宗盛無可取代以的李式經典折服全球,2015/4/4&5 登上了全球藝術表演者嚮往的最高殿堂林肯中心(Lincoln Center)開唱,更於同年06/22登上英國有144年歷史的倫敦皇家阿爾伯特音樂廳(Royal Albert Hall),演出此系列世界巡迴最終場《還是做個大叔好》,越過山丘再攀顛峰,與幸參與這場經典一刻的歌迷悸動見證這一次絕無僅有的因緣際會。

李宗盛在製作過無數膾炙人口專輯經歷人生大風大浪、華麗與沉潛,近年來淡出舞台,回到音樂發聲的起點,專心於木吉他事業,打造華人第一個手工吉他品牌「Lee Guitars」;再次走回幕前開唱,是為了享受一總感覺,透過唱過的每首歌,以過來人的角度直率的分享過往歲月及故事,現在回頭看起來,都帶著記憶的溫度。李宗盛也感謝歌迷:「做為一個音樂人,很開心我寫的東西能感動你,謝謝大家喜歡我寫的歌,從小李的青春年少,聽到我的兩鬢斑白,所以,我肯定有更珍貴的東西還與你們分享,無以為謝,唯有寫歌,給在乎自己的人,和自己在乎的人聽。」

曲目:

CD 1

01 愛情有什麼道理
02 生命中的精靈
03 飄洋過海來看你
04 不必在乎我是誰
05 領悟
06 十二樓
07 晚婚
08 因為單身的緣故
09 寂寞難耐
10 我是真的愛你
11 鬼迷心竅
12 組曲_ 別怕我傷心 _ 聽見有人叫你寶貝 _ 愛情少尉 _ 愛如潮
13 讓我歡喜讓我憂
14 飛
15 傷心地鐵

CD 2

16 忙與盲
17 阿宗三件事
18 你像個孩子
19 因為寂寞
20 夢醒時分
21 愛的代價
22 山丘
23 一個人
24 問
25 寂寞的戀人
26 凡人歌
27 你們
28 我是一隻小小鳥
29 給自己的歌

Download:

mqs.link_20161118WAV2444.1.part1.rar
mqs.link_20161118WAV2444.1.part2.rar
mqs.link_20161118WAV2444.1.part3.rar

Relax α Wave –ぐっすり眠れるα波 ~ クリスマス プレミアム・オルゴール・ベスト [Mora FLAC 24bit/96kHz]

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レーベル S2S
配信開始日 2016.11.19
収録曲数 全20曲
販売データ ハイレゾ|FLAC|96.0kHz/24bit

http://mora.jp/package/43000072/GCHPM-001_F/

年の瀬を彩るクリスマスの名曲達を、リアルで甘美なオルゴールの音色で

国産最高級オルゴールと日本が世界に誇るオルゴール職人・永井淳氏の夢の共演!圧倒的音質の「ぐっすり眠れるα波・プレミアム・オルゴール・ベスト」。シリーズの4作目として、クリスマスの定番曲を集めたクリスマス楽曲集が登場!

プレミアム・オルゴール・ベストは「ぐっすり眠れるα波」のコンセプトに沿った、快眠のためのゆったりしたBPMとスムーズなボイシングを意識した作品であるが、大ヒットしているピアノ・バージョンとはまた違ったオルゴール特有の美しい響きが特徴的。またアレンジ面でも国産オルゴール独自の深く豊かな響きを再現するため、音の隙間と和音の並びを特に重視。ピアノとはまた違った夢を見せてくれるような、甘い懐かしさと深い切なさに満ちたロマンティックな音世界を聴く事ができるシリーズである。

クリスマス・キャロルの「もろびとこぞりて」「ひいらぎ飾ろう」「きよしこの夜」、クリスマス・ソングの「赤鼻のトナカイ」「ウィンター・ワンダーランド」「サンタが街にやってくる」、クリスマス・ポピュラー・ソングの「恋人達のクリスマス」「ラスト・クリスマス」「Wonderful Christmastime」等、クリスマス・シーズンを彩る代表曲を網羅した選曲でお届けするクリスマス・オルゴール・アルバム。

全曲が2分程の長さでまとめられているのが特色で、各曲のいい部分を特に楽しめるような、何か得をした(?)ような気分にもなる。もちろんアルバム・コンセプトに添う睡眠に配慮した音の配置や意識的なBPM(テンポ)による快眠効果も持つサウンドでもあるのだが、特にどこか懐かしいような、気分が落ち着く豊かでふくよかな響きを持ったオルフェイスの音色がとても心地良い。心身をリラックスさせたい時のBGM等にも役立つのではないだろうか。オススメはゆったりとした中にも華やかさを感じる2曲目「もろびとこぞりて」、アルペジオが綺麗な9曲目「ホワイト・クリスマス」、バラード・アレンジも似合う11曲目「ラスト・クリスマス」、少しジャジーな18曲目「ザ・クリスマス・ソング」。

1音1音丁寧にサンプリングされた本物のオルゴールの音色と、丁寧な味付けによる快眠のためのアレンジが施されたこのクリスマス・オルゴール・アルバム、心地良い眠りや気分を落ち着かせたい時はもちろん、季節感を出したい時のBGMにも最適。寒い冬を暖かい音色で優しく包み込んでくれる好作品!

録音スタジオ:FREEDOM STUDIO
アレンジャー:Kohei Sotani
エンジニア:Tatsuya Miyoshi

本シリーズのオルゴール制作ストーリーについては、
「ぐっすり眠れるα波 ~ ジブリ プレミアム・オルゴール・ベスト」のページをご覧下さい。

収録曲

1 – 恋人達のクリスマス (オルゴール) – 01:56
2 -もろびとこぞりて (オルゴール) – 01:25
3 – ジングルベル (オルゴール) – 01:44
4 – 赤鼻のトナカイ (オルゴール) – 01:50
5 – ママがサンタにキスをした (オルゴール) – 02:01
6 – サンタが街にやってくる (オルゴール) – 01:54
7 – そりすべり (オルゴール) – 02:35
8 – ジングルベルロック (オルゴール) – 01:57
9 – ホワイト・クリスマス (オルゴール) (オルゴール) – 01:45
10 – Wonderful Christmastime (オルゴール) – 02:09
11 – ラスト・クリスマス (オルゴール) – 02:25
12 – もみの木 (オルゴール) – 01:49
13 – We Wish You A Merry Christmas (オルゴール) – 01:49
14 – Let It Snow! Let It Snow! Let It Snow! (オルゴール) – 01:59
15 – ウィンター・ワンダーランド (オルゴール) – 02:08
16 – ひいらぎ飾ろう (オルゴール) – 02:06
17 – Happy Xmas(War Is Over) (オルゴール) – 02:32
18 – ザ・クリスマス・ソング (オルゴール) – 02:14
19 – O Holy Night (オルゴール) – 02:51
20 – きよしこの夜 (オルゴール) – 02:03

Download:

mqs.link_HiRes96kHz24bitFLAC.part1.rar
mqs.link_HiRes96kHz24bitFLAC.part2.rar

Sex Pistols – Never Mind The Bollocks (1977) [Japanese Limited SHM-SACD 2013 # UIGY-9537] {SACD ISO + FLAC 24bit/88,2kHz}

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Sex Pistols – Never Mind The Bollocks (1977) [Japanese Limited SHM-SACD 2013 # UIGY-9537]
PS3 Rip | SACD ISO | DSD64 2.0 > 1-bit/2.8224 MHz | 38:52 minutes | Scans included | 1,57 GB
or FLAC(converted with foobar2000 to tracks) 24bit/88,2 kHz | Scans included | 875 MB
Genre: Punk

While mostly accurate, dismissing Never Mind the Bollocks as merely a series of loud, ragged midtempo rockers with a harsh, grating vocalist and not much melody would be a terrible error. Already anthemic songs are rendered positively transcendent by Johnny Rotten’s rabid, foaming delivery. His bitterly sarcastic attacks on pretentious affectation and the very foundations of British society were all carried out in the most confrontational, impolite manner possible. Most imitators of the Pistols’ angry nihilism missed the point: underneath the shock tactics and theatrical negativity were social critiques carefully designed for maximum impact. Never Mind the Bollocks perfectly articulated the frustration, rage, and dissatisfaction of the British working class with the establishment, a spirit quick to translate itself to strictly rock & roll terms. the Pistols paved the way for countless other bands to make similarly rebellious statements, but arguably none were as daring or effective. It’s easy to see how the band’s roaring energy, overwhelmingly snotty attitude, and Rotten’s furious ranting sparked a musical revolution, and those qualities haven’t diminished one bit over time. Never Mind the Bollocks is simply one of the greatest, most inspiring rock records of all time.

Tracklist:
01. Holidays In The Sun
02. Bodies
03. No Feelings
04. Liar
05. God Save The Queen
06. Problems
07. Seventeen
08. Anarchy In The UK
09. Submission
10. Pretty Vacant
11. New York
12. EMI

DSD flat transferred from UK original analogue master tapes and mastered by Tim Young at Metropolis Studios, London, in 2013.

SACD ISO

mqs.link_SexPistlsNeverMindTheBllcks1977Japan2013SHMSACDIS.part1.rar
mqs.link_SexPistlsNeverMindTheBllcks1977Japan2013SHMSACDIS.part2.rar

FLAC 24bit/88,2kHz

mqs.link_SexPistlsNeverMindTheBllcks1977Japan2013FLAC2488.2.rar

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