Pro Member
Group: Members
Posts: 805
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Артист: |
The Manhattan Transfer |
Альбом: |
The Manhattan Transfer , 1975 |
Жанр: |
jazz/Vocal Jazz |
Формат файла: |
eac-ape |
Ссылка: |
CD |
Нахождение: |
eDonkey |
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TRACKLIST | 1. Tuxedo Junction Dash 2. Sweet Talking Guy 3. Operator Spivery 4. Candy David, 5. Gloria Levy 6. Clap Your Hands 7. That Cat Is High 8. You Can Depend on Me Carpenter 9. Blue Champagne 10. Java Jive 11. Occapella Toussaint 12. Heart's Desire
| SPOILER (LOG) | EAC extraction logfile from 15. May 2007, 19:12 for CD The Manhattan Transfer / The Manhattan Transfer
Used drive : TSSTcorpCD/DVDW SH-W162L Adapter: 0 ID: 1 Read mode : Secure with NO C2, accurate stream, disable cache Read offset correction : 12 Overread into Lead-In and Lead-Out : No
Used output format : Internal WAV Routines 44.100 Hz; 16 Bit; Stereo
Other options : Fill up missing offset samples with silence : Yes Delete leading and trailing silent blocks : No Installed external ASPI interface
Range status and errors Selected range Filename E:\The Manhattan Transfer - The Manhattan Transfer.by.rat.eac-ape-covers\The Manhattan Transfer - The Manhattan Transfer.by.rat.eac-ape-covers.wav
Peak level 100.0 % Range quality 99.9 % CRC 4E382AC0 Copy OK
No errors occured
End of status report |
SPOILER (INFO) | The Manhattan Transfer first came to the general public's attention as a retro act, a nostalgic throwback in a era consumed with nostalgia - the early/mid-'70s - and their debut Atlantic album, as well as their 1975 summer replacement TV series, catered unashamedly to that market. As a result, this record seemed old when it came out, and it still sounds more than a little sappy, especially when one considers the astonishing growth of the Transfer since. True, "You Can Depend Upon Me" is a lively precursor of vocalese triumphs to come, enlivened by a brief solo from Zoot Sims, and there are subdued reminders of their jazz roots on "Tuxedo Junction." But the object of the latter exercise was to bring back sweet memories, specifically of a wartime era evoked more explicitly by the unctuous, sugary rendition of "Candy." Nothing if not eclectic even then, the Transfer also evokes the Ink Spots, 1940s jive, 1950s doo wop, New Orleans funk, even 1975 with the proto-disco "Clap Your Hands." Yet the net results usually seem calculated, not fresh |
This post has been edited by taurus66 on 14-11-2011, 00:51 |
Please take a second to encourage releaser for all his hard work, press 'Thanks' button
The following members said 'Спасибо!': |
mitay, taurus66, dynamics, RAZOR87, Dudtsyn, shatterhand, adjonja, ArCanon, arizonadream, BioS, drobovik, veritas, Gwelgoth, blade2k |
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