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Forums > Super Sound > Doug MacLeod - Come To Find (XRCD) (1994), спасибо ув. GST из другого форума!


Posted by: yury_usa on 18-02-2007, 19:24
Doug MacLeod - Come To Find (XRCD)
Артист: Doug MacLeod
Альбом: Come To Find (XRCD), 1994
Жанр: Blues
Формат файла: EAC / APE / Cover / 241 MB
Ссылка: CD (ed2k://|file|Doug%20MacLeod%20-%20Come%20To%20Find%20(XRCD)%20-%20Eac%20Ape%20Cover%20(HQShare.Net).rar|253637038|6CD29A91389421A33FEC7BF1127E2146|h=7SDAUIIX5FYQQ7WMMG5TJ2TKPKREAGIM|/
Нахождение: eDonkey/Kademlia
CODE
EAC extraction logfile from 16. October 2005, 9:53 for CD
Doug MacLeod / Come To Find

Used drive  : PLEXTOR CD-R  PREMIUM  Adapter: 1  ID: 0
Read mode  : Secure with NO C2, accurate stream, disable cache
Read offset correction : 30
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 H:\CDImage.wav

    Peak level 100.0 %
    Range quality 99.9 %
    CRC 37658E9B
    Copy OK

No errors occured

End of status report

Posted by: yury_usa on 18-02-2007, 19:25
thanks goes to GST for sharing this wonderful gem :D

Review:
AMG: The sparseness of the arrangements make this album admirable and draw even more attention to the music both overall and in its subtleties. It showcases brilliantly Bill Stuve's upright bass work, and for Jimi Bott, how unusually placed but effective drumbeats prove him a blues drummer deserving greater recognition. "Since I Left St. Louis" has MacLeod reflecting on his early adult years of fast life, women, and drinking, and the lessons painfully learned from those experiences. The title track is a realization that making the most out of life is better than a life of abuse, whether it be child abuse, substance abuse, or any other kind. Always a master on the harmonica, Charlie Musselwhite blows on Willie Dixon's "Bring It On Home" and the MacLeod-penned "Lost Something This Morning." A great example of Piedmont-style blues is illustrated in "Old Virginia Stomp," dedicated to mentor Ernest Banks. Backup singers Black Cherry round the album out with the uplifting gospel feel of "Ain't No Grave," which tells of the triumph of the afterlife over death.

Track List:
01 Bring It On Home 6:33
02 Since I Left St. Louis 3:37
03 Mystery Woman 5:02
04 Come To Find 4:09
05 Old Virginia Stomp 1:57
06 Master's Plan 3:49
07 Ain't No Grave 4:16
08 Run With The Devil 5:22
09 Lost Something This Morning 6:16
10 Rollin' & Tumblin' 3:06
11 Any Port In A Storm 4:40
12 When I Left Missouri 3:25

Posted by: Brut on 18-03-2007, 01:34
Спасибо! Звук на этом релизе просто великолепен!

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