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Friar Alessandro – Voice From Assisi (2012) [Official Digital Download 24bit/96kHz]

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Friar Alessandro – Voice From Assisi (2012)
FLAC (tracks) 24 bit/96 kHz | Time – 44:56 minutes | 925 MB | Genre: Classical
Official Digital Download – Source: HDTracks.com | Digital booklet | © Decca Records

Decca Records has announced the global signing of Franciscan Friar, Alessandro Brustenghi, from the original friary founded by Saint Francis of Assisi: the Porziuncola in Assisi. This marks the first time in music history that a Friar has landed a major record deal. Alessandro was discovered by the legendary Mike Hedges (U2, The Cure, Manic Street Preachers), while in Italy. The album is a masterful blend of traditional and modern sacred songs, including an original track by Royal Wedding composer Paul Mealor.

Given the tremendous success of the Singing Nun album half a century ago, it’s surprising that it has taken so long for the music industry to come up with a Singing Friar. Friar Alessandro, an Umbrian tenor and Franciscan friar named Alessandro Brustenghi, seems sincere enough in his undertaking here. Having taken a vow of poverty, he does not stand to profit from this major-label release, although some profits will be donated to his order. The program of Voice from Assisi, with the composers mostly unidentified in the graphics (all except a hitherto unknown sacred aria by Bellini are quite familiar), reflects a degree of thought on the singer’s part: much of the music has roots in chant or in other music that is iconic of Catholic ritual, and he clearly came to it out of his own enthusiasm. Yet even these points in favor aren’t enough to quite make this work. Alessandro’s voice lacks the power to make him the next Italian star Decca seems to be hoping he’ll become. In its lower register it’s not as pleasant as Bocelli’s, with a flat honk that wears on you at times. Much of the music is arranged for the unidentified orchestra (and choir), and the arrangements start out from the overwrought style of Donovan’s theme from the film Fratello Sole, Sorella Luna (Brother Sun, Sister Moon) and don’t develop or vary much from there. The album as a whole smothers the listener in the clichés of soundtrack music. The religiously oriented may be able to listen through to the core here, but average listeners can do better with other crossover releases.

Tracklist:
01 – Fratello Sole Sorella Luna
02 – Pater Noster
03 – Le Lodi Di Dio Altissimo
04 – Panis Angelicus
05 – Sancta Maria
06 – Tantum Ergo Sacramentum
07 – Vergin Tutto Amor
08 – Ave Maria
09 – Kyrie
10 – Cantique De Jean Racine
11 – Make Me A Channel Of Your Peace

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https://subyshare.com/f5nosrioqiub/FriarAl3ssandroVoic3FromAssisi2012HDTracks24882.rar.html


Faces – Long Player (1971/2015) [Official Digital Download 24bit/192kHz]

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Faces – Long Player (1971/2015)
FLAC (tracks) 24-bit/192 kHz | Time – 45:22 minutes | 1,71 GB | Genre: Rock
Studio Master, Official Digital Download – Source: HDTracks | Front Cover | © Warner Bros. Records
Recorded: September 1970-January 1971 at Morgan Sound Studios, London and with The Rolling Stones Mobile Recording Unit, live tracks recorded at Fillmore East, NYC

On their second album Long Player, the Faces truly gel — which isn’t quite the same thing as having the band straighten up and fly right because in many ways this is album is even more ragged than their debut, with tracks that sound like they were recorded through a shoebox thrown up against a couple of haphazardly placed live cuts. But if the album seems pieced together from a few different sources, the band itself all seems to be coming from the same place, turning into a ferocious rock & roll band who, on their best day, could wrestle the title of greatest rock & roll band away from the Stones. Certainly, the sheer force of the nine-minute jam on Big Bill Broonzy’s “I Feel So Good” proves that, but what’s more remarkable is how the band are dovetailing as songwriters, complementing and collaborating with very different styles, to the extent that it’s hard to tell who wrote what; indeed, the ragged, heartbroken “Tell Everyone” sounds like a Stewart original, but it comes from the pen of Ronnie Lane. The key is that Stewart, Lane and Ron Wood (Ian McLagan only co-write “Bad ‘N’ Ruin”) are all coming from the same place, all celebrating a rock & roll that’s ordinary in subject but not in sound. Take “Bad ‘N’ Ruin,” the tale of a ne’er do well returning home with his tail between his legs, after the city didn’t treat him well. It has its counterpart in “Had Me a Real Good Time,” where a reveler insists that he has to leave, concluding that he was glad to come but also glad to get home. These are songs that celebrate home, from family to the neighborhood, and that big heart beats strong in the ballads, too, from the aching “Sweet Lady Mary” to the extraordinary reworking of Paul McCartney’s “Maybe I’m Amazed,” which soars in ways Macca’s exceptional original never did. Then, there’s there humor — the ramshackle “On the Beach,” the throwaway lines from Rod on “Had Me a Real Good Time” — which give this a warm, cheerful heart that helps make Long Player a record as big, messy, and wonderful as life itself.

Tracklist:
1 Bad ‘N’ Ruin 5:24
2 Tell Everyone 4:18
3 Sweet Lady Mary 5:49
4 Richmond 3:04
5 Maybe I’m Amazed 5:53
6 Had Me A Real Good Time 5:51
7 On The Beach 4:15
8 I Feel So Good 8:49
9 Jerusalem 1:53

Personnel:
Rod Stewart – lead vocals
Ronnie Lane – bass, acoustic guitar, percussion, backing vocals, lead vocal [tracks 4 & 7, first verse/harmony on track 5]Ronnie Wood – lead, slide, acoustic and pedal steel guitars, backing vocals, co-lead vocal [track 7]Ian McLagan – piano, organ and keyboards, backing vocals
Kenney Jones – drums and percussion
Bobby Keys – tenor saxophone on “Had Me a Real Good Time”
Harry Beckett – trumpet on “Had Me a Real Good Time”

Download:

https://subyshare.com/u57srxuwinso/FacesL0ngPlayer19712015HDTracks24192.part1.rar.html
https://subyshare.com/y8oy6gfa6ku8/FacesL0ngPlayer19712015HDTracks24192.part2.rar.html

Elvis Presley – Aloha From Hawaii Via Satellite (1973/2015) [Official Digital Download 24bit/96kHz]

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Elvis Presley – Aloha From Hawaii Via Satellite (1973/2015)
FLAC (tracks) 24 bit/96 kHz  | Time – 01:02:07 minutes | 1,28 GB | Genre: Pop, Rock
Studio Masters, Official Digital Download – Source: Q0buz | Front Cover | © RCA Records
Recorded live at the Honolulu International Center, 12:30 AM, Sunday, January 14, 1973

Aloha from Hawaii Via Satellite is a live concert album by American singer and musician Elvis Presley, released by RCA Records in February 1973 and peaked at #1 on the Billboard chart in the spring of the same year. Despite the satellite innovation, the US did not air the concert until April 4. Aloha from Hawaii (which was a worldwide ratings smash) went to #1 on the Billboard album chart. The album dominated the charts, reaching #1 in both the pop and country charts in the US.
Aloha from Hawaii was a two-disc set—only the second such release of Presley’s career (the first being 1969’s double set From Memphis to Vegas/From Vegas to Memphis, which contained one album each of studio and concert recordings). It was initially released only in quadraphonic sound, becoming the first album in the format to top the Billboard album chart.
The album contains all the live performances from the TV special, but omits the five songs Presley recorded after the show and which were featured on the original broadcast; these would be issued later on the album Mahalo from Elvis. The album also omits Presley’s brief announcement concerning the concert being presented for the benefit of the Kui Lee Cancer Fund.
The album was certified Gold on February 13, 1973, platinum and 2× Platinum on May 20, 1988, 3× Platinum on July 15, 1999, and 5× Platinum on August 1, 2002, by the RIAA.On April 15, 2016 the BPI certified the album Silver for sales of 60,000 units.

Aloha from Hawaii Via Satellite is a double-album set that captures Elvis’ celebrated live television concert from 1973. Arguably, it also captures the peak of the Presley live extravaganzas of the ’70s. Spanning two albums and 30 songs (the single-CD reissue from 1992 trims the number of songs to 24), the record finds Elvis pulling out all the stops, running through a set that favors covers and new material at the expense of classics. That’s hardly a complaint, since the whole point of his concerts in the ’70s was a sensory onslaught, where a bluesy (albeit over the top) version of “See See Rider” could sit next to a schmaltzy showstopper like “American Trilogy.” And the key to the whole thing is that Elvis actually sounds more committed to “American Trilogy” than “See See Rider.” That passion and energy are carried over to each song, and that’s what makes the entire enterprise so entertaining. It’s also why the record was a massive hit upon its release and why so many fans have fond memories of Aloha from Hawaii decades after the actual concert. –AllMusic Review by Stephen Thomas Erlewine

Tracklist:
1 Introduction: Also Sprach Zarathustra (Theme From 2001: A Space Odyssey) 1:10
2 See See Rider 2:59
3 Burning Love 3:10
4 Something 3:31
5 You Gave Me A Mountain 3:17
6 Steamroller Blues 3:04
7 My Way 4:04
8 Love Me 1:55
9 Johnny B. Goode 1:43
10 It’s Over 2:10
11 Blue Suede Shoes 1:13
12 I’m So Lonesome I Could Cry 2:16
13 I Can’t Stop Loving You 2:27
14 Hound Dog 0:52
15 What Now My Love 3:15
16 Fever 2:28
17 Welcome To My World 1:54
18 Suspicious Minds 4:31
19 Introductions By Elvis 1:37
20 I’ll Remember You 2:31
21 Medley: Long Tall Sally/Whole Lotta Shakin’ Goin’ On 2:04
22 American Trilogy 4:34
23 A Big Hunk O’ Love 2:09
24 Can’t Help Falling In Love 2:43

Personnel:
Elvis Presley, guitar, vocals
Background vocalists:
J.D. Sumner & the Stamps Quartet: Ed Enoch, Bill Baize, Donnie Sumner, Ed Wideman, J.D. Sumner
The Sweet Inspirations: Myrna Smith, Sylvia Shemwell, Estelle Brown
Kathy Westmoreland
The TCB Band:
James Burton, lead guitar
John Wilkinson, rhythm guitar
Ronnie Tutt, drums
Jerry Scheff, Fender bass
Glen Hardin, piano, keyboards
Charlie Hodge, vocals, acoustic guitar
The Joe Guercio Orchestra

Download:

https://subyshare.com/2gtk4kbe3g58/ElvisPresleyAl0haFr0mHawaiiViaSatellite19732015Q0buz2496.part1.rar.html
https://subyshare.com/j7ffgmh92ixr/ElvisPresleyAl0haFr0mHawaiiViaSatellite19732015Q0buz2496.part2.rar.html

Elvis Presley – Elvis Today (1975/2015) [Official Digital Download 24bit/96kHz]

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Elvis Presley – Elvis Today (1975/2015)
FLAC (tracks) 24 bit/96 kHz | Time – 34:03 minutes | 693 MB | Genre: Pop, Rock
Studio Masters, Official Digital Download – Source: HDTracks | Front Cover | © RCA Records
Recorded: March 10–12, 1975, RCA Studio C, Hollywood, CA

Today is a studio album by American singer Elvis Presley, released on May 7, 1975 by RCA Records. The Today sessions were held in RCA’s Studio C, Hollywood, Los Angeles, California, March 10–12, 1975, and marked the last time Presley would record in a studio. He last recorded at Studio C, Hollywood in 1972 where he recorded the gold records “Burning Love” and “Separate Ways”. At this time, Elvis was 40 years old. He was accompanied by his then-current girlfriend, Sheila Ryan. In the 2005 FTD TODAY release from these sessions, Presley asked her to “step up here Sheila, let me sing to ya baby” on Take 1 of Don McLean’s “And I Love You So”. He continued to make “And I Love You So” and “Fairytale” a part of his live concerts until his death. On stage, he often referred to “Fairytale” as the story of his life.
Today featured a new rock song, “T-R-O-U-B-L-E”, which was released as its first single and went Top 40 in the US. “Bringin’ It Back” was its second single in the US. The album also features covers of songs by Perry Como, Tom Jones, The Pointer Sisters, Billy Swan, Faye Adams, The Statler Brothers and Charlie Rich.
“Green, Green Grass of Home” was released as a single in the UK, where it went Top 30, and also received US airplay. Presley first heard the song in 1967 while driving his bus back to Memphis after making another movie, and heard Tom Jones’ new single “Green Green Grass of Home” for the first time and loved it. He had the Memphis Mafia call the local AM station to make them replay it over and over again. Eight years later, he cut his own version.

As it turned out, Today would be the last full studio album Elvis Presley recorded in his life. Headed out to Hollywood to collect the Grammy he won for Best Inspirational Performance of 1975 (it was awarded for a live version of “How Great Thou Art”), Presley booked sessions in RCA’s L.A. Studio C with his longtime producer Felton Jarvis and settled in to knock out ten songs over the course of three days. Because it opens with the rollicking boogie “T-R-O-U-B-L-E” — a legitimate throwback to the dawn of rock & roll — and also finds space for the down-and-dirty gospel-soul groove of “Shake a Hand” and Billy Swan’s cheerful “I Can Help,” Today was pegged upon its initial release as something of a return to Elvis’ Sun roots, but the rest of the record plays straight down the middle: a collection of Presley’s preferred majestic ballads and MOR pop tempered by a touch of lushly produced Nashville country. This combination had long been a winning one for Elvis — it’s the blend developed in the wake of 1971’s Elvis Country (I’m 10,000 Years Old) — but in 1975, it was slightly past its sell-by date, so it didn’t quite sell in blockbuster numbers (“T-R-O-U-B-L-E” did turn into a hit, nearly cracking the country Top Ten and revived in 1992 by Travis Tritt). Nevertheless, these era-specific concerns fade over time and leave Today standing as an excellent latter-day Elvis album. Those rockabilly revivals find Presley game and loose, as does a nimble version of the Statler Brothers’ “Susan When She Tried”; the trio of orchestrated ballads (Don McLean’s “And I Love You So,” Jerry Chesnut’s “Woman Without Love,” Troy Seals’ “Pieces of My Life”) give Elvis an opportunity to find a moving heart beating underneath the shine, a skill that also enlivens an almost corny version of the ’60s standard “Green, Green Grass of Home”; while the country reinvention of the Pointer Sisters’ “Fairytale” and the soulful rendition of Gregg Gordon’s “Bringin’ It Back” are expert adult contemporary — gorgeous and skirting the edges of being overwrought. Added up, Today touches upon nearly everything he did well in the mid-’70s — a nice portrait of Elvis at a time when he was still an active, thriving working musician and a record that remains easy to enjoy today. –AllMusic Review by Stephen Thomas Erlewine

Tracklist:
1 T-R-O-U-B-L-E 3:00
2 And I Love You So 3:36
3 Susan When She Tried 2:15
4 Woman Without Love 3:31
5 Shake A Hand 3:46
6 Pieces Of My Life 3:59
7 Fairytale 2:41
8 I Can Help 4:01
9 Bringin’ It Back 2:58
10 Green Green Grass Of Home 3:32

Personnel:
Elvis Presley – lead vocals
James Burton, Chip Young, Johnny Christopher – guitar
David Briggs, Tony Brown, Glen Hardin, Jimmy Gordon – keyboards
Buddy Spicher – fiddle
Millie Kirkham, Mary Holladay, Ginger Holladay, Lea Berinati – background vocals
Weldon Myrick – steel guitar
Norbert Putnam, Mike Leech, Duke Bardwell – bass
Ronnie Tutt – drums
Charlie Hodge – guitar, harmony vocals

Download:

https://subyshare.com/8winhm2qsgux/ElvisPresleyElvisT0day19752015HDTracks2496.rar.html

Elvis Presley – Good Times (1974/2015) [Official Digital Download 24bit/96kHz]

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Elvis Presley – Good Times (1974/2015)
FLAC (tracks) 24 bit/96 kHz | Time – 30:05 minutes | 620 MB | Genre: Pop, Rock
Studio Masters, Official Digital Download – Source: HDTracks | Front Cover | © RCA Records
Recorded: July 21 – December 16, 1973, Stax Studios, Memphis

Good Times is a 1974 album by American singer and musician Elvis Presley and his 20th studio album. The album was constructed by the first pick of a session held at Stax Studios in Memphis in December 1973 and two songs, “I’ve Got a Thing About You Baby” and “Take Good Care of Her”, which were left over from the session at Stax in July 1973. The album includes a collection of songs that vary in style and genre. Released the same day as the recording of Elvis: Recorded Live on Stage in Memphis was being made, the title was taken from the song “Talk About the Good Times”. Many of the songs are covers of hits at the time, like “Spanish Eyes” and “She Wears My Ring”. Charting low at the time of its release, it was considered typical 1970s Elvis material and was his first album to hit the “cut-out bins”. The album did have some success though upon its original release, becoming a Cashbox #1 hit and charting in the Top 50 in the UK. Original copies of the LP with the sticker on the cover (stating the singles on the album) are very rare and sell for large amounts on auction sites. The album released two singles, both hits: “I’ve Got a Thing About You Baby” rose to #4 on the Country charts, #39 pop; “My Boy” hit #1 on the Adult Contemporary charts, as well as #14 Country and #20 Pop.

No one could have known it at the time, but Elvis Presley had only a handful of studio albums left ahead of him when Good Times showed up in the late winter of 1974. Recorded in the summer and fall of the previous year at Stax Studios in Memphis, this ten-song album caught the artist near his late-career peak — he still had better, greater records left to do, but there’s nothing here that mars the image or the legend. Whether trading in rock & roll or soul sounds or accompanied by a full-blown gospel choir on “If That Isn’t Love,” he’s in great voice, and with the likes of James Burton and Norbert Putnam playing with him, it’s hard to find any fault with Good Times, except perhaps its brevity. It wasn’t necessarily what longtime fans or potential listeners among younger audiences were looking for, but the album has more than stood the test of time, even if it isn’t his best work of this period. –AllMusic Review by Bruce Eder

Tracklist:
1 Take Good Care Of Her 2:50
2 Loving Arms 2:48
3 I Got A Feelin’ In My Body 3:33
4 If That Isn’t Love 3:29
5 She Wears My Ring 3:12
6 I’ve Got A Thing About You Baby 2:20
7 My Boy 3:19
8 Spanish Eyes 2:21
9 Talk About The Good Times 2:22
10 Good Time Charlie’s Got The Blues 3:09

Personnel:
Elvis Presley – guitar, vocals
J.D. Sumner & The Stamps, Voice – background vocals
Mike Leech – string and horn arrangements
Glen Spreen – string arrangement on “I’ve Got a Thing About You Baby”

Download:

https://subyshare.com/rj8ge7oxciid/ElvisPresleyG00dTimes19742015HDTracks2496.rar.html

Elvis Presley – He Touched Me (1972/2015) [Official Digital Download 24bit/96kHz]

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Elvis Presley – He Touched Me (1972/2015)
FLAC (tracks) 24 bit/96 kHz | Time – 30:56 minutes | 651 MB | Genre: Pop, Rock
Studio Masters, Official Digital Download – Source: HDTracks | Front Cover | © RCA Records
Recorded: March–June 1971

He Touched Me is a 1972 contemporary gospel music album by American singer and musician Elvis Presley. It earned him his second of three Grammy Awards. The album his third and final studio gospel album, and the most contemporary of the three. He Touched Me was certified Gold on March 27, 1992 and Platinum on July 15, 1999 by the RIAA.

Elvis’ third and final gospel album, He Touched Me, is distinct from both of his previous LPs — it was not only recorded five years after the prior album, but included a far different set of songs and musicians. This is Elvis’ contemporary gospel record, including material from Bill Gaither (the title song), Andraé Crouch (“I’ve Got Confidence”), and Dallas Frazier (“He Is My Everything”). His vocal backgrounds come from the Imperials and J.D. Sumner & the Stamps, and the instrumental arrangements leave space for electric guitar and electric bass. Though it’s spiritual, it doesn’t have the sacred feel of 1960’s His Hand in Mine or the first half of 1966’s How Great Thou Art. –AllMusic Review by John Bush

Tracklist:
1 He Touched Me 2:37
2 I’ve Got Confidence 2:20
3 Amazing Grace 3:32
4 Seeing Is Believing 2:50
5 He Is My Everything 2:38
6 Bosom Of Abraham 1:34
7 An Evening Prayer 1:52
8 Lead Me, Guide Me 2:39
9 There Is No God But God 2:17
10 A Thing Called Love 2:22
11 I, John 2:14
12 Reach Out To Jesus 3:12

Personnel:
Elvis Presley – arranger, guitar, vocals
The Imperials, Ginger Holladay, Mary Holladay, Millie Kirkham, Kathy Westmoreland, Sonja Montgomery, June Page, Temple Riser – vocals
David Briggs – organ, piano
James Burton, Joe Esposito, Charlie Hodge, Chip Young – guitar
Kenny Buttrey, Jerry Carrigan – drums
Charlie McCoy – organ, piano
Joe Moscheo – organ, piano
Norbert Putnam – bass guitar

Download:

https://subyshare.com/gktptd9fa2fp/ElvisPresleyHeT0uchedMe19722015HDTracks2496.rar.html

Elvis Presley – Let’s Be Friends (1970/2015) [Official Digital Download 24bit/96kHz]

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Elvis Presley – Let’s Be Friends (1970/2015)
FLAC (tracks) 24 bit/96 kHz | Time – 21:54 minutes | 407 MB | Genre: Pop, Rock
Studio Masters, Official Digital Download – Source: AcousticSounds | Front Cover | © RCA Records
Recorded: March 1962 to March 1969

Let’s Be Friends is the thirty-seventh album by American singer and musician Elvis Presley, released on RCA Camden Records CAS 2408, in April 1970. It is the second Presley budget album to appear on the RCA subsidiary label. It peaked at number 105 on the Billboard 200 album chart. It was certified Gold on June 15, 1999 and Platinum on January 6, 2004 by the Recording Industry Association of America.

Just as Elvis Presley returned to the top of the charts with his 1968 comeback, RCA’s budget line Camden began to flood the market with compilations of leftovers. The process started in 1968 with Singer Presents Elvis Singing Flaming Star and Others, a record initially released as a promo but seeing wider circulation toward the end of the year, but it began in earnest with Let’s Be Friends, a hodgepodge released in April of 1970. Camden LPs offered a quick buck for both RCA and Elvis but that swift infusion of cash came at the expense of coherence, particularly in the case of Let’s Be Friends, which snags a couple of good leftovers from the American Sound Studio sessions from 1969 — “If I’m a Fool (For Loving You),” “I’ll Be There” — and pairs them with movie leftovers dating all the way back to 1962. That particular oldie would be “Mama,” an exceptionally sticky ballad, but most of the leftovers are recent, including three selections from Presley’s last film, 1969’s Change of Habit. Although these tracks pale when compared to the songs Elvis cut for Chips Moman, the production is informed by Presley’s soulful comeback, so they don’t feel quite as hackneyed as, say, the contrived down-home stomp “Stay Away, Joe” that unfortunately opens up the album. It’s the worst thing on the album, providing an uneasy start to what otherwise is a fitfully entertaining and worthwhile collection. –AllMusic Review by Stephen Thomas Erlewine

Tracklist:
1 Stay Away, Joe 1:39
2 If I’m A Fool (For Loving You) 2:45
3 Let’s Be Friends 2:44
4 Let’s Forget About The Stars (original LP Mono Mix) 2:26
5 Mama (original LP Mono Mix) 2:15
6 I’ll Be There 2:26
7 Almost 1:51
8 Change Of Habit 3:20
9 Have A Happy 2:23

Personnel:
Elvis Presley – Guitar, Vocals

Download:

https://subyshare.com/h6xjh7gs1lv2/ElvisPresleyLetsBeFriends19702015Ac0usticS0unds2496.rar.html

Elvis Presley – On Stage (1970/2015) [Official Digital Download 24bit/96kHz]

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Elvis Presley – On Stage (1970/2015)
FLAC (tracks) 24 bit/96 kHz | Time – 31:52 minutes | 693 MB | Genre: Pop, Rock
Studio Masters, Official Digital Download – Source: HDTracks | Front Cover | © RCA Records
Recorded: February 17–19, 1970, International Hotel, Las Vegas, Nevada

On Stage is an Elvis Presley live album mostly recorded between February 17 and 19, 1970 at the International Hotel, Las Vegas, Nevada, and released on RCA Records LSP-4362. It was an immediate follow up to From Memphis to Vegas/From Vegas to Memphis, which also featured live recordings. Unlike the previous release, however, this album focused on songs that were not, at the time, associated with Elvis. This album was released in June 1970 and reached number 13 on both the Billboard 200 and country music charts. It was certified Gold on February 23, 1971, and Platinum on July 15, 1999, by the Recording Industry Association of America.
It features the worldwide number one single “The Wonder of You”, which topped both the United States Adult Contemporary tracks chart and the British music chart. Other selections include “See See Rider”, “Yesterday”, Tony Joe White’s “Polk Salad Annie”, Del Shannon’s “Runaway”, and a version of “Let It Be Me”. “See See Rider” would go on to become Elvis’ frequent introductory number at his concerts up to his last performance at the (now defunct) Market Square Arena in Indianapolis Indiana on June 26, 1977, while “Polk Salad Annie” also became a regular part of his repertoire. The album is notable for not showing Elvis’ name anywhere on the cover.

Elvis’ second live album, partly cut at the International Hotel in Las Vegas in early 1970, is one of his most unfairly underrated releases. At the time, it did seem a bit cheap, offering ten songs that weren’t necessarily associated with Presley. By this time, he was adding covers of other artists’ contemporary hits to his set, not to capitalize on their success but to keep his hand in contemporary music and show audiences of the era that he was capable of doing more than reprising his own ’50s and early-’60s songs. The critics failed to notice two things, however: Presley had the same first-rate band who had graced the previous tour, led by James Burton on guitar; when he performed Neil Diamond’s “Sweet Caroline,” Tony Joe White’s “Polk Salad Annie,” and (most especially) Del Shannon’s “Runaway,” he did them extremely well. “The Wonder of You” might not have been “That’s All Right” or even “Heartbreak Hotel,” but it was a towering performance by a singer who could, even then, run circles around virtually anyone in the business this side of Roy Orbison. –AllMusic Review by Bruce Eder

Tracklist:
1 See See Rider 3:06
2 Release Me (And Let Me Love Again) 3:12
3 Sweet Caroline 2:43
4 Runaway 2:47
5 The Wonder Of You 2:39
6 Polk Salad Annie 5:33
7 Yesterday 2:28
8 Proud Mary 2:48
9 Walk A Mile In My Shoes 3:00
10 Let It Be Me (Je T’Appartiens) 3:39

Personnel:
Elvis Presley – Guitar, Guitar (Baritone), Vocals
James Burton, James Wilkinson – Guitar, Guitar (Baritone)
Glen D. Hardin – Keyboards, Piano
Charlie Hodge – Guitar, Guitar (Baritone), Vocals (Background)
The Imperials Quartet, The Sweet Inspirations – Vocals
Bob Lanning – Drums, Drums (Snare)
Bobby Morris – Conductor
Larry Muhoberac – Organ, Piano
Jerry Scheff – Bass, Guitar (Bass)
Ron Tutt, Ronnie Tutt – Drums

Download:

https://subyshare.com/o5f97zn73f7k/ElvisPresley0nStage19702015HDTracks2496.rar.html


Elvis Presley – Raised on Rock / For Ol’ Times Sake (1973/2015) [Official Digital Download 24bit/96kHz]

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Elvis Presley – Raised on Rock / For Ol’ Times Sake (1973/2015)
FLAC (tracks) 24 bit/96 kHz | Time – 27:57 minutes | 571 MB | Genre: Pop, Rock
Studio Masters, Official Digital Download – Source: HDTracks | Front Cover | © RCA Records
Recorded: July 21–24, 1973, Stax Studios, Memphis; September 22–23, 1973, Elvis Presley’s Residence, Palm Springs, California

Raised on Rock / For Ol’ Times Sake is a studio album by American singer and musician Elvis Presley released in 1973. Along with the album Elvis, it was released after the massive success of Aloha From Hawaii (although the entire Elvis album contained material recorded before the Aloha show). The album, which sold over one million copies worldwide, was recorded at Stax Studios in Memphis, Tennessee in July 1973 and at Presley’s home in Palm Springs, California in September 1973. Two songs from these sessions would be retained for release on the Good Times album the following spring. The initial vocal tracks were recorded in July 1973. “Raised on Rock” backed by “For Ol’ Times Sake” was the only single released from the album, reaching #41 on the Billboard chart and #42 on the Country chart in September 1973.
The album was one of the few that failed to chart in the United Kingdom, but the single “Raised on Rock / For Ol’ Times Sake” did enter the British charts. Some of the songs are well known covers like “Are You Sincere” which had been around for many years, but some new songs like the lead off single were written for Presley, or written by writers he had previously recorded, such as Mark James. The title single, “Raised on Rock,” has been noted by historians such as Roy Carr and Mick Farren in Elvis: The Illustrated Record as odd lyrically, as Presley sings in first person about being a child and discovering rock and roll through records such as “Johnny B. Goode” when Presley was a contemporary of the artists he cites.

In July 1973 Elvis returned to Memphis, this time to the justly famed source of Southern soul, Stax Studios. After a couple of days, several of Stax’s most famous musicians came in, including the marvelous rhythm section of Donald “Duck” Dunn, bass, and Al Jackson, drums. Apparently, the very idea of working with Elvis was intimidating and the group couldn’t overcome their awe, so Elvis had to leave the building. In his absence, rhythm tracks were laid down. He then returned to add his vocals, a practice only used during the last few years of the soundtracks, when he was too bored to show up and work. From all of this five songs were attempted, one completed, and it’s instantly forgettable. Elvis returned in December to Stax and with a mix of his band and some Nashville cats, recording eighteen tracks in a week. In between, he had tried a session at his Palm Springs home that didn’t work, although three almost ponderously sincere ballads were completed. All in all, RCA had thirty new Elvis songs, enough quality material for two strong albums of twelve tracks each, which would have restored Presley in the sight of critics and record reviewers and, hopefully, the increasingly apathetic consumer. Unfortunately, the material was issued as three cheesily packaged albums of a mere ten tracks each. Raised on Rock, Good Times and Promised Land all have something to offer: “I’ve Got a Thing About You, Baby” is Raised on Rocks’s standout; “Loving Arms” is Good Times”; while the roaring “Promised Land” kicks off the album of the same name. But the lesser material dilutes the impact of the strong, the sound ranges from okay to atrocious, thus producing more evidence of Presley’s growing mediocrity. –AllMusic Review by Neal Umphred

Tracklist:
1 Raised On Rock 2:39
2 Are You Sincere 1:58
3 Find Out What’s Happening 2:30
4 I Miss You 2:12
5 Girl Of Mine 3:39
6 For Ol’ Times Sake 3:38
7 If You Don’t Come Back 2:29
8 Just A Little Bit 2:30
9 Sweet Angeline 3:02
10 Three Corn Patches 2:46

Personnel:
Elvis Presley – guitar, vocals
James Burton, Reggie Young, Charlie Hodge – guitar
Bobby Wood – piano
Jerry Carrigan, Ron Tutt, Al Jackson, Jr. – drums
Tommy Cogbill, Donald “Duck” Dunn, Tom Hensley – bass
Bobby Emmons – organ
Glen Spreen – string arrangements
Mary and Ginger Holliday – background vocals
Kathy Westmoreland – background vocals
J. D. Sumner & the Stamps – background vocals

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Dolly Parton – The Collection (2015) [Official Digital Download 24bit/96kHz]

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Dolly Parton – The Collection (2015)
FLAC (tracks) 24 bit/96 kHz  | Time – 05:05:09 minutes | 6,07 GB | Genre: Country
Studio Masters, Official Digital Download – Source: Q0buz | Front Cover | © RCA/Legacy/Sony Music
Recorded: 1966-1980

Dolly Rebecca Parton is an American singer, songwriter, multi-instrumentalist, record producer, actress, author, businesswoman, and philanthropist, known primarily for her work in country music.

It’s difficult to find a country performer who has moved from her country roots to international fame more successfully than Dolly Parton. Her autobiographical single “Coat of Many Colors” shows the poverty of growing up one of 12 children on a rundown farm in Locust Ridge, Tennessee. At 12 years old, she was appearing on Knoxville television; at 13 she was recording on a small label and appearing on the Grand Ole Opry. Her 1967 hit “Dumb Blonde” (which she’s not) caught Porter Wagoner’s ear, and he hired Parton to appear on his television show, where their duet numbers became famous. By the time her “Joshua” reached number one in 1970, Parton’s fame had overshadowed her boss’, and she had struck out on her own, though she still recorded duets with him. During the mid-’70s, she established herself as a country superstar, crossing over into the pop mainstream in the early ’80s, when she smoothed out the rough edges in her music and began singing pop as well as country. In the early ’80s, she also began appearing in movies, most notably the hit 9 to 5. Though her savvy marketing, image manipulation (her big dumb blond stage persona is an act), extracurricular forays into film, and flirtations with country-pop have occasionally overshadowed her music, at her core Parton is a country gal and a tremendously gifted singer/songwriter. Among her classics are “Coat of Many Colors,” “Jolene,” “Kentucky Gambler,” “I Will Always Love You,” “But You Know I Love You,” and “Tennessee Homesick Blues,” and they give a hint as to why her contribution to bringing country music to a wide audience, not only in America but throughout the world, cannot be overestimated.
The fourth of 12 children, Parton was born and raised in Locust Ridge, Tennessee, just next to the Smoky Mountains National Forest. Parton’s family struggled to survive throughout her childhood, and she was often ridiculed for her poverty, yet music soothed their worries. Though her farming father did not play, her half-Cherokee mother played guitar and her grandfather, Rev. Jake Owens, was a fiddler and songwriter (his “Singing His Praise” was recorded by Kitty Wells). When she was seven, her uncle Bill Owens gave her a guitar, and within three years, she became a regular on WIVK Knoxville’s The Cas Walker Farm and Home Hour. Over the next two years, her career steadily increased, and in 1959 she made her debut on the Grand Ole Opry; the following year, she recorded her first single, “Puppy Love,” for Goldband.
When she was 14 years old, Parton signed to Mercury Records, but her 1962 debut for the label, “It’s Sure Gonna Hurt,” was a bomb, and the label immediately dropped her. Over the next five years, she shopped for a new contract and did indeed record a number of songs, which were later reissued through budget-line records. She continued to attend high school, playing snare drum in the marching band. After she graduated, she moved to Nashville, where she stayed with Bill Owens. Both songwriters pitched songs across Nashville with no success, and Parton began singing on demos. Early in 1965, both Parton and Owens finally found work when Fred Foster signed them to his publishing house, Combine Music; Foster subsequently signed her to Monument Records. Parton’s first records for Monument were marketed to pop audiences, and her second record, “Happy, Happy Birthday Baby,” nearly made the charts. In 1966, Bill Phillips took two of Parton’s and Owens’ songs — “Put It Off Until Tomorrow” and “The Company You Keep” — to the Top Ten, setting the stage for Parton’s breakthrough single, “Dumb Blonde.” Released early in 1967, the record climbed to number 24, followed shortly afterward by the number 17 “Something Fishy.”
The two hit Monument singles attracted the attention of country star Porter Wagoner, who was looking to hire a new female singer for his syndicated television show. Parton accepted the offer and began appearing on the show on September 5, 1967. Initially, Wagoner’s audience was reluctant to warm to Parton and chanted for Norma Jean, the singer she replaced, but with Wagoner’s assistance, she was accepted. Wagoner also convinced his label, RCA, to sign Parton. Since female performers were not particularly popular in the late ’60s, the label decided to protect their investment by releasing her first single as a duet with Wagoner. Their first single, “The Last Thing on My Mind,” reached the country Top Ten early in 1968, launching a six-year streak of virtually uninterrupted Top Ten singles. Parton’s first solo single, “Just Because I’m a Woman,” was released in the summer of 1968 and was a moderate hit, reaching number 17. For the remainder of the decade, none of her solo efforts — even “In the Good Old Days (When Times Were Bad),” which would later become a standard — were as successful as her duets. The duo was named Vocal Group of the Year in 1968 by the Country Music Association, but Parton’s solo records were continually ignored. Wagoner and Parton were both frustrated by her lack of solo success, because he had a significant financial stake in her future; as of 1969, he was her co-producer and owned nearly half of the publishing company Owepar.
By 1970, Porter had her sing Jimmie Rodgers’ “Mule Skinner Blues (Blue Yodel No. 8),” a gimmick that worked. The record shot to number three on the charts, followed closely by her first number one single, “Joshua.” For the next two years, she had a number of solo hits — including her signature song “Coat of Many Colors” (number four, 1971) — in addition to her duets. Though she had successful singles, none of them were blockbusters until “Jolene” reached number one in early 1974. Parton stopped traveling with Wagoner after its release, yet she continued to appear on television and sing duets with him until 1976.
Once she left Wagoner, Parton’s records became more eclectic and diverse, ranging from the ballad “I Will Always Love You” (number one, 1974) and the racy “The Bargain Store” (number one, 1975) to the crossover pop of “Here You Come Again” (number one, 1977) and the disco experiments of “Baby I’m Burning” (number 25 pop, 1978). From 1974 to 1980, she consistently charted in the country Top Ten, with no less than eight singles reaching number one. Parton had her own syndicated television show, Dolly, in 1976, and by the next year had gained the right to produce her own albums, which immediately resulted in diverse efforts like 1977’s New Harvest…First Gathering. In addition to her own hits during the late ’70s, many artists, from Rose Maddox and Kitty Wells to Olivia Newton-John, Emmylou Harris, and Linda Ronstadt, covered her songs, and her siblings Randy and Stella received recording contracts of their own.
Though she was quite popular, Parton became a genuine superstar in 1977, when the Barry Mann/Cynthia Weil song “Here You Come Again” became a huge crossover hit, reaching number three on the pop charts, spending five weeks at the top of the country charts, and going gold. Its accompanying album went platinum and the follow-up, Heartbreaker, went gold. Soon, she was on the cover of country and mainstream publications alike. With the new financial windfall, a lawsuit against Wagoner — who had received a significant portion of her royalties — ensued. By the time it was settled, she regained her copyrights while Wagoner was given a nominal fee and the studio the duo shared. In the wake of the lawsuit, a delayed duet album, Making Plans, appeared in 1980; its title track hit number two on the country charts.
Parton’s commercial success continued to grow during 1980, as she had three number one hits in a row: the Donna Summer-written “Starting Over Again,” “Old Flames (Can’t Hold a Candle to You),” and “9 to 5.” The latter was the theme song to Parton’s acting debut, 9 to 5. Also starring Jane Fonda and Lily Tomlin, the movie became a huge success, establishing Parton as a movie star. The song became her first number one pop single as well. 9 to 5 gave Parton’s career momentum that lasted throughout the early ’80s. She began appearing in more films, including the Burt Reynolds musical The Best Little Whorehouse in Texas (1982) and the Sylvester Stallone comedy Rhinestone (1984). Parton’s singles continued to appear consistently in the country Top Ten: between 1981 and 1985, she had 12 Top Ten hits and half of those were number one singles. Parton continued to make inroads on the pop charts as well with a re-recorded version of “I Will Always Love You” from The Best Little Whorehouse in Texas scraping the Top 50 and her Kenny Rogers duet “Islands in the Stream” (which was written by the Bee Gees and produced by Barry Gibb) spending two weeks at number one.
However, by 1985 many old-time fans had felt that Parton was spending too much time courting the mainstream. Most of her albums were dominated by the adult contemporary pop of songs like “Islands in the Stream,” and it had been years since she had sung straightforward country. She also continued to explore new business and entertainment ventures such as her Dollywood theme park, which opened in 1985. Despite these misgivings, she had continued to chart well until 1986, when none of her singles reached the Top Ten. RCA Records didn’t renew her contract after it expired that year, and she signed with Columbia in 1987.
Before she released her Columbia debut, Parton joined forces with Linda Ronstadt and Emmylou Harris to record the rootsy Trio album. Trio became a huge hit, earning both critical and popular acclaim, selling over a million copies, and peaking at number six on the pop charts; it also spawned three Top Ten country singles: “To Know Him Is to Love Him,” “Telling Me Lies,” and “Those Memories of You.” Following the success of the album, she had a weekly variety television show, Dolly, on ABC that lasted only one season. Trio also provided a perfect launching pad for her first Columbia album, 1989’s White Limozeen, which produced two number one hits in “Why’d You Come in Here Lookin’ Like That” and “Yellow Roses.”
Though it looked like Parton’s career had been revived, it was actually just a brief revival before contemporary country came along in the early ’90s and pushed all veteran artists out of the charts. Parton had a number one duet with Ricky Van Shelton, “Rockin’ Years,” in 1991, but after that single, she slowly crept out of the Top Ten and later the Top 40. Parton was one of the most outspoken critics of radio’s treatment of older stars. While her sales had declined, she didn’t disappear. Despite her lack of sales, Parton remained an iconic figure in country music, appearing in films (the 1991 TV movie Wild Texas Wind, 1992’s Straight Talk), selling out concerts, and releasing a series of acclaimed albums — including 1993’s Honky Tonk Angels, a collaboration with Tammy Wynette and Loretta Lynn — that all sold respectably. Furthermore, “I Will Always Love You” was covered in 1992 by Whitney Houston, who took it to number one on the pop charts; the single spent 14 weeks at number one, becoming the biggest pop hit of the rock & roll era (it was unseated four years later by Mariah Carey and Boyz II Men’s “One Sweet Day”).
In 1994, Parton published her autobiography, My Life and Other Unfinished Business. Treasures, her 1996 album, was a praised collection of unusual covers, ranging from Merle Haggard to Neil Young. Hungry Again followed in 1998, and early the following year she reunited with Ronstadt and Harris for a second Trio collection in addition to releasing the solo The Grass Is Blue. A rootsy effort, it was well received and prompted the release of more recordings like it on Little Sparrow in 2001 and Halos & Horns in 2002. The patriotic For God and Country appeared in 2003 and was followed by the CD and DVD Live and Well a year later. Those Were the Days from 2005 found Parton covering her favorite pop songs from the ’60s and ’70s. Backwoods Barbie, Parton’s first mainstream country album in nearly 20 years, arrived on her own Dolly Records imprint in 2008. Live from London followed in 2009. An album of all Parton-written material, Better Day, appeared from Dolly Records in 2011, the 41st studio release of her long career. Three years later, Blue Smoke was released, appearing first in Australia and New Zealand in January, then in other territories, including America, in May.
In 2015, Parton’s classic song “Coat of Many Colors” was adapted into a made-for-TV movie, which featured Alyvia Alyn Lind as the young Dolly Parton and Jennifer Nettles (from the group Sugarland) as her mother. Parton was a producer on the film, which became a major success in the ratings, and a Christmas-themed sequel was put into production for the 2016 holiday season. In the summer of 2016, Parton announced that she was headlining a 60-date North American concert tour, her most extensive run of shows in 25 years. The jaunt was being billed as the Pure & Simple Tour, and not coincidentally, Parton also revealed she was releasing a new album in August 2016, a set of ten original love songs also called Pure & Simple. –Artist Biography by David Vinopal

Tracklist:

Disc 1 – 1967 – Hello, I’m Dolly
1 Dumb Blonde 00:02:30
2 Your Ole Handy Man 00:02:13
3 I Don’t Want to Throw Rice 00:02:25
4 Put It off Until Tomorrow 00:02:22
5 I Wasted My Tears 00:02:20
6 Something Fishy 00:02:10
7 Fuel to the Flame 00:02:42
8 The Giving and the Taking 00:02:27
9 I’m In No Condition 00:02:13
10 The Company You Keep 00:02:37
11 I Lived My Life 00:02:39
12 The Little Things 00:02:23

Disc 2 – 1969 – My Blue Ridge Mountain Boy
1 In the Ghetto 00:02:51
2 Games People Play 00:02:26
3 ‘Til Death Do Us Part 00:03:09
4 Big Wind 00:02:18
5 Evening Shade (Remastered) 00:03:22
6 I’m Fed Up with You 00:02:00
7 My Blue Ridge Mountain Boy 00:03:32
8 Daddy 00:02:51
9 We Had All the Good Things Going 00:02:46
10 The Monkey’s Tale 00:01:51
11 Gypsy, Joe and Me 00:03:14
12 Home for Pete’s Sake 00:02:00

Disc 3 – 1974 – Jolene
1 Jolene 00:02:43
2 When Someone Wants to Leave 00:02:07
3 River of Happiness 00:02:20
4 Early Morning Breeze 00:02:47
5 Highlight of My Life 00:02:19
6 I Will Always Love You 00:02:57
7 Randy 00:01:53
8 Living On Memories of You 00:02:48
9 Lonely Comin’ Down 00:03:14
10 It Must Be You 00:01:51

Disc 4 – 1974 – Love Is Like a Butterfly
1 Love Is Like a Butterfly 00:02:23
2 If I Cross Your Mind 00:02:41
3 My Eyes Can Only See You 00:02:48
4 Take Me Back 00:02:38
5 Blackie, Kentucky 00:03:32
6 Gettin’ Happy 00:02:40
7 You’re the One That Taught Me How to Swing 00:02:08
8 Highway Headin’ South 00:02:08
9 Once Upon a Memory 00:03:13
10 Sacred Memories 00:02:42

Disc 5 – 1975 – The Bargain Store
1 The Bargain Store 00:02:45
2 Kentucky Gambler 00:02:41
3 When I’m Gone 00:02:17
4 The Only Hand You’ll Need to Hold 00:02:12
5 On My Mind Again 00:02:51
6 I Want to Be What You Need 00:02:43
7 Love to Remember 00:02:33
8 You’ll Always Be Special to Me 00:02:23
9 He Would Know 00:02:35
10 I’ll Never Forget 00:02:47

Disc 6 – 1976 – All I Can Do
1 All I Can Do 00:02:27
2 The Fire That Keeps You Warm 00:02:52
3 When the Sun Goes Down Tomorrow 00:02:09
4 I’m a Drifter 00:02:57
5 Falling Out of Love with Me 00:02:50
6 Shattered Image 00:02:27
7 Boulder to Birmingham 00:04:17
8 Preacher Tom 00:03:45
9 Life’s Like Poetry 00:01:52
10 Hey, Lucky Lady 00:02:21

Disc 7 – 1977 – New Harvest… First Gathering
1 Light of a Clear Blue Morning 00:04:56
2 Applejack 00:03:26
3 My Girl (My Love) 00:03:47
4 Holdin’ On to You 00:02:47
5 You Are 00:05:19
6 How Does It Feel 00:03:15
7 Where Beauty Lives In Memory 00:03:58
8 Higher and Higher 00:02:54
9 Getting In My Way 00:02:41
10 There 00:05:34

Disc 8 – 1977 – Here You Come Again
1 Here You Come Again 00:02:59
2 Baby Come Out Tonight 00:03:29
3 It’s All Wrong, but It’s All Right 00:03:21
4 Me and Little Andy 00:02:41
5 Lovin’ You 00:02:26
6 Cowgirl & The Dandy 00:03:49
7 Two Doors Down 00:03:09
8 God’s Coloring Book 00:03:15
9 As Soon as I Touched Him 00:03:14
10 Sweet Music Man 00:03:09

Disc 9 – 1978 – Heartbreaker
1 I Really Got the Feeling 00:03:10
2 It’s Too Late to Love Me Now 00:03:02
3 We’re Through Forever (‘Til Tomorrow) 00:03:51
4 Sure Thing 00:03:33
5 With You Gone 00:03:06
6 Baby I’m Burnin’ 00:02:37
7 Nickels and Dimes 00:03:25
8 The Man 00:03:17
9 Heartbreaker 00:03:36
10 I Wanna Fall In Love 00:02:25

Disc 10 – 1980 – 9 to 5 and Odd Jobs
1 9 to 5 00:02:47
2 Hush-A-Bye Hard Times 00:03:50
3 The House of the Rising Sun 00:04:03
4 Deportee (Plane Wreck at Los Gatos) 00:04:43
5 Sing for the Common Man 00:03:48
6 Working Girl 00:03:21
7 Detroit City 00:03:39
8 But You Know I Love You 00:03:20
9 Dark as a Dungeon 00:03:29
10 Poor Folks Town 00:02:57

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https://subyshare.com/zytga18mosob/D0llyPart0nTheC0llecti0n2015Q0buz2496.part1.rar.html
https://subyshare.com/4d96u8jddcow/D0llyPart0nTheC0llecti0n2015Q0buz2496.part2.rar.html
https://subyshare.com/s3un1dce0nhw/D0llyPart0nTheC0llecti0n2015Q0buz2496.part3.rar.html
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https://subyshare.com/5i8inerfoaq5/D0llyPart0nTheC0llecti0n2015Q0buz2496.part5.rar.html
https://subyshare.com/m9c4f6dk75kd/D0llyPart0nTheC0llecti0n2015Q0buz2496.part6.rar.html
https://subyshare.com/q2hckjndnu9w/D0llyPart0nTheC0llecti0n2015Q0buz2496.part7.rar.html

Daniel Herskedal – The Roc (2017) [Official Digital Download 24bit/88,2kHz]

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Daniel Herskedal – The Roc (2017)
FLAC (tracks) 24 bit/88,2 kHz  | Time – 48:14 minutes | 897 MB | Genre: Jazz
Studio Masters, Official Digital Download – Source: HighResAudio | Front Cover | © Edition Records Ltd.

Over the last 2 years, Daniel Herskedal, Helge Andreas Norbakken and Eyolf Dale (also on Edition) have defined themselves as one of the most unique and innovative small ensembles in Europe today, bringing together a vast mix of influences from Folk, Jazz, Classical and Arabic music.
The sublime Slow Eastbound Train, released in 2015, took Herskedal’s international profile to new heights. He toured extensively throughout Europe and Japan, culminating in a 26min commission from the BBC Concert Orchestra, performed at London Jazz Festival 2016.
A strong Arabic influence runs throughout The Roc, which has its roots in inspiring trips Herskedal made to Syria, Lebanon and Palestine. Themes of place and travelling are ever-present, as they were on Slow Eastbound Train. The titles of some of the compositions originate from the names of scales (Kurd, Bayat, Nahawand To Kurd) and rhythms (Thuraaya) used in them; others from Arabic sayings (There Are Three Things You Cannot Hide; Love, Smoke And A Man Riding On A Camel) and places that inspired the musicians (Hijaz Train Station). The title of the LP itself is a reference to the great bird of pan-Asian mythology.

The Roc is Norwegian tuba player Daniel Herskedal’s follow-up album to his 2015 recording for Edition Records, Slow Eastbound Train which like its predecessor again features Eydolf Dale on piano and Helge Andreas Norbakken on percussion. However, that record also benefitted from the massive Trondheim Soloists chamber string orchestra.
A pastoral beginning with “The Seeds Of Language” belies the nature of the ensuing tracks, things taking a more overtly oriental turn on the title track and beyond. Specifically, there’s a clearly perceptible Arabic influence running through the album, derived from Hersekdal’s travels through Syria, Lebanon and Palestine. These geographically-based motifs are especially evinced by Bergmund Waal Skaslien’s lustrously serpentine viola playing. The titles of many of the tracks reflect the Middle Eastern character of the pieces. Such as “Eternal Sunshine Creates A Desert,” “Kurd Bayat,” “Nahawand To Kurd” and “Hijaz Train Station.”
Although both his albums have a similar quality to them, what is notable here is how Herskedal can obtain such a full sound with just a quintet, as opposed to his previous record using a trio with a full string orchestra. Another praiseworthy element is the lithe richness and versatility of Herskedal’s tuba playing. Whilst his music is generically not in the same ball park as that of other, more obviously jazz inspired tuba players such as Bob Stewart and Howard Johnson, he shares the same ability as those tuba pioneers to push the instrument to the fore and utilise the skill of subtle improvisation within the context of notated composition.
A mesmerizingly dramatic soundscape is manifested by the rich strings of Bergmund Waal Skaslien and Svante Henryson on the quirkily titled “There Are Three Things You Cannot Hide: Love, Smoke And A Man Riding On A Camel.” Equally entrancing is Eyolf Dale’s tintinnabulating piano on “All That Has Happened, Happened As Fate Willed.” Throughout the album, the listener cannot fail to be transported to another place of heat and dust and occasionally, to another dimension entirely. –Roger Farbey, All About Jazz

Tracklist:
1. Seeds of Language 04:46
2. The Roc 05:28
3. Eternal Sunshine Creates A Desert 04:18
4. Kurd, Bayat, Nahawand To Kurd 04:46
5. Hijaz Train Station 03:20
6. Thurayya Railways 06:31
7. The Afrit 03:22
8. There Are Three Things You Cannot Hide; Love, Smoke And A Man Riding On A Camel 05:01
9. The Krøderen Line 05:52
10. All That Has Happened, Happened As Fate Willed 04:50

Personnel:
Daniel Herskedal: tuba, bass trumpet
Bergmund Waal Skaslien: viola
Svante Henryson: cello
Eyolf Dale: piano
Helge Andreas Norbakken: percussion

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Chrystel Wautier – Before a Song (2016) [Official Digital Download 24bit/44,1kHz]

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Chrystel Wautier – Before a Song (2016)
FLAC (tracks) 24 bit/44,1 kHz  | Time – 48:19 minutes | 546 MB | Genre: Jazz
Studio Masters, Official Digital Download – Source: Q0buz | Booklet, Front Cover | © Bonsaï Music
Recorded: La Louvière at EGS Studio by Ruben Wautier

Fille de pasteur, Chrystel Wautier a d’abord été initiée au gospel avant d’étudier le solfège et le piano. En 2000, elle entre au Conservatoire de Bruxelles pour y étudier le chant avec Anca Parghel, la vocaliste roumaine qui a enregistré plusieurs albums avec Jean-Louis Rassinfosse et le pianiste allemand Klaus Ignatzek. En 2005, elle forme un trio avec Quentin Liégeois à la guitare et Sam Gerstmans à la contrebasse et enregistre, deux ans plus tard, son premier album personnel « Between Us », consacré essentiellement à de grands standards, avec Jean-Paul Estiévenart (trompette) et Guy Cabay (vibraphone) en invités. Après avoir participé à l’album « Radoni’s Tribe », hommage rendu au regretté Paolo Radoni, en compagnie de Paolo Loveri (guitare), Charles Loos (piano), Ben Sluijs (saxophone alto) et Gino Latucca (trompette), elle enregistre, en 2010, un deuxième disque personnel, « Peace Of Time », toujours avec Quentin Liégeois à la guitare mais, cette fois, Boris Schmidt à la contrebasse et Ben Sluijs (saxophone alto et flûte) en invité. A l’exception de deux compositions originales, le répertoire est, de nouveau, consacré à de grands classiques et deux thèmes de Joao Gilberto. Avec ce « Before A Song », Chrystel Wautier amorce un véritable virage : plus de standards mais une série de compositions originales qui illustrent un ancrage plus volontiers « pop/jazz », mais toujours avec la même voix fluide et limpide. Une démarche qui a séduit André Manoukian, mais aussi le producteur français Pierre Darmon du label Bonsaï (sur lequel vient de sortir « The Wisthleblowers » de David Linx, Paolo Fresu et Diederik Wissels). Le premier a déclaré à propos de notre compatriote : « On a l’impression qu’elle nous chante dans l’oreille, son phrasé est limpide, elle joue la retenue ». Quant au second, il présente Chrystel Wautier comme « la nouvelle voix céleste du jazz vocal ». Ici, plus de souffleurs mais une rythmique très étoffée et plus volontiers électrique. Au piano, au Fender Rhodes et à la contrebasse sur un thème, Cédric Raymond que l’on a entendu dans le quintet hard bop de Manu Hermia et le quartet de Greg Houben et Fabian Fiorini. A la guitare, Lorenzo Di Maio, membre des quintets de Sal La Rocca et Fabrice Alleman. A la contrebasse, Jacques Pili qui a fait partie du groupe Quatre avec Nicolas Kummert (saxophone ténor) mais est surtout connu pour sa participation aux albums de Maurane, Michel Fugain ou Lara Fabian. A la batterie, Jérôme Klein, élève de Stéphane Galland et Bruno Casdtelluci au Conservatoire de Bruxelles. Enfin, deux invités Micel Seba aux percussions sur six morceaux et Raf Debacker à l’orgue Hammond sur Eternal Life. Au répertoire, à l’exception de Milagre de Dorival Caymmi et Hard Time Lillin’ Floor Blues de Skip James, rien que des compositions originales : trois de Chrystel Wautier (paroles et musique), quatre cosignées avec Cédric Raymond, une avec Lorenzo Di Maio, ainsi que des lyrics posés sur Continuum de Jaco Pastorius. Que ce soit sur des mélodies au tempo soutenu (Before A Song ou Family Tree avec Fender Rhodes et guitare électrique ou Eternal Life avec orgue Hammond), des ballades avec piano (B Town, You Make Me Feel So Good), des atmosphères bluesy (Hard Time Killin’Floor Blues, Continuum) ou un petit détour vers des rythmes brésiliens avec guitare acoustique et percussions (Milagre chanté en portugais), la voix limpide et ondoyante de Chrystel Wautier s’accommode de tous les changements de rythme. –Claude Loxhay

Tracklist:
1. Before a Song 4’11’’
2. B Town 4’12’’
3. You Make Me Feel so Good 4’12’’
4. Every Step 4’03’’
5. Continuum 3’50’’
6. Milagre 4’30’’
7. A Gospel Tune 4’25’’
8. Hard Time Killin’ Floor Blues 5’09’’
9. Fill in 4’08’’
10. Family Tree 4’44
11. Eternal Life 4’37’’

Personnel:
Chrystel Wautier: Vocals and Backing vocals
Cédric Raymond: Piano, Fender Rhodes (doublebass on Milagre)
Lorenzo Di Maio: Guitars
Jacques Pili: Doublebass
Jérôme Klein: Drums

Download:

https://subyshare.com/3q0hyjce8ijl/ChrystelWautierBef0reaS0ng2016Q0buz2444.1.rar.html

Christoph Beck Quartet – Reflections (2017) [Official Digital Download 24bit/44,1kHz]

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Christoph Beck Quartet – Reflections (2017)
FLAC (tracks) 24 bit/44,1 kHz | Time – 54:13  minutes | 603 MB | Genre: Jazz
Studio Masters, Official Digital Download – Source: ProStudioMasters | Front Cover | ©  Double Moon Records

Things remain exciting. Whenever a smart aleck again verbosely proclaims the downfall of jazz, complains that current protagonists cannot think of anything else than quote the past and their heroes and the music as such is no longer relevant, then some young guy comes along at the same time and brazenly thumbs his nose at the spirit of the times. You can marvel at such not the least in the Jazz thing Next Generation series, which also proves in its 67th release that precisely jazz is an entertaining, individual, modern and relevant art form in every respect in the waning first decades of the 21st century.

This time, the personalized enlivenment comes under the name of Christoph Beck, who comes from the Swabian region of Germany, studied in Stuttgart (with distinction summa cum laude), Vienna and Würzburg, and has played in the Baden-Württemberg Youth Jazz Orchestra and the German Youth Jazz Orchestra (BuJazzO). He is a highly talented tenor saxophonist who was awarded the “Young Lions Jazz Award Stuttgart” and received a scholarship from the Baden-Württemberg Foundation. He has played in the Tobias Becker Big Band, the Hot Damn Horns, the Slavko Benic Orkestr, the Südsax saxophone quartet, Antizyklon, the SWR4 and SWR1 bands and in his own ensembles such as “Das letzte Känguru” and numerous big bands (Eberhard Budziat Bigband Project, Stuttgart Jazz Orchestra and Jazz Factory Orchestra, among others). In addition, the young musician has collaborated in various theater and musical productions (West Side Story, Chicago, Rocky, Line1, Faust, Twelfth Night and Happy End) and teaches at the Leonberg Youth Music School. This is proof that well-trained jazz musicians do not have to spend the night under a bridge to get the necessary experience and expertise.

Christoph Beck’s first album under his own name, “Reflections”, together with Andreas Feith (piano), Sebastian Schuster (bass) and Thomas Wörle (drums) has the radiance of a beacon in an increasingly vast German jazz scene. It contains his own compositions without exception and with unconventional titles such as “Grellgruen”, “Nutzlos”, “Unveraenderlich” and “Unbekannte Schatten” that sketch the exploring personality of Beck, who deliberately chose a conventional cast for the recording. Both in ballads as well as up-tempo pieces, the native of Stuttgart goes his own way, which is certain to single him out as a distinctive voice with a unique style. Music like a signature: playful melancholy meets skeptical optimism. Simply too big for commercial pigeonholing.
Beck’s former teacher Rainer Tempel (composition/arrangement) commented that it is always a nice feeling when former students prove with a CD that they stay focused, rehearse, play and record. “Painters paint, actors play and musicians simply make music, regardless of whether anyone else likes it in the beginning. However, someone else definitely likes it in the case of Christoph Beck.” Others will certainly agree with Temple’s opinion soon. “Christoph Beck can play. He and the other musicians of this quartet stand for the 2010 generation of the Stuttgart scene and contribute to keeping it alive here, as something moving and changing. This in turn inspires others.”

Perhaps this is genuine art, which a young jazz musician such as this one has to dominate these days: to compose intelligently and control the melody at the same time, compose intricate harmonies and stay “catchy” at all times. Christoph Beck and his quartet manage to achieve this closing of the circle masterly.

Tracklist:
1 Grellgruen 07:20
2 Castellezgasse 06:40
3 Nutzlos 06:48
4 Space Invader 06:36
5 Unveraenderlich 06:52
6 Dolor 08:10
7 Sykpe 04:38
8 Unbekannte Schatten 07:11

Personnel:
Christoph Beck – sax
Andreas Feith – piano
Sebastian Schuster – bass
Thomas Wörle – drums

Download:

https://subyshare.com/g5h8eal7rfg8/Christ0phBeckQuartetReflecti0ns2017Pr0Studi0Masters2444.1.rar.html

Charles Calello & Orchestra – Direct Hits (1966/2016) [Official Digital Download 24bit/192kHz]

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Charles Calello & Orchestra – Direct Hits (1966/2016)
FLAC (tracks) 24 bit/192 kHz | Time – 30:16 minutes | 1,11 GB | Genre: Pop
Studio Masters, Official Digital Download – Source: HDTracks | Front Cover | ©  RCA Records
Recorded: RCA Victor’s Studio A, New York City

Tracklist:
1 A Lover’s Concerto 02:43
2 The Name Game 02:47
3 Navy Blue 02:40
4 Dawn (Go Away) 02:25
5 The Mouse 02:24
6 Bye Bye Baby (Baby Goodbye) 02:28
7 Let’s Hang On 02:56
8 The Clapping Song 02:21
9 Ronnie 02:47
10 Candy Girl 02:16
11 Concrete and Clay 02:10
12 Abigail Beecher 02:19

Personnel:
Charles Calello, arranger, conductor

Download:

https://subyshare.com/gfd50g0y66yd/CharlesCalell00rchestraDirectHits19662016HDTracks24192.part1.rar.html
https://subyshare.com/8nqugtjwk02y/CharlesCalell00rchestraDirectHits19662016HDTracks24192.part2.rar.html

Leonard Bernstein – The Age of Anxiety & Serenade after Plato’s ‘Symposium’– Philippe Entremont, Zino Francescatti, New York Philharmonic Orchestra, Leonard Bernstein (1966/2017) [Official Digital Download 24bit/192kHz]

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Leonard Bernstein – The Age of Anxiety & Serenade after Plato’s ‘Symposium’ – Philippe Entremont, Zino Francescatti, New York Philharmonic Orchestra, Leonard Bernstein (1966/2017)
FLAC (tracks) 24 bit/192 kHz | Time – 01:07:21 minutes | 2,64 GB | Genre: Classical
Studio Masters, Official Digital Download – Source: HDTracks | Front Cover | ©  Columbia Records

Symphony No. 2, “The Age of Anxiety” :: Anyone who grew up in America in the late 1950s probably first encountered classical music through a series of Young People’s Concerts, presented on television by Leonard Bernstein. Bernstein’s gently narrated, eloquent descriptions examined many aspects of his art.
One program explained that music, in itself, is never “about” anything but music. For his example, Bernstein chose the tone poem Don Quixote by Richard Strauss, specifically Variation 2, in which the Don meets a flock of sheep on the road and believes them to be soldiers. Before playing the episode, however, Bernstein created a fanciful story about a group of motorcycle riders, and allowed the music graphically to illustrate a completely different idea. His point was made.
In 1947, W. H. Auden published an epic poem, The Age of Anxiety, concerned with 20th-century man’s search for God. The poem won a Pulitzer Prize, and Bernstein, deeply moved, chose it as the subject matter for a symphony. He added a solo piano part, representing himself as a spectator. The story concerns four disenchanted people searching for faith, and Bernstein composed music to illustrate the descriptions on the printed page. At the end, after a jazz interlude for piano and percussion, “the characters disperse,” and an Epilogue, for orchestra alone, represents faith itself. Later, Bernstein rewrote the finale, adding a cadenza before the coda to round out the work’s concert function. In other words, he followed his own maxim about music not being related to anything except itself. The music had acquired a life—and a separate personality—of its own, despite the words that inspired it. —Paul Myers

Serenade (After Plato’s Symposium) :: Bernstein’s Serenade (After Plato’s Symposium), a “violin concerto” for soloist, string orchestra, harp, and percussion, probably did itself no favors by having such an erudite title. Bernstein chose the title “Serenade” (after the Italian sera, or “evening piece”), while the Symposium—Plato’s examination of the many aspects of love, as defined by his Athenian colleagues—was simply used by Bernstein to stimulate his creative energies.
That’s not to say that Bernstein didn’t take the ideas in Symposium seriously; throughout his life, he was concerned with learning about—and strengthening—the emotional bonds that connect people. He once said “I feel, love, need, and respect people above all else … I believe in man’s unconscious, the deep spring from which comes his power to communicate and to love … all art’s a combination of these powers.” For Bernstein, who described his violin showpiece as “a series of related statements in praise of love,” his Serenade was indeed an artwork that expressed this force. —Paul Myers

Tracklist:
Leonard Bernstein (1918—1990)
The Age of Anxiety, Symphony No. 2 for Piano and Orchestra (after W. H. Auden)
Part One
1 a. The Prologue: Lento moderato 02:31
2 b. The Seven Ages: Variations 1 – 7 09:11
3 c. The Seven Stages: Variations 8- 14 06:15
Part Two
4 a. The Dirge: Largo 06:07
5 b. The Masque: Extremely fast 04:35
6 c. The Epilogue: Adagio – Andante – Con Moto 08:10
Serenade after Plato’s Symposium for Solo Violin, Strings, Harp and Percussion
7 I. Phaedrus: Pausanias (Lento – Allegro marcato) 07:02
8 II. Aristophanes (Allegretto) 04:11
9 III. Erixymathus (Presto) 01:28
10 IV. Agathon (Adagio) 06:58
11 V. Socrates: Alcibiades (Molto tenuto – Allegro molto vivace) 10:48

Personnel:
Philippe Entremont, piano #1-6
Zino Francescatti, violin #7-11
New York Philharmonic Orchestra
Leonard Bernstein, conductor

Download:

https://subyshare.com/b8qoxx2157je/BernsteinAge0fAnxietyNYP0Le0nardBernstein19662017HDTracks24192.part1.rar.html
https://subyshare.com/t6orxr7g4r3y/BernsteinAge0fAnxietyNYP0Le0nardBernstein19662017HDTracks24192.part2.rar.html
https://subyshare.com/tsq47djj6a22/BernsteinAge0fAnxietyNYP0Le0nardBernstein19662017HDTracks24192.part3.rar.html


Anton Bruckner – Symphony No. 0 – Yomiuri Nippon Symphony Orchestra, Stanislaw Skrowaczewski (2015) [Official Digital Download 24bit/96kHz]

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Anton Bruckner – Symphony No. 0 – Yomiuri Nippon Symphony Orchestra, Stanislaw Skrowaczewski (2015)
FLAC (tracks) 24 bit/96 kHz  | Time – 45:40 minutes | 939 MB | Genre: Classical
Studio Masters, Official Digital Download – Source: e-Onkyo | Front Cover | © Denon/Nippon Columbia Co., Ltd.
Recorded: October 8, 2014, Tokyo Metropolitan Theatre

91歳を超えて、なお進化・深化を続ける巨匠による、一音千金の居くべき奇貨。
読売日本交響楽団桂冠名誉指揮者、スクロヴァチェフスキによる、91歳を迎えたすぐ後の読響定期公演を収録したライヴ録音盤。老巨匠の豊富なレパートリーの中でも、特に高い世評と人気を誇るのがブルックナーで、これまでリリースしてきた3曲の後期交響曲は、いずれも最高の評価を得ています。
公開演奏・出版には至らず、「第0番」と呼ばれるようになった経緯も判然としないものの、第1番の後に続くものとして、試行錯誤の末に完成されたこの交響曲には、まぎれもないブルックナーの美質が横溢しています。他に単曲で入手できる良盤に恵まれず、中・後期作品のような深淵を垣間見せてくれたこの演奏がCD化されれば、必ずや代表盤となるであろうとの大きな期待が寄せられていました。

Tracklist:
Anton Bruckner (1824-1896)
Symphony No. 0 in D minor, WAB 100
1. I. Allegro 14’25
2. II. Andante 13’18
3. III. Scherzo: Presto – Trio: Langsamer und ruhiger 6’37
4. IV. Finale: Moderato – Allegro vivace 11’20

Personnel:
Yomiuri Nippon Symphony Orchestra
Stanisław Skrowaczewski, conductor

Download:

https://subyshare.com/c4iikhyxdm85/BrucknerSymph0nyN0.0YNS0StanisawSkr0waczewski2015e0nky02496.rar.html

Anton Bruckner – Symphony No. 7 – Yomiuri Nippon Symphony Orchestra, Stanislaw Skrowaczewski (2011) [Official Digital Download 24bit/96kHz]

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Anton Bruckner – Symphony No. 7 – Yomiuri Nippon Symphony Orchestra, Stanislaw Skrowaczewski (2011)
FLAC (tracks) 24 bit/96 kHz  | Time – 01:06:39 minutes | 1,27 GB | Genre: Classical
Studio Masters, Official Digital Download – Source: e-Onkyo | Front Cover | © Denon/Nippon Columbia Co., Ltd.
Recorded: October 16, 2010, Suntory Hall

現代最高のブルックナー指揮者、スクロヴァチェフスキが読売日本交響楽団第8代常任指揮者のポストを辞して、桂冠名誉指揮者となってから初めて行った公演のライヴ録音です。ミスターSと読響によるブルックナーの後期3大交響曲が、これで待望の完結を見ました。巨匠が到達した至高のブルックナー解釈が、ここ日本で完璧な結実を見せたことに感謝しないではいられません。読響の演奏も、日本のオーケストラ演奏史上のマイルストーンと言って良い奇跡的なものです。
秀抜な録音がとらえたこの名演を一人でも多くの方に味わっていただくため、コロムビア創立100周年を記念して、SACDの新録新譜としては画期的な低価格でお届けします。

Tracklist:
Anton Bruckner (1824-1896)
Symphony No. 7 in E major, WAB 107
1. I. Allegro moderato 20’44
2. II. Adagio. Sehr feierlich und sehr langsam 22’59
3. III. Scherzo. Sehr schnell 10’05
4. IV. Finale. Bewegt, doch nicht schnell 12’51

Personnel:
Yomiuri Nippon Symphony Orchestra
Stanisław Skrowaczewski, conductor

Download:

https://subyshare.com/bp0p3fe41tlq/BrucknerSymph0nyN0.7YNS0StanisawSkr0waczewski2011e0nky02496.part1.rar.html
https://subyshare.com/enoitj1vbius/BrucknerSymph0nyN0.7YNS0StanisawSkr0waczewski2011e0nky02496.part2.rar.html

Anton Bruckner – Symphony No. 8 – Yomiuri Nippon Symphony Orchestra, Stanislaw Skrowaczewski (2010) [Official Digital Download 24bit/96kHz]

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Anton Bruckner – Symphony No. 8 – Yomiuri Nippon Symphony Orchestra, Stanislaw Skrowaczewski (2010)
FLAC (tracks) 24 bit/96 kHz  | Time – 01:19:13 minutes | 1,45 GB | Genre: Classical
Studio Masters, Official Digital Download – Source: e-Onkyo | Front Cover | © Denon/Nippon Columbia Co., Ltd.
Recorded: March 25, 2010, Tokyo Opera City Concert Hall

読売日本交響楽団の第8代常任指揮者としての最後のプログラムとなった、ブルックナーの第8。その3月25日のライヴ録音がついにディスクになりました。
最高の評価を得た前作の第9すら眼下に見えるほどの、この世のものとも思えない高みに達した演奏に、どれだけの聴衆が涙したことでしょう。その中には、ブルックナーにかけては殊の外厳しい審美眼を注ぐ、海千山千の評論家やプレス関係者も含まれています。この、まさに音楽の世界遺産といっても過言ではない演奏を、ベスト・チューニングされたサラウンドと高音質2チャンネルのSACDで、会場で聞き逃した多くのファンにお届けできるのは、発売日翌々日に創立100周年の日を迎えるコロムビアにとって大きな喜びです。
この演奏が偉大なのは、名演とされるブルックナー演奏に比較的多く聴かれる、神秘性や腹芸を旨とするのではなく、贅肉をそぎ落とした非常にタイトで若々しささえ感じさせる外装の下に、作曲家でもあるミスターSならではの、細部に至るまでの克明な彫刻と、全体を鳥瞰する何段階ものパースペクティヴとが稀有な同居を果たしているからでしょう。

Tracklist:
Anton Bruckner (1824-1896)
Symphony No. 8 in C minor, WAB 108
1. I. Allegro moderato 14’46
2. II. Scherzo. Allegro moderato 16’53
3. III. Adagio. Feierlich langsam; doch nicht schleppend 26’59
4. IV. Finale. Feierlich, nicht schnell 20’35

Personnel:
Yomiuri Nippon Symphony Orchestra
Stanisław Skrowaczewski, conductor

Download:

https://subyshare.com/q5xjt28jk712/BrucknerSymph0nyN0.8YNS0StanisawSkr0waczewski2010e0nky02496.part1.rar.html
https://subyshare.com/vy6eesdq5mri/BrucknerSymph0nyN0.8YNS0StanisawSkr0waczewski2010e0nky02496.part2.rar.html

Anton Bruckner – Symphony No. 9 – Yomiuri Nippon Symphony Orchestra, Stanislaw Skrowaczewski (2010) [Official Digital Download 24bit/96kHz]

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Anton Bruckner – Symphony No. 9 – Yomiuri Nippon Symphony Orchestra, Stanislaw Skrowaczewski (2010)
FLAC (tracks) 24 bit/96 kHz  | Time – 01:01:35 minutes | 1,15 GB | Genre: Classical
Studio Masters, Official Digital Download – Source: e-Onkyo | Front Cover | © Denon/Nippon Columbia Co., Ltd.
Recorded: September 23, 2009, Tokyo Metropolitan Theatre

2007年に読売日本交響楽団の第8代常任指揮者のポストに就き、日本中のファンを驚かせ、また喜ばせたマエストロも、今シーズンを最後に惜しまれつつそのポストから去って桂冠名誉指揮者となりました。
掉尾を飾るプログラムは、ブルックナーの第8交響曲。言わずと知れたミスターS再評価のきっかけを作ったブルックナー・チクルス中の畢生の大作です。
スクロヴァチェフスキ=読響は、デンオン・レーベルにてブラームスの交響曲全集が進行中で、残すところ第4番のみとなっていますが、この機会に合わせ、先の9月に行われたブルックナーの交響曲第9番のライヴ録音を先行して発売します。
8番の後に書かれ、未完に終わった第9番は、その神々しいまでの宗教性によって、凡百の指揮者の入山を許さない峻厳な霊峰に喩えられます。
86歳の巨匠が読響をして顕現せしめた奇跡的な音空間の中で、幸運にもコンサート会場に居合わせた聴衆は神の声を聴いたといいます。このCDは、その機会に恵まれなかった人々への、日本を愛するマエストロSからの素晴らしい贈り物といえるでしょう。

Tracklist:
Anton Bruckner (1824-1896)
Symphony No. 9 in D minor, WAB 109
1. I. Feierlich, misterioso 23’33
2. II. Scherzo. Bewegt, lebhaft – Trio. Schnell 10’13
3. III. Adagio. Langsam, feierlich 27’48

Personnel:
Yomiuri Nippon Symphony Orchestra
Stanisław Skrowaczewski, conductor

Download:

https://subyshare.com/tqpncljd3yxq/BrucknerSymph0nyN0.9YNS0StanisawSkr0waczewski2010e0nky02496.part1.rar.html
https://subyshare.com/1wtw6obtinrv/BrucknerSymph0nyN0.9YNS0StanisawSkr0waczewski2010e0nky02496.part2.rar.html

Anton Bruckner – Symphony No. 5 – London Philharmonic Orchestra, Stanislaw Skrowaczewski (2016) [Official Digital Download 24bit/96kHz]

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Anton Bruckner – Symphony No. 5 – London Philharmonic Orchestra, Stanislaw Skrowaczewski (2016)
FLAC (tracks) 24 bit/96 kHz  | Time – 01:18:49 minutes | 1,39 GB | Genre: Classical
Studio Masters, Official Digital Download – Source: Q0buz | Booklet, Front Cover | © LSO
Recorded live at Southbank Centre’s Royal Festival Hall, London on: 31 October 2015

This live concert recording features renowned Bruckner expert Stanisław Skrowaczewski, who commands a rare position within the international musical scene, being both a renowned conductor and a highly-regarded composer.

This recording is an interpretation of humility from nonagenarian Stanisław Skrowaczewski, a performance in which the listener can hear the remarkable connection between conductor and the London Philharmonic Orchestra; the Orchestra has performed Bruckner’s symphonies under his baton many times.

Anton Bruckner’s Fifth Symphony is one of the grandest of his so-called ‘cathedrals in sound’. From the first movement’s monumental tone, via the dance-haunted Scherzo, to the beautiful yet finally enigmatic Adagio, Bruckner’s ‘fantastic’ Fifth ends with a triumphant orchestral finale, among the finest ever written.

Skrowaczewski’s interpretation of Bruckner’s Symphony No. 3 with the LPO is also available on the LPO’s record label (LPO-0084). Released in 2015, the recording received excellent reviews, with BBC Radio 3 commenting that ‘it sounds throughout as if the LPO is completely in sympathy with the conductor’s carefully controlled approach … It feels right, end to end.’

This recording was taken from a live concert performance at Southbank Centre’s Royal Festival Hall on Saturday 31 October 2015.

Tracklist:
Anton Bruckner (1824-1896)
Symphony No. 5 in B-Flat Major, WAB 105 (1878 Version, Ed. L. Nowak)
1. I. Adagio – Allegro 21:27
2. II. Adagio: Sehr langsam 18:09
3. III. Scherzo: Molto vivace (Schnell) – Trio: Im gleichen – Tempo 13:16
4. IV. Finale: Adagio – Allegro moderato 25:22

Personnel:
London Philharmonic Orchestra
Stanisław Skrowaczewski, conductor

Download:

https://subyshare.com/a9q1pgnkj3nj/BrucknerSymph0nyN0.5LP0StanisawSkr0waczewski2016Q0buz2496.part1.rar.html
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