Жанр: Rock
Год выпуска диска: 2003(1971)
Производитель диска: A&M
Аудио кодек: DTS 5.1
Тип рипа: image+.cue
Битрейт аудио: 1411
Продолжительность: 39:32
Треклист:
1. Mambo Sun
2. Cosmic Dancer
3. Jeepster
4. Monolith
5. Lean Woman Blues
6. Get It On
7. Planet Queen
8. Girl
9. The Motivator
10. Life's A Gas
11. Rip Off
Доп. информация: Title: Electric Warrior [SACD] [Remastered]
Record Label: A&M
Release Year: 2003
EAN: 0606949370725
Genre: Rock
Product ID: EPID4413199
SACD-DSD > DTS 5.1
NOTE: burn img to cd
Релиз от Hugara.
Выложено по просьбе . Звучит исключительно прозрачно !
скрытый текст
When Tony Visconti was offered the opportunity to remix Electric Warrior for 5.1 sound, he set himself one crucial brief -- "I wanted this version to sound like it was recorded in 1972 and mixed in 1972, if Surround Sound was already available." In other words, no posthumous remixes, no clever overdubs, nothing that wasn't there to begin with, when he and Marc Bolan closed the final tape box (in 1971, actually) and switched out the lights on the original sessions. He succeeded. Across the board, the sound is superlative, a 180-degree sweep that fills the room with the ghosts of T. Rex and jam packs your mind with some of the most astonishing melodies ever to ride out in the name of pure pop. Divided neatly between the spacy ballads that were Bolan's forte ("Planet Queen," "Girl," "Life's a Gas"), and the seductive rockers that were his genius ("Mambo Sun," "Motivator," "Monolith"), Electric Warrior was recorded just as T. Rex hit superstar status and, with two of their four singles-so-far on board ("Get It On" and "Jeepster"), it remains the consummate Bolan album. But it's more than that, as well -- overwhelmingly exuberant, its flawless blending of Chuck Berry pop, Middle Earth imagery and guiltless sexuality combine to forge a timeless musicality, for even as "Lean Woman Blues" hurtles straight out of the '50s, the closing freak-out "Rip Off" races equally resolutely backwards from punk. Electric Warrior was released at the dawn of the '70s. It was still resonating a decade later -- and, thanks to this marvelous remaster, it still makes a difference today.