Рeter Gabriel - 3 (a.k.a. Melt)
Жанр: Rock
Год выпуска альбома: 1980
Производитель диска: Classic Records 200g (Quiex SV-P) / Real World PG3-200
Mastered by Bernie Grundman @ Grundman Mastering, Hollywood
Аудио кодек: FLAC
Тип рипа: (tracks+.cue)
Битрейт аудио: 24 bit / 96 khz
Продолжительность: 45:16
Источник : сеть
Релизер : aksman
Трэклист:
Side A
1. "Intruder" – 4:54
2. "No Self-Control" – 3:55
3. "Start" – 1:21
4. "I Don't Remember" – 4:41
5. "Family Snapshot" – 4:28
6. "And Through the Wire" – 5:00
Side B
1. "Games Without Frontiers" – 4:06
2. "Not One of Us" – 5:22
3. "Lead a Normal Life" – 4:14
4. "Biko" – 7:32
Rating on allmusic.com: 5 out of 5 Stars
Personnel
* Peter Gabriel – vocals, piano, synthesizer, bass synthesizer, percussion
* Kate Bush – backing vocals
* Jerry Marotta – drums, percussion
* Larry Fast – synthesizer, bass synthesizer
* Robert Fripp – guitar
* John Giblin – bass
* Dave Gregory – guitar
* Tony Levin – Chapman stick
Additional personnel
* Phil Collins – drums, snare drum, surdo
* Dick Morrissey – saxophone
* Morris Pert – percussion
* David Rhodes – guitar, backing vocals
* Paul Weller – guitar
Доп. информация
Peter Gabriel, released in 1980, is Peter Gabriel's third eponymous album and his first (and only) for Mercury Records and re-issued in 1983 on Geffen Records. The album was met with wide critical acclaim and contains two of Gabriel's most famous songs, "Games Without Frontiers," which reached the U.S. Top 50, and "Biko". It was remastered with most of Gabriel's catalog in 2002.
This album is often referred to as Melt, referring to the album cover by Storm Thorgerson using image manipulation techniques employing a Polaroid SX-70 instant camera (though Thorgerson has said that Gabriel himself was involved with the smudging of several photos from the same session, and he does not remember whether he or Gabriel is responsible for the cover's final look.)
This album marked the first reunion of Gabriel with a member from Genesis: drummer, and current Genesis vocalist (as Gabriel's successor), Phil Collins.
In 1989, the album was ranked #45 on Rolling Stone magazine's list of the 100 greatest albums of the 1980s. In 2000; Q magazine placed the album at number 53 in its list of the 100 Greatest British Albums Ever.
Miscellanea
The song "Family Snapshot" was inspired by An Assassin's Diary, published in 1973 and written by Arthur Bremer, who attempted to assassinate George Wallace. Gabriel talked about the book in an authorized biography of him written by Spencer Bright and published (ISBN 0-283-99498-3) in 1988: An Assassin's Diary was a really nasty book, but you do get a sense of the person who is writing it. Bremer was obsessed with the idea of fame. He was aware of the news broadcasts all over the world and was trying to time the assassination to hit the early evening news in the States and the late night in Europe to get maximum coverage.
Phil Collins and Jerry Marotta's drum sound on this album (notable for its lack of cymbals) was a strong influence on Public Image Ltd's 'Flowers of Romance'. Collins, in turn, was so impressed with 'Flowers of Romance' that he hired that album's engineer, Nick Launay, for future recording projects.
Тех. информация
Music Hall MMF 5.1 Turntable
Goldring "1042GX reference" Cartridge
Belari VP-129 Tube Phono PreAmp with Sylvania 12AX7WA
Tascam US-144 external USB 2.0 Audiointerface
Interconnections by "Goldkabel"
Wavelab 5 recording software
TT > Belari > Laptop > Wavelab 5.01 (24/96) > manual click removal >
analyze (no clipping, no DC Bias offset) > split into individual Tracks > FLAC encoded (Vers. 1.21)
No silence been removed, please burn gapless to match original tracklayout.