(Female Vocal Jazz\Mainstream Jazz) Lorraine Feather - Ages - 2010, FLAC (image+.cue) lossless
Lorraine Feather - Ages
Жанр: Female Vocal Jazz\Mainstream Jazz
Страна-производитель диска: USA
Год издания диска: 2010
Издатель (лейбл): Jazzed Media
Страна: USA
Аудио кодек: FLAC (*.flac)
Тип рипа: image+.cue
Битрейт аудио: lossless
Продолжительность: 52:39
Источник (релизер): rfccbh
Наличие сканов в содержимом раздачи: да
Треклист:
1 A Lot to Remember
2 Peculiar Universe
3 I Forgot to Have Children
4 Old at 18/Dog Bowl
5 Perugia
6 Things I Learned in High School
7 Two Desperate Women in Their Late 30s
8 The Girl with the Lazy Eye
9 How Did We End Up Here?
10 Scrabble
11 I Always Had a Thing for You
Жанр: Female Vocal Jazz\Mainstream Jazz
Страна-производитель диска: USA
Год издания диска: 2010
Издатель (лейбл): Jazzed Media
Страна: USA
Аудио кодек: FLAC (*.flac)
Тип рипа: image+.cue
Битрейт аудио: lossless
Продолжительность: 52:39
Источник (релизер): rfccbh
Наличие сканов в содержимом раздачи: да
Треклист:
1 A Lot to Remember
2 Peculiar Universe
3 I Forgot to Have Children
4 Old at 18/Dog Bowl
5 Perugia
6 Things I Learned in High School
7 Two Desperate Women in Their Late 30s
8 The Girl with the Lazy Eye
9 How Did We End Up Here?
10 Scrabble
11 I Always Had a Thing for You
Лог создания рипа
Exact Audio Copy V1.0 beta 1 from 15. November 2010
EAC extraction logfile from 12. April 2011, 20:38
Lorraine Feather / Ages
Used drive : Optiarc DVD RW AD-7200S Adapter: 3 ID: 0
Read mode : Secure
Utilize accurate stream : Yes
Defeat audio cache : Yes
Make use of C2 pointers : No
Read offset correction : 48
Overread into Lead-In and Lead-Out : No
Fill up missing offset samples with silence : Yes
Delete leading and trailing silent blocks : No
Null samples used in CRC calculations : Yes
Used interface : Native Win32 interface for Win NT & 2000
Used output format : User Defined Encoder
Selected bitrate : 768 kBit/s
Quality : High
Add ID3 tag : No
Command line compressor : C:\Program Files (x86)\Exact Audio Copy\FLAC\FLAC.EXE
Additional command line options : -8 -V %s
TOC of the extracted CD
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1 | 0:00.00 | 3:17.44 | 0 | 14818
2 | 3:17.44 | 5:18.62 | 14819 | 38730
3 | 8:36.31 | 4:33.12 | 38731 | 59217
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6 | 22:47.63 | 4:15.52 | 102588 | 121764
7 | 27:03.40 | 6:53.27 | 121765 | 152766
8 | 33:56.67 | 7:01.68 | 152767 | 184409
9 | 40:58.60 | 4:41.68 | 184410 | 205552
10 | 45:40.53 | 2:40.06 | 205553 | 217558
11 | 48:20.59 | 4:18.33 | 217559 | 236941
Range status and errors
Selected range
Filename C:\rfccbh\Lorraine Feather - Ages.wav
Peak level 99.2 %
Extraction speed 0.3 X
Range quality 100.0 %
Test CRC 0D8061F9
Copy CRC 0D8061F9
Copy OK
No errors occurred
AccurateRip summary
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Track 2 accurately ripped (confidence 3) [CA73B649]
Track 3 accurately ripped (confidence 3) [D2E7A8CF]
Track 4 accurately ripped (confidence 3) [5F75D371]
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Track 8 accurately ripped (confidence 3) [A882C4CF]
Track 9 accurately ripped (confidence 3) [6AA5774D]
Track 10 accurately ripped (confidence 3) [4271A9CF]
Track 11 accurately ripped (confidence 3) [BABFCE64]
All tracks accurately ripped
End of status report
Содержание индексной карты (.CUE)
REM GENRE Vocal
REM DATE 2010
REM DISCID 980C570B
REM COMMENT "ExactAudioCopy v1.0b1"
PERFORMER "Lorraine Feather"
TITLE "Ages"
FILE "Lorraine Feather - Ages.flac" WAVE
TRACK 01 AUDIO
TITLE "A Lot To Remember"
PERFORMER "Lorraine Feather"
INDEX 01 00:00:00
TRACK 02 AUDIO
TITLE "Peculiar Universe"
PERFORMER "Lorraine Feather"
INDEX 01 03:17:44
TRACK 03 AUDIO
TITLE "I Forgot To Have Children"
PERFORMER "Lorraine Feather"
INDEX 01 08:36:31
TRACK 04 AUDIO
TITLE "Old at 18\Dog Bowl"
PERFORMER "Lorraine Feather"
INDEX 01 13:09:43
TRACK 05 AUDIO
TITLE "Perugia"
PERFORMER "Lorraine Feather"
INDEX 01 18:57:51
TRACK 06 AUDIO
TITLE "Things I Learned In High School"
PERFORMER "Lorraine Feather"
INDEX 01 22:47:63
TRACK 07 AUDIO
TITLE "Two Desperate Women in Their Late 30's"
PERFORMER "Lorraine Feather"
INDEX 01 27:03:40
TRACK 08 AUDIO
TITLE "The Girl With The Lazy Eye"
PERFORMER "Lorraine Feather"
INDEX 01 33:56:67
TRACK 09 AUDIO
TITLE "How Did We End Up Here?"
PERFORMER "Lorraine Feather"
INDEX 01 40:58:60
TRACK 10 AUDIO
TITLE "Scrabble"
PERFORMER "Lorraine Feather"
INDEX 01 45:40:53
TRACK 11 AUDIO
TITLE "I Always Had A Thing For You"
PERFORMER "Lorraine Feather"
INDEX 01 48:20:59
Об исполнителе (группе)
Lorraine Feather was born in Manhattan. Her parents named her Billie Jane Lee Lorraine after godmother Billie Holiday, her mother Jane (formerly a big band singer), her mother's ex-roommate Peggy Lee, and the song "Sweet Lorraine." She is the daughter of the late jazz writer Leonard Feather.
The Feathers moved to L.A. when Lorraine was 12; at 18, after two years as a theater arts major at L.A. City College, she returned to New York to pursue an acting career. Some touring, off-Broadway work and the Broadway show Jesus Christ Superstar followed, interspersed with many waitressing jobs up and down Manhattan's West Side.
Frequently out of work, and discouraged by more than one restaurateur from pursuing a career in the food service industry, Lorraine decided to try singing. She began working with various jazz and Top 40 bands in and around New York. SGrand Funkhe sang backup for Petula Clark and Grand Funk Railroad, and finally put her own act together, eventually moving back to L.A., where she sang at local jazz clubs and did a solo album for Concord. Soon after, she joined producer Richard Perry's vocal trio Full Swing and recorded three albums with the group. Lorraine wrote lyrics for most of the songs on these releases, some for classic pieces like Duke Ellington's "Rockin' in Rhythm," the Yellowjackets' "Ballad of the Whale" and Horace Henderson's "Big John's Special" (later heard in the movie Swing Shift). Full Swing was featured on Barry Manilow's Swing Street album and TV special singing the Feather/Eddie Arkin song "Big Fun."
When Full Swing dissolved, Lorraine focused mainly on writing. Songs with her lyrics were recorded by artists such as Patti Austin, Phyllis Hyman, Djavan, David Benoit, Kenny Rankin and Diane Schuur. Cleo Laine recorded four tracks of Lorraine's versions of Ellington instrumentals.
Lorraine has written lyrics for the Disney TV show Dinosaurs (with Ray Colcord) and the PBS show Make Way for Noddy (with Terry Sampson). Her work with Mark Watters includes the MGM animated film Babes in Toyland, Disney's Pooh's Heffalump Halloween, Hasbro's Candy Land movie and their My Little Pony series, as well as the touring stage show My Little Pony—The World's Biggest Tea Party. They also wrote opening title themes for All Dogs Go to Heaven and The Lionhearts, and the piece "Faster, Higher, Stronger," performed by opera singer Jessye Norman in the closing of the Opening Ceremonies of the 1996 Summer Olympics. Lorraine worked on the Disney films The Jungle Book 2 (with Paul Grabowsky) and The Princess Diaries 2 (with Larry Grossman). She has received seven Emmy nominations.
Lorraine has written lyrics for the My Little Pony films for several years, with music by Mark Watters. The most recent of these, Twinkle Wish Adventure, also showed on the Disney Channel.
Lorraine has always kept singing: she sang on the Dick Tracy soundtrack (with Janis Siegel and Cheryl Bentyne of The Manhattan Transfer) the soundtrack album for Bette Midler's For the Boys, and keyboardist Terry Trotter's Sweeney Todd in Jazz.
Lorraine's album The Body Remembers, released in March of 1997 on the Bean Bag label, was an offbeat electronic project written with various co-writers including her husband, drummer Tony Morales, Terry Sampson, Joe Curiale, Yutaka, and Eddie Arkin. Some of the album's musical guests were Russ Freeman, David Benoit and Don Grusin.
In 1999 Lorraine began a year-long project, the compositions of Fats Waller with her lyrics and vocals. The album featured Dick Hyman, Mike Lang and Fats Waller himself, in sampled form, on piano. It was released in July of 2001 on Rhombus Records, received glowing reviews and was played on 150+ radio stations nationwide. Lorraine's next three CDs were released on Sanctuary. She completed Cafe Society in the summer of 2002; this was a compilation of original songs in a classic jazz motif, with music by Duke Ellington, Johnny Mandel, Don Grusin, Eddie Arkin, Russell Ferrante and David Benoit. In 2003 her Such Sweet Thunder CD came out. This project featured the music of Duke Ellington with her added lyrics, and received a four-star review in Down Beat and a description of "pure genius" from Jazz Times. Her new album Dooji Wooji was released in early 2005 and also received enthusiastic reviews.
Lorraine's 2008 solo project was Language, which was released in April of 2008 on the Colorado label Jazzed Media. The songs were written with contemporary composers Shelly Berg, Russell Ferrante, Bill Elliott, Eddie Arkin, Michael B. Nelson, Terry Sampson and Tony Morales. Language was the #1-selling jazz CD on Amazon the month after its release. Her 2010 release was Ages and featured songs with her lyrics as always, and music by Arkin, Berg, Ferrante, Dick Hyman and Béla Fleck. It received a Grammy nomination in the Best Jazz Vocal Album category.
Lorraine has made several self-produced videos to accompany her CDs. In 2008 she began work on a fully-animated short film of one of her Waller adaptations, "You're Outa Here" (based on Waller's "The Minor Drag"), co-produced with "the quintessential independent American animator" George Griffin. The film was released in 2009, played at 35 festivals internationally, and won several awards, including Best Music Video at the South Beach International Animation Festival.
Lorraine and her husband Tony moved from Southern California to the San Francisco Bay Area in the late 1990s, then relocated to the San Juan Islands, off the coast of Washington State, in the summer of 2007. They have no children but have adopted dogs and cats on a continuing basis throughout their marriage. The current pair are Sterling and Brava, scooped up from Hopalong Rescue and The Milo Foundation respectively.
The Feathers moved to L.A. when Lorraine was 12; at 18, after two years as a theater arts major at L.A. City College, she returned to New York to pursue an acting career. Some touring, off-Broadway work and the Broadway show Jesus Christ Superstar followed, interspersed with many waitressing jobs up and down Manhattan's West Side.
Frequently out of work, and discouraged by more than one restaurateur from pursuing a career in the food service industry, Lorraine decided to try singing. She began working with various jazz and Top 40 bands in and around New York. SGrand Funkhe sang backup for Petula Clark and Grand Funk Railroad, and finally put her own act together, eventually moving back to L.A., where she sang at local jazz clubs and did a solo album for Concord. Soon after, she joined producer Richard Perry's vocal trio Full Swing and recorded three albums with the group. Lorraine wrote lyrics for most of the songs on these releases, some for classic pieces like Duke Ellington's "Rockin' in Rhythm," the Yellowjackets' "Ballad of the Whale" and Horace Henderson's "Big John's Special" (later heard in the movie Swing Shift). Full Swing was featured on Barry Manilow's Swing Street album and TV special singing the Feather/Eddie Arkin song "Big Fun."
When Full Swing dissolved, Lorraine focused mainly on writing. Songs with her lyrics were recorded by artists such as Patti Austin, Phyllis Hyman, Djavan, David Benoit, Kenny Rankin and Diane Schuur. Cleo Laine recorded four tracks of Lorraine's versions of Ellington instrumentals.
Lorraine has written lyrics for the Disney TV show Dinosaurs (with Ray Colcord) and the PBS show Make Way for Noddy (with Terry Sampson). Her work with Mark Watters includes the MGM animated film Babes in Toyland, Disney's Pooh's Heffalump Halloween, Hasbro's Candy Land movie and their My Little Pony series, as well as the touring stage show My Little Pony—The World's Biggest Tea Party. They also wrote opening title themes for All Dogs Go to Heaven and The Lionhearts, and the piece "Faster, Higher, Stronger," performed by opera singer Jessye Norman in the closing of the Opening Ceremonies of the 1996 Summer Olympics. Lorraine worked on the Disney films The Jungle Book 2 (with Paul Grabowsky) and The Princess Diaries 2 (with Larry Grossman). She has received seven Emmy nominations.
Lorraine has written lyrics for the My Little Pony films for several years, with music by Mark Watters. The most recent of these, Twinkle Wish Adventure, also showed on the Disney Channel.
Lorraine has always kept singing: she sang on the Dick Tracy soundtrack (with Janis Siegel and Cheryl Bentyne of The Manhattan Transfer) the soundtrack album for Bette Midler's For the Boys, and keyboardist Terry Trotter's Sweeney Todd in Jazz.
Lorraine's album The Body Remembers, released in March of 1997 on the Bean Bag label, was an offbeat electronic project written with various co-writers including her husband, drummer Tony Morales, Terry Sampson, Joe Curiale, Yutaka, and Eddie Arkin. Some of the album's musical guests were Russ Freeman, David Benoit and Don Grusin.
In 1999 Lorraine began a year-long project, the compositions of Fats Waller with her lyrics and vocals. The album featured Dick Hyman, Mike Lang and Fats Waller himself, in sampled form, on piano. It was released in July of 2001 on Rhombus Records, received glowing reviews and was played on 150+ radio stations nationwide. Lorraine's next three CDs were released on Sanctuary. She completed Cafe Society in the summer of 2002; this was a compilation of original songs in a classic jazz motif, with music by Duke Ellington, Johnny Mandel, Don Grusin, Eddie Arkin, Russell Ferrante and David Benoit. In 2003 her Such Sweet Thunder CD came out. This project featured the music of Duke Ellington with her added lyrics, and received a four-star review in Down Beat and a description of "pure genius" from Jazz Times. Her new album Dooji Wooji was released in early 2005 and also received enthusiastic reviews.
Lorraine's 2008 solo project was Language, which was released in April of 2008 on the Colorado label Jazzed Media. The songs were written with contemporary composers Shelly Berg, Russell Ferrante, Bill Elliott, Eddie Arkin, Michael B. Nelson, Terry Sampson and Tony Morales. Language was the #1-selling jazz CD on Amazon the month after its release. Her 2010 release was Ages and featured songs with her lyrics as always, and music by Arkin, Berg, Ferrante, Dick Hyman and Béla Fleck. It received a Grammy nomination in the Best Jazz Vocal Album category.
Lorraine has made several self-produced videos to accompany her CDs. In 2008 she began work on a fully-animated short film of one of her Waller adaptations, "You're Outa Here" (based on Waller's "The Minor Drag"), co-produced with "the quintessential independent American animator" George Griffin. The film was released in 2009, played at 35 festivals internationally, and won several awards, including Best Music Video at the South Beach International Animation Festival.
Lorraine and her husband Tony moved from Southern California to the San Francisco Bay Area in the late 1990s, then relocated to the San Juan Islands, off the coast of Washington State, in the summer of 2007. They have no children but have adopted dogs and cats on a continuing basis throughout their marriage. The current pair are Sterling and Brava, scooped up from Hopalong Rescue and The Milo Foundation respectively.
Об альбоме (сборнике)
As the daughter of respected jazz critic, Leonard Feather, Lorraine Feather comes to her jazz pedigree honestly, but more from natural talent than dogged filial loyalty. In possession of a pure, rich voice, she tried acting—along with some discouraging stints in the food industry—before finding her multi-colored niche in singing and composing. Ages, about the epochs that women of "a certain age" look back on, is full of artistry and humor.
Co-written with Yellowjackets pianist/arranger Russell Ferrante, guitarist Eddie Arkin, pianist Shelly Berg, banjoist Bela Fleck and pianist/arranger Dick Hyman, Feather plays the light-hearted schoolgirl, then revolves back to a deep-hearted but not cloying look at ages long lost. "I Forgot To Have Children" is a great tongue-in-cheek look at an issue that nary a single woman has not considered when looking at the end of their culture- driven "shelf life." Yet it's not a clichéd look, either. Her lyrical arabesques can elicit moments of pensive thought as well as guffaws of laughter. With musical dexterity—a very credible tribute to the 1890's pop musical ballads with "The Girl With the Lazy Eye"—she comments on anything from the girl who doesn't fit in the usual cliques in high school to the surprised commentary that all have asked, "How Did We End Up Here?"
From straight-ahead mainstream jazz to ballads that defy a sugary overlay, then to an elegant bossa nova, Feather's back-up musicians easily keep pace with her strong, smooth vocals. With bassist Michael Valerio and vibraphonist Bob Leatherbarrow augmenting the rest of the group, their originality meets Feather where she lives, in an intelligent, witty, sometimes pathos-ridden world.
That, in the end, is what shines on Ages. This is not a "chick's album." Yes, there are the inevitable songs about significant relationships, but none are hackneyed or gender-driven. No more can be asked than that Lorraine Feather has produced a polished yet very engaging look at this life. It may leave a smile, as well as recalling those long-lost secrets that we thought only we knew.
Co-written with Yellowjackets pianist/arranger Russell Ferrante, guitarist Eddie Arkin, pianist Shelly Berg, banjoist Bela Fleck and pianist/arranger Dick Hyman, Feather plays the light-hearted schoolgirl, then revolves back to a deep-hearted but not cloying look at ages long lost. "I Forgot To Have Children" is a great tongue-in-cheek look at an issue that nary a single woman has not considered when looking at the end of their culture- driven "shelf life." Yet it's not a clichéd look, either. Her lyrical arabesques can elicit moments of pensive thought as well as guffaws of laughter. With musical dexterity—a very credible tribute to the 1890's pop musical ballads with "The Girl With the Lazy Eye"—she comments on anything from the girl who doesn't fit in the usual cliques in high school to the surprised commentary that all have asked, "How Did We End Up Here?"
From straight-ahead mainstream jazz to ballads that defy a sugary overlay, then to an elegant bossa nova, Feather's back-up musicians easily keep pace with her strong, smooth vocals. With bassist Michael Valerio and vibraphonist Bob Leatherbarrow augmenting the rest of the group, their originality meets Feather where she lives, in an intelligent, witty, sometimes pathos-ridden world.
That, in the end, is what shines on Ages. This is not a "chick's album." Yes, there are the inevitable songs about significant relationships, but none are hackneyed or gender-driven. No more can be asked than that Lorraine Feather has produced a polished yet very engaging look at this life. It may leave a smile, as well as recalling those long-lost secrets that we thought only we knew.
Состав
Russell Ferrante: piano (2, 4, 5, 7, 8, 9) arranger (2, 5, 7, 8); Shelly Berg: piano (3, 6, 11) arranger (3, 6, 11); Dick Hyman: piano (10) arranger (10); Michael Valerio: bass (1, 2, 3, 4, 6, 7, 9, 11); Grant Geissman: guitar (1, 3, 6, 7, 11); Eddie Arkin: rhythm guitar (1) arranger (1, 4, 9); Bela Fleck: banjo (2); Michael Shapiro: drums (2, 4, 7, 9) percussion (2, 4, 6, 7, 9); Gregg Field: drums (1, 3, 6, 11); Tony Morales: dog bowl and additional percussion (4) trash can (7); Warren Luening: trumpet (1, 2, 4); Bob Leatherbarrow: vibes (9).
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This album is available on our DC++ hub: dchub://hub.pro-jazz.com:7777