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(Fusion, Contemporary, Jazz-Funk) George Benson (w. Ron Carter, Jack DeJohnette, Harold Mabern, Earl Klugh, Mabutu etc) - Body Talk (1973) {CBS ZK 45222, USA} {Remaster} - 1989, APE (image+.cue) lossless

George Benson - Body Talk Жанр: Fusion, Contemporary, Jazz-Funk Страна-производитель диска: USA Год издания диска: 1989 (1973) Издатель (лейбл): CBS Records Inc. / CBS Associated (AAD) Номер по каталогу: ZK 45222 (DIDP 071654) Аудио кодек: APE (*.ape) Тип рипа: image+.cue Битрейт аудио: lossless Продолжительность: 00:48:48 Источник (релизер): barin99 Наличие сканов в содержимом раздачи: даТреклист:1. Body Talk 8:22 2. Top of the World 9:58 3. Dance 10:31 4. When Love Has Grown 5:03 5. Plum 5:31 6. Body Talk 9:21Recorded at Van Gelder Studios on July 17 & 18, 1973 Englewood Cliffs, New Jersey Rudy Van Gelder - Engineer Originally released on CTI RecordsGeorge Benson — Guitar, Vocals Frank Foster — Sax (Tenor) Waymon Reed — Flugelhorn, Trumpet John Gatchell — Flugelhorn, Trumpet Jon Faddis — Flugelhorn, Trumpet Dick Griffin — Trombone Gerald Chamberlain — Trombone Gary King — Bass Ron Carter — Bass Harold Mabern — Piano Earl Klugh — Guitar Mobutu — Percussion Jack DeJohnette — DrumsProduced by Creed TaylorArranged and conducted by Pee Wee EllisThis reissue produced by Didier C. DeutschDigitally mixed and mastered by Larry Keyes at CBS Studios, NY  Лог создания рипа (EAC Log) Exact Audio Copy V1.0 beta 1 from 15. November 2010EAC extraction logfile from 21. April 2011, 19:45George Benson / Body TalkUsed drive : TSSTcorpDVD+-RW TS-L532B Adapter: 1 ID: 0Read mode : SecureUtilize accurate stream : YesDefeat audio cache : YesMake use of C2 pointers : NoRead offset correction : 704Overread into Lead-In and Lead-Out : NoFill up missing offset samples with silence : YesDelete leading and trailing silent blocks : NoNull samples used in CRC calculations : YesUsed interface : Native Win32 interface for Win NT & 2000Used output format : Internal WAV RoutinesSample format : 44.100 Hz; 16 Bit; StereoTOC of the extracted CD Track | Start | Length | Start sector | End sector --------------------------------------------------------- 1 | 0:00.00 | 8:22.72 | 0 | 37721 2 | 8:22.72 | 9:58.28 | 37722 | 82599 3 | 18:21.25 | 10:31.72 | 82600 | 129996 4 | 28:53.22 | 5:03.13 | 129997 | 152734 5 | 33:56.35 | 5:31.22 | 152735 | 177581 6 | 39:27.57 | 9:21.10 | 177582 | 219666Range status and errorsSelected range Filename C:\Documents and Settings\VB\My Documents\BARIN99\George Benson - Body Talk\George Benson - Body Talk.wav Peak level 97.7 % Extraction speed 0.4 X Range quality 100.0 % Copy CRC A67EEF7E Copy OKNo errors occurredAccurateRip summaryTrack 1 not present in databaseTrack 2 not present in databaseTrack 3 not present in databaseTrack 4 not present in databaseTrack 5 not present in databaseTrack 6 not present in databaseNone of the tracks are present in the AccurateRip databaseEnd of status report  Содержание индексной карты (.CUE) REM GENRE Jazz+FunkREM DATE 1973REM DISCID 410B7006REM COMMENT "ExactAudioCopy v1.0b1"PERFORMER "George Benson"TITLE "Body Talk"FILE "George Benson - Body Talk.ape" WAVE TRACK 01 AUDIO TITLE "Body Talk" PERFORMER "George Benson" INDEX 01 00:00:00 TRACK 02 AUDIO TITLE "Top Of The Wold" PERFORMER "George Benson" INDEX 00 08:20:32 INDEX 01 08:22:72 TRACK 03 AUDIO TITLE "Dance" PERFORMER "George Benson" INDEX 00 18:18:52 INDEX 01 18:21:25 TRACK 04 AUDIO TITLE "When Love Has Grown" PERFORMER "George Benson" INDEX 00 28:50:35 INDEX 01 28:53:22 TRACK 05 AUDIO TITLE "Plum" PERFORMER "George Benson" INDEX 00 33:53:62 INDEX 01 33:56:35 TRACK 06 AUDIO TITLE "Body Talk (Alternate Take)" PERFORMER "George Benson" INDEX 00 39:24:17 INDEX 01 39:27:57  Full Credits & Notes (from Discogs)Credits▼ * Arranged By, Conductor – Pee Wee Ellis * Artwork By – Bob Ciano * Bass – Gary King, Ron Carter * Drums – Jack DeJohnette * Electric Piano – Harold Mabern * Engineer – Rudy Van Gelder * Guitar – Earl Klugh, George Benson * Mastered By [Cd Reissue] – Larry Keyes * Percussion – Mobutu * Photography – Peter Turner * Producer – Creed Taylor * Reissue Producer – Didier C. Deutsch * Remix [Digitally, Cd Reissue] – Larry Keyes * Saxophone [Tenor] – Frank Foster * Trombone – Dick Griffin, Gerard Chamberlain * Trumpet, Flugelhorn – John Gatchell, Jon Faddis, Waymon Reed * Written-By – George Benson (tracks: 1, 2, 3, 5, 6)Notes▼Recorded at Van Gelder Studios, July 17 & 18, 1973. Digitally remixed and mastered at CBS Studios, N.Y.  All About JazzBy DAN BILAWSKY, Published: July 6, 2011With a title like Body Talk, and a lead-off track called "Dance," George Benson—a guitar-god-on-the-rise when this album originally hit shelves in 1973—makes it clear that this music is all about feeling the groove. While a good number of Benson projects on CTI benefited from Don Sebesky's arrangements, the guitarist needed a funkier feeling for this album, and Pee Wee Ellis was just the man to provide it. Ellis helped to create the sound that defined the music of James Brown in the late '60s, becoming an important presence as an arranger on Creed Taylor's Kudu imprint, making him the perfect person to tap for horn arrangements here.These horn arrangements become a more important presence later in the album, but the core group is in charge early on. Co-written by Benson and Ellis, "Dance" is fueled by the funky percussion team of CTI regular, drummer Jack DeJohnettel, and percussionist Mobutu and, while guitar is always the focal point, the percussion breakdown shared by both men on this track is an early highlight. DeJohnette's constantly evolving pseudo-swing underscores "When Love Has Grown," which features Benson's brilliant statements and some short solos from guitarist Earl Klugh and electric pianist Harold Mabern, but the follow-up track finds the band splitting the stylistic difference between the first two numbers. "Plum" opens on a swing feel that's both loping and lively at the same time, but the music eventually moves toward a funky rock groove, with horn riffs pushing the band forward. Benson's blazing single note lines light up the track early on and the guitarist shows great endurance, as he manages to keep the energy level high from beginning to end.The title track opens on an Isaac Hayes-worthy background, as DeJohnette's sixteenth-note high-hat pattern keeps things locked in and the rest of the band creates funky riffs around it, but the music gets a bit punchier as time passes and the horns join in at full blast. An alternate take of "Body Talk" now occupies the final spot on the album, but "Top Of The World" was last in the running order on the original release. While the horn section brings out a certain amount of intensity in the music, the rhythm section plays things very cool here, giving the song a gentler quality as Benson takes the spotlight with some Wes Montgomery-inspired chordal melody work.While Body Talk is occasionally overlooked, in favor of Benson's stupendous Beyond The Blue Horizon (CTI, 1973) and White Rabbit (CTI, 1973), the slick grooves, unique arrangements and stellar fretwork make this album a standout in the guitarist's long and impressive discography.  CD UniverseBenson stretches out extensively on this recording, cut in a couple of days in 1973. He also wrote four of the five tunes, though often his composing here consists of laying down enough of a riff to establish a groove and then letting a handful of horn hits complete the job. "Top of the World," "Dance," and the title cut follow this pattern; "Plum" makes more of melody statement, cooking in a smoky, mid-tempo vein before jumping into double time, with Benson getting busy over a two-chord vamp.The six horns, arranged by James Brown vet Alfred (Pee Wee) Ellis, include musicians like Frank Foster and Jon Faddis, and succeed in sounding hot and funky rather than cheesy and contrived. While the liner notes emphasize the presence of Earl Klugh in Benson's band at this time (Benson had recently met and hired the 19-year old), his presence on BODY TALK is minimal; he can be heard playing recurring R&B figures in the background on "Dance," and takes a 16-bar solo on "When Love Has Grown," the album's one cover, after harmonizing on the melody with his boss.  AMG"With an eye and ear on what was happening on the soul charts — James Brown in particular — Benson made a decided swerve toward R&B on this release. Indeed the JB's Pee Wee Ellis turns up as a big band arranger on three tracks, and he no doubt had a direct influence on the distinct JB groove of one of the non-big-band tunes, 'Dance.' It should come as no surprise by now that this formidable guitarist has no problem handling any kind of groove, although the mixed rhythm section of Jack DeJohnette, Ron Carter, electric pianist Harold Mabern, and percussionist Mobutu sometimes sends mixed messages. Earl Klugh has a few tasty moments on his own, and there are some reconnaissance flights back to the jazz side of George, which he handles with his usual confident aplomb."
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