(Hard Bop) Yusef Lateef - 1984 - 1965, WavPack (image+.cue) lossless
Yusef Lateef - 1984
Жанр: Hard Bop
Год издания диска: 1998 (rec. 1965)
Издатель (лейбл): Victor/MCA
Номер по каталогу: MVCJ-19154
Аудио кодек: WavPack (*.wv)
Тип рипа: image+.cue
Битрейт аудио: lossless
Продолжительность: 39:54
Источник (релизер): ffsf (hqshare)
Наличие сканов в содержимом раздачи: нет
Треклист:
01. 1984 (Lateef)
02. Try Love (Lateef)
03. Soul Sister (Harris)
04. Love Waltz (Nock)
05. One Little Indian (Lateef)
06. Listen to the Wind (Lateef)
07. Warm Fire (Ellington)
08. Gee! Sam Gee (Lateef)
09. The Greatest Story Ever Told (Newman)
Состав:
Yusef Lateef - tenor saxophone, flute, oboe
Mike Nock - piano
Reggie Workman - bass
James Black - drums
Bob Thiele - producer
Rudy Van Gelder - engineer
Recorded on February 24, 1965.
Лог создания рипа
Exact Audio Copy V1.0 beta 1 from 15. November 2010
EAC extraction logfile from 11. December 2010, 14:39
Yusef Lateef / 1984
Used drive : HL-DT-STDVDRAM GT20N Adapter: 0 ID: 0
Read mode : Secure
Utilize accurate stream : Yes
Defeat audio cache : Yes
Make use of C2 pointers : No
Read offset correction : 667
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 : Installed external ASPI interface
Used output format : Internal WAV Routines
Sample format : 44.100 Hz; 16 Bit; Stereo
TOC of the extracted CD
Track | Start | Length | Start sector | End sector
---------------------------------------------------------
1 | 0:00.37 | 8:16.60 | 37 | 37296
2 | 8:17.22 | 2:13.13 | 37297 | 47284
3 | 10:30.35 | 3:05.72 | 47285 | 61231
4 | 13:36.32 | 4:30.18 | 61232 | 81499
5 | 18:06.50 | 2:37.20 | 81500 | 93294
6 | 20:43.70 | 6:12.05 | 93295 | 121199
7 | 26:56.00 | 4:21.00 | 121200 | 140774
8 | 31:17.00 | 5:21.12 | 140775 | 164861
9 | 36:38.12 | 3:16.33 | 164862 | 179594
Range status and errors
Selected range
Filename D:\EAC\Yusef Lateef - 1984.wav
Peak level 93.9 %
Extraction speed 0.3 X
Range quality 100.0 %
Test CRC 4D1EFB5D
Copy CRC 4D1EFB5D
Copy OK
No errors occurred
AccurateRip summary
Track 1 accurately ripped (confidence 1) [17A4F374]
Track 2 accurately ripped (confidence 1) [4E0ADE9C]
Track 3 accurately ripped (confidence 1) [50664E7D]
Track 4 accurately ripped (confidence 1) [7E1BEC3B]
Track 5 accurately ripped (confidence 1) [1B085F38]
Track 6 accurately ripped (confidence 1) [394558C1]
Track 7 accurately ripped (confidence 1) [7012CFF0]
Track 8 accurately ripped (confidence 1) [CBF957E0]
Track 9 accurately ripped (confidence 1) [D9F23A9D]
All tracks accurately ripped
End of status report
==== Log checksum 0D562D3E897FAB5207A38C622596AECB1D9D1C8E5B23CA4351E8A9DF059E8C42 ====
Review by Thom Jurek
Yusef Lateef's experimentalism hit the stratosphere in 1965 with the issue of 1984. With bassist Reggie Workman, pianist Mike Nock, and drummer James Black, from the eight-minute title track that opens the album and the two-minute, angular modal ballad "Try Love," 1984 certainly seems to be shaping up into one weird record. The title is an experimental, noodling improv that has Lateef literally moaning as if in mourning throughout -- indecipherably no less -- and "Try Love"'s minimalist reeds barely hint at a melodic structure. All of this would be perfectly in keeping with the time, of course. After all, Coltrane, Ornette, and Cecil Taylor were tearing up Western musical conventions as if they were yesterday's newspapers. But then with "Soul Sister," featuring Lateef's deep, bluesy, tenor blowing around a gorgeous lyric figure, and Mike Nock's stunningly beautiful soloing on "Love Waltz," the entire album moves in another direction, even if it isn't terribly focused. The off-kilter, blues rip on "One Little Indian" (yes, that one), with its carny piano and out saxophone blowing into the microphonic territories, sends it off into another space entirely until, at the end, when we've heard the lovely flute on his read of "The Greatest Story Ever Told" and have reentered the complex melodic world of Lateef, that we can understand where we've been harmonically, and it isn't somewhere familiar, though it has some signposts we recognize. In all, a complex yet very emotionally and musically rewarding effort by a master.