Поиск

[SACD-R][OF] Charles Mingus – The Black Saint And The Sinner Lady - 1963/2011 (Jazz, Post-Bop, Progressive Jazz)

[SACD-R][OF] Charles Mingus – The Black Saint And The Sinner Lady - 1963/2011 (Jazz, Post-Bop, Progressive Jazz)
Charles Mingus – The Black Saint And The Sinner Lady (1963/2011) Жанр: Jazz, Post-Bop, Progressive Jazz
Носитель: SACD
Год издания: 1963/2011
Издатель: Analogue Productions
Номер по каталогу: CIPJ 35 SA
Аудиокодек: DSD64 2.0
Тип рипа: image (iso)
Продолжительность: 00:39:30
Наличие сканов в содержимом раздачи: да
Образ снят с помощью: Sony PlayStation 3 и утилиты sacd-ripper version 0.21
Релизёр:
Треклист:
01.Track A – Solo Dancers (Stop! Look! And Listen, Sinner Jim Whitney!) 06:37
02.Track B – Duet Solo Dancers (Hearts’ Beat and Shades In Physical Embraces) 06:44
03.Track C – Group Dancers (Soul Fusion, Freewoman and Oh, This Freedom’s Slave Cries) 07:23
04.Medley: Mode D-Trio and Group Dancers/Mode E- Single solos and Group Dance/ModeF-Group and Solo Dance 18:46
 
SACD+Back
 
 
 
The Black Saint
The Black Saint and the Sinner Lady is a studio album by American jazz musician Charles Mingus, released on Impulse! Records in 1963. The album consists of a single continuous composition—partially written as a ballet—divided into four tracks and six movements.
 
 
All Music Review

The Black Saint and the Sinner Lady is one of the greatest achievements in orchestration by any composer in jazz history. Charles Mingus consciously designed the six-part ballet as his magnum opus, and — implied in his famous inclusion of liner notes by his psychologist — it’s as much an examination of his own tortured psyche as it is a conceptual piece about love and struggle. It veers between so many emotions that it defies easy encapsulation; for that matter, it can be difficult just to assimilate in the first place. Yet the work soon reveals itself as a masterpiece of rich, multi-layered texture and swirling tonal colors, manipulated with a painter’s attention to detail. There are a few stylistic reference points — Ellington, the contemporary avant-garde, several flamenco guitar breaks — but the totality is quite unlike what came before it. Mingus relies heavily on the timbral contrasts between expressively vocal-like muted brass, a rumbling mass of low voices (including tuba and baritone sax), and achingly lyrical upper woodwinds, highlighted by altoist Charlie Mariano. Within that framework, Mingus plays shifting rhythms, moaning dissonances, and multiple lines off one another in the most complex, interlaced fashion he’d ever attempted. Mingus was sometimes pigeonholed as a firebrand, but the personal exorcism of Black Saint deserves the reputation — one needn’t be able to follow the story line to hear the suffering, mourning, frustration, and caged fury pouring out of the music. The 11-piece group rehearsed the original score during a Village Vanguard engagement, where Mingus allowed the players to mold the music further; in the studio, however, his exacting perfectionism made The Black Saint and the Sinner Lady the first jazz album to rely on overdubbing technology. The result is one of the high-water marks for avant-garde jazz in the ’60s and arguably Mingus’ most brilliant moment.
 
 
Musicians:
Charles Mingus (bass, piano)
Jay Berliner (guitar)
Don Butterfield (tuba)
Jaki Byard (piano)
Rolf Ericson (trumpet)
Dick Hafer (flute, tenor saxophone)
Quentin Jackson (trombone)
Charlie Manano (alto saxophone)
Jerome Richardson (flute, soprano saxophone, baritone saxophone)
Dannie Richmond (drums)
Richard Gene Williams (trumpet)
 
 
Новичкам: что делать с этим iso ?
1.Образ iso нужно записать на DVD диск программой ImgBurn, получив в итоге SACD-R.
Какие стационарные SACD плееры играют и не играют рипнутые SACD диски (SACD-R)? (обсуждение).
2.Для проигрывания на компьютере: foobar2000 + sacd-плагин к нему (открывать образ прямо в foobar2000).
Воспроизведение и конверсия SACD на компьютере (обсуждение).
Доп. информация: Charles Mingus: The Black Saint and The Sinner LadyОгромная благодарность за релиз pssacd
12:11
600
No comments yet. Be the first to add a comment!