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| Compartir en: [Ofrecido] Janis Joplin - Pearl (2 cds) (2005) Janis Joplin-Pearl-Legacy Edition-2CD-2005-SER Artista: Janis Joplin Album: Pearl (Legacy Edition) Genero: Soul/Jazz/Classic Rock CDs: 2 Fecha de Salida: 14.06.2005 Bitrate: VBR Tamaño de Archivo: 166 MB Metodo de Descarga: EMU-BT Disponibilidad: Buena Links: Janis Joplin-Pearl-Legacy Edition-2CD-2005-SER Janis Joplin-Pearl-Legacy Edition-2CD-2005-SER.torrent Temas: CD1:
01. Move Over
02. Cry Baby
03. A Woman Left Lonely
04. Half Moon
05. Buried Alive In The Blues
06. My Baby
07. Me And Bobby McGee
08. Mercedes Benz
09. Trust Me
10. Get It While You Can
11. Happy Birthday, John (Happy Trails)
12. Me And Bobby McGee (demo version)
13. Move Over (alternate version)
14. Cry Baby (alternate version)
15. My Baby (alternate version) - Previously Unissued
16. Pearl (instrumental) - Previously Unissued CD2:
01. Tell Mama
02. Half Moon
03. Move Over
04. Maybe
05. Summertime
06. Little Girl Blue
07. That's Rock 'N Roll
08. Try (Just A Little Bit Harder)
09. Kozmic Blues
10. Piece Of My Heart
11. Cry Baby
12. Get It While You Can
13. Ball And Chain Código: After the live Cheap Thrills, Pearl is undeniably Janis Joplin's studio classic, and her final recording, released posthumously. She departed the earth at the very top of her game creatively. The album was recorded with a less-is-more approach -- the explosive horn section so prevalent on Kozmic Blues was replaced by a rootsier, more organic studio group called the Full Tilt Boogie Band, with precious few guests in a minimal number of places. The album cooks from the opener, "Move Over," with John Till's jagged, knife-edge guitar playing the lyric line in duet with Joplin and Ken Pearson's choogling Hammond B-3 stomping on the chorus and the bridge. The emotional intensity actually gets upped on "Cry Baby," where Pearson's organ drives the track, raucously and passionately augmented by Till and Richard Bell's soul cum honky tonk piano. The thing is, the album just doesn't quit from "A Woman Left Lonely" to "Buried Alive in the Blues" to "My Baby" and the closer, "Get It While You Can." The fact that Pearl's most famous cuts, "Me and Bobby McGee" and "Mercedes Benz," are both here as well and were issued as the album's singles is simply astonishing given they are far form its strongest cuts. On the double -disc Legacy Edition of Pearl, some changes were made from earlier CD versions of the album. For starters, the bonus live tracks included on the 1999 version have been relegated to disc two. In their place, six cuts have been added, including three cuts taken from the Love, Janis box set: the demo of "Me and Bobby McGee," an alternate of "Cry Baby," and "Happy Birthday John (Happy Trails)." But there's more: three unissued alternate takes of "Move Over," "My Baby," and Full Tilt Boogie's instrumental tribute to Joplin called "Pearl." Disc two contains 13 live cuts taken from three different concerts on the Canadian Festival Express tour, recorded between June 28 and July 4, 1970. In addition to the bonus tracks moved from the original CD version of Pearl and others taken from Janis Joplin in Concert and Farewell Song are six more unreleased tunes, including awesome versions of "Try (Just a Little Bit Harder)," "Kozmic Blues," and "Maybe." Oh yeah, there's yet another version of "Piece of My Heart" (can't have too many). In sum, this new version of Pearl is a gold mine, a treasure trove that juxtaposes the final will and testament of Joplin with her throwing down live with the same band on the road in electrifying performances. Add to this a wildly intimate and canny essay by Joplin's road manager, John Byrne Cooke, and a wonderful set of photos in a handsome package and you can safely assume that perfection has been improved upon.
Janis Joplin's highest charting and arguably most artistically successful album gets the deluxe, expanded treatment on this 2005 reissue. Already re-released once with four extra live tunes, this edition moves those to the second disc, adds nine more (six previously unavailable) from the same summer 1970 tour that predated the original album's January 1971 posthumous release and pads the studio disc with six additional tracks. Those sides--three are inferior, if moderately interesting alternate takes, one is a band jam without Joplin contributing--don't bring much to the table other than to prove that producer Paul A. Rothchild used the correct versions for the final album. But Pearl holds up tremendously well, with Janis focused on some terrific rocking material, yet widening her scope to include a soulful folksy reading of Kris Kristofferson's "Me and Bobby McGee," the album's only major hit.
The real meat of this version consists of the thirteen concert recordings, plucked from the Canadian leg of Joplin's only tour with Full Tilt Boogie. It finds her and the band chugging through ragged but emotionally charged versions of her classics, along with a few tunes from the forthcoming Pearl. Sequenced to mirror her set list, it's a roaring example of Joplin in her prime, comfortable with her band and confident in her astounding abilities to tear into the soul of blues and R&B with vocals that come straight from the heart. Hal Horowitz
OfficialJanis.com - The Official Janis Joplin Website
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| Si, mi viejo, estos son los links que hacen falta, caracho!!!
Gracias x miles.
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| Hay mas material de Janis posteado.
Y gracias (de nuevo) a PanaDeCatan por este post.
Imperdible | -
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| Imoresionante Pana, gracias Traten de compartir lo que bajan al menos 10 dias | -
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| Bajando!!!! Cha Gracia... algo de buena musica para escuchar cuando vuelva del laburo!!! "A compartir que se acaba el mundo" | -
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| Janis vive muchas gracias..... | Temas Similares -
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