Description :
Musicians :
Carole King (piano, electric piano, vocals), Charles Larkey (acoustic & electric bass), James Taylor, Danny Kootch (acoustic guitar), Abigale Haness (backing vocals), Bobbye Porter Hall (bongos, congas, ... [Tout afficher]
Description:
Musicians :
Carole King (piano, electric piano, vocals), Charles Larkey (acoustic & electric bass), James Taylor, Danny Kootch (acoustic guitar), Abigale Haness (backing vocals), Bobbye Porter Hall (bongos, congas, tambourine), Theresa Colderon (congas), Curtis Amy (tenor saxophone), Joel O'Brien (drums).
The Companion Album to Tapestry Features Beautiful Melodies, Incisive Songwriting, Graceful Arrangements, and Production from Lou Adler : Carole King's Music Reached No. 1 on the Charts, Includes "Sweet Seasons" and "It's Going to Take Some Time"
Sourced from the Original Master Tapes and Pressed at RTI for Audiophile Sound: Mobile Fidelity's Numbered-Edition 180 gram LP Brings You Close to King's Hallmark Singing and Piano Playing
1/4" / 15 IPS analog master to DSD 64 to analog console to lathe
Released on the heels of her breakthrough album Tapestry, Carole King's Music is every bit the equal of its more famous predecessor: a N° 1 smash that features impeccable songwriting, beautiful melodies, and extraordinary piano playing. In short, everything that's made King an institution. After of years of being overshadowed, this 1971 singer-songwriter classic has been given the audiophile treatment it's long deserved.
Sourced from the original master tapes and pressed on dead-quiet vinyl at RTI, Mobile Fidelity's numbered-edition 180 gram LP of King's second solo masterpiece is rife with intimacy, transparency, soulfulness, and you-are-there sound. Never before remastered, Music seems like a brand-new album as King's familiar voice, intelligent arrangements, and ace support band presented on a deep, three-dimensional soundstage. Your appreciation for and understanding of the depth of King's inspirational lyrics and performances will doubtlessly increase this reissue brings you that much closer.
Accompanied by percussionist Bobbye Hall, drummer Russ Kinkel, guitarist/vocalist James Taylor, and a multitude of other professional wind musicians, King delves further into R&B and jazz-derived pop. Warm and cohesive, songs echo with simplicity and honesty. And as is typical of much of King's work, several of tunes here were later covered by other artists, including "It's Going To Take Some Time" (the Carpenters). Yet the originals trump the later renditions, and King's rendition of the standard "Some Kind of Wonderful" stands among the best ever recorded.
With Taylor lending more of a hand on Music than he does on Tapestry, King expands her reach on the piano and peppers the songs with graceful touches of saxophone, flute, pedal-steel guitar, and woodwinds. Ballads sway ("Surely"), gospel raises spirits ("Brighter"), and backup vocals float amid pop arrangements like clouds ("Song of Long Ago"). The most irresistible aspect? King's voice, infused with fondness, concern, joy, and a quiet power that parallels the delicacy and deliberate nature that define Music.
Mobile Fidelity's 180 gram LP is free of the limiting artifacts that have helped keep this record in the dark for the better part of the 80s, 90s, and early 2000s. Acoustic guitars, subtle brass elements, and soft percussion contribute to the enjoyment of the songs, and King's voice pleasant, assuring, emotional comes through with incredible clarity and inflection. The brilliance of Lou Adler's original production is restored to its full glory.
Aptly named, this companion to Tapestry is an aural and sonic delight. [Masquer]