Mostrar mensagens com a etiqueta manfred mann. Mostrar todas as mensagens
Mostrar mensagens com a etiqueta manfred mann. Mostrar todas as mensagens
quinta-feira, 16 de janeiro de 2025
sexta-feira, 6 de novembro de 2020
"Up The Junction" Original Soundtrack
Original released on LP Fontana STL 5460
(UK, 1968)
One of the great soundtracks of the 1960s, "Up the Junction" shows Manfred Mann shedding their pop skin and evolving into a truly awesome jazz outfit, which would later be fully realized in their Chapter Three incarnation. Not that they didn't have some lovely pop gems on this record. The title song, sort of a flipped-out, very very British alternative to "Good Vibrations," is one of Manfred Mann's finest pieces ever, with an excellent vocal from Mike d'Abo, Paul Jones' (Manfred's original vocalist) replacement. But the series of brief jazz-based instrumentals such as "Sheila's Dance" and "Belgravia" are equally arresting, showing off Mike Hugg's drumming and Mann's own piano abilities as never before. Priceless. (Matthew Greenwald in AllMusic)
quinta-feira, 27 de setembro de 2018
MANFRED MANN - "Mann Made"
Original released on LP HMV
CLP 1911 (mono) / CSD 1628 (stereo)
(UK 1965, October 15)
sábado, 4 de agosto de 2018
domingo, 17 de junho de 2018
sábado, 26 de agosto de 2017
domingo, 16 de julho de 2017
sábado, 14 de janeiro de 2017
MANN'S INSTRUMENTALS
Original released on LP HMV Records CSD 3594 (mono)
(UK 1967, January 13)
quinta-feira, 6 de outubro de 2016
domingo, 27 de setembro de 2015
MANFRED FIRST
Original released on LP HMV / CLP 1731
(UK, 11/9/1964)
The debut
album by Manfred Mann holds up even better 40 years on than it did in 1964. It's
also one of the longest LPs of its era, clocking in at 39 minutes, and there's
not a wasted note or a song extended too far among its 14 tracks. The Manfreds
never had the reputation that the Rolling Stones enjoyed, which is a shame,
because "The Five Faces of Manfred Mann" is one of the great
blues-based British invasion albums; it's a hot, rocking record that benefits
from some virtuoso playing as well, and some of the best singing of its era,
courtesy of Paul Jones, who blew most of his rivals out of the competition with
his magnificently impassioned, soulful performance on "Untie Me", and
his simmering, lusty renditions of "Smokestack Lightning" and "Bring
It to Jerome". The stereo mix of the album, which never surfaced
officially in England until this 1997 EMI anniversary reissue (remastered in
24-bit digital sound), holds up very nicely, with sharp separation between the
channels yet - apart from a few moments on "Untie Me" - few moments
of artificiality. (in AllMusic)
segunda-feira, 22 de outubro de 2012
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