Eric Clapton - Clapton DTS 2seeders: 2
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Eric Clapton - Clapton DTS 2 (Size: 625.75 MB)
Description--------------------------------------------------------------------- Eric Clapton - Clapton DTS 2 --------------------------------------------------------------------- Artist...............: Eric Clapton Album................: Clapton Source...............: Lossless Year.................: 2010 Channels.............: 5.1 / 44100 HZ / 16 Bit Burn test............: 12/4/2012 Method:..............: SPEC-ArcTan-PTA Included.............: WAV,CUE,nfo,Cover Posted by............: MrMalikai on 9/18/2010, 12/15/2012 How to burn a DTS CD How to Play a DTS-CD or DTSWav Information..........: Play it LOUD --------------------------------------------------------------------- Tracklisting --------------------------------------------------------------------- 01-Traveling Alone 02-Rocking Chair 03-River Runs Deep 04-Judgement Day 05-How Deep Is The Ocean 06-Milkman 07-Crazy About You Baby 08-That's No Way To Get Along 09-Everything Will Be Alright 10-Diamonds 11-When Somebody Thinks You're Wonderful 12-Hard Times 13-Run Back to Your Side 14-Autum Leaves Playing Time.........: 01:01:59 Total Size...........: 357.99 MB --------------------------------------------------------------------- It's a stereo to DTS 5.1 conversion. Burn it to a standard CD-R. Can be played on home theater systems that have a DTS decoder and on PC's with the software to play DTS. --------------------------------------------------------------------- Clapton is Eric Clapton’s first solo album in five years, but he hardly spent the back half of the 2000s in seclusion. After 2005’s Back Home, he went on a journey through the past, writing a 2007 autobiography -- also titled Clapton, although that’s the only connection they shared -- mending fences with Jack Bruce and Ginger Baker for a brief Cream reunion, establishing a lasting connection with his old Blind Faith bandmate Steve Winwood, and recording a duet album with his ‘70s inspiration JJ Cale. This embrace of history isn’t directly heard on Clapton but it’s certainly felt, extending to how EC relies on old tunes -- blues and country, but also pop and R&B -- for the bulk of this 14-track album. EC is no stranger to covers and the sound of the album is familiar, but there’s no record quite like Clapton in his catalog. The closest may be Unplugged, which also ambles along with an unhurried shuffle, but this boasts a greater musical range, mixing up Fats Waller and Robert Wilkins with Hoagy Carmichael and Irving Berlin, finding room for guests appearances by Winwood, Allen Toussaint, Wynton Marsalis, Sheryl Crow, Derek Trucks and selected members from Preservation Hall Jazz Band. Yes, it is eclectic, even dipping into a bit of a soulful soft-rock groove on “Everything Will Be Alright,” but not self-consciously so. Clapton flows easily, the blues never hitting too hard, the New Orleans jazz never getting too woozy, the standards never too sleepy, the sounds subtly shifting but changing all the same. It’s leisurely in its performance and its length, perhaps running just a little too long, but it’s hard to complain because the slow ramble is so enjoyable. Eric Clapton has never sounded so relaxed on record, either as a singer -- he is supple and casually authoritative, a far cry from the tentative lead vocalist of his earliest solo records -- or a bandleader, sounding at peace with his past yet harboring no desire to recycle it, even if he’s reaching back far beyond the blues that initially sparked his interest in music. He’s simply laying back and enjoying what he’s playing, winding up with one of his simplest and best records. Related Torrents
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