Neil Young - Neil Young 1968 (Japan 2005) DTS (SBU)

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Added on September 9, 2012 by rmsk8rin Music
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Neil Young - Neil Young 1968 (Japan 2005) DTS (SBU) (Size: 386.12 MB)
 neil-booklet01-12.jpg3.66 MB
 neil-booklet02-03.jpg2.89 MB
 neil-tray.jpg1.8 MB
 neil-booklet10-11.jpg1.73 MB
 neil-booklet06-07.jpg1.65 MB
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 neil-booklet08-09.jpg1.6 MB
 neil-disc.jpg1.27 MB
 neil-obi.jpg1002.06 KB
 neil-insert03.jpg573.39 KB
 Neil Young - Neil Young - DTS.wav365.55 MB
 Neil Young - Info.txt3.99 KB
 Neil Young - Neil Young - DTS.cue976 bytes


Description

Artist:Neil Young
Album:Forever Young Japanese 2005 CD
Format:DTS CD
Source:Lossless Flac
Upmix Method:SurroundByU.com
Distribution: torrent
Original LP release: 1968

This CD released: 2005-09-21
Label: Warner Music Japan / Reprise
Catalog #: WPCR-75086


It's this item:
http://www.cdjapan.co.jp/detailview.html?KEY=WPCR-75086


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From cduniverse:

Personnel includes: Neil Young (vocals, guitar); Jim Messina (bass); George Grantham (drums); Merry Clayton, Brenda Holloway, Patrice Holloway, Gloria Richetta Jones, Sherlie Matthews, Gracia Nitzsche (background vocals).

Producers: Dave Briggs, Neil Young, Jack Nitzsche, Ryland Cooder.

Engineers include: Mark Richardson, Donn Landee, Dale Batchelor.

Neil Young's first solo record is quite a bit different from the sound he would later develop--not that anyone could ever know what to expect from this mercurial visionary. This album, though, is a bit artier and less spontaneous-sounding than most of Young's catalog. That's not to say that he hadn't already developed a gift for writing unique, captivating material. He'd already shown that ability with Buffalo Springfield, and NEIL YOUNG is full of great, idiosyncratic tunes.

The most well-known cut here is the most traditional rock-sounding tune, "The Loner," but even here Young sings of disaffection and isolation, over an arrangement that shifts between distorted guitar and elegant string section. "The Old Laughing Lady" is probably the most Springfieldish song here, and along with the country flavor of some of the other tunes, provides a link to Young's past. The piece de resistance is the closing acoustic epic, "The Last Trip To Tulsa," a surreal, Dylanesque number that showed Young already blazing his own trail in the world of rock poets.


AMG review by William Ruhlmann:

On his songs for Buffalo Springfield, Neil Young had demonstrated an eclecticism that ranged from the rock of "Mr. Soul" to the complicated, multi-part arrangement of "Broken Arrow." On his debut solo album, he continued to work with composer/arranger Jack Nitzsche, with whom he had made "Expecting to Fly" on the Buffalo Springfield Again album, and together the two recorded a restrained effort on which the folk-rock instrumentation, most of which was by Young, overdubbing himself, was augmented by discreet string parts. The country & western elements that had tinged the Springfield's sound were also present, notably on the leadoff track, "The Emperor of Wyoming," an instrumental that recalled the Springfield song "A Child's Claim to Fame." Still unsure of his voice, Young sang in a becalmed high tenor that could be haunting as often as it was listless and whining. He was at his least appealing on the nine-and-a-half-minute closing track, "The Last Trip to Tulsa," on which he accompanied himself with acoustic guitar, singing an impressionistic set of lyrics seemingly derived from Bob Dylan's Highway 61 Revisited. But double-tracking and the addition of a female backup chorus improved the singing elsewhere, and on "The Loner," the album's most memorable track, Young displayed some of the noisy electric guitar work that would characterize his recordings with Crazy Horse and reminded listeners of his ability to turn a phrase. Still, Neil Young made for an uneven, low-key introduction to Young's solo career, and when released it was a commercial flop, his only album not to make the charts. (Several months after the album's release, Young remixed it to bring out his vocals more and added some overdubs. This second version replaced the first in the U.S. from then on, though the original mix remained available overseas.)

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01. The Emperor of Wyoming [2:20]
02. The Loner [3:53]
03. If I Could Have Her Tonight [2:21]
04. I've Been Waiting For You [2:35]
05. The Old Laughing Lady [5:58]
06. String Quartet From Whiskey Boot Hill [1:05]
07. Here We Are In The Years [3:19]
08. What Did You Do To My Life [2:28]
09. I've Loved Her So Long [2:41]
10. The Last Trip To Tulsa [9:28]

DTS-CD info:

This is a 5.1 DTS encoded cd. You burn it just like any other cd (wav and cue file included) but it requires a DTS decoder to playback. Otherwise you will just get a blast of noise (un-decoded DTS)!

Some instructions here: http://www.surroundbyus.com/sbu/viewtopic.php?f=7&t=15

The short version is you play this in CD, DVD, Blu-Ray, or Game Console, with a DIGITAL connection (SPDIF or HDMI) to a Receiver with a DTS decoder. For DVD, Blu-Ray, Game Console, some settings may be necessary to ensure 44.1 Khz audio is BIT STREAMED to your receiver.

Some software players, such as foobar2000, can also be taught to play back DTS CDs or the included DTS encoded wav and cue files.

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Neil Young - Neil Young 1968 (Japan 2005) DTS (SBU)

All Comments

Really nice job on this. I enjoyed it on my main system tonight. That Japanese remaster sounds great.