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David Bowie - Pinups (1973) 24 - Bit Digitally Remastered

Posted By : aeolos | Date : 07 May 2010 22:29:17 | Comments : 4 |
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David Bowie - Pinups
Label: EMI | EAC img | WAVPACK+CUE+LOG | 222MB | HQ MP3 CBR | 320kbps - 77MB | scans
Genre: Rock

This is an album of cover material by one of the great masters in rock history. It is David Bowie's kind of tribute to the sixties contains familiar and obscure covers from The Kinks, The Merseys, Yardbirds and Pink Floyd among others. Have fun!

Track Listings


1. Rosalyn
2. Here Comes the Night
3. I Wish You Would
4. See Emily Play
5. Everything's Alright
6. I Can't Explain
7. Friday on My Mind
8. Sorrow
9. Don't Bring Me Down
10. Shapes of Things
11. Anyway, Anyhow, Anywhere
12. Where Have All the Good Times Gone!

Log File
Exact Audio Copy V0.99 prebeta 5 from 4. May 2009

EAC extraction logfile from 7. May 2010, 16:07

David Bowie / Pinups (24 Bit Digitally Remastered)

Used drive : Optiarc DVD RW AD-7203A Adapter: 4 ID: 0

Read mode : Secure
Utilize accurate stream : Yes
Defeat audio cache : No
Make use of C2 pointers : Yes

Read offset correction : 48
Overread into Lead-In and Lead-Out : No
Fill up missing offset samples with silence : Yes
Delete leading and trailing silent blocks : No
Null samples used in CRC calculations : No
Used interface : Native Win32 interface for Win NT & 2000

Used output format : Internal WAV Routines
Sample format : 44.100 Hz; 16 Bit; Stereo


TOC of the extracted CD

Track | Start | Length | Start sector | End sector
---------------------------------------------------------
1 | 0:00.00 | 2:21.65 | 0 | 10639
2 | 2:21.65 | 3:09.00 | 10640 | 24814
3 | 5:30.65 | 2:47.67 | 24815 | 37406
4 | 8:18.57 | 4:12.35 | 37407 | 56341
5 | 12:31.17 | 2:28.20 | 56342 | 67461
6 | 14:59.37 | 2:11.20 | 67462 | 77306
7 | 17:10.57 | 2:56.33 | 77307 | 90539
8 | 20:07.15 | 2:53.05 | 90540 | 103519
9 | 23:00.20 | 2:05.55 | 103520 | 112949
10 | 25:06.00 | 2:53.10 | 112950 | 125934
11 | 27:59.10 | 3:12.42 | 125935 | 140376
12 | 31:11.52 | 2:41.20 | 140377 | 152471
13 | 36:24.72 | 2:37.49 | 163872 | 175695


Range status and errors

Selected range

Filename C:\Documents and Settings\My Music\David Bowie - Pinups (1973)\David Bowie - Pinups (24 Bit Digitally Remastered).wav

Peak level 94.0 %
Range quality 100.0 %
Copy CRC 3B95D38E
Copy OK

No errors occurred

End of status report



Review by Bruce Eder

Pin Ups fits into David Bowie's output roughly where Moondog Matinee (which, strangely enough, appeared the very same month) did into the Band's output, which is to say that it didn't seem to fit in at all. Just as a lot of fans of Levon Helm et al. couldn't figure where a bunch of rock & roll and R&B covers fit alongside their output of original songs, so Bowie's fans — after enjoying a string of fiercely original LPs going back to 1970's The Man Who Sold the World — weren't able to make too much out of Pin Ups' new recordings of a brace of '60s British hits.

Ziggy Stardust and Aladdin Sane had established Bowie as perhaps the most fiercely original of all England's glam rockers (though Marc Bolan's fans would dispute that to their dying day), so an album of covers didn't make any sense and was especially confusing for American fans — apart from the Easybeats' "Friday on My Mind" and the Yardbirds' "Shapes of Things," little here was among the biggest hits of their respective artists' careers, and the Who's "I Can't Explain" and "Anyway Anyhow Anywhere" were the only ones whose original versions were easily available or played very often on the radio; everything else was as much a history lesson, for Pink Floyd fans whose knowledge of that band went back no further than Atom Heart Mother, or into Liverpool rock (the Merseys' "Sorrow"), as it was a tour through Bowie's taste in '60s music. The latter was a mixed bag stylistically, opening with the Pretty Things' high-energy Bo Diddley homage "Rosalyn" and segueing directly into a hard, surging rendition of Them's version of Bert Berns' "Here Comes the Night," filled with crunchy guitars; "I Wish You Would" and "Shapes of Things" were both showcases for Bowie's and Mick Ronson's guitars, and "See Emily Play" emphasized the punkish (as opposed to the psychedelic) side of the song. "Sorrow," which benefited from a new saxophone break, was actually a distinct improvement over the original, managing to be edgier and more elegant all at once, and could easily have been a single at the time, and Bowie's slow version of "I Can't Explain" was distinctly different from the Who's original — in other words, Pin Ups was an artistic statement, of sorts, with some thought behind it, rather than just a quick album of oldies covers to buy some time, as it was often dismissed as being.
In the broader context of Bowie's career, Pin Ups was more than an anomaly — it marked the swan song for the Spiders from Mars and something of an interlude between the first and second phases of his international career; the next, beginning with Diamond Dogs, would be a break from his glam rock phase, going off in new directions. It's not a bad bridge between the two, and it has endured across the decades — and the CD remasterings since the late '90s have made it worth discovering all over again.


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Posted By: aeolos Date: 07 May 2010 22:57:03
For friends who are not familiar with this exceptional lossless codec (WAVPACK), here is a link where you can download for free a WavPack frontend in order to encode or decode in this case, the downloaded files. This is in case you don't already have another software for this job.
http://members.home.nl/w.speek/wavpack.htm


Posted By: LezDawson Date: 08 May 2010 12:34:44
@ aeolos: the latest CUETools is all you need. Converts between WV, FLAC, APE, TTA and WAV, splits into tracks, joins tracks into one file, renames tracks from FreeDb data base, creates accurip log - this is all you need! ;)
P.S. FLAC is preferable for many people because many more hardware devices will play FLAC than WV. Happily CUETools converts in seconds, with zero loss.
And finally, thanks for this share! :)
Posted By: aeolos Date: 08 May 2010 16:52:23
@lezDawson
Nice to see you again! You are absolutely right for both CUETools and FLAC notices. I just wanna pay some credit to people who work and share their output for free. The author of WAVPACK is one of the them (samewise FLAC & APE). That's why I am posting using various lossless codecs ( at least I try) to give everyone a credit.
Thanks!
Posted By: FrancyD Date: 03 Nov 2011 21:02:53
thanks a lot
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