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Kanoka by Switchback (CD, 2013) flambant NEUF scellé en usine - CD WayGood Records

État :
Entièrement neuf
Prix :
14,99 $US
Environ20,44 $C
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Lieu : Chicago, Illinois, États-Unis
Livraison :
Livraison prévue entre le ven. 31 mai et le lun. 3 juin à 43230
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Numéro de l'objet eBay :276096757973
Dernière mise à jour : mars 28, 2024 12:18:35 HAEAfficher toutes les modificationsAfficher toutes les modifications

Caractéristiques de l'objet

État
Entièrement neuf: Un objet n'ayant jamais été ouvert et dont le sceau du fabricant n'a pas été ...
Instrument
Recorder
Features
Sealed
UPC
0700261381633
Artist
Switchback
Format
CD
Release Year
2013
Record Label
CD Baby, Cdb
Release Title
Kanoka
Genre
Country

À propos de ce produit

Product Identifiers

Record Label
CD Baby, Cdb
UPC
0700261381633
eBay Product ID (ePID)
20046040989

Product Key Features

Format
CD
Release Year
2013
Genre
Country
Artist
Switchback
Release Title
Kanoka

Dimensions

Item Height
0.40 in
Item Weight
0.25 lb
Item Length
5.60 in
Item Width
4.90 in

Additional Product Features

Number of Tracks
15
Number of Discs
1
Tracks
1.1 Southbound Train 1.2 Kanoka 1.3 Pour Me 1.4 Dog Days 1.5 Van Tassel 1.6 Rope As I'm Riding 1.7 Wrong You Can Write 1.8 Water Through Sand 1.9 Midnight Crossing 1.10 High Plains Killers 1.11 Boxcar View 1.12 Rocky Mountain Express 1.13 I'll Be Damned 1.14 Bottom of the Bottle of Beer 1.15 One Way Dream
Notes
Switchback Kanoka Liner Notes There is always a moment of anticipation, suspense, and joy as one tears the plastic sheath off a new CD, opens the jewel case, pops the disc out of the restraining center fingers, and slips the recording into the sliding tray of the player. It is an unconscious ritual recreation of your favorite birthday present being unwrapped-- a magical moment as living music emerges from inanimate machine. That pristine plastic disc suddenly sings in vivid aural hues. Oh sure, perhaps the suspense and joy are a little different in 2013, a little more muted, as the music is now merely a few mouse clicks and a download away with the instant gratification of iTunes. But still, the experience is pure enchantment as you and the music are conjoined. Technology enables sound on your laptop, tablet, or smartphone almost instantly, but the personal connection to the artist becomes pale and distant without cover artwork, without liner notes, or even the comforting tactile feel of the disc and jewel case that are themselves faint echoes of the nostalgic vinyl LP experience. The CD is different, though. The CD can be conceived as an organic whole in which all the music lives together in the same neighborhood. Each song in this community is invested with a specific role creating a narrative experience as one cut leads inevitably to the next. Like a train, there may be a "hit song" engine that drives the rest, but each car carries it's own passengers and freight in which the sum of the whole is greater than it's parts. The whole idea of a cloud technology digital library destroys the album concept and works to dissolve the unity of the CD. Tracks are sold for 98 cents each. Every song is an orphan. Cheap, quick, sound bytes trump carefully wrought unity. And yet, here in your hands, is the promise of something very different. Deliciously retro in it's unity, wonderfully conceived as a whole, with a music that is nurtured by the sweet scent of Midwestern soil and inextricably linked to the fascinating characters that inhabit the heartland of America, Kanoka is an astonishing ramble through the heart of Americana soul, a love story redolent of Walt Whitman's lyrical verse. Kanoka is unity. In fact, the fictional place name is nearly a palindrome; the album itself is a palindrome. The title track opens with the sound of a surging train wedded to the soulful whistle of Lloyd Maines's steel guitar. The final track, "Bottom of the Bottle of Beer," trails off like a caboose coda in the distance graced with those same train track clacks and Maines's steel rail wails. The circle is unbroken. Switchback is very unusual in that the band consists of only two performers in both live performance and recording situations. Marty McCormack and Brian FitzGerald have forged an identity and shared vision over a twenty-five year relationship that has enabled them to enfold others in their music as an integrated extension of themselves. The presence of musician's musicians, Lloyd Maines on pedal slide guitar and Howard Levy on harmonica, allows Switchback to draw upon the full soundscape of American life. Drummers Jim Hines and Nick Hirka and percussionist Keith Riker inject the pulse that is the heartland heartbeat. Levy's harp is woven into the band's mix on four cuts, but more importantly, there are a pair of extraordinary solo interludes that punctuate the album. The first is a jovial blues cowboy meditation on Western life that makes a seamless transition into the first sweet notes of Maines's steel guitar that begins "Van Tassel." The second interlude, a prelude to "Rocky Mountain Express," dances merrily along it's path to a graceful extended arpeggio that ends in a sweetly sustained final whistle tone. And then, from the distance, this is answered in the same key with the onrushing rhythm of the "Express." This transition is a kinder, gentler nod to the scream as train whistle in Hitchcock's The 39 Steps. Maines's pedal steel

Description de l'objet du vendeur

Patrone E-Commerce

Patrone E-Commerce

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