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Robert Plant & Alison Krauss - Raising Sand (Remas


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[b]Robert Plant & Alison Krauss - Raising Sand (Remastered) (2021) 96-24 [/b]
Country: UK
Genre: Folk,Country Blues
Format: FLAC (*tracks)
Quality: Lossless [96 kHz/24 bit]
Time: 57:17
Full Size: 1.2 GB
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[center]The musical collaboration of the decade, "Raising Sand" is the sound of two iconic figures stepping out of their respective comfort zones and letting their instincts lead them across a brave new sonic landscape. despite hailing from distinctly different backgrounds, Alison Krauss and Robert Plant share a maverick spirit and willingness to extend the boundaries of their respective genres. this spirit, expertly honed by producer T Bone Burnett, has resulted in an album pitched three steps beyond some cosmic collision of early urban blues, spacious west Texas country, and the untapped potential of the folk-rock revolution. supported by the unparalleled musicianship of Marc Ribot, Dennis Crouch, Mike Seeger, Jay Bellerose, Norman Blake, Greg Leisz, Patrick Warren, and Wiley Baugus, Plant and Krauss - as both solo and harmony vocalists - tackle an intriguing selection of songs from such tunesmiths as Tom Waits, Gene Clark, Sam Phillips, Townes van Zandt, the Everly Brothers, and Mel Tillis. "Raising Sand" finds Robert Plant and Alison Krauss exploring popular music's elemental roots while still sounding effortlessly, breath-takingly contemporary.

"What seems to be an unlikely pairing of former Led Zeppelin vocalist Robert Plant and bluegrass superstar Alison Krauss is actually one of the most effortless-sounding duos in modern popular music. The bridge seems to be producer T-Bone Burnett and the band assembled for this outing: drummer Jay Bellerose (who seems to be the session drummer in demand these days), upright bassist Dennis Crouch, guitarists Marc Ribot and Burnett, with Greg Leisz playing steel here and there, and a number of other guest appearances. Krauss, a monster fiddle player, only does so on two songs here. The proceedings are, predictably, very laid-back. Burnett has only known one speed these last ten years, and so the material chosen by the three is mostly very subdued. This doesn't make it boring, despite Burnett's production, which has become utterly predictable since he started working with Gillian Welch. He has a "sound" in the same way Daniel Lanois does: it's edges are all rounded, everything is very warm, and it all sounds artificially dated. Sam Phillips' "Sister Rosetta Goes Before Us" is a centerpiece on this set. It has her fingerprints all over it. This tune, with its forlorn, percussion-heavy tarantella backdrop, might have come from a Tom Waits record were it not so intricately melodic -- and Krauss' gypsy swing fiddle is a gorgeous touch. There is an emptiness at the heart of longing particularly suited to Krauss' woodsy voice, and Plant's harmony vocal is perfect, understated yet ever-present. It's the most organically atmospheric tune on the set -- not in terms of production, but for lyric and compositional content. Stellar." (Thom Jurek, AMG)

[img]https://i111.fastpic.ru/big/2019/1222/7c/7323b5de344cdb4ff91b3db1d0bba37c.jpg[/img]

[quote]01. Rich Woman (04:04)
02. Killing the Blues (04:17)
03. Sister Rosetta Goes Before Us (03:24)
04. Polly Come Home (05:39)
05. Gone Gone Gone (Done Moved On) (03:33)
06. Through the Morning, Through the Night (04:02)
07. Please Read The Letter (05:54)
08. Trampled Rose (05:33)
09. Fortune Teller (04:31)
10. Stick with Me Baby (02:50)
11. Nothin' (05:34)
12. Let Your Loss Be Your Lesson (04:01)
13. Your Long Journey (03:55)[/quote]



https://youtu.be/gwg2sdRdahM

[img]https://i114.fastpic.ru/big/2021/0520/98/941b20c9edbd76c98e7f7b431b5d2998.gif[/img]

[code]Download from [b]HotLink[/b]

https://hotlink.cc/folder/d404393b-487f-11ec-a971-0cc47ac4f47e

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