Emerson, Lake & Palmer - Tarkus (1971) DE Pressing - LP/FLAC In 24bit/96kHz

Posted By: Fran Solo

Emerson, Lake & Palmer - Tarkus
Vinyl | LP Cover (1:1) | FLAC + cue | 24bit/96kHz | 900mb
Label: Manticore/87 225 XOT | Released: 1971 | This Issue: 1974 | Genre: Symphonic-Rock

Tarkus
A1 Eruption
A2 Stones Of Years
A3 Iconoclast
A4 Mass
A5 Manticore
A6 Battlefield
A7 Aquatarkus
-
B1 Jeremy Bender
B2 Bitches Crystal
B3 The Only Way (Hymn)
B4 Infinite Space (Conclusion)
B5 A Time And A Place
B6 Are You Ready Eddy?


Recorded At – Advision Studios
Distributed By – Ariola Eurodisc GmbH
Printed By – Mohndruck Reinhard Mohn OHG
Credits
Arranged By, Directed By – ELP*
Drums, Percussion [Assorted] – Carl Palmer
Engineer – Eddy "Are You Ready" Offord*
Lyrics By, Vocals, Bass, Acoustic Guitar, Electric Guitar, Producer – Greg Lake
Organ [Hammond, St. Marks Church Organ], Piano, Celesta, Synthesizer [Moog] – Keith Emerson
Painting – William Neal (2)
Notes
Gatefold sleeve.

Recorded at Advision.
A Manticore Recording Distributed by Ariola-Eurodisc GmbH.

Printed in Western Germany by Mohndruck Reinhard Mohn OHG, Gütersloh

B3: Themes used in introduction & bridge only - Toccata in "F" & Prelude VI - Bach
Barcode and Other Identifiers
Rights Society: GEMA
Matrix / Runout (Label Side A): C 85 527 A
Matrix / Runout (Label Side B): C 85 527 B
Matrix / Runout (Stamped Side A): Made in Germany C 85527 A-1
Matrix / Runout (Stamped Side B): Made in Germany C 85527 B-1







This Rip: 2015
Cleaning: RCM Moth MkII Pro Vinyl
Direct Drive Turntable: Marantz 6170
Cartridge: SHURE M97xE With JICO SAS Stylus (New!)
Amplifier: Sansui 9090DB
ADC: E-MU 0404
DeClick with iZotope RX3 & ClickRepair: Only Manual (click per click)
This LP: From my personal collection
Vinyl Condition: NM-
LP Rip & Full Scan LP Cover: Fran Solo
Password: WITHOUT PASSWORD

Well, I'm going against the common view on this one. It seems everyone here finds the song Tarkus a huge masterpiece, while side 2 disappoints. I couldn't disagree more about the second side. I mean, Tarkus is Tarkus, there isn't too much you can say about it, other than the fact that it is one of the greatest compositions ever. But side 2 is incredible. It truly is. Tarkus: Like I said, it's hard to describe. a) Eruption: Hard to think of a better opening to an album. That 5-beat-per-measure riff blows you out of your seat. b) Stones of Years: The first time I heard it, I thought, "Oh man, why is it mellow? Eruption was awesome!" But then, maybe 4 or 5 listens later, I realized that this second section is as good as or better than Eruption. Lake appears here (and very well at that), and the organ solo in the middle is especially awesome. c) Iconoclast: Goes back to the Eruption theme. Perfect entryway into... d) Mass: Again, Lake sings again, with another keyboard solo in the middle. Both are perfect. It's tough to go too far into it, because a word has not yet been invented to describe it. e) Manticore: Another instrumental section, with a really cool 3-beat keyboard riff, and then into... f) Battlefield: Possibly.... possibly... the best section here. Maybe, I'm still not sure, even though I've listened to the album at least 300 times. All I know is that Battlefield, on its own, is a towering masterpiece. g) Aquatarkus: ELP goes out on a bang. Jeremy Bender: Ah, here it is. Side 2. Well, JB is under 2 minutes long, but it is still better than 99% of music out there. Bitches Crystal: No one can deny the quality of this song. Kicks off fast and never looks back, ELP having a good time. The Only Way (Hymn): Very, very overlooked song. Organ and piano here are fantastic. Lake also delivers a very captivating performance here. Infinite Space (Conclusion): Instrumental, with an alternating 3-beat then 4-beat per measure riff. Piano takes lead here (as always), and it follows up The Only Way well. A Time and a Place: The rocker on the album. Nice contrast to the other songs. Rocks harder than the others, while maintaining the ELP quality. Are You Ready Eddy?: This song makes me laugh every time I hear it. This is ELP having a blast playing their music, and it also shows Keith Emerson randomly hitting his piano, but somehow, it works. This is the ultimate contrast on the album. It ends the album differently than you would have expected, but eventually, you realize that it couldn't have been done any other way. This is a 5 star album, no matter which way you slice it. 5/5 stars.
Welcome to the Dark Side of the Vinyl
Silent spaces haven't been deleted in this rip

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