The Carpenters - Lovelines (1989) 24-Bit/96-kHz Vinyl Rip

Posted By: nettz

The Carpenters - Lovelines (1989) 24-Bit/96-kHz Vinyl Rip
Vinyl Rip in 24-Bit/96-kHz | FLAC tracks | no cue | no log | Covers | Rapidshare + FileFactory | 967 MB (3% recovery)
1989 | Genre: Pop | Label: A&M | SP-3931 | US pressing


Where have you gone, Spiro Agnew? Our nation clamors for 1972: Donny Osmond lands a Number Three single, Chris Evert and Jimmy Connors cause the greatest stir at the U.S. Open, and The Karen Carpenter Story hits near the top of the Neilson ratings. Though the TV movie ended with the singer's death in 1983, Lovelines offers the fantasy sequel: Karen lives, goes out on her own and becomes reasonably…hip.
Karen did in fact make one solo album in 1980, with many of the musicians who had just finished working on Michael Jackson's Off the Wall; it was produced by the Quincy Jones of the East Coast, Phil Ramone. Four of those unreleased cuts surface on Lovelines, and they are liberating. Ramone recorded her in leaner, decidedly unsaccharine settings and, in effect, got rid of her music's otherwise characteristic bad aftertaste. As Karen's cozy contralto pulses through the come-hither Lovelines, the hearth-warm If We Try (both written by Rod Temperton, whose credits also include Rock With You and Thriller) and the saltier If I Had You, her vocals come damn close to soulful. Listening to them, it becomes apparent why singers like Chrissie Hynde, Madonna and Gloria Estefan have "come out of the closet" and admitted they were Karen fans.
Richard Carpenter has apparently deemed the rest of the solo album inappropriate for release (among the still-shelved tracks are a Cars-like rocker, "I'm Still In Love With You", and a mad disco romp "My Baby Keeps Changing My Mind"), but at least he had the sense to tone down his usual Disneyesque flourishes and milky choirs for the rest of Lovelines, which consists of unreleased Carpenters tracks recorded between 1977 and 1980.
The best of these are Where Do I Go From Here and You're The One, which both reaffirm that Karen was the finest ballad singer of the 1970s: No one could fill up, and out, a melody or cut to the blood and guts of the ickiest love song as she could. In fact, voices like Karen Carpenter's never really go out of style; Lovelines reveals just a few of the avenues that would have been open to her. But sadly, the Seventies never really ended for Karen Carpenter; she died before she could shed the goody-two-shoes image that shrouded her immense talent. As such, Lovelines becomes her essential epitaph.
( Rob Hoerburger - Rolling Stone, Feb 1990 )

Track Listing:

A1. Lovelines
A2. Where Do I Go From Here?
A3. The Uninvited Guest
A4. If We Try
A5. When I Fall in Love
A6. Kiss Me the Way You Did Last Night
B1. Remember When Lovin' Took All Night
B2. You're the One
B3. Honolulu City Lights
B4. Slow Dance
B5. If I Had You
B6. Little Girl Blue


Turntable: Roksan Radius III
Tonearm: Audioquest PT-9
Cartridge: Ortofon X5-MC (Moving Coil)
Phono Cable: Van den Hul D-502 Hybrid
Pre-amplifier: Counterpoint SA 5.1 (vacuum tube Sovtek 6922)
Interconnect: balanced, Belden 1813A cable with Neutrik XLR connectors
Analog to Digital Converter: EMU 1212M (configured for balanced input +4dBu, 0 dB Gain)
Capture software: Goldwave 5.22
Post processing: none.
Ripping policy: I always rip good condition vinyl so that the amount of click/pop will be almost none



Download (rapidshare):

Part 1 | Part 2 | Part 3 | Part 4 | Part 5 | Part 6


Mirror (filefactory):

Part 1 | Part 2 | Part 3 | Part 4 | Part 5 | Part 6

No Password