Harry Manx - Dog My Cat - 2001
WavPack (Img + Cue + Log + Audio Identifier Report Included): 226 Mb | EAC Secure Mode Rip | Mp3 (Fraunhofer IIS - 320 kbps): 95.9 Mb | Front & Back Cover | Rar Files (3% Recovery)
Audio CD (July 3, 2001) - Number of Discs: 1 - Label: NorthernBlues Music - Catalog Number: NBM0004
Blues
WavPack (Img + Cue + Log + Audio Identifier Report Included): 226 Mb | EAC Secure Mode Rip | Mp3 (Fraunhofer IIS - 320 kbps): 95.9 Mb | Front & Back Cover | Rar Files (3% Recovery)
Audio CD (July 3, 2001) - Number of Discs: 1 - Label: NorthernBlues Music - Catalog Number: NBM0004
Blues
Biography: Multi-instrumentalist and composer Harry Manx has been described as an essential link between the music of the East and the music of the West. He fuses traditional blues with classic Indian ragas to create a distinctive sound. Manx, primarily a guitarist, who also plays harmonica and banjo, was born on the Isle of Mann and moved with his family to Canada. He left home in his teens to live in Europe, Japan, India and Brazil, carefully perfecting his compelling live show on streets and in cafes and bars before later breaking out to music festivals. Blues music capture his attention when he was still in his teens and he did some roadie work for Willie Dixon, John Hammond and others. He hit the road hard in Europe, booking himself wherever and whenever he could, as a solo act playing banjo, harmonica and guitar. He moved to Japan and spent the latter half of the 1980's performing there. In Japan, he discovered the music of Vishwa Mohan Bhatt and left Japan for India. In 1992, he introduced himself to Bhatt and then spent the next five years under his tutelage, learning to play Bhatt's creation, the 20-string mohan veena. The apex of his time as Bhatt's apprentice came about with a concert for several thousand people at the Taj Mahal. At that time, Bhatt was well known in India, but several years later, he'd be discovered by some American audiences with his 1994 Grammy Award winning recording with Ry Cooder, "Meeting By the River." The only other musician to have mastered the complex Mohan veena was the late Beatle, George Harrison. Manx, based in Canada for the last dozen years, traveled from India to his wife's home country, Brazil, and played his unique blend of American and Indian "blues" music in the bars and cafes around Sao Paulo. He returned to Canada in 2000 and quickly recorded a demo, which became his debut album for Northern Blues Music, "Dog My Cat." After hearing Manx perform at a conference of the North American Folk Music and Dance Alliance executives at Northern Blues Music signed Manx, releasing "Dog My Cat." Manx's debut album was immediately recognized by cognoscenti in Toronto's blues scene, and he was nominated for two Maple Blues Awards, for "Best Acoustic Act" and "Best Recording" in 2001. Manx quickly followed up with his 2002 release for Northern Blues Music, "Wise and Otherwise," which he recorded in the space of a day. Manx's sophomore effort won a Canadian Independent Music Award for "Blues Album of the Year" and drew him critical praise comparing his stylings with those of Kelly Joe Phelps and Ry Cooder. In 2003, he released "Jubilee" with Northern Blues Music, a collaboration with sought-after recording session maven Kevin Breit. Since his emergence in 2001 to an international touring base [ via his releases with Northern Blues Music ] in Canada, the U.S. and Europe, Manx has been nominated for numerous Juno and Maple Blues Awards. Since 2001, Manx, an engaging musician and vocalist, has released "Road Ragas" [2003,] "West Eats Meet" on his own label in 2004, and "Mantras for Madmen" in 2005. In the spring of 2007, he released "In Good We Trust" another excellent collaboration with Kevin Breit, for the highly regarded Stony Plain Records. Manx continues to tour around Canada, Europe, South America and the U.S. His live shows have been described as captivating and engaging, as he plays guitar, lap steel, harmonica, banjo and the Indian Mohan Veena. In a biography accompanying one of his releases, Manx says: "The live performances have become the most exciting part of the music business for me. And it's not only the playing; it's all the other magic that happens between myself and the audience. My goal has always been to draw the audience as deep as possible into the music." ~ Richard Skelly, All Music Guide
* Dog My Cat (2001)
* Wise and Otherwise (2002)
* Jubilee (with Kevin Breit) (2003)
* Road Ragas (2003)
* West Eats Meet (2004)
* Mantras for Madmen (2005)
* In Good We Trust (with Kevin Breit) (2007)
* Live at the Glenn Gould Studio (2008)
* Bread and Buddha (2009)
Product Description: Slide guitarist Harry Manx was born in the U.K., raised in Canada, and lived and worked in Europe and Japan before spending five years studying Indian slide guitar under the great Vishwa Mohan Bhatt. This is his first solo album, and as one might expect, it's a fascinating hodgepodge of differing musical traditions. Happily, Dog My Cat has none of the hippie-dippy multicultural piety that afflicts so many East-meets-West musical experiments – Manx's approach to the blues is gritty and straightforward, his original songs are tight and tuneful, and when he pauses to play a raga (as he does twice on this album), he manages to imbue the Indian musical form with a soulful depth that somehow has nothing and everything to do with the blues. Highlights are hard to identify on this album because its quality is so consistently high, but his rendition of the Muddy Waters standard "Can't Be Satisfied" is especially fine, as are his own "Love Ain't No Game" and the traditional "Reuben's Train."
Review: This is Manx's first CD and is full of great deeply felt and played blues. He is a wonderful musician playing equally well on Lap Slide, Mohan Veena (the 20 stringed Indian slide), and Harmonica while singing in a mellow expressive way (a bit like Van Morrison on ASTRAL WEEKS). It is hard to believe he is playing alone sometimes (the liner notes say he is with only the occational overdub). I love this stuff and highly recommend it to anyone who appreciates great slide playing, especially for its transformative/meditiative quality. ~ Amazon Customer
01 - Can't Be Satisfied - 3:18
02 - Bring That Thing - 5:10
03 - Good Morning Stranger - 3:05
04 - Reuben's Train - 4:05
05 - Lay Down My Worries - 3:18
06 - Rag Bihag (Dusk Rag) - 1:50
07 - Sunday Morning Ascension - 3:29
08 - Baby Please Don't Go - 2:44
09 - Brick and Stone - 3:00
10 - Song for William - 1:56
11 - Love Ain't No Game - 4:12
12 - Shame, Shame, Shame - 3:12
13 - Rag Jog (Evening Rag) - 1:15
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Exact Audio Copy V0.99 prebeta 5 from 4. May 2009
EAC extraction logfile from 5. February 2010, 18:20
Harry Manx / Dog My Cat
Used drive : Pioneer BDR-203BK Adapter: 8 ID: 0
Read mode : Secure
Utilize accurate stream : Yes
Defeat audio cache : Yes
Make use of C2 pointers : No
Read offset correction : 667
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 : Yes
Used interface : Native Win32 interface for Win NT & 2000
Used output format : User Defined Encoder
Selected bitrate : 128 kBit/s
Quality : High
Add ID3 tag : No
Command line compressor : C:\WINDOWS\system32\wavpack-4.60.1\wavpack.exe
Additional command line options : -hmx3 -w "Year=%y" -w "Genre=%m" %s %d
TOC of the extracted CD
Track | Start | Length | Start sector | End sector
––––––––––––––––––––––––––––-
1 | 0:00.00 | 3:17.55 | 0 | 14829
2 | 3:17.55 | 5:09.58 | 14830 | 38062
3 | 8:27.38 | 3:04.63 | 38063 | 51925
4 | 11:32.26 | 4:05.17 | 51926 | 70317
5 | 15:37.43 | 3:18.37 | 70318 | 85204
6 | 18:56.05 | 1:50.17 | 85205 | 93471
7 | 20:46.22 | 3:28.69 | 93472 | 109140
8 | 24:15.16 | 2:44.32 | 109141 | 121472
9 | 26:59.48 | 2:59.73 | 121473 | 134970
10 | 29:59.46 | 1:56.11 | 134971 | 143681
11 | 31:55.57 | 4:11.58 | 143682 | 162564
12 | 36:07.40 | 3:11.71 | 162565 | 176960
13 | 39:19.36 | 1:14.68 | 176961 | 182578
Range status and errors
Selected range
Filename O:\-=Music 4\Blues\Harry Manx\Harry Manx - Dog My Cat - 2001\9yajJeqM\Harry Manx - Dog My Cat.wav
Peak level 99.9 %
Range quality 99.9 %
Copy CRC 1D0FEBCB
Copy OK
No errors occurred
End of status report
EAC extraction logfile from 5. February 2010, 18:20
Harry Manx / Dog My Cat
Used drive : Pioneer BDR-203BK Adapter: 8 ID: 0
Read mode : Secure
Utilize accurate stream : Yes
Defeat audio cache : Yes
Make use of C2 pointers : No
Read offset correction : 667
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 : Yes
Used interface : Native Win32 interface for Win NT & 2000
Used output format : User Defined Encoder
Selected bitrate : 128 kBit/s
Quality : High
Add ID3 tag : No
Command line compressor : C:\WINDOWS\system32\wavpack-4.60.1\wavpack.exe
Additional command line options : -hmx3 -w "Year=%y" -w "Genre=%m" %s %d
TOC of the extracted CD
Track | Start | Length | Start sector | End sector
––––––––––––––––––––––––––––-
1 | 0:00.00 | 3:17.55 | 0 | 14829
2 | 3:17.55 | 5:09.58 | 14830 | 38062
3 | 8:27.38 | 3:04.63 | 38063 | 51925
4 | 11:32.26 | 4:05.17 | 51926 | 70317
5 | 15:37.43 | 3:18.37 | 70318 | 85204
6 | 18:56.05 | 1:50.17 | 85205 | 93471
7 | 20:46.22 | 3:28.69 | 93472 | 109140
8 | 24:15.16 | 2:44.32 | 109141 | 121472
9 | 26:59.48 | 2:59.73 | 121473 | 134970
10 | 29:59.46 | 1:56.11 | 134971 | 143681
11 | 31:55.57 | 4:11.58 | 143682 | 162564
12 | 36:07.40 | 3:11.71 | 162565 | 176960
13 | 39:19.36 | 1:14.68 | 176961 | 182578
Range status and errors
Selected range
Filename O:\-=Music 4\Blues\Harry Manx\Harry Manx - Dog My Cat - 2001\9yajJeqM\Harry Manx - Dog My Cat.wav
Peak level 99.9 %
Range quality 99.9 %
Copy CRC 1D0FEBCB
Copy OK
No errors occurred
End of status report