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    Gilberto Gil – The Soul Of Brazil (The Very Best Of) (Comp. 2005)

    Posted By: janwal46
    Gilberto Gil – The Soul Of Brazil (The Very Best Of) (Comp. 2005)

    Gilberto Gil – The Soul Of Brazil (The Very Best Of) (Comp. 2005)

    Gilberto Gil – The Soul Of Brazil (The Very Best Of) (Comp. 2005)
    WEA | Comp. 2005 | Brazilian Folk Rock Pop Jazz | EAC RIP | FLAC+CUE+LOG+HQ-Covers (400Dpi) | 450Mb+16Mb

    This is a compilation CD by one of Brazil's most beloved artists. 19 tracks including 'Patuscada De Gandhi', 'Flora', 'Toda Menina Baiana' and more. Gilberto Gil, along with Caetano Veloso, Maria Bethania, and Gal Costa, was one of the founding members of the revolutionary late-60's Tropicalia movement, which deliberately challenged the conventions of Brazilian popular culture. Gil had an early burst of pop fame, and rapidly made his way into that musical state of grace where everything he did seemed to shimmer magically.

    A leader of the tropicalia movement in Brazil in 1967 and 1968, along with artists like Caetano Veloso and Gal Costa, Gilberto Gil and other musicians mixed native styles with rock and folk instruments. Because Gil fused samba, salsa, and bossa nova with rock and folk music, he's recognized today as one of the pioneers in world music. A multi-instrumentalist and singer/songwriter, Gil joined his first group, the Desafinados,
    in the mid-'50s and by the beginning of the 1960s was earning a living as a jingle composer. Although known mostly as a guitarist, he also holds his own with drums, trumpet, and accordion.

    He began playing the accordion when he was eight, and he listened to street singers in the marketplace around Salvador. By the end of the 1950s, Gil was studying business administration at Salvador's Federal University and playing with a group called Os Desafinados. At this time he heard singer and guitarist João Gilberto on the radio and was so impressed that he immediately bought a guitar and learned to play and sing the bossa nova. He spent the early '60s composing songs for TV ads, and in 1964, he was in Nos Por Exemplo, a show of bossa nova and traditional Brazilian songs directed by Caetano Veloso.
    In 1965, he moved to São Paulo, and after singing and playing in various shows, he had his first hit when singer Elis Regina recorded his song "Louvacao." He began to establish himself as a singer of protest songs, and he became very popular with Brazilians involved in the Tropicalia movement, which opened up native Brazilian folk music to other kinds of influences. The success of the single "Louvacao" inspired Gil to record an album of his own material with the same title.

    Gil made his first self-titled recording in 1966, but his first hit single didn't come about until 1969, with "Aquele Abraco." His musical fusion of bossa nova, samba, and other styles was so revolutionary it frightened the country's military dictatorship into arresting him, and that's when he headed to Great Britain. (He and Caetano Veloso were placed in solitary confinement while authorities figured out what they wanted to do with the pair.) After three years in England, where he had the chance to work with groups like Pink Floyd, Yes, the Incredible String Band, and Rod Stewart's band in London clubs, he returned to Brazil in 1972. He recorded Expresso 2222, which spurred two hit singles in Brazil, "Back in Bahia" and "Oriente." After playing at the Midem Festival in France in 1973, Gil recorded Ao Vivo in 1974. A year later, he recorded with Jorge Ben for the album Gil & Jorge. In 1976, he toured with Veloso, Gal Costa, and Maria Bethânia and released the Doces Báraros album.

    For most of the rest of the 1970s, he recorded for a variety of Brazilian record companies until signing an international deal with the WEA group of labels in 1977. He toured U.S. colleges in 1978 and firmly established his place in the international jazz world with his albums Nightingale (1978) and Realce (1979) . He also released a double live album in 1978, Gilberto Gil ao Vivo em Montreux, recorded during his performances at the jazz and blues festival in Switzerland. In 1980, Gil teamed up with reggae musician Jimmy Cliff.
    The pair toured Brazil, and Gil's cover of Bob Marley's "No Woman, No Cry" climbed to number one, selling 700,000 copies. Gil followed up in 1981 with Luar (A Gente Precisa Ver o Luar), one of his most acclaimed recordings. In 1982, he performed again at the Montreux festival, but this time with Jimmy Cliff. He followed up with Um Banda Um (1982), Extra (1983), and Raça Humana (1984), the last recorded with Bob Marley's Wailers.

    In the late '70s, Gil became a prominent spokesman for the black consciousness movement then taking place in Brazil. In 1982, he had huge crossover success with "Palco," which became popular in dance clubs and led to stadium tours of Europe. Meanwhile, back in the U.S., he would play mid-sized jazz clubs in New York City and Los Angeles. Gil celebrated his then two-decade career in 1985 with the album Dia Dorim Noite Neon (released in the U.S.), and released Gilberto Gil em Concerto, recorded live in Rio, in 1987. The early '90s saw Gil continuing his involvement in social and political causes in his native country, finding widespread support for his political stances, and he was elected to office in the port city of Salvador (aka the Black Rome), his hometown. In 2003, Gil began serving as Brazil's Minister of Culture, and two years later, he received Sweden's Polar Music Prize and a Légion d'Honneur from the French government. Gil continued to maintain a recording career throughout the '90s and 2000s, including the 2008 release Banda Larga Cordel.

    Tracklist:

    01. Patuscade De Gandhi
    02. Rebento
    03. Toda Menina Baiana
    04. Acertei No Milhar
    05. Palco
    06. Flora
    07. Chegada Em Palmares [Instrumental]
    08. Febril
    09. Touche Pas À Mon Pote
    10. Mar De Copacabana
    11. Mardi Dix Mars
    12. De Bob Dylan A Bob Marley - Um Samba Provocação
    13. Buda Nagô
    14. Pop Wu Wei
    15. Lugar Do Nosso Amor
    16. Ciência E Arte
    17. Esperando Na Janela
    18. Three Little Birds
    19. Mãe Solteira

    Sound Quality: 8/9

    Exact Audio Copy V0.99 prebeta 5 from 4. May 2009

    EAC extraction logfile from 25. April 2010, 20:31

    Gilberto Gil / The Soul of Brazil

    Used drive : Optiarc DVD RW AD-7173A Adapter: 1 ID: 0

    Read mode : Secure
    Utilize accurate stream : Yes
    Defeat audio cache : Yes
    Make use of C2 pointers : No

    Read offset correction : 48
    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 : Internal WAV Routines
    Sample format : 44.100 Hz; 16 Bit; Stereo


    TOC of the extracted CD

    Track | Start | Length | Start sector | End sector
    ––––––––––––––––––––––––––––-
    1 | 0:00.00 | 2:35.33 | 0 | 11657
    2 | 2:35.33 | 2:56.44 | 11658 | 24901
    3 | 5:32.02 | 3:46.14 | 24902 | 41865
    4 | 9:18.16 | 2:06.00 | 41866 | 51315
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    7 | 20:05.35 | 2:34.64 | 90410 | 102023
    8 | 22:40.24 | 3:38.20 | 102024 | 118393
    9 | 26:18.44 | 3:46.49 | 118394 | 135392
    10 | 30:05.18 | 3:49.07 | 135393 | 152574
    11 | 33:54.25 | 4:04.53 | 152575 | 170927
    12 | 37:59.03 | 3:45.64 | 170928 | 187866
    13 | 41:44.67 | 3:29.36 | 187867 | 203577
    14 | 45:14.28 | 3:12.56 | 203578 | 218033
    15 | 48:27.09 | 3:31.25 | 218034 | 233883
    16 | 51:58.34 | 3:08.43 | 233884 | 248026
    17 | 55:07.02 | 4:21.51 | 248027 | 267652
    18 | 59:28.53 | 3:11.02 | 267653 | 281979
    19 | 62:39.55 | 2:44.64 | 281980 | 294343


    Range status and errors

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    Filename F:\AVAXHOME\Gilberto Gil - The Soul Of Brazil (2005)\Gilberto Gil - The Soul of Brazil.wav

    Peak level 92.6 %
    Range quality 99.9 %
    Copy CRC 53011F47
    Copy OK

    No errors occurred


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    All tracks accurately ripped

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