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Mark Nauseef – Personal Note (1982) (24/96 Vinyl Rip)

Posted By: boogie-de
Mark Nauseef – Personal Note (1982) (24/96 Vinyl Rip)

Mark Nauseef – Personal Note (1982)
XLD Flac 24Bit/96kHz = 933 MB | Mp3 VBR0 16Bit/48kHz = 111 MB | Scans 400 dpi jpg | RAR
Vinyl LP | CMP 16 ST | Experimental Fusion | US · Germany

I'd never have thought to hear Phil Lynott sing on an experimental Jazz recording, but here he is, together with an exquisite bunch of top musicians on Mark Nauseef's first solo LP. If you're missing some fading in and out of tracks 2–4, on the record they were combined without any interruption.

Biography from Allmusic:
Although there are many more widely known session drummers than Mark Nauseef, few have lent their talents to as wide a variety of musical styles as Nauseef has over the years. Nauseef has studied numerous percussive styles during his long and winding career, including Javanese gamelan with K.R.T. Wasitodiningrat; Balinese gamelan with I. Nyoman Wenten; North Indian pakhawaj drumming with Pandit Taranath Rao and Pandit Amiya Dasgupta; Ghanaian drumming and dance with Kobla, Alfred Ladzekpo, Dzidzogbe Lawulvi, and C.K. Ganyo; and 20th Century western percussion techniques and hand drumming with John Bergamo and Glen Velez.
Nauseef got his start in the 1970s, as he drummed on recordings by such rock outfits as Elf (a band that featured a pre-Rainbow/Black Sabbath Ronnie James Dio on vocals), a post-Lou Reed version of the Velvet Underground, the Ian Gillan Band, as a fill-in for Thin Lizzy during an Australian tour (which is documented on the Lizzy home video The Boys Are Back in Town), Jack Bruce, Andy Summers, and Gary Moore, among others. But it wasn't long before Nauseef broadened his horizons and began drumming with non-rock artists: Joachim Kühn, Rabih Abou-Khalil, Trilok Gurtu, Kyai Kunbul (Javanese gamelan), the Ladzekpo Brothers (Ghanaian music and dance), and the Gamelan Orchestra of Saba (Balinese gamelan).
Since the early 80s, Nauseef has sporadically issued his own solo albums: 1983's Personal Notes and Sura, 1984's Wun-Wun, 1995's Snake Music, and 2000's With Space in Mind. In addition to his percussion talents, Nauseef has also produced other artists, including recordings of traditional Balinese and Javanese music, a few of which later appeared on the compilation CMPIer, Vol. 1: 3000 Series.
Tracks
01. Chemistry 04:10
02. Talking drum (for Ariel) 03:28
03. Doctor Marathon part I 04:00
04. Doctor Marathon part II 08:30
05. Corsica 10:55
06. Fillmore 10:44
Total time: 41:43

Musicians
Mark Nauseef: drums, tuned gongs, kalimba, industrial surfaces, tam-tams, cup-chimes, woodblocks, vocals, production
Joachim Kühn: acoustic piano, Roland Jupiter-4 synthesizer, Fender Rhodes, Arp sixteen voice electric piano, alto sax, production
Trilok Gurtu: tabla, congas, caxixi, water instruments, anklung, log drums, pans, triangles, metal plates, cowbells, rattles, whistles, shells, beads, handbells, vocals
Philip Lynott: vocals (1) (ex Thin Lizzy)
Jan Akkerman: guitar (4,6) (ex Brainbox)
George Kochbeck: Moog bass, Hohner d-6, Fender Rhodes (3) (ex Alto, Eberhard Schoener)
Detlef Beier: acoustic bass (3,5)
Walter Quintus: engineer, co-production (ex Parzival, Musical "Der Führer")
Recorded at Tennessee Studio, Hamburg, Germany, August–September 1981



Record Player: Dual CS 5000 – electronically controlled belt drive Link
Pickup: Ortofon OMB 20 ellipsoid diamond Link
Pre-/Amplifier: Kenwood KR 5030 Link
A-D converter: MacPro onboard
Sound editing: Adobe Audition
Flac & Mp3 encoding: XLD (X-Lossless-Decoder) Link
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