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Uncle Monk - Self-titled (2006) RESTORED

Posted By: Rehabilly
Uncle Monk - Self-titled (2006) RESTORED

Uncle Monk - Uncle Monk (2006)
FLAC+CUE+LOG or MP3 CBR 320 | 42:14 min | 291 or 98 MB
Old-Time Music / Bluegrass / Classic Country

Uncle Monk is an alt-country bluegrass indie-acoustic duo featuring Tommy Ramone on vocals, mandolin, guitar, banjo and dobro, and Claudia Tienan on vocals, guitar and bass. Uncle Monk's music is rooted in old-time and bluegrass influences. To this mix they have added twangy guitar textures to create a sound with a new sensibility.

"There is life after the Ramones, but who knew that its sound would be bluegrass? Tommy Ramone plays a mean mandolin in this new acoustic duo, singing tautly written songs with tenderness about the comforts and subtle politics of home life". –The New York Times

Uncle Monk - Self-titled (2006) RESTORED
If, as high school guidance counselors and human resources directors like to say, the average person will have several different careers over the course of life, Tom Erdelyi is a good example. Born in Budapest, Hungary, in 1952, he grew up in the Forest Hills section of the borough of Queens in New York City and became an engineer at the famed Record Plant recording studio. Then, he began managing a group of friends who became famed punk rock group the Ramones, later leaving his business duties to take up the drums and the pseudonym Tommy Ramone. After their albums Ramones, Ramones Leave Home, and Rocket to Russia, he withdrew to become the group's producer and reclaimed his real name. Now, he is the sole surviving founding member of the band, and one half of the new duo Uncle Monk, along with Claudia Tienan, a former member of the Simplistics. For this project, Erdelyi has hung up his leather jacket, let his now gray hair curl down his back, grown a beard, and adopted a cowboy hat. (He's still wearing jeans, though.) And instead of drumming, he is overdubbing mandolin, banjo, dobro, fiddle, and guitar on an album devoted to original compositions performed in a strictly bluegrass/traditional country style. There's nothing here for Ramones fans to grab onto, beyond the occasionally pugnacious lyrical sentiment. Erdelyi and Tienan are more impressive as instrumentalists than as vocalists, their arrangements harking back to many old-timey predecessors. Their singing harks back, too, to the semi-professional, untrained sound of country singers who only pursued music as a part-time occupation. If there is any consistency in Erdelyi's long career in various aspects of the music business, it may be that he prefers to take music to its most basic possible level and re-create it from the ground up. Uncle Monk is no Ramones, but it represents another simplified approach to a familiar musical style.

~ William Ruhlmann, all media guide

Rock artists are always reinventing themselves, but who could have ever imagined drummer Tommy Ramone reemerging as a bluegrass picker? For Ramone (born Erdélyi Tamás, January 29, 1952) the stretch isn't as far as you'd think. "I've been into old time music since I was a kid," Ramone said in a 2007 interview. "My older brother would bring string-band and folk music records home from the library. We'd make tape copies and I'd listen to them all the time. I've always been into music of classic simplicity, with basic chord structures, but great depth of meaning and emotion. There is a direct connection between genuine folk music and punk. You can hear [that influence] on songs like "Susie Is a Headbanger," "Can't Give You Anything" and the musical arrangements on the album, Road to Ruin to name just a few."Ramone actually started playing folk guitar as a kid, but as soon as the Beatles appeared he got an electric guitar and started a rock band. The came the Ramones: "What made the Ramones so good was their musical dynamic and unique personalities. What made us so creative, our volatile and neurotic temperaments also made it hard to [work together] around the clock. I eventually thought it would be better for my well being if we brought in another drummer, but I continued to write songs and produce the records and be a creative influence on them."Ramone met Claudia Tienan, a folkie who hails from Minneapolis, MN, a long time before the Ramones broke up. In the early '90s, Ramone and Tienan had an electric jam band also called Uncle Monk. Tienan played bass and Ramone was the lead guitarist. Ramone created the current acoustic Uncle Monk to be a folk band with alternative and indie rock sensibilities. He took the musical instrumentation and song stylings of old-time and bluegrass music and blended them with modern themes and lyrics. "I bought a banjo about 15 years ago and soon after got a mandolin. I fell in love with both instruments and worked hard learning how to play them. I loved the music so much that I wanted to play the other string band instruments too, so one by one, I taught myself to play them."In the Uncle Monk duo, Ramone sings lead and harmony vocals and picks mandolin, banjo, dobro, fiddle and guitar. Tienan sings lead and harmony vocals and plays guitar and acoustic bass. Both write songs. "I've always loved acoustic music," Ramone said. "[In Hungary] every restaurant and many other establishments had live bands playing all the time – gypsy music, swing, jazz and folk music." When he came to America, the soundtrack of Blackboard Jungle embedded Bill Haley's "Rock Around the Clock" into his DNA. Hearing the Weavers do "Wimoweh" on their Live at Carnegie Hall album is another early memory. Pete Seeger's voice and the arrangement of the song made a big impression on his early musical taste. The easy, relaxed feel of the Weavers was a big influence on Ramone's plans for Uncle Monk. The duo start writing and arranging songs in 2004 and spent the next year recording and mixing their first album. They launched their website and started selling their album digitally the same year the played their first live gig at South by Southwest in 2006. Their eponymous album was officially released in 2007 and they've been on the road ever since.Uncle Monk creates a joyful noise that's fun and funky, but they work hard to appear spontaneous. "It's part of our aesthetic to keep things loose and comfortable," Ramone said. "We work hard to keep things free and easy. Songwriting and arranging are very much connected and part of the same process. We feed of each other when it comes to final arrangements."Uncle Monk's rough and tumble spirit share much with the anarchic style that made the Ramones so much fun. Since they started touring, they've gotten a good reaction, partially due to Ramone's name recognition and the jarring contrast between the music he's been doing most of his life and this new, mellow acoustic sound. "Uncle Monk is about the love of music and the opportunity to express ourselves. We hate the hype and artificiality that's a big part of what's out there in the music world. We try to keep what we're doing as natural as possible. We take the music seriously and think that what we're doing has real meaning and substance".


Uncle Monk - Self-titled (2006) RESTORED



An excellent album that really goes back to the basics
I have been a fan of Mr. Ramone's work for years, including the music he performed with the Ramones and the music he has produced for others such as the Replacements. This album, while quite different from any of the rock, alternative or punk music Mr. Ramone (Erdelyi) has produced over the years, shows true feelings of enjoyment and love for the music itself. If you are a classic bluegrass fan, you will love this. If you are not a classic bluegrass fan, listen to the album and don't put a label to the music. Just let it wash over you and you will see what I mean. –customer review at amazon.com
Tracklist:

01. Round The Bend
02. Emotional Needs
03. Happy Tune
04. Home Sweet Reality
05. Mean To Me
06. Airday
07. Need A Life
08. Heaven
09. Name Of The Game
10. Mr. Endicott
11. Urban Renewal
12. Walking Bandit
13. Bright Fluorescent
14. Wishing At The Moon

Exact Audio Copy V1.0 beta 1 from 15. November 2010

EAC extraction logfile from 20. March 2011, 12:02

Uncle Monk / Uncle Monk

Used drive : PIONEER DVD-RW DVR-116D Adapter: 1 ID: 0

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

Read offset correction : 96
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 : Installed external ASPI interface

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 | 2:49.47 | 0 | 12721
2 | 2:49.47 | 2:32.27 | 12722 | 24148
3 | 5:21.74 | 2:53.74 | 24149 | 37197
4 | 8:15.73 | 2:26.72 | 37198 | 48219
5 | 10:42.70 | 2:32.23 | 48220 | 59642
6 | 13:15.18 | 3:25.39 | 59643 | 75056
7 | 16:40.57 | 4:13.26 | 75057 | 94057
8 | 20:54.08 | 2:49.63 | 94058 | 106795
9 | 23:43.71 | 3:29.71 | 106796 | 122541
10 | 27:13.67 | 2:59.04 | 122542 | 135970
11 | 30:12.71 | 2:18.73 | 135971 | 146393
12 | 32:31.69 | 2:20.64 | 146394 | 156957
13 | 34:52.58 | 3:12.73 | 156958 | 171430
14 | 38:05.56 | 4:08.27 | 171431 | 190057


Range status and errors

Selected range

Filename C:\AvaxHome.ru\Uncle Monk - Uncle Monk (2006) [Tommy Ramone]\Uncle Monk - Self-Titled (ADR-1002).wav

Peak level 96.6 %
Extraction speed 0.6 X
Range quality 100.0 %
Test CRC F51EF0B5
Copy CRC F51EF0B5
Copy OK

No errors occurred


AccurateRip summary

Track 1 accurately ripped (confidence 1) [D7D21E6B]
Track 2 accurately ripped (confidence 1) [3D8F2D0C]
Track 3 accurately ripped (confidence 1) [6B34C3B8]
Track 4 accurately ripped (confidence 1) [E02DB97B]
Track 5 accurately ripped (confidence 1) [74B74841]
Track 6 accurately ripped (confidence 1) [AE1A1DF5]
Track 7 accurately ripped (confidence 1) [32CD49A0]
Track 8 accurately ripped (confidence 1) [64A6EB78]
Track 9 accurately ripped (confidence 1) [5F78443E]
Track 10 accurately ripped (confidence 1) [24CE0902]
Track 11 accurately ripped (confidence 1) [1A3C5DFD]
Track 12 accurately ripped (confidence 1) [D97CC0DA]
Track 13 accurately ripped (confidence 1) [D667A19B]
Track 14 accurately ripped (confidence 1) [9C96D520]

All tracks accurately ripped

End of status report

==== Log checksum 2F5CB7A047CC7DA5EDBAFCF3DEC5322BC6102B10E3321EA5867C5304968BCC35 ====


Produced & Engineered by T. Erdelyi
Recorded at Phoenicia Phonics, Phoenicia, New York
Mastered by Dave McNair at Unity Mastering, Brooklyn, NY

• Tommy Ramone - vocals, guitar, mandolin, banjo, dobro, fiddle
• Claudia Tienan - vocals, guitar, bass

Release Date: March 21, 2006
Label: Airday Records
Catalog No.: ADR-1002
The Right choice*
http://filepost.com/files/511c8d7c/RAM206UMK868F.rar

all covers.jpg (20 MB)
http://filepost.com/files/26e57763/RAM206UMK360C.rar

lossy.mp3
http://filepost.com/files/8a53d8me/RAM206UMK20G.rar


* Original CD -> EAC Image, embedded cuesheet & more, foobar2000 ready, etc.
(all CUEs, LOGs and other technical info includes in the internal "CD_Support" archive)


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