Triumvirat - Old Loves Die Hard
Vinyl | LP Cover (1:1) | FLAC + cue | 24bit/96kHz | 900mb
Mastered At Capitol Mastering
Label: Capitol Records/ST-11551 | Released: 1976 | Genre: Symphonic Rock
A1 I Believe
A2 Day In A Life
a Uranus' Dawn
b Pisces At Noon
c Panorama Dusk
A3 The History Of Mystery (Part One)
B1 The History Of Mystery (Part Two)
B2 A Cold Old Worried Lady
B3 Panic On 5th Avenue
B4 Old Loves Die Hard
Recorded At – EMI-Electrola Studios, Cologne
Mixed At – EMI-Electrola Studios, Cologne
Published By – Beechwood Music Corp.
Mastered At – Capitol Mastering
Credits
Art Direction – Roy Kohara
Bass – Dick Frangenberg*
Engineer – Wolfgang Thierbach
Other [Assisted By] – Werner "Tallihoh" Kopal
Percussion – Hans Bathelt
Photography [Cover & Liner] – Don Peterson
Photography [Inner Sleeve] – H.J. Filz, Rainer Kosseda
Piano, Organ, Synthesizer, Arranged By [Strings], Strings [String Ensemble] – Jürgen Fritz
Producer – Jürgen Fritz
Vocals – Barry Palmer
Notes
Recorded & Mixed at EMI Electrola Studio 1, Cologne, W. Germany
Between Jan. 5th and April 6th, 1976
Vocals on "The History Of Mystery" were recorded at Studio N, Cologne, W. Germany
All Selections Published by Beechwood Music Corporation/BMI
Barcode and Other Identifiers
Matrix / Runout (Runout Side A): ST-1-11551-F2 –-◄ MASTERED BY CAPITOL
Matrix / Runout (Runout Side B): ST-2-11551-F2 –-◄ MASTERED BY CAPITOL
Vinyl | LP Cover (1:1) | FLAC + cue | 24bit/96kHz | 900mb
Mastered At Capitol Mastering
Label: Capitol Records/ST-11551 | Released: 1976 | Genre: Symphonic Rock
A1 I Believe
A2 Day In A Life
a Uranus' Dawn
b Pisces At Noon
c Panorama Dusk
A3 The History Of Mystery (Part One)
B1 The History Of Mystery (Part Two)
B2 A Cold Old Worried Lady
B3 Panic On 5th Avenue
B4 Old Loves Die Hard
Recorded At – EMI-Electrola Studios, Cologne
Mixed At – EMI-Electrola Studios, Cologne
Published By – Beechwood Music Corp.
Mastered At – Capitol Mastering
Credits
Art Direction – Roy Kohara
Bass – Dick Frangenberg*
Engineer – Wolfgang Thierbach
Other [Assisted By] – Werner "Tallihoh" Kopal
Percussion – Hans Bathelt
Photography [Cover & Liner] – Don Peterson
Photography [Inner Sleeve] – H.J. Filz, Rainer Kosseda
Piano, Organ, Synthesizer, Arranged By [Strings], Strings [String Ensemble] – Jürgen Fritz
Producer – Jürgen Fritz
Vocals – Barry Palmer
Notes
Recorded & Mixed at EMI Electrola Studio 1, Cologne, W. Germany
Between Jan. 5th and April 6th, 1976
Vocals on "The History Of Mystery" were recorded at Studio N, Cologne, W. Germany
All Selections Published by Beechwood Music Corporation/BMI
Barcode and Other Identifiers
Matrix / Runout (Runout Side A): ST-1-11551-F2 –-◄ MASTERED BY CAPITOL
Matrix / Runout (Runout Side B): ST-2-11551-F2 –-◄ MASTERED BY CAPITOL
This Rip: 2015
Cleaning: RCM Moth MkII Pro Vinyl
Direct Drive Turntable: Marantz 6170
Cartridge: SHURE M97xE With JICO SAS Stylus
Amplifier: Marantz 2252
ADC: E-MU 0404
DeClick with iZotope RX4: Only Manual (Click per click)
Vinyl Condition: NM-
This LP: From my personal collection.
LP Rip & Full Scan LP Cover: Fran Solo
Password: WITHOUT PASSWORD
WOW! This record is just a bit less good than Spartacus: mostly, it sounds very similar to Spartacus. The weak point on this album is Barry Palmer's lead vocals, although bearable. "I believe", sounding a bit pop, has good rhythmic piano, Fender Rodes, choir parts and some floating keyboards. The first part of the marvelous "Day in a life" has Fender Rhodes and background floating keyboards sounding like the Gary Wright's "Dream Weaver" track; the second part has a very progressive & melodic piano a la Rick Wakeman: absolutely GRAND; finally, the third part sounds like on the Spartacus album: rhythmic piano, VERY spacy moog, fast drums and bass. The epic "History of mystery part 1" starts with another excellent piano part, followed by heroic & catchy keyboards like on the Spartacus album: Hammond organ and moog; so, this tracks sounds like the best ELP of the early 70's! The excellent "History of mystery part 2", containing a killer moog solo in the beginning, is a variation on the theme present on the "History of mystery part 1" track. The simple and not very progressive "A cold old worried lady" is a good but not catchy piano oriented song, with some background orchestral arrangements: no synthesizers, no drums and no bass. The next track "Panic on 5th Avenue", sounding again like on the Spartacus album, is a pompous keyboards exploration a la ELP: TONS of Hammond organ, ultra floating moogs a bit like the Gary Wright's "Dream Weaver" track again, police sirens emulation, hammering drums, elastic bass, the track is maybe a bit repetitive, but it is very well made; the killer long & melodic moog solo at the end is absolutely OUTSTANDING! The more ordinary last track, "Old loves die hard", has a bit the same style as "A cold old worried lady", except there are drums and bass plus some discrete organ notes.
Rating: 4.5 starsReview by greenback, progarchives.com
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