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New York Dolls - One Day It Will Please Us to Remember Even This (2006)

Posted By: mfrwiz
New York Dolls - One Day It Will Please Us to Remember Even This (2006)

New York Dolls - One Day It Will Please Us to Remember Even This (2006)
WavPack (Img + Cue + Log + Audio Identifier Report Included): 377 Mb | EAC Secure Mode Rip | Mp3 (320 kbps): 123 Mb | LQ Covers from Web | Rar Files (3% Recovery)
Audio CD Release Date: 07.25.2006 - Number of Discs: 1 - Label: Roadrunners Records - Catalog Number: RR 8105-5 - Source: eMule
Glam Rock, Punk

New York Dolls - One Day It Will Please Us to Remember Even This (2006)

New York Dolls Biography: The New York Dolls created punk rock before there was a term for it. Building on the Rolling Stones' dirty rock & roll, Mick Jagger's androgyny, girl group pop, the Stooges' anarchic noise, and the glam rock of David Bowie and T. Rex, the New York Dolls created a new form of hard rock that presaged both punk rock and heavy metal. Their drug-fueled, shambolic performances influenced a generation of musicians in New York and London, who all went on to form punk bands. And although they self-destructed quickly, the band's two albums remain two of the most popular cult records in rock & roll history. All of the members of the New York Dolls played in New York bands before they formed in late 1971. Guitarists Johnny Thunders and Rick Rivets, bassist Arthur Kane, and drummer Billy Murcia were joined by vocalist David Johansen. Early in 1972, Rivets was replaced by Syl Sylvain and the group began playing regularly in lower Manhattan, particularly at the Mercer Arts Center. Within a few months, they had earned a dedicated cult following, but record companies were afraid of signing the band because of their cross-dressing and blatant vulgarity. Late in 1972, the New York Dolls embarked on their first tour of England. During the tour, drummer Murcia died after mixing drugs and alcohol. He was replaced by Jerry Nolan. After Nolan joined the band, the Dolls finally secured a record contract with Mercury Records. Todd Rundgren – whose sophisticated pop seemed at odds with the band's crash-and-burn rock & roll – produced the band's eponymous debut, which appeared in the summer of 1973. The record received overwhelmingly positive reviews, but it didn't stir the interest of the general public; the album peaked at number 116 on the U.S. charts. The band's follow-up, Too Much Too Soon, was produced by the legendary girl group producer George "Shadow" Morton. Although the sound of the record was relatively streamlined, the album was another commercial failure, only reaching number 167 upon its early summer 1974 release. Following the disappointing sales of their two albums, Mercury Records dropped the New York Dolls. No other record labels were interested in the band, so they decided to hire a new manager, the British Malcolm McLaren, who would soon become famous for managing the Sex Pistols. With the Dolls, McLaren began developing his skill for turning shock into invaluable publicity. Although he made it work for the Pistols just a year later, all of his strategies backfired for the Dolls. McLaren made the band dress completely in red leather and perform in front of the U.S.S.R.'s flag, all of which meant to symbolize the Dolls' alleged communist allegiance. The new approach only made record labels more reluctant to sign the band and members soon began leaving the group. By the middle of 1975, Thunders and Nolan left the Dolls. The remaining members, Johansen and Sylvain, fired McLaren and assembled a new lineup of the band. For the next two years, the duo led a variety of different incarnations of the band, to no success. In 1977, Johansen and Sylvain decided to break up the band permanently. Over the next two decades, various outtakes collections, live albums, and compilations were released by a variety of labels and the New York Dolls' two original studio albums never went out of print. Upon the Dolls' breakup, David Johansen began a solo career that would eventually metamorphose into his lounge-singing alter ego, Buster Poindexter, in the mid-'80s. Syl Sylvain played with Johansen for two years before he left to pursue his own solo career. Johnny Thunders formed the Heartbreakers with Jerry Nolan after they left the group in 1975. Over the next decade, the Heartbreakers would perform sporadically and Thunders would record an occasional solo album. On April 23, 1991, Thunders – who was one of the more notorious drug abusers in rock & roll history – died of a heroin overdose. Nolan performed at a tribute concert for Thunders later in 1991; a few months later, he died of a stroke at the age of 40. In 2004, former Smiths vocalist Morrissey – who was once the president of a British New York Dolls fan club – invited the surviving members of the New York Dolls to perform at the 2004 Meltown Festival, a music and cultural festival that was being curated that year by the singer. To the surprise of many, David Johansen, Syl Sylvain, and Arthur Kane agreed to the gig, with Steve Conte (from Johansen's solo band) standing in for Thunders and Gary Powell from the Libertines sitting in on drums. The group's set was well received by critics and fans (and was recorded for release on DVD and compact disc), which led to offers for other festival appearances, but only a few weeks after the Meltdown show, Kane checked himself into a Los Angeles hospital with what he thought was a severe case of the flu. Kane's ailment was soon diagnosed as leukemia, and he died only a few hours later, on July 13, 2004, at age 55. With Sam Yaffa (of Hanoi Rocks) on bass, the remaining Dolls played a hometown tribute to their fallen brothers at Little Steven's International Underground Garage Festival in New York City on August 14, 2004, reuniting again (this time with Brian Delaney on drums) in 2006 for the all-new CD/DVD One Day It Will Please Us to Remember Even This. The Todd Rundgren-produced Cause I Said So appeared on Rhino in 2009. ~ Stephen Thomas Erlewine, All Music Guide

New York Dolls - One Day It Will Please Us to Remember Even This (2006)

Product Description: Now in 2006, The NEW YORK DOLLS return with the follow-up to 1974's Too Much Too Soon that proves that the band hasn’t lost a step and that they are ready to show the world what they've been missing. The new studio album "One Day It Will Please Us To Remember Even This" captures the spirit of a band that had disappeared long before rock n roll became about big business, and presents the essence of fun, revelatory Rock N Roll in its purest form.

Review: I loved the Dolls from the very beginning, in the Oscar Wilde room at the Mercer Arts Center, when nobody came to see them & Billy was still the drummer. I was there at the Little Hippodrome for the Red Patent Leather finis. I saw their triumphant return at Little Steven's Underground Garage, with tears in my eyes when David sang Lonely Planet Boy & You Can't Put Your Arms Around A Memory. Tears for lost Dolls & lost youth. The '70's Dolls were something to see. If you saw them in their hey day you know they were touched by greatness. Like the early Rolling Stones. Gonna be bigger than the Beatles! The rest, as they say, is history. I avoided buying this disc, and owned it for a week before I played it. How can just David and Syl recreate the mayhem and music in the new millenium? Somehow, they do. The first 4 songs on the CD - from We're all in Love, Runnin' Around, Plenty of Music, Dance Like a Monkey -the reconstituted NY Dolls take control. It's a blast of attitude, witty lyrics, and solid fun. Several reviewers have slagged the ballads & slower tunes, but I think songs like Maimed Happiness, Punishing World, and especially I Ain't Got Nothin' are spot on. There are flashes of regret, bitterness, introspection that were unthinkable 30+ years ago. It's appropriate for men in their '50's to look back & ponder. I Ain't Got Nothin', in the hands of anybody else but David Johansen would be an excuse for a pity party. But long after it finished playing, I could hear the heartfelt and plaintive delivery. For me the lone clinker is Gotta Get Away From Tommy. Won't be listening to that too many times. Highlights for me are "Fishnets & Cigarettes" - managing to create the atmosphere and the energy of '70's New York club scenes where band and after band, led by the Dolls, created a new rock benchmark. "Dancing on the Lip of a Volcano" is evocative & magic. "Gimme Love & Turn on the Light" replaces teenage lust with grown up sex with an old fashioned blues churned up & spat out. A bow to Iggy, it smacks of a marriage between the Stooges & the Dolls. Syl's signature harmonies and tunesmithery is consistent throughout. Despite other reviewers comparisons to David Johansens solo turns, I beg to differ - this is a Dolls album. David, older, wiser, gruffer, is channeling the spirit from within to earmark his lyrics with the droll, snotty, whimsical self he first displayed in 1972. He's still good/bad, but he's not evil. There's a lot about One Day… that intentionally harkens back to the beginning - the monkey noises on Dance Like a Monkey, lyrics, song structure, arrangements. It raises the spectre of who's not there. Sam Conte attempts some signature Thunders riffing, but it just reminds me that no matter how people have tried, & many have again & again throughout the years,no one has mastered Johnny's lurching, buzzsaw solos & phrasing. The drummer is very good, but he just reminds me how Jerry Nolan hammered home the back beat. Jerry was under rated as a drummer. He was the key to the Dolls sound. Sami Yaffa's definitely a better bass player than Arthur, but all it does is remind me of that big lovable lug standing on stage in his torn fishnets & beatup yellow platform boots attempting to figure out how to breath and play at the same time. It's bittersweat. But I smile at the memory. You CAN put your arms around a memory. ~ Amazon Customer

Note: Credit to shan, the original uploader.

New York Dolls - One Day It Will Please Us to Remember Even This (2006)
Track Listing:

01 - We're All In Love - 4:38
02 - Runnin' Around - 4:12
03 - Plenty Of Music - 4:00
04 - Dance Like A Monkey - 3:38
05 - Punishing World - 2:38
06 - Maimed Happiness - 3:03
07 - Fishnets & Cigarettes - 3:13
08 - Gotta Get Away From Tommy - 2:28
09 - Dancing On The Lip Of A Volcano - 4:18
10 - I Ain't Got Nothin' - 4:28
11 - Rainbow Store - 2:59
12 - Gimme Luv & Turn On The Light - 3:19
13 - Take A Good Look At My Good Looks - 5:01
14 - Seventeen (Bonus Track) - 4:28
New York Dolls - One Day It Will Please Us to Remember Even This (2006)

Personnel:

David Johansen
Sylvain Sylvain
Brian Koonin
Steve Conte
Brian Delaney
Sam Yaffa
New York Dolls - One Day It Will Please Us to Remember Even This (2006)


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

EAC extraction logfile from 12. April 2010, 16:04

New York Dolls / One Day It Will Please Us to Remember Even This

Used drive : _NEC DVD_RW ND-3550A Adapter: 1 ID: 0

Read mode : Secure
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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 : Installed external ASPI interface

Used output format : User Defined Encoder
Selected bitrate : 768 kBit/s
Quality : High
Add ID3 tag : Yes
Command line compressor : C:\Program Files\Exact Audio Copy\Flac\wavpack.exe
Additional command line options : -hmx4 -w "Year=%y" -w "Genre=%m" %s %d


TOC of the extracted CD

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12 | 39:34.60 | 3:19.27 | 178110 | 193061
13 | 42:54.12 | 5:01.26 | 193062 | 215662
14 | 47:55.38 | 4:27.62 | 215663 | 235749


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Filename C:\windows\profiles\shantiq\Desktop\New York Dolls - One Day It Will Please Us to Remember Even This.wav

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Copy CRC 7698423D
Copy OK

No errors occurred


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All tracks accurately ripped

End of status report