Joanna Newsom - Have One On Me (2010) 3CD EAC FLAC Tracks (Cue&Log) ~ 633 Mb (incl 5%) Mp3 (CBR320/Stereo) ~ 298 Mb (incl 5%) Scans ~ 101 Mb Genre: Indie Folk, Pop Rock, Singer/Songwriter Label: Drag City # DC390CD Time: 02:04:08 “ It was a little disturbing at first to hear that Joanna Newsom's full-length follow-up to the ambitious and polarizing Ys would be a triple album. Where 2004's The Milk-Eyed Mender was an unusual record with its share of quirks (her squeaky voice and fondness for arcane language, the harp), it also had its simple pleasures. Most of the tracks were short and the sound was spare; you pretty much liked it or you didn't based on how you felt about Newsom's sound and her ability to put a song together. Ys, on the other hand, was unapologetically dense. The five songs averaged more than 10 minutes each, and through them Newsom sang continuously; Van Dyke Parks' arrangements were similarly relentless, seeming to comment upon and embellish almost every line. Descargar Contpaq Gratis Con Crack.

Joanna Newsom shares an unreleased outtake for the 1st 'AnniDIVERSary' of the release of Divers. Update: you can download the track for free, courtesy of Drag City, below. Joanna Newsom covers one of her biggest influences + inspirations in Malibu for Melissa Coker's LA-based Wren label's Fall/Winter '13 line.

It was a rewarding album-- filled with memorable turns of phrase and impressive storytelling. Many were enthralled, and almost everyone at least admired it.

Joanna Newsom Have One On Me Download Zip

But in comparison to Milk-Eyed, Ys took some serious work to crack. So when I heard that Newsom would be following it with a 3xLP set called Have One on Me, I had troubling visions of 25-minute songs with lyrics that stretched to 5,000 words.

As it turns out, Have One on Me is a 'triple album' in the vinyl sense, in the same way that the Flaming Lips' Embryonic is a 'double album,' even though it fits onto one CD. There are 18 songs here, and they total about two hours. To pick a couple of reference points from the CD era, that's the same length as Smashing Pumpkins' Mellon Collie and the Infinite Sadness, and just a bit longer than Biggie's Life After Death. Two hours is a lot of music, but having it broken into three discs, each the length of a 1970s LP, helps.

You can dip into Have One on Me at a given point, listen for a while, and move on to something else. But while the album invites sampling, I've found myself returning to a different section each time I sit down with it. The highlights are spread out evenly, and Newsom couldn't have sequenced the record any better. While songs here evoke moments of Ys and Milk-Eyed and Newsom's harp is still the dominant musical focus, it's striking how much Have One on Me feels like its own thing. Not a progression, exactly, more of a deepening.

You can feel roots going down and an edifice being built. Her voice has gained depth and she sings with more force and clarity, so that's part of it. And the arrangements are more judicious and draw less attention to themselves (some tracks are just harp, others add horns, strings, and percussion, but with a lighter touch). But the bigger difference seems to be the overall mood, which is expansive and welcoming. The best songs feel more like conversations rather than artworks to be hung on the wall and admired from several paces away.

Newsom seems to sing from somewhere deep inside of them, and her earthy presence has a way of drawing you in, bringing you closer to her music than you've been before. The name you'll most hear in discussion of this record is Joni Mitchell. Part of it is that Newsom can sound a fair bit like her with her more richly textured voice. Sometimes, almost eerily so, like on 'In California' (the way she wraps the vocal melody around the evocative title word is just a few miles up the PCH from Blue's 'California'). In addition to her voice and phrasing, the more approachable songs here, from the stirring harp-and-voice ballads 'Jackrabbits' and 'Esme' to the funny, weird, and hugely appealing road song 'Good Intentions Paving Company', have bluesy chord progressions that stand in stark contrast to the rigid folk modes of Ys. These songs sway and heave with a warmth and approachability that are new for Newsom.

They, and several others like them, offer a fresh way into Newsom's music for the curious. 'The phantom of love moves among us at will,' goes a line in 'Esme'. Most of the songs here deal with love in some form, another quality that connects Have One on Me to the broader singer-songwriter tradition.

Sometimes the love is romantic; other times its about friendship or family. Newsom sometimes approaches the subject from her elliptical perch, talking in pictures-- 'Each phantom-limb lost has got an angel (so confused, like the wagging bobbed-tail of a bulldog),' is the line that follows the one above in 'Esme'. But though Newsom indulges her gift for imagery early and often, Have One on Me has moments of simplicity and directness, where the tangled phrases can be boiled down to, 'Life can be difficult and lonely and we all need love, but holding on to it can be hard.'

One significant difference between Newsom and Mitchell is that the latter, especially early in her career, was writing songs that would sound good on the radio. For better or worse, Newsom is not a pop singer-- that's just not what she does. So I don't want to overstate this record's accessibility.

A few tracks here, especially longer ones like the title track and 'Kingfisher', approach the winding density that marked Ys. On these, song structure is elusive-- at any given moment you're not sure if you're listening to a verse, chorus, or bridge.

The lyric sheet helps a bit, but with two hours of music to digest, you won't feel too guilty about using the skip button here and there, or digesting the record in pieces. Helpfully, returning to the most immediate songs causes their charm and appeal to bleed into the tracks that surround them-- so the album seems to grow and change as you listen. Have One on Me begins with 'Easy', about a wish for the kind of life the title suggests, and closes with 'Does Not Suffice', which finds the narrator packing up a house to leave after a breakup, putting away all that reminds her lover of how 'easy [she] was not.' The latter is subtitled 'In California, Refrain', it uses a similar gospel-inflected progression as the earlier song, and it's flat-out gorgeous, heavy with sadness ('the tap of hangers swaying in the closet') but also exhibiting quiet dignity and strength.

It's my favorite song here, and it comes last, which is a dependable sign that I'll be returning to an album often. When I hear Newsom sing the word 'easy' in 'Suffice' and my mind jumps back to the opener, it reinforces just how many threads she's weaved between those songs and how incredible it is to discover new things with every listen. Review by Mark Richardson, Pitchfork.com ” “ In case there was any doubt that Joanna Newsom was busy making music -- along with modeling and starring in MGMT videos -- in the four years between her brilliant second album Ys and its follow-up, Have One on Me’s three-disc, two-hour expanse is proof positive. The album’s massive size suggests that Newsom is bent on outdoing herself with each release, but the music is simpler than Ys’ symphonic majesty.

Instead, she uses this oversize canvas to travel from Appalachian folk to big city pop, with stops at country, soul, and gospel along the way. It’s a dense journey, not just as a whole, but from song to song. Most of the album’s range is in the title track: Over 11 minutes, “Have One on Me” begins with jazzy harp stylings and some of Newsom’s most polished vocals, returns to Milk-Eyed Mender’s rural whimsy, passes through a marching band and lands in a British folk reverie. Similarly striking moments appear at the beginning and end of this triptych, but the first disc presents Newsom’s biggest departures. Have One on Me’s first third incorporates rock and pop, giving it a Laurel Canyon flair that underscores the ‘70s vibe of the whole endeavor. The lovely “Easy” plays like a Ys track rewritten for a rock opera; “Good Intentions Paving Company” flirts with winsome country-rock; “’81” is the closest the album comes to having a pop single; and the limpid, almost painfully quiet “Baby Birch” reaffirms that Newsom doesn’t have to be complex to be moving.

The album’s third disc dives into her dramatic side, especially on “Kingfisher,” a chamber pop fantasia that plays like a condensed version of Ys. Have One on Me’s middle stretch unfurls songs that expand on Milk Eyed Mender’s serenity, including the dazzlingly beautiful “Go Long,” which ranks among Newsom’s finest songs, and the pretty but meandering “You and Me, Bess.” Therein lies the problem with Have One on Me: Newsom gives her listeners so much music that not all of it is equally memorable. The album’s cross between Milk-Eyed Mender and Ys isn’t always greater than the sum of its parts -- songs that sound like they come from a less-complex Ys or a less-innocent Milk-Eyed Mender are sometimes simply less. While Have One on Me might be more listenable if it was one or even two discs, it’s hard to say that it would be better. Its flow from disc to disc disproves thoughts that Newsom recorded three albums’ worth of material, couldn’t decide what to keep, and just released them all. At its best, these songs have the feel of an intimate live performance; at their worst, they’re lovely, but exhausting. Have One on Me is quite a technical achievement, but since Newsom has proven she can do just about anything, next time she shouldn’t try to do everything.

Exact Audio Copy V0.99 prebeta 4 from 23. January 2008 EAC extraction logfile from 5. Foobar2000 1.2 / Dynamic Range Meter 1.1.1 log date: 2013-08-14 03:45:03 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Analyzed: Joanna Newsom / Have One On Me -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- DR Peak RMS Duration Track -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- DR9 -0.10 dB -13.79 dB 6:04 01-Easy DR10 -0.12 dB -13.74 dB 11:02 02-Have One On Me DR12 -2.33 dB -17.31 dB 3:52 03-81 DR9 -0.32 dB -12.32 dB 7:02 04-Good Intentions Paving Co. DR9 -0.32 dB -11.90 dB 6:25 05-No Provenance DR11 -0.11 dB -16.69 dB 9:30 06-Baby Birch -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Number of tracks: 6 Official DR value: DR10 Samplerate: 44100 Hz Channels: 2 Bits per sample: 16 Bitrate: 662 kbps Codec: FLAC ================================================================================.

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