The New Basement Tapes – Lost On The River (2014) [FLAC 24 bit, 96 kHz]

The New Basement Tapes - Lost On The River (2014) [FLAC 24 bit, 96 kHz] Download

Artist: The New Basement Tapes
Album: Lost On The River
Genre: Rock
Release Date: 2014
Audio Format:: FLAC (tracks) 24 bit, 96 kHz
Duration: 01:13:43
Total Tracks: 20
Total Size: 1,57 GB

Tracklist:

01. The New Basement Tapes – Down On The Bottom (04:28)
02. The New Basement Tapes – Married To My Hack (01:57)
03. The New Basement Tapes – Kansas City (04:04)
04. The New Basement Tapes – Spanish Mary (05:31)
05. The New Basement Tapes – Liberty Street (02:44)
06. The New Basement Tapes – Nothing To It (03:31)
07. The New Basement Tapes – Golden Tom – Silver Judas (02:39)
08. The New Basement Tapes – When I Get My Hands On You (03:10)
09. The New Basement Tapes – Duncan And Jimmy (04:09)
10. The New Basement Tapes – Florida Key (03:19)
11. The New Basement Tapes – Hidee Hidee Ho #11 (04:44)
12. The New Basement Tapes – Lost On The River #12 (03:41)
13. The New Basement Tapes – Stranger (04:21)
14. The New Basement Tapes – Card Shark (02:35)
15. The New Basement Tapes – Quick Like A Flash (03:17)
16. The New Basement Tapes – Hidee Hidee Ho #16 (03:51)
17. The New Basement Tapes – Diamond Ring (02:53)
18. The New Basement Tapes – The Whistle Is Blowing (05:16)
19. The New Basement Tapes – Six Months In Kansas City (Liberty Street) (03:36)
20. The New Basement Tapes – Lost On The River #20 (03:47)

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Produced by T Bone Burnett, Lost On The River: The New Basement Tapes was written and performed in creative collaboration by Elvis Costello, Rhiannon Giddens, Taylor Goldsmith, Jim James and Marcus Mumford. The artists and Burnett gathered in Capitol Studios in March to write and create music for a treasure trove of recently discovered lyrics handwritten by Bob Dylan in 1967 during the period that generated the recording of the legendary Basement Tapes.

The album will be released this year by Electromagnetic Recordings/Harvest Records (Capitol Music Group), and will be accompanied by a Showtime documentary titled, Lost Songs: The Basement Tapes Continued, directed by Sam Jones (the Wilco documentary, I Am Trying To Break Your Heart). The film will present an exclusive and intimate look at the making of Lost On The River: The New Basement Tapes set against the important and historical cultural backdrop of Bob Dylan’s original Basement Tapes.

Bob Dylan’s original Basement Tapes – recorded by Dylan in 1967 with musicians who would later achieve their own fame as The Band – have fascinated and enticed successive generations of musicians, fans and cultural critics for nearly five decades. This collective recorded more than a hundred songs in the basement of a small house in upstate New York that summer and fall, including dozens of newly-written Bob Dylan future classics such as, “I Shall Be Released,” “The Mighty Quinn,” “This Wheel’s On Fire,” “You Ain’t Going Nowhere” and “Tears Of Rage.”

Lost On The River: The New Basement Tapes celebrates the discovery of new Bob Dylan lyrics from that noted 1967 period and marks a unique creative opportunity for Burnett, Costello, Giddens, Goldsmith, James and Mumford, who are bringing them to life nearly 50 years later. For Burnett, whom Dylan has entrusted with this endeavor, it was imperative to provide an environment in which these artists could thrive. “Great music is best created when a community of artists gets together for the common good. There is a deep well of generosity and support in the room at all times, and that reflects the tremendous generosity shown by Bob in sharing these lyrics with us.”When a clutch of unfinished lyrics written during Bob Dylan’s 1967 sojourn at Big Pink in Woodstock, New York was discovered in 2013, there were really only two choices left for his publisher: either they could be collected as text or set to music. Once the decision to turn these words into songs was made, there was really only one logical choice to direct the project: T-Bone Burnett, the master of impressionistic Americana. He had played with Dylan during the Rolling Thunder Revue of 1975 and 1976 — a tour that happened to occur in the wake of the first official release of The Basement Tapes — but more importantly, his 2002 work on the Grammy-winning O Brother Where Art Thou? soundtrack established him as deft modernizer of classic American folk and country, skills that were needed for an album that wound up called Lost on the River. Burnett decided to assemble a loose-knit band of Americana superstars to write the music and play as a band. That’s how Burnett’s old pal Elvis Costello, Jim James of My Morning Jacket, Taylor Goldsmith of Dawes, Marcus Mumford of Mumford & Sons, and Rhiannon Giddens of the Carolina Chocolate Drops became a band called the New Basement Tapes (the name seems more of a formality than an actual moniker), and if Burnett’s intent was to approximate the communal spirit Dylan had with the Band at Big Pink, the execution was much different. The New Basement Tapes recorded Lost on the River in a real studio fully aware there was an audience awaiting their output, an attitude that’s the polar opposite of the ramshackle joshing around of the original Basement Tapes. Thankfully, nobody involved with Lost on the River contrives to replicate either the sound or feel of the 1967 sessions, even if the artists consciously pick up the strands of country, folk, and soul dangling on the originals. Wisely, the songwriters steer their given lyrics toward their own wheelhouses, which means this contains a little of the woolliness of a collective but Burnett sands off the rough edges, tying this all together. Certainly, some musicians make their presence known more than others — there’s a slow, soulful ease to James’ four contributions that stand in nice contrast to Costello’s canny bluster (“Married to My Hack” would’ve fit onto any EC album featuring Marc Ribot) — but the best work might come from Goldsmith, who strikes a delicate, beguiling balance between his own idiosyncrasies and the Americana currents that flow out of The Basement Tapes. Then again, the whole project is rather impressive: Burnett and the New Basement Tapes remain faithful to the spirit of The Basement Tapes yet take enough liberties to achieve their own identity, which is a difficult trick to achieve. –Stephen Thomas Erlewine

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