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(Leftfield, Synth-pop, Pop Rock, Modern Classical) VA - Zang Tuum Tumb • The Value Of Entertainmen
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Zang Tuum Tumb • The Value Of Entertainment
Жанр: Leftfield, Synth-pop, Pop Rock, Modern Classical Страна-производитель диска: UK Год издания диска: 02 Feb 2015 Тип издания: CD, Compilation , Reissue Издатель (лейбл): Salvo, ZTT Каталожный номер: SALVOSVX028, Element 35 Аудиокодек: FLAC (*.flac) Тип рипа: tracks+.cue Продолжительность: 1:15:26 Источник (релизер): what.cd Наличие сканов в содержимом раздачи: front Zang Tumb Tuum Sampled: Sampled Side One, Seven Parts: Nothing Is Comic 01. The Art of Noise - Closing (1:15) 02. Frankie Goes to Hollywood - Disneyland (3:08) 03. Propaganda - Femme Fatale (The Woman With The Orchid) (3:22) 04. Anne Pigalle - Intermission (The Gods Are Bored) (3:11) 05. Instinct - Swamp Out (3:29) 06. The Art of Noise - Egypt (0:51) 07. Andrew Poppy - The Object Is A Hungry Wolf (Extract 1) (4:05) 08. Propaganda - P:Machinery (Beta) (7:58) Sampled Side Two, Five Parts: Everything Is Comic 09. Anne Pigalle - Looking For Love (Demo) (4:04) 10. The Art of Noise - A Time For Fear (Who's Afraid) 'Suicide Is Painless' (5:32) 11. Frankie Goes to Hollywood - Born To Run (Live) (5:04) 12. Andrew Poppy - The Object Is A Hungry Wolf (Extract 2) (1:47) Sampled Side Three, Three Parts: The Director's Cut (Anything Is Comic) 13. The Art of Noise - Closing (The Director's Cut) (1:36) 14. Instinct - Swamp Out (The Director's Cut) (3:30) 15. Frankie Goes to Hollywood - Born To Run (Live) (The Director's Cut) (4:04) Sampled Side Four, Four Parts: The Value Of Entertainment (Everything And Nothing) 16. Andrew Poppy - The Amusement (Live At The Value Of Entertainment) (6:00) 17. The Art of Noise - Beat Box (From The Ambassador's Reel) (3:55) 18. The Art of Noise - Medley (From The Ambassador's Reel) (10:56) 19. The Art of Noise - Beat Box (Live At The Value Of Entertainment, 30 May 1985, Extract) (1:39) Zang Tuum Tumb ‘The Value of Entertainment’ reissue
In May 1985 Zang Tuum Tumb occupied the Ambassadors Theatre in London’s West End for two weeks with a showcase of their current roster (minus Frankie and some of Art of Noise) entitled ‘The Value of Entertainment’. In October they released their first label roster compilation which largely mirrored the show’s line up but, thankfully, reinstated Frankie into the mix, cleverly word-playing on the bit of studio kit they’d become associated with due to Trevor Horn‘s production techniques. ‘Sampled’ was an odd duck but then the label was never going to do the obvious best of so far was it? “So what happens now?” intones a voice early on in Art of Noise’s ‘Closing’, which strategically opened rather than closed the album, posing the question, setting the scene, having the last laugh first. None of the hits from the past two years were included, not in their original form anyway, the closest you got was Propaganda‘s ‘P-Machinery’, a track not even 6 months old, and snippets and snatches from the Art of Noise’s debut LP, ‘Who’s Afraid…’ Instead of celebrating the previous 24 months with ‘Relax’, ‘Two Tribes’, ‘Dr Mabuse’, ‘Close (To The Edit)’, ‘Moments In Love’, ‘Duel’ or ‘The Power of Love’ we got cover versions by Frankie and Propaganda, interludes by Art of Noise and a host of new artists who were making their debuts on the label with this release. And quite right too. The one exception was ‘Disneyland’, the previously mooted double A side of Frankie Goes To Hollywood’s ‘Welcome To The Pleasuredome’ single which, if included, may have got them that fourth No.1 after all. It was held over to help sell this compilation (“a bait, comrades” as Paul Morley‘s sleeve notes confirmed) and is still one of the highlights of the set. ‘Don’t be bland in Disneyland, it’s very good in Hollywood’ being the standout line in a short burst of energy that would have bolstered the sagging third side of their debut LP no end. ZTT did the unexpected, which is what we expected and wanted them to do and why we love them so much for it. They also knew what we didn’t, that there were tensions in the camps of their main three artists and that the wheels were coming off the wagon. Indeed three members of Art of Noise had already flown the coop and were about to release their debut single for China records, having pulled out of the Ambassadors Theatre shows at the 11th hour. But I’m getting ahead of myself here. The compilation acted as a crossover from the first round of signings to the second, introducing Andrew Poppy, Anne Pigalle and Instinct to Zang and cleverly bought the label some more time in the spotlight whilst everyone else was trying to catch up (again). Instinct were the most conventional of the new artists but one that I felt never matched up to the excitement or daring of Frankie or Propaganda, a good support band maybe but never a headline act. Until recently their contribution, ‘Swamp Out’, was their only release on the label outside of their short performance on the rare ‘The Value of Entertainment’ video or even rarer Japanese laser disc. Without wanting to sound unkind, that was probably for the best as it’s not a great calling card. Anne Pigalle, a visually stunning model and singer of the Edith Piaf persuasion who’d been seen in all the right places in London for some time, had the look and just about managed to pull off the voice for her two contributions, of which ‘Intermission’ was probably the best track from her debut LP for ZTT, released around the same time. Her inclusion certainly wrong-footed a few but fitted into the label’s European-leanings like a glove. Unfortunately the pop world was just taking a turn for the commercial in ’85, the post punk, new wave, Futurists and synth brigade were about to be steamrollered by the Stock, Aitken & Waterman juggernaut and the fist pumping stadium rock of U2, Simple Minds and Springsteen. There would be little place for Anne in such a world, despite the fact that she was on one of the most forward thinking labels of the time, but the times they were a-changing. Andrew Poppy, the third newcomer to the roster was a genuine head-turner, a British avant grade composer with previous form as a member of The Lost Jockey, forward thinking and influenced by industrial music as much by his contemporaries. His pieces (or extracts from) were and are things of beauty that were both out of place with the company on the LP but fitted perfectly into the ZTT ethos. He also had an ace up his sleeve; he didn’t need Trevor Horn to produce him, something that every other act up until then had a connection with and one that was rapidly becoming an albatross around both his and the label’s neck. Not a man exactly known for his fast work rate, it was unrealistic to expect Horn to produce every band on the label and Poppy was the first to completely break the mould. This new version of ‘Sampled’ has never sounded so good with an excellent transfer from a new master source instantly noticeable. The album was originally released on a single piece of vinyl and cassette, never on CD and it’s great to hear such a clean, crisp version. It’s been bumped up to 75 minutes with two more ‘sides’, the first of different mixes of earlier tracks subtitled ‘Director’s Cuts’. Art of Noise’s ‘Closing’ gets a 21 second extension but it’s so full of jump cuts the difference is hard to tell. There’s a new mix of Instinct’s ‘Swamp Out’ that was found in the vaults although I didn’t notice until I read the sleeve notes. A new version that did stand out was Frankie’s take on ‘Born To Run’ which sounds like an early attempt to get a live sound of the studio recording. Unfortunately it’s an inferior mix to the original release, drenched in reverb with Mark O’Toole‘s intricate bass lines half buried in the mix. The fourth ‘side’ has edits from ‘The Value of Entertainment’ shows themselves and provides the only genuinely exciting new unreleased recording in a live version of Andrew Poppy’s ‘The Amusement’. Hearing how close the players come to nailing the recorded version’s sound and arrangement is something to behold and this is only a six minute extract from the original 45 minute performance. 30 years later it sounds extraordinary that such a piece was presented at what was, at the time, a pop label showcase, let’s hope the full performance surfaces one day too. The other extras are sadly unremarkable in that they sound like literal room recordings of playbacks of the Art of Noise ‘performance’ complete with faulty mic introduction for the last track. I consider myself a hardcore ZTT fan but this is scraping the barrel by most people’s standards – for diehards only. In a calculated move to avoid the obvious and tame the critics who were, predictably, beginning a backlash after Frankie’s winning streak the previous year, ‘The Value of Entertainment’ live show struck out boldly and promised something new. The paired down Art of Noise performance, little more than a playback with dancers, despite Morley’s self-deprecating asides, ended up falling short of expectations. Original compere John Sessions quit after one show to be replaced by a new MC, now disgraced comedian Chris Langham who failed to ignite the crowds at the time and you can see some awkward exchanges backstage in the second half of the DVD that comes with this reissue package. Of the performances in Time Capsule One – a version of the original VHS release in all it’s grainy 80’s glory – only Propaganda ignite any interest, looking and sounding like a pop band in charge of their material. Pigalle is a rabbit in the headlights and Instinct are breathtakingly ordinary, any art house pretence hinted at in the recordings dashed by a spectre of a tight Brit funk band with average material. Mercifully, Morley vox pops are scattered throughout their performance and a visibly nervous Paul wonders whether he’ll be lynched or booed off once he takes the stage. The second half of the DVD – Time Capsule Two – has further excerpts of songs and backstage banter excised from the original film, taken from the Japanese laser disc from 1986, ending with an excellent photo gallery from the original nights set to part of Andrew Poppy’s score. Poppy is sadly absent from the whole film, his only appearance in the photo gallery and as backing music for the menu, a real shame, and a missing ingredient that would have added to the *ahem* value of the package. Knowing how thoroughly Ian Peel goes about compiling these reissues I suspect the footage either no longer exists (if it ever did) or wasn’t high quality enough to include. Philip Marshall‘s minimalist design pays homage to the original release with a new take on the Kenneth Martin cover image and the inclusion of unseen photos from the shows by Andrew Catlin. As it stands, in terms of value and entertainment this set definitely fulfills the former admirably, taking care above and beyond the usual call for an oddity such as this but falls a little short on the latter. As a ‘Time Capsule’ it’s perfect, a delight to see mid-80s Soho on film in all its scaffolded, dingy hustle & bustle in contrast with ZTT’s avant pop, its pristine, slick exterior radiating ideas and bucking trends they couldn’t hope to replicate in the everyday gig or performance setting. At one point in a backstage tour of the theatre Morley chances upon Instinct sound checking and apologies that, “it’s come to this”, a sentiment echoed by his on stage dialogue concerning the Art of Noise’s non-appearance. ‘A Radiant Obstacle in the Path of the Obvious’ was an early ZTT mission statement and you get a sense that he knows that that mission is starting to fail. The label’s acts worked best in the controlled isolation of the recording studio or video edit where the fantasy could be molded, re-mixed and perfected. Once the live element was introduced the illusions created were torn away and, no matter which context you set them in, the theatre or the concert hall, the fallible human side shattered the utopian vision. ‘Sampled’ saw the beginning of a new phase for the label but it was the end of their first two glorious years where they were at their most experimental and daring. ‘The Value of Entertainment’ was largely savaged in reviews although many conceded that it WAS something different at least. Instinct failed to release another record, Pigalle tanked and Propaganda split into a different version of the group soon after, signing to Virgin with only Claudia staying at the label. Frankie, as we know, returned a year later with the lacklustre ‘Liverpool’ before imploding themselves. Only Andrew Poppy really made a mark from the compilation, going on to release two albums and singles of exciting, forward-thinking material before he too was cast adrift, the third promised LP emerging years later as part of a box set. The label would have one last shining moment in Grace Jones‘ ‘Slave To The Rhythm’ before the changing pop landscape rendered their first incarnation yesterday’s news and they began their second phase, cannily reborn and re-aligned to the emerging dance music scene at the end of the decade. ‘The Value of Entertainment’ is out now from ZTT/Union Square Music – CD+DVD+16 page booklet in card digipak that lines up with all the previous reissues beautifully. The Art of Noise ‘at the end of the century’ 2xCD+DVD is also out, review coming soon… Exact Audio Copy V1.1 from 23. June 2015 REM GENRE Electronic ----------------------- foobar2000 1.3.5 / Замер динамического диапазона (DR) 1.1.1
Дата отчёта: 2016-05-08 13:14:29 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Анализ: Andrew Poppy / The Value Of Entertainment (1-3) Anne Pigalle / The Value Of Entertainment (4-5) Frankie Goes to Hollywood / The Value Of Entertainment (6-8) Instinct / The Value Of Entertainment (9-10) Propaganda / The Value Of Entertainment (11-12) The Art of Noise / The Value Of Entertainment (13-19) -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- DR Пики RMS Продолжительность трека -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- DR6 -0.20 дБ -8.52 дБ 4:05 07-The Object Is A Hungry Wolf (Extract 1) DR11 -0.01 дБ -14.06 дБ 1:47 12-The Object Is A Hungry Wolf (Extract 2) DR7 -0.20 дБ -8.94 дБ 6:00 16-The Amusement (Live At The Value Of Entertainment) DR7 -0.10 дБ -8.93 дБ 3:11 04-Intermission (The Gods Are Bored) DR8 -0.10 дБ -9.71 дБ 4:04 09-Looking For Love (Demo) DR6 -0.10 дБ -7.78 дБ 3:08 02-Disneyland DR6 0.00 дБ -8.11 дБ 5:04 11-Born To Run (Live) DR5 -0.10 дБ -7.21 дБ 4:04 15-Born To Run (Live) (The Director's Cut) DR8 -0.20 дБ -8.66 дБ 3:29 05-Swamp Out DR8 -0.20 дБ -9.25 дБ 3:30 14-Swamp Out (The Director's Cut) DR7 -0.90 дБ -9.74 дБ 3:22 03-Femme Fatale (The Woman With The Orchid) DR7 -0.20 дБ -9.86 дБ 7:58 08-P:Machinery (Beta) DR10 -0.10 дБ -13.32 дБ 1:15 01-Closing DR15 -0.10 дБ -19.05 дБ 0:51 06-Egypt DR7 -0.20 дБ -10.77 дБ 5:32 10-A Time For Fear (Who's Afraid) 'Suicide Is Painless' DR6 0.00 дБ -9.31 дБ 1:36 13-Closing (The Director's Cut) DR4 0.00 дБ -5.76 дБ 3:55 17-Beat Box (From The Ambassador's Reel) DR4 0.00 дБ -6.55 дБ 10:56 18-Medley (From The Ambassador's Reel) DR6 -0.20 дБ -9.98 дБ 1:39 19-Beat Box (Live At The Value Of Entertainment, 30 May 1985, Extract) -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Количество треков: 19 Реальные значения DR: DR7 Частота: 44100 Гц Каналов: 2 Разрядность: 16 Битрейт: 841 кбит/с Кодек: FLAC ================================================================================ Для того, чтобы скачать .torrent Вам необходимо зарегистрироваться |
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