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Linda Ronstadt - The 80's Studio Album Collection (Édition StudioMasters) (2014) [Hi-Res]

Linda Ronstadt - The 80's Studio Album Collection (Édition StudioMasters) (2014) [Hi-Res]

BAND/ARTIST: Linda Ronstadt

  • Title: The 80's Studio Album Collection (Édition StudioMasters)
  • Year Of Release: 2020
  • Label: Rhino / Elektra
  • Genre: Pop Rock
  • Quality: flac 24bits - 96.0kHz
  • Total Time: 04:32:30
  • Total Size: 5.47 gb
  • WebSite:
Tracklist
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CD1
01. Mad Love
02. Party Girl
03. How Do I Make You
04. I Can't Let Go
05. Hurt so Bad
06. Look out for My Love
07. Cost of Love
08. Justine
09. Girls Talk
10. Talking in the Dark

CD2
01. Get Closer
02. The Moon Is a Harsh Mistress
03. I Knew You When
04. Easy for You to Say
05. People Gonna Talk
06. Talk to Me of Mendocino
07. I Think It's Gonna Work out Fine (with James Taylor)
08. Mr Radio
09. Lies
10. Tell Him
11. Sometimes You Just Can't Win
12. My Blue Tears

CD3
01. What's New?
02. I've Got a Crush on You
03. Guess I'll Hang My Tears out to Dry
04. Crazy He Calls Me
05. Someone to Watch over Me
06. I Don't Stand a Ghost of a Chance with You
07. What'll I Do?
08. Lover Man (Oh Where Can You Be?)
09. Good-Bye

CD4
01. When I Fall in Love
02. Skylark
03. It Never Entered My Mind
04. Mean to Me
05. When Your Lover Has Gone
06. I'm a Fool to Want You
07. You Took Advantage of Me
08. Sophisticated Lady
09. Can't We Be Friends
10. My Old Flame
11. Falling in Love Again
12. Lush Life

CD5
01. When You Wish Upon a Star
02. Bewitched, Bothered & Bewildered
03. You Go to My Head
04. But Not for Me
05. My Funny Valentine
06. I Get Along Without You Very Well
07. Am I Blue
08. (I Love You) For Sentimental Reasons
09. Straighten up and Fly Right
10. Little Girl Blue
11. 'Round Midnight

CD6
01. Por Un Amor (For a Love)
02. Los Laureles (The Laurels)
03. Hay Unos Ojos (There Are Some Eyes)
04. La Cigarra (The Cicada)
05. Tu Solo Tu (You Only You)
06. Y Andale (Get on with It)
07. Rogaciano El Huapanguero (Rogiciano)
08. La Charreada (The Charreada)
09. Dos Arbolitos (Two Little Trees)
10. Corrido DeCanenea (Ballad of Cananea)
11. La Barca De Guaymas (The Boat from Guaymas)
12. La Calandria (The Lark)
13. El Sol Que Tu Eres (The Sun That You Are)

CD7
01. Still Within The Sound Of My Voice (feat. Aaron Neville)
02. Cry Like A Rainstorm (feat. Aaron Neville)
03. All My Life (with Aaron Neville)
04. I Need You (feat. Aaron Neville)
05. Don't Know Much (with Aaron Neville)
06. Adios (feat. Aaron Neville)
07. Trouble Again (feat. Aaron Neville)
08. I Keep It Hid (feat. Aaron Neville)
09. So Right, So Wrong (feat. Aaron Neville)
10. Shattered (feat. Aaron Neville)
11. When Something Is Wrong With My Baby (feat. Aaron Neville)
12. Goodbye My Friend (feat. Aaron Neville)


Linda Ronstadt began as the clear-voiced, country-influenced singer for '60s folk-rockers the Stone Poneys, where she covered tunes by the likes of Mike Nesmith and Tim Buckley. That knack for choosing material served her well in the second half of the '70s, when she became a pop superstar interpreting songs by everyone from Dave Edmunds and Elvis Costello to Chuck Berry and Roy Orbison. Subsequently, she has shown her diversity by cutting albums of jazz standards, traditional Mexican music, and pure country.
While Ronstadt was a student at Arizona State University, she met guitarist Bob Kimmel. The duo moved to Los Angeles, where guitarist/songwriter Kenny Edwards joined the pair. Calling themselves the Stone Poneys, the group became a leading attraction on California's folk circuit, recording their first album in 1967. The band's second album, Evergreen, Vol. 2, featured the Top 20 hit "Different Drum," which was written by Michael Nesmith. After recording one more album with the group, Ronstadt left for a solo career at the end of 1968.
Ronstadt's first two solo albums -- Hand Sown Home Grown (1969) and Silk Purse (1970) - accentuated her country roots, featuring several honky tonk numbers. Released in 1971, her self-titled third album was a pivotal record in her career. Featuring a group of session musicians who would later form the Eagles, the album was a softer, more laid-back variation of the country-rock she had been recording. With the inclusion of songs from singer/songwriters like Jackson Browne, Neil Young, and Eric Anderson, Linda Ronstadt had folk-rock connections as well. Don't Cry Now, released in 1973, followed the same formula to greater success, yet it was 1974's Heart Like a Wheel that perfected the sound, making Ronstadt a star. Featuring the hit covers "You're No Good," "When Will I Be Loved," and "It Doesn't Matter Anymore," Heart Like a Wheel reached number one and sold over two million copies.
Released in the fall of 1975, Prisoner in Disguise followed the same pattern as Heart Like a Wheel and was nearly as successful. Hasten Down the Wind, released in 1976, suggested a holding pattern, even if it charted higher than Prisoner in Disguise. Simple Dreams (1977) expanded the formula by adding a more rock-oriented supporting band, which breathed life into the Rolling Stones' "Tumbling Dice" and Warren Zevon's "Poor Poor Pitiful Me." The record became the singer's biggest hit, staying on the top of the charts for five weeks and selling over three million copies. With Living in the U.S.A. (1978), Ronstadt began experimenting with new wave, recording Elvis Costello's "Alison"; the album was another number one hit. On 1980's Mad Love, she made a full-fledged new wave record, recording three Costello songs and adopting a synth-laden sound. While the album was a commercial success, it signaled that her patented formula was beginning to run out of steam. That suspicion was confirmed with 1982's Get Closer, her first album since Heart Like a Wheel to fail to go platinum.
Sensing it was time to change direction, Ronstadt starred in the Broadway production of Gilbert & Sullivan's Pirates of Penzance, as well as the accompanying movie. Pirates of Penzance led the singer to a collaboration with Nelson Riddle, who arranged and conducted her 1983 collection of pop standards What's New. While it received lukewarm reviews, it was a considerable hit, reaching number three on the charts and selling over two million copies. Ronstadt's next two albums -- Lush Life (1984) and For Sentimental Reasons (1986) - were also albums of pre-rock standards recorded with Riddle.
At the end of 1986, Ronstadt returned to contemporary pop, recording "Somewhere Out There," the theme to the animated An American Tail, with James Ingram; the single became a number two hit. She also returned to her country roots in 1987, recording the Trio album with Dolly Parton and Emmylou Harris. The album was enough of a success that she reunited with Parton and Harris for another collaboration, 1999's Trio II. The two Trio albums and a number of unreleased tracks were later compiled into a box set, 2016's The Complete Trio Collection. In 1987, Ronstadt also recorded Canciones de Mi Padre, a set of traditional Mexican songs that became a surprise hit. Two years later, she recorded Cry Like a Rainstorm - Howl Like the Wind - her first contemporary pop album since 1982's Get Closer. Featuring four duets with Aaron Neville, including the number two hit "Don't Know Much," the album sold over two million copies.
Ronstadt returned to traditional Mexican and Spanish material with Mas Canciones (1991) and Frenesi (1992). She returned to pop with 1994's Winter Light, which failed to generate a hit single, as did 1995's Feels Like Home. In 1996, she released the children's album Dedicated to the One I Love; We Ran followed in 1998. Two years later, Ronstadt delivered the holiday collection A Merry Little Christmas. Another collection of standards, Hummin' to Myself, arrived in 2004, followed by Adieu False Heart, a collaboration with Ann Savoy of the Savoy-Doucet Cajun Band in 2006.
As it turned out, Adieu False Heart would be Ronstadt's last studio album. She supported it with a tour in 2007, including an appearance at the Newport Folk Festival, and although it didn't rise above 146 on the Billboard charts, it did receive a Grammy nomination for Best Traditional Folk Album. In 2010, she appeared on the Chieftains' San Patricio album, but a year later, she told The Arizona Daily Star she was retired. Three years later, she published her autobiography Simple Dreams: A Musical Memoir and, in its pre-release publicity, Ronstadt confessed that she had Parkinson's disease, explaining that it was a factor in her retirement. Early in 2014, she was inducted into the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame; although she wasn't able to attend, an intergenerational all-star group performed in her honor, including Emmylou Harris, Stevie Nicks, Bonnie Raitt, Sheryl Crow, and Carrie Underwood. Around the time of her induction, the compilation Duets was released on Rhino.
In early 2019, Ronstadt released Live in Hollywood, an archival album documenting a concert she gave in 1980 which was originally aired on HBO. ~ Stephen Thomas Erlewine




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