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Cat Stevens - New Masters (1967/2020)

Cat Stevens - New Masters (1967/2020)

BAND/ARTIST: Cat Stevens

  • Title: New Masters
  • Year Of Release: 1967/2020
  • Label: Universal Music Group
  • Genre: Folk Rock, Pop Rock, Acoustic
  • Quality: 320 kbps | FLAC (tracks)
  • Total Time: 01:03:30
  • Total Size: 155 mb | 445 mb
  • WebSite:
Tracklist:

01. Kitty (Stereo Version)
02. I'm So Sleepy (Stereo Version)
03. Northern Wind (Stereo Version)
04. The Laughing Apple (Stereo Version)
05. Smash Your Heart (Stereo Version)
06. Moonstone (Stereo Version)
07. The First Cut Is The Deepest (Stereo Version)
08. I'm Gonna Be King (Stereo Version)
09. Ceylon City (Stereo Version)
10. Blackness Of The Night (Stereo Version)
11. Come On Baby (Shift That Log) (Stereo Version)
12. I Love Them All (Stereo Version)
13. Here Comes My Wife (Mono Version)
14. A Bad Night
15. The Laughing Apple (Mono Version)
16. Kitty (Mono Version)
17. Blackness of the Night (Mono Version)
18. Lovely City (When Do You Laugh?)
19. Image Of Hell
20. It's A Super (Dupa) Life
21. Here Comes My Wife (Electronic Stereo Version)
22. Where Are You (Mono Version)
23. The View From The Top

New Masters is as uneven musically as its predecessor, Matthew & Son, was bold. It was recorded after Cat Stevens had enjoyed a trio of hit singles of his own and a pair of hits ("Here Comes My Baby," "First Cut Is the Deepest") as a songwriter, but also after he'd started drinking regularly and the hits had stopped coming as easily. As he had also broken with his producer, Mike Hurst, it was according to Andy Neill truly a lawyers' record, in the sense that attorneys were all over the studio during the recording, representing both sides of the dispute. And with the record label caught in the middle, the resulting album was allowed to die on the vine in 1967/1968 (though Decca was able to sell it in profusion when it was reissued [especially in America] when Stevens re-emerged as a popular singer/songwriter in the early '70s). In a sense, it's more of the same as Matthew & Son but, intrinsically, not as interesting as a late 1967 release, as the earlier record was as an early 1967 release. The quirky, folky pop sound is there, on songs like "Kitty" and "Northern Wind." Some of it's highly derivative "The Laughing Apple" owing a bit to "Greenback Dollar," among other songs interspersed with pop balladry ("Smash Your Heart") and whimsy ("Moonstone," "Ceylon City"), plus the author's version of his own pop-soul standard "The First Cut Is the Deepest."


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  • User offline
  • whiskers
  •  wrote in 19:46
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Many Thanks
  • User offline
  • mufty77
  •  wrote in 21:07
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Many thanks for lossless.