Tina Turner - Private Dancer (MrMalikai) DTSseeders: 1
leechers: 1
Tina Turner - Private Dancer (MrMalikai) DTS (Size: 448.17 MB)
Description
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Tina Turner - Private Dancer DTS ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ Artist...............: Tina Turner Album................: Private Dancer Genre................: Rock Source...............: Lossless flac Thx Kitlope Year.................: 1984 File Format.........: DTS WAV (*.wav) Channels............: 5.1 Surround Sound Sample Rate........: 44.1 KHz Sample Size........: 16 bit Quality/Bit Rate...: 1411.2 kbps Burn test............: 5/14/2013 Method:..............: SPEC-ArcTan-PTA Included.............: WAV,CUE,NFO,Cover Posted by............: MrMalikai on 5/18/2013, 6/9/2013 Information..........: Play it LOUD! ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Tracklisting ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1. Tina Turner - I Might Have Been Queen [04:10] 2. Tina Turner - What's Love Got To Do With It [03:50] 3. Tina Turner - Show Some Respect [03:19] 4. Tina Turner - I Can't Stand The Rain [03:43] 5. Tina Turner - Private Dancer [07:14] 6. Tina Turner - Let's Stay Together [05:16] 7. Tina Turner - Better Be Good To Me [05:14] 8. Tina Turner - Steel Claw [03:50] 9. Tina Turner - Help [04:32] 10. Tina Turner - 1984 [03:11] Playing Time.........: 44:23 Total Size...........: 448.09 MB ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- ... ;) It's a stereo to DTS 5.1 conversion. Burn it to a standard CD-R. Can be played on home theater systems that have a DTS decoder and on PC's with the software to play DTS. ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- I turn the PC on at 5:00AM and off at 9:00PM (GMT-05:00) Eastern Time (US & Canada) ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- In 1984, a 45-year-old Tina Turner made one of the most amazing comebacks in the history of American popular music. A few years earlier, it was hard to imagine the veteran soul/rock belter reinventing herself and returning to the top of the pop charts, but she did exactly that with the outstanding Private Dancer. And Turner did so without sacrificing her musical integrity. To be sure, this pop/rock/R&B pearl is decidedly slicker than such raw, earthy, hard-edged Ike & Tina classics as "Proud Mary," "Sexy Ida," and "I Wanna Take You Higher." But she still has a tough, throaty, passionate delivery that serves her beautifully on everything from the melancholy, reggae-influenced "What's Love Got to Do With It" to the gutsy "Better Be Good to Me" to heartfelt remakes of the Beatles' "Help," Al Green's "Let's Stay Together," and David Bowie's "1984." A reflection on the emptiness of a stripper's life, the dusky title song is as poignant as it is depressing. Without question, this was Turner's finest hour as a solo artist. allmusic.com Dire Straits' Mark Knopfler originally wrote "Private Dancer" around the time of his band's Love Over Gold album, and the seven-plus-minute song would have been an excellent addition to that album's worth of long, slowly unfolding songs, adding a dash of the pop sense of Making Movies and hopefully relegating the jokey "Industrial Disease" to a B-side. However, Knopfler decided at the last minute that he didn't feel comfortable singing a song from a female perspective -- much less in the character of a prostitute -- and bequeathed the song to Tina Turner, who made it the title track and climax of her 1984 comeback album. (Ironically, although the rest of Dire Straits is the backing band on this track, Knopfler doesn't appear at all; that's Jeff Beck performing a solo in Knopfler's familiar, restrained style.) Given room to build tension throughout the extended song, Turner starts quietly, almost conversational, climaxing with a masterful performance on the bridge at the song's heart, until she shrieks the line "Tell me, do you want to see me do the shimmy again?" with just as much visceral force as she had managed on "River Deep Mountain High" nearly two decades before. Although mono-named producer Carter (the Motels, etc.) lacks the elegant grace that Knopfler's own production would have brought to the recording, he does a serviceable job of mimicking the Dire Straits sound. allmusic.com ...........................................................-_-.............................................................. Sharing Widget |