Details for this torrent 


Kate Bush-50 Words for Snow
Type:
Audio > FLAC
Files:
10
Size:
1.1 GB

Tag(s):
Kate Bush English Alternative Singer Songwriter Rock Pianist Composer
Quality:
+0 / -0 (0)

Uploaded:
Nov 17, 2011
By:
roaduck



This is a full quality 96 KHz / 24 bit stereo lossless Flac encoding of Kate Bush's new album.That is better than CD quality; more like a SACD or DVD-A implementation.

    It is not my doing.All credit to Vittos at sharp files blo... for the original upload - Thanks.
 
http://bayimg.com/MALaJAAda


review: http://www.guardian.co.uk/music/2011/nov/17/kate-bush-50-words-snow

Kate Bush: 50 Words for Snow – review

(Fish People/EMI)


Alexis Petridis

guardian.co.uk, Thursday 17 November 2011 15.25 GMT


What a flake! ... Kate Bush

"There are many peculiar things about Kate Bush's 50 Words for Snow. If it's not strictly speaking a Christmas album, it's certainly a seasonal one, and the seasonal album is these days more associated with Justin Bieber than critically acclaimed singer-songwriters following their own wildly idiosyncratic path. It devotes nearly 14 impossibly beautiful minutes to Misty, a song on which Bush imagines first building a snowman and then, well, humping him, with predictably unhappy consequences: "He is dissolving before me," she sings sadly, not the first lady in history to complain about an evening of passion coming to a premature conclusion. It features a title track that turns out to be more prosaically named than you might expect. Over pattering drums and an almost acid house synth line, Stephen Fry (perhaps possessed by the spirit of his hero Vivian Stanshall's cameo appearance on Mike Oldfield's Tubular Bells) enunciates 50 largely made-up synonyms for snow with fruity relish, while Bush offers encouragement from the sidelines: "Come on, man, you've got 44 to go." The first words are beautiful, but become increasingly Pythonesque – you go from blackbird braille and Wenceslas air to schnamistaflopf and boomerangablanga. And, on Wild Man – on which Bush sings about the Yeti in a voice that suggests she'd definitely consider giving him a seeing-to as well – we find Andy Fairweather Low pretending to be a Nepalese mountain dweller: "While crossing the Lhapka-La, something jumped down from the rocks," sings the veteran sessioneer.

But in one sense, these peculiarities aren't really that peculiar, given that this is an album by Bush. She has form in releasing Christmas records, thanks to 1980's December Will Be Magic Again, on which she imagined herself falling softly from the sky on a winter's evening. She does it again here on opener Snowflake, although anyone looking for evidence of her artistic development might note that 30 years ago she employed her bug-eyed Heeeath-CLIFF! voice and plonking lyrical references to Bing Crosby and "old St Nicholas up the chimney" to conjure the requisite sense of wonder. Today, she gets there far more successfully using only a gently insistent piano figure, soft flurries of strings and percussion and the voice of her son Bertie.

Meanwhile, Fry's is merely the latest unlikely guest appearance – Bush has previously employed Lenny Henry, Rolf Harris (twice) and the late animal imitator Percy Edwards, the latter to make sheep noises on the title track of 1982's The Dreaming. Equally, Fairweather Low is not the first person called upon to pretend to be someone else on a Bush album, although she usually takes that upon herself, doing impersonations to prove the point: Elvis on Ariel's King of the Mountain, a gorblimey bank robber on There Goes a Tenner. Finally, in song at least, Bush has always displayed a remarkably omnivorous sexual appetite: long before the Yeti and old Snow Balls showed up, her lustful gaze had variously fixed on Adolf Hitler, a baby and Harry Houdini.

No, the really peculiar thing is that 50 Words for Snow is the second album in little over six months from a woman who took six years to make its predecessor and 12 to make the one before that. If it's perhaps stretching it to say you can tell it's been made quickly – no one is ever going to call an album that features Lake Tahoe's operatic duet between a tenor and a counter-tenor a rough-and-ready lo-fi experience – it certainly feels more intuitive than, say, Ariel, on which a lot of time and effort had clearly been expended in the pursuit of effortlessness. For all the subtle beauty of the orchestrations, there's an organic, live feel, the sense of musicians huddled together in a room, not something that's happened on a Bush album before.

That aside, 50 Words for Snow is extraordinary business as usual for Bush, meaning it's packed with the kind of ideas you can't imagine anyone else in rock having. Taking notions that look entirely daft on paper and rendering them into astonishing music is very much Bush's signature move. There's something utterly inscrutable and unknowable about how she does it that has nothing to do with her famous aversion to publicity. Better not to worry, to just listen to an album that, like the weather it celebrates, gets under your skin and into your bones."

Comments

I have two more versions of this album; a 320kbps CBR .mp3 and a straight CD copy into WAV which I've uploaded here.

320 mp3 - http://thepiratebay.ee/torrent/6823673/Kate_Bush_-_50_Words_For_Snow

Normal CD - http://thepiratebay.ee/torrent/6826112/Kate_Bush_50_Words_for_Snow
Thanks a lot for this!
I'm curious what the source is, though... as, to my knowledge, no 96Hz/24bit official release has been schedulded, I would have expected the best lossless torrent to be CD-sourced (hence 41Hz/16bit) ... is this coming directly from the recording studio? I'm confused...
just checked with audition... transcode...obviously even mp3 sourced. I'll never understand why people do that...
Hello kurply as far as I know this version isn't a transcode or upconversion.The frequency spectrum graphs look like a high bitrate .flac to me.

And yes this isn't an official release.
Hi roaduck,
glad to know you didn't post this on purpose, but it is definitely a transcode, comparing the spectrum graphs with proper flacs of the same songs, this torrent not only turns out to have much less informations than a regular flac, but it's even lower than a properly encoded mp3.

I was about to upload screenshots of the Audition graphs but then I thought I am not the "torrent police" or anything, just a user who's wasted time and bandwith on this torrent, my goal is just to avoid this to others, not to put up a whole self-righteous demonstration.

But if you ARE interested in seeing the comparison to be sure that you shouldn't trust your source that much, I can do it. Let me know.
Hello kurply - I checked with Audiochecker and according to that it is 100% certain from a .mpeg source.Don't ask me what the source is; no idea.
Thanks for the info kurply.Just checked with Audiochecker and it said with 100% certainty that it was from a .mpeg.

No idea about the original source file that this upload came from.
thanks this is a great album