Mustafa Ozkent ve Orkestrasi - Genclik Ile Elele
Жанр: Psychedelic Funk
Носитель: LP
Год выпуска: 1973/2016
Лейбл: Jackpot Records (JPR031)
Страна-производитель: США
Аудио кодек: FLAC
Тип рипа: tracks
Формат записи: 24/192
Формат раздачи: 24/192
Продолжительность: 00:30:29
Треклист:
01. Uskudar (2:02)
02. Burcak (2:55)
03. Dolana (4:35)
04. Karadir (2:55)
05. Emmioglu (3:01)
06. Carsamba (2:18)
07. Zeytinyagli (3:45)
08. Silifke (3:34)
09. Lorke (2:24)
10. Ayas (3:00)
Источник оцифровки: thezabs
Код класса состояния винила: Mint
Устройство воспроизведения: Rega P10 Turntable with Rega P10 PSU
Головка звукоснимателя: Rega Apheta 3 Cartridge
Предварительный усилитель: PS Audio NuWave Phono Converter ADC
Программа-оцифровщик: Audition CC 2019
Обработка: Click Repair 3.9.9 at 10/0 on DeClick > Volume Boost +5 DB > Remove DC Bias
Условия оцифровки
Lineage:
Degritter RCM > Rega P10 Turntable with Rega P10 PSU > Virgin Vinyl > Rega Apheta 3 Cartridge > PS Audio NuWave Phono Converter ADC > AudioQuest Carbon USB Cable > USB-IN > Audition CC 2019 @ 24bit float, 192kHz capture.
Processing:
24bit wav > Run through Click Repair 3.9.9 at 10/0 on DeClick > Volume Boost +5 DB > Remove DC Bias > Saved as 24bit,192kHz WAV > FLAC > Tagged with Discogs tagger through Foobar.
Scans:
Epson Expression 11000XL -> 16bit 600 DPI with Unsharp Mask -> Color Correction in Photoshop CC 2021 x64 -> 8bit 600DPI PNG.
Замер динамического диапазона
foobar2000 1.6.16 / Dynamic Range Meter 1.1.1
log date: 2024-10-21 20:41:22
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Analyzed: Mustafa Ozkent ve Orkestrasi / Genclik Ile Elele
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DR Peak RMS Duration Track
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DR14 -1.64 dB -17.35 dB 2:02 01-Uskudar
DR14 -0.86 dB -17.77 dB 2:55 02-Burcak
DR13 -2.92 dB -17.88 dB 4:35 03-Dolana
DR13 -2.20 dB -17.47 dB 2:55 04-Karadir
DR12 -0.93 dB -15.67 dB 3:01 05-Emmioglu
DR13 -3.79 dB -18.13 dB 2:18 06-Carsamba
DR13 -0.89 dB -16.20 dB 3:45 07-Zeytinyagli
DR13 -1.36 dB -17.00 dB 3:34 08-Silifke
DR14 -0.98 dB -18.91 dB 2:24 09-Lorke
DR13 -0.88 dB -16.56 dB 3:00 10-Ayas
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Number of tracks: 10
Official DR value: DR13
Samplerate: 192000 Hz
Channels: 2
Bits per sample: 24
Bitrate: 5153 kbps
Codec: FLAC
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Об альбоме (сборнике)
Come for the chimp; stay for the Turkish psychedelic funk. Mustafa Özkent’s instrumental album Gençlik Ile Elele was originally released in Turkey in 1973, and even if you’re a devotee of Anatolian pop music, it’s highly unlikely that you’ve ever come across that first pressing. But consumers who have been eating up exotic rock reissues for years may recognize its cover. If the simian wreaking havoc with a reel to reel tape player seems familiar, that’s because Finders Keepers reissued it ten years ago. While this music was previously available on CD in the US, Jackpot is making it available on vinyl for the first time in the States. After that come-hither chimp on the bold green background seduces you with its “Buy me!” eyes, will you find that the album lives up to its cover? Not quite—but what would?
This wild variation on funky library music was originally credited to Özkent and Orkestrasi and featured unusual instrumentation: two drummers, two guitarists, two percussionists, a bass player and a Hammond B3. To approximate quarter-notes and Turkish scales, Özkent modified guitars to include extra frets (the notes for the Finders Keeper release called him a “Turkish Harry Partch).” He also built an array of distortion pedals. Özkent cared about sound and its variations, and you can hear it in the mix: On a typical track, stereo separation places a drummer in each channel, one hitting fills while another keeps a steady beat.
The album’s ten tracks are concise, none lasting more than four and a half minutes and most clocking in under three. “Üsküdar’a Giderken” opens the album with a deft lead guitar that sounds like exotic surf music—indeed, The Shadows and the Ventures were reportedly major influences on the early rock scene in Istanbul. “Burcak Tarlari” launches with the kind of beats that make this a DJ favorite, with drummers in opposite channels setting up a heavy shuffle before effects-laden lead guitar adds a sinuous line over funky chicken-scratch rhythm guitar. It’s a strange Anatolian hybrid of Hank Marvin and James Brown. “Dolana” ups the tempo with faster funk guitar, more rippling fuzzy lead and Hammond textures sustained to mimic the sound of a spaceship, while the rhythm section is driven by an aggressive, slapping bass line.
The sparer “Karadır Kara” showcases the orkestrasi’s percussionists for a few bars before the rest of the band comes in. The lead guitar here sounds as if it’s vocalizing, seemingly anticipating the guitar vocalizer popularized on Frampton Comes Alive. Gençlik Ile Elele did not go platinum. It’s hard not to hear this music as exotic kitsch, but the instrumentation and musical ideas are unusual enough that it sounds fresh. While the funk guitars may be familiar sound, the guitars and percussion keep this music compelling—in limited doses. Its tracks end up sounding similar, lacking the varied approaches of Anatolian rockers like Barış Manço or Erkin Koray. Still, Gençlik Ile Elele fits a very specific mood that you won’t be able to fill with any other album.
-- Pat Padua