Joan Baez - Diamonds & Rust
Vinyl | LP Cover (1:1) | FLAC + cue | 24bit/96kHz | 900mb
Mastered At JVC Cutting Center By (Quad Mastering) Darrell Johnson
Label: A&M Records/QU-54527 | Released: 1975 | Genre: Country-Folk
A1 Diamonds & Rust
A2 Fountain Of Sorrow
A3 Never Dreamed You'd Leave In Summer
A4 Children And All That Jazz
A5 Simple Twist Of Fate
-
B1 Blue Sky
B2 Hello In There
B3 Jesse
B4 Winds Of The Old Days
B5 Dida
B6 I Dream Of Jeannie / Dannie Boy
Mastered At – JVC Cutting Center
Credits
Acoustic Guitar – Joan Baez (tracks: A1, A5, B2 to B5)
Arranged By – Joan Baez (tracks: A3 to A5), Larry Carlton (tracks: A3 to A5)
Bass – Reinie Press (tracks: A2, A3, A5, B2, B4), Wilton Felder (tracks: A1, A4, B1, B3)
Cello – Jesse Erlich* (tracks: A3-A5)
Electric Piano – Joe Sample (tracks: A1-A5, B4, B5)
Engineer [Assistant] – Ellis Sorkin
Executive Producer – Bernard Gelb
Guitar – Dean Parks (tracks: A1, A3 to B1, B4), Larry Carlton (tracks: A1 to B1, B3, B4)
Leader [Strings] – Sid Sharp* (tracks: A3-A5)
Mastered By – Mike Reese
Mastered By [Quad Mastering] – Darrell Johnson
Mixed By – Rick Ruggieri
Photography – Irene Harris
Piano – Larry Knechtel (tracks: A2, A3, A5, B4, B6)
Producer – David Kershenbaum, Joan Baez
Recorded By – Rick Ruggieri
Steel Guitar [Pedal] – Red Rhodes (tracks: A2, B1, B2, B4)
Viola – Isabell Daskoff* (tracks: A3 to A5)
Violin – Carl La Magna* (tracks: A3 to A5), James Getzoff (tracks: A3 to A5), Raymond Kelly* (tracks: A3 to A5), Robert Konrad (tracks: A3 to A5), Robert Ostrowsky (tracks: A3 to A5), Ronald Folsom (tracks: A3 to A5), Sidney Sharp (tracks: A3 to A5), Tibor Zelig (tracks: A3 to A5), William Hymanson (tracks: A3 to A5), William Kurasch (tracks: A3 to A5)
Vocals – Joan Baez
Written-By – Joan Baez (tracks: A1, A4, B4, B5)
Notes
The Quad CD-4 Release was mastered by Darrell Johnson at JVC Cutting Center (see matrix etching).
Barcode and Other Identifiers
Matrix / Runout (Side One): QU 5454791 -REPL Δ 20169 (2) DWJ
Matrix / Runout: QU 5454792 -REPL Δ 20169-X (2) DWJ
Vinyl | LP Cover (1:1) | FLAC + cue | 24bit/96kHz | 900mb
Mastered At JVC Cutting Center By (Quad Mastering) Darrell Johnson
Label: A&M Records/QU-54527 | Released: 1975 | Genre: Country-Folk
A1 Diamonds & Rust
A2 Fountain Of Sorrow
A3 Never Dreamed You'd Leave In Summer
A4 Children And All That Jazz
A5 Simple Twist Of Fate
-
B1 Blue Sky
B2 Hello In There
B3 Jesse
B4 Winds Of The Old Days
B5 Dida
B6 I Dream Of Jeannie / Dannie Boy
Mastered At – JVC Cutting Center
Credits
Acoustic Guitar – Joan Baez (tracks: A1, A5, B2 to B5)
Arranged By – Joan Baez (tracks: A3 to A5), Larry Carlton (tracks: A3 to A5)
Bass – Reinie Press (tracks: A2, A3, A5, B2, B4), Wilton Felder (tracks: A1, A4, B1, B3)
Cello – Jesse Erlich* (tracks: A3-A5)
Electric Piano – Joe Sample (tracks: A1-A5, B4, B5)
Engineer [Assistant] – Ellis Sorkin
Executive Producer – Bernard Gelb
Guitar – Dean Parks (tracks: A1, A3 to B1, B4), Larry Carlton (tracks: A1 to B1, B3, B4)
Leader [Strings] – Sid Sharp* (tracks: A3-A5)
Mastered By – Mike Reese
Mastered By [Quad Mastering] – Darrell Johnson
Mixed By – Rick Ruggieri
Photography – Irene Harris
Piano – Larry Knechtel (tracks: A2, A3, A5, B4, B6)
Producer – David Kershenbaum, Joan Baez
Recorded By – Rick Ruggieri
Steel Guitar [Pedal] – Red Rhodes (tracks: A2, B1, B2, B4)
Viola – Isabell Daskoff* (tracks: A3 to A5)
Violin – Carl La Magna* (tracks: A3 to A5), James Getzoff (tracks: A3 to A5), Raymond Kelly* (tracks: A3 to A5), Robert Konrad (tracks: A3 to A5), Robert Ostrowsky (tracks: A3 to A5), Ronald Folsom (tracks: A3 to A5), Sidney Sharp (tracks: A3 to A5), Tibor Zelig (tracks: A3 to A5), William Hymanson (tracks: A3 to A5), William Kurasch (tracks: A3 to A5)
Vocals – Joan Baez
Written-By – Joan Baez (tracks: A1, A4, B4, B5)
Notes
The Quad CD-4 Release was mastered by Darrell Johnson at JVC Cutting Center (see matrix etching).
Barcode and Other Identifiers
Matrix / Runout (Side One): QU 5454791 -REPL Δ 20169 (2) DWJ
Matrix / Runout: QU 5454792 -REPL Δ 20169-X (2) DWJ
This Rip: 2016
• Cleaning: RCM Moth MkII Pro Vinyl
• Direct Drive Turntable: Direct Drive Turntable: Technics SL-1200MK2 Quartz New!
• Cartridge: SHURE M97xE With JICO SAS Stylus
• Amplifier: Marantz 2252
• ADC: E-MU 0404
• DeClick with iZotope RX4: Only Manual (Click per click)
• Vinyl Condition: EX
• This LP: From my personal collection
• LP Rip & Full Scan LP Cover: Fran Solo
• Password: WITHOUT PASSWORD
With the Vietnam War winding down, Joan Baez, who had devoted one side of her last album to her trip to Hanoi, delivered the kind of commercial album A&M Records must have wanted when it signed her three years earlier. But she did it on her own terms, putting together a session band of contemporary jazz veterans like Larry Carlton, Wilton Felder, and Joe Sample, and mixing a wise selection from the work of current singer-songwriters like Jackson Browne and John Prine with pop covers of Stevie Wonder and the Allman Brothers Band, and an unusually high complement of her own writing. A&M, no doubt recalling the success of her cover of the Band's "The Night They Drove Old Dixie Down," released her version of the Allmans' "Blue Sky" as a single, and it got halfway up the charts. But the real hit was the title track, a self-penned masterpiece on the singer's favorite subject, her relationship with Bob Dylan. Outdoing the current crop of confessional singer/songwriters at soul baring, Baez sang to Dylan, reminiscing about her '60s love affair with him intensely, affectionately, and unsentimentally. It was her finest moment as a songwriter and one of her finest performances, period, and when A&M finally released it on 45, it made the Top 40, propelling the album to gold status. But those who bought the disc for "Diamonds & Rust" also got to hear "Winds of the Old Days," in which Baez forgave Dylan for abandoning the protest movement, as well as the jazzy "Children and All That Jazz," a delightful song about motherhood, and the wordless vocals of "Dida," a duet with Joni Mitchell accompanied by Mitchell's backup band, Tom Scott and the L.A. Express. The cover songs were typically accomplished, making this the strongest album of Baez's post-folk career.Review by William Ruhlmann, allmusic.com
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