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Janis Joplin - Pearl Sessions (2012)

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Janis Joplin - Pearl Sessions (1971)

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Disc: 1
1. Move Over
2. Cry Baby
3. A Woman Left Lonely
4. Half Moon
5. Buried Alive In The Blues
6. My Baby
7. Me And Bobby McGee
8. Mercedes Benz
9. Trust Me
10. Get It While You Can
11. Me And Bobby McGee (Mono Single)
12. Half Moon (Mono Single)
13. Cry Baby (Mono Single
14. Get It While You Can (Mono Single)
15. Move Over (Single Version)
16. A Woman Left Lonely (Mono Single)

Disc 2
1. Overheard In The Studio...
2. Get It While You Can (Take 3)
3. Overheard In The Studio...
4. Get It While You Can (Take 5)
5. Overheard In The Studio...
6. Move Over (Take 6)
7. Move Over (Take 13)
8. Move Over (Take 17)
9. Me And Bobby McGee (Demo Version)
10. Me And Bobby McGee (Take 5 - Alternate)
11. Cry Baby (Alternate Version)
12. A Woman Left Lonely (Alternate Vocal)
13. Overheard In The Studio...
14. My Baby (Alternate Take)
15. Overheard In The Studio...
16. Get It While You Can (Take 3)
17. My Baby (Alternate Version)
18. Pearl (Instrumental)
19. Tell Mama (Live Version)
20. Half Moon (Live From "The Dick Cavett Show")

Personnel: 
Janis Joplin (vocals); 
John Till (guitar); 
Richard Bell (piano); 
Ken Pearson (organ); 
Clark Pierson (drums); 
Bobbie Hall (conga drum, bongos); 
Sandra Crouch (tambourine).

 

Not to state the obvious, but the reality is that The Pearl Sessions by Janis Joplin is primarily for completists and musical historians. That's fine; given its design and contents it appears it was meant to be. The two-disc package includes the original album and mono 45 masters of six of its tracks -- including "Me & Bobby McGee," "Move Over," and "Get It While You Can." These are interesting, but they don't hold a candle to the stereo album mixes. It's the second disc that holds the fan treasures. The studio banter by Joplin, producer Paul A Rothchild, and the Full-Tilt Boogie Band is priceless. It offers proof of Joplin's exacting standards when it came to getting across the maximum emotional impact of a song, as well as her vulnerability -- asking for guidance from Rothchild as to how to approach a particular take (he hands control right back to her). There is also plenty of humor, including comments about Richard Nixon and an unnamed rock star that Joplin claims she wouldn't bed because he's boring and a nerd. The genuine camaraderie between her, her band, and her producer offers ample evidence that these sessions were as much fun as they were work. Musically, there are multiple alternate takes of some album cuts. Sometimes they rival or even surpass versions that ended up on the final product: the fifth take of "Get It While You Can" (there are three here) and the demo of "Me & Bobby McGee," where she is accompanied only by an acoustic guitar. There are three takes in a row of "Move Over." The alternate of "Cry Baby," while inferior to the album take, reveals the song's deep emotional attraction for Joplin. Alternate takes of "Cry Baby" and "My Baby" are compelling. In addition, there is an instrumental version of "Pearl" (that could have been left off as it reveals nothing and is wholly uninteresting), a live version of "Tell Mama," with a breakneck tempo that makes one wonder why it was chosen, and a performance of "Half Moon," from the Dick Cavett Show in 1970. Add to this Rothchild's own remembrances from and observations about these sessions, Holly George-Warren's excellent liner notes, some rare photographs, and hardcore Joplin fans and historians have an excellent retrospective package which, while illuminating the process of the creation of Pearl, doesn't replace it in the canon. ---Thom Jurek, AllMusic Rewiew

 

"The Pearl Session" to dwupłytowy zbiór nigdy wcześniej nie wydanych nagrań studyjnych, koncertowych i innych rarytasów dokumentujących album będący arcydziełem stworzonym przez Janis Joplin. W 1971 roku, jej pośmiertnie wydany krążek "Pearl" zdobył pierwsze miejsca list przebojów, przynosząc ponadczasowy przebój "Me and Bobby McGee". Po raz pierwszy w jednym wydawnictwie znalazły się oryginalne wersje mono utworów Janis, jak również intrygujące, nowo odnalezione archiwalne wersje alternatywne piosenek pochodzących z sesji do albumu "Pearl". Na odnalezionych taśmach znajdują się między innymi zapisy Janis w studio żartującej z producentem Paulem Rothchildem (The Doors). --- muzyka.onet.pl

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