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Bob Dylan Love And Theft 2LP 45rpm 180 Gram Vinyl Limited Edition Mobile Fidelity MFSL RTI 2020 USA

Bob Dylan Love And Theft 2LP 45rpm 180 Gram Vinyl Limited Edition Mobile Fidelity MFSL RTI 2020 USA Maximize
Artist: Bob Dylan
Title: Love And Theft
Catalog Number: MFSL 2-489
Label: Columbia
Reissued by: Mobile Fidelity Sound Lab
Barcode: 821797248914
Original release year: 2001
Reissue year: 2020
Number of discs: 1
Revolutions per minute: 45 rpm
Disc size: 12"
Vinyl Weight Grade: 180gr
Limited Edition: Yes
Numbered Edition: Yes
Total Item Weight: 777gr
Pressing country: USA
For Market Release in: USA
Collection: MFSL Original Master Recording
Note: Never eligible for any further discounts
Vinyl Gourmet Club: No


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Unit Price: 80,40 €

Reference: MF452489GF

Availability: Out of stock




 

Bob Dylan's Love And Theft is a visionary train ride through the vast American landscape and all its hills, valleys, mountains, river towns, and urban and rural settlements. As they burrow into villages and barrel across trestle bridges, the 2001 record's songs introduce us to outlaws, outliers, gamblers, brawlers, tricksters, bootleggers, and scoundrels.

 

 

Rolling Stone 500 Greatest Albums of All Time Rated 385/500

  • Strictly Limited Edition (3000 units)
  • Numbered Edition
  • 2LP 180 Gram 45rpm High Definition Vinyl pressed at RTI
  • Half-Speed mastering on MFSL Gain 2 Ultra Analog System
  • Mastered by Mobile Fidelity Sound Lab
  • Mastered by Krieg Wunderlich and Shawn R. Britton
  • Special Static Free & Dust Free Inner Sleeves
  • Deluxe Gatefold Cover

 

 

A Visionary Survey of American Music and Its Vast Landscapes: Bob Dylan's Love and Theft Tours Swing, Blues, Country, Folk, and Vaudeville En Route to Becoming a Roots-Rock Landmark.


Mastered from the Original Master Tapes and Strictly Limited to 3,000 Numbered Copies: Mobile Fidelity reissue Features You-Are-There Immediacy, Lifelike Naturalism, Stunning Presence!


Bob Dylan's Love and Theft is a visionary train ride through the vast American landscape and all its hills, valleys, mountains, river towns, and urban and rural settlements. As they burrow into villages and barrel across trestle bridges, the 2001 record's songs introduce us to outlaws, outliers, gamblers, brawlers, tricksters, bootleggers, and scoundrels. It is, in effect, a commanding survey of and plunge into American music. Named the best album of the year by Rolling Stone and the Village Voice's Pazz & Jop Critics Poll, anointed the second-best album of the decade by Newsweek, and later declared the 385th Greatest Album of All Time by Rolling Stone, Love and Theft remains the Nobel Laureate's finest effort since 1975's Blood on the Tracks – and an extension of the jesting, imagery, and free-form looseness present on his seminal 1960s works. Now, it possess knock-out sound.


Mastered from the original master tapes, pressed at RTI on dead-quiet vinyl, and limited to 3,000 numbered copies, Mobile Fidelity's 180g 45RPM 2LP set reveals the you-are-there immediacy of Dylan's production and the colorful textures inherent to every passage. Experienced on this audiophile version given extra groove space that permits the extraction of more information, the songs possess a sense of swing and naturalism so sure-footed that they seem to float, with Dylan and his crack ensemble setting up as a live band taking down the house in a deep-in-the-woods Louisiana shotgun shack. Prized aural traits such as presence, imaging, separation, and soundstaging depth don't come better. This is the very definition of sonic chemistry.


Indeed, Dylan's virtuosic cast that rides in akin to a pack of Old West horsemen – Texas guitar whiz Charlie Sexton, drummer David Kemper, bassist Tony Garnier, multi-instrumentalist Larry Campbell, and keyboardist Augie Meyers – emerges with detailing, scaling, and tonality so realistic, it's scary. Various imperfections – stray notes, errant chords that Dylan valued to suit the overall atmosphere – further become enmeshed with the entire tapestry. The first time the album has been available in the 45RPM format, Mobile Fidelity's numbered-edition analog reissue brings you as close to the music as possible. And Love and Theft is one album for which you should settle for nothing less.


Drawing from roots-based styles that always inspired him – including blues, vaudeville, country, jazz, swing, and folk – Dylan turns in a masterwork that references the past without reverentially giving into it. Hence, each composition is vital, contemporary, timeless, and, ultimately, classic. As esteemed critic Greg Kot observed in his salient review of the Grammy-winning effort for the Chicago Tribune: "This is a tour of American music – jump blues, slow blues, rockabilly, Tin Pan Alley ballads, country swing – that evokes the sprawl, fatalism and subversive humor of Dylan's sacred text, Harry Smith's Anthology of American Folk Music, the pre-rock voicings of Hank Williams, Charley Patton and Johnny Ray, among others, and the ultra-dry humor of Groucho Marx."


Similarly, the scope of the record – along with its mysteries, riddles, and fantasies – wasn't lost on Rolling Stone scribe Rob Sheffield, who mused: "The music evokes an America of masquerade and striptease, a world of seedy old-time gin palaces, fast cash, poison whiskey, guilty strangers trying not to make eye contact, pickpockets slapping out-of-towners on the back. Love and Theft comes on as a musical autobiography that also sounds like a casual, almost accidental history of the country. Relaxed, magisterial, utterly confident in every musical idiom he touches, Dylan sings all twelve songs in a voice that sounds older than he is, a grizzled con man croaking biblical blues and Tin Pan Alley valentines out of the side of his mouth while keeping one eye on the exit."


Throughout, subtle changes in keys, tempos, and approaches adapt to the specific feel of each song – many of which were performed in the studio after Dylan played everyone vintage recordings by the likes of a Billie Holiday or Jimmy Rushing to establish the mood and manner he desired. The collective went from there. The resultant arrangements fit the lyrics to a proverbial "t." Consider the apocalyptic nature of the symbolic "High Water (for Charley Patton)," which doubles as a mini-history of the U.S.' racial strife as well as a metaphor for contemporary problems. Or the deceptive ease of the crooned ballad "Bye and Bye" that hides a clever kiss-off. Every song, every note matters. And whether via the swing of "Summer Days" (pregnant with a destructive ending), galloping death trip of "Tweedle Dee & Tweedle Dum," or desperate slide of "Honest with Me," Dylan and company turn each track into a powerful commentary on power, folklore, and myths.


"Things should start to get interesting right about now," Dylan sings in his trademark rasp on "Mississippi," the line doubling as an apt metaphor for every second of Love and Theft – one of the greatest records of our time.

 

 

Track Listing:

 

01. Tweedle Dee & Tweedle Dum
02. Mississippi
03. Summer Days
04. Bye and Bye
05. Lonesome Day Blues
06. Floater (Too Much to Ask)
07. High Water (For Charley Patton)
08. Moonlight
09. Honest with Me
10. Po' Boy
11. Cry a While
12. Sugar Baby

 

 

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