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Lincoln Mayorga & Amanda McBroom - Growing Up in Hollywood Town (1980) 24-Bit/192-kHz Vinyl Rip

Posted By: nettz
Lincoln Mayorga & Amanda McBroom - Growing Up in Hollywood Town (1980) 24-Bit/192-kHz Vinyl Rip

Lincoln Mayorga & Amanda McBroom - Growing Up in Hollywood Town
Vinyl Rip in 24-Bit/192-kHz | FLAC tracks | no cue | no log | Covers | Rapidshare + FileFactory | 0.98 GB
1980 | Genre: Jazz | Label: Sheffield Lab | LAB-13 | Direct-to-Disc recording, Limited Edition

Lincoln Mayorga & Amanda McBroom - Growing Up in Hollywood Town (1980) 24-Bit/192-kHz Vinyl Rip

The Sheffield Lab recording Growing up in Hollywood Town with Amanda McBroom on vocals and Lincoln Mayorga on piano is billed as a "large scale pop" recording. It was recorded in the Sheffield Lab Studios at the MGM sound stage in Culver City, California, in 1980, with a small orchestra containing instruments usually associated with classical and jazz. I was in this same studio three years later for the Sheffield Lab recording of a jazz session entitled The Name is Macowicz, and can attest to the very high acoustical quality of this studio.
My favorite cuts on Growing up in Hollywood Town are the three pieces that were both written and performed by Amanda McBroom. "Amanda" is beautiful and haunting. "The Portrait" is evocative and sad. And "The Rose," written for the film of the same name, garnered a Golden Globe Award for Amanda McBroom. She also does a great job with "Dusk." The other five cuts are primarily instrumental, and include two pieces penned by Lincoln Mayorga. I love Amanda's cuts, while the rest are more a matter of taste (you may translate that as "Audiophile" with a capital "A").
{ Dave Glackin - enjoythemusic.com }


Born 28 March 1937, Los Angeles, California
Nowadays, Lincoln Mayorga is best known as a highly regarded classical concert pianist who has performed all over the world. However, he has also made some important contributions to popular music, most notably in the period 1958-1963. Trained as a classical pianist, Mayorga hooked up with the vocal group the Four Preps (Bruce Belland, Ed Cobb, Marvin Inabnett and Glen Larson) as their arranger and accompanist. This group was signed to Capitol in 1956 and had its first big hit in early 1958 with "26 Miles" (# 2), soon followed by "Big Man" (# 3). The latter featured powerful piano chords, vital to the success of the record. Only recently was it revealed (by Todd Everett) that there are two piano players on this disc to establish that big sound. Mayorga was joined by none other than Dudley Brooks, who plays piano on "Jailhouse Rock" and many other Elvis Presley recordings.
Mayorga was such an important contributor to the recordings and live shows of the Four Preps that he was called "the Fifth Prep". While still with the group, he branched out into the field of instrumental rock 'n' roll, a popular genre during the 1958-64 period. Together with his friend Ed Cobb of the Four Preps, Mayorga created the Piltdown Men, a group of L.A. studio musicians whose name was derived from the Piltdown Man archaeological hoax in 1912 (Piltdown is a village in East Sussex, England). The Piltdown Men featured a "dirty" sax sound, from the horns of Scott Gordon and Jackie Kelso. Mayorga himself played piano on the Piltdown sessions, which he also arranged. The group was more successful in the UK, where their first three singles all made the Top 20, than in their native country where only "Brontosauris Stomp" (in the UK this was the B-side of "McDonald's Cave") made any impact (# 75). In an interesting diversion, Mayorga and Cobb teamed up with Al Garcia, Fred Mendoza, Vince Bumatay and Art Rodriguez as the Link-Eddy Combo. This outfit hit the R&B charts (# 28) in May 1961 with the instrumental "Big Mr. C", one of the first 45s to be released on Frank Sinatra's newly formed Reprise label (Reprise 20002). The second Link-Eddy single, "Cat's Pajamas"/ "Katrina" is pleasant enough, but more poppy (Reprise 20008) Mayorga was not involved with the Piltdown Men's final Capitol single, "Tequila Bossa Nova"/"Night Surfin'" (1962). By this time, Ed Cobb and he had found a new protégé in the person of Ketty Lester (born Revoyda Frierson, 1934). Her first record, "Love Letters", co-produced by Cobb and Mayorga, went to # 5 in the US and # 4 in the UK. Mayorga took care of the arrangement and the very distinctive piano accompaniment. In 1987, Alison Moyet had a # 4 hit in Britain with "Love Letters" in a version that copied Mayorga's arrangement note for note.
After Ketty Lester's success dwindled, Mayorga became a busy session pianist in Los Angeles. In 1966, he went to work for Walt Disney Studios and was staff pianist for 15 years. At Disney, he performed on the soundtracks of several animated classics. He has also contributed to the soundtracks of many movies, like "Chinatown", "The Rose", "Ragtime", The Way We Were" and "Pete's Dragon" and TV series like "Bonanza", "Dallas", "Little House On the Prairie" and "Highway To Heaven".

{ by Stuart Colman }

Musicians:
Vocal: Amanda McBroom
Violins: Harry Bluestone, Arnold Belnick, David Frisina, Endre Granat, Connie Kupka, Nathan Ross, Joseph Stepansky, Robert Sushel, Dorothy Wade
Violas: Alan Harshman, Myer Bello, Louis Kievman
Cellos: Gloria Strassner, Robert Adcock, Selene Hurford
Piano: Lincoln Mayorga
Guitar: Mike Anthony
Bass: Gary Walters
Drums: Deane Hagen
Harmonica: Tommy Morgan
Percussion: Gary Coleman
Saxophone: Pete Christlieb
Clarinet: Jim Kanter

Track Listing:

A1. The Portrait
A2. Peter The Hermit
A3. The Rose
A4. You've Lost That Lovin' Feelin'
A5. Dusk
B1. Hooray For Hollywood / Growing Up In Hollywood Town
B2. Love Letters
B3. Amanda
B4. Silent Lady


Turntable: Roksan Radius III
Tonearm: Audioquest PT-9
Cartridge: Ortofon X5-MC (Moving Coil)
Cable: Van den Hul phono cable
Pre-amplifier: Counterpoint SA 5.1 (vacuum tube Sovtek 6922)
Interconnect: balanced, Belden 1813A cable with Neutrik XLR connectors
Analog to Digital Converter: EMU 1212M (configured for balanced input +4dBu, 0 dB Gain)
Capture software: Goldwave 5.22
Post processing: none. ( No click/pop filter ever applied. No digital volume adjustment)
Ripping policy: I always rip good condition vinyl so that the amount of click/pop will be at minimum without distracting listening enjoyment



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