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Todd Snider - Songs For The Daily Planet

Posted By: Toxxy
Todd Snider - Songs For The Daily Planet

Todd Snider - Songs For The Daily Planet
Year & Label: 1994 MCA Records | CD#: MCD 11067 | 5% WinRAR Recovery
Wave image | Mp3 VBR-0 (tracks) | Artwork (JPG, 400 dpi) | File-hosts: HF, FF & RS
Alt-Country/Rock | WAVE: 425 MB (558 MB extracted!) | Mp3: 104 MB | Artwork: 17 MB

EAC Secure-rip with LOG+CUE+COVERS | Source: My CD-collection

Todd Snider - Songs For The Daily Planet


Todd Snider brings a hip sensibility to his rocking brand of country music. The style is strictly alternative country, melding the best of rockabilly, folk, rhythm & blues and modern rock, with a "deep country" musical groove.

***

Todd is a first-rate songwriter, ready to join the league of cutting-edge country boys like Lyle Lovett, John Hiatt and Steve Earle. He also exhibits qualities of rough-edged heartland crooners like John Mellencamp ("This Land Is Our Land"). Snider's lyrics are insightful, clever and often humorous, and his performance is energetic, emotional and wide-ranging.


It's ironic that Todd Snider's first radio exposure would come from a song included on his debut as an afterthought and contained as a "hidden" track. "Talking Seattle Grunge-Rock Blues" is reminiscent of early Dylan, hilarious in its satire as a clever dose of good-natured pokes at the industry hype surrounding the Seattle music scene (including references to Eddie Vedder and Nirvana). Although he is a very talented songwriter with a keen wit, at times Snider is just a little too consciously contrived for his own good, threatening to reduce his art to novelty. For instance, the extremely countrified "My Generation, Pt. 2" and the Mellencamp-esque "Alright Guy" are very humorous observations, but dangerously close to sounding trite, especially when compared to the seriousness of the chilling "You Think You Know Somebody," which deals with the ramifications of child abuse. A rootsy record that combines country and folk elements with a genuine rock & roll sensibility, Songs for the Daily Planet also features some cutting fretwork by one of Nashville's finest young guitarists, Eddy Shaver, the son of country outlaw Billy Joe Shaver, one of Snider's heroes. Overall a fine introduction to a remarkable voice. [Jack Leaver, All Music Guide]


Todd Snider official homepage
Todd Snider at Wikipedia
Todd Snider at MySpace


Personnel:

Todd Snider (vocals, acoustic guitar, harmonica); Peter Hyrka (acoustic guitar, mandolin, violin, accordion); Eddy Shaver, Doug Lancio (guitar); Mark "Hoot" Marchetti (vibraphone); Edgar Meyer (acoustic bass); Joe Mariencheck (bass, background vocals); Joe McLeary (drums); Terry McMillan (percussion); Tom Littlefield, Harry Stinson (background vocals); Michael Utley, Ashley Cleveland, Marshall Chapman.

Album recorded at Soundstage Studios, Nashville, Tennessee. Includes liner notes by Todd Snider.


Track List:

01. My Generation (Part 2)
02. Easy Money
03. That Was Me
04. This Land Is Our Land
05. Alright Guy
06. I Spoke As A Child
07. Turn It Up
08. Trouble
09. Alot More
10. You Think You Know Somebody
11. Somebody's Coming
12. Joe's Blues

Exact Audio Copy V0.99 prebeta 5 from 4. May 2009

EAC extraction logfile from 30. December 2009, 16:51

Todd Snider / Songs For The Daily Planet

Used drive : Optiarc DVD RW AD-7240S Adapter: 0 ID: 4

Read mode : Secure
Utilize accurate stream : Yes
Defeat audio cache : Yes
Make use of C2 pointers : No

Read offset correction : 48
Overread into Lead-In and Lead-Out : No
Fill up missing offset samples with silence : Yes
Delete leading and trailing silent blocks : No
Null samples used in CRC calculations : Yes
Used interface : Native Win32 interface for Win NT & 2000

Used output format : Internal WAV Routines
Sample format : 44.100 Hz; 16 Bit; Stereo


TOC of the extracted CD

Track | Start | Length | Start sector | End sector
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1 | 0:00.32 | 3:09.73 | 32 | 14279
2 | 3:10.30 | 5:16.72 | 14280 | 38051
3 | 8:27.27 | 3:15.45 | 38052 | 52721
4 | 11:42.72 | 4:31.25 | 52722 | 73071
5 | 16:14.22 | 4:30.28 | 73072 | 93349
6 | 20:44.50 | 4:16.45 | 93350 | 112594
7 | 25:01.20 | 4:31.22 | 112595 | 132941
8 | 29:32.42 | 3:42.60 | 132942 | 149651
9 | 33:15.27 | 4:52.73 | 149652 | 171624
10 | 38:08.25 | 4:26.55 | 171625 | 191629
11 | 42:35.05 | 4:05.20 | 191630 | 210024
12 | 46:40.25 | 8:41.27 | 210025 | 249126


Range status and errors

Selected range

Filename E:\Todd Snider - Songs For The Daily Planet.wav

Peak level 100.0 %
Range quality 100.0 %
Test CRC C68E66B5
Copy CRC C68E66B5
Copy OK

No errors occurred


AccurateRip summary

Track 1 accurately ripped (confidence 5) [EE26054F]
Track 2 accurately ripped (confidence 5) [5BA5CDD1]
Track 3 accurately ripped (confidence 6) [50AFB437]
Track 4 accurately ripped (confidence 6) [A7EB8F50]
Track 5 accurately ripped (confidence 6) [5B656EC5]
Track 6 accurately ripped (confidence 6) [E8AABB2D]
Track 7 accurately ripped (confidence 5) [A581D51F]
Track 8 accurately ripped (confidence 6) [D67A62DC]
Track 9 accurately ripped (confidence 6) [EB0CCA96]
Track 10 accurately ripped (confidence 6) [E138DDB3]
Track 11 accurately ripped (confidence 6) [08BA2CEA]
Track 12 accurately ripped (confidence 5) [68AC74D2]

All tracks accurately ripped

End of status report



Turn it UP!

Alt country madman Todd Snider has been strangely ignored by the musical mainstream. I first heard of him when the excellent, biting `Alright Guy' got some alternative airplay. I took me just one listen to know that Snider was for me. Of course, `Alright Guy' is positively gushy compared the venomous minor hit `Talking Seattle Grunge-Rock Blues' a Dylanesque send up of Grunge-mania. His more traditionally country tune was even covered by the more traditionally country Mark Chesnutt. Needless to say, Snider has songwriting chops comparable to guys like Nick Lowe, Bruce Springsteen and Elvis Costello. Genrewise he is in the alt country zone populated by Joe Buck, Tommy Womack and Webb Wilder. For pathos, check out his mournful `That Was Me' or the stirring, affecting `You Think You Know Somebody'. For pulse pounding, uplifting tunes try `A Whole Lot More' or `Somebody's Coming'. It's hard to overrate Snide; every track here is a memorable sing along gem. Pity that witty roots rockers are so out of fashion. [Amazon user]


This CD is amazing. In my opinion Todd Snider is truly the most gifted singer/songwriter of the nineties. Who else compares? A great performer/artist in the vein of Jimmy Buffett, Jerry Jeff Walker and John Prine. If you don't own this CD then you're missing a great piece of music. And what about those Nervous Wrecks? GREAT band! If you ever get the chance to see Todd live (especially solo/acoustic) don't pass it up. I guarantee you won't be dissapointed. Todd's a born entertainer! [Amazon user]




Todd Snider - Songs For The Daily Planet




The album is uploaded to Hotfile, Filefactory and Rapidshare. Formats are: WAVE and Mp3 VBR-0 (tracks). You can of course also get the complete artwork!

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