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Dec 1st 2015 shipping applies to physical packages
DIGITAL
MP3
MP3-320kbps
11 tracks, Total time 47:26 minutes of instrumental
music.
Mastered from limited/compressed master.
16bit 44.1 Khz
resolution.
Dynamic range DR9.
ZIP file sIze 94 Mo
BUY
7€
DIGITAL
HiRes
FLAC-24bit
Includes 29:23 of bonus
tracks from the Swan Song sessions.16 tracks total 76:37 minutes of instrumental
music.
Mastered from un-limited/un-compressed master.
24bit 48kHz resolution.
Dynamic range DR13.
Includes digital booklet, lead sheet music (6 songs). ZIP
file size 831 Mo
BUY
9€
PHYSICAL
CD
CD-16bit
Includes 29:23 of bonus
tracks from the Swan Song sessions.
16 tracks total 76:37 minutes of instrumental
music.
Mastered from un-limited/un-compressed master.
CD in Eco-wallet gatefold with 8 page booklet.
16bit 44.1 Khz resolution. Dynamic range DR13
BUY
16€
PHYSICAL
CD
+
DIGITAL
HiRes+MP3
CD-16bit
+
FLAC-24bit
+
MP3-320kbps
Includes 29:23 of bonus
tracks from the Swan Song sessions.
16 tracks total, 76:37 minutes of instrumental
music.
Mastered from un-limited/un-compressed master.
Includes MP3s, from limited/compressed master.
-CD in Eco-wallet gatefold with 8 page booklet.
16bit 44.1 Khz resolution. Dynamic range DR13.
-Download of whole 16 tracks, from the same
un-limited/un-compressed master. but in HiRes.
24bit 48kHz resolution.
Includes digital booklet, lead sheet music (6 songs)
BUY 18€
About audio resolution and
formats:
MP3
16bit/320kbps audio, is a
lossy format, mastered files are CD quality (16bit, 44.1 kHz)
and then compressed to make them smaller in file size. The
highest possible MP3 resolution (320 kbps) has been used, but
this is a "lossy" file format, meaning that some musical
information (sometimes difficult to perceive) is lost in the
encoding.
Master files are sourced from a normal "mastered" version of the
full album. Music has been slightly compressed and limited,
making it sound louder but reducing it's dynamic range. This is
the usual mastering you find in most commercial music releases,
but compression and limiting has been using very sparsely to
preserve this music's dynamics and sound.
CD (Compact
Disc)16bit/1411kbps audio,
FIles are sourced from an un-compressed/un-limited
master, CD is higher resolution than
mp3 (but smaller than FLAC). CD is a 16bit audio format, while this music
has been recorded in 24bit (so 33% of this resolution has been
compressed to create CD compatible audio)
FLAC
24bit/2304kbps audio, Flac is a
lossless audio format. Files are compressed but without losing
any musical transients or information. This encoding allows to
have smaller files than the original masters, but with exactly
the same audio information. Files are much bigger than MP3 (4x bigger)
but smaller than original master files (around half the size). Think of
a FLAC file as a kind of RAR or ZIP file. Most music players,
telephones and computers can decode and playback FLAC (a free codec).
Because FLAC can reproduce all of the musical information in
detail, High Resolution 24bit/48kHz master files are used for
encoding. No compression/limiting has been used in the mastering
process for these files, so all the dynamics are there. These
are the final tracks as we hear them in the mixing studio.
Trouvez SWAN SONG à Paris chez
"Tierra De
Gauchos" 58 RUE SAINT-PLACIDE 75006 PARIS
If you would like to be informed of this
release or other DD activities, please join his mailing list in the field
here or (simpler) do send an email to info(at)dedeland.com with MAILING LIST in
the subject field and your choice of language.
SWAN SONG by Daniel Diaz
REVIEW November 2015
DedeLand/Exodos October 2015
Multi-instrumentalist, composer, arranger, and producer, Daniel Diaz,
releases a new album, Swan Song, which is an instrumental gem that includes
sixteen tracks and a total running length of nearly seventy-eight minutes
long. The Argentinean-native brings together South American nuances, jazz
melodies, new age arrangements, and laid-back, cinematic compositions for a
truly world music recording that includes a range of musicians from the USA,
Cameroon, UK, Denmark, France, Australia, and Cuba. Daniel plays bass,
guitars, piano, vibes, hang, harmonium, percussion, accordina, charango,
ukulele, and synth.
“Romantica Cromatica” begins with a few twinkling piano notes, laid-back
swishy percussion, and accordina or bandoneon sounds. The jaunty mix
contains some emotive violin displays from Denmark’s Line Kruse. The light
percussion, strings, and piano notes signal a South American jazz medley
with neo-classical, roots, and folk wanderings. The guitar sounds are rather
acoustic and playful throughout. The violin amplifies the middle part of the
song, as a fluid sax melody ensues. The quaint and diverse melody is rather
romantic and evocative, but not too showy. The music showcases some
excitement near the end of the song with a flurry of musical activity, but
it is all very relevant and necessary.
“Os Historicos” opens with a swishy percussion melody and Spanish-tinged
guitar set-up with clarinet sounds and a rousing rhythm that is very breezy
and South American in tone. The short tune is more of an interlude, but it
is very adventurous with a host of acoustic and electric instruments leading
the way. The music is very upbeat without any missteps. It is almost
Brazilian in tone with historical elements, too.
“Palermo” opens with a few cymbal clashes, eerie pings, blips, and horn
sounds that seem rather incongruous. However, the brass sounds, tapping
percussion, clanging cymbals, fluid vibes, and light melodies bring together
a variety of elements that seem to work well together. The sub-nine-minute
track is full of interesting sounds and instruments that culminate into a
work of neo-jazz, avant-garde, and world fusion music. The sax blurts break
up the music in experimental ways that do not detract too much from the rest
of the instruments. In short, there is a lot of music in the nine-minutes.
“Neo Zamba (Fin De Siecle)” begins with a gritty guitar intro, sporadic
percussion, breezy clarinet sounds, and rootsy sounds that weave in and out
of various jazz idioms. The Fender Rhodes creates a funky, experimental, and
classic sound with a dash of South American nostalgia that encompasses
light, sauntering beats and instrumental arrangements that are very
enjoyable.
“Harold’s Lake” opens with a few pensive piano notes and background washes
with violin accents. The emotive work is rather new age in delivery, but the
jazzy elements are still there. The diverse and almost frenzied string
arrangements early in the song appear later in the song, too. The earthy
violin sounds are not as refined as in classical music, which may be a
deterrent for some. At any rate, fans of diverse jazz and roots music will
appreciate Daniel’s organic treatment here.
Daniel Diaz’ latest release, Swan Song, may be a cliché, but that is where
the fun begins. Throughout the sixteen tracks, Daniel brings out rousing
rhythms, evocative melodies, a slew of instruments and guests, and a frolic
through jazz, neo-classical, roots, new age, and avant-garde music. The
result is a fusion of sorts that mainly experiments with the instrumental
side of things with a few radio voices added in one track. Listeners should
expect an album of surprises, as this is not a traditional album, vocal
album, or rock album. It is an almost indescribable melding of South
American and Mayan elements for today’s listeners.
Review by Matthew Forss (November 2015)
Rating: 5 stars (out of 5) *****
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"La luz discurre
inventando sucios colores
Y con algún remordimiento
De mi complicidad en el resurgimiento del día
Solicito mi casa,
Atónita y glacial en la luz blanca,
Mientras un pájaro detiene el silencio
Y la noche gastada
Se ha quedado en los ojos de los ciegos.."
J.L.B.