Bob Marley and The Wailers - Burnin'
(Ultra Tape)
Label: |
Analogue Productions |
Genre: |
Reggae |
Product No.: |
RRAP 0042
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Availability: |
Pre Order
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Category: |
1/4 Inch - 15 IPS Tape |
Arrival Date To Be Announced |
Also available on:
• 180 Gram Vinyl Record
Half-Speed Master
• Vinyl Record
Original Jamaican Version, Limited Numbered Edition
• UHQR Vinyl Record
33 RPM 180 Gram LP on Clarity Vinyl
• Preowned Vinyl Record
2007 Japanese pressing Boston Collection
• UHQR Vinyl Record
45 RPM 180 Gram Double LP on Clarity Vinyl
• Hybrid Stereo SACD
• 180 Gram Vinyl Record
The Wailers — Burnin'
Analogue Productions Ultra Tape reel-to-reel reissue!
15 ips, ¼-inch 2-track (½ track) analog tape copy
Sourced from original master tapes
Transferred using ATR-modified Ampex Tape Machine with flux magnetic heads
Custom slipcase cover — highest quality tape reissue!
Burnin' is the Wailers' sixth album, released in October 1973. All three members of the band — Bob Marley, Peter Tosh, and Bunny Wailer (the last before Tosh and Bunny departed for solo careers and the band became known as Bob Marley & The Wailers) — wrote for, recorded and produced the album in Jamaica. Burnin' promoted the Wailers into international fame, led by the classic hits "I Shot The Sheriff" (a subsequent U.S. No. 1 for Eric Clapton) and the enduring anthem of people power, adopted by civil rights activists worldwide "Get Up, Stand Up."
Burnin' was, to some degree, a summary of the Wailers' progress to this point. An album full of revolutionary fire and fervor, it was also the last, heroic distillation of a lineup that had taken the teenaged Wailer, Tosh, and Marley on a journey from the streets of Trenchtown to the brink of global stardom.
Although a "new" act in Britain and America, the Wailers had been singing and recording together since 1963, and could boast a plentiful catalog of songs which were largely unknown outside Jamaica. Several of the tracks on Burnin' were re-recordings of songs that had been released before. "Put It On," a gentle, spiritual groove with the more emollient chant of "Lord I Thank You," had been released as a single on the Studio One label in Jamaica in 1965, when it was one of the first songs to coin the word "toasting" to refer to the lyrical style of chanting by the dancehall DJs. Likewise "Duppy Conqueror" and "Small Axe" were both new recordings of songs that were old favorites in the Wailers' story.
From Burnin' forward it would be Bob Marley who was very much the man in charge.
Here, with our Ultra Tape 15 ips 1/4-inch analog tape edition, Burnin' sounds its purest and most vital. The tape playback brings crystal clear fidelity to the highest and lowest freqency ranges.
Reel 1 | 1. Get Up, Stand Up | 2. Hallelujah Time | 3. I Shot The Sheriff | 4. Burnin’ And Lootin’ | 5. Put It On | Reel 2 |
1. Small Axe | 2. Pass It On | 3. Duppy Conqueror | 4. One Foundation | 5. Rasta Man Chant |
View other items by Bob Marley and The Wailers |
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