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Sounds From The Thievery Hi Fi Rar: A Tribute to Bossa Nova Pioneer Antonio Carlos Jobim by Thievery



Includes unlimited streaming via the free Bandcamp app, plus high-quality downloads of Symphonik, Treasures from the Temple, La Force de Melodie, The Temple of I & I, Saudade, Culture of Fear, It Takes a Thief., Radio Retaliation, and 5 more. , and , . Purchasable with gift card Buy Digital Discography $92 USD or more (20% OFF) Send as Gift Share / Embed 1. A Warning (Dub) 02:15 lyrics buy track Vocals by: Hutchy 2. 2001 Spliff Odyssey 05:07 buy track 3. Shaolin Satellite 06:24 buy track 4. Transcendance 04:07 buy track 5. Universal Highness 04:22 buy track 6. Incident at Gate 7 06:29 buy track 7. Scene at the Open Air Market 02:58 buy track 8. The Glass and Bead Game 06:12 buy track 9. Encounter in Bahia 04:00 buy track 10. The Foundation 05:39 buy track 11. Interlude 02:23 buy track 12. The Oscillator 04:15 buy track 13. Assault on Babylon 04:26 buy track 14. .38.45 (A Thievery Number) 05:07 buy track 15. One 04:52 buy track 16. Sun, Moon and Starts 04:31 buy track 17. Sleeper Car 03:07 buy track about When they met in the mid-1990s, Thievery Corporation's Eric Hilton and Rob Garza instantly bonded over a shared passion for bossa nova and dub. This chance meeting in Washington, DC set the duo on a journey that begins in 1996 with the release of their debut studio album, Sounds From the Thievery Hi-Fi. Originally released in Germany before appearing in the US on June 7, 1997, the duo's first album set the beat for a 20+ year dance through dub, bossa nova, trip-hop, electronica, acid jazz, lounge, and laid-back grooves.Sounds From the Thievery Hi-Fi is dedicated in memory of Bossa Nova pioneer Antonio Carlos Jobim. Guest vocalists include Pam Bricker and Bebel Gilberto.in 2006, Thievery Corporation celebrated the album's 10-year anniversary with a re-release including the additional track, "The Sleeper Car," as well as the reissue of vinyl and CD formats through their ESL Music imprint. More Info: thieverycorporation.com/thieveryhifi/ $(".tralbum-about").last().bcTruncate(TruncateProfile.get("tralbum_about"), "more", "less"); credits released June 7, 1997 license all rights reserved tags Tags 90s bossa nova chill dub electronic electronica trip hop acid jazz bossanova chillout downtempo lounge Washington Shopping cart total USD Check out about Thievery Corporation Washington, D.C.




Sounds From The Thievery Hi Fi Rar



Thievery Corporation released the following albums including Lebanese Blonde (1998), Abductions and Reconstructions (1999), DJ-Kicks (1999), The Mirror Conspiracy (2000), Shadows of Ourselves (2000), Sounds from the Verve Hi-Fi (2002), The Richest Man in Babylon (2002), The Outernational Sound (2004), Babylon Rewound (2004), The Cosmic Game (2005), Sounds from the Thievery Hi-Fi (2006), Versions (2006), Radio Retaliation (2008) and Radio Retaliation (2009).


Since the dawn of ripping CDs and downloading high resolution music people have been subjecting the files to audio analysis through applications such as Audacity and Adobe Audition. This type of analysis can be interesting when it reveals a high resolution album was simply upsampled from at 16 bit / 44.1 kHz version. A much more interesting, and more telling, indicator of sound quality can be seen when analyzing a track's waveform for dynamic range compression. Now that audiophiles are streaming lossless 16 bit / 44.1 kHz music from services such as TIDAL HIFI, Qobuz, and Deezer, the question of how to analyze this music becomes relevant. In the past we simply imported the file stored on our hard drive into one of the analysis applications and we had our answers. Because streaming services don't store music on our hard drives in the traditional sense we have to get a little creative. Thanks to software from Rogue Amoeba called Audio Hijack we can now capture bit perfect audio from nearly anything and save it on our hard drives for later analysis. What follows is a step-by-step guide to recording music using Audio Hijack.


Note: I'm not foolish enough to think people won't use this article for nefarious purposes such as recording lossless music from streaming services. However, please keep in mind I do not advocate being a jerk and ripping people off just to beef up your collection of music, or worse make the recorded music available to others. Recording a few tracks for analysis then deleting the tracks is reasonable to me and why I believe this article is aboveboard.


Click on the larger Application icon, that's now in the larger left window, to expose the Select an App drop-down box. Select the down arrow and select the application from which you'd like to record audio. I am recording a track from TIDAL HIFI for this demonstration.


Click and drag the Output Devices little icon from the right window over to the main larger window on the left. This should automatically put a connection line between the Application and Output Devices larger icons in the main window. Click on the Output Devices larger icon in the main window to expose the audio device selection area. I've selected Built-in Output: Internal Speakers for this demonstration, but any output can be selected. The reason an output is selected, even though we are recording to a file, is so we can hear the audio while recording.


Click and drag the small Recorder icon from the right window over to the main larger window on the left. In the image below you can see the connection line goes directly from the Application icon to the Recorder icon rather than flowing through the Output Device icon. By default the Recorder icon says MP3 256 kbps Stereo.


The app is a desktop airplay renderer and recorder. From what I understand, you choose the desktop app as an output device (but cannot monitor), from the airplay device list in iOS, for your airplay stream. What is created is ALAC files with Metadata and Album Art.


So does this allow you to rip from a streamer? If so, that's a dream come true. At the moment I buy a fair bit of heavy metal on bandcamp or direct from labels and its fab how you buy the LP and then get the flacs for free. That's what I want everywhere. No point owning cds. Would be lovely to buy vinyl and then get the digital copies this way


But, Chris - you can do this on the fly with MusicScope from Xivero AND not break with your EULA with any of the services. Why hijack the file when you can do instant analysis on the stream itself? So much more fun.


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