# xmcd
#
# Track frame offsets:
#	150
#	16937
#	34832
#	50557
#	68092
#	79142
#	96055
#	116405
#	124495
#	139330
#	154937
#	160275
#	181780
#	201817
#	224205
#	242130
#
# Disc length: 3495 seconds
#
# Revision: 2
# Processed by: cddbd v1.5.1PL2 Copyright (c) Steve Scherf et al.
# Submitted via: MusicManager 7.3.0.0 
#
DISCID=e80da510
DTITLE=Joplin,Janis / Pearl (Legacy Edition) - Disc 1 of 2
DYEAR=1971
DGENRE=Rock
TTITLE0=Move Over
TTITLE1=Cry Baby
TTITLE2=A Woman Left Lonely
TTITLE3=Half Moon
TTITLE4=Buried Alive In The Blues
TTITLE5=My Baby
TTITLE6=Me And Bobby McGee
TTITLE7=Mercedes Benz
TTITLE8=Trust Me
TTITLE9=Get It While You Can
TTITLE10=Happy Birthday, John (Happy Trails) - (Bonus Track)
TTITLE11=Me And Bobby McGee (Demo Version)
TTITLE12=Move Over (Previously Unissued Alternate Version)
TTITLE13=Cry Baby (Previously Unissued Alternate Version)
TTITLE14=My Baby (Previously Unissued Alternate Version)
TTITLE15=Pearl (Previously Unissued Instrumental)
EXTD=Pearl (Legacy Edition) - Disc 1 of 2\n2005 Columbia/Legacy\n\nThis compilation released \nOriginally Released February 1971\nOriginal CD Edition Released \nRemastered + Expanded CD Edition Released \n\nAMG EXPERT REVIEW: Joplin's second masterpiece 
EXTD=after Cheap Thrills), Pearl was designed as a showcase for her powerhouse vocals, stripping down the arrangements that had often previouslycluttered her music or threatened to drown her out. Thanks also to a more consistent set of songs, the results
EXTD=are magnificent--given room to breathe, Joplin's trademark rasp conveys an aching, desperate passion on funked-up, bluesy rockers, ballads both dramatic and tender, and her signature song, the posthumous number one hit "Me and Bobby McGee." The unfi
EXTD=ished "Buried Alive In the Blues" features no Joplin vocals--she was scheduled to record themon the day after she was found dead. Its incompleteness mirrors Joplin's career; Pearl's power leaves the listener to wonder whatelse Joplin could have acco
EXTD=plished, but few artists could ask for a better final statement. The 1999 CD reissue adds four previously unreleased live July 1970 recordings: "Tell Mama, " "Little Girl Blue, " "Try, " and "Cry Baby." -- Steve Huey, All Music Guide\n\nRolling Ston
EXTD= (2/18/71, p.48) - "...The voice cut off was clearly in its prime...there is every indication that Janis was working toward a new maturity and confidence....With PEARL it's a case of a conscious attempt to make something of Janis' talent; simply hav
EXTD=ng it won't do anymore..." \n\nQ Magazine (11/99, p.156)- 4 stars out of 5 - "...her most fully formed [album]. Joplin was working with excellent musicians who raised her game accordingly....her voice has a new control and fluidity..." \n\nRolling S
EXTD=one (9/30/99, p.90) - 4.5 stars out of 5 - "...a poignancy that is as undeniable now as it was upon its posthumous release....'Me and Bobby McGee' is her greatest studio recording....frightening beauty..." \n\nProducer: Paul A. Rothchild. \n\nRecord
EXTD=d on September 4, 5 & 25, 1970. Originally released on Columbia (9700). Includes liner notes by John Bryne Cook. \n\nPEARL is a bluesy, organ-drenched answer to the flower-child sound of the free-and-easy 60's. As a backing band, Full Tilt Boogie re
EXTD=laces some of Big Brother's looseness with polish and control, yet they groove hard with the fire that Janis demands. Guitarist John Till's riffs, chords and solos are exciting and tightly executed. "A Woman Left Lonely" and Bobby Womack's "Trust Me
EXTD= are rain-on-the-windows ballads that glow with Janis' gritty vocal brilliance, while "Move Over" and "Half Moon" are surely some of her funkiest cuts ever. This is an excellent, if somewhat overlooked part of Joplin's discography.
EXTT0=
EXTT1=
EXTT2=
EXTT3=
EXTT4=
EXTT5=
EXTT6=
EXTT7=
EXTT8=
EXTT9=
EXTT10=
EXTT11=
EXTT12=
EXTT13=
EXTT14=
EXTT15=
PLAYORDER=
