Preston Reed - [1982] Pointing Up - Flying Fish FF-244 (24-bit 96kHZvinyl rip)


Preston Reed - Pointing Up
Vinyl rip in 24-bit / 96kHZ [and redbook] FLAC + artwork
826 MB / 230 MB | magnet + mega | Jazz
Flying Fish - FF-244, first pressing, first play (sealed copy)

Pointing Up is the second release from Preston Reed.

"Widely thought of as the world's most gifted guitarist" - Total Guitar



I hate to make comparisons, but if you like Michael Hedges, Leo Kottke, John Fahey, you're probably going to dig this if you don't already know of Preston Reed...

Virtually self-taught in guitar (classical lessons were swiftly abandoned), Reed began playing seriously in his mid-teens and at the age of 17 supported beat poet Allen Ginsberg at the Smithsonian Institute. After becoming a professional musician, he worked in a variety of settings, gaining admiring audiences and respect from fellow musicians. He began recording in the late 70s, releasing a series of acoustic guitar albums on the Sky, Folkstudio and Flying Fish labels. Encouraged by country music artist Lyle Lovett, Reed secured a recording contract with MCA Records in the late 80s.
Resident in Scotland from the early 00s, Reed is an intriguing composer. Among his compositions is a suite for the Minneapolis Guitar Quartet and he has also written film music. Among musicians with whom he has worked is fellow guitarist Laurence Juber, with whom he has recorded in duo. In addition to performing, Reed also teaches, including leading classes at the National Guitar Summer Workshop. He formed Outer Bridge Records at the start of the new millennium, making his debut for the label with the same year’s Handwritten Notes. He has also released instructional videos on Homespun Tapes.
Although Reed began playing acoustic guitar in an orthodox manner, he gradually developed a distinctive technique in which he produces self-accompanying percussive motifs by rapping the guitar body with either hand. Similarly notable is Reed’s use of unusual tuning for the instrument. He has an astonishing technique and continues to draw praise from critics and fellow guitarists.
I am constantly shocked when I play hist stuff that I am listening to one guy playing, with NO OVERDUBS!



tracks:
A1 The Wirewhip
A2 The Groundhog
A3 Cane Bay
A4 Gone But Not Forgotten
A5 Gittel And Jerry's Theme
B1 A Day At The Races
B2 Fun With Wally
B3 Suite Hoodeet
B4 View From Afar
B5 Potato Pancake

credits:
Preston Reed - Guitar (6 and 12-string)

Jonathan Freed- Engineer
Craig Thorson- Remastering
Graig Perman- Photography
All songs composed by Preston Reed

Recorded at Nineteen Recording Studio South Glastonbury, CT
This album was recorded on a two-track tape recorder. There is no overdubbing on any of the songs.



transfer: March 13, 2013
Record Doctor RCM
Audio-Technica AT33EV
Sota Sapphire w/ Eminent Technology Tonearm 2 (ET-2)
Tube Box SE II w/NOS Telefunken ECC83
TC Electronic Impact Twin ACD
Sound Studio [capture 24-bit/96kHZ]
Amadeus Pro [Analyze, split tracks, verify waveform, no clipping]
Izotope RX2 [manual de-clicking]
xACT [flac conversion, tagging, ffp]



Comments

Schooner333 said…
Preston Reed is new to me, so thanks for the comparisons. As you said I'm "probably going to dig this", no wait...I know I'm going to dig this!

Thanks for the rip. :smile:

Oh, and anything from Kottke or Hedges would be a real treat.
rodney said…
Wow, reading about the technique, I immediately thought of Badi Assad. Saw her in the 90s and was gobsmacked that one person was doing that. Looking forward to hearing Reed's method.
86ed said…
Michael Hedges on our new ripper forum in case you missed it.
Observando Desde El Sur said…
Thanks man: new artist to me, too. Thanks for the opportunity to hear him! :grin:

All the best,
B.
MTW said…
Thank you very much for this LP. Reed started to get better known when he began guitar tapping ala Michael Hedges, but for me, this is his go-to LP. His 12-string playing is particularly nice and clean here, and the man can certainly play fast, if you're in the mood for that sort of thing. I wouldn't compare Reed to John Fahey, though; Fahey let his music breath and paid as much attention to the space between the notes as the notes themselves. Reed just smoked on the guitar here; his later LPs got more atmospheric. Great share!
86ed said…
Right, I did not mean that Preston Reed sounds anything like Fahey, only that I think folks who dig John Fahey might likely enjoy this LP too. Another unique player is all. He is often referred to as "an early disciple of Fahey."

I was just trying to nudge folks to give it a chance!

;)
BFR1028 said…
"Recorded at Nineteen Recording Studio South Glastonbury, CT"



This is 30 minutes away from my house! :mrgreen:
(Or Less)
MTW said…
...and I certainly hope that they do give Reed a chance, because he is well worth hearing (and your rip is really sweet!). There are so many wonderful solo guitarists to be discovered after the first tier of Hedges, Kottke, and Fahey, and Reed is one of them. I find it notable that there are very few rips of even Fahey and Kottke floating around out there, so I never imagined that a high-quality rip of Reed's "Pointing Up" would spring forth seemingly out of nowhere. I appreciate your good taste and can only hope that you have other obscure gems like this to share. Thanks again.
JoJo said…
Many thanks 86ed, like for most of us, he´s new to me, too. I really like Michael Hedges, so i can´t resist!

PS: Just to let you know, the 2 mega links for 24/96
are linked with torrent.
lx66 said…
Thank you very much for Preston! I would love to see Laurence Juber records rips too! :smile:
rockness87 said…
thank you very much!
f1motogp said…
like it, sounds excellent. thank you 86er!
sinala said…
Thanks a lot, 86ed, for introducing me to such a fabulous guitarist! I absolutely enjoy your rip.

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