<span>Pickin’ Up the Pieces</span>
<span style="font-size: 18px; line-height: normal;"><span class="post-font-serif1">Pickin’ Up the Pieces is the debut album by Country rock pioneers Poco, released in 1969. It was one of the earliest examples of the emerging genre of Country rock. Several of the songs here date back to Richie Furay’s days in Buffalo Springfield. An early version of “What a Day” was included on the Springfield’s eponymous box set in 1996.<span class="post-br"><br></span>Randy Meisner appears on this album but was asked to leave the band shortly before the record was released. Meisner’s exit was a result of his anger from being excluded (at Furay’s insistence) from participation in the final mix playback sessions for the record, as only Messina and Furay were to complete the production. His image was removed from the painting on the album’s cover, and replaced with the dog seen at the far left. His bass parts and backing vocals were left in the mix, but his lead vocals were removed, and new versions were sung by George Grantham.</span></span>
<span>All Music Review</span>
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<span style="font-size: 18px; line-height: normal;"><span class="post-font-serif1">Poco dealt with a lot during the recording of their debut album — the sudden departure of bassist Randy Meisner, the frustration of working with an engineer who didn’t quite get what they were trying for, and a lot of pressure to deliver a solid collection of country-rock songs — and came up with this startlingly great record, as accomplished as any of Buffalo Springfield’s releases, and also reminiscent of the Beatles and the Byrds. Pickin’ Up the Pieces is all the more amazing when one considers that Jim Messina and George Grantham were both covering for the departed Meisner in hastily learned capacities on bass and vocals, respectively. The title track is practically an anthem for the virtues of country-rock, with the kind of sweet harmonizing and tight interplay between the guitars that the Byrds, the Burritos, and others had to work awhile to achieve. The mix of good-time songs (“Consequently So Long,” “Calico Lady”), fast-paced instrumentals (“Grand Junction”), and overall rosy feelings makes this a great introduction to the band, as well as a landmark in country-rock only slightly less important (but arguably more enjoyable than) Sweetheart of the Rodeo.</span></span>
<span>Новичкам: что делать с этим iso ?</span>
1.Образ <span class="post-b">iso</span> нужно записать на DVD диск программой <a href="http://www.imgburn.com/" class="postLink">ImgBurn</a>, получив в итоге SACD-R.<br>
<a href="https://rutracker.net/forum/viewtopic.php?t=3591110" class="postLink">Какие стационарные SACD плееры играют и не играют рипнутые SACD диски (SACD-R)?</a> (обсуждение).<br>
2.Для проигрывания на компьютере: <a href="http://www.foobar2000.org/download" class="postLink">foobar2000</a> + <a href="http://sourceforge.net/projects/sacddecoder/files/" class="postLink">sacd-плагин</a> к нему (открывать образ прямо в foobar2000).<br>
<a href="https://rutracker.net/forum/viewtopic.php?t=3655974" class="postLink">Воспроизведение и конверсия SACD на компьютере</a> (обсуждение).