<< FLAC Rodriguez - Cold Fact [1970]
Rodriguez - Cold Fact [1970]
Category Sound
FormatFLAC
SourceCD
BitrateLossless
GenreFolk
TypeAlbum
Date 1 decade, 1 year
Size 221.94 MB
 
Website https://nzbindex.nl/search/?q=Rodriguez+-+Cold+Fact+%5B1970%5D
 
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Deze cd is het onderwerp van de docu Het Uur van de Wolf: Searching for Sugarman
Vanavond 20.25 ned.2 Aanrader !!!!

Documentaire Singer-songwriter Sixto Rodriguez had een groot jaren zeventig rockicoon kunnen zijn. Zijn debuutalbum 'Cold Fact' kreeg goede kritieken, maar flopte commercieel. Rodriguez verdween daarop weer in de obscuriteit, omgeven door geruchten over een gruwelijke zelfmoord. Een illegale kopie van zijn plaat kwam ondertussen in Zuid-Afrika terecht en werd daar zonder zijn weten extreem populair. Het werd dè muziek van de witte anti-apartheidsbeweging en Rodriguez was er groter dan de Rolling Stones. Als twee Zuid-Afrikaanse fans op zoek gaan naar de waarheid rond de dood van hun muzikale held, blijkt zijn verhaal nog gekker dan alle mythes bij elkaar. Rodriguez leeft en na decennia vinden publiek en muzikant elkaar alsnog.

Tracklist:
01 - Sugar Man
02 - Only Good For Conversation
03 - Crucify Your Mind
04 - This Is Not A Song, It's An Outburst: Or, The Establishment Blues
05 - Hate Street Dialogue
06 - Forget It
07 - Inner City Blues
08 - I Wonder
09 - Like Janis
10 - Gommorah (A Nursery Rhyme)
11 - Rich Folks Hoax
12 - Jane S. Piddy

"Mexican by descent, American protest singer-songwriter Rodriguez is the man the Woodstock generation forgot. He should by right share the same virtual immortality enjoyed by Bob Dylan, Neil Young and others of their ilk. Instead, if you were to ask the most studious of American music-writers what they know of him you would get nothing but quizzical shrugs and blank expressions in return. On the other hand, take yourself to far away South Africa and ask the same question to pretty much any old Joe Bloggs you see walking down the street? "Rodriguez, yaw! He's an American dude, I grew up to his album 'Cold Fact', he's dead now, he killed himself on stage?" Well that's what you would've been told a few years ago anyway. 'Cold Fact' was the album that caused all the fuss. It was an album so incredibly mainstream in appeal despite being anything but mainstream in content and for a quarter of a century it was all people had to go on. Never before had there been such an air of wonderment and mystery about an artist. It was not known who he was, where he was from, how the album got to South Africa, it wasn't even known if he was dead or alive. Rumours of suicide, drug overdose and countless others did the rounds. One man even reported seeing him shoot himself on stage. The only thing that was known, as his songs were passed from generation to generation, was the music and the quality that lay therein. 'Cold Fact' consists chiefly of beautifully brief, straight-to-the-point numbers with his incredibly poetic lyrics providing the focal point throughout.

Opening track "Sugar Man" is as drug-induced a song as you're ever likely to hear and when the song reaches it's eerie finale you'd be forgiven for thinking that you were the one who'd been doing the indulging. All of his work seems to be as much philosophical as musical and you'll find his verses popping into your head at the most opportune times. When I was asked to sign the book of remembrance for the victims of Omagh the opening lines of "Crucify Your Mind" came out. "Was it a huntsman or a player that made you pay the cost / Who now assumes relaxed position and prostitutes your loss." With his words and his mind-blowing use of imagery he truly can paint a song as he covers most social topics from drug-abuse and government inadequacies to self-pity and heartbreak. On "Establishment Blues : This Is Not A Song It's An Outburst" he shares the same 'clean the scum off the streets' attitude as psychopath Travis Bickle from the classic flick Taxi Driver when he sings "Woke I this morning with an ache in my head / Splashed on my clothes as I spilled out of bed / Opened the window to listen to the news / But all I heard was the establishment blues."

For years there had been rumours abound about the existence of a prior album which had vanished before Cold Fact even saw the light of day. In late 1996 a copy of this 'holy-grail' was finally uncovered. It sparked renewed interest and intrigue in the Rodriguez saga and prompted a worldwide search Rodriguez for 'the messiah' involving web-sites, musicologists and private investigators. Within a year the new album, "Coming From Reality" was released and adored by his followers. Once again it was a collection of songs with writing so touching and thought provoking you could slap a dusty cover on it and call it The Bible. Within weeks of that a response came through on the 'Great Rodriguez Hunt' web-site from Eva Alicia Rodriguez Koller stating "Rodriguez is my Father." Through his daughter, contact was finally made with the man himself and at last, after 25 years, all those questions could be answered. It was no surprise to find him completely overwhelmed by the fact that people not only listened to his music but found inspiration in it. In keeping with his songs it was revealed that not only had he done extensive social work in his hometown of Detroit, Michigan but had also run for public-office on four occasions."

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