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''El Cambio'' is the debut studio album by Miguel de la Bastide. It was recorded at La Bastide Productions and mastered by George Graves at Lacquer Channel〔(Lacquer Channel )〕 in Toronto Canada in 1998. The track "Calle Torrecillo del Leal" was mixed by Jesse Cook at his recording studio, which was stated in the liner notes and also in an article in "20th Century Guitar Magazine".〔(20th Century Guitar magazine interview )〕 The album contains four re-recorded tracks that were previously released under the Narada Productions label onto various Flamenco and Nuevo Flamenco compilations. "Morir Soñando" was previously recorded in 1996 as "Morí Soñando" and was one of his first contributions to the compilation ''Flamenco: Fire and Grace''.〔(Flamenco: Fire and Grace web page at Narada.com )〕 The other was "Viajeros", which was originally titled "Viajero". "Calle Torrecillo del Leal" was originally titled "Torrecillo del Leal" on the compilation ''Gypsy Passion'' in 1997.〔(Gypsy Passion from Narada.com )〕 "A Mi Carmen" was originally titled "Mi Carmen" on the compilation ''Gypsy Soul'' in 1998.〔(Gypsy Soul from Narada.com )〕 Two tracks from the album were later included in Narada compilations: "Candela" was his contribution to ''Gypsy Fire'' in early 2000〔(Gypsy Fire from Narada.com )〕 and a shortened version of the title track, renamed "El Cambio (edit)" on ''Viva Flamenco!'' in the later part of 2000, which was the highly anticipated sequel to "Flamenco: Fire and Grace".〔(Viva Flamenco! from Narada.com )〕 ==Track listing== #"El Cambio" – 7:10 #"A Mi Carmen" – 4:41 #"Arrimate” – 4:53 #"Candela" – 3:27 #"Calle Torrecillo del Leal" – 5:40 #"Morir Soñando" – 5:03 #"Viajeros" – 5:33 #"Alma Libre" – 10:45 (Contains a hidden track "Soleá") 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「El Cambio」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
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