Cat 4 Test

The Cat Purrsonality Test: What Our Feline Friends Are Really Thinking  eBooks & eLearning

Posted by yoyoloit at May 3, 2022
The Cat Purrsonality Test: What Our Feline Friends Are Really Thinking

The Cat Purrsonality Test
by Davies, Alison;Levy, Alissa;

English | 2022 | ISBN: 0711263000| 128 pages | True EPUB | 4.43 MB
Cat Stevens - Catch Bull At Four (50th Anniversary Remaster) (1972/2022)

Cat Stevens - Catch Bull At Four (50th Anniversary Remaster) (1972/2022)
EAC Rip | FLAC (tracks, cue, log) - 236 MB | MP3 CBR 320 kbps - 95 MB
39:19 | Acoustic, Pop Rock, Folk Rock, Soft Rock | Label: UMC (Universal Music Catalogue)

On its original release in 1972, Cat Stevens' fourth LP on Island/A&M, 'Catch Bull At Four', spent three weeks at #1 on the Billboard 200, making it his biggest album of all time. To celebrate its 50th anniversary, Island Records / UMe reissues a newly remastered version of 'Catch Bull At Four'.

Cat Stevens - Collected (2007)  Music

Posted by Rtax at Oct. 17, 2024
Cat Stevens - Collected (2007)

Cat Stevens - Collected (2007)
EAC Rip | FLAC (tracks, cue, log) - 1 GB | MP3 CBR 320 kbps - 428 MB
3:05:45 | Folk Rock, Acoustic, Electro, Pop Rock | Label: Universal

The Collected Cat Stevens is a three-disc box set that by no means eclipses the four-disc package released in 2001, bit does give it a good run for its money. Largely chronological, but oddly relegating some of Stevens' earliest hits to the end of the final disc, the box opens and closes with two of his most emotive numbers, the hit "Lady D'Arbanville," and the questioning "Father and Son," first heard in their familiar studio form, and then as live recordings. In between times, a total of 54 tracks bounces through Stevens career, from "Matthew & Son" through to "*"Midday (Avoid City After Dark)," credited to the singer's latter-day Yusuf Islam identity, and it's difficult to pick fault with any of the inclusions – even those which, like "Moonshadow," "Morning Has Broken" and, indeed, "Father and Son," are so tweely saccharin that it seems incredible anybody ever took them seriously. They did, though, and Stevens remains one of the few early-'70s singer/songwriters whose ouvre continues to attract new listeners with every passing generation. This smartly projected box will only add to their numbers.
Cat Stevens - Cat Stevens aka On The Road To Find Out (In Search Of The Centre Of The Universe) (2001) 4CD Box Set

Cat Stevens - Cat Stevens (2001) 4CD Box Set
aka On The Road To Find Out (In Search Of The Centre Of The Universe)

EAC | FLAC | Tracks (Cue&Log) ~ 1.61 Gb | Scans ~ 120 Mb
Label: A&M, Universal | # 314 585 285-2 | Time: 04:41:20
Singer/Songwriter, Folk, Psychedelic, Folk-Rock, Soft Rock

Completists will be happy to own many of the rarities on this four-disc set, including Stevens's first demo session, an unreleased 1970 duet with Elton John, a cover of Fats Domino's "Blue Monday," and several choice live cuts from the late '70s. And it's nice to have an overview of the artist's entire career–from late '60s pop-star wannabe to '70s folk-rock superstar–in one place. But the difference between early Cat Stevens (despite composing hits for others) and post-Tea for the Tillerman Stevens is substantial. The two follow-up LPs were part of a trilogy of brilliance–both musically and lyrically–and any Stevens collection must start there. Nevertheless, surprises and some gems are to be found throughout all four discs–even his most recent recording (as Yusuf Islam) isn't bad. This box set also offers a choice opportunity to reassess a deserving career. (All royalties go to New York City relief victims and orphans and homeless families in underdeveloped countries.)
Cat Stevens - Three: Numbers (1975) / Izitso (1977) / Back To Earth (1978) [3CD Box Set, MFSL, 1996]

Cat Stevens - Three: Numbers (1975) / Izitso (1977) / Back To Earth (1978) [3CD Box Set, MFSL, 1996]
EAC Rip | FLAC (tracks+.cue+log) - 591 MB | MP3 CBR 320 kbps (LAME 3.93) - 248 MB | Covers - 91 MB
Genre: Folk Rock, Pop Rock, Singer-Songwriter | RAR 3% Rec. | Label: Mobile Fidelity Sound Lab (UDCD 3-661)

Cat Stevens was one of the most popular artists of the '70s. Mobile Fidelity Sound Lab is very proud to present this numbered, limited-edition 3-disc box set containing the hard-to-find Izitso and two titles exclusive to Mobile Fidelity: Back To Earth and Numbers.
Numbers (1975). Subtitled "A Pythagorean Theory Tale," Numbers was a concept album relating to a faraway galaxy, a planet called Polygor, a palace, and its people, the Polygons. The songs presumably told the tale, but as with so many concept albums, listening to Numbers was like hearing a Broadway cast album without having seen the show - something seemed to be going on, but it was hard to tell what…

Cat Power - Albums Collection 1995-2012 (12CD + DVD5)  Music

Posted by Designol at May 13, 2023
Cat Power - Albums Collection 1995-2012 (12CD + DVD5)

Cat Power - Albums Collection 1995-2012 (12CD + DVD5)
FLAC | Tracks (Cue&Log) ~ 2.6 Gb | Mp3 (CBR320) ~ 1.18 Gb | Time: 08:08:18
DVD5 | NTSC | 4:3 (720x480) VBR | AC3, 2 ch, 192 Kbps | 01:41:54 | ~ 4 Gb
Genre: Indie Rock, Alternative Rock, Folk-Rock, Lo Fi, Sadcore | Scans included

Indie singer/songwriter who bridges folk, blues, soul, and experimental rock in vulnerable and cathartic ways. Collection includes: Dear Sir (1995); What Would the Community Think (1996); Myra Lee (1996); Moon Pix (1998); The Covers Record (2000); You Are Free (2003); Speaking for Trees: A Film by Mark Borthwick (DVD) + Willie Deadwilder (CD) (2004); The Greatest (2006); Jukebox (2008); Sun (2012).
Cat Mother and the All Night Newsboys - Albion Doo-Wah... (1970) Remastered Reissue 2013

Cat Mother and the All Night Newsboys - Albion Doo-Wah… (1970) Reissue 2013
XLD | FLAC | Tracks (Cue&Log) ~ 245 Mb | Mp3 (CBR320) ~ 97 Mb | Scans included | 00:39:37
Classic Rock, Country Rock, Folk-Rock, Roots Rock | Label: Real Gone Music | # RGM-0157

After the success of their Jimi Hendrix-produced debut album The Street Giveth…and the Street Taketh Away (also available from Real Gone) and its hit “Good Old Rock ‘N’ Roll,” the members of Cat Mother repaired to their Woodstock cabin (pictured in the album gatefold reproduced here) and started writing songs for Albion Doo-Wah. The record had much more pastoral, country feel to it, no doubt in part due to the replacement of Charlie Chin by multi-instrumentalist folkie Jay Ungar, who also brought several songs to the group. But there was definitely something in the air in the late’-60s/early ‘70s Woodstock scene; Albion Doo-Wah has several scoops of that timeless, Americana-laced Basement Tapes/Music from Big Pink fairy dust. CD debut, and one long, long requested by the band’s fans, with a gorgeous remastering job by Maria Triana at Battery Studios.

Cat Stevens - Early Tapes (1993)  Music

Posted by Rtax at June 5, 2024
Cat Stevens - Early Tapes (1993)

Cat Stevens - Early Tapes (1993)
XLD Rip | FLAC (tracks, cue, log) - 222 MB
38:32 | Folk Rock, Pop Rock | Label: Spectrum

A lot has been said of Cat Stevens' early music being over-produced and filled with bloated '60s studio touches, which is true, but, even so, that shouldn't obscure the fact that in these songs lie the genius that was to become Cat Stevens. And they're not altogether bad songs either. This collection opens with "I Love My Dog," which, while not brilliant, at least showed that Stevens was willing to approach songwriting from unconventional angles even at that stage. The following track, "The First Cut Is the Deepest," would have been a perfect fit for the Righteous Brothers. The majority of the songs, which aren't as consistently great as his later work, are still impressive. "I'm So Sleepy" sounds similar to some of the tracks he'd be cutting in a few years, as does the Gordon Lightfoot-esque "Blackness of the Night" and "Where Are You," which wouldn't have been out of place on Mona Bone Jakon. That's not to say that some of the songs aren't poorly done, but, overall, if the horns and strings are stripped away, you still have a Cat Stevens album.

Cat Stevens - Tea For The Tillerman (1970)  Music

Posted by gribovar at Oct. 25, 2021
Cat Stevens - Tea For The Tillerman (1970)

Cat Stevens - Tea For The Tillerman (1970)
EAC Rip | FLAC (tracks+.cue+log) - 183 MB | MP3 CBR 320 kbps (LAME 3.93) - 86 MB | Covers - 39 MB
Genre: Folk Rock, Pop Rock, Singer-Songwriter | RAR 3% Rec. | Label: Island Records/Helicon (842 352-2, IMCD 36)

Mona Bone Jakon only began Cat Stevens' comeback. Seven months later, he returned with Tea for the Tillerman, an album in the same chamber-group style, employing the same musicians and producer, but with a far more confident tone. Mona Bone Jakon had been full of references to death, but Tea for the Tillerman was not about dying; it was about living in the modern world while rejecting it in favor of spiritual fulfillment. It began with a statement of purpose, "Where Do the Children Play?," in which Stevens questioned the value of technology and progress. "Wild World" found the singer being dumped by a girl, but making the novel suggestion that she should stay with him because she was incapable of handling things without him…
Cat Power - Cat Power Sings Dylan: The 1966 Royal Albert Hall Concert (2023)

Cat Power - Cat Power Sings Dylan: The 1966 Royal Albert Hall Concert (2023)
EAC Rip | FLAC (tracks+log+.cue) - 493 Mb | MP3 CBR 320 kbps - 204 Mb | 01:28:49
Folk, Folk Rock, Singer-Songwriter, Female Vocal | Label: Domino

Last November in London, Cat Power took the stage at Royal Albert Hall and delivered a song-for-song recreation of one of the most fabled and transformative live sets of all time. Held at the Manchester FreeTrade Hall in May 1966—but long known as the “Royal Albert Hall Concert” due to a mislabeled bootleg—the original performance saw Bob Dylan switching from acoustic to electric midway through the show, drawing ire from an audience of folk purists and forever altering the course of rock-and-roll. In her own rendition of that historic night, the artist otherwise known as Chan Marshall inhabited each song with equal parts conviction and grace and a palpable sense of protectiveness, ultimately transposing the anarchic tension of Dylan’s set with a warm and luminous joy. Now captured on the live album CatPower Sings Dylan: The 1966 Royal Albert Hall Concert, Marshall’s spellbinding performance both lovingly honors her hero’s imprint on history and brings a stunning new vitality to many of his most revered songs.