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[Pre Order] Chris Isaak – Heart Shaped World – MFSL UltraDisc One-Step 45RPM 2LP Box Set *

[Pre Order] Chris Isaak – Heart Shaped World – MFSL UltraDisc One-Step 45RPM 2LP Box Set *

Model: ZMU980285940
  • Original price was: $124.99.Current price is: $62.50.

Release Date: TBA

Chris IsaaksHeart Shaped WorldIs a Mood Masterpiece: Double-Platinum Album Features the Smash Wicked Game, Brilliant Singing, and Extraordinary Guitar Tones

Experience the Brooding 1989 Album in Definitive Sound: Mobile Fidelitys UltraDisc 180g 45RPM 2LP Box Set Is Strictly Limited to 3,000 Numbered Copies and Includes the Bonus Track Diddley Daddy

1/2 / 30 IPS analog master to DSD 256 to analog console to lathe

There was nothing in contemporary music like Chris IsaaksHeart Shaped Worldwhen it hit shelves in June 1989. More than three decades later, the singer-songwriters third album still sounds unique and claims a backstory nearly as fascinating as the retro-leaning material and standout performances that propelled it to sales of more than 2.5 million copies. Home to the Top 10 smash Wicked Game, the set remains a masterful mood piece that invites you to pour a late-night drink, sit in a dimmed room, and relish Isaaks elegant albeit raw ruminations on love, relationships, and questionable decisions.

Sourced from the original master tapes, pressed at Fidelity Record Pressing, strictly limited to 3,000 numbered copies, and featuring the bonus track Diddley Daddy, Mobile Fidelity’s UltraDisc One-Step 180g 45RPM 2LP box set ofHeart Shaped Worldunearths the staggering inner details, saturated tones, and brilliant atmospherics of the crisp production. It brings you up close and personal with Isaaks spectacular singing impeccably controlled, tense, brooding, steamy, smoldering, haunted situated amidst stripped-down backdrops that allow every note to fully bloom and decay.

While Isaaks ever-steady baritone remains the anchor, the contributions of his trusty backing band, the aptly named Silvertone, come across with just as much cool, command, and realism. The indispensable playing of guitarist James Calvin Wilsey particularly emerges with superb clarity and dimensionality. The character of his 1965 Fender Stratocaster, shivering twang of his spring-coiled fills, and his signature use of reverb, delay, and vibrato seamlessly match Isaak’s patient deliveries and the bands unhurried rhythms. Experienced on UD1S with ultra-black backgrounds and a nearly invisible noise floor,Heart Shaped Worldis in every regard a demonstration disc.

The premium packaging of this UD1S pressing befits its elevated status. Housed in a deluxe slipcase, it features foil-stamped jackets and faithful-to-the-original graphics. Aurally and visually, this reissue is for discerning listeners who desire to immerse themselves in everything involved with the album, not the least of which is the cover art depicting a lost-in-thought Isaak staring ahead and sitting in what appears to be an efficiency apartment. The image epitomizes the records lonesome temperaments and pensive themes.

Of course, if not for director David Lynch hand-picking two cuts fromHeart Shaped Worldfor his 1990 filmWild at Heart, the record wouldve probably suffered the same fate as Isaaks prior efforts and gone unnoticed by the mainstream. Despite receiving raves from outlets such asNME, Chicago Tribune,andRolling Stoneupon its original release, the album stalled in the lower quadrants of theBillboardcharts and, after a few weeks, dropped off.

Cue the ear of Lee Chesnut. Then the music director for a large Atlanta radio station, Chesnut heard the instrumental version of Wicked Game on Lynchs soundtrack and started airing the album rendition at all hours of the day. Aided by a sensual video featuring Isaak and supermodel Helena Christensen, the song found its way into the public consciousness by early 91 and helped make Isaak a most unlikely mainstream star in an era where his techniques had little to nothing in common with popular tastes.

Despite its vintage vibes and shared DNA with legends such as Roy Orbison, Chet Baker, and Glen Campbell,Heart Shaped Worldtranscends nostalgia, rockabilly, and throwback tropes. For all the melodrama and sadness at hand, Isaaks gorgeously transparent singing dives deep underneath emotional surfaces. He mines subtleties that indicate his feelings go beyond heartbreak and anguish, and occasionally suggest frustration, menace, and anger. You can hear it in his quivering falsetto, and the slow and methodical ways he allows delicate whispers to break into shadowy phrasing that crosses over to the darker sides of romance and desire.

That approach bolsters the title track, which suggests calm yet moves on ominous currents its simmering pace and snare-drum snappiness foreshadowing Isaak raising the volume and urgency during the coda. The southwestern-tinged Wrong to Love You plays with similar concepts of hesitation, unease, and discord, Isaak careful never to fully erupt and give anything away. His poised deliveries offer a master class in the art of insinuation and hurt on Nothings Changed, sent up with a wordless backing chorus and crackling guitar lines straight out of a Memphis blues joint.

Heart Shaped Worldfurther boosts its merit via its abundant stylistic variations, from the upbeat country-and-western trot of Im Not Waiting and Spanish acoustic shimmer of the jazz-based ballad Blue Spanish Sky to the swinging horn-accompanied grooves of Dont Make Me Love You and desert smokiness of the understated Kings of the Highway. On the latter, Isaak comes across as resigned and absolute. His singing and pain worm their way into your soul, and echo akin to the way the music prepares to strike when you least expect.

Trouble going ’round, Isaak croons right as the album begins. Trouble going down. Damn straight.

Side One:

  1. Heart Shaped World
  2. Im Not Waiting
  3. Dont Make Me Dream About You

Side Two:

  1. Kings of the Highway
  2. Wicked Game

Side Three:

  1. Blue Spanish Sky
  2. Wrong to Love You
  3. Forever Young

Side Four:

  1. Nothings Changed
  2. In the Heat of the Jungle
  3. Diddley Daddy