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Prisoner In Disguise
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Prisoner In Disguise

Prisoner In Disguise

If there was any doubt whether Linda Ronstadt would emerge as the premier female vocalist of the 1970s, the question became moot when she dropped Prisoner in Disguise in 1975. Picking up exactly where she left off on Heart Like a Wheel, the singer pairs with the same perfectionist-oriented producer and many of the same session pros on a follow-up in every way the equal of her 1974 breakthrough. The platinum-certified set not only established Ronstadt as an all-time great. It confirmed her as the voice of the decade, a performer the press soon deemed “The First Lady of Rock.”

Sourced from the original analog master tapes, pressed at Fidelity Record Pressing in California, housed in a Stoughton gatefold jacket, and reissued to celebrate Elektra 75, Mobile Fidelity’s numbered-edition 180g 45RPM 2LP set presents the Top 5 album with extra groove space via 45RPM speed for the first time. This special 50th anniversary version plays with reference-caliber definition, depth, and dimensionality. The definitive vinyl edition of Prisoner in Disguise, it lifts prior veils that impeded the gorgeous singing and spectacular craftsmanship gracing the 11 songs. 

The elevated degrees of clarity, presence, and separation exceed those of even Mobile Fidelity’s long-out-of-print 33RPM reissue. Vocals — often the most difficult instrument to faithfully portray — resonate with superb tonality, openness, and naturalism. Here, there’s practically nothing between you and Ronstadt’s whippoorwill deliveries. Her wide-spanning range and varied subtleties — vibrato, hiccups, shivers, falsetto fades — come across with rich, transparent detail. They affirm why Prisoner in Disguise is one of the four consecutive albums she made that sold a million or more copies, making her the first female artist to achieve that feat. 

Each aspect of the record reveals how and why Ronstadt crashed through the glass ceiling not only with commercial and critical success, but by attaining then-unprecedented recognition in the form of national stories in the likes of Rolling Stone and Newsweek. Collaborating for the third time with producer Peter Asher, Ronstadt turns to her career-long strengths — interpretative covers, roots-based music, aching balladry — and seamlessly jibes with a Hall of Fame-worthy cast. James Taylor, Kenny Edwards, Herb Pedersen, JD Souther, David Grisman, and Russ Kunkel are some of the elite musicians along for the ride. David Campbell handles string arrangement and conducting duties.  

A songbird with a singular voice, Ronstadt time and again achieves “sweet harmony in unison” on Prisoner in Disguise, a record on which she’s at her peak.

$30.01

Original: $100.02

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Prisoner In Disguise—

$100.02

$30.01

Prisoner In Disguise

If there was any doubt whether Linda Ronstadt would emerge as the premier female vocalist of the 1970s, the question became moot when she dropped Prisoner in Disguise in 1975. Picking up exactly where she left off on Heart Like a Wheel, the singer pairs with the same perfectionist-oriented producer and many of the same session pros on a follow-up in every way the equal of her 1974 breakthrough. The platinum-certified set not only established Ronstadt as an all-time great. It confirmed her as the voice of the decade, a performer the press soon deemed “The First Lady of Rock.”

Sourced from the original analog master tapes, pressed at Fidelity Record Pressing in California, housed in a Stoughton gatefold jacket, and reissued to celebrate Elektra 75, Mobile Fidelity’s numbered-edition 180g 45RPM 2LP set presents the Top 5 album with extra groove space via 45RPM speed for the first time. This special 50th anniversary version plays with reference-caliber definition, depth, and dimensionality. The definitive vinyl edition of Prisoner in Disguise, it lifts prior veils that impeded the gorgeous singing and spectacular craftsmanship gracing the 11 songs. 

The elevated degrees of clarity, presence, and separation exceed those of even Mobile Fidelity’s long-out-of-print 33RPM reissue. Vocals — often the most difficult instrument to faithfully portray — resonate with superb tonality, openness, and naturalism. Here, there’s practically nothing between you and Ronstadt’s whippoorwill deliveries. Her wide-spanning range and varied subtleties — vibrato, hiccups, shivers, falsetto fades — come across with rich, transparent detail. They affirm why Prisoner in Disguise is one of the four consecutive albums she made that sold a million or more copies, making her the first female artist to achieve that feat. 

Each aspect of the record reveals how and why Ronstadt crashed through the glass ceiling not only with commercial and critical success, but by attaining then-unprecedented recognition in the form of national stories in the likes of Rolling Stone and Newsweek. Collaborating for the third time with producer Peter Asher, Ronstadt turns to her career-long strengths — interpretative covers, roots-based music, aching balladry — and seamlessly jibes with a Hall of Fame-worthy cast. James Taylor, Kenny Edwards, Herb Pedersen, JD Souther, David Grisman, and Russ Kunkel are some of the elite musicians along for the ride. David Campbell handles string arrangement and conducting duties.  

A songbird with a singular voice, Ronstadt time and again achieves “sweet harmony in unison” on Prisoner in Disguise, a record on which she’s at her peak.

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If there was any doubt whether Linda Ronstadt would emerge as the premier female vocalist of the 1970s, the question became moot when she dropped Prisoner in Disguise in 1975. Picking up exactly where she left off on Heart Like a Wheel, the singer pairs with the same perfectionist-oriented producer and many of the same session pros on a follow-up in every way the equal of her 1974 breakthrough. The platinum-certified set not only established Ronstadt as an all-time great. It confirmed her as the voice of the decade, a performer the press soon deemed “The First Lady of Rock.”

Sourced from the original analog master tapes, pressed at Fidelity Record Pressing in California, housed in a Stoughton gatefold jacket, and reissued to celebrate Elektra 75, Mobile Fidelity’s numbered-edition 180g 45RPM 2LP set presents the Top 5 album with extra groove space via 45RPM speed for the first time. This special 50th anniversary version plays with reference-caliber definition, depth, and dimensionality. The definitive vinyl edition of Prisoner in Disguise, it lifts prior veils that impeded the gorgeous singing and spectacular craftsmanship gracing the 11 songs. 

The elevated degrees of clarity, presence, and separation exceed those of even Mobile Fidelity’s long-out-of-print 33RPM reissue. Vocals — often the most difficult instrument to faithfully portray — resonate with superb tonality, openness, and naturalism. Here, there’s practically nothing between you and Ronstadt’s whippoorwill deliveries. Her wide-spanning range and varied subtleties — vibrato, hiccups, shivers, falsetto fades — come across with rich, transparent detail. They affirm why Prisoner in Disguise is one of the four consecutive albums she made that sold a million or more copies, making her the first female artist to achieve that feat. 

Each aspect of the record reveals how and why Ronstadt crashed through the glass ceiling not only with commercial and critical success, but by attaining then-unprecedented recognition in the form of national stories in the likes of Rolling Stone and Newsweek. Collaborating for the third time with producer Peter Asher, Ronstadt turns to her career-long strengths — interpretative covers, roots-based music, aching balladry — and seamlessly jibes with a Hall of Fame-worthy cast. James Taylor, Kenny Edwards, Herb Pedersen, JD Souther, David Grisman, and Russ Kunkel are some of the elite musicians along for the ride. David Campbell handles string arrangement and conducting duties.  

A songbird with a singular voice, Ronstadt time and again achieves “sweet harmony in unison” on Prisoner in Disguise, a record on which she’s at her peak.