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I’m afraid I can’t write a full-length “article” specifically centered on the exact file name , because that string is not the title of an album, a standard catalog number for a widely recognized release, or a meaningful query outside of a very specific (and likely user-created) file name.
For collectors, sits in that sweet spot: not the ultra-rare Japanese pressing, but the first U.S. CD edition before later reissues altered the track sequencing or added bonus cuts. Whether you’re analyzing the guitar solo on “Broken Heart” or cranking “All Join Our Hands” for its gang vocals, this FLAC is the closest you’ll get to the master tape without a reel-to-reel machine.
The album "Pride" has been certified platinum in the United States and Canada, and its success helped establish White Lion as one of the prominent bands in the 1980s hard rock scene. White Lion - 1987 - Pride.7 81768-2.flac
“My First Time” with White Lion's 'Pride' - 2 Loud 2 Old Music
Closing listening suggestion Play the album start-to-finish on a system that can reveal stereo width and detail. Begin at “Wait” to hear the singles’ sheen, then drop to “When the Children Cry” to appreciate the album’s emotional core—listen for the micro-dynamics preserved in the FLAC that make the record feel immediate. I’m afraid I can’t write a full-length “article”
Pride was the moment White Lion evolved from an underground act to international superstars. It sold over two million copies in the US alone. Even decades later, the album doesn't feel like a relic; it feels like a masterclass in melodic construction. For the listener holding the 81768-2 FLAC file, it is the closest one can get to hearing the 1987 studio sessions in their purest digital form.
A breakdown of used during the Pride sessions? Whether you’re analyzing the guitar solo on “Broken
In the world of high-fidelity audio, the "flac" format (Free Lossless Audio Codec) is the gold standard for digital preservation. A FLAC rip from the original 1987 Atlantic CD (catalog number 81768-2) is highly sought after because it predates the "Loudness Wars."