Showing posts with label IRON BUTTERFLY. Show all posts
Showing posts with label IRON BUTTERFLY. Show all posts

August 28, 2014

IRON BUTTERFLY – Live In Copenhagen 1971



Iron Butterfly – Live In Copenhagen 1971 (2014)


Recorded on the final night of the band’s 1971 European tour, Live In Copenhagen 1971 is another hollow-sounding, bootleg-quality tape albeit with slightly more presence than its predecessor. Unrestricted by the demands of a radio broadcast like on the previous night in Sweden, the band rips and snorts through a lengthy set list that draws five of its seven songs from Metamorphosis. Although Pinera and Reinhardt were considered hired guns in the studio, by this time they had been fully integrated into the band, and their addition not only upped the quality of the musicianship, but also the band’s potential.

Tracklist:
1. Best Years Of Our Life ( 4:56)
2. Soldier In Our Town ( 4:16)
3. Stone Believer ( 4:43)
4. Easy Rider (Let The Wind Pay The Way) ( 3:45)
5. Butterfly Bleu (23:55)
6. In-A-Gadda-Da-Vida (24:27)
7. Goodbye Jam (10:49)

http://fp.io/73d1b33c/

April 14, 2013

IRON BUTTERFLY - Göteborg, Sweden 1971


Iron Butterfly - Göteborg, Sweden 1971
Two long tracks with Iron Butterfly live in Göteborg, Sweden at the Konserthuset.
An act supported by Yes and on the first song they use a talk-box, years later turned very famous by Peter Frampton.

Sound Quality: 9.5
Source: Soundboard

Track List:

01 - Butterfly Bleu (23:12)
02 - In A Gadda Da Vida (24:29)

http://fp.io/e34c2d11/


November 3, 2011

IRON BUTTERFLY - LIVE AT FILLMORE EAST 1968


When the San Diego quartet took New York’s Fillmore East in the spring of 1968, they had one album, Heavy, under their belts but a myriad of lineup changes that would put veteran bands to shame. At the time, the band was singer/organist Doug Ingle, drummer Ron Bushy and new guitarist and bassist Erik Braunn (all of 17 at the time) and Lee Dorman – both of whom replaced the recently-departed members Danny Weis, Jerry Penrod and second vocalist/percussionist Darryl DeLoach, who had left after recording sessions for Heavy.The shift in personnel wasn’t the only sign of things to come, though. While the sets draw heavily from Heavy‘s track lineup, including “Possession,” “Unconscious Power” and the double set closers “So-Lo” and “Iron Butterfly Theme,” the sets include songs that would be committed to tape by the new lineup for their next, smash hit of an album, including the album’s eventual title track, the hard-driving jam “In-a-Gadda-de-Vida,” not yet the Top 40 single that would drive sales of the forthcoming record to over 4 million domestically but not nearly lacking in intensity.
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