October 31, 2013
OZRIC TENTACLES - 30th Anniversary Tour O2 Academy 2 Liverpool - 10/28/2013
Ozric Tentacles
2013-10-28
30th Anniversary Tour
O2 Academy 2
Liverpool
101 Intro
102 Dots Thots
103 Invisible Carpet
104 Paper Monkeys
105 Xingu
106 Sniffing Dog
107 Og-Ha-Be
108 Sploosh!
109 Disdots
201 Mooncalf
202 Sultana Detrii
203 Lost In The Sky
204 The Sacred Turf
205 Myriapod
206 Kick Muck
207 Eternal Wheel
Band Line-up
Ed Wynne - guitar, keyboards, synthesizer
Brandi Wynne - bass
Silas Wynne – keyboards, synthsizer
Paul Hankin - congas and percussion
Balázs Szende - drums
http://fp.io/e617dfbm/
GOV'T MULE - McDonald Theatre, Eugene OR - 10/27/2013
Gov't Mule
2013-10-27 McDonald Theatre, Eugene OR
Busman Audio LD Cardiod > Lunatec V2 > Tascam DR-680 (Busman Mod) 24/48
Front row center balcony. DIN.
Set 1
Brand New Angel
Lola Leave Your Light On
Inside Outside Woman Blues
Thelonius Beck
Fool's Moon
Opium
Stoop So Low
Forsaken Savior
World Gone Wild
Set 2
Scared To Live
Whisper In Your Soul
Patchwork Quilt
I Shall Return >
Drums >
Million Miles From Yesterday
Railroad Boy >
Mule > Whole Lotta Love > Mule
Encore
Walk On The Wild Side
Sweet Jane
I'm Waiting For My Man >
Walk On The Wild Side Reprise http://fp.io/m8afcec1/
2013-10-27 McDonald Theatre, Eugene OR
Busman Audio LD Cardiod > Lunatec V2 > Tascam DR-680 (Busman Mod) 24/48
Front row center balcony. DIN.
Set 1
Brand New Angel
Lola Leave Your Light On
Inside Outside Woman Blues
Thelonius Beck
Fool's Moon
Opium
Stoop So Low
Forsaken Savior
World Gone Wild
Set 2
Scared To Live
Whisper In Your Soul
Patchwork Quilt
I Shall Return >
Drums >
Million Miles From Yesterday
Railroad Boy >
Mule > Whole Lotta Love > Mule
Encore
Walk On The Wild Side
Sweet Jane
I'm Waiting For My Man >
Walk On The Wild Side Reprise http://fp.io/m8afcec1/
PHISH - Star Lake Amphitheatre, Burgettstown, PA - 08/11/1998
8/11/98 Phish
Star Lake Amphitheatre, Burgettstown, PA
The 2-DVD set of Phish’s August 11,1998 performance at Star Lake Amphitheatre in Burgettstown, PA is the only full show available from the video archives as a multi-camera lawn screen feed that will be released from the band’s summer tour of 1998.
The set was created from VHS videotapes of the lawn feed from the concert. The audio was mixed by Jon Atschiller from Paul Languedoc’s multi-track masters.
On August 11, 1998 Phish played at Star Lake Amphitheatre in Burgettstown, Pennsylvania. This was their second visit to Star Lake of seven to-date starting in 1997 including 2003, 2009 and 2012 shows previously released at LivePhish.com.
The Star Lake 98 show was the 20th of summer to showcase the loose, experimental vibe of a tour that began in Europe and jumped to the United States enroute to the summer’s ending Lemonwheel festival. The introduction of a never-before-played cover most nights earned the tour the nickname “summer of covers” from fans and Star Lake’s contribution was a Trench Town Rock opener. This was Phish’s first and only cover of the Bob Marley classic in the city where he last performed live. Star Lake also saw the return of Time Loves A Hero which was a huge bustout - played for the first time in a decade and segued out of a sultry Wolfman’s Brother. Julius, an extended percussive Fee outro, a deep Maze and soaring Reba set the stage for set II. The second set featured a supersized and super-swinging, ethereal Runaway Jim opener and a neat pairing of Meat > Limb By Limb. Local flavor of the Commonwealth was provided by Bittersweet Motel (the title of the Phish documentary recorded during Europe ’98 dates) and Wilson, King of Prussia.
Star Lake 98 is the only full show available as switched multi-cam video from summer 1998. The 2-DVD set was created from archival VHS videotapes of the 3-camera lawn screen feed. The audio was recorded multi-track by Paul Languedoc and mixed by Jon Altschiller in stereo PCM and 5.1 surround. It was released December 11, 2012 on JEMP Records.
DISC ONE
SET ONE
Trench Town Rock
(5:15)
Julius
(9:49)
Wolfman's Brother
(11:12)
Time Love A Hero
(5:44)
Bittersweet Motel
(4:37)
Reba
(17:25)
The Sloth
(3:51)
Ginseng Sullivan
(3:58)
Fee
(8:38)
Maze
(15:18)
Sample in a Jar
(5:16)
DISC TWO
SET TWO
Runaway Jim
(35:08)
Meat
(5:36)
Limb By Limb
(9:43)
When the Circus Comes
(5:34)
Down with Disease
(11:44)
ENCORE
Wilson
(4:55)
Golgi Apparatus
(5:45)
Star Lake Amphitheatre, Burgettstown, PA
The 2-DVD set of Phish’s August 11,1998 performance at Star Lake Amphitheatre in Burgettstown, PA is the only full show available from the video archives as a multi-camera lawn screen feed that will be released from the band’s summer tour of 1998.
The set was created from VHS videotapes of the lawn feed from the concert. The audio was mixed by Jon Atschiller from Paul Languedoc’s multi-track masters.
On August 11, 1998 Phish played at Star Lake Amphitheatre in Burgettstown, Pennsylvania. This was their second visit to Star Lake of seven to-date starting in 1997 including 2003, 2009 and 2012 shows previously released at LivePhish.com.
The Star Lake 98 show was the 20th of summer to showcase the loose, experimental vibe of a tour that began in Europe and jumped to the United States enroute to the summer’s ending Lemonwheel festival. The introduction of a never-before-played cover most nights earned the tour the nickname “summer of covers” from fans and Star Lake’s contribution was a Trench Town Rock opener. This was Phish’s first and only cover of the Bob Marley classic in the city where he last performed live. Star Lake also saw the return of Time Loves A Hero which was a huge bustout - played for the first time in a decade and segued out of a sultry Wolfman’s Brother. Julius, an extended percussive Fee outro, a deep Maze and soaring Reba set the stage for set II. The second set featured a supersized and super-swinging, ethereal Runaway Jim opener and a neat pairing of Meat > Limb By Limb. Local flavor of the Commonwealth was provided by Bittersweet Motel (the title of the Phish documentary recorded during Europe ’98 dates) and Wilson, King of Prussia.
Star Lake 98 is the only full show available as switched multi-cam video from summer 1998. The 2-DVD set was created from archival VHS videotapes of the 3-camera lawn screen feed. The audio was recorded multi-track by Paul Languedoc and mixed by Jon Altschiller in stereo PCM and 5.1 surround. It was released December 11, 2012 on JEMP Records.
DISC ONE
SET ONE
Trench Town Rock
(5:15)
Julius
(9:49)
Wolfman's Brother
(11:12)
Time Love A Hero
(5:44)
Bittersweet Motel
(4:37)
Reba
(17:25)
The Sloth
(3:51)
Ginseng Sullivan
(3:58)
Fee
(8:38)
Maze
(15:18)
Sample in a Jar
(5:16)
DISC TWO
SET TWO
Runaway Jim
(35:08)
Meat
(5:36)
Limb By Limb
(9:43)
When the Circus Comes
(5:34)
Down with Disease
(11:44)
ENCORE
Wilson
(4:55)
Golgi Apparatus
(5:45)
LOU REED - Gaumont Theatre Southampton - 09/26/1973
Lou Reed
Gaumont Theatre
Southampton
1973.09.26
1. Intro / Vicious 10:02
2. How Do You Think It Feels 3:23
3. Caroline Says 1 3:27
4. I'm Waiting For The Man 5:20
5. Satellite Of Love 5:08
6. Walk On The Wild Side 4:51
7. Oh, Jim / Heroin (Cut) 12:25
8. Rock 'n' Roll 6:27
Lou Reed - vocals
Steve Hunter - guitar
Dick Wagner - guitar
Ray Colcord - organ
Peter Walsh - bass
Pentti Glan - drums http://fp.io/6bc2ae37/
LOU REED - Apollo Theatre Glasgow - 09/24/1973
Lou Reed
Apollo Theatre
Glasgow
1973.09.24
Lou Does Elvis
B-T-73/14
01. Intro / Vicious 10:07
02. How Do You Think It Feels 3:39
03. Caroline Says 1 3:42
04. I'm Waiting For The Man 5:33
05. Satellite Of Love 5:35
06. Walk On The Wild Side 4:39
07. Oh, Jim 4:48
08. Heroin (Cut) 6:35
09. Rock 'n' Roll 6:31
10. Sister Ray 8:00
Lou Reed - vocals
Steve Hunter - guitar
Dick Wagner - guitar
Ray Colcord - organ
Peter Walsh - bass
Pentti Glan - drums http://fp.io/da1amb2b/
October 30, 2013
PAUL SIMON - Radio City Music Hall New York, NY - 10/21/2006
Paul Simon
2006-10-21
Radio City Music Hall
New York, NY
FM Broadcast
CD 1:
01. Gumboots
02. The Boy In The Bubble
03. Outrageous
04. Fifty Ways to Leave Your Lover
05. Slip Sliding Away
06. You're the One
07. Me and Julio Down by the Schoolyard
08. Train in the Distance
09. How Can You Live in the Northeast
10. Loves Me Like A Rock
11. That Was Your Mother
12. Duncan
13. Graceland
14. Father and Daughter
15. Cecelia
16. The Only Living Boy In New York
CD 2:
01. Diamonds on the Soles of Her Shoes
02. You can Call Me Al
03. Still Crazy After All These Years
04. Mrs. Robinson
05. Wartime Prayers
06. Bridge Over Troubled Water
07. Late In The Evening
08. The Boxer (with Jerry Douglas)
http://fp.io/a81d6295/
THE BAND - NY Central Terminal Buffalo NY - 10/28/1983
The Band
1983-10-28
NY Central Terminal
Buffalo NY
Soundboard Recording
01. Rag Mama Rag
02. Long Black Veil
03. The Shape I'm In
04. It Makes No Difference
05. Milkcow Blues
06. Mystery Train
07. King Harvest
08. Voodoo Music
09. WS Wolcott Medicine Show
10. You Don'T Know Me
11. Stage Fright
12. Caledonia
13. Chest Fever
14. Up On Cripple Creek
15. Java Blue
16. Rock & Roll Shoes
17. The Weight
LOU REED, JOHN CALE, NICO - Le BATACLAN 1972
Title
Waiting For The Man
Berlin
Black Angels Death Song
Wild Child
Heroin
Ghost Story
The Biggest, Loudest, Hairiest Group Of All
Empty Bottles
Femme Fatale
No One Is There
Frozen Warnings
Janitor Of Lunacy
I'll Be Your Mirror
All Tomorrow's Parties (Encore)
BOZ SCAGGS - The Essential
Boz Scaggs – The Essential (2013)
Boz Scaggs returned from a five-year absence from the studio with Memphis, a collection celebrating classic southern soul like “Rainy Night in Georgia,” “Love on a Two Way Street” and “Mixed Up, Shook Up Girl.” Columbia Records and Legacy Recordings celebrating Scaggs’ own music with the October 29 release of the 2-CD anthology The Essential Boz Scaggs. This 32-song set draws on Scaggs’ landmark tenure at Columbia Records which yielded 1976’s Silk Degrees but also on his recordings for Atlantic, Virgin and 429 Records right up through Memphis.
Singer-songwriter-guitarist Scaggs made a splash on the first two albums by the Steve Miller Band before departing that group’s ranks to pursue solo fame. 1969’s Atlantic Records LP Boz Scaggs wasn’t his debut; that honor actually went to the all-but-forgotten, never-reissued Boz, which received a release in Sweden only in 1965. But Boz Scaggs (co-produced by Jann Wenner of Rolling Stone) paired the singer-songwriter-guitarist with the Muscle Shoals Rhythm Section and the great Duane Allman on guitar, and attracted enough attention to gain him a Columbia Records contract. 1971’s Moments began his association with Columbia, and its mellow brand of blue-eyed soul would lead to the 1976 breakthrough Silk Degrees.
Scaggs’ seventh overall album and fifth for Columbia, Silk handily bested the No. 81 chart placement of its predecessor Slow Dancer. Silk Degrees, produced by Joe Wissert with backing from future Toto men David Paich, Jeff Porcaro, Steve Porcaro and David Hungate, peaked at No. 2 and spent 115 weeks on the Billboard chart. Three of its singles, “Lowdown,” “It’s Over” and “Lido Shuffle” all made the Top 40. A fourth single, “What Can I Say,” barely missed that mark, with a No. 42 berth. “Lowdown” netted Scaggs a Grammy Award, and the album’s closing song (and the B-side of two separate singles) “We’re All Alone” went on to receive numerous cover versions of which Rita Coolidge’s Adult Contemporary chart-topper was undoubtedly the most successful. Scaggs’ winning streak continued with the platinum sellers Down Two Then Left (1977) and Middle Man (1980) as well as the No. 3 AC/No. 14 Pop single “Look What You’ve Done to Me” from the film Urban Cowboy. “Look What You’ve Done to Me” – with backing vocals from Don Henley, Glenn Frey and Timothy B. Schmit of The Eagles – and the Top 15 hit “Miss Sun” both appeared on 1980’s Hits! LP, and are reprised here.
The Essential, arranged in roughly chronological order, includes tracks from Boz Scaggs and each of Scaggs’ Columbia albums. He remained with the label all the way through 1988’s Other Roads, though it was only his second studio album of the decade after Middle Man. Scaggs re-emerged on Virgin Records in 1994 with Some Change, following it with a set of “unplugged” re-recordings in 1996 (Fade into Light, initially released in Japan) and then another album of new material, Come on Home, the very next year. Both Some Change and Come on Home are represented on the new anthology, along with 2001’s Dig. The artist again laid low for much of the early part of the 21st century save for a couple of albums of standards (2003’s But Beautiful and 2008’s Speak Low), plus live releases and compilations. His 2013 return, Memphis, closes out The Essential with “Gone Baby Gone.”
Containing 14 Hot 100 chart singles, The Essential Boz Scaggs displays the singer’s mastery of blues, rock and roll, R&B and smooth soul. It features a new essay by Anthony DeCurtis which draws on new interview material with Scaggs.
Boz Scaggs, The Essential Boz Scaggs (Columbia/Legacy 88883 74121 2, 2013)
CD 1
I’ll Be Long Gone
Loan Me a Dime
Runnin’ Blue
We Were Always Sweethearts
Painted Bells
Near You
Dinah Flo
Might Have to Cry
You Make It So Hard (To Say No)
Slow Dancer
What Can I Say
It’s Over
Harbor Lights
Lowdown
Lido Shuffle
We’ll All Alone
Hard Times
CD 2
JoJo
Isn’t It Time
Simone
Breakdown Dead Ahead
Miss Sun
Look What You’ve Done to Me
Heart of Mine
Some Change
Sierra
As The Years Go Passing By (with Booker T & the MG’s)
It All Went Down the Drain
Miss Riddle
I Just Go
Thanks to You
Gone Baby Gone
CD 1, Tracks 1-2 from Boz Scaggs, originally issued 1969, as Atlantic 8239
CD 1, Track 3 from Boz Scaggs & Band, originally issued November 1971, as Columbia 30796
CD 1, Tracks 4-6 from Moments, originally issued March 1971, as Columbia 30454
CD 1, Tracks 7-8 from My Time, originally issued September 1972, as Columbia 31384
CD 1, Tracks 9-10 from Slow Dancer, originally issued March 1974, as Columbia 32760
CD 1, Tracks 11-16 from Silk Degrees, originally issued March 1976, as Columbia 43920
CD 1, Track 17 from Down Two Then Left, originally issued November 1977, as Columbia 34729
CD 2, Tracks 1-4 from Middle Man, originally issued April 1980, as Columbia 36106
CD 2, Tracks 5-6 from Hits! originally issued November 1980, as Columbia 36841
CD 2, Track 7 from Other Roads, originally issued May 1988, as Columbia 40463
CD 2, Tracks 8-9 from Some Change, originally issued April 1994, as Virgin 7243 8 39489 2
CD 2, Track 10 from The Best Of The Columbia Records Radio Hour, Volume 2, originally issued 1996, as Columbia 67498
CD 2, Track 11 from Come On Home, originally issued April 1997, as Virgin 7243 8 42984 2 5
CD 2, Tracks 12-14 from Dig, originally issued September 2001, as Virgin CDVUS206
CD 2, Track 15 from Memphis, originally issued March 2013, as 429 Records FTN17889
http://fp.io/22a22b38/
Boz Scaggs returned from a five-year absence from the studio with Memphis, a collection celebrating classic southern soul like “Rainy Night in Georgia,” “Love on a Two Way Street” and “Mixed Up, Shook Up Girl.” Columbia Records and Legacy Recordings celebrating Scaggs’ own music with the October 29 release of the 2-CD anthology The Essential Boz Scaggs. This 32-song set draws on Scaggs’ landmark tenure at Columbia Records which yielded 1976’s Silk Degrees but also on his recordings for Atlantic, Virgin and 429 Records right up through Memphis.
Singer-songwriter-guitarist Scaggs made a splash on the first two albums by the Steve Miller Band before departing that group’s ranks to pursue solo fame. 1969’s Atlantic Records LP Boz Scaggs wasn’t his debut; that honor actually went to the all-but-forgotten, never-reissued Boz, which received a release in Sweden only in 1965. But Boz Scaggs (co-produced by Jann Wenner of Rolling Stone) paired the singer-songwriter-guitarist with the Muscle Shoals Rhythm Section and the great Duane Allman on guitar, and attracted enough attention to gain him a Columbia Records contract. 1971’s Moments began his association with Columbia, and its mellow brand of blue-eyed soul would lead to the 1976 breakthrough Silk Degrees.
Scaggs’ seventh overall album and fifth for Columbia, Silk handily bested the No. 81 chart placement of its predecessor Slow Dancer. Silk Degrees, produced by Joe Wissert with backing from future Toto men David Paich, Jeff Porcaro, Steve Porcaro and David Hungate, peaked at No. 2 and spent 115 weeks on the Billboard chart. Three of its singles, “Lowdown,” “It’s Over” and “Lido Shuffle” all made the Top 40. A fourth single, “What Can I Say,” barely missed that mark, with a No. 42 berth. “Lowdown” netted Scaggs a Grammy Award, and the album’s closing song (and the B-side of two separate singles) “We’re All Alone” went on to receive numerous cover versions of which Rita Coolidge’s Adult Contemporary chart-topper was undoubtedly the most successful. Scaggs’ winning streak continued with the platinum sellers Down Two Then Left (1977) and Middle Man (1980) as well as the No. 3 AC/No. 14 Pop single “Look What You’ve Done to Me” from the film Urban Cowboy. “Look What You’ve Done to Me” – with backing vocals from Don Henley, Glenn Frey and Timothy B. Schmit of The Eagles – and the Top 15 hit “Miss Sun” both appeared on 1980’s Hits! LP, and are reprised here.
The Essential, arranged in roughly chronological order, includes tracks from Boz Scaggs and each of Scaggs’ Columbia albums. He remained with the label all the way through 1988’s Other Roads, though it was only his second studio album of the decade after Middle Man. Scaggs re-emerged on Virgin Records in 1994 with Some Change, following it with a set of “unplugged” re-recordings in 1996 (Fade into Light, initially released in Japan) and then another album of new material, Come on Home, the very next year. Both Some Change and Come on Home are represented on the new anthology, along with 2001’s Dig. The artist again laid low for much of the early part of the 21st century save for a couple of albums of standards (2003’s But Beautiful and 2008’s Speak Low), plus live releases and compilations. His 2013 return, Memphis, closes out The Essential with “Gone Baby Gone.”
Containing 14 Hot 100 chart singles, The Essential Boz Scaggs displays the singer’s mastery of blues, rock and roll, R&B and smooth soul. It features a new essay by Anthony DeCurtis which draws on new interview material with Scaggs.
Boz Scaggs, The Essential Boz Scaggs (Columbia/Legacy 88883 74121 2, 2013)
CD 1
I’ll Be Long Gone
Loan Me a Dime
Runnin’ Blue
We Were Always Sweethearts
Painted Bells
Near You
Dinah Flo
Might Have to Cry
You Make It So Hard (To Say No)
Slow Dancer
What Can I Say
It’s Over
Harbor Lights
Lowdown
Lido Shuffle
We’ll All Alone
Hard Times
CD 2
JoJo
Isn’t It Time
Simone
Breakdown Dead Ahead
Miss Sun
Look What You’ve Done to Me
Heart of Mine
Some Change
Sierra
As The Years Go Passing By (with Booker T & the MG’s)
It All Went Down the Drain
Miss Riddle
I Just Go
Thanks to You
Gone Baby Gone
CD 1, Tracks 1-2 from Boz Scaggs, originally issued 1969, as Atlantic 8239
CD 1, Track 3 from Boz Scaggs & Band, originally issued November 1971, as Columbia 30796
CD 1, Tracks 4-6 from Moments, originally issued March 1971, as Columbia 30454
CD 1, Tracks 7-8 from My Time, originally issued September 1972, as Columbia 31384
CD 1, Tracks 9-10 from Slow Dancer, originally issued March 1974, as Columbia 32760
CD 1, Tracks 11-16 from Silk Degrees, originally issued March 1976, as Columbia 43920
CD 1, Track 17 from Down Two Then Left, originally issued November 1977, as Columbia 34729
CD 2, Tracks 1-4 from Middle Man, originally issued April 1980, as Columbia 36106
CD 2, Tracks 5-6 from Hits! originally issued November 1980, as Columbia 36841
CD 2, Track 7 from Other Roads, originally issued May 1988, as Columbia 40463
CD 2, Tracks 8-9 from Some Change, originally issued April 1994, as Virgin 7243 8 39489 2
CD 2, Track 10 from The Best Of The Columbia Records Radio Hour, Volume 2, originally issued 1996, as Columbia 67498
CD 2, Track 11 from Come On Home, originally issued April 1997, as Virgin 7243 8 42984 2 5
CD 2, Tracks 12-14 from Dig, originally issued September 2001, as Virgin CDVUS206
CD 2, Track 15 from Memphis, originally issued March 2013, as 429 Records FTN17889
http://fp.io/22a22b38/
HUMBLE PIE - Performance: Rockin’ The Fillmore – The Complete Recordings
Humble Pie - Performance: Rockin’ The Fillmore – The Complete Recordings
All 4 Shows, unedited, as-they-happened live from the Fillmore East, New York—May 1971.
Mixed and mastered from the original multi-tracks under the supervision of Peter Frampton and Jerry Shirley.
4 Hours of Music on 4 CDs!
One of the world’s greatest live albums is now four times greater!
When Steve Marriott left the Small Faces (Rock and Roll Hall Of Fame Class of 2012) to launch a new band in 1968, expectations were high. Marriott teamed with 18-year-old guitarist Peter Frampton, already a U.K. star through his work with The Herd, along with bassist Greg Ridley from Spooky Tooth, and 17-year-old drummer Jerry Shirley, who Steve Marriott had used as a session player for Andrew Loog Oldham’s Immediate Record Label.
Humble Pie recorded four albums and several singles before achieving its U.S. breakthrough with their 1971 the double-live set Performance: Rockin’ The Fillmore. Drawn from four shows played over two consecutive nights at Bill Graham’s legendary Fillmore East, Performance captured a red-hot band firing on all cylinders, distilling the crowd-pleasing heavy blues-rock style that had come to dominate the Brit foursome’s repertoire, and which would help to lay the foundation for the sound that would soon become known as heavy metal. Performance caught on in a big way with American listeners, hitting #21 on the U.S. album chart and becoming the Pie’s first Gold album.
Now, for the first time, Omnivore Recordings has gathered all four shows from Humble Pie’s historic Fillmore East stand in this lovingly packaged four-CD box set. No editing or resequencing—just the four sets as they were played on May 28 and 29, 1971. The seven tracks that comprised the original album are joined here by 15 previously unissued performances—including the never-before-heard complete first set from May 28!
You may not need no doctor, but you do need Humble Pie’s Performance: Rockin’ The Fillmore – The Complete Recordings.
Humble Pie’s ‘Rockin’ the Fillmore’ Track Listing
Disc One (05/28/71 Friday, First Show)
1 - Four Day Creep
2 - I'm Ready
3 - I Walk on Gilded Splinters
4 - Hallelujah (I Love Her So)
5 - I Don't Need No Doctor
Disc Two (05/28/71 Friday, Second Show)
1 - Four Day Creep
2 - I'm Ready
3 - I Walk on Gilded Splinters
4 - Hallelujah (I Love Her So) *
5 - Rollin' Stone *
6 - I Don't Need No Doctor *
Disc Three (05/29/71 Saturday, First Show)
1 - Four Day Creep
2 - I'm Ready
3 - I Walk on Gilded Splinters
4 - Hallelujah (I Love Her So)
5 - Stone Cold Fever *
Disc Four (05/29/71 Saturday, Second Show)
1 - Four Day Creep *
2 - I'm Ready *
3 - I Walk on Gilded Splinters *
4 - Hallelujah (I Love Her So)
5 - Rollin' Stone
6 - I Don't Need No Doctor
* are the tracks from the original 1971 release
http://fp.io/7m8e6cc4/
PHISH - Reading, PA - 10/29/2013
10/29/2013:
Reading, PA
SET ONE
Cars Trucks Buses 6:50
Stealing Time From the Faulty Plan 7:18
Ginseng Sullivan 3:20
Wolfman's Brother 9:31
Sparkle 3:58
Walk Away 6:27
Divided Sky 16:52
Split Open and Melt 11:25
Julius 8:18
SET TWO
Down with Disease 21:51
Taste 8:18
Twenty Years Later 14:23
Piper 8:17
Backwards Down the Number Line 8:03
You Enjoy Myself 23:29
Grind 2:30
ENCORE
Bouncing Around the Room 3:49
Reba 13:12
Good Times, Bad Times 5:33
http://fp.io/f73d73ac/
October 29, 2013
LOU REED - Concertgebouw Amsterdam - 09/20/1973
Lou Reed
Concertgebouw
Amsterdam
1973.09.20
1. Intro / Sweet Jane 7:29
2. How Do You Think It Feels 3:34
3. Caroline Says 1 3:30
4. I'm Waiting For The Man 5:05
5. Satellite Of Love 5:12
6. Walk On The Wild Side 4:51
7. Vicious 6:55
8. Oh, Jim / Heroin (Cut) 15:55
Lou Reed - vocals
Steve Hunter - guitar
Dick Wagner - guitar
Ray Colcord - organ
Peter Walsh - bass
Pentti Glan - drums
LOU REED - Falkonerteatret, Copenhagen, Denmark - 09/19/1973
Lou Reed
Falkonerteatret, Copenhagen, Denmark
1973-09-19
1. Intro / Sweet Jane
2. How Do You Think It Feels?
3. Caroline Says I
4. I'm Waiting For The Man
5. Satellite Of Love
6. Walk On The Wild Side
7. Oh Jim
8. Heroin
9. Rock And Roll
10. White Light/White Heat
11. Vicious
Lou Reed - Lou Reed
Pentti Glen - drums
Prakash John - bass
Ray Colcord - keyboards
Steve Hunter - guitar
Dick Wagner - guitar
http://fp.io/66496c46/
LOU REED - Out of the Underground::New York City, NY - 01/27/1973
ARTIST: Lou Reed
TITLE: Out of the Underground
DATE: January 27th, 1973
VENUE: Alice Tully Hall
LOCATION: New York City, NY
SOURCE: SBD
QUALITY: A/A+
1. White Light/White Heat
2. Wagon Wheel
3. I'm Waiting For The Man
4. Walk and Talk It
5. Sweet Jane
6. New Age
7. Vicious
8. I Can't Stand It
9. Satellite of Love
10. Heroin
11. I'm So Free
12. Walk on the Walk Side
13. Rock & Roll
14. Sister Ray
LOU REED - Vieilles Charrues Carhaix - 07/17/2011
Lou Reed
Vieilles Charrues
Carhaix
2011.07.17
01 - Who Loves the Sun
02 - Senselessly Cruel
03 - All Through The Night
04 - Ecstasy
05 - Smalltown
06 - Venus in Furs
07 - Sunday Morning
08 - Femme Fatale
09 - Waves of Fear
10 - Sweet Jane
11 - Pale Blue Eyes
Webcast
From streaming retransmission Direct17 Web. Pro shot.
http://fp.io/c8ef1f7e/
LOU REED - ''LIVE'' 1975
LOU REED
''LIVE''
1975
38:40
1/Walk on the Wild Side
Lou Reed/5:59
2/I'm Waiting for the Man
Lou Reed/5:59
3/Vicious
Lou Reed/4:53
4/Satellite of Love
Lou Reed/3:40
5/Oh, Jim
Lou Reed/10:39
6/Sad Song
Lou Reed/7:30
Ray Colcord /Keyboards
Whitey Glan /Drums
Steve Hunter /Guitar
Prakash John /Bass
Steve Katz /Producer
Lou Reed /Vocals, Guitar, Piano
Dick Wagner /Guitar
BIOGRAPHY
by Richie Unterberger
The career of Lou Reed defies capsule summarization. Like David Bowie (whom Reed directly inspired in many ways), he has made over his image many times, mutating from theatrical glam rocker to strung-out junkie to avant-garde noiseman to straight rock & roller to your average guy. Few would deny Reed's immense importance and considerable achievements. As has often been written, he expanded the vocabulary of rock & roll lyrics into the previously forbidden territory of kinky sex, drug use (and abuse), decadence, transvestites, homosexuality, and suicidal depression. As has been pointed out less often, he remained (and remains) committed to using rock & roll as a forum for literary, mature expression well into middle age, without growing lyrically soft or musically complacent. By and large, he's taken on these challenging duties with uncompromising honesty and a high degree of realism. For these reasons, he's often cited as punk's most important ancestor. It's often overlooked, though, that he's equally skilled at celebrating romantic joy, and rock & roll itself, as he is at depicting harrowing urban realities. With the exception of Neil Young, no other star who rose to fame in the '60s continued to push himself so diligently into creating work that is meaningful and contemporary.
Although Reed achieved his greatest success as a solo artist, his most enduring accomplishments were as the leader of the Velvet Underground in the '60s. If Reed had never made any solo records, his work as the principal lead singer and songwriter for the Velvets would have still ensured his stature as one of the greatest rock visionaries of all time. the Velvet Underground are discussed at great length in many other sources, but it's sufficient to note that the four studio albums they recorded with Reed at the helm are essential listening, as is much of their live and extraneous material. "Heroin," "Sister Ray," "Sweet Jane," "Rock and Roll," "Venus in Furs," "All Tomorrow's Parties," "What Goes On," and "Lisa Says" are just the most famous classics that Reed wrote and sang for the group. As innovative as the Velvets were at breaking lyrical and instrumental taboos with their crunching experimental rock, they were unappreciated in their lifetime. Five years of little commercial success was undoubtedly a factor in Reed leaving the group he had founded in August 1970, just before the release of their most accessible effort, Loaded. Although Reed's songs and streetwise, sing-speak vocals dominated the Velvets, he was perhaps more reliant upon his talented collaborators than he realized, or is even willing to admit to this day. The most talented of these associates was John Cale, who was apparently fired by Reed in 1968 after the Velvets' second album (although the pair have worked together on various other projects since then).
Reed has a reputation of being a difficult man to work with for an extended period, and that has made it difficult for his extensive solo oeuvre to compete with the standards of brilliance set by the Velvets. Nowhere was this more apparent than on his self-titled solo debut from 1971, recorded after he'd taken an extended hiatus from music, moving back to his parents' suburban Long Island home at one point. Lou Reed mostly consisted of flaccid versions of songs dating back to the Velvet days, and he could have really used the group to punch them up, as proved by the many outtake versions of these tunes that he actually recorded with the Velvet Underground (some of which didn't surface until about 25 years later).
Reed got a shot in the arm (no distasteful pun intended) when David Bowie and Mick Ronson produced his second album, Transformer. A more energetic set that betrayed the influence of glam rock, it also included his sole Top 20 hit, "Walk on the Wild Side," and other good songs like "Vicious" and "Satellite of Love." It also made him a star in Britain, which was quick to appreciate the influence Reed had exerted on Bowie and other glam rockers. Reed went into more serious territory on Berlin (1973), its sweet orchestral production coating lyrical messages of despair and suicide. In some ways Reed's most ambitious and impressive solo effort, it was accorded a vituperative reception by critics in no mood for a nonstop bummer (however elegantly executed). Unbelievably, in retrospect, it made the Top Ten in Britain, though it flopped stateside.
Having been given a cold shoulder for some of his most serious (if chilling) work, Reed apparently decided he was going to give the public what it wanted. He had guitarists Steve Hunter and Dick Wagner give his music more of a pop-metal, radio-friendly sheen. More disturbingly, he decided to play up to the cartoon junkie role that some in his audience seemed eager to assign to him. Onstage, that meant shocking bleached hair, painted fingernails, and simulated drug injections. On record, it led to some of his most careless performances. One of these, the 1974 album Sally Can't Dance, was also his most commercially successful, reaching the Top Ten, thus confirming both Reed's and the audience's worst instincts. As if to prove he could still be as uncompromising as anyone, he unleashed the double album Metal Machine Music, a nonstop assault of electronic noise. Opinions remain divided as to whether it was an artistic statement, a contract quota-filler, or a slap in the face to the public.
While Reed has never behaved as outrageously (in public and in the studio) as he did in the mid-'70s, there was plenty of excitement in the decades that followed. When he decided to play it relatively straight, sincere, and hard-nosed, he could produce affecting work in the spirit of his best vintage material (parts of Coney Island Baby and Street Hassle). At other points, he seemed not to be putting too much effort into any aspect of his songs ("Rock and Roll Heart"). With 1978's Take No Prisoners, he delivered one of the weirdest concert albums of all time, more of a comedy monologue (which not too many people laughed hard at) than a musical document. Reed had always been an enigma, but no one questioned the serious intent of his work with the Velvet Underground. As a soloist, it was getting impossible to tell when he was serious, or whether he even wished to be taken seriously anymore.
At the end of the '70s, The Bells set the tone for most of his future work. Reed would settle down; he would play it straight; he would address serious, adult concerns, including heterosexual romance, with sincerity. Not a bad idea, but though the albums that followed were much more consistent in tone, they remained erratic in quality and, worse, could occasionally be quite boring. The recruitment of Robert Quine as lead guitarist helped, and The Blue Mask (1982) and New Sensations (1984) were fairly successful, although in retrospect they didn't deserve the raves they received from some critics at the time. Quine, however, would also find Reed too difficult to work with for an extended period. New York (1989) heralded both a commercial and critical renaissance for Reed, and in truth it was his best work in quite some time, although it didn't break any major stylistic ground. Reed works best when faced with a challenge, which arrived when he collaborated with former partner John Cale in 1990 on a song cycle for the recently deceased Andy Warhol. In both its recorded and stage incarnations, this was the most experimental work that Reed had devised in quite some time.
Magic and Loss (1992) returned him to the more familiar straight rock territory of New York, again to critical raves. The re-formation of the Velvet Underground for a 1993 European live tour could not be considered an unqualified success, however. European audiences were thrilled to see the legends in person, but critical reaction to the shows was mixed, and critical reaction to the live record was tepid. More distressingly, old conflicts reared their head within the band once again, and the reunion ended before it had a chance to get to America. Cale and Reed at this point seem determined never to work with each other again (the death of Velvet Underground guitarist Sterling Morrison in 1995 seemed to permanently ice prospects of more VU projects). In 1996, the surviving Velvet Underground members were inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame, performing a newly penned song for their fallen comrade, Morrison. Reed closed the '90s with an album that saw him explore relationships, 1996's Set the Twilight Reeling (many speculated that the album was biographical and focused on his union with performance artist Laurie Anderson), which didn't turned out to be one of Reed's more critically acclaimed releases. He also found time to compose music for the Robert Wilson opera Timerocker, and in 1998, released the "unplugged" album Perfect Night: Live in London. The same year, Reed was the subject of a superb installment of the PBS American Masters series that chronicled his entire career (eventually released as a DVD, titled Rock and Roll Heart).
2000 saw Reed's first release for Reprise Records, Ecstasy, a glorious return to raw and straightforward rock, a tour de force that many agreed was his finest work since New York. Another collaboration with Robert Wilson, POE-try, followed in 2001 and continued its worldwide stage run through the year. Including new music by Reed and words adapted from the macabre texts of Edgar Allan Poe, POE-try led to Reed's highly ambitious next album, The Raven. Animal Serenade, a double-disc set recorded at the Wiltern Theater in Los Angeles during his 2003 world tour, was issued in spring 2004. The live effort is Reed's tribute of sorts to his celebrated Rock N Roll Animal concert album, which was released 30 years before. In 2007, Reed released Hudson River Wind Meditations, a four-song experimental sound collage that celebrated both the best and worst aspects of Metal Machine Music. In 2011, he joined forces with heavy metal legends Metallica to create Lulu, an album of fresh studio material. Written by Reed, with James Hetfield et al providing input on arrangements and dynamics, Lulu blended Lou Reed's trademark monotone vocals with the power and ferocity of Metallica's musicianship.
http://fp.io/me5679d1/
''LIVE''
1975
38:40
1/Walk on the Wild Side
Lou Reed/5:59
2/I'm Waiting for the Man
Lou Reed/5:59
3/Vicious
Lou Reed/4:53
4/Satellite of Love
Lou Reed/3:40
5/Oh, Jim
Lou Reed/10:39
6/Sad Song
Lou Reed/7:30
Ray Colcord /Keyboards
Whitey Glan /Drums
Steve Hunter /Guitar
Prakash John /Bass
Steve Katz /Producer
Lou Reed /Vocals, Guitar, Piano
Dick Wagner /Guitar
BIOGRAPHY
by Richie Unterberger
The career of Lou Reed defies capsule summarization. Like David Bowie (whom Reed directly inspired in many ways), he has made over his image many times, mutating from theatrical glam rocker to strung-out junkie to avant-garde noiseman to straight rock & roller to your average guy. Few would deny Reed's immense importance and considerable achievements. As has often been written, he expanded the vocabulary of rock & roll lyrics into the previously forbidden territory of kinky sex, drug use (and abuse), decadence, transvestites, homosexuality, and suicidal depression. As has been pointed out less often, he remained (and remains) committed to using rock & roll as a forum for literary, mature expression well into middle age, without growing lyrically soft or musically complacent. By and large, he's taken on these challenging duties with uncompromising honesty and a high degree of realism. For these reasons, he's often cited as punk's most important ancestor. It's often overlooked, though, that he's equally skilled at celebrating romantic joy, and rock & roll itself, as he is at depicting harrowing urban realities. With the exception of Neil Young, no other star who rose to fame in the '60s continued to push himself so diligently into creating work that is meaningful and contemporary.
Although Reed achieved his greatest success as a solo artist, his most enduring accomplishments were as the leader of the Velvet Underground in the '60s. If Reed had never made any solo records, his work as the principal lead singer and songwriter for the Velvets would have still ensured his stature as one of the greatest rock visionaries of all time. the Velvet Underground are discussed at great length in many other sources, but it's sufficient to note that the four studio albums they recorded with Reed at the helm are essential listening, as is much of their live and extraneous material. "Heroin," "Sister Ray," "Sweet Jane," "Rock and Roll," "Venus in Furs," "All Tomorrow's Parties," "What Goes On," and "Lisa Says" are just the most famous classics that Reed wrote and sang for the group. As innovative as the Velvets were at breaking lyrical and instrumental taboos with their crunching experimental rock, they were unappreciated in their lifetime. Five years of little commercial success was undoubtedly a factor in Reed leaving the group he had founded in August 1970, just before the release of their most accessible effort, Loaded. Although Reed's songs and streetwise, sing-speak vocals dominated the Velvets, he was perhaps more reliant upon his talented collaborators than he realized, or is even willing to admit to this day. The most talented of these associates was John Cale, who was apparently fired by Reed in 1968 after the Velvets' second album (although the pair have worked together on various other projects since then).
Reed has a reputation of being a difficult man to work with for an extended period, and that has made it difficult for his extensive solo oeuvre to compete with the standards of brilliance set by the Velvets. Nowhere was this more apparent than on his self-titled solo debut from 1971, recorded after he'd taken an extended hiatus from music, moving back to his parents' suburban Long Island home at one point. Lou Reed mostly consisted of flaccid versions of songs dating back to the Velvet days, and he could have really used the group to punch them up, as proved by the many outtake versions of these tunes that he actually recorded with the Velvet Underground (some of which didn't surface until about 25 years later).
Reed got a shot in the arm (no distasteful pun intended) when David Bowie and Mick Ronson produced his second album, Transformer. A more energetic set that betrayed the influence of glam rock, it also included his sole Top 20 hit, "Walk on the Wild Side," and other good songs like "Vicious" and "Satellite of Love." It also made him a star in Britain, which was quick to appreciate the influence Reed had exerted on Bowie and other glam rockers. Reed went into more serious territory on Berlin (1973), its sweet orchestral production coating lyrical messages of despair and suicide. In some ways Reed's most ambitious and impressive solo effort, it was accorded a vituperative reception by critics in no mood for a nonstop bummer (however elegantly executed). Unbelievably, in retrospect, it made the Top Ten in Britain, though it flopped stateside.
Having been given a cold shoulder for some of his most serious (if chilling) work, Reed apparently decided he was going to give the public what it wanted. He had guitarists Steve Hunter and Dick Wagner give his music more of a pop-metal, radio-friendly sheen. More disturbingly, he decided to play up to the cartoon junkie role that some in his audience seemed eager to assign to him. Onstage, that meant shocking bleached hair, painted fingernails, and simulated drug injections. On record, it led to some of his most careless performances. One of these, the 1974 album Sally Can't Dance, was also his most commercially successful, reaching the Top Ten, thus confirming both Reed's and the audience's worst instincts. As if to prove he could still be as uncompromising as anyone, he unleashed the double album Metal Machine Music, a nonstop assault of electronic noise. Opinions remain divided as to whether it was an artistic statement, a contract quota-filler, or a slap in the face to the public.
While Reed has never behaved as outrageously (in public and in the studio) as he did in the mid-'70s, there was plenty of excitement in the decades that followed. When he decided to play it relatively straight, sincere, and hard-nosed, he could produce affecting work in the spirit of his best vintage material (parts of Coney Island Baby and Street Hassle). At other points, he seemed not to be putting too much effort into any aspect of his songs ("Rock and Roll Heart"). With 1978's Take No Prisoners, he delivered one of the weirdest concert albums of all time, more of a comedy monologue (which not too many people laughed hard at) than a musical document. Reed had always been an enigma, but no one questioned the serious intent of his work with the Velvet Underground. As a soloist, it was getting impossible to tell when he was serious, or whether he even wished to be taken seriously anymore.
At the end of the '70s, The Bells set the tone for most of his future work. Reed would settle down; he would play it straight; he would address serious, adult concerns, including heterosexual romance, with sincerity. Not a bad idea, but though the albums that followed were much more consistent in tone, they remained erratic in quality and, worse, could occasionally be quite boring. The recruitment of Robert Quine as lead guitarist helped, and The Blue Mask (1982) and New Sensations (1984) were fairly successful, although in retrospect they didn't deserve the raves they received from some critics at the time. Quine, however, would also find Reed too difficult to work with for an extended period. New York (1989) heralded both a commercial and critical renaissance for Reed, and in truth it was his best work in quite some time, although it didn't break any major stylistic ground. Reed works best when faced with a challenge, which arrived when he collaborated with former partner John Cale in 1990 on a song cycle for the recently deceased Andy Warhol. In both its recorded and stage incarnations, this was the most experimental work that Reed had devised in quite some time.
Magic and Loss (1992) returned him to the more familiar straight rock territory of New York, again to critical raves. The re-formation of the Velvet Underground for a 1993 European live tour could not be considered an unqualified success, however. European audiences were thrilled to see the legends in person, but critical reaction to the shows was mixed, and critical reaction to the live record was tepid. More distressingly, old conflicts reared their head within the band once again, and the reunion ended before it had a chance to get to America. Cale and Reed at this point seem determined never to work with each other again (the death of Velvet Underground guitarist Sterling Morrison in 1995 seemed to permanently ice prospects of more VU projects). In 1996, the surviving Velvet Underground members were inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame, performing a newly penned song for their fallen comrade, Morrison. Reed closed the '90s with an album that saw him explore relationships, 1996's Set the Twilight Reeling (many speculated that the album was biographical and focused on his union with performance artist Laurie Anderson), which didn't turned out to be one of Reed's more critically acclaimed releases. He also found time to compose music for the Robert Wilson opera Timerocker, and in 1998, released the "unplugged" album Perfect Night: Live in London. The same year, Reed was the subject of a superb installment of the PBS American Masters series that chronicled his entire career (eventually released as a DVD, titled Rock and Roll Heart).
2000 saw Reed's first release for Reprise Records, Ecstasy, a glorious return to raw and straightforward rock, a tour de force that many agreed was his finest work since New York. Another collaboration with Robert Wilson, POE-try, followed in 2001 and continued its worldwide stage run through the year. Including new music by Reed and words adapted from the macabre texts of Edgar Allan Poe, POE-try led to Reed's highly ambitious next album, The Raven. Animal Serenade, a double-disc set recorded at the Wiltern Theater in Los Angeles during his 2003 world tour, was issued in spring 2004. The live effort is Reed's tribute of sorts to his celebrated Rock N Roll Animal concert album, which was released 30 years before. In 2007, Reed released Hudson River Wind Meditations, a four-song experimental sound collage that celebrated both the best and worst aspects of Metal Machine Music. In 2011, he joined forces with heavy metal legends Metallica to create Lulu, an album of fresh studio material. Written by Reed, with James Hetfield et al providing input on arrangements and dynamics, Lulu blended Lou Reed's trademark monotone vocals with the power and ferocity of Metallica's musicianship.
http://fp.io/me5679d1/
LOU REED - Original Album Series
Lou Reed – Original Album Series (2013)
Released in 2013, Original Album Series offers 5 Lou Reed albums from the middle period of his solo career — 1989's New York to 2000's Ecstasy.
The first two albums of the series, New York and Songs for Drella, are the most essential of the bunch, but this is a quick and cheap way to get Magic and Loss, Set the Twilight Reeling, and Ecstasy as well, since each has its moments.
New York remains a high point in Reed’s career – his love/hate letter to the city where he grew and up, while Songs for Drella followed the very next year – a very beautiful and satisfying collaboration with John Cale that remembers the life of Andy Warhol. Magic and Loss from 1992, is not an album you’d reach for to put on at a party, but it remains a truly stunning piece of work. A quiet meditation..
…on life and death, told with brutal honesty as Reed recalls the passing of two friends.
Set The Twilight Reeling (1996) and Ecstasy (2000) didn’t benefit from the general goodwill and momentum that the three previous albums enjoyed, but they are both excellent. Reed is as witty and literate as ever, and Ecstasy sees the return of Mike Rathke, who played on New York and Magic and Loss (he also co-wrote many songs on the Magic and Loss album).
LOU REED - AMERICAN POET
Recorded live at the Hempstead Theatre, New York, New York in 1972. Finally, this is an official release of the December 26, 1972, performance of Reed on a New York radio show, which had been floating around on numerous bootlegs for many years. The sound is at least as good as it's been on any of those bootlegs. As for the music, it's inarguably among the finest of Reed's solo work, released or unreleased. The set's split evenly between the Velvet Underground classics and highlights from Reed's early solo albums, with backing by the Tots, the group of unknown musicians who played with him in concert during the period. The fidelity is very good, Reed's singing is great, and the band plays in a raw and urgent manner that Reed should have employed on his solo albums, but didn't. The Velvet Underground songs are well-done and considerably different from the originals, and the versions of solo classics like "Vicious," "Walk on the Wild Side," "I'm So Free," "Berlin," and "Satellite of Love" slay the studio takes to shreds. If you're looking for one interesting bonus that doesn't seem to have made it onto many of the prior bootleg releases of this material, there's a brief interview with Reed in which the naive-sounding DJ asks him where Doug Yule is. "Dead, I hope," Reed deadpans, to sincere gasps of shock from the audience. For those who take their Reed seriously, that one moment might actually make this CD worthy of purchase, even if they already have the music on bootleg. This is essential for Reed fanatics, though it's unfortunate that the liner notes are poorly written and poorly proofread, with no details about the show itself, instead offering a general history of his activities in the early '70s. - cduniverse.com
01. White Light / White Heat
02. Vicious
03. I'm Waiting For The Man
04. Walk It Talk It
05. Sweet Jane
06. Interview
07. Heroin
08. Satellite of Love
09. Walk on the Wild Side
10. I'm So Free
11. Berlin
12. Rock 'N' Roll http://fp.io/87e5m7cf/
October 28, 2013
LOU REED - Palace Theatre Dayton, OH - 10/27/1974
Lou Reed
1974-10-27
Palace Theatre
Dayton, OH
27 October 1974
Soundboard Recording
320 kbps
CD 1:
01 Tuning* 1.26
02 Intro* 2.38
03 Sweet Jane* 5.21
04 Vicious* 6.26
05 Ride Sally Ride 4.24
06 Heroin 11.13
07 Kill Your Sons 7.35
08 NY Stars 5.00
CD 2:
01 Animal Language 3.08
02 Waiting For The Man/Sally Can't Dance 9.38
03 Bass Solo 3.46
04 Walk On The Wild Side*
05 White Light White Heat
06 NY Telephone Conversation/Goodnight Ladies
07 Rock And Roll
* mono soundboard from Felt Forum, New York, 09 October 1974 used to fill in gaps in these tracks
Lou Reed: vocals. amphetamines, foul language
Danny Weiss: guitar
Prakash John: bass (definitely tracks D101, D102, D103, D104, D204 and possibly all the others)
Peter Hodgeson (?): bass (possibly the tracks recorded at Dayton)
Michael Fonfara: keyboards
Peter "Mouse" Johnson: drums
lineage: CDr - (EAC, secure mode) - wav - flac (level 8) - you
Uploaded to Dime November 2012 by lurid_uk
The late 1974 US tour to promote "Sally Can't Dance" was Lou's amphetamine and alcohol - fuelled assault on the unsuspecting youth of North America. The RCA publicity machine had moved into top gear, but Lou was speeding way, way ahead of them. While they were pushing him as a user-friendly glam-rock/white soul superstar, he was dying iron crosses in his hair, living with a half-Mexican transsexual called Rachel and (simulating) shooting up on stage. The new LP and 45 were being being heavily promoted via nationwide TV ads featuring our man in trademark leather jacket, blonde hair and shades (...follow the bouncing ball and sing along with Lou.....). Whatever RCA were doing, it worked, and "Sally" was in the US top 10 LP chart. Lou was later quoted as saying "....I slept through that LP - whatever they suggested I said yes....". It seemed that the further Lou descended into self-parody, the more records he sold, and the more pressure RCA put on him to produce even more "product". This would ultimately backfire in mid 1975, when he vomited up "Metal Machine Music" and then had a very public breakdown during the Australian leg of the '75 world tour. Lou wouldn't perform in public again until late 1976.
I think this is a simply outstanding show. Lou may be out of it, but the band most certainly are not. I love the way you can hear Lou slapping the mic stand at the end of "Vicious". The vocals alternate between detached and manic throughout this set, but are particularly expressive during "Kill Your Sons" (surely the best EVER live version of this song). It's as if he's standing on the edge of a cliff and he's just about to jump off because he KNOWS he can fly. This tour was the only outing for "NY Stars" and "Animal Language" - these live renditions sound better than the studio versions to me. You can hear him sneering as he spits out the words to "NY Stars". It sounds as if someone broke a string during "Animal Language": the band start a loose jam while it's being replaced. Lou starts vamping the words to "Waiting" during the jam, and just continues singing it when the band move on to the "Sally Can't Dance" riff. The end result is a unique medley of "Waiting" and "Sally" (you have to wonder how long it took Lou to realise he was singing the wrong song - he did pretty much the same at the Chalmette show in November, singing "Vicious" while the band played "Sweet Jane"). "White Light White Heat" is a heavy metal prototype for every late 1970s punk band. "Goodnight Ladies" is a gas, with the whole band gathering round the microphone - you can (just) hear someone in the background asking where the "Jacks" (Jack Daniels) is.....they were having a good time. "Rock And Roll" is simply sublime.
The stereo recording made at Dayton was missing "Intro/Sweet Jane" and part of "Vicious" and there was a tape break during "Wild Side": mono soundboard recordings from the New York concert have been used to replace those songs.
http://fp.io/7f271817/
LOTUS - BLUR II
Lotus
Album: Blur II
Released: 2013
Style: Electronic
Format: MP3 320Kbps
Size: 110 Mb
Tracklist:
01 – Owing To
02 – Strangers
03 – The Circle of Fire
04 – Indocina
05 – Afterglow
06 – Dance With Me
07 – Koko
08 – Melancholic Ballad
09 – Mystical Paths
10 – Aspect
11 – Breath
http://fp.io/226cb8fm/
Album: Blur II
Released: 2013
Style: Electronic
Format: MP3 320Kbps
Size: 110 Mb
Tracklist:
01 – Owing To
02 – Strangers
03 – The Circle of Fire
04 – Indocina
05 – Afterglow
06 – Dance With Me
07 – Koko
08 – Melancholic Ballad
09 – Mystical Paths
10 – Aspect
11 – Breath
http://fp.io/226cb8fm/
LED ZEPPELIN - Stadthalle Bremen - 06/23/1980
Led Zeppelin
June 23, 1980
Stadthalle
Bremen
01. Train Kept a Rollin'
02. Nobody's Fault But Mine
03. Black Dog
04. In the Evening
05. The Rain Song
06. Hot Dog
07. All My Love
08. Trampled Underfoot
09. Since I've Been Loving You
10. Achilles Last Stand
11. White Summer / Black Mountainside / Kashmir
12. Stairway to Heaven
13. Rock and Roll
14. Communication Breakdown
Plant barks aggressively as the band races through an explosive Train Kept a Rollin'. Bonzo forgets some of the breaks during Nobody's Fault But Mine, robbing the song of its dynamic tension. Plant's voice is a bit rough during In the Evening, he has trouble reaching some of the higher notes. The Rain Song is fantastic. As the song ends, Plant attempts to calm the rowdy crowd so Bonzo can introduce Hot Dog. Following All My Love, Plant announces "this is one we must dedicate to Phil Carson of Atlantic Records who, if he doesn't get his shit together shortly, will be... Trampled Underfoot." Bonzo mistakenly plays through the break following the guitar solo. Plant asks the crowd to stop pushing forward prior to a lackluster Since I've Been Loving You. As the song comes to a close, Bonzo can be heard shouting "be quiet, you cunt!" at the impatient crowd. The band plods through an uninspired Achilles Last Stand. Page gets a bit lost in the arrangement toward the end of the song. Plant delivers a powerful performance during Kashmir. Stairway to Heaven features an excellent guitar solo. Bonzo fumbles through the drum outburst at the end of Rock and Roll. The band closes the show with a violent Communication Breakdown. As the song ends, Plant announces "thank you, it's nice to be... back, goodnight." http://fp.io/m7775983/
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