Artist: Bruce Springsteen
Performance Date: 2014-05-14
Venue: Hersheypark Stadium, Hershey, Pennsylvania
Official live recordings of Bruce Springsteen & The E Street Band's
concert at Hersheypark Stadium, Hershey, Pennsylvania May 14th, 2014.
Source: Official FLAC 16 Download via Demonoid
FLAC Files Converted To Mp320 With FLAC MP3 Converter v3.3 build 1058
FLAC Files Tested OK With TLH-Decodeable Without Error
FLAC Files SBE's Fixed-Removed From File Name
FLAC Files Tagged-Updated With Mp3Tag
FLAC Files CDDA (Lossless)
See more at: http://brucespringsteen.fanfire.com/cgi-bin/WebObjects/
Store.woa/wa/product?sourceCode=BSPWEBWWUSD&sku=BSPDE144F#sthash.JtG2VoYi.dpuf
Track list: (180:11) Times Approximate
01 Clampdown (3:52)
02 Badlands (6:08)
03 Wrecking Ball (6:23)
04 Hungry Heart (5:11)
05 Candy's Room (3:17)
06 Roulette (4:20)
07 Death To My Hometown (4:27)
08 High Hopes (6:35)
09 Be True (4:39)
10 E Street Shuffle (7:26)
11 Lost In The Flood (8:04)
12 For You (8:14)
13 Prove It All Night (9:00)
14 Promised Land (6:11)
15 Mary's Place (8:15)
16 Shackled And Drawn (7:25)
17 Waitin' On A Sunny Day (6:08)
18 The Ghost Of Tom Joad (8:14)
19 Lonesome Day (4:13)
20 The Rising (4:49)
21 Light Of Day (6:53)
22 Bruce Talk 01 (1:18)
23 Surprise Surprise (3:35)
24 Bruce Talk 02 (2:12)
25 The Wall (4:42)
26 Born To Run (5:39)
27 Bobby Jean (4:18)
28 Dancing In The Dark (7:43)
29 Tenth Avenue Freeze-Out (6:13)
30 Shout (6:19)
31 Bruce Talk 03 (1:06)
32 Thunder Road (7:22)
http://fp.io/44397ce6/
May 25, 2014
PHIL LESH & Friends - Terrapin Crossroads San Rafael, CA - 05/24/2014
Phil Lesh & Friends
May 24, 2014
Terrapin Crossroads
San Rafael, CA
TXR webcast rip
Set 1
The Golden Road (To Unlimited Devotion) >
I Don't Need No Doctor >
Cold Rain & Snow
Mississippi Half-Step Uptown Toodeloo >
Doin' That Rag
Cassidy
Cosmic Charlie
Set 2
Shakedown Street >
El Paso >
Unbroken Chain >
Viola Lee Blues >
Cumberland Blues >
Viola Lee Blues >
Friend of The Devil >
Cumberland Blues >
Viola Lee Blues >
Samson & Delilah >
Unbroken Chain
Eyes of The World >
Shakedown Street
Encore
Donor Rap
Ripple
Band: Phil Lesh, John Kadlecik, Joe Russo, John Scofield, John Medeski, Ross James, Jordan Levine
http://fp.io/37d4m7f1/
MARILLION - Teatro Caupolicán Santiago, Chile - 05/16/2014
Marillion - 2014-05-16, Santiago, Chile [FM]
Marillion
2014-05-16
Teatro Caupolicán
Santiago, Chile
Lineage : FM Broadcast -> Microlab recorder -> Sound Forge Audio Studio 10 (Normalization) -> CD Wave Editor 1.98 -> Flac level 8
Nice FM recording, lots of DJ chatting, but not to mess up completely the recording, really well mixed for a live broadcast. The FM reception is a little bit poor here, so you can hear a little static in the quieter parts.
Tracklist
1 - Gaza
2 - Easter
3 - Beautiful
4 - Power
5 - You're Gone
6 - Man of a Thousand Faces
7 - No One Can
8 - Warm Wet Circles
9 - That Time of the Night (The Short Straw)
10 - Cover My Eyes (Pain and Heaven)
11 - The Uninvited Guest
12 - Hooks in You
Encore:
13 - Ocean Cloud
Encore 2:
14 - Kayleigh
15 - Lavender
16 - Heart of Lothian
Encore 3:
17 - Sugar Mice
18 - Neverland http://fp.io/15f6mf54/
SOUTHSIDE JOHNNY AND THE ASBURY JUKES - Playlist: The Very Best of Southside Johnny & The Asbury Jukes (2013)
Southside Johnny – Playlist: The Very Best of Southside Johnny & The Asbury Jukes (2013)
Southside JohnnyWhen Bruce Springsteen gave the green light to officially release his 1973 recording of “The Fever” on 1999’s 18 Tracks, The Boss’ decision was rightfully greeted with acclaim. But many of us Jersey boys were in on a secret: Bruce wrote it, but “The Fever” belonged to Southside Johnny and his Asbury Jukes. Springsteen’s torrid evocation of a burning blue-collar romance, as produced by “Miami” Steve Van Zandt, was the centerpiece of the band’s 1976 Epic Records debut I Don’t Want to Go Home. And it’s one of fourteen freshly remastered slabs of red-hot R&B – both live and in the studio – on Playlist: The Very Best of Southside Johnny and the Asbury Jukes.
“The Fever” – with its unforgettable bass vocals from a pseudonymous Clarence Clemons – is one of three tracks from I Don’t Want to Go Home on the new anthology. Playlist focuses just a single five-year period of Southside Johnny and the Asbury Jukes’ long career, but during those years of 1976-1981, it was entirely possible that the Jersey shore was the epicenter of pure rock and roll. And the sound of the Jersey shore was, in large part, the sound of the Jukes as fully formed on I Don’t Want to Go Home, the first of three landmark Epic albums. It was an exultant open invitation to a bar that never closes, with Lyon (vocals/harmonica), Kenny “Popeye” Pentifallo (drums/vocals), Kevin Kavanaugh (keyboards/vocals), Billy Rush (guitar), Alan Berger (bass), Carlo Novi (tenor saxophone), the future Little Steven (guitars/vocals) and The Miami Horns providing the blood, sweat and tears. (The Jukes’ lineup would be fluid on the albums represented in this set with innumerable guest musicians and singers popping in.)
The band’s spirit was epitomized in the opening lines of that LP’s title track written by Van Zandt and reprised here: “Oh I know that it’s getting late, but I don’t want to go home/I’m in no hurry, baby, time can wait/’Cos I don’t want to go home/Listen to the man sing his song/But I don’t want to go home/I don’t mind if they take all night long/’Cos I don’t want to go home!” Southside’s whiskey-soaked rasp instantly conjures up the time and place. In the year of Born to Run, Lyon, Springsteen, Van Zandt, engineer Jimmy Iovine and co. were synthesizing Stax horns, Drifters strings, Four Seasons pathos, and The Rascals’ blue-eyed soul into a vibrant style that either transcended the familiar tag of “bar band” or significantly raised the, um, bar for all of the other such groups out there!
It’s no slight to Southside Johnny to state the importance of his friend Springsteen’s role in shaping his music. Five of the fourteen songs on Playlist came from The Boss’ pen (either in full or in part), but they weren’t mere cast-offs. Springsteen and Lyon shared a similar musical sensibility, and both men found an ideal foil in Steven Van Zandt. For The Jukes’ three Epic albums – the crux of this compilation – Van Zandt served as singer, songwriter, arranger, guitarist and general foil to Lyon. Steve and Johnny once claimed to have shared the stage in 48 (!) bands together prior to finding mainstream success. Their paths crossed often with Springsteen’s. Individually and collectively, the three men created a true alternative to disco as well as punk. Lyrically, these songs were often in a good-time vein, with empathy for the underdog, but there was also a real underpinning in the blues of “rhythm and,” as evidenced by the cover version here of Solomon Burke’s “Got to Get You Off My Mind” from the Jukes at the Bottom Line promotional LP. Another of the many highlights here is “Broke Down Piece of Man,” with Lyon and Van Zandt more than respectably subbing for Sam and Dave.
Persistent piano and scorching guitars join with the exuberant horns for Van Zandt’s raucous “This Time It’s For Real,” the title song of the band’s 1977 sophomore effort. But the most iconic song off that set might be another Springsteen/Van Zandt co-write “Love on the Wrong Side of Town.” It’s heard in a live performance from Los Angeles’ Roxy just days after the song’s single release. While the choice of a live version over the studio original might keep this disc from being a so-called “definitive” collection, the Jukes always came to life before an audience, and this track (first aired in the 2007 box set Jukebox) is no exception. A kiss-off to a cheating lover never sounded as delicious as it does here, with the tasty sax solo doffing its melodic hat to “Up on the Roof.”
In his new track-by-track liner notes penned especially for Playlist, Lyon recalls hearing Aretha Franklin perform “Without Love” at a New Jersey supper club. He attended Franklin’s concert with Springsteen, Van Zandt and Garry Tallent, and “saw Stevie’s eyes light up” during the song. Its boisterous Jersey shore makeover from This Time It’s for Real is another one of the well-chosen cover versions included here.
Three highlights have been plucked from the Jukes’ Epic swansong, 1978’s Hearts of Stone. That album showed off the various sides of the band but was very much a transitional album. Van Zandt and the Jukes would soon part ways, and Hearts was very much Miami Steve’s parting gift. He had a hand in writing every track other than two solo offerings from Springsteen, in addition to his usual producing and arranging duties. “Trapped Again,” by the Lyon/Van Zandt/Springsteen team (“I wrote a lyric, Steve and Bruce straightened it out and revamped the song,” writes Lyon) is a tight, crisp rocker about another painful relationship, while the breakneck “Talk to Me” is Springsteen at his most pop-oriented. Bruce was also tapped for the sublimely soulful title track, sung by Lyon with an ache in his voice as Van Zandt supports him on sympathetic lead guitar. “This is the last dance, the last chance,” Lyon croons in the song. It’s a fitting valedictory for the Epic years.
Two tracks have been licensed from Mercury, one from each of the band’s first two post-Epic albums. The brassy “All I Want is Everything,” written by Lyon and fellow Juke Billy Rush, is one of the more in-your-face tracks here, and “Why is Love Such a Sacrifice” is tough and dramatic. “Everything” was produced by renowned keyboardist Barry Beckett for the self-titled The Jukes, and recorded south of the Mason-Dixon Line at Beckett’s home base in Muscle Shoals, Alabama. Beckett brought a more polished, less rough-and-tumble sound to The Jukes. The band returned to New Jersey for the West Orange-recorded Love is a Sacrifice, with Patti Scialfa and Soozie Tyrell among the participants. Jukes guitarist Billy Rush was the group’s principal songwriter by this point, but inspiration wasn’t in the air. These two songs are both solid inclusions, but they’re the “odd men out” as they’re sonically removed from the previous cuts.
Playlist reprises nine of the ten songs issued on the 1979 compilation Havin’ a Party, but it’s a few short of the 19 tracks that featured on 1992’s Epic/Legacy release The Best of Southside Johnny and the Asbury Jukes. That disc offered one choice B-side and more highlights from the Bottom Line, and included the entirety of Hearts of Stone save one song. For a packed overview of the Jukes’ post-Epic career, Rhino’s 1993 All I Want is Everything is still the ultimate collection, with 18 songs from 1979-1991. Playlist is a solid retrospective of the Epic years plus, and a must-have for the new and long overdue remastering by Mark Wilder. Johnny’s notes are also a welcome addition.
http://fp.io/dfd8c16d/
Southside JohnnyWhen Bruce Springsteen gave the green light to officially release his 1973 recording of “The Fever” on 1999’s 18 Tracks, The Boss’ decision was rightfully greeted with acclaim. But many of us Jersey boys were in on a secret: Bruce wrote it, but “The Fever” belonged to Southside Johnny and his Asbury Jukes. Springsteen’s torrid evocation of a burning blue-collar romance, as produced by “Miami” Steve Van Zandt, was the centerpiece of the band’s 1976 Epic Records debut I Don’t Want to Go Home. And it’s one of fourteen freshly remastered slabs of red-hot R&B – both live and in the studio – on Playlist: The Very Best of Southside Johnny and the Asbury Jukes.
“The Fever” – with its unforgettable bass vocals from a pseudonymous Clarence Clemons – is one of three tracks from I Don’t Want to Go Home on the new anthology. Playlist focuses just a single five-year period of Southside Johnny and the Asbury Jukes’ long career, but during those years of 1976-1981, it was entirely possible that the Jersey shore was the epicenter of pure rock and roll. And the sound of the Jersey shore was, in large part, the sound of the Jukes as fully formed on I Don’t Want to Go Home, the first of three landmark Epic albums. It was an exultant open invitation to a bar that never closes, with Lyon (vocals/harmonica), Kenny “Popeye” Pentifallo (drums/vocals), Kevin Kavanaugh (keyboards/vocals), Billy Rush (guitar), Alan Berger (bass), Carlo Novi (tenor saxophone), the future Little Steven (guitars/vocals) and The Miami Horns providing the blood, sweat and tears. (The Jukes’ lineup would be fluid on the albums represented in this set with innumerable guest musicians and singers popping in.)
The band’s spirit was epitomized in the opening lines of that LP’s title track written by Van Zandt and reprised here: “Oh I know that it’s getting late, but I don’t want to go home/I’m in no hurry, baby, time can wait/’Cos I don’t want to go home/Listen to the man sing his song/But I don’t want to go home/I don’t mind if they take all night long/’Cos I don’t want to go home!” Southside’s whiskey-soaked rasp instantly conjures up the time and place. In the year of Born to Run, Lyon, Springsteen, Van Zandt, engineer Jimmy Iovine and co. were synthesizing Stax horns, Drifters strings, Four Seasons pathos, and The Rascals’ blue-eyed soul into a vibrant style that either transcended the familiar tag of “bar band” or significantly raised the, um, bar for all of the other such groups out there!
It’s no slight to Southside Johnny to state the importance of his friend Springsteen’s role in shaping his music. Five of the fourteen songs on Playlist came from The Boss’ pen (either in full or in part), but they weren’t mere cast-offs. Springsteen and Lyon shared a similar musical sensibility, and both men found an ideal foil in Steven Van Zandt. For The Jukes’ three Epic albums – the crux of this compilation – Van Zandt served as singer, songwriter, arranger, guitarist and general foil to Lyon. Steve and Johnny once claimed to have shared the stage in 48 (!) bands together prior to finding mainstream success. Their paths crossed often with Springsteen’s. Individually and collectively, the three men created a true alternative to disco as well as punk. Lyrically, these songs were often in a good-time vein, with empathy for the underdog, but there was also a real underpinning in the blues of “rhythm and,” as evidenced by the cover version here of Solomon Burke’s “Got to Get You Off My Mind” from the Jukes at the Bottom Line promotional LP. Another of the many highlights here is “Broke Down Piece of Man,” with Lyon and Van Zandt more than respectably subbing for Sam and Dave.
Persistent piano and scorching guitars join with the exuberant horns for Van Zandt’s raucous “This Time It’s For Real,” the title song of the band’s 1977 sophomore effort. But the most iconic song off that set might be another Springsteen/Van Zandt co-write “Love on the Wrong Side of Town.” It’s heard in a live performance from Los Angeles’ Roxy just days after the song’s single release. While the choice of a live version over the studio original might keep this disc from being a so-called “definitive” collection, the Jukes always came to life before an audience, and this track (first aired in the 2007 box set Jukebox) is no exception. A kiss-off to a cheating lover never sounded as delicious as it does here, with the tasty sax solo doffing its melodic hat to “Up on the Roof.”
In his new track-by-track liner notes penned especially for Playlist, Lyon recalls hearing Aretha Franklin perform “Without Love” at a New Jersey supper club. He attended Franklin’s concert with Springsteen, Van Zandt and Garry Tallent, and “saw Stevie’s eyes light up” during the song. Its boisterous Jersey shore makeover from This Time It’s for Real is another one of the well-chosen cover versions included here.
Three highlights have been plucked from the Jukes’ Epic swansong, 1978’s Hearts of Stone. That album showed off the various sides of the band but was very much a transitional album. Van Zandt and the Jukes would soon part ways, and Hearts was very much Miami Steve’s parting gift. He had a hand in writing every track other than two solo offerings from Springsteen, in addition to his usual producing and arranging duties. “Trapped Again,” by the Lyon/Van Zandt/Springsteen team (“I wrote a lyric, Steve and Bruce straightened it out and revamped the song,” writes Lyon) is a tight, crisp rocker about another painful relationship, while the breakneck “Talk to Me” is Springsteen at his most pop-oriented. Bruce was also tapped for the sublimely soulful title track, sung by Lyon with an ache in his voice as Van Zandt supports him on sympathetic lead guitar. “This is the last dance, the last chance,” Lyon croons in the song. It’s a fitting valedictory for the Epic years.
Two tracks have been licensed from Mercury, one from each of the band’s first two post-Epic albums. The brassy “All I Want is Everything,” written by Lyon and fellow Juke Billy Rush, is one of the more in-your-face tracks here, and “Why is Love Such a Sacrifice” is tough and dramatic. “Everything” was produced by renowned keyboardist Barry Beckett for the self-titled The Jukes, and recorded south of the Mason-Dixon Line at Beckett’s home base in Muscle Shoals, Alabama. Beckett brought a more polished, less rough-and-tumble sound to The Jukes. The band returned to New Jersey for the West Orange-recorded Love is a Sacrifice, with Patti Scialfa and Soozie Tyrell among the participants. Jukes guitarist Billy Rush was the group’s principal songwriter by this point, but inspiration wasn’t in the air. These two songs are both solid inclusions, but they’re the “odd men out” as they’re sonically removed from the previous cuts.
Playlist reprises nine of the ten songs issued on the 1979 compilation Havin’ a Party, but it’s a few short of the 19 tracks that featured on 1992’s Epic/Legacy release The Best of Southside Johnny and the Asbury Jukes. That disc offered one choice B-side and more highlights from the Bottom Line, and included the entirety of Hearts of Stone save one song. For a packed overview of the Jukes’ post-Epic career, Rhino’s 1993 All I Want is Everything is still the ultimate collection, with 18 songs from 1979-1991. Playlist is a solid retrospective of the Epic years plus, and a must-have for the new and long overdue remastering by Mark Wilder. Johnny’s notes are also a welcome addition.
http://fp.io/dfd8c16d/
BROTHERS PAST - Catskill Chill - Hancock, NY - 09/07/2013
9/7/13 - Catskill Chill - Hancock, NY
by Brothers Past
1.
Words Like Weapons > 14:08
2.
Year of the Horse 13:55
3.
Squeeze 17:36
4.
banter / happy birthday Rick 02:17
5.
State Police > 07:20
6.
Boy 09:19
http://fp.io/b91cccf1/
MOE. - Civic Theatre, New Orleans, LA - 04/26/2014
MOE. 04/26/14 Civic Theatre, New Orleans, LA
DISC ONE
SET ONE
Y.O.Y.
(8:18)
She
(17:08)
Mar De Ma
(5:16)
The Pit
(11:00)
Don't Fuck With Flo
(13:36)
Big World
(7:03)
Ricky Marten
(7:32)
DISC TWO
Time Ed
(16:48)
SET TWO
Zed Nought Z
(7:58)
Rainshine
(6:09)
Suck A Head
(4:29)
Buster
(16:10)
Overlude
(8:47)
DISC THREE
Yodelittle
(20:28)
Bearsong
(15:13)
Billygoat
(9:55)
ENCORE
Alnouncements
(3:10)
Time
(5:19)
Jerry Garcia Symphonic Celebration Warren Haynes w/Keith Lockhart & The Boston Pops Symphony Hall, Boston MA 05-14-2014
Jerry Garcia Symphonic Celebration
Warren Haynes w/Keith Lockhart & The Boston Pops
Symphony Hall, Boston MA 05-14-2014
Set One
Dark Star
Bird Song
Crazy Fingers
Scarlet Begonias
Russian Lullabye
Shakedown Street
Morning Dew
Set Two
Attics of My Life
Comes A Time
China Cat
Jam
West LA Fadeaway
Black Peter
Terrapin Station
Field: Sony PCM-M10 – Internal Mics, 24/96 FOB/DFC
Post: Fades in Audacity, Downsample in R8Brain, Track Splits in CDWav,
FLAC’ed and Torrent in TLH, Tags in Media Monkey.
Enjoy.
http://fp.io/8f752ca6/
Warren Haynes w/Keith Lockhart & The Boston Pops
Symphony Hall, Boston MA 05-14-2014
Set One
Dark Star
Bird Song
Crazy Fingers
Scarlet Begonias
Russian Lullabye
Shakedown Street
Morning Dew
Set Two
Attics of My Life
Comes A Time
China Cat
Jam
West LA Fadeaway
Black Peter
Terrapin Station
Field: Sony PCM-M10 – Internal Mics, 24/96 FOB/DFC
Post: Fades in Audacity, Downsample in R8Brain, Track Splits in CDWav,
FLAC’ed and Torrent in TLH, Tags in Media Monkey.
Enjoy.
http://fp.io/8f752ca6/
PHIL LESH & Friends - Terrapin Crossroads - 05/23/2014
Phil Lesh & Friends
May 23, 2014
Terrapin Crossroads
TXR webcast rip
Set 1
After Midnight
Bertha
Althea
Pride of Cucamonga >
He's Gone >
Pride of Cucamonga
Tumbling Dice >
Casey Jones
Set 2
Scarlet Begonias >
Fire on the Mountain
Just a Little Light
Dark Star >
The Other One >
Truckin' >
The Other One >
Dark Star >
Like a Hurricane >
Morning Dew
Encore
Donor Rap
Not Fade Away
Band: Phil Lesh, John Kadlecik, Joe Russo, John Scofield, John Medeski, Grahame Lesh
http://fp.io/8b8bd22d/
May 23, 2014
Terrapin Crossroads
TXR webcast rip
Set 1
After Midnight
Bertha
Althea
Pride of Cucamonga >
He's Gone >
Pride of Cucamonga
Tumbling Dice >
Casey Jones
Set 2
Scarlet Begonias >
Fire on the Mountain
Just a Little Light
Dark Star >
The Other One >
Truckin' >
The Other One >
Dark Star >
Like a Hurricane >
Morning Dew
Encore
Donor Rap
Not Fade Away
Band: Phil Lesh, John Kadlecik, Joe Russo, John Scofield, John Medeski, Grahame Lesh
http://fp.io/8b8bd22d/
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