7/13/14 The NorVa, Norfolk, VA
DISC ONE
SET ONE
Happy Hour Hero
(10:58)
Seat of My Pants
(11:02)
Sensory Deprivation Bank
(6:41)
Hey O
(5:30)
Same Old Story
(5:19)
Little Miss Cup
(6:46)
Timmy Tucker
(18:20)
DISC TWO
SET TWO
McBain
(17:38)
Skrunk
(11:48)
Kids
(15:54)
George
(14:30)
Lazarus
(6:21)
Kids
(4:36)
DISC THREE
Wind It Up
(8:59)
ENCORE
Alnouncements
(1:12)
Tambourine
(5:28)
Cripple Creek
(8:14) http://fp.io/dc5a6fm3/
July 23, 2014
SANTANA - with Jose Feliciano The Forum Los Angeles, CA - 03/23/1971
Santana
1971-03-23
with Jose Feliciano
The Forum
Los Angeles, CA
Soundboard Recording
256 kbps
01. Waiting
02. Ballin
03. Black Magic Woman - Gypsy Queen
04. Oye Como Va
05. Savor - Samba Pa Ti
06. Toussaint L'Overture
07. Evil Ways
08. Incident at Neshabur
09. Jungle Strut
10. Everybody's Everything
11. Gumbo
12. Black Magic woman - Gypsy Queen
13. Oye Como Va
14. Guajira
Guest:
Jose Feliciano: Tracks 12-14
Carlos Santana
Jose “Chepito” Areas
David Brown
Michael Carabello
Coke Escovedo
Gregg Rolie
Neal Schon
Michael Shrieve http://fp.io/8a4bdm7d/
THE WHO - Charlton Athletic Football Ground, London, UK - 05/18/1974
The Who
1974-05-18
Charlton Athletic Football Ground,
London, UK
Soundboard Recording
320 kbps
CD 1:
01. Young Man Blues
02. Behind Blue Eyes
03. Pinball Wizard
04. See Me, Feel Me
05. Magic Bus
06. My Generation
07. Substitute
08. I’m A Boy
09. Tattoo
10. Boris The Spider
CD 2:
01. Drowned
02. Bell Boy
03. Dr. Jimmy
04. Won’t Get Fooled Again
05. Summertime Blues
06. Baba O’Riley
07. Naked Eye > Let’s See Action
08. My Generation Blues http://fp.io/7668d115/
THE WHO - Glastonbury Festival Pilton, UK - 06/24/2007
The Who
2007-06-24
Glastonbury Festival
Pilton, UK
FM Broadcast
320 kbps
01. I Can't Explain
02. The Seeker
03. Anyway Anyhow Anywhere
04. Fragments
05. Who Are You
06. Behind Blue Eyes
07. Baba O'Riley
08. Relay
09. You Better You Bet
10. My Generation
11. Won't Get Fooled Again
12. The Kids Are Alright
13. Pinball Wizard
14. Amazing Journey > Sparks
15. See Me Feel Me > Listening To You
16. Tea & Theatre
http://fp.io/92bdcdcf/
PINK FLOYD The Montreux 40th Anniversary Series Too Late For Mind Expanding - Montreux Casino - 11/21/1970
PINK FLOYD
The Montreux 40th Anniversary Series
Too Late For Mind Expanding (HRV CDR 036)
Montreux Casino, 21Nov70
Mastertape by Victor
Remastering by MOB
Quality Control by EdP
Artwork by RonToon
Produced by Harvested Records
Disc One
1. Astronomy Domine
2. Fat Old Sun
3. Cymbaline
4. Atom Heart Mother
5. Embryo
Disc Two
1. Green Is The Colour
2. Careful With That Axe, Eugene
3. Set The Controls For The Heart Of The Sun
4. A Saucerful Of Secrets
5. Just Another Twelve Bar
6. More Blues
Sources:
Victor's 2009 transfer: 2 x Sennheiser MD-421 > Uher 4200 reel recorded at 19 ips > Audio CD > EAC > FLAC
"The Good" recorder: unknown gen > Scotch Reel > DAT(0) > WAV@48Khz > Speed & Pitch Correction > FLAC@48Khz
It was 40 years ago today!
This new Harvested release provides the first of the two Montreux 1970 concerts in the most complete form and with the best possible quality. The main source was Victor's raw master transfer already shared last year. The ending part of Green Is The Colour and the following track Careful With That Axe, Eugene, not present on Victor's master, were taken from "The Good" recorder that surfaced some years ago on "The Good ... The Bad" RoIO ref. FA033.
Victor's raw transfer shared in November 2009 was first thought to be from the second concert, mainly because it matched "The Good ... The Bad" RoIO that was labelled from 22Nov70. However, based on Victor's recollections of the two shows and some pictures from his reels, it now appears that the present show with the two "blues" encores is actually from 21Nov70 (this show ended late, forcing the band to finish with a quiet blues). The second concert was added at the last minute for the next afternoon at 2.30pm (Roger sarcastically said "good morning" to the audience) and at this second show the encore was Interstellar Overdrive. But that's for our next release ... ;-)
Victor's master is a superb audience recording and a compilation cassette he did in the past from both concerts was copied by someone and ended up on the 1995 "Smoking Blues" bootleg ("Smoking Blues" is therefore at least 1st or 2nd gen, and even with that lineage some people thought it was from soundboard or from some EMI acetates that are most probably pure legend). Embryo, Just Another Twelve Bar and More Blues from "Smoking Blues" are from 21Nov70, but the versions presented here are upgrades, coming directly from the master and with an uncut More Blues (fading out on "Smoking Blues").
Despite its fantastic quality, Victor's master had some flaws that needed to be corrected. The speed was not consistent throughout the show: for some tracks, speed was absolutely perfect, while for others speed gradually slowed down (probably an "end of reel" effect during the play-back). Fat Old Sun, Atom Heart Mother and A Saucerful Of Secrets suffered from that slowing-down phenomenon and speed was corrected for these three songs. There were some channel loss and level fluctuations, the most obvious being during the first verse of Fat Old Sun. These were repaired. There were also drop-outs here and there, especially during the first 2 minutes of Cymbaline (one drop-out every 862ms, thus 140 drop-outs were manually corrected one by one in order to fully restore these first minutes of Cymbaline). The right channel became slightly weaker during Set The Controls and A Saucerful Of Secrets, where more drop-outs were present on that channel. These flaws were attenuated as much as possible. Last but not least, there were several cuts on the master: the very first chord of Fat Old Sun was missing and has been restored, a short cut during Mother Fore (AHM) was carefully patched, and the central part of Celestial Voices (ASOS) that was missing due to a tape flip, was restored from another show in order to save the continuity and progression to the climax of the song.
The end of Green Is The Colour, Careful With That Axe, Eugene and the first 30 seconds of Set The Controls were taken from "The Good" source. A lot of work was needed in order to restore that part, because of abrupt speed fluctuations during Careful, and also because "The Good ... The Bad" RoIO comes from a "tweaked" tape: the original audio capture is pure mono (there is absolutely no stereo separation between the instruments), but someone found funny to play with the faders during the analogue transfer, introducing artificial panning in order to fake stereo effects (these tricks were clearly done during an analogue mixing of the recording, not in the digital world). Speed was corrected segment by segment, and levels were carefully adjusted in order to restore the original music as it was on the master, i.e. in the centre of the stereo image, before the artificial panning ruining most parts of "The Good ... The Bad".
So there you are. The 21Nov70 Montreux concert in all its glory!
This is a rare case where all the stars were aligned: we have the best audience recording from that era, and at the same time the Floyd performance was really magic that night. All five songs of CD1 were delivered with fire and passion (including the most powerful rendition of Funky Dung ever recorded). And on CD2, the first part of A Saucerful Of Secrets (Something Else) shows the Floyd sounding like King Crimson would sound three years later. Another highlight of CD2 is Just Another Twelve Bar: even if not too interesting from a musical point of view, this song is a true rarity in Pink Floyd live repertoire (even if it's mainly based on the bass riff from Biding My Time).
Enjoy !
MOB (November 21, 2010)
Harvested Records http://fp.io/m114dda3/
THE ALLMAN BROTHERS BAND - Winterland San Francisco, CA - 09/26/1973
The Allman Brothers Band Winterland (San Francisco, CA)SEP 26, 1973
1 Bill Graham Introduction 00:44
2 Wasted Words 05:11
3 Done Somebody Wrong 04:51
4 One Way Out 08:58
5 Stormy Monday 08:49
6 Midnight Rider 03:40
7 Ramblin' Man 08:12
8 In Memory Of Elizabeth Reed 17:35
9 Statesboro Blues 05:59
10 Come And Go Blues 06:12
11 Southbound 06:03
12 Jessica 09:57
13 You Don't Love Me 06:08
14 Amazing Grace 04:22
15 Les Brers In A Minor (Pt.1) 10:07
16 Drums 08:45
17 Les Brers In A Minor (Pt.2) 08:27
18 Blue Sky 06:04
19 Trouble No More 04:48
Gregg Allman - lead vocals, organ, electric piano
Dickey Betts - lead guitar, slide guitar
Lamar Williams - bass
Chuck Leavell - piano
Butch Trucks - drums, percussion
Jai Johanson - drums
Few bands could have recovered from such tragic personnel losses as did The Allman Brothers Band in 1973. After the death of Duane Allman in 1971 and Berry Oakley the following year, few would have thought The Allman Brothers Band could carry on. One key to the group's remarkably successful recuperation was their recognition of the futility of trying to replace such distinctive musicians. Rather than go through the anguish of trying, the group brought in fresh blood in the form of pianist Chuck Leavell and bassist Lamar Williams. With the release of Brothers and Sisters, they ventured in a more countrified direction that won many new fans while retaining a good portion of the old. Then, in a remarkable twist of fate, the band suddenly had a hit single racing up the charts with "Ramblin' Man." Unexpectedly, the Allman Brothers had become the most popular live act in America.
This show captures the group right at that point in time. They are still feeling their way back on older material, but play all the newer material from Brothers and Sisters and some of the Eat a Peach material that hadn't been previously performed in concert with a renewed enthusiasm. Much to the amazement of die-hard Duane fans, Dickey Betts rose to the challenge of exclusively handling guitar duties for the group, and proved a more than capable lead guitarist in his own right, developing his own, distinctive style while acknowledging his debt to brother Duane.
On this tour, the band was primarily playing huge sporting arenas and outdoor festivals, such as Watkins Glen that summer; but, as a favor to Bill Graham, they agreed to play the much smaller Winterland on this date.
Following Graham's introduction, the band kicks off with an hour or so of songs from Brothers and Sisters and some of the blues covers from their earlier albums. Betts' guitar playing had become far more expressive, and to everyone's surprise, he had absorbed a lot of Allman's electric bottleneck slide technique. The nearly 18-minute "Elizabeth Reed" shows just how inventive and distinctive Betts had become.
During the second hour, the band grows more adventurous. Starting with the high paced shuffle of "Southbound," Betts' hot blooded guitar and Leavell's graceful piano playing set an energetic tone. Next is the Django Reinhardt inspired instrumental "Jessica," full of dancing keyboards and expressive joy. Following a ten minute jam on "You Don't Love Me," featuring improvisations on the "Amazing Grace" theme, comes the highlight of this show: "Les Brers In A Minor." The most sophisticated and complicated Eat a Peach track, this piece was particularly difficult to play shows this ABB lineup at both their compositional and expressive best. The lovely "Blue Sky" and bluesy "Trouble No More" end the set.
After the emotional rollercoaster of the preceding year, it's both beautiful and moving to see the band, in its new reincarnation, finding their own, distinctive direction - and without losing an ounce of speed. Whatever forms and paths the group would go on to take, the ride, and all of its excitement, was far from over
1 Bill Graham Introduction 00:44
2 Wasted Words 05:11
3 Done Somebody Wrong 04:51
4 One Way Out 08:58
5 Stormy Monday 08:49
6 Midnight Rider 03:40
7 Ramblin' Man 08:12
8 In Memory Of Elizabeth Reed 17:35
9 Statesboro Blues 05:59
10 Come And Go Blues 06:12
11 Southbound 06:03
12 Jessica 09:57
13 You Don't Love Me 06:08
14 Amazing Grace 04:22
15 Les Brers In A Minor (Pt.1) 10:07
16 Drums 08:45
17 Les Brers In A Minor (Pt.2) 08:27
18 Blue Sky 06:04
19 Trouble No More 04:48
Gregg Allman - lead vocals, organ, electric piano
Dickey Betts - lead guitar, slide guitar
Lamar Williams - bass
Chuck Leavell - piano
Butch Trucks - drums, percussion
Jai Johanson - drums
Few bands could have recovered from such tragic personnel losses as did The Allman Brothers Band in 1973. After the death of Duane Allman in 1971 and Berry Oakley the following year, few would have thought The Allman Brothers Band could carry on. One key to the group's remarkably successful recuperation was their recognition of the futility of trying to replace such distinctive musicians. Rather than go through the anguish of trying, the group brought in fresh blood in the form of pianist Chuck Leavell and bassist Lamar Williams. With the release of Brothers and Sisters, they ventured in a more countrified direction that won many new fans while retaining a good portion of the old. Then, in a remarkable twist of fate, the band suddenly had a hit single racing up the charts with "Ramblin' Man." Unexpectedly, the Allman Brothers had become the most popular live act in America.
This show captures the group right at that point in time. They are still feeling their way back on older material, but play all the newer material from Brothers and Sisters and some of the Eat a Peach material that hadn't been previously performed in concert with a renewed enthusiasm. Much to the amazement of die-hard Duane fans, Dickey Betts rose to the challenge of exclusively handling guitar duties for the group, and proved a more than capable lead guitarist in his own right, developing his own, distinctive style while acknowledging his debt to brother Duane.
On this tour, the band was primarily playing huge sporting arenas and outdoor festivals, such as Watkins Glen that summer; but, as a favor to Bill Graham, they agreed to play the much smaller Winterland on this date.
Following Graham's introduction, the band kicks off with an hour or so of songs from Brothers and Sisters and some of the blues covers from their earlier albums. Betts' guitar playing had become far more expressive, and to everyone's surprise, he had absorbed a lot of Allman's electric bottleneck slide technique. The nearly 18-minute "Elizabeth Reed" shows just how inventive and distinctive Betts had become.
During the second hour, the band grows more adventurous. Starting with the high paced shuffle of "Southbound," Betts' hot blooded guitar and Leavell's graceful piano playing set an energetic tone. Next is the Django Reinhardt inspired instrumental "Jessica," full of dancing keyboards and expressive joy. Following a ten minute jam on "You Don't Love Me," featuring improvisations on the "Amazing Grace" theme, comes the highlight of this show: "Les Brers In A Minor." The most sophisticated and complicated Eat a Peach track, this piece was particularly difficult to play shows this ABB lineup at both their compositional and expressive best. The lovely "Blue Sky" and bluesy "Trouble No More" end the set.
After the emotional rollercoaster of the preceding year, it's both beautiful and moving to see the band, in its new reincarnation, finding their own, distinctive direction - and without losing an ounce of speed. Whatever forms and paths the group would go on to take, the ride, and all of its excitement, was far from over
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)

