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Deus_Nova
Forum Newbie
Joined: May 04 2007
Location: Chile
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Points: 39
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Topic: Your 10 favorite live albums Posted: December 27 2007 at 22:04 |
Dream Theater - Score
Porcupine Tree - Arriving Somewhere...
Opeth - Lamentations (DVD)
Rush - A Show Of Hands
Toto - Live in Amsterdam
Pink Floyd - Pulse
Edited by Deus_Nova - December 27 2007 at 22:05
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nightlamp
Forum Senior Member
Joined: May 07 2007
Location: San Francisco
Status: Offline
Points: 163
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Posted: December 27 2007 at 17:45 |
Official: Pink Floyd - At Pompeii King Crimson - The Great Deceiver Jethro Tull - Bursting Out Frank Zappa - You Can't Do That on Stage Anymore, Vol. 2 (Helsinki 1973) Rush - Exit...Stage Left Miles Davis - Black Beauty Ozric Tentacles - Live at the Pongmaster's Ball Deep Purple - Made in Japan Kraan - Live Circle (Corea/Braxton/Holland/Altschul) - The Paris Concert
Bootleg: King Crimson - Live in Mainz 1974 Gong - Oslo 1974 Pink Floyd - The Massed Gadgets of Auximenies (Royal Festival Hall 1969) Guru Guru - Essen 1970 Sleep - Live NYC 1994 Steve Hillage - Rockpalast, Germany 1977 Can - Horrortrip in the Paperhouse (Köln 1973)
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heyitsthatguy
Forum Senior Member
Joined: April 17 2006
Location: Washington Hgts
Status: Offline
Points: 10094
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Posted: December 27 2007 at 01:15 |
1. dredg- Live at the Fillmore- ok its the only one I own but its pretty damn good
not owned: Score- cuz I was there. Yeah.
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Peter
Special Collaborator
Honorary Collaborator
Joined: January 31 2004
Location: Canada
Status: Offline
Points: 9669
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Posted: December 27 2007 at 01:02 |
10 Jean? That's a lot!
I'm not sureI have ten faves -- I'll have to step beyond the bounds of prog, to be sure....
 Let's see. As they occur to me:
The Band -- The Last Waltz (vintage 70s farewell concert movie, featuring band & guests Neil Young, Dylan, Neil Diamond, Joni Mitchell, Van Morrison, Eric Clapton, etc! Rock royalty retrospective, plus The Band ROCK!)
King Crimson -- USA (fave track "Asbury Park" lethal!)
Who -- Live at Leeds (raw rock power!)
Tubes -- What do You Want from Live (must have been some show!)
PFM - Cook (Italian masters conquer the US -- tastefully)
Gentle Giant -- Giant On the Box (if I might slip a DVD in here... Amazing multi-musicianship -- see for yourself!)
Neil Young -- Heart of Gold (another DVD, dir, Jonathan Demme. Simply beautiful)
Talking Heads -- Stop Making Sense (great high-energy album, great movie, also dir. J. Demme)
Yes -- Yessongs (c'mon, it's got three LPs!)
Brand X -- Livestock (yes, they could do it all live!)
Guess I could do a few more. Hackett's DVD Once Above a Time is very tasty....
Genesis -- Second's Out... Bowie -- Stage... TD -- Encore....
Edited by Peter - December 27 2007 at 01:15
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"And, has thou slain the Jabberwock? Come to my arms, my beamish boy! O frabjous day! Callooh! Callay!' He chortled in his joy.
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ten years after
Forum Senior Member
Joined: September 07 2007
Location: Australia
Status: Offline
Points: 1008
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Posted: December 26 2007 at 21:37 |
1. Woodstock. More than just the music this is a documentary of the event.
2. Yessongs.
3. ELP - Pictures at an Exhibition
4. Colosseum - Reunion concerts 1994
6=. Pink Floyd - Ummagumma
6= Cream - Wheels of Fire
8. MC5 - Kick out the Jams
9. Curved Air - Live
10. Neil Young - Live Rust
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BaldJean
Prog Reviewer
Joined: May 28 2005
Location: Germany
Status: Offline
Points: 10387
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Posted: December 26 2007 at 21:06 |
gliss bliss wrote:
BaldJean wrote:
I know some people don't like live albums, but I just love them. nowhere else can a band be free of the restriction to try to sound perfectly but simply let the music flow. what are your favorite ones? here are mine, counting backward from10 to 1. please try to give s short explanation why you include the albums too.
10) Frumpy: "Live" (1973). Inga Rumpf and company put on a great show; she
definitely has the blackest voice of all white singers. an excellent introduction
to this band which deserves more attention.
9) Kraan: "Live" (1975). a stunning classic with highlights like "Holiday am Marterhorn including Gipfelsturm", "Sarah's Ritt durch den Schwarzwald" or "Nam Nam". Helmut Hattler definitely is one of the best bass players in prog; something you can hear here.
8) Guru Guru: "Live" (1976). with a lot of previously unreleased tracks
(some of which had been a live favorite already though), like "Medicine
Man's Overdose", "Herzflimmern" or "Transylvanian Express", and great
versions of "Moroso", "Der Elektrolurch" and "Ooga Booga". the album
shows what a great live act Guru Guru must have been (I never saw them
live myself). one can actually see Mani Neumeier hopping around in his
wrestling suit when hearing him. it helps if you understand some German
to get some of the jokes they make, like when Neumeier sings "Santa Fu,
raus bist du" ("Santa Fu, you are out", that song was recorded at Santa
Fu, a prison in Hamburg) in "Ooga Booga" and talks about the prisoners getting new
uniforms after the concert that look like his wrestling suit.
7) Hawkwind: "Space Ritual" (1973). what can I say? a classic. Hawkwind re-released the album with uncut versions of "Time We Left" and "Brainstorm" (they had been shortened for the original release because they were too long). too bad this is not a DVD; Stacia would have been a nice addition 
6) Gentle Giant: "Playing the Fool" (1977). Gentle Giant show that their complex compositions can be played live without sounding sterile; on the contrary, they make them sound really alive. highlights are the "Octopus Medley", "On Reflection" and "Funny Ways".
5) Steve Hillage: "Live Herald" (1978). this one originally came out as a 3-sides live, 1-side studio vinyl; unfortunately the studio material sounded bloodless compared to the live material (with the exception of "1988 Activator"). it was in my opinion a good decision of Virgin to release this as a single CD live album and add the studio material to the CD-version of "Open". at 69 minutes the album is still long enough. great versions of classic Hillage songs.
4) 801: "Live" (1976). Brian Eno, Phil Manzanera and friends play a collection of songs associated with former projects of them as well as some classic. one of the most interesting releases of that time; the beginning of punk can be felt in songs like "Third Uncle". unfortunately a single album only.
3) Magma: "Live / Hhai" (1975). featuring a 17-year old Didier Lockwood on
violin who (almost) steals the show; just listen to his seven and a
half minute solo in "Mekanik Zain". great version of "Köhntark". a
friend of mine once commented: "sounds like a holiday in hell".
2) Gong: "Live au Bataclan" (1990). this album was recorded in 1973 and shows the "classic" band line-up (Daevid Allen, Gilly Smyth, Pierre Moerlen, Didier Malherbe, Steve Hillage, Mike Howlett, Tim Blake) in top form, performing some of their classics. don't get irritated by the strange titles on the album; you will recognize these classics quickly.
1) Van der Graaf Generator: "Vital" (1978). since I follow my usual policy of best lists (naming an artist twice or more in such a list is behaving like a fan boy/girl; pick your gender) I was torn between "Vital" and "Real Time". I settled for "Vital" because it adds new aspects to the songs; also because it includes some previously unreleased material. the general treatment of all songs was: give 'em a raw brushing up! Nic Potter's bass truly is a monster!
again this list may change at any moment, depending on my mood, but "Vital", "Live au Bataclan" and "Live / Hhai" will always be in it
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You've not heard Gong Est Mort or Gong Live Etc yet, some of Hillage's finest moments with that other prog rock keyboard wizard Click Switch Doctor Aka Hi T Moonweed Aka Tim Blake
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oh, but I know "Live etc." by heart; it was the first live album by Gong I had. and I really love the wacky version of "Radio Gnome" "...Lllllllladies and Gentlemen, I would like to introduce to you the only gnome who wears habitually a 1912 bathing costume. the formidable biceps and the x-mas cake ice-cream cone of Bloomdidoo Bad de Grasse, who will now let forth a few happy ditties...". but there is one thing I do definitely NOT like about "Gong Live Etc.", and that is the way at least 2 songs have been tampered with, "You Can't Kill Me" and "Zero the Hero". both had parts of the solos cut out of them. it so happens that both songs were taken from the Bataclan concert that the "Live au Bataclan" album was recorded at; I recognized them immediately. you can, however, imagine my surprise when in the middle of the solos in the 2 named songs they suddenly started playing something else than I was used to; these parts which I expected appeared a few bars later. so on the "Live Etc." album these bars before the ones I expected had been cut out.
Edited by BaldJean - December 26 2007 at 23:01
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A shot of me as High Priestess of Gaia during our fall festival. Ceterum censeo principiis obsta
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khammer99
Forum Senior Member
Joined: November 21 2007
Location: United States
Status: Offline
Points: 157
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Posted: December 26 2007 at 19:57 |
The reason I don't like life albums is they are generally poorly produced. Stuff, like the singer fades in and out, drums and bass overpower, etc. I'm not saying a want it polished, just have a better production process... 1) Kiss - Alive - Recorded in Detroit. Great show 2) Rush - All the Worlds a Stage - Good quality sound from a live album. 3) Humble Pie - King Biscuit Flower Hour (recorded in San Fransisco) - Just great 4) Peter Frampton - Frampton Comes Alive - Alright, alright, I know it's lame! But I got right up front!  5) Led Zep - The Song Remains the Same - Seeing my hero's live...
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Genius is always allowed some leeway, once the hammer has
been pried from its hands and the blood has been cleaned up.
- Terry Pratchett
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ProgBagel
Prog Reviewer
Joined: May 13 2007
Location: United States
Status: Offline
Points: 2819
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Posted: December 26 2007 at 17:38 |
Pain of Salvation - 12.5
I think that is all I have. I don't care that much for live albums.
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Ely78
Forum Senior Member
Joined: July 20 2007
Location: Italy
Status: Offline
Points: 169
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Posted: December 26 2007 at 17:19 |
See this for my RPI (and related) top list:
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When the love becomes poetry, distant from the eyes
(Quando l'Amore Diventa poesia/ Lontano Dagli occhi [Aphrodite's Child)
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Nightfly
Special Collaborator
Honorary Collaborator
Joined: August 01 2007
Location: United Kingdom
Status: Offline
Points: 3659
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Posted: December 23 2007 at 13:36 |
Jim Garten wrote:
BroSpence wrote:
3. Led Zeppelin - BBC Sessions (I prefer many of these sessions to any of the studio recordings. The band sounds full and raw. Plant wails, Page fuzzes, Bonham explodes all while JPJ keeps it steady and grooving). |
Excellent choice - reminds me, I forgot to mention 'How the West Was Won'; to my mind, knocks spots off 'The Song Remains The Same'; includes a full on workout of 'Since I Been Lovin You', on which JPJ plays the dirtiest sounding Hammond you'll ever hear  |
Agreed; How the West Was Won is far better than The Song Remains the Same although that is much improved on the remastered version and the adition of the extra, shorter tracks seems to help the flow and offset some of the meanderings of the more bloated tracks and is a much better album as a consequence.
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A B Negative
Forum Senior Member
Joined: May 02 2006
Location: Methil Republic
Status: Offline
Points: 1594
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Posted: December 23 2007 at 10:22 |
darqdean wrote:
and don't say Live in Pompeii because there is no audience present during the recording and does not qualify as a live album |
It's a bit too Zen for me - if a band records an album and there's nobody there to hear it, is it a live album? If the audience claps with one hand I'm going to get really confused! My favourites at the moment: Hawkwind - Space Ritual Hawkwind - The 1999 Party Gong - Est Mort Planet Gong - Live Floating Anarchy 1977 King Crimson - Earthbound King Crimson - The Night Watch Tangerine Dream - Ricochet Tangerine Dream - Logos Magma - Trilogie au Trianon Opeth - The Roundhouse Tapes
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"The disgusting stink of a too-loud electric guitar.... Now, that's my idea of a good time."
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Forgotten Son
Forum Senior Member
Joined: March 13 2005
Location: United Kingdom
Status: Offline
Points: 1356
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Posted: December 22 2007 at 09:15 |
Marillion - Popular Music
Fish - Sunsets on Empire: Live in Poland 1997
Pink Floyd - PULSE
Pendragon - Live in Krakow '96
Dire Straits - Alchemy Live
Led Zeppelin - How the West Was Won
Satellite - Evening Dreams
Grey Lady Down - The Time Of Our Lives
Steve Hackett - The Tokyo Tapes
Deep Purple - Made in Japan
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limeyrob
Forum Senior Member
VIP Member
Joined: January 15 2005
Location: England
Status: Offline
Points: 1402
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Posted: December 22 2007 at 06:32 |
Haven't really got that many live albums as I prefer studio versions
The exceptions are Yessongs, Tournado and Richochet which are brilliant
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gliss bliss
Forum Newbie
Joined: December 20 2007
Location: United Kingdom
Status: Offline
Points: 24
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Posted: December 20 2007 at 20:58 |
"Planet Gong - Floating Anarchy Live Not really Gong, but Daevid Allen with Here & Now, but it's exceptional."
What about Gilli Smyth and Steve Hillage they were on that record too, I know Steffi Sharpstrings is credited as guitarist, but this was recorded on the same show as Gong Est Mort. For contractual reasons Hillage was uncredited on both these records because he was contracted to Virgin records which forbade him to appear on any other recordings.
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Lets go to church and be good looking.
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Soul Dreamer
Forum Senior Member
Joined: October 17 2005
Location: Netherlands
Status: Offline
Points: 997
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Posted: December 20 2007 at 20:52 |
Prog:
- Yes - Yessongs
- Yes - Symphonic Live (DVD)
- Genesis - Seconds Out
- Hawkwind - Space Ritual
- Tangerine Dream - Ricochet
- Rush - Rush in Rio (DVD)
- Dream Theater - Score (DVD)
- Pendragon - And Now Everybody To The Stage (DVD)
- Porcupine Tree - Arriving Somewhere... (DVD)
- Renaissance - Live at the Carnegie Hall
edit: forgot Ange - Tome VI...soooooo good!
Non-Prog
- Wishbone Ash - Live Dates
- Neil Young - Live Rust
- Bruce Springsteen - Live 1975-1985
- Deep Purple - Made in Japan
- Metallica - S&M
- Allman brothers Band - Live at Fillmore East
- Coldplay - Live 2003
Edited by Soul Dreamer - December 20 2007 at 21:06
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To be the one who seeks so I may find .. (Metallica)
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Teh_Slippermenz
Forum Senior Member
Joined: September 11 2007
Location: United States
Status: Offline
Points: 321
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Posted: December 20 2007 at 20:43 |
1. Plays Live - Peter Gabriel (Awesome one that I picked up from my library last night) 2. Yessongs - Yes 3. Genesis Live - Genesis
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Philéas
Forum Senior Member
Joined: June 14 2006
Status: Offline
Points: 6419
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Posted: December 20 2007 at 19:51 |
Favourites in no order (most of these are unprog, sorry):
Jimi Hendrix - Live at Woodstock The Who - Live at Leeds Indian Summer - Hidden Arithmetic (one live recording and one radio session. This isn't the Prog band, btw) Myrbein - Live Östersund 1979 (never properly released, except as mp3's on the band's website) Jimi Hendrix - Band of Gypsys Badger - One Live Badger
I'm not that interested in live albums generally.
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gliss bliss
Forum Newbie
Joined: December 20 2007
Location: United Kingdom
Status: Offline
Points: 24
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Posted: December 20 2007 at 19:36 |
BaldJean wrote:
I know some people don't like live albums, but I just love them. nowhere else can a band be free of the restriction to try to sound perfectly but simply let the music flow. what are your favorite ones? here are mine, counting backward from10 to 1. please try to give s short explanation why you include the albums too.
10) Frumpy: "Live" (1973). Inga Rumpf and company put on a great show; she
definitely has the blackest voice of all white singers. an excellent introduction
to this band which deserves more attention.
9) Kraan: "Live" (1975). a stunning classic with highlights like "Holiday am Marterhorn including Gipfelsturm", "Sarah's Ritt durch den Schwarzwald" or "Nam Nam". Helmut Hattler definitely is one of the best bass players in prog; something you can hear here.
8) Guru Guru: "Live" (1976). with a lot of previously unreleased tracks
(some of which had been a live favorite already though), like "Medicine
Man's Overdose", "Herzflimmern" or "Transylvanian Express", and great
versions of "Moroso", "Der Elektrolurch" and "Ooga Booga". the album
shows what a great live act Guru Guru must have been (I never saw them
live myself). one can actually see Mani Neumeier hopping around in his
wrestling suit when hearing him. it helps if you understand some German
to get some of the jokes they make, like when Neumeier sings "Santa Fu,
raus bist du" ("Santa Fu, you are out", that song was recorded at Santa
Fu, a prison in Hamburg) in "Ooga Booga" and talks about the prisoners getting new
uniforms after the concert that look like his wrestling suit.
7) Hawkwind: "Space Ritual" (1973). what can I say? a classic. Hawkwind re-released the album with uncut versions of "Time We Left" and "Brainstorm" (they had been shortened for the original release because they were too long). too bad this is not a DVD; Stacia would have been a nice addition 
6) Gentle Giant: "Playing the Fool" (1977). Gentle Giant show that their complex compositions can be played live without sounding sterile; on the contrary, they make them sound really alive. highlights are the "Octopus Medley", "On Reflection" and "Funny Ways".
5) Steve Hillage: "Live Herald" (1978). this one originally came out as a 3-sides live, 1-side studio vinyl; unfortunately the studio material sounded bloodless compared to the live material (with the exception of "1988 Activator"). it was in my opinion a good decision of Virgin to release this as a single CD live album and add the studio material to the CD-version of "Open". at 69 minutes the album is still long enough. great versions of classic Hillage songs.
4) 801: "Live" (1976). Brian Eno, Phil Manzanera and friends play a collection of songs associated with former projects of them as well as some classic. one of the most interesting releases of that time; the beginning of punk can be felt in songs like "Third Uncle". unfortunately a single album only.
3) Magma: "Live / Hhai" (1975). featuring a 17-year old Didier Lockwood on
violin who (almost) steals the show; just listen to his seven and a
half minute solo in "Mekanik Zain". great version of "Köhntark". a
friend of mine once commented: "sounds like a holiday in hell".
2) Gong: "Live au Bataclan" (1990). this album was recorded in 1973 and shows the "classic" band line-up (Daevid Allen, Gilly Smyth, Pierre Moerlen, Didier Malherbe, Steve Hillage, Mike Howlett, Tim Blake) in top form, performing some of their classics. don't get irritated by the strange titles on the album; you will recognize these classics quickly.
1) Van der Graaf Generator: "Vital" (1978). since I follow my usual policy of best lists (naming an artist twice or more in such a list is behaving like a fan boy/girl; pick your gender) I was torn between "Vital" and "Real Time". I settled for "Vital" because it adds new aspects to the songs; also because it includes some previously unreleased material. the general treatment of all songs was: give 'em a raw brushing up! Nic Potter's bass truly is a monster!
again this list may change at any moment, depending on my mood, but "Vital", "Live au Bataclan" and "Live / Hhai" will always be in it
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You've not heard Gong Est Mort or Gong Live Etc yet, some of Hillage's finest moments with that other prog rock keyboard wizard Click Switch Doctor Aka Hi T Moonweed Aka Tim Blake
|
Lets go to church and be good looking.
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Jim Garten
Special Collaborator
Retired Admin & Razor Guru
Joined: February 02 2004
Location: South England
Status: Offline
Points: 14693
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Posted: August 24 2007 at 08:14 |
BroSpence wrote:
3. Led Zeppelin - BBC Sessions (I prefer many of these sessions to any of the studio recordings. The band sounds full and raw. Plant wails, Page fuzzes, Bonham explodes all while JPJ keeps it steady and grooving). |
Excellent choice - reminds me, I forgot to mention 'How the West Was Won'; to my mind, knocks spots off 'The Song Remains The Same'; includes a full on workout of 'Since I Been Lovin You', on which JPJ plays the dirtiest sounding Hammond you'll ever hear
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Jon Lord 1941 - 2012
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BroSpence
Forum Senior Member
Joined: March 05 2007
Status: Offline
Points: 2614
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Posted: August 23 2007 at 20:53 |
2. Humble Pie - Rockin' the Fillmore (incredible! Humble with Marriott and Frampton in top shape rocking not just the Fillmore!)
1. Jimi Hendrix - Live at Woodstock (I always go back to this amazing performance. 2 discs and not a bad note on either one. )
6. Birth Control - Live (Krautrockers turn volume and jams up to 11)
8. Neil Young - Live Rust (Personally I find it much better than Rust Never Sleeps. Good mix of RNS songs and classic Young songs that feedback like no other)
7. Miles Davis - Live at the Fillmore West (Jazz giant has a killer backing band and several nights of great performances. Jack DeJohnette grooves, Davis messes around).
4. Allman Brothers Band - Live at the Fillmore East (Duane makes his guitar sing along with a band that played tight together and knew how to treat the blues).
10. Jim Hall - Live! (Possibly the greatest Jazz guitarist playing almost alone and as beautifully as ever. Hall has one of the best tones a player could ask for).
9. Frank Zappa and the Mothers of Invention - Fillmore East June 1971 (complete ridiculousness that never gets old or uninteresting).
5. The Byrds - Untitled (a double album 1/2 live half studio. Both halves are great. Clarence White is a forgotten hero of the Guitar).
3. Led Zeppelin - BBC Sessions (I prefer many of these sessions to any of the studio recordings. The band sounds full and raw. Plant wails, Page fuzzes, Bonham explodes all while JPJ keeps it steady and grooving).
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