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Mostrando postagens com marcador Live. Mostrar todas as postagens
Mostrando postagens com marcador Live. Mostrar todas as postagens

08/04/2020

David Gilmour faz live com a família e toca músicas de Leonard Cohen




Se não fosse a quarentena, David Gilmour iria fazer uma turnê com a esposa Polly Samson para divulgar o livro dela, A Theatre For Dreamers.

Acontece que o novo Coronavírus não impediu que a lenda do Pink Floyd se apresentasse em família, já que o músico fez uma live ao lado dos parentes, celebrando a arte.

Por lá, Polly leu alguns trechos do seu novo romance e Gilmour tocou duas canções do saudoso Leonard Cohen, com “Bird on the Wire” e “So Long, Marianne”.





19/10/2019

King Crimson: Live In Newcastle, December 8, 1972 (CLUB48) FLAC






Sem sombra de dúvida uma excelente notícia este lançamento da Discipline Global Mobile na série The King Crimson Collectors' Club, tantos anos depois.

Foi o primeiro show do King Crimson já assistido pelo escritor e biógrafo da banda Sid Smith. Ele comenta que o público estava bastante satisfeito em ouvir material desconhecido e respondeu com entusiasmo ao desafio apresentado.

Smith ainda observa sobre esta gravação: “Se essa fita estivesse disponível por ocasião da edição do box set de "Larks 'Tongues In Aspic: The Complete Recordings" 40th Anniversary Series com 15 discos, não tenho absolutamente nenhuma dúvida de que esse show teria sido a joia dessa coroa em particular. Exemplos de boa qualidade com o quinteto da era Muir são tão raros e distantes entre si, que uma fita de mesa de som como essa é realmente um achado precioso.”

Ele está sobremaneira correto, é o melhor registro ao vivo no curto período de tempo de Jamie Muir com essa formação, e, é aí que a mágica realmente reside. Isto é um verdadeiro presente dos deuses do rock progressivo. Gravado sem nenhuma expectativa de que seria usado além de, possivelmente, por um membro da banda que quisesse verificar um elemento da apresentação de uma noite anterior, a fita de um show ao vivo, não tocado desde 1972 e ainda, tão emocionante por tudo que representa, surge do nada apenas agora em 2019. Ao que se sabe, no final de 2017, um ex-membro da equipe entregou uma fita ao gerente da banda em uma festa. Ele não tinha certeza se estava no arquivo do DGM...

King Crimson tocava com confiança o material que comporia, na maior parte, o clássico álbum "Larks 'Tongues in Aspic" - realizado quase na íntegra e, exceto as maravilhosas improvisações, na ordem de execução que surgiria em vinil no início de 1973 e que é considerado um dos grandes clássicos da banda.

O site oficial do King Crimson, DGM Live, através do próprio Sid Smith, destacou a resenha de John Kelman do canal especializado All About Jazz, que dentre outras coisas enaltece este formidável registro por sua qualidade impar e o que ele representa: "Agora, com o melhor som de gravação ao vivo até hoje, o Live in Newcastle, em 8 de dezembro de 1972, elucida ainda mais a importância inestimável de Muir nesse conjunto, nos deixando apenas uma pergunta: para onde esse grupo teria ido se Muir tivesse decidido não sair?" (Confira abaixo a integra da matéria de John Kelman)

Boa audição! 




King Crimson
Live In Newcastle, December 8, 1972
Discipline Global Mobile/Panegyric
Série: The King Crimson Collectors' Club ‎– CLUB48 


Tracklist

1. Larks' Tongues In Aspic Part One 10:47
2. RF Announcement 1:09
3. Book Of Saturday (Daily Games) 2:49
4. Improv I 14:49
5. Exiles 6:20
6. Easy Money 9:33
7. Improv II 17:28
8. The Talking Drum 5:49
9. Larks' Tongues In Aspic Part Two 3:47



​​David Cross - Bill Bruford - Jamie Muir - John Wetton - Robert Fripp


All About Jazz
By John Kelman
April 19, 2019

"Never say never," or so the old adage goes. When it comes to music, there are two more that should be added: "farewell tour" and, most certainly as it relates to King Crimson's Live in Newcastle, December 8, 1972, "the complete recordings." This, the 48th in the veteran group's King Crimson Collector's Club series of archival releases, turns out not just to be an unexpected addition to the group's Larks' Tongues in Aspic (Panegyric), but belies that fifteen-disc, 2012 40th Anniversary Series box set, which was subtitled "The Complete Recordings" on the opening page of its enclosed 36-page booklet.

But it's a minor quibble. The truth is, this five-piece version of a brand new lineup, making its first public appearance just two months prior on October 13, 1972 and its last a mere five months later, was King Crimson's second shortest-lived incarnation next to the 2008 twin-drummer lineup (which performed a mere eleven dates in four cities, leaving no studio recordings and, effectively, no new music).

The remaining members of the Larks' Tongues band continued as a quartet for another fifteen months before being summarily shut down in September, 1974 by the group's only remaining co-founder, guitarist Robert Fripp, following the recording of King Crimson's final studio album of the '70s, Red (Island, 1974, reissued Panegyric, 2009). But with only seven live recordings from the quintet's 46 concerts included in the 40th Anniversary Series box (plus a very poor quality bonus eighth as a download), and a full five of those seven shows sourced from audience bootlegs, it's terrific news, indeed, that the band, still road-testing its new material in the final months of 1972, was in the habit of making cassette recordings off of the soundboard. Far from the high fidelity possible today, these soundboard recordings were, nevertheless, of sufficient quality to allow the band to continue honing its new repertoire prior to going into the studio.

Live in Newcastle, December 8, 1972 is, indeed, a major find: a soundboard recording that's a major addition to the documented legacy of this short-lived five-piece lineup that, alongside Fripp, ex-Yes drummer Bill Bruford, ex-Family bassist/vocalist John Wetton and violinist David Cross, featured the fur vest-clothed, blood capsule-spewing and inimitably creative percussionist, Jamie Muir. Exceptionally well-restored, it reveals a great deal more about just how extraordinary this band was, even if only for such a short time.

Muir left King Crimson after its March 31, 1973 show, a mere eight days after the release of Larks' Tongues in Aspic (Island Records, 1973). While the four-piece formation that remained would prove to be amongst the band's most-loved (until, that is, its current, slightly shifting format, which has been touring since 2014), recordings from the full quintet remain amongst the holiest of Crimson holy grails.

Percussion [Percussion & Allsorts] – Jamie Muir

And for good reason. As superb as the Larks' Tongues quartet would ultimately prove to be in performance (and as well-documented, generally from much better sources, on two mega-box sets from Panegyric in 2013 and 2014 respectively, The Road to Red and Starless), Muir brought not just a visual "X factor" to the group but a musical one as well, his not-to-be understated contributions during his brief tenure with Crimson still felt well after his departure, with the percussionist exerting a lasting influence on Bruford, who added the role of percussionist to his extant position as the group's drummer after Muir's departure.

Live in Newcastle, December 8, 1972 stands out amongst the relatively few recordings from the Larks' Tongues quintet.

First, while still a relatively low-fi recording (call it "mid-fi," perhaps), it's still the best-sounding live recording from this group to date, with surprising clarity and delineation, given its source and age.

Second, it's the only known recording—barring the Hull Technical College date from November 10, 1972, included in the 40th Anniversary Series box—that features the entire Larks' Tongues in Aspic album in its running order, albeit with an incomplete version of the set-closing "Larks' Tongues in Aspic Part Two," which cuts off about halfway through.

Along with every track from Larks' Tongues in Aspic, two lengthy improvisations demonstrate the group's ability to draw music from the ether while, at the same time, connecting one song to the next. The first is embedded between a particularly lovely version of the miniature vocal piece, "Book of Saturday," and the powerfully symphonic "Exiles." The second is bookended by a lengthier, nine minute-plus look at the album's most eminently rocking "Easy Money" and the whisper-to-a-roar, improv-heavy "The Talking Drum," which segues into an incomplete "Larks' Tongues in Aspic Part Two," rendering the set almost completely continuous, barring a brief break for Fripp's announcement after the set-opening "Larks' Tongues in Aspic Part One" and another (with no announcement) following "Exiles."

Together, these two improvisations occupy 32 minutes of the CD's 72-minute run time, and demonstrate this quintet's far freer approach to extemporization, again largely thanks to Muir, who'd already established himself in the British free jazz scene, collaborating with guitarist Derek Bailey, electronics specialist Hugh Davies, saxophonist Evan Parker and vocalist Christine Jeffrey in the Music Improvisation Company, whose sole, eponymous album was released by a nascent ECM Records in 1970.

Guitar, Mellotron – Robert Fripp

Road-testing the emerging album's worth of material over a full 32 live performances before committing it to tape for Larks' Tongues in Aspic, the group was still working on nailing down formats and arrangements even at the relatively late date of Live in Newcastle, December 8, 1972, its sixth-to-last show before heading into the studio for two months in early '72. But it was inching closer and closer.

The out-of-the-gate game-changing "Larks' Tongues in Aspic Part One"—its introduction bringing Muir's bells and other percussion together with guitar and violin harmonics, and Bruford's textural cymbal work—has largely been whipped into shape by this time, but Fripp is still looking for just the right mix of compositional construction and improvisational forays. The technically challenging, rapid-picked and angularly conceived guitar part first introduced during the third section of this eleven-minute, episodic blend of crunching, metallic power chords, pastoral violin passages and many other ideas in-between, is repeated, here, during the following passage before heading off into more spontaneous territory. This contrasts with the studio version, where the guitarist overlays an intensifying build of increasingly rapid-strummed chords, a logical extension and expansion of the similar technique used during Fripp's now-iconic, skewed banjo-inflected guitar solo during "Sailor's Tale," from Islands (Island, 1971, reissued Panegyric, 2010).


It's an incendiary reading of the composition that seems to effortlessly shift from subtle delicacies to ear-bursting grooves, the latter driven hard by Wetton's heavily distorted, positively massive bass lines, Bruford's instantly recognizable snare and Muir's reckless percussive contributions. The album's start-stop introduction to Cross' delicately oblique, largely a cappella solo has yet to emerge at this point, though the violinist's feature, which turns into a duet with Muir, is closer to but, in the spirit of improvisation that underscores virtually the entire performance, still not a precise mirror of what would ultimately appear on the studio recording. Here, Muir's cascading, harp-like dulcimer strums gradually join with Cross for the simple, Oriental-sounding melody that signals the composition's final section, as it gradually builds towards the familiar, climactic conclusion.

Violin, Flute, Mellotron – David Cross

It may be a brief announcement at just over a minute, but before launching into "Book of Saturday" (still, at this point, titled "Daily Games," and delivered with both pastoral beauty and a hint of melancholy) Fripp takes the time to compliment the Newcastle audience, introduce what came before and what is to come next as the group "proceed[s] to attack culture yet again," following "a small demonstration of Mellotron tuning," and how the set will conclude. At the same time, Fripp is compelled to draw attention to a rather vocal member of the audience, thankfully inaudible in this recording.

This may have been relatively early days in the group's half century existence, but Fripp was already drawing a line in the sand with respect to how an audience can either inspire or distract. "My, my, what a nice crowd they have in Newcastle," his cadential remarks begin, before turning more pointed. "To the gentlemen who so kindly passed those killingly funny remarks at the beginning, may I say thank you sir, you're really a scream," Fripp gently yet acerbically adds, before concluding his introduction with: "To the gentleman with the loud voice: your indulgence sir, thank you." It's a relatively small but telling decision to include this introduction, as it could just as easily have been edited out.

But back to the music. As the under three minute "Book of Saturday"—with Wetton's first vocal of the set and Fripp's beautifully arpeggiated solo—reaches its conclusion, it segues seamlessly into "Improv I." Beginning as a lovely, melodic feature driven by Bruford's soft kit work and Muir's fluid yet unpredictable percussion injections, Fripp's lyrical, clean-toned playing is augmented by Wetton's blend of rhythmic anchor and melodic foil. Cross improvises, too, but largely in the background, though it's impossible to know whether this is by intent or the result of the front-of-house mix and where the recorder was in the hall.

The three-chord set of changes that spontaneously emerge gradually lead to an accelerating bass solo that reveals Wetton as a fine bassist for the group, albeit one with a more limited vernacular as compared to Fripp, Cross and, even, Muir, when he is employing tuned percussion like xylophone or wood blocks. As the tempo slows again, Fripp introduces the silkily sustaining tone he first unleashed on the world during his fiery solo on "21st Century Schizoid Man," the opening track to King Crimson's (music) world-changing debut, In the Court of the Crimson King (Island, 1969, reissued Panegyric, 2009).

Slowly morphing into a backbeat-driven, xylophone-colored and wah wah-heavy solo from Cross that again accelerates in tempo, as Fripp engages with Cross with greater virtuosity, the 14-minute improvisation builds climactically and yet, in its final minute, dissolves as it magically finds its way to the intro of "Exiles," where Wetton, not always the most pitch-accurate of singers, delivers a particularly compelling vocal performance.

With Crimson's earlier albums, also including In the Wake of Poseidon (Island, 1970, reissued Panegyric, 2010) and Lizard (Island, 1971, reissued Panegyric, 2009), strongly featuring Mellotron, it's no small significance that "Exiles" is the first tune on Larks' Tongues in Aspic (and, for that matter, Live in Newcastle, December 8, 1972) to utilize the tape-loop driven keyboard instrument that allowed the group to incorporate a breadth of symphonic sounds.

Drums - Bill Bruford

Also features significantly on "Easy Money," but not until Fripp's lengthy solo section, with Cross' keyboard work supporting the guitarist's gradually expanding, intervallic-leaping and, at times, blues-informed phrases. The instrumental section, nearly three minutes longer than the studio version, also demonstrates how much Muir brings to the group, as he layers all manner of percussion instruments and "allsorts" (meaning: just about anything he could find capable of being shaken, swirled, struck or dropped) over Bruford's unshakable anchor with, again, the deeply intuitive sounds of surprise. As ever, Muir both responds to and further encourages Fripp and the entire group as it builds to a high-volume peak that's brought back to the final verse by Wetton's (unfortunately) pitchy scatting.

The 17-minute improvisation that follows quickly dissolves into a solo feature for Muir, who employs everything from, amongst many other things, drum kit, horns, spinning toys and swinging chains to strange laughs, a large metal sheet and all manner of tuned metal and wood. A drum solo follows, but is clearly still Muir in its complete and utter abandon, though Bruford begins to join in, as does Wetton, first with a repeating two-chord phrase but, ultimately, greater freedom as both Cross and Fripp engage in some unanticipated Mellotron interplay, Cross soon moving to violin as the entire band takes off with an accelerating pulse.

Building to the kind of funk-heavy groove that often defined many later quartet improvisations, "Improv II" continues to demonstrate the Larks' Tongues quintet's greater volatility, its sheer capriciousness an immutably defining quality. The previous Islands touring band was often defined by similar free exchanges, but between Muir and Fripp's broader language and their connection to the British free jazz scene—the guitarist recruiting a number of free jazz guests on the Crimson trifecta of Poseidon through Islands while producing, amongst others, Keith Tippett's massive ensemble project Centipede and its two-LP Septober Energy (Neon, 1971), as well as the pianist's more intimate but still unfettered Blueprint (RCA, 1972)—this lineup far outpaced any other Crimson lineup (including the subsequent quartet) when it came to astonishing and impossible to anticipate states of change. Only the current lineup, as different as it is, approaches the Larks' Tongues in Aspic quintet in terms of both consistent excellence and, albeit in a subtler fashion, improvisational/interpretive strength.

With Muir's odd vocalizing, from growls and grunts to howls and yowls, bringing "Improv II" to a near-whisper, the piece segues into "The Talking Drum," The percussionist's hand-drumming setting the pace for Wetton to gradually assume the instrumental's familiar bass line. "The Talking Drum" is almost two minutes shorter than the ultimate studio version, but still manages to build to the searing conclusion of melded violin harmonics and guitar screeches that segue into the anthemic instrumental, "Larks' Tongues in Aspic Part Two."

While plenty energetic, the only shame about Live in Newcastle, December 8, 1972 is that "Larks' Tongues in Aspic Part Two" cuts off right before Cross' solo. Still, the familiar crunch of Fripp's overdriven guitar defines both the "A" section's higher volume and shifting meters and the "B" section's brief respite, before it builds back to fierier energy.

Bass Guitar, Vocals – John Wetton

Muir's protean contributions are, once again, a demonstration of this group's greater extemporaneous versatility and improvisational élan. If anything, Live in Newcastle, December 8, 1972 is the best example, to date, of why this particular Crimson lineup is held in such high esteem by so many fans. While completely different than the four albums that came before, Larks' Tongues in Aspic, and the profound chemistry of the five musicians that created it, may represent a more consistently visible demonstration of Fripp's growing prowess as a guitarist.

While any real examination of the King Crimson's first four albums reveal a guitarist already extended well beyond the limitations of most guitarists connected to the rock world, Larks' Tongues in Aspic and its follow-up, Starless and Bible Black (Island, 1974, reissued Panegyric, 2011) and the mind-boggling closer that still challenges even the most accomplished six-stringers with "Fracture," render crystal clear that Fripp was, even at this relatively early stage in his career, a guitarist occupying a rarefied stratum alongside precious few others.

But as much as Larks' Tongues in Aspic was a clear revelation of Fripp's eminently impressive yet still-evolving talents as guitarist, composer, conceptualist and bandleader, it was the profound chemistry of everyone involved that made it such an artistic (if, at the time, not entirely commercial or critical) success. Still, it was Muir's relentless "X factor" that made the studio album what it is. Now, with the best sounding live recording to date, Live in Newcastle, December 8, 1972 further elucidates Muir's inestimable importance in this nascent ensemble. The quartet would go on to extensive touring and a reputation as one of King Crimson's best lineups, with Live in Newcastle, December 8, 1972 leaving but one question: where might this group had gone had Muir decided not to leave?

It's an absolutely essential addition to King Crimson's expanded discography of live recordings released since Fripp first curated and issued the four-disc box set of performances by the Larks' Tongues quartet, The Great Deceiver (Virgin, 1992, reissued DGM Live, 2006). But, just as importantly, King Crimson's staggering quintet performance on Live in Newcastle, December 8, 1972 suggests that the phrase "the complete recordings" can often be incorrect...and, here, in the most superbly glorious way possible.

Track Listing: Larks’ Tongues in Aspic Part One; RF Announcement; Book of Saturday; Improv I; Exiles; Easy Money; Improv II; The Talking Drum; Larks’ Tongues in Aspic Part Two.

Personnel: Bill Bruford: drums; David Cross: violin, mellotron; Robert Fripp: guitar, mellotron; Jamie Muir: percussion, drums, "allsorts"; John Wetton: bass, vocals.

Title: Live in Newcastle, December 8, 1972 | Year Released: 2019 | Record Label: DGM Live


FLAC
ulozto.net - (378 MB)
ou
filefactory - (360.88 MB)

04/10/2019

Pink Floyd ‎– Definitive Millard 1975 (Sigma 228) FLAC



Have A Cigar


Considerada uma das melhores performances da turnê pelos EUA em 1975, e graças a Mike Millard, um registro em qualidade muito superior a qualquer outro disponível no período, esta captura da apresentação do Pink Floyd na Arena Los Angeles Memorial Sports em Los Angeles, CA, USA., no dia 26 de abril de 1975, é peça da primeira prateleira de qualquer coleção, principalmente em se tratando de um fã da banda que aprecia a riqueza de cada concerto do grupo, cujas performances têm identidade própria graças a genialidade dos improvisos, fruto do talento excepcional de Rick e Gilmour que se fundem através das interpretações numa atmosfera extremamente agradável aos nossos ouvidos.

Homenagem: "Mike The Mike" Millard

Esta é uma gravação do lendário Mike Millard, "sempre gratuita aos fãs", de um concerto que é realmente uma extensão do tempo. Voltar nos anos 60 e 70 através de um registro a partir de gravador cassete. Imaginem agir sorrateiramente num desses concertos hoje em dia. Provavelmente, o "gravador" secreto escolhido hoje em dia seria um smartphone, e você simultaneamente retransmitiria online pela internet, quem sabe até via youtube. Sendo pequeno o suficiente para caber em seu bolso.

Mas no caso de Millard era muito diferente... Em 26 de abril, 1975, ele chegou cedo ao show, a arena era perto da sua casa, puxou uma cadeira de rodas do porta-malas do seu carro, e começou a deslocar-se para o show como se fosse deficiente. (Freqüentemente usava uma cadeiras de rodas que ele tinha para esconder seu equipamento, fato que por si só já é incrível, surreal).

A Nakamichi 550, the expensive Japanese tape deck 
that Mike Millard used for his recordings.

Assim, ele conseguiu garantir "assento" na primeira fila, em frente e no centro. Escondido debaixo de sua cadeira de rodas um gravador cassete estéreo Nakamichi, conectado à dois microfones AKG de alta fidelidade. Os seguranças daqueles dias, provavelmente desconhecem tais acontecimentos até hoje. 

Suas gravações foram muito procuradas por sua qualidade - capturadas em extensão acústica de um grande ambiente, característico devido a acústica do local. Sua proximidade eliminou qualquer eco em suas gravações. Todos os instrumentos gravados imediatamente após os alto-falantes frontais. Ele tinha o hábito de marcar suas fitas, Mike nunca se envolveu em venda de bootlegs e foi totalmente contra a venda ilegal de suas gravações históricas - fato hoje que reduziu muito audiência de seus registros. Notório por "catalogar" suas cópias meticulosamente, tornou-se mais tarde possível que as gravações aparecessem para venda em LP ou CD, entretanto como detestava contrabandistas que o pressionavam para comercialização, na época ele seria capaz de delatar às autoridades, qualquer pessoa que conseguisse através de seus amigos uma cópia para contrabando. Ele mantinha um diário das gravações detalhando os eventos através de marcações, exceções eram bastante raras. Há alguns anos, algumas cópias desmarcadas de gravações de primeira geração do Led Zeppelin surgiram em círculos de troca, um momento verdadeiramente histórico para colecionadores de todo o mundo. 

Ele trabalhava como zelador em uma escola pública e sempre morou com sua mãe. Em um momento de depressão, infelizmente cometeu suicídio em 1990, (alegadamente sofria de depressão severa).

Seus amigos dizem que ele destruiu muitas das cópias de suas gravações. Os poucos que restaram são os que agora estão sendo negociados e ou compartilhados desde então.

Millard esteve ativo desde 1974 até os anos 80, e disse ter gravado shows do Led Zeppelin, Pink Floyd, Yes, The Rolling Stones, The Who, Jethro Tull e até Kansas. Até hoje, nunca encontrou-se uma cópia de suas gravações de The Who ou do JT. Os originais Zeppelin são conhecidos por estar de posse da família Millard. Um amigo que o conhecia muito bem, após sua morte esteve na residência de sua mãe para ajudá-la a organizar e embalar todo material remanescente, e segundo ele, ela não teria outro objetivo senão manter tudo no quarto onde sempre estiveram. Tanto quanto se sabe, ainda estão no quarto onde ele estava vivendo ao longo de sua vida. Esperemos que um dia eles venham ser compartilhados. (Harvested)

Este bootleg é especial, pois é um dos poucos de 1975 que é completo e com soberba qualidade dentre os disponíveis. Ele contém as versões mais atuais de "Dick Parry" com um solo de saxofone em "Echoes", "Raving and Drooling" e "You Gotta Be Crazy", que acabariam por se tornarem "Sheep" e "Dogs", respectivamente. 

Depois de "You Gotta Be Crazy", "Dave Gilmour" comentou que "Era uma canção cruel .... Mas justa. Para então anunciar: "A próxima música que vamos tocar para vocês é mais um novo número, que é chamado de 'Shine On You Crazy Diamond'. Tem algo a ver com "Syd Barrett", que alguns de vocês devem se lembrar ..... e alguns de vocês mais jovens provavelmente não irão." 
.   

Boa audição!


Echoes




Pink Floyd
Definitive Millard 1975 (Sigma 228)
Live At Los Angeles Memorial Sports Arena, 
Los Angeles, CA, USA 26th April 1975


  Disc 1
   1. Mike Test
   2. Intro.
   3. Raving And Drooling
   4. You Gotta Be Crazy
   5. Shine On You Crazy Diamond (Part 1-5)
   6. Have A Cigar
   7. Shine On You Crazy Diamond (Part 6-9)
   TOTAL TIME (63:14)

  Disc 2
   [The Dark Side Of The Moon]
   1. Speak To Me
   2. Breathe
   3. On The Run
   4. Time
   5. Breathe (Reprise)
   6. The Great Gig In The Sky
   7. Money
   8. Us And Them
   9. Any Colour You Like
   10. Brain Damage
   11. Eclipse
   TOTAL TIME (56:49)

  Disc 3
   1. Audience
   2. Echoes
   TOTAL TIME (24:22)





Bonus DVDR



Abaixo matéria da Sigma a respeito do registro, confira:  

Pink Floyd / Definitive Millard / 3CD+1Bonus DVDR / Sigma

Live at Los Angeles Memorial Sports Arena, Los Angeles, CA, USA 26th April 1975 plus Bonus DVDR “Los Angeles 1975 5th Night”

The Pink Floyd 1975 legendary recording updated by that Mike Millerd! The long-stopped LA performance is finally at the top of the 2019 latest technology!

Speaking of the United States tour of Floyd 75 for sound source fans, it is a treasure trove of excellent sound sources with excellent recordings. In particular, high-quality audience recordings such as “ARMS OF VANCOUVER (Sigma 56)”, “SEATTLE MASTER REELS (Sigma 58)”, “THEORY OF RUIN VALUE (Sigma 46)” such as the first US tour in April It is lined up and fascinates sound source fans. However, it is a legendary taper that the recording excellent in sound quality was outstanding during these performances of April in the 70’s, Los Angeles performances of April 26 by Mike Millerd. This is a very special-grade high-quality sound recording, and so far this Sigma label has released a decisive strike such as “LOS ANGELES 1975 4TH NIGHT (Sigma 148)” including “PINK MILLARD (Sigma 31)”. In particular, the Sigma 148, like the Sigma 31, does not have a slight excess equalization and convenient cut editing, and keeps the 1st Gen’s clear mirrored recording transferred to DAT tape almost untouched and untouched except for pitch adjustment. It was highly appreciated that this show was well received by fans as an overwhelming title, not an exaggeration to say that it is the top of all existing 1975 sound sources.

It is a translation that is a standard sound source that represents the Floyd 75 sound source, but this is why it is also possible to push the perfection to the ultimate thing that brings the perfection from the beginner to the expert. I think that it is the mission of leading Sigma. As well known, this sound source is so excellent in recording that it does not feel particularly uncomfortable on hearing, and it seems that there is no problem in sound quality, but it is not necessarily true if it is completely essential It is not. Especially I would like to pay attention to the variation of the mid-bass range, which I notice to visualize with the master sound waveform of the mirror, but some of this range expand slightly and the sound image becomes cramped (= something that has a close feeling) In the meantime, there are places where the sound component runs short and you feel light. In addition, it is also possible to see some places where the spread of the sound can not exert its original potential.

From an audio point of view, it is assumed that the density of this midrange is high and the balance between bass and treble is well in order to make a sound that is responsive. In particular, if this middle to low range is properly organized, the sound will be more stable and energetic, and at the same time improvement in sharpness and extension of the range can be expected. It can not be done. Even if it is a standard recording representative of Floyd 75, it is also carefully restored to the ideal waveform with the latest equipment and technology of 2019, and it is arranged to the sound image of the next level without defects even in a severe eye You should see the crown overhead. Yes, it is the 2019 edition of the mirrord recording of this latest film, the most vivid sound image of the source ever, that made it come true!

However, since it was a quite high-quality sound board even at the time of Sigma 148, if you have that, you might be wondering, “Is there anything that makes a difference?” However, if you listen to this film, it is a content that you can understand in a skin sense how carefully adjusting the middle to low range has a great effect on musical energy and driving feeling and the directionality of the music. is. For example, it is Mike Millard’s voice heard at the beginning of Disc 1, but I would like to pay attention to the silent part behind his voice. With this board, you will notice from this slight opening scene that the sound has not already been clogged up (= the band has broadened and the gap has improved). “Raving And Drooling” also shows the strength based on accurate waveform control noticeably in the sound, and in “You Gotta Be Crazy”, clear sound and luster appear with a beautifully arranged sound image, and the music is final Interesting musical vocabularies before they are shaped are becoming more and more in full swing. The difference between the sharpness and power of single tones is easy to grasp in the beginning of “Shine On You … Part 1-5”, and the thickness of the hard sound coming out from 3:46 is unique to this record. “Have A Cigar” also shows that the reach of the two voices is clearer by the extension of the range, “Shine On You … Part 6-9” in the gap between the sound and sound Sigma 148 or more I think that you will be scolded by the sense of density of From the middle stage 7:03, the impressive bass sound jumps out with a sense of massive elasticity, and the MC and in-the-field reaction that can not conceal the discomfort (to the audience with low morale audience) who enters after the final performance You can experience it with a sound image with an even greater feeling.

The dark side set also has a three-dimensional cross between the guitar and the bass in the early stages of “Breathe” and “Money” than the Sigma 148, and the increase in space and the omission of reverberation in “Time” and the goodness of the reverb The singing line also became clearer, and it became possible to grasp the charm attractive to the original sound. As for “Us And Them”, the voice of the female chorus appearing slightly like the voice behind Gilmore’s voice becomes clear, and this seems to be proof that the original sound has been polished with the latest technology. Although the reverse point (with a slight loss of sound) of the master tape at 5: 01 of “Any Color You Like” remains as it is, this mirrord recording can not be patched on the same day as a source that can compensate for the patch. , Here is the form of the original sound recording. However, it will be necessary to check the cymbal sound and the point where the delicate weak sound of the guitar touch is more easily heard. Towards the final stage “Brain Damage ~ Eclipse” soft dreamy sound image, and the mellow sound of the bell sound coming after the final performance is a finish that can be affirmed that the best figure of mirrord sound source. I think you can see that the loud sound of the bass that stands out from around 7:15 is sharper than the Sigma 148 version in response to “Echoes”, and similarly, it is also due to a drop in the number of toms coming in from around 9:49 The appearance that the first half scene disappears is also better than ever, and both have produced results by close scrutiny and review of the range. In addition, the sound of fireworks (※ Pyro?) Rising at 17:50 is also clearer, and even the documentary nature as a recording that the original sound is hidden is embossed with the best sound.

In order to make the best use of the high-quality sound originally recorded in the milled, I kept in mind remastering that does not make the feeling of equalization appear, so the difference with the old Sigma 148 is slightly different from just listening lightly in the component and car stereo It may be hard to understand. However, as mentioned above, the sound is definitely clear, so if you have an old board, I strongly recommend you to listen carefully compared with headphones. Such a Sigma 148 has been sold out for a long time, and of course the store is completely out of stock in the warehouse sent for overseas sales at that time, but it was a situation where it was out of stock although it was a standard for a while. As a matter of fact, many requests for recurrence have been received, and this time it was also a version upgrade in a form that meets that expectation, therefore “The standard that makes you feel totally lost from beginners to collectors sound source The goal is to achieve the finish of the sound source, and a definitive mirror sound is realized. Now over time
Please check carefully with the ear, the difference in the case of the sound that is appropriate for being heard afterward !!!

(Remastered note)
★ Adjusted the mid-low range to broaden the entire range and to make the performance clearer. It is difficult to understand because it is an adjustment that does not bring out a sense of equalizing and high-quality sound originally, but it is clear.


Shine On You Crazy Diamond (Part 1-5)
 
FLAC
mega.nz - (898.1 MB)
ou
ulozto.net - (942 MB)

23/09/2019

Miley Cyrus - 'Comfortably Numb' (Cover) Live at 2019 iHeartRadio Festival




Por BLITZ
Miley Cyrus canta Pink Floyd:


Cantora surpreende em festival no Canadá


Miley Cyrus atuou este fim de semana no festival canadiano iHeartRadio, tendo brindado os presentes com uma versão de 'Comfortably Numb', do Pink Floyd.

A cantora, que nunca escondeu a sua veia "rockeira" - já interpretou clássicos de bandas como os Led Zeppelin, Nine Inch Nails ou Metallica - afirmou cantar estes temas porque "adoro ver os pais confusos".

Nas redes sociais ela escreveu que nos shows canta algumas músicas para o público e outras para ela, e que tocar esses clássicos é a razão pela qual começou a trabalhar com música. E continuou:

"Acho importante que meu público, que talvez não tenha crescido ouvindo música com seus pais, avós, irmãos e irmãs mais velhos, fique exposto a alguns desses clássicos! Ninguém deve perder músicas como essas, os jovens precisam saber como era antes para entender como a música chegou onde está hoje! Espero que depois de ouvi-los em um dos meus shows, vocês vão conferir as originais, porque são obras-primas."







10/02/2018

Pink Floyd: Definitive MSG 1977 (Sigma 192) 1977-07-02 FLAC




Pink Floyd
Definitive MSG 1977 (Sigma 192)  
Madison Square Garden, New York City, NY, USA - July 2, 1977

Tracklist

1-1 Sheep
1-2 Pigs On The Wing Pt. 1
1-3 Dogs
1-4 Pigs On The Wing Pt. 2
1-5 Pigs (Three Different Ones)
2-1 Shine On You Crazy Diamond Pts. 1-5
2-2 Welcome To The Machine
2-3 Have A Cigar
2-4 Wish You Were Here
2-5 Shine On You Crazy Diamond Pts. 6-9
2-6 Money
2-7 Us And Them




Resenha:


One of the first Pink Floyd vinyl bootlegs I bought in the late 80’s was Caught In The Crossfire(Pharting Pharoah Records 13153), a double LP that feature three quarters of the bands performance at New York City’s famed Madison Square Gardens. The sound was very good, the performance was sublime and as I had previously done with Crackers, made a copy on cassette so I could listen in the car, at work and the likes. While the record featured about half of the Animals portion of the show, what was there became one of my most beloved shows in my small (back then) bootleg collection. The CD era brought titles like Caught In The Crossfire (Neutral Zone NZCD 89017) and New York 1977 (The Welfare Pig TWP-CD-203). Both were incomplete with only the second half, the Wish You Were Here set. Prog King (Sirene 099) featured the complete show in very good quality but for me the title never really clicked, it sounded, to my ears, dull and lifeless. Sigma would tackle the concert twice, Day Of The Animals (Sigma 77) was an upgrade to Prog King, and the best version of the tape was New York 1977 2nd Night (Sigma 125). The latter title was taken from a torrent posted on the excellent Yeeshkul site, boasting a direct transfer of the master cassettes. This new title from Sigma is merely the second edition of Sigma 125, minus the bonus replica mini tour program.

This recording was made by the prolific team of Bob Menke and Louis Falanga, two tapers who’s primary interest was recording the Grateful Dead, one must remember that in the 1970’s the Dead had not yet adopted their taper friendly stance and tapers had to smuggle their equipment into a venue. Bob Menke preferred quality and used a Sony TC-152 deck and Sony ECM microphones (either 250 or 270). Their recording of Pink Floyd’s second concert at Madison Square Garden is among the most vivid of the tour, and in my humble opinion, the best overall recording from 1977. Sure Paris, Oakland, and Boston are excellent recordings, but the Floyd’s performance in MSG is incredible, their playing is fierce and the atmosphere inside the Garden is electric, when you combine these factors, the equation is simple. First off this title, as well as Sigma 125, is sourced directly from the master cassettes, so the lineage is direct. Work was done to speed correct the second half of Shine On, Money and Us And Them as there batteries were dying, and the second source was used to fill the gaps in Shine On You Crazy Diamond Pts. 6-9 and Us And Them. Lastly the folks at Sigma gently boosted the sounds levels on the Animals set slightly to better mirror the second Wish You Were Here set as the tapers moved up during the intermission. The results of this work provide an incredible aural experience, this recording sounds superb with a nice three dimension sound so vivid you feel like you are in the crowd, and as previously stated (a couple times) the performance is excellent as the Floyd were really hitting their stride during the latter portion of the tour.

In issue 40 of Brain Damage magazine Elliot Tayman gives a reader flashback of the build up to the MSG shows, the only performances the band would give during Roger Waters’ tenure in the band. In February 1977, a publicity stunt featuring a flatbed truck and live Animals were paraded up 6th Avenue to Central Park with the newly released Animals record serving as soundtrack. A couple weeks later WNEW-FM staged an event in the parks Sheep Meadow (now called Strawberry Fields) where priority mail order forms were handed out for the four MSG dates. Elliot states that most of the shows at the venue were handled mail order only, one would assume to avoid shenanigans of fans waiting in lines for box office tickets. Elliot scored tickets for three of the four shows and gives a nice play by play of his experience at the first concert, the music and visuals and overall vibe of the concerts. The two page article also featured a ticket stub, mail order coupon pictures as well as live band shots from the event, being a fan of the Caught In The Crossfire vinyl, it was nice to read a first hand account.

As Gerard tells during both his reviews for Prog King and Day Of The Animals, the summer of 1977 found marijuana being decriminalized in New York, and being so close to the Fourth of July holiday, the atmosphere inside the Garden sounds like a war zone, during the Animals set the amount of fireworks set off is incredible, surprisingly Roger holds his tongue, something he would not do over the next days performances. Full marks must go to the generous folks at Yeeshkull whose hard work is often the source for these Sigma titles. Their diligent effort to circulate the best and lowest generation copies of these Floyd artifacts free of charge, the way it should be. While they do not endorse anything other than free trading of material, the collectors market is certainly a benefactor of their laborious work.

Boa audição!


FLAC
mediafire.CD1 - (324.74 MB)
mediafire.CD2 - (413.89 MB)


01/02/2018

Pink Floyd – Tokyo 1972 2nd Night (Sigma 161) FLAC


Live at Tokyo Taiikukan, Tokyo, Japan 7th March 1972




Pink Floyd
Tokyo 1972 2nd Night (Sigma 161)

Disc 1
  [The Dark Side Of The Moon]
  1. Speak To Me
  2. Breathe
  3. On The Run
  4. Time
  5. Breathe (Reprise)
  6. The Great Gig In The Sky
  7. Money
  8. Us And Them
  9. Any Colour You Like
   10. Brain Damage
   11. Eclipse
  TOTAL TIME (46:49)

Disc 2
  1. One Of These Days
  2. Careful With That Axe, Eugene
  3. Echoes
  4. Set The Controls For The Heart Of The Sun
  TOTAL TIME (57:19)






Sigma Review:

Further Floyd’s first appearance sound source of astonishment !! impact will be one more installment emergency release this week !! after Hakone Aphrodite about half a year, March 1972, which became a visit to Japan for the second time Floyd 7 days Tokyo Gymnasium 2 days the eyes of the pattern is a new excavation sound source of the complete first appearance was full recording !!

This week became the simultaneous release “COMPLETE APHRODITE 1971 (Sigma 160)” is the one time of the giga-class title the whole picture of Hakone Aphrodite in really 45 years to 50 years of interpretation in the full recording and super A-class sound quality. But no way inferior to it would be the appearance of this sound source. As this 72-year Tokyo Metropolitan Gymnasium second day of the recording, in the sound source was out from overseas label ZEUS “LIVE IN TOKYO 1972 (Zeus Z907001 / 2)” is only in 1999, for some reason other record up to this that source came out into the world is of a such a performance date of the air pocket that no. But this ZEUS source is transparent feeling that had been used on the board is a thing of the performance sound is totally Kabosoku, also component of the right channel becomes thin from the disk 2 that captures the second half of the show, sound output from the left side almost only the sound progresses, moreover collapse of the bass was the fire ant recording source for that stand out. And encore “sun Hymn” but it is the translation was also very painful drawback of the way to fade out to disk end, as listen to the side just above this was the only recording source, in this ZEUS panel = Recorder 1 is a translation only listen was not. But it also marks the end finally at the weekend. To overcome all the weaknesses in such a sound quality because, further Recorder 2 of “sun Hymn” the first time in the history of uncut complete recording of the first-ever appearance, that this work is in this day. Because repaint the sound source history at once !!

Actually, I recorded this, was the same person as the Hakone Aphrodite full version to be released simultaneously at the end of this week. This time, the second of treasured sound source that has been passed from the recording’s your identity along with the full sound of Hakone in this, recording equipment was also used me reveals that it is the same (※ = Densuke and cassette tape). I mean of course the this also Hakone full sound source, as well as recording in person is completely original master of the world’s first appearance for that was not issued into the world at all 44 years, but of the contents of inclusion was also amazing. That is,

1.
There is a thick density feeling and sense of transparency to the performance sound from the beginning to the end, comfortable listening with a tough response. Also to high-frequency range it has been equipped with elongation and space property, yet sound crack is not also present one in all the scenes

2.
Further improve the sound quality from the disk 2 that captures the second half of the show, the components of the right channel as the ZEUS panel also not thin, are equipped with excellent stability to the sound image to disk end

3.
Uncut complete recording of the encore, “the sun Hymn”. This is the same day of the sound source first-ever appearance, the world premiere of the feat. In addition also recording continues around then, it is included until the state after the show

Like … like, it was a ZEUS board = more than lightly the Recorder 1 boasts a high-grade sound and content new excavation sound source of wonder was the only so far !!

And what this is, but I think that is appropriate better to tell that the new standard sound source of astonishment rather than another mere upper version of this day appeared, this work is that digital transfer to direct this large excavation treasured tape from the master it is, other than the modification of the pitch is what was pressed into without the addition of any of the hand. For the remaining tape preservation, although the recording on and off in the passages in the part in every performance end is pressed, superior sound quality of the fresh feeling perfect score after that all of the tune has been recorded is to will be noted, the performance of this day which could not have know only in the ZEUS panel = Recorder 1 to this more than anything discussed brand new point of view, interpretation and understanding Yukeru joy should have immeasurable. Also from so it is different recordings position the Recorder 1 with (※ and perhaps with the recording equipment used tapes) that, big also have changed a lot is the impression of the sound output from the sound that listen in the ZEUS board until this I would point. The biggest difference is is to improve the thickness and density feeling clarity of sound, it is going to listen to sound how each instrument is the sound of the organ and synthesizer become noticed in that has been recorded in a clear close sound . For example, when the “breath of life” begins playing sound from the inside of elasticity there is the low frequency range is I come oozing out at a high concentration, and the sound of the guitar from the organ in the ZEUS board compared both source is out in front, organ is the ringing sound that inconspicuous recessed. Course guitar in this recording is heard firm, but at the same organ further Rei at the same time

Since you arrived in Shii sound, probably the source of the ZEUS board is recorded at the venue left = Gilmore closer, this recording will be inferred that there has been a central slightly right to the recording machine (※ straight singing voice also from a more central is more of this work to have arrived).

Also “running around”, fluent but cracking sound in most of the scene in which the entire instrument is heard in the ZEUS board had occurred, it does not occur at all, such as such cracking sound in this recording, the music in the sound image with an outstanding sense of stability to you has the pleasure of Yukeru. “Time” is also the closeness and the thickness of the watch stiff sound at the beginning, also appeared in the appearance that stands out, vividness has significantly improved the sound from the first sound eyes, listless Kyokuso sounded more than one sound simultaneously proceeding and then we run through the ear while armed with richness between, organ, which has been in Kabosoku long distance in any ZUES album “scat of the void” will appear in the deep timbre close one by one note, also speaking voice also clearly go in SE appear for, will the sound of these each part is Uruwashiku stands out in the ear in order of magnitude of the upper sound flowing away is pegged. Vividly jumped in tough beyond comparison with Recorder 1 is the beginning register sound also “money”, motility of Massive bass range, which is led by the voice of the young Gilmore also its dense and heavy dismissed the ZEUS board sound you have. And out “Us-and-Them” is also orders of magnitude the power of sound and the sound of the organ well, it will blow away the ZEUS sound which has been flowing with no sound of the core is light instantly (※ go in the second half of the song organ solo is similar, this will also be seen that is significantly different from the impression received from the performance and tone). In attention to the point that deep delay it took to voice and guitar of Gilmour is heard more than ever, it should it can grab every single guitar sound credible response than ever. “The color of hope” is also to narrowing play high amount of heat of the guitar I think that I can experience the combined brand-new sound contrast with the dense performance sound in a tough back, “madman in the mind” is also in the sound close to the Recorder 1 or more it is sure to be deprived mind to arpeggio with the singing of the early guitar out. And a “wake up the way from the madness” of this day to the transition of the last synth sound that is led to the “madness eclipse” slide into slow down, the increasingly strong intellect of hand to listen to the development potential of a prototype version of the motif us to stimulation.

Of the show the second half stunning sound disc 2 is followed by the as it is, surprisingly, “Eugene, Watch out for the ax” to further improve the sound quality from the beginning. In the ZEUS board faded component of the right channel from the disk 2, but had become sound image spree left the flame to localization, in this recording with a foot in the dense and transparent vintage sound is firm ground from the left and right channels has become, it the advantage and high quality in terms of sound quality can be further strongly feel. It is immediately experience can be of a “blow, wind, Yobeyo storm” in, that ZEUS sound was hard very listen bass is one by one crack, in this recording I represent the first time in the history of its appearance as the original no damage fastball sound performance . Although There is a scene no sound retracted the sound of suddenly sequencer from trouble (※ production?) Of the or near the 2 minutes and 57 seconds on the day of the PA system in the performance of the day (※ the second half of 6 minutes and 11 seconds near and demodulated by), and to stand out the depth and three-dimensional feeling of flying is the sound of the sound of other instruments to progress in the cheers and rhythm-less that occur in even stadium this about 3 minutes or more ZEUS board, between the sound further deeply read you. “Eugene” is, but has expired at the beginning is slightly in order, which has been a tape of the reverse point that you use, vividness and clarity of the sound than the sound of up to here or for recording the position has changed slightly in the operation, and closeness and the spread of performance sound more than anything will be greatly improved. Has increased medium to low range of the sound collecting degree further by this happy effect, in addition to drum and bass movement is given as able to track a high-resolution sound further, because Roger of whisper is he appears to increasingly close irresistible. Also figure that music after Scream is explode the ZEUS board will earn our chasing its deployment in the order of magnitude of the response, but most of the listening far from would be how actually the sound towards from there to the finale day become gradually thinner . After the tragedy, the Recorder 2 to be Yuku this musical transition that away from the field is fully captured very vividly, here come your expectations because it has become a name scene that just can see the perspective of performance expression Please!!

“Echoes” is also have been perfect recording from the song introduced by the buzz and Roger of the stadium, which was full of expectations before playing. While the previous year’s Hakone Aphrodite is a translation initial version of lyrics that have been unveiled as the lyrics of which are sung as a finished version is here, this is also Gilmore and write by the two voices of rich harmonies and back performance is clearly of the wit appeared in the high-quality sound, which is divided into listening, the former also remarkable, especially on the sound that focus on the entire playing Masu Yuki one after another deployment. Albatross of the scene also captures the appearance of sharp cries of the guitar is to penetrate and diffusion in the Tokyo Metropolitan Gymnasium in Katsuaki, come out quietly synthesizer is realistic sounds that excitement sonar sound overlap also like tremble is only rises from a distance I. The second half swell music at most by the sound type repeating the rise and fall, jumped out to figure that flying is perfect, it is a guarantee that exactly meet to hear of ecstasy can enjoy. “The sun Hymn” of Angkor has been recorded in the first-ever full-length full version, but even the goodness of its sound quality stands out here. Because, so concentrated as the sound of each instrument in this song is the mid-range you know is, you will hear in a mass of blurred sound that this is Mokomoko and is a mediocre record. But hear “there? Such a place in the or not put out this kind of sound” each sound enough to be a number also found that the firm is in this recording, even places that gradually become the up-tempo in the middle captures perfectly the musical elation you have. ZEUS board is where the rhythm disappears welcomed the apex but in the (※ near this recording 5 minutes and 22 seconds ~) is a translation that has reached the disk aid, about 7 of the present recording is from here earlier, to play the end and beyond a fully uncut recording until the-minute high (!!). In this first appearance performance scene has mystical free approach by the slide guitar and the organ is to show the unknown deployment, each other tapestries of the one and only of the mysterious sound has for the first time show the figure, in this song There is no difference again to be surprised to hidden faceted charm and possibilities. The finale after recording about one minute less than followed, buzz, etc. of the howling sound and stadium, around the stage, microphone, for even the air of fresh place immediately after the end of a show has been recorded to disk end in a dense sound is!!


Between pretty long time, the only performance of the day that could not be known only by the sound source is excitement all the surprise out and discussions can illuminate the play from a different angle by the new treasured source … This chase Floyd to informal sound source our unique would be joy. Tokyo of this work 72 years, and the 71-year-Hakone shock weekend is another release now, which is also is a huge topic that complete recording of the first-ever appearance, and this historic large excavation sound source before suddenly the crosses the head on, we is a point that the care and learn still much about Floyd went Japan tour. There also be merely a larger version of the encyclopedia also a fairly chunky science historiography, even a quick look at the entire contents of inclusion and sound quality, and even watching a microscopically small part structure boasts a superb quality this 2 One of the supernova title is just research material of the first class also said the scriptures full of unknown surprise. Please come this weekend to fill the blank of 45 years in the hands of the two major excavation sound source of this historic feat in fully. Because neither is the first-ever appearance, songs complete recording of sound overall picture was outstanding, a great weekend Floyd is perfectly filled the large fragments that had to leave to Japan in the early 70s and the best continue to strongly stimulates the craving for knowledge, of There is no difference in the summer of challenges. Of course is a shock appearance in the press boards and beautiful picture disc specification !!

★ New source the same taper as the Hakone new sound source, was recorded in the same equipment. Year 72 is the emergence of a New definitive edition of the Tokyo second day performances.


FLAC
 mediafire - (478.56 MB)

04/10/2017

King Crimson – Palazzo Del Sport, Rome, Italy – April 6, 1973 (Flac)


Jumble Of Lies (Siréne-120)


No dia 6 de Abril de 1973, a formação de King Crimson com Bill Bruford na bateria, David Cross no violino e teclados, e John Wetton no baixo e vocais, juntamente com Robert Fripp, se apresentavam pela primeira vez em Roma. E Fripp enfatiza na ocasião á animada platéia presente, o quão feliz é para ele o primeiro tour da banda na Itália e que espera que hajam muitas mais no futuro.

O grupo têm uma excelente performance, e ao meu ver, sem dúvida cabe ressaltar as duas improvisações, a primeira um destaque especial por se tratar de uma versão embrionária de Fracture, o que torna o evento único, e a segunda se qualifica tranquilamente como uma das melhores improvisações da banda em sua trajetória. Como não podia ser diferente “21st Century Schizoid Man” é outro grande destaque, com Fripp super afiado. Boa audição!





King Crimson
Jumble Of Lies (Siréne-120)
Palazzo Del Sport, Rome, Italy – April 6, 1973


Setlist / Tracklist

01 Doctor Diamond
02 Larks' Tongues in Aspic Part I
03 Fripp speaks
04 Easy Money
05 Improvisations
06 Exiles
07 Book Of Saturda
08 Improvisations
09 Talking Drum
10 Larks' Tongues in Aspic Part II
11 21st Century Schizoid man



FLAC
uloz.to - 575 MB



Abaixo um trecho da resenha do excelente site Collectors Music Reviews feito em 2006:

Jumble Of Lies is the first release on silver of the rare spring performance in Rome in April. “Doctor Diamond” opens the show and runs right into “Larks’ Tongues In Aspic Part I”. 

Afterwards Fripp says how happy he is for King Crimson’s first tour of Italy and hopes there will be many more in the future before a long version of “Easy Money” with some different, inaudible lyrics about a snake. The first improvisation contains a long “Fracture”-like phrase. 

A second source is used for the first forty-eight seconds of “Book Of Saturday”. The second improv is an eight-minute Bruford led impressionistic nightmare that segues into “Talking Drum”. 

“21st Century Schizoid Man” is the encore. A source floating around claims to have a second encore “Peace- A Theme” and a reprise of “Doctor Diamond”. That isn’t included here and its authenticity is disputed. 

The packing includes several great photos of the band. Overall this is a really good release and the first silver Crimso release on Sirene in over a year. The label can fill a big need with future releases since Fripp’s attention of late has shifted to the KCCC CD releases to posting tapes online for download. 

Perhaps Sirene can make some of those tapes available in the future since not all collectors are sold on downloading tapes. Besides Sirene always do a spectacular job and the mastering of these documents and could do as good a job with them as Fripp himself.



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