Showing posts with label Eric Clapton. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Eric Clapton. Show all posts

Thursday, September 25, 2025

Various Artists - Music for Montserrat, Royal Albert Hall, London, Britain, 9-15-1997

Here's a really interesting benefit concert from 1997. Just look at the list of big stars involved: Carl Perkins, Midge Ure, Phil Collins, Jimmy Buffett, Mark Knopfler, Eric Clapton, Sting, Elton John, and Paul McCartney. Most of them performed two or three songs together, and all the big names got together with McCartney to sing some of his songs for the finale. All that, and the sound quality is excellent.

Montserrat is a small island in the Caribbean Sea, and it's still a colony of Britain. In 1979, George Martin, best known as the producer for nearly all the Beatles records, financed the building of a recording studio there. From 1979 to 1989, about 70 albums were recorded there, because musicians enjoyed recording in a beautiful, exotic locale. Many of them were by very big stars, such as "Synchronicity" by the Police and "Brothers in Arms" by Dire Straits.   

Unfortunately, in 1989, the Category Four hurricane Hugo hit Montserrat. It destroyed 90 percent of all buildings on the island, including Martin's recording studio. The studio wasn't rebuilt. Then, in 1995, the main volcano on the island, Soufriere Hills volcano, erupted. The island was basically completely devastated again. Martin then led the effort to stage this benefit concert. All the musicians involved recorded albums on Montserrat. Ultimately, about a million and half British pounds were raised. Later, limited edition lithographs signed by McCartney and Martin raised another million and a half pounds. This money went to help people reconstruct their homes, as well as the building of a new cultural center for the island. 

Here's the Wikipedia entry about this concert, if you want to know more: 

Music for Montserrat - Wikipedia  

For this concert, Martin decided that less was more. He even mentioned in his banter during the concert that he turned down many musical acts who wanted to take part. The focus was just on the biggest stars. One exception was Arrow. He only had one minor hit in 1982, in Britain, "Hot Hot Hot." But he is Montserratian, so it made sense he would be involved. Also, "Hot Hot Hot" went on to be a bigger hit by Buster Poindexter in 1987. 

This concert has been released on DVD, but not in any audio format. So I started with the DVD, converting it to audio format then breaking it into mp3s. "Hot Hot Hot," plus "Volcano" by Jimmy Buffett and "Dancing with Tears in My Eyes" by Midge Ure, were not on the DVD. But luckily I found out they were performed by reading the Wikipedia entry about the concert. Then I found YouTube videos of them. Those had very good sound quality, because they were broadcast on TV. 

In addition to adding some missing songs, I cut some things. Mostly, I cut some interviews that were interspersed between the songs in the DVD. Martin plus some of the big stars like McCartney and Sting were interviewed. It's interesting stuff, but it wasn't part of the concert, so it got the axe. If you want to see that, check out the DVD.

Probably the highlight of the concert was McCartney's set at the end. As he said in the interview which I cut out, he had met the other stars in this concert many times over the years. However, he rarely actually played music with any of them. For instance, he said the last time he played with Clapton was when Clapton guested on "While My Guitar Gently Weeps" on the White Album by the Beatles in 1968. But McCartney practiced with Phil Collins, Mark Knopfler, Eric Clapton, and Elton John, and really collaborated with tracks 42 to 46 at the end here.

One final note. This was the last major public appearance for Carl Perkins. He was in fine health at the time of this concert. But he died after a series of strokes in January 1998, at the age of 65. 

This album is two hours and 15 minutes long.

01 talk (George Martin)
02 talk (Carl Perkins)
03 Blue Suede Shoes (Carl Perkins)
04 talk (emcee)
05 talk (Midge Ure)
06 Dancing with Tears in My Eyes (Midge Ure)
07 Vienna (Midge Ure)
08 talk (George Martin)
09 talk (Phil Collins)
10 In the Air Tonight (Phil Collins)
11 Take Me Home (Phil Collins with Ray Cooper)
12 talk (Arrow)
13 Hot Hot Hot (Arrow)
14 talk (Jimmy Buffett)
15 Volcano (Jimmy Buffett)
16 talk (Phil Collins)
17 talk (Mark Knopfler)
18 Going Home [Theme from Local Hero] [Instrumental] (Mark Knopfler)
19 talk (Mark Knopfler)
20 Brothers in Arms (Mark Knopfler with Guy Fletcher)
21 talk (Mark Knopfler)
22 Money for Nothing (Mark Knopfler with Sting, Phil Collins, Eric Clapton & Ray Cooper)
23 talk (Phil Collins)
24 Message in a Bottle (Sting)
25 Fields of Gold (Sting)
26 Every Little Thing She Does Is Magic (Sting)
27 talk (George Martin)
28 talk (Elton John)
29 Your Song (Elton John)
30 talk (Elton John)
31 Live like Horses (Elton John)
32 Don't Let the Sun Go Down on Me (Elton John)
33 talk (Carl Perkins)
34 Broken Hearted (Eric Clapton)
35 Layla (Eric Clapton with Mark Knopfler)
36 talk (Eric Clapton)
37 Same Old Blues (Eric Clapton with Mark Knopfler & Phil Collins)
38 talk (George Martin)
39 talk (Paul McCartney)
40 Yesterday (Paul McCartney)
41 talk (Paul McCartney)
42 Golden Slumbers (Paul McCartney with Phil Collins, Mark Knopfler & Eric Clapton)
43 Carry That Weight - The End (Paul McCartney with Phil Collins, Mark Knopfler & Eric Clapton)
44 talk (George Martin)
45 Hey Jude (Paul McCartney, Elton John & Everybody)
46 Kansas City - Hey, Hey, Hey, Hey (Paul McCartney & Everybody)
47 talk (Paul McCartney & George Martin) 

https://pixeldrain.com/u/WN5He6az 

alternate: 

https://bestfile.io/en/rtae3vnAgivMIJf/file

The cover photo is from this exact concert. From left to right: Carl Perkins, Mark Knopfler, Eric Clapton, and Paul McCartney. Sting is right behind Perkins, but all you can really see of him is his hand on the neck of a bass guitar. In the original photo, the neck of Sting's bass guitar went right over Knopfler's face. In my opinion, it kind of ruined the photo. But there were several photos no doubt taken minutes apart from each other from the same spot. I found one where Knopfler's face was fully visible and the bass guitar neck was lower, and I patched in just that part of the image, using Photoshop. I also used the Krea AI program to flesh out some of the detail.

Sunday, August 31, 2025

Toronto Rock and Roll Revival, Varsity Stadium, Toronto, Canada, 9-13-1969, Part 7: John Lennon and the Plastic Ono Band

Okay, it's time for a big one, the pinnacle of the 1969 Toronto Rock and Roll Revival Festival, even though it wasn't the final musical act. The star was John Lennon, supported by his wife Yoko Ono and a great band that included famous lead guitarist Eric Clapton.

This is probably going to be one of the longest write-ups I ever did, if not the longest. But I find the story behind Lennon's involvement in this concert to be very fascinating, and I hope you will too. Seriously, someone could make an entertaining movie out of this, especially if you add in the drama of how Lennon got invited to the festival in the first place, which I discussed previously. 

I think, after several decades, it's hard for anyone to imagine just what a big deal it was for Lennon to perform at this concert. He was still a member of the Beatles, though he wouldn't stay one for long (and this concert would have a major impact on that, as we shall see). The Beatles stopped touring in 1966. Since then, Lennon had only performed a couple of times. He played one song in 1968 as part of the Rolling Stones' Rock and Roll Circus show. He performed as part of the Beatles on the rooftop of their recording studio in London earlier in 1969. And that was it for the last three years. None of the other Beatles had performed in public since 1966, and nobody expected Lennon would.

In the first album I posted from this festival, the Chicago set, I explained how the festival came to be, and how the recruitment of Lennon at the last minute saved the festival from cancellation due to poor ticket sales. Let me pick up that narrative, of what happened to Lennon after he agreed to perform in the festival, over the phone, and on the other side of the Atlantic Ocean, just one day before the festival was due to happen.  

The first thing Lennon had to figure out when he got off the phone was who would be in his band, especially on such short notice. His first idea was to include another Beatle, George Harrison. But Harrison turned him down, saying it would seem too much like a Beatles concert with both of them in it, and the popular demand would be that they just play Beatles songs, when he knew Lennon wanted to do something different. 

Lennon didn't push back too much on that. He knew Harrison had brought up valid points. Besides, he had someone else in mind he also was very interested in: Eric Clapton. As mentioned above, Lennon performed one song ("Yer Blues," from the Beatles' "White Album") in the 1968 Rolling Stones' Rock and Roll Circus show, and Clapton had been the lead guitarist for Lennon then. Lennon had a very good rapport with Clapton in general at the time. In fact, during the Beatles' contentious "Get Back" sessions in early 1969, when Harrison quit the Beatles for a few days, Lennon suggested they might replace him with Clapton.

Unfortunately, the call asking Lennon to take part in the festival came at the last minute, almost literally. It was already the evening before the festival when Lennon got the phone call! Immediately, Lennon had people at the Apple Records office he was at try to call Clapton to see if he wanted to take part. The assumption was that Clapton would be willing if he could be reached, but nobody could reach him. People not only repeatedly tried calling Clapton's house in the middle of the night, but they tried calling his friends, as well as night clubs and any other likely places he could be late at night. But nobody knew where he was.

Meanwhile, Lennon had to figure out who the other members of the band would be. The choice for bass player was easy: Klaus Voormann. Voormann, a German, had met the Beatles when they were struggling and playing small clubs in Hamburg, Germany, in the early 1960s. He'd stayed friends with them ever since then, even designing the cover of their 1966 album "Revolver." He'd also become a very talented bass player, joining the band Manfred Mann from 1966 until 1969 and working a lot as a session musician. Lennon would use him a lot as bassist in future years.

The choice of drummer, though, was a very surprising one: Alan White. At the time, White was a teenager and essentially a complete known. He was drumming in the obscure band Griffin. But, by chance, Lennon and Ono attended a Griffin concert at a small club the night before. Lennon had been very impressed by White's drumming. (Indeed, White was a talented drummer who was destined for bigger things. In 1972, he would join the prog rock band Yes and stay with them for about 50 years.) 

Somehow, Lennon was able to find out the name of the Griffin drummer, then get his telephone number, and called him. But White later recalled, "I hung up on him. I thought someone was playing a prank. John Lennon's not going to call me." However, Lennon kept calling him back and managed to convince him that he really was John Lennon and he really did want him in his new band, to perform on a different continent the next day! White agreed, even though that meant cancelling a Griffin concert scheduled at the same time. "What was I going to say? No, to a Beatle? I don't think so."

Meanwhile, Lennon was desperate to get in contact with Clapton. He stayed up until five in the morning with an assistant, calling everyone they could think of, to no avail. The airplane to take Lennon and his new band to Toronto was due to fly out of London at 10 in the morning. However, around 9:30, Lennon called festival promoter John Brower from the airport and said he would have to cancel his role in the festival. Clapton couldn't be found in time, and Lennon wasn't willing to perform without him.

Brower was incredulous, and horrified. He'd borrowed $25,000 from a man named Edjo, who was the head of a biker gang, to pay the fee for the Doors to headline the festival. If the festival ticket sales bombed or the festival was canceled altogether, that biker had promised to severely beat Brower, for starters. Brower considered fleeing Canada just to save his life!

But luckily, with Lennon and others waiting at the airport, he was given the word that Clapton had been found after all. It turned out that Clapton had gone to bed early and slept during the entire search, far from his phone. A telegram had been sent to his house as part of the desperate search to find him. In the morning, Clapton's gardener saw the telegram, opened it, saw the urgency of it, and woke him up. Clapton was very willing to perform with Lennon at the festival. Still, there was no way Clapton could make it to the airport in time to catch the flight overseas. It seemed all was lost. Lennon said he would send Brower a bouquet of flowers as an apology.

Brower later recalled, "I saw Edjo [the biker gang leader] putting the flowers on my grave; everything was destroyed." He decided to try to call Clapton, now that Clapton was awake, and beg for help.

He claims he told Clapton on the phone, "Listen man, you've gotta help me. If John Lennon does not show up today, I am ruined. I have to leave my city. I have to leave my country. In fact, I'm going to come over there and move in with John Lennon, with my wife and kid, okay? You need to get him back on the phone and tell him he has to come.' Clapton started yelling, 'I don't get up at this time of the morning for anybody. Fucking Lennon gets us out here and then sends fucking flowers?'"

Clapton then immediately phoned Lennon back. Brower recalled, "He was furious. He just [told Lennon], 'What the fuck are you doing? There's some guy on the other end of the phone who is ruined if we don't go over there. He said he's going to come over and move in with you!' We later found out... that Lennon was mortified that Eric Clapton was mad at him. I mean, you just don't get Eric Clapton mad at you."

So Lennon scrambled to come up with a new plan. Arrangements were made to book a flight to Toronto that left at 3:15 in the afternoon, London time. It would be a tight schedule, but that would get them in Toronto in time to perform at the end of the festival, thanks to the time zone difference. While waiting at the airport, Lennon held an impromptu press conference, announcing to the world his involvement in the festival.

Now, Lennon had his band and the ability to get to the festival in time. But the band hadn't practiced whatsoever. They tried their best to do that during the plane flight. But it wasn't easy, because they didn't have amplified instruments, and White had to "drum" using the seat back in front of him. They could barely hear themselves over the noise of the airplane. At least they agreed on the songs they would play. However, while Lennon told the other band members that Ono would be singing a couple of songs, they didn't practice those at all. Voormann later said, "So, no rehearsal with Yoko. He kept it really away from us. He just wanted us to be surprised."

I normally don't add pictures to my write-ups, but since this one is so long, here's a photo of Lennon and Clapton trying to practice while on the plane flight. 

The drama continued when Lennon and his band arrived in Toronto. To their surprise, they were met at the airport by a biker gang led by Edjo, the same gang leader who had loaned Brower $25,000. There was a limousine waiting. Edjo and about 100 of his bikers led a motorcade from the airport to the stadium where the festival was taking place. Police joined the motorcade, redirecting traffic so Lennon's motorcade could blow through all the red lights, just as if he was a president or prime minister.

Lennon arrived at the stadium while Cat Mother was performing, and word somehow spread throughout the crowd, raising the anticipation. But Lennon and his band went to a grubby back room and essentially stayed cooped up there for a couple of hours until it was time for them to go on stage. They tried to practice some more, but they still didn't have adequate instruments to practice on. They apparently spent most of the time trying to figure out the lyrics to the songs they had chosen to sing. They wrote them all out so Lennon could read them on stage. When their performance actually began though, Lennon would forget about the notes and just winged it, except for reading the lyrics to his one new song, "Cold Turkey." 

Speaking of "cold turkey," in 1969, Lennon had become a heroin addict. So had Clapton. Both of them didn't dare sneak drugs on the plane. So they were very worried about falling apart if they couldn't find some drugs in Toronto - if not heroin, then at least something similar. Soon, Lennon asked Brower, "Can you get us some coke?" Brower later recalled that he replied, "Let's get six Cokes over here right away.' I looked back at the two of them like, 'No problem. No problem,' and they just had this horrified look on their faces. They were looking at each other like 'Where are we?' And Yoko goes, 'No, coke for the nose.'"

Brower was determined to do whatever it took to make sure the festival would be a success. He remembered he had a friend who did drugs and was attending the festival. He actually arranged a stage announcement to call that friend backstage. The friend soon showed up, and was able to find some cocaine. Brower said, "I went backstage to give it to John, and I swear to God he looked at me like, 'You're Jesus and this is the Lord's water.'" Lennon made sure Clapton got some of the cocaine as well.

That problem was solved. But still, Lennon was in a bad way. He was repeatedly throwing up due to nervousness from giving his very first concert as a solo performer. He even threw up again a few minutes before getting on stage. He also was tired from getting almost no sleep, due to spending most of the night trying to find Clapton.

Kim Fowley, a famous music producer, was the emcee for the festival, so he was the one to introduce Lennon to the stage. According to Fowley, shortly before Lennon was due to go on stage, he asked Lennon how he was doing, and Lennon replied something to the effect of: "I'm terrified. Imagine if you were in the Beatles as the only band you've only been in your life. The first time you are to step on stage with people that weren't in the Beatles. You’re about to go on stage with your wife, a friend, a friend, and a complete stranger with songs you had learned acoustically on an airplane on the way over from England with jet lag. You would be terrified. Do something so the kids don't know how scared I am."

Fowley came up with an idea to boost his spirits. He remembered a scene from a movie, "Our Lady of Fatima," where a bunch of children had held candles up together, and he asked everyone to do the same, to show their support and encouragement. You can hear Fowley doing this at the start of this album. It seemed to have really helped. Lennon later commented, "They all lit candles or lights up and it was really beautiful, you know, and the vibes were fantastic."

Remarkably, it appears this was the very first time lights were held up like this at a major concert. Due to the prominence of the festival, as well as a movie documentary about it, the practice spread, and it soon became a fairly common concert ritual. So kudos to Fowley for that.

Finally, the time came for Lennon to start playing music. He and his band ran through some classic rock songs from the 1950s, which was very much in keeping with the overall theme of the festival. They also played one Beatles song, "Yer Blues." Then they played "Cold Turkey." Lennon had just written this song about his recent heroin addiction (which, thankfully he was able to kick about a year later). This was the first time it was performed in public. Lennon would release it as a single a month later, and it would make the Top Forty in both the U.S. and Britain. Then he performed "Give Peace a Chance," which he had released as a single in July.

Overall, the band sounded ragged due to lack of practice, but they made up for it with enthusiasm. Plus, they played the kinds of simple, rocking songs where being ragged actually fit. Most people in the audience, which filled the stadium by now, probably were disappointed not to be hearing Beatles classics. ("Yer Blues" was a relative obscurity.) However, it seems they were in awe to be hearing Lennon sing anything, and they were very enthusiastic overall.

Lennon later recalled, "I can't remember when I had such a good time. Yoko was holding a piece of paper with the words to the songs in front of me. But then she suddenly disappeared into her bag in the middle of the performance and I had to make them up because it's so long since I sang them that I've forgotten most of them. It didn't seem to matter."

(Indeed, Ono spent most of the first half of the set inside a big white bag on the stage floor! That was an example of her performance art that helped attract Lennon to her. Robby Krieger of the Doors, who was watching from the side of the stage, later said, "I really thought it was cool that Yoko decided to do the whole show in a laundry bag. I really gained respect for her for that.") 

Clapton also recalled, "It was really refreshing to do these songs because they are very simple and uncomplicated. John and I really love that music. That's the kind of music that turned John on initially, and it's the same for me. In fact, I could go on playing 'Money' and 'Dizzy Miss Lizzy' for the rest of my life."

So far, everything was going great. Lennon was particularly pleased at how the audience responded to his new song "Cold Turkey." He said, "The way that we got it together was like we'd all been playing together for years. Then, 'Give Peace a Chance,' which was just unbelievable."

Then it was time for Ono to sing her two songs. Keep in mind that not even the other band members other than Lennon knew what was going to happen next. For the first song, Lennon had merely told the others that he'd start playing a riff on his guitar and they should all repeat it over and over.

Nowadays, Ono is rather notorious for her screaming style. But at the time, the audience was in for a shock when she began her screaming singing. There hadn't been any concerts or albums with her singing like that, at least not that the wider public was aware of.

Voormann, the bassist, later recalled, "This scream came [from Ono]. I said, 'She must have stepped on a nail or something.' And Eric [Clapton] looked at me, 'What's this?!'" But the band gamely rolled with the punches and kept playing.

Ono's first song was somewhat palatable to the audience, since there at least was a kind of rock and roll beat to it. But her second song went on for much longer, and it was all Ono's wailing and guitar feedback. (The other band members kept rolling with the punches, with Clapton even singing some backing vocals to Ono.) Lennon said, "Yoko's first number had a bit of rhythm, but the second number was completely freaky. It was sort of the thing she did at Cambridge [earlier in 1969], but it was more like Toronto 1984."

Some people seemed to "get it," and others didn't. 

Voormann later said, "The funny thing is that when I was up there, I was behind Yoko, and I felt suddenly what she was doing. She was actually telling the people, in her way, that all those people are dying [in the Vietnam War]. Those tanks and bombs falling and dead bodies lying about. What she was doing was really, really felt like a dying bird. She couldn't have stood there and talked about it and said, 'Yeah, peace. Just think of Vietnam.' No. This was far ahead of its time. The audience didn't understand a thing."

By and large, it seems the audience was baffled by Ono's performance, but were fairly tolerant just because Lennon was involved. There was some booing, but it seems accounts of this were later exaggerated. Few people left, especially because the Doors were still due to perform next.

Lennon was encouraged by the crowd's reaction, overall. He later said in an interview, "A lot of the audience walked out, but the ones that stayed, they were in a trance, man. They just all came to the front." In a different later interview, he felt even more encouraged. ""All I can say is that there were maybe 25,000 people there and maybe 15 didn't like it. I didn't hear any booing. It's always the man from the daily paper who does!" He further added, "It gave me a great feeling, a feeling I haven't had for a long time. It convinced me to do more appearances, either with or without the rest of the Beatles. Everything went down so well."

Lennon was so excited about this concert performance that he wanted to immediately release it on album. However, his record company, Capitol Records, initially resisted the idea. "They said 'This is garbage, we're not going to put it out with her screaming on one side and you doing this sort of live stuff.' And they refused to put it out. But we finally persuaded them that people might buy this. Of course, it went gold the next day." 

The album was released later that year under the title "Live Peace in Toronto 1969," and it sold over 500,000 copies (which is gold status). This recording here is essentially the same as the official release. I'm including it so one can have the full recording and story of this festival in one place.

The songs sung by Lennon were on one side of the album and the songs sung by Ono on the other. At the time, the Lennon songs were praised by music critics and the Ono songs were panned. But interestingly, over time, some famous musicians claim they were more inspired by Ono's songs. For instance, Iggy Pop said that Ono's side of the record is "the part that stands out. The rest of it's just kinda pedestrian." Perry Farrell of Jane's Addiction has made similar comments, stating that Ono's sound experiments were a cornerstone of his musical education. 

Personally, I think Ono's songs here make for an interesting listen once or twice, but it's not something I'd want to hear more often than that. Of course, you can choose to keep or delete those songs.

I have one final note to make about Lennon's performance. It seems undeniable that this was a pivotal moment in his music career and even his entire life, because it's when he fully committed to leaving the Beatles. Prior to this festival, he was drifting away from the Beatles, but he hadn't really figured out what would come next, and he lacked the confidence to leave the most famous band in the world. The success of this performance gave him that confidence.

Shortly after the concert was over,  he told his new band mates he would be leaving the Beatles. "I told Alan [White] I was leaving. I told Eric Clapton and Klaus [Voormann] that I was leaving. I announced it to myself and to the people around me. 'It's over.'" As soon as he returned to London the next day, he told his manager Allen Klein the same thing. Then he broke the news to the other Beatles on September 20th, about a week after the festival. However, they all agreed to keep that news quiet while they renegotiated their record contract. In the end, they didn't go public with the news until April 1970, but they were effectively broken up until then, with the four of them never all getting together a single time.

So this leads to a big question: would the Beatles have endured for much longer had it not been for the improbable chain of events that led to Lennon performing at the festival? My guess is maybe they would have stuck together for a few more months, but not longer than that. A break-up was in motion over many issues, mainly financial ones relating to a dispute over who would manage the band after Brian Epstein died. Plus, Lennon really wanted to go off and do his own thing with Ono, and he was just gathering the confidence to make the break. Had it not been this concert, something else would have come along soon that played the same role. (In fact, the same band with some other musicians added played another concert in December 1969, which was a benefit for the non-profit UNICEF.) And the Beatles had just finished recording the "Abbey Road" album in August, so they probably wouldn't have wanted to record a new album until well into 1970 anyway. The odds of them sticking together long enough to record another album had this festival never happened would have been extremely low, in my opinion.

This album is 39 minutes long. 

01 talk (John Lennon & the Plastic Ono Band)
02 Blue Suede Shoes (John Lennon & the Plastic Ono Band)
03 Money [That's What I Want] (John Lennon & the Plastic Ono Band)
04 Dizzy Miss Lizzy (John Lennon & the Plastic Ono Band)
05 Yer Blues (John Lennon & the Plastic Ono Band)
06 talk (John Lennon & the Plastic Ono Band)
07 Cold Turkey (John Lennon & the Plastic Ono Band)
08 talk (John Lennon & the Plastic Ono Band)
09 Give Peace a Chance (John Lennon & the Plastic Ono Band)
10 talk (John Lennon & the Plastic Ono Band)
11 Don't Worry Kyoko [Mummy's Only Looking for Her Hand in the Snow] (John Lennon & the Plastic Ono Band)
12 John, John [Let's Hope for Peace] (John Lennon & the Plastic Ono Band)

https://pixeldrain.com/u/JyMeVpN6

alternate:

https://bestfile.io/en/oADkPwOhcIM78cY/file

The cover image is a screenshot I took from the "Revival69" documentary. I wanted to get an image that showed Lennon and Clapton. I succeeded, but we can only see the back of Clapton's head. The white blob on the floor at the bottom is Yoko Ono inside a large bag.

Wednesday, April 2, 2025

Derek & the Dominos (including Duane Allman) - Curtis Hixon Hall, Tampa, FL, 12-1-1970

I want to kick off the month of April 2025 with a special album posting. This album is the one and only concert recording of Derek and the Dominos with Duane Allman taking part. This has been bootlegged many times. But I'm proud to say this version has noticeably better sound quality than any previous version!

The classic album "Layla and Other Assorted Love Songs" was by the band Derek and the Dominos, with Eric Clapton the main star. However, one thing that made that album special was that Duane Allman of the Allman Brothers Band played his distinctive slide guitar all through the album. That kind of made him one of the Dominos, but only partially because he already had a full time job with the Allman Brothers Band, and they were touring constantly. It turned out during the couple of months that Derek and the Dominos went on tour, in late 1970, Duane Allman only took part in two concerts: this one, in Tampa, Florida, and one the next day in Syracuse, New York. 

Only this one of the two got recorded, and only an average sounding audience bootleg. But due to the unique presence of Allman playing guitar for the entire show, this is probably the most traded Derek and the Dominos bootleg, despite the sound quality issue. Personally, I had this in my music collection for years, but I almost never listened to it, due to the sound. But I noticed last week that a person named Goody posted a new version that adjusted the speed and the pitch. So I downloaded that. Then I tried to see what I could do to improve upon it. 

I used two tricks that I often use. First, I used the UVR5 audio editing program to boost the vocals relative to the instruments. There were some places in particular where the vocals were extra quiet. For instance, I went through parts of "Got to Get Better in a Little While" line by line. Probably, Clapton had his head too far from the microphone at times. I also got rid of most vocals that weren't actually by the band members. For example, in the middle of "Have You Ever Loved a Woman," a sad blues song, a woman in the audience could be heard laughing loudly for a few seconds. I didn't get rid of all of that, but I got most of it. I made a lot of other little changes like that.

Then I used the MVSEP audio editing program to get rid of most of the crowd noise, except at the very beginnings and ends of songs. Since this is an audience boot, there was a low level of crowd noise all through the songs. Sometimes, one could even hear snippets of conversation. I got rid of most of that.

I also cut down on the dead air between songs. There was quite a bit, for instance, guitar tuning. That probably shortened the album by a couple of minutes.

However, my audio editing skills are quite limited. So I then handed the files off to my musical associate MZ. Here's what he said he did to the file: "anomalies repaired, EQ rationalised, compressed (loud parts lowered, quiet parts made louder), etc... Numerous details fixed." When I listened to the music after he sent it back to me, I noticed a difference. 

Mind you, one can only do so much with the source material. This is still an audience boot, not a soundboard or FM boot. But if you compare this with previous versions, I'm confident you'll notice that this sounds better. Let's hope the powers that be who own the rights to this material do a professional job and officially release it, since this is a truly historic concert. There's so much that can be done these days due to improving audio editing technology.

Note that I previously included two songs from this concert, "Layla" and "Have You Ever Loved a Woman," on a Derek and Dominos live compilation album called "Live and Rare." I have now removed those, since they're here, and with better sound. Here's the link if you want to get the revised version:

https://albumsthatshouldexist.blogspot.com/2018/04/derek-dominos-live-and-rare-1970.html

Also note that in recent days I updated most of the Derek and the Dominos album covers with better versions, using the Krea AI program. They were generally pretty rough images due to the lack of many good photos of the band.

Finally, a big thanks to both Goody and MZ!

This album is an hour and 34 minutes long.

01 talk (Derek & the Dominos)
02 Layla (Derek & the Dominos)
03 Got to Get Better in a Little While (Derek & the Dominos)
04 Key to the Highway (Derek & the Dominos)
05 talk (Derek & the Dominos)
06 Why Does Love Got to Be So Sad (Derek & the Dominos)
07 Blues Power (Derek & the Dominos)
08 Have You Ever Loved a Woman (Derek & the Dominos)
09 Bottle of Red Wine (Derek & the Dominos)
10 Let It Rain - Drum Solo - Let It Rain (Derek & the Dominos)

https://pixeldrain.com/u/68ZtMkmG

alternate:

https://bestfile.io/en/C1iKYwbanNr5xa6/file

There are two parts to the cover art. The top part is a photograph of a genuine ticket from this historic concert. (That's Clapton on the left, Allman on the right, and bassist Carl Radle in the middle background.) I figured it contained all the important information needed, so I didn't add any text to the cover. The bottom is a photograph from this exact concert. The original was in black and white, and was quite dark. I colorized it using the Kolorize program. I also lightened it some, and used the Krea AI program to improve the quality a bit.

Friday, February 7, 2025

Cream - BBC Sessions, Volume 3: Farewell Concert, Royal Albert Hall, London, Britain, 11-26-1968

I'm glad to be finally posting this. In addition to being a BBC concert, it also is almost the last concert by Cream, except for a few reunion concerts decades later. I say almost because this was the early show out of the two on their last night. The late show was either not properly recorded or has never been made public.

Cream was only in existence from 1966 to 1968, but they were very productive and popular during that time. However, their sudden superstardom led to the usual drug and ego issues. In particular, bassist Jack Bruce and drummer Ginger Baker already hated each other before the band even started, due to being in an earlier band together, and things between them slowly got worse. The third band member, guitarist Eric Clapton, eventually couldn't take it and decided to break up the band. But they went out with a final tour.

At the time, the BBC almost never broadcast concerts. Their popular "In Concert" program didn't start until 1970. However, the end of Cream was a big deal, so the BBC filmed this final concert. It was shown on TV in Britain in January 1969. Unfortunately, the film work was pretty poor and the audio quality was bad as well. A reviewer for a 2005 upgrade of the video commented, "The sound has been digitally remastered, but the audio is still a turgid sonic sludge. The visuals are even worse, with director Tony Palmer jerking the camera around as if this were an episode of NYPD Blue, layering the picture with dated and distracting psychedelic light effects, and providing far too many close-ups of Bruce's teeth (and almost no wide shots of the entire band)." On top of that, there was narration and interviews played over some of the music, making it hard to appreciate the songs.

In 2020, the concert was released on audio as part of a Cream box set called "Goodbye Tour - Live 1968" that contained four full concerts from the tour. But, as a Wikipedia article about it noted, "Sadly, the sound of this Royal Albert Hall concert is much worse than the sound of the other three shows of this box set."

Given all that, I'd known about this concert for a long time, but I decided against posting it to my blog due to the poor sound quality. However, nowadays, much can be done with audio editing, so I decided to see if it could be salvaged. I boosted the lead vocals a little bit relative to the instruments, using the UVR5 program. I lowered the crowd noise in the rare cases someone was talking between songs, so one might actually hear what they're saying. But most importantly, I gave the files to musical associate MZ. He's good at remixing. I suggested the bass was too loud, and he agreed. The version he sent back lowered some parts of the bass range and boosted some parts of the treble. It sounds much better now, like a layer of muck has been removed. Frankly, I don't know why the 2020 box set didn't do this. Audio editing technology has improved a lot since then, but simply lowering the bass in the mix was easy to do back then.

Does this sound great now? No. But it's much more listenable, on par with the other three soundboards from this final tour. Thanks to MZ for his valuable help.

By the way, in Clapton's autobiography, he discussed this final concert some. Here's what he said:

"Before the gig started, I just wanted to get it over with. But once I was up on stage, I became quite excited. I thought it was great that we could do this and keep our heads high, and walk away from the whole thing with a fair amount of good grace. ... It also meant a lot to me knowing that out there in the audience there were not just fans, but musician friends, and people on the scene who had all come to say their goodbyes. My overwhelming emotion, however, was that we had done the right thing. I think we all knew that. At the end of the second show, there was no party, no speeches. We just went our separate ways."

This album is an hour and four minutes long.

01 talk (Cream)
02 White Room (Cream)
03 Politician (Cream)
04 talk (Cream)
05 I'm So Glad (Cream)
06 talk (Cream)
07 Sitting on Top of the World (Cream)
08 talk (Cream)
09 Crossroads (Cream)
10 talk (Cream)
11 Toad [Instrumental] (Cream)
12 Spoonful (Cream)
13 talk (Cream)
14 Sunshine of Your Love (Cream)
15 talk (Cream)
16 Steppin' Out [Instrumental] (Cream)
17 talk (Cream)

https://pixeldrain.com/u/kYPH13rw

alternate:

https://bestfile.io/en/LY65LHVRqh7f5Z6/file

The cover photo is from this exact concert.

Friday, November 15, 2024

Eric Clapton, Mark Knopfler & Elton John - Tokyo Dome, Tokyo, Japan, 11-2-1988

In the late 1980s, lead guitar legends Eric Clapton and Mark Knopfler performed many concerts together. They actually first played in concert together in 1985 while Mark Knopfler was still leading his band Dire Straits. But then Dire Straits was disbanded for a few years, and Knopfler didn't had a band until the Notting Hillbillies in 1990 and then a Dire Straits reunion in 1991. In 1987 and 1988 especially, the two of them did entire tours together. They were basically Eric Clapton concerts, but with Knopfler adding lead guitar to every song and singing one or two songs as lead vocalist.

Things got even more interesting when their joint tour stopped by Japan in 1988. Elton John joined them there, and the three of them headlined four concerts together. One of them, in Tokyo, was broadcast on TV and radio in Japan only. This got bootlegged, naturally, and it makes for an excellent recording, with soundboard quality sound. That's what this is here.

The first portion of the concert only featured Clapton and Knopfler. Clapton sang most of the songs, but one of his female backing vocalists sang lead on "Can't Find My Way Home" and Knopfler sang lead on his huge Dire Straits hit "Money for Nothing." Then Elton John joined them for the rest of the concert. Most of the songs from that point on were John's hits, but Clapton sang three more, and Knopfler did one more Dire Straits song, "Solid Rock." John naturally played keyboards even on the songs he didn't sing.

So all in all this is a really nice and very rare collaboration between three rock superstars. It wasn't the last time the three of them did this, however. They also played together during the Knebworth Festival in 1990. I have posted that already, which you can find here:

https://albumsthatshouldexist.blogspot.com/2024/05/knebworth-festival-knebworth-house_50.html

This album is two hours and 13 minutes long.

01 Crossroads (Eric Clapton & Mark Knopfler)
02 White Room (Eric Clapton & Mark Knopfler)
03 I Shot the Sheriff (Eric Clapton & Mark Knopfler)
04 Lay Down Sally (Eric Clapton & Mark Knopfler)
05 Wonderful Tonight (Eric Clapton & Mark Knopfler)
06 Tearing Us Apart (Eric Clapton & Mark Knopfler)
07 After Midnight (Eric Clapton & Mark Knopfler)
08 Can't Find My Way Home (Eric Clapton & Mark Knopfler)
09 Money for Nothing [Edit] (Eric Clapton & Mark Knopfler)
10 Candle in the Wind (Eric Clapton, Mark Knopfler & Elton John)
11 I Guess That's Why They Call It the Blues (Eric Clapton, Mark Knopfler & Elton John)
12 I Don't Wanna Go On with You like That (Eric Clapton, Mark Knopfler & Elton John)
13 I'm Still Standing (Eric Clapton, Mark Knopfler & Elton John)
14 Daniel (Eric Clapton, Mark Knopfler & Elton John)
15 talk (Eric Clapton, Mark Knopfler & Elton John)
16 Cocaine (Eric Clapton, Mark Knopfler & Elton John)
17 Layla (Eric Clapton, Mark Knopfler & Elton John)
18 Solid Rock (Eric Clapton, Mark Knopfler & Elton John)
19 Saturday Night's Alright [For Fighting] (Eric Clapton, Mark Knopfler & Elton John)
20 Sunshine of Your Love (Eric Clapton, Mark Knopfler & Elton John)
21 Percussion Solo (Eric Clapton, Mark Knopfler & Elton John)
22 Sunshine of Your Love (Eric Clapton, Mark Knopfler & Elton John)

https://www.imagenetz.de/e2iJV

alternate:

https://pixeldrain.com/u/873KARqh

second alternate:

https://bestfile.io/en/yKoZ6ps2xz0RPgG/file

The cover image was very hard for me to make. It is of this exact concert, right after the end of the final song of the encore. However, I couldn't find any photos of them together, so I had to resort to taking a screenshot from a video of this concert I found on YouTube. But the video was so low-res and blurry that I had to rewatch that section of the video to even figure out Knopfler was holding something (a towel) in his hands. 

The reason this cover looks like it does is due to the free Krea AI program. I ran the screenshot through that program, giving prompts identifying who was in the image. It was a little bit better, but not much. Then I ran that version through the program. Again, some improvement, but still rough. I did it four times in all! Finally, it ended up like this. To show you how drastically things changed, here's the screenshot I started from. Frankly, I'm kind of amazed at what the AI technology is capable of. Yeah, there's a lot of change there, it's not entirely true to reality, but I think the final version looks a hell of a lot better than the screenshot does.

Wednesday, May 29, 2024

Knebworth Festival, Knebworth House, Knebworth, Britain, 6-30-1990, Part 6: Eric Clapton, Dire Straits & Elton John

The sixth performance at the 1990 Knebworth Festival was a rather unusual collaboration between Eric Clapton, Dire Straits, and Elton John.

Collaboration between these three famous musical forces was rare, but not unprecedented. In particular, Mark Knopfler, leader of Dire Straits, and Eric Clapton became good friends in the late 1980s and toured together a lot in 1987 to 1989. Elton John joined them for at least one full concert, in Tokyo, Japan, in 1988. 

Meanwhile, Dire Straits broke up in 1986, at the conclusion of the tour to promote their 1985 album "Brothers in Arms." They got back together for about five shows in 1988 and 1989, mostly benefit concerts, and usually with Clapton included. Then they did this festival, their only performance of 1990. A full reunion followed, leading to the band's final album, "On Every Street," in 1991. This concert didn't actually include all of Dire Straits. Mark Knopfler, John Illsey, and Alan Clark took part, but Guy Fletcher was missing. Instead, the band was rounded out by Clapton, Ray Cooper, and Phil Palmer. But still, it was considered a Dire Straits reunion.

The first four songs were sung by Clapton. Then Dire Straits joined in. One song played, "Think I Love You Too Much," was an original that never made it onto a Dire Straits (or Mark Knopfler) album, despite being a good song that got played a lot on the Dire Straits world tour in 1991 and 1992. This was the first time it was performed in concert. Elton John joined in for the last four songs, three of which were sung by him.

I don't recall any wind noise trouble with this performance. Also note that it's the longest set of the festival, because it was basically three big acts put together.

This album is an hour and 16 minutes long.

01 talk by Dave Dee (Eric Clapton)
02 Pretending (Eric Clapton)
03 Before You Accuse Me (Eric Clapton)
04 Old Love (Eric Clapton)
05 Tearing Us Apart (Eric Clapton)
06 Solid Rock (Eric Clapton & Dire Straits)
07 talk (Eric Clapton & Dire Straits)
08 I Think I Love You Too Much (Eric Clapton & Dire Straits)
09 Money for Nothing (Eric Clapton & Dire Straits)
10 talk (Eric Clapton, Mark Knopfler & Elton John)
11 Sacrifice (Eric Clapton, Mark Knopfler & Elton John)
12 Sad Songs [Say So Much] (Eric Clapton, Mark Knopfler & Elton John)
13 Saturday Night's Alright for Fighting (Eric Clapton, Mark Knopfler & Elton John)
14 Sunshine of Your Love (Eric Clapton, Mark Knopfler & Elton John)

https://pixeldrain.com/u/HoBf13LZ

alternate:

https://bestfile.io/en/4oHFJrfaG2Kgn1R/file

For the cover, I wanted a photo of Clapton, Knopfler, and John together at this concert. I couldn't find any, since they were spread out on stage. However, I did find one of Clapton and John.

Thursday, March 28, 2024

Various Artists - Prince's Trust Rock Gala, Royal Albert Hall, London, Britain, 6-5-1988

The Prince's Trust is a charity founded by then Prince Charles, the British crown prince. (He is now King Charles III) as I write this in 2024.) There have been a bunch of benefit concerts for the charity, each with many stars participating. Here's another one.

These Prince's Trust concerts have happened in a very irregular pace. I've already posted benefit concerts from 1982, 1986, and 1987. This one is from 1988. There were more from 1989 and 1990, so it started to seem like an annual thing. However, I think the next one after that took place in 1996. There have been at least five more since then, although I may well be missing some.

This one was similar to the previous two in similar ways. The concert started with some newer acts, like T'Pau and Wet Wet Wet, and they played more songs than one might expect, given the stature of the other acts in the concert. Both T'Pau and Wet Wet Wet actually played four songs each, according to setlists, but I only have two from T'Pau and three from Wet Wet Wet. I can't say I'm lamenting the missing songs, since I don't think one could compare them with nearly all of the acts that came later. Rick Astley and Black were a couple other acts that appeared early, and played the one big hit each of them was known for.

After that, there were many of the same "usual suspects" who played in previous Prince's Trust concerts, such as Phil Collins, Elton John, Howard Jones, Mark Knoplfer, and Eric Clapton. But there were some first timers too, like Leonard Cohen, the Bee Gees, Peter Gabriel, and Joe Cocker. It's frustrating to me that you have someone like Peter Gabriel, whose most recent album at the time, "So," had sold five million copies in the U.S. alone, only getting to play one song. But it is what it is, I guess.

I don't know the exact details, but I believe that many of the big stars backed each other towards the end of the concert, as was the case in previous years. Because people pay extra close attention to Eric Clapton's guitar playing, I was able to find out that once he took the stage with track 26 ("Behind the Mask"), he stayed on stage for the rest of the concert, including playing guitar on songs sung by Knoplfer, John, and Cocker.

Similarly, I was able to determine that Brian May of Queen didn't sing lead vocals on any songs, but he played lead guitar on a bunch of them: tracks 6, 8, 10, 16, 19, 24, 26, and 35. John Deacon, the bassist for Queen, also apparently played on some songs.

Currently, I'm only able to find a few songs from the 1989 and 1990 concerts. If anyone has the full concerts, please let me know. I may try to post the 1996 concert, but I'm probably missing about half of that one.

This album is two hours and two minutes long.

01 Heart and Soul (T'Pau)
02 China in Your Hand (T'Pau)
03 talk (Wet Wet Wet)
04 Wishing I Was Lucky (Wet Wet Wet)
05 Sweet Little Mystery - Twist and Shout (Wet Wet Wet)
06 Dancing with Tears in My Eyes (Midge Ure)
07 talk (Midge Ure & Rick Astley)
08 Never Gonna Give You Up (Rick Astley)
09 talk (Rick Astley & Black)
10 Wonderful Life (Black)
11 talk (Black & Leonard Cohen)
12 Tower of Song (Leonard Cohen)
13 talk (Phil Collins)
14 Doesn't Anyone Stay Together Anymore (Phil Collins)
15 talk (Phil Collins & the Bee Gees)
16 You Win Again (Bee Gees)
17 Jive Talkin' (Bee Gees)
18 talk (Bee Gees & Peter Gabriel)
19 Sledgehammer (Peter Gabriel)
20 talk (Peter Gabriel & Howard Jones)
21 What Is Love (Howard Jones)
22 talk (Phil Collins)
23 I Missed Again (Phil Collins)
24 You Can't Hurry Love (Phil Collins)
25 talk (Phil Collins & Joe Cocker)
26 The Letter (Joe Cocker)
27 talk (Eric Clapton)
28 Behind the Mask (Eric Clapton)
29 Cocaine (Eric Clapton)
30 talk (Eric Clapton & Mark Knopfler)
31 Money for Nothing (Mark Knopfler)
32 talk (Elton John)
33 I Don't Wanna Go On with You like That (Elton John)
34 Layla (Eric Clapton)
35 With a Little Help from My Friends (Joe Cocker)

https://pixeldrain.com/u/cbyrisBH

alternate:

https://bestfile.io/en/jJV74b5uh8a36UP/file

alternate:

https://www.imagenetz.de/gP7SW

Just like previous years, there was a group photo taken of the performers. Here are all their names.
Back row: Rick Astley, Howard Jones, Peter Gabriel, Joe Cocker, Phil Collins, Midge Ure
Middle row: Mark Knopfler, Brian May, Elton John, Eric Clapton
Front row: The Bee Gees, Robin, Barry and Maurice Gibb

Saturday, March 9, 2024

Eric Clapton - Acoustic Versions: 1989-1999

This is kind of a supplement to the Eric Clapton stray tracks albums from the 1990s that I've been posting. These are all stray tracks too, in the sense that none of them appeared on his studio albums in this era, at least not in these arrangements. And, as you can guess from the album title, they're all acoustic versions.

Note that "at least not in these arrangements" comment I just made. A few of these songs do appear on other stray tracks albums I've made, such as "Tears in Heaven" and "Change the World." But not many, and generally they are done quite differently here. For instance, "Tears in Heaven" is stripped way back from the studio version, with just Clapton's voice and acoustic guitar.

All but three of the performances here are unreleased. The three released ones are "Mississippi Blues" (which comes from an album by another musician), "(I) Get Lost" (from a movie soundtrack) and "Danny Boy" (from a B-side).

There are 12 unreleased songs. Seven of them come from concert bootlegs. For all of those, I used the MVSEP audio editing program to get rid of the crowd noise, so they'd fit in with all the studio tracks. The remaining five didn't come with crowd noise in the first place. They're generally from concert rehearsals, although one, "'The Van' Title Theme," is from a movie or TV show that never had a soundtrack.

I think this makes for a nice listen. Clapton's acoustic performances are underrated, in my opinion.

01 Standing Around Crying (Eric Clapton with Pete Townshend)
02 Tears in Heaven (Eric Clapton)
03 Circus (Eric Clapton)
04 Ain't Nobody's Bizness If I Do (Eric Clapton)
05 Come On in My Kitchen (Eric Clapton)
06 Malted Milk (Eric Clapton)
07 Motherless Child (Eric Clapton)
08 Mississippi Blues [Instrumental] (Eric Clapton & Timothy Duffy)
09 How Long (Eric Clapton with Dr. John)
10 'The Van' Title Theme [Instrumental] (Eric Clapton)
11 Broken Hearted (Eric Clapton)
12 Change the World (Eric Clapton)
13 Driftin' Blues (Eric Clapton)
14 [I] Get Lost (Eric Clapton)
15 Danny Boy [Instrumental] (Eric Clapton) 

https://www.upload.ee/files/16368818/ERCCLPTN1989-1999AcustcVrsons_atse.zip.html

The cover photo was taken at the Royal Albert Hall in London some time in 1998.

https://www.upload.ee/files/16368818/ERCCLPTN1989-1999AcustcVrsons_atse.zip.html

Wednesday, February 28, 2024

Eric Clapton - Black Cat Bone - Non-Album Tracks (1994-1996)

On one hand, I'm still annoyed, maybe permanently annoyed, at Eric Clapton's idiotic comments and behavior about the Covid pandemic. But on the other hand, he's done a lot of great music, and I have a ton of albums I've prepared from even before the Covid crisis. So I'm gonna try to move faster on posting them. This is another stray tracks album.

Around this time, Clapton was going through a particularly bluesy phase, culminating with his all blues album "From the Cradle" in 1994. 

One partial exception is the song "Change the World," which was a big hit in the U.S. in 1996, reaching the Top Five of the singles chart, and one of the most played songs on the radio that year. It has a much more poppy sound that the others, including a hint of hip hop. But at the same time, Clapton said the song still has "one foot in the blues, even if it's subtly disguised."

"Change the World," released only as an A-side and on a movie soundtrack, is one of four officially released songs here. The others are "Ain't Gone 'N' Give Up on Love," from a live Stevie Ray Vaughan tribute album, "Every Day I Have the Blues," from a "Live at Hyde Park" DVD, and "Low Tide," an instrumental from another movie soundtrack.

The other songs are all blues songs from concert bootlegs. With Clapton bootlegs being very popular, I had no problem sourcing all of them from soundboard boots. Note that I ran them through the MVSEP audio editing program filter to remove the crowd noise, so they'd fit in with the studio tracks. I also boosted the lead vocals on a few tracks that needed it.

This album is 51 minutes long.

01 I Can't Judge Nobody (Eric Clapton)
02 Forty-Four (Eric Clapton)
03 Ain't Nobody's Bizness If I Do (Eric Clapton)
04 Black Cat Bone (Eric Clapton)
05 I'm Gonna Cut Your Head (Eric Clapton)
06 Blues All Day Long [Blues Leave Me Alone] (Eric Clapton)
07 I Got My Mojo Working (Eric Clapton)
08 Ain't Gone 'N' Give Up on Love (Eric Clapton)
09 Change the World (Eric Clapton)
10 Every Day I Have the Blues (Eric Clapton)
11 Low Tide [Instrumental] (Eric Clapton)

https://www.upload.ee/files/16326559/ERCCLPTN1994-1996BlckCtBne_atse.zip.html

All I know about the photo used for the cover is that it's from 1996. The little picture of the cat in the top right corner I added on a whim, after doing an image search for the phrase "black cat bone."

Sunday, February 25, 2024

Various Artists - Prince's Trust Rock Gala, Wembley Arena, London, Britain, 6-5-1987

I just posted the Prince's Trust concert from 1986. This is the 1987 concert. It's the same basic idea, but many of the songs and performers are different. Both are very worthwhile listens.

Like the 1986 concert, this one started with some newer musical acts. With the benefit of hindsight, some were good choices, and others... not so much (cough cough, Curiosity Killed the Cat and Go West, cough cough). But if you don't like all the artists, that's okay, because none of the first few acts lasted more than a single song.

There were fewer big name artists in this concert than the 1986 one. Plus, the entire concert was about half an hour shorter. (If, in fact, this is the whole thing - I'm not entirely sure.) But on the other hand, the finale was probably even more impressive. I'll get to that in a minute.

First though, I want to point out that, like the 1986 concert, for many of the songs, there was a backing band made up of many stars. I don't know which songs exactly, because I can't find the full video of this concert on YouTube. But, for instance, when Ben E. King sang his song, his backing band included Phil Collins on drums, Midge Ure on rhythm guitar, and Eric Clapton on lead guitar.

But the big deal was the finale. In the 1986, the biggest star was ex-Beatle Paul McCartney. But the 1987 concert outdid that by having two ex-Beatles performing together: George Harrison and Ringo Starr! Harrison's appearance was a particularly big deal because he hadn't performed in concert since his 1974 tour (other than a couple of brief appearances in the finales of other artist's concerts). 

I randomly stumbled across a description of the concert's finale in a 2015 article in Guitar World Magazine. Here it is:

"On June 5, 1987, three of the five original musicians who appeared on the classic Beatles 'White Album' track 'While My Guitar Gently Weeps' reunited to perform the song live at the Prince's Trust Rock Gala in London's Wembley Arena. George Harrison, Ringo Starr, and Eric Clapton were joined in an all-star U.K. band, including Elton John, Phil Collins, Jeff Lynne, Ray Cooper, and... well, if you're wondering who that understandably happy bassist is, it's Mark King from Level 42. Harrison, Starr, and Clapton last performed the song live 16 years earlier at the Concert for Bangladesh in New York City. What most interesting about this performance is the fact that A., the normally Strat-happy Clapton is playing a beautiful Gibson Les Paul, just as he did on the original 1968 recording, and B., the also-Strat-happy Harrison joins Clapton in the extended guitar solo at the end of the song. The two guitarists trade solos and feed off each other's energy, and their intertwining lines are often pretty damn cool."

In addition to that, someone, I'm guessing Clapton, played a guitar solo for "With a Little Help from My Friends," a song that normally lacked any solo. It's a shame that Jeff Lynne apparently didn't sing any of his Electric Light Orchestra hits. But he sang backing vocals on all three of the Beatles songs at the end. Given that Lynne is a huge Beatles fan, this must have been the closest he ever got to a fantasy of being a part of the Beatles, getting to sing with Harrison and Starr, with Clapton on guitar for good measure!

This album is an hour and 45 minutes long.

01 Running in the Family (Level 42 with Eric Clapton)
02 If I Was (Midge Ure)
03 Misfit (Curiosity Killed the Cat)
04 Don't Look Down (Go West)
05 Invisible (Alison Moyet)
06 Through the Barricades (Spandau Ballet)
07 [Something Inside] So Strong (Labi Siffre)
08 Run to You (Bryan Adams)
09 Hearts on Fire (Bryan Adams)
10 Somebody (Bryan Adams)
11 talk (Dave Edmunds & Bryan Adams)
12 The Wanderer (Dave Edmunds & Bryan Adams)
13 talk (Eric Clapton)
14 Wonderful Tonight (Eric Clapton)
15 Behind the Mask (Eric Clapton)
16 Stand by Me (Ben E. King)
17 talk (Phil Collins)
18 Reach Out, I'll Be There - I Can't Help Myself - Same Old Song (Phil Collins & Paul Young)
19 You've Lost That Loving Feeling (Phil Collins & Paul Young)
20 talk (Elton John)
21 Your Song (Elton John)
22 Saturday Night's Alright for Fighting (Elton John)
23 talk (George Harrison & Ringo Starr)
24 While My Guitar Gently Weeps (George Harrison & Eric Clapton with Ringo Starr & Jeff Lynne)
25 Here Comes the Sun (George Harrison with Ringo Starr & Jeff Lynne)
26 With a Little Help from My Friends (Ringo Starr with George Harrison, Eric Clapton & Jeff Lynne)

https://pixeldrain.com/u/W4HtwzDd

alternate:

https://bestfile.io/en/6mOchiVwGJ0ZR4P/file

I searched the Internet pretty thoroughly for a color version of the group photo from this concert. All I could find was a black and white version. I tinted it blue. If anyone can find the color version, please let me know so I can upgrade this. There are way too many people in the photo for me to try to make a colorized version.

Various Artists - Prince's Trust Rock Gala, Wembley Arena, London, Britain, 6-20-1986

Hmmm. I could have sworn I'd posted this months ago. I'd posted the 1982 Prince's Trust concert a while back. I was getting to post the next one in the series, from 1987, when I did a search and noticed this one wasn't here. So now you'll get two in a row, as I'll be posting the 1987 one today as well. 

Prince Charles, the crown prince of Britain at the time, ran a charity to help troubled youths. It's still going as I write this in 2024, and Charles has finally become king. 

These concerts didn't happen every year. In fact, I don't think there was any after the 1982 one I mentioned until this one, although there was a Dire Straits concert in 1985 that benefited the charity. This one, though, was truly a star-studded event. Perhaps inspired by Live Aid in 1985, the big names showed up in droves.

In fact, I find this concert frustrating, because so much big name talent was underused. The concerts started with sets by Big Country, Suzanne Vega, and Level 42. I definitely like Big Country and Suzanne Vega (whereas Level 42, not so much), and I've posted albums by them here. But it seems very odd to me that they got to play four or five songs each, while much bigger names like Sting, Mark Knopfler, George Michael, David Bowie, and Mick Jagger got less than one full song, since they only appeared as part of duets. Very strange.

That said, what there is here is quite good. It's just that I wish there had been a lot more of it. But as far as I can tell, this was the complete concert. I guess the organizers had to keep things relatively short because the concert was broadcast live on TV and radio in Britain. I gather the reason Big Country, Suzanne Vega, and Level 42 had such surprisingly long sets was because one purpose of the show was to showcase new talent. This is a trend with the other Prince's Trust concerts I'm aware of. At least in this year the new acts would end up being pretty good. (Some other years weren't so lucky.)

One special aspect of this concert is how much the big stars in the second half of the show performed together. You don't really see it in the artist credits on each song. For instance, typically, Phil Collins played drums, Elton John played piano, Midge Ure of Ultravox played rhythm guitar, and Eric Clapton or Mark Knoplfer played lead guitar. At one point, you can hear Rod Stewart joke about how happy he is to finally get Elton John in his backing band. But that's not all. You really the watch the video this (the whole thing can be found on YouTube as I type this) to see all the stars backing each other.

The highlights are many, too many for me to describe. But I'll point out that the biggest start of the evening had to be Paul McCartney, who closed the show. Keep in mind that, from the perspective of 1986, McCartney hadn't barely played in any concerts since the 1970s. Starting in 1989 he would go on a world tour, and he would tour often after that. But he'd only made three other concert appearances in the 1980s prior to this, and each one was just for a couple of songs at most. (For instance, he played one song for Live Aid in 1985.)

By the way, note that there's a flaw with the duet of "Dancing in the Street" by David Bowie and Mick Jagger. For some reason, Bowie's vocals are way down in the mix. I currently don't have the means to fix that, since it's tricky with them singing together most of the time. But with audio editing technology advancing recently, it probably will be fixable eventually.

Note that various versions of this concert have been officially released, both on audio and video. But as far as I can tell, none of them are complete. The audio version, for instance, is only the length of a single album. So there's a lot more music here.

This album is two hours and 17 minutes long.

01 Introduction (Emcee)
02 talk (Big Country)
03 Wonderland (Big Country)
04 Fields of Fire (Big Country)
05 talk (Big Country)
06 Look Away (Big Country)
07 Chance (Big Country)
08 talk (Big Country)
09 In a Big Country (Big Country)
10 talk (Big Country)
11 talk (Suzanne Vega)
12 Tom’s Diner (Suzanne Vega)
13 talk (Suzanne Vega)
14 Cracking (Suzanne Vega)
15 Small Blue Thing (Suzanne Vega)
16 talk (Suzanne Vega)
17 Marlene on the Wall (Suzanne Vega)
18 talk (Emcee)
19 Lesson in Love (Level 42)
20 Leaving Me Now (Level 42)
21 Something about You (Level 42)
22 talk (Level 42)
23 Your Song (Elton John)
24 talk (Phil Collins)
25 In the Air Tonight (Phil Collins)
26 talk (Emcee)
27 Better Be Good to Me (Tina Turner)
28 talk (Tina Turner)
29 Tearing Us Apart (Eric Clapton & Tina Turner)
30 talk (Eric Clapton)
31 Call of the Wild (Midge Ure)
32 talk (Midge Ure)
33 Money for Nothing (Mark Knopfler & Sting)
34 talk (Mark Knopfler)
35 Every Time You Go Away (Paul Young)
36 talk (Paul Young)
37 Reach Out (Joan Armatrading)
38 No One Is to Blame (Howard Jones)
39 talk (Rod Stewart)
40 Sailing (Rod Stewart)
41 I’m Still Standing (Elton John)
42 talk (Elton John)
43 Every Time You Go Away (Paul Young & George Michael)
44 talk (George Michael)
45 I Saw Her Standing There (Paul McCartney)
46 Long Tall Sally (Paul McCartney)
47 talk (Paul McCartney)
48 Dancing in the Street (David Bowie & Mick Jagger)
49 Get Back (Paul McCartney & Everyone)
50 talk (Paul McCartney)

https://pixeldrain.com/u/kFX6wzSe

alternate:

https://bestfile.io/en/FFh3i4FUiXCUiKw/file

Each time one of these concerts happened, there typically was a group photo. If anyone wants to identify all the people in the photo, that would be great.

Friday, December 22, 2023

Eric Clapton - Tears in Heaven - Non-Album Tracks, 1992-1994

The last two times I posted an Eric Clapton album, I commented that I've lost a lot of my enthusiasm for his music due to his idiotic public stance about the Covid vaccine. But I've made my point there, so I'll just move on and post more of his music, since I created a bunch of stray tracks albums and other people might want to hear them. Sadly, there are lots of great musicians who have unfortunate beliefs or personal lives.

This album contains Clapton's big hit "Tears in Heaven," which was emotionally fueled by the tragic death of one of his children at a very young age. The song was a Top Ten hit in many countries, including the U.S. and Britain. But many more people got it by buying the live version on the album "Unplugged," which ended up selling nearly 30 million copies! 

However, the studio version appeared on a different album, the soundtrack to the movie "Rush." This is an odd album, because almost all of the songs are instrumentals written and performed by Clapton, plus "Tears in Heaven," plus the poppy sounding Clapton song "Help Me Up," and a long blues jam sung by Buddy Guy. I ultimately only included three songs from this album: "Tears in Heaven," "Help Me Up," and what I considered the best of the instrumentals, "Tracks and Lines." If you like that one, you should listen to the whole album. 

"Loving Your Lovin'" is from another movie soundtrack. "Stone Free" and "You Must Believe Me" are from tribute albums.

That leaves the unreleased tracks. Tracks 5, 6, and 7 are all Bob Dylan songs that Clapton planned to perform for the 30th Anniversary Concert in 1992 that celebrated 30 years of Dylan's music career. However, instead of being the live versions released on the official album of that concert, these are rehearsal versions that lucky have excellent sound quality. Also, the duet with Dylan on the song "t Takes a Lot to Laugh, It Takes a Train to Cry" only happened in the rehearsal, not the actual concert.

Finally, "Tell Me Mama" is from a concert bootleg. "Born Under a Bad Sign" is from a rehearsal for a blues themed concert.

This album is 49 minutes long.

01 Help Me Up (Eric Clapton)
02 Tears in Heaven (Eric Clapton)
03 Tracks and Lines [Instrumental] (Eric Clapton)
04 Loving Your Lovin' (Eric Clapton)
05 Don't Think Twice, It's All Right (Eric Clapton)
06 It Takes a Lot to Laugh, It Takes a Train to Cry (Bob Dylan & Eric Clapton)
07 Love Minus Zero-No Limit (Eric Clapton)
08 Stone Free (Eric Clapton)
09 Tell Me Mama (Eric Clapton)
10 You Must Believe Me (Eric Clapton)
11 Born Under a Bad Sign (Eric Clapton)

https://www.upload.ee/files/16073488/EricC_1992-1994_TarsinHeavn_atse.zip.html

The cover is largely based on the cover art for the single of "Tears in Heaven." However, I made some changes in Photoshop, like moving and/or resizing some of the text, and getting rid of some other text.

Sunday, December 17, 2023

Eric Clapton - Hoodoo Man - Non-Album Tracks (1988-1992)

It's been a year since I last posted an Eric Clapton stray tracks album. I have to admit that I still have lost a lot of enthusiasm for his music ever since he came out strongly against the Covid vaccine. But I have a bunch more of these stray tracks albums by him, so I might as well keep posting them.

Five of the songs here have been officially released. "This Kind of Life" is from a Brendan Croker album. "That Kind of Woman" was actually written by George Harrison, but never recorded by him. Clapton did it for a charity benefit album called "Nobody's Child." "Border Song" was done for "Two Rooms," a tribute album to Elton John and Bernie Taupin. Finally, "The Stilt House" went on the "Lethal Weapon 2" soundtrack and "Runaway Train" went on the "Lethal Weapon 3" soundtrack. 

That leaves five unreleased songs. "Forever" is a studio outtake. The other four are from concert bootlegs. Generally speaking, their sound is very good.

This album is 47 minutes long.

01 A Remark You Made [Instrumental] (Eric Clapton)
02 Forever (Eric Clapton)
03 This Kind of Life (Brendan Croker & Eric Clapton)
04 The Stilt House [Instrumental] (Eric Clapton, David Sanborn & Michael Kamen)
05 That Kind of Woman (Eric Clapton)
06 Bad Boy (Eric Clapton)
07 Sweet Home Chicago (Eric Clapton, Buddy Guy, Steve Tyler & Others)
08 Border Song (Eric Clapton)
09 Hoodoo Man (Eric Clapton)
10 Runaway Train (Elton John & Eric Clapton)

https://pixeldrain.com/u/1Dczg8u9

alternate:

https://bestfile.io/en/v7Z7Py8ZEd2zVv0/file

The cover photo seems to be from a promo photo shoot taken around 1989.

Wednesday, December 13, 2023

Carl Perkins with Eric Clapton - The Bottom Line, New York City, 5-9-1989

We're very lucky to have this recording. In 1989, Eric Clapton joined Carl Perkins for a bunch of songs in concert. I looked it up at a comprehensive Clapton fan site, and believe that's the only time that happened. Yet somehow a soundboard recording leaked to the public.

The first half or so of this is just Perkins and his usual band. That's quite nice all by itself, with this sound quality. But track 11 introduces Clapton, and he stayed on stage for the rest of the concert. It seems like they planned this in advance and may even have practiced some, because Clapton was quite involved and seemed to know what he was doing, including joining in on backing vocals a lot. He even sang lead for part of the song "Matchbox."

If anyone know more about this concert, and how it came to be professionally taped but then not officially released, please let me know.

This album is 50 minutes long. The portion with Clapton is the last 30 minutes.

01 The World Is Waiting for the Sunrise (Carl Perkins)
02 talk (Carl Perkins)
03 Dixie Fried (Carl Perkins)
04 talk (Carl Perkins)
05 Born to Rock (Carl Perkins)
06 talk (Carl Perkins)
07 The Birth of Rock and Roll (Carl Perkins)
08 Your True Love (Carl Perkins)
09 talk (Carl Perkins)
10 Put Your Cat Clothes On (Carl Perkins)
11 talk (Carl Perkins)
12 Mean Woman Blues (Carl Perkins with Eric Clapton)
13 talk (Carl Perkins with Eric Clapton)
14 Matchbox (Carl Perkins with Eric Clapton)
15 talk (Carl Perkins with Eric Clapton)
16 Roll Over Beethoven-Maybellene-Slippin' and Slidin'-I'm Walkin'-Whole Lotta Shakin'-Hound Dog (Carl Perkins with Eric Clapton)
17 talk (Carl Perkins with Eric Clapton)
18 Blue Suede Shoes (Carl Perkins with Eric Clapton)
19 Goin' Down the Road Feelin' Bad (Carl Perkins with Eric Clapton)

https://www.upload.ee/files/16039160/CarlPerk_1989_TheBottmLneNwYrkC__5-9-1989_atse.zip.html

We're very lucky that I managed to find one photo from this exact concert, showing Perkins and Clapton together. Unfortunately, it was only in black and white, but I colorized it with the help of the Palette program.

Monday, September 25, 2023

Live Aid - JFK Stadium, Philadelphia, PA, 7-13-1985, Part 5: Neil Young, the Power Station, the Thompson Twins, Eric Clapton, and Phil Collins

This is the fifth part of the Philadelphia portion of the 1985 Live Aid concert. Two more Philadelphia parts will follow.

First up in this part was Neil Young. As I mentioned previously, he would later play a set as part of Crosby, Stills, Nash and Young, but first he did this solo set. He did the first couple of songs truly solo, with just his acoustic guitar, but he was in full electric band mode by the last song.

The Power Station was a side band by some members of Duran Duran, with Robert Palmer as the singer. In addition to this set, Duran Duran had their own set later in the concert.

There's not much to say about the Thompson Twins set, except that it's worth noting Madonna joined them on backing vocals on one song, while they also helped with backing vocals on one of the songs in Madonna's set.

Eric Clapton was up next. I watched Live Aid as a kid, and I remember being excited that he played "White Room," which he originally did as part of Cream in the 1960s. He almost never played the song as a solo artist until earlier in 1985.

The final artist on this album was Phil Collins. He played a set early in the Live Aid concert in London, then rushed to a helicopter, flew a Concorde to the U.S., then took another helicopter to the Live Aid concert in Philadelphia, where he played this set. That made him the only person to play both Live Aid shows. He was a busy guy, because he also played drums for Eric Clapton in the set before this one, then later played drums as part of the Led Zeppelin reunion. Unfortunately though, the two songs he played in his solo set in Philadelphia were the same ones he played in London. Apparently this was because he played alone on piano, and those were the only two songs he knew in that format.

Once again, I was able to find some introductions, and only missed the intro for Neil Young this time. Actor Don Johnson introduced the Power Station. Actress and singer Bette Midler introduced the Thoimpson Twins. Music promoter Bill Graham introduced Eric Clapton. Actor Jack Nicholson assisted Midler in introducing Phil Collins.

This album is an hour and eleven minutes long.

097 Sugar Mountain (Neil Young)
098 The Needle and the Damage Done (Neil Young)
099 Helpless (Neil Young)
100 Nothing Is Perfect (Neil Young)
101 Powderfinger (Neil Young)
102 talk (Bill Graham)
103 talk (Don Johnson)
104 Murderess (Power Station)
105 talk (Power Station)
106 Get It On [Bang a Gong] (Power Station)
107 talk (Bill Graham)
108 talk (Bette Midler)
109 Hold Me Now (Thompson Twins)
110 talk (Thompson Twins)
111 Revolution (Thompson Twins with Madonna, Steve Stevens & Nile Rodgers)
112 talk (Bill Graham)
113 White Room (Eric Clapton)
114 She's Waiting (Eric Clapton)
115 Layla (Eric Clapton)
116 talk (Jack Nicholson & Bette Midler)
117 Against All Odds [Take a Look at Me Now] (Phil Collins)
118 talk (Phil Collins)
119 In the Air Tonight (Phil Collins)

https://www.upload.ee/files/15724528/LveAidJFKStdiumPhladlphiaPA__7-13-1985_Part5.zip.html

As with most of the other parts in this series, I divided the cover art into four photos taken at the concert. Neil Young is on the top left, the Thompson Twins are on the top right, Eric Clapton is on the bottom left, and Phil Collins is on the bottom right.

Monday, May 29, 2023

The Allman Brothers Band & Eric Clapton - Beacon Theatre, New York City, 3-20-2009

There aren't many cases of musical greats meeting up in a prolonged manner like this, so if you're a fan of the Allman Brothers Band and/or Eric Clapton, you should have this. 

In 1970, Clapton's short lived band Derek and the Dominos made the classic album "Layla and Other Assorted Love Songs." Slide guitarist Duane Allman was a member of that band while still being a member of the Allman Brothers Band (ABB) at the same time. Clapton has said that he considered Duane to be kind of a musical soul mate. But tragically, Duane died less than a year after the release of that album, so further collaborations never came to pass.

Duane's brother Gregg Allman kept on with the Allman Brothers Band, to great success. Gregg had jammed some with Derek and the Dominos during the making of the "Layla" album. But the musical paths of Clapton and the ABB never really crossed paths again until two special nights in 2009, March 19th and 20th, at the Beacon Theatre in New York City. The ABB was doing a series of 15 shows at that venue that year, with a focus on remembering Duane Allman, and including lots of special guests who had a connection to him. Clapton joined in for about half the concert for both of those nights. He sang five songs, all from the "Layla" album, and played on three other songs led by the ABB.

I found a Rolling Stone Magazine article about the 2009 Beacon Theatre concerts, with some quotes from ABB lead guitarist Derek Trucks about the two Clapton shows. Here are some excerpts.

The ABB had made it a yearly tradition to do a long run of concerts at the Beacon every year. Trucks said that "since I joined the band, there was a rumor that Eric would play." When he finally showed up in 2009, "there was a palpable buzz in the place - and in the band, like there was unfinished business. For the Allmans, in a sense, it was something to prove. And it happened in the best spirit. ... It was a magical night." Trucks said that during "In Memory of Elizabeth Reed" on March 20th, Clapton took a solo "that was a different side of him, that I hadn't seen. Where he normally would have gotten to his point, stayed and got out, he got in, stayed and realized he wasn't nearly finished. He kept plowing. There was a freedom and unhinged element to it that I really dug."

Derek Trucks Goes Behind the Allman Brothers’ Beacon Box Set – Rolling Stone

It's generally considered that Clapton collaboration on March 20th was the better one (something that the quote from Trucks above supports), so that's what I've included here. However, there was one song played by the ABB and Clapton on March 19th only, "Anyday." So I slipped that in after the track in which Clapton got introduced. Blues singer Susan Tedeschi also helped with the lead vocals on that song.

The entire performance here has been officially released. Normally, I don't post officially released stuff unless it's rare and/or I change or reorganize it in some important way. In this case, I'm doing it because this has only been available as part of the "Beacon Box," a box set containing no less than 47 CDs, with a cost of $500! Because of that, it seems very few people have this, or even know about it. 

Note, by the way, that key Allman Brothers Band member Dickey Betts isn't here, because he left the band around the year 2000. 

This album is an hour and 16 minutes long.

01 talk (Allman Brothers Band & Eric Clapton)
02 Anyday (Allman Brothers Band & Eric Clapton with Susan Tedeschi)
03 Key to the Highway (Allman Brothers Band & Eric Clapton)
04 Call It Stormy Monday (Allman Brothers Band & Eric Clapton)
05 Dreams (Allman Brothers Band & Eric Clapton)
06 Why Does Love Got to Be So Sad (Allman Brothers Band & Eric Clapton)
07 Little Wing (Allman Brothers Band & Eric Clapton)
08 In Memory of Elizabeth Reed [Instrumental] (Allman Brothers Band & Eric Clapton)
09 talk (Allman Brothers Band & Eric Clapton)
10 Layla (Allman Brothers Band & Eric Clapton)

https://pixeldrain.com/u/ME1HxaVK

alternate: 

https://bestfile.io/en/5nfzUHZSbwPsf2X/file

The cover photo shows the ABB and Clapton on March 19, 2009. Left to right: Gregg Allman, Jaimoe, Marc Quinones, Warren Haynes, Derek Trucks, Butch Trucks, and Eric Clapton.