Sunday, October 4, 2020

Janis Joplin - Honolulu International Center Arena, Honolulu, HI, 7-6-1970

I haven't published any of Janis Joplin's music until now. She's one of many big name musicians I haven't gotten to at all yet, because I don't want to have too many balls juggling in the air at once. But today, I was listening to the radio and it was mentioned that this was the exact 50th anniversary of Joplin's death, on October 4, 1970. I normally miss those kinds of anniversaries, but since I happened to catch one, I figured I'd post something from her.

This seems to be the best concert recording from her that hasn't been officially released. There's surprisingly little well recorded live material from her, especially considering what a big star she was in the last few years of her life, and one that was well known for her exciting concert performances. There are only three official live albums, plus some other live material here and there.

This bootleg, I'm happy to say, is a soundboard. The sound quality is generally pretty good, but it's not without its flaws. I've tried to fix those flaws the best I could, and I think I succeeded most of the time, but not all the time. It was a long slog getting this ready to post, because I had to fix little things with almost every song. For instance, removing little bursts of feedback, or patching in some audience noise when the crowd reaction faded too fast, or boosting the volume of Joplin's comments between songs. I had to do a lot of volume adjustment in particular. Many songs got louder or quieter for long stretches, for no particular reason. The good thing is that's an easy thing to fix with no loss of sound quality.

But there were some issues like that I couldn't entirely fix. Especially for the last couple of songs, the volume sometimes wobbles up and down, as if someone was turning a volume knob up and down every couple of seconds. Luckily, it's not that noticeable during a song, and I did some extra editing to make it less noticeable between songs.

One nice thing about the concert is that it shows a lot of spirit of the times, and Joplin's personality in particular. It's a good guess that she was drunk, but she sang as well as usual. The crowd was especially rowdy too, with the emcee trying to calm down during the encore and at the end.

Another thing I like about this concert is that it came near the end of her life, during the time she was recording her classic album "Pearl," which wouldn't be released until after her death. Three songs are from that.

The concert is 54 minutes long, and appears to be complete.

01 talk (Janis Joplin)
02 Tell Mama (Janis Joplin)
03 talk (Janis Joplin)
04 Half Moon (Janis Joplin)
05 talk (Janis Joplin)
06 Move Over (Janis Joplin)
07 talk (Janis Joplin)
08 Maybe (Janis Joplin)
09 Summertime (Janis Joplin)
10 talk (Janis Joplin)
11 Get It while You Can (Janis Joplin)
12 Kozmic Blues (Janis Joplin)
13 talk (Janis Joplin)
14 Piece of My Heart (Janis Joplin)

https://www.upload.ee/files/15905244/JanisJ_1970c_HonluluInternationalCenterArena__7-6-1970_atse.zip.html

The cover art photo comes for her appearance on the Dick Cavett Show on August 5, 1970.

Friday, October 2, 2020

Various Artists - Rock Trump Out, Volumes 1 and 2 (2015-2020)

I'm a very politically progressive person. I'm trying hard to keep this blog focused just on the music. But with the critically important November 2020 presidential election coming up, I don't think I'll be able to keep entirely quiet about politics. Needless to say, I hope you all vote for Joe Biden! As Bernie Sanders put it recently, "This is not just an election between Donald Trump and Joe Biden. This is an election between Donald Trump and democracy."

I've put together a collection of songs that combines my political feelings with my love of music. All the songs are either about Trump or at least they're Trump adjacent, addressing the dire situation the country is in due to the Trump presidency. I found so many songs that I've made two albums out of them that are about an hour long each. But, and this is key, these are all GOOD songs that stand on their own musically. I culled them down from a larger bunch based both on topic relevance and musical quality. So if you're feeling frustrated about the Trump presidency and want something to help motivate you to work for his defeat while also entertaining you, this is for you.

Whereas if you're a Trump supporter, you're probably going to skip this. If you post pro-Trump comments here, be warned I'm likely to delete them. Sorry. This is not a place for heated political arguments. If you're not into this, then please move on.

Also, there are NO song parodies here. A lot of those are entertaining, but that's an entirely different thing. All the songs here are serious, and a majority of them are done by big name musicians. 

I've split the songs into two albums. The first album's songs were all released between 2015 and 2018. The second album's songs date from 2018 until, well, right now.  One of them, the Ani DiFranco song, was released just two days ago as I write this. Within each album, I worked with a friend to sort the songs in a way that hopefully makes for a good musical flow.

In order for a song to be included, it had to be one that I liked. I'm not really a fan of rap or hip hop, so there's very little of that here, even though there have been some big anti-Trump songs in those genres. There are a couple that are rap influenced, especially the ones by the Prophets of Rage (made up of members of Public Enemy and Rage Against the Machine) and Janelle Monae. Still, if someone else put this together, they probably would have included more.

The title is "Rock Trump Out." The idea there is that we can rock while we kick Trump out on election day. The word "rock" is intentional because my musical tastes are based in classic rock, and I want these to be rocking albums. So I excluded some good anti-Trump songs that were good but too folky or country or the like to fit. I did include some soul and funk songs and the like, since those fit the upbeat mood.

I've looked around the Internet, and I haven't seen anyone else put a collection together like this, at least not that I could find. I'm sure there are some really good songs that fit the theme that I missed. If you know of any, please let me know and I may well add them in.

If you're someone who wants Trump voted out, please spread this to your friends and family and beyond. It's something that can lift spirits in these difficult times.

I'm almost done with my comments here, but I have a couple of interesting notes about a few songs. Believe it or not, the words to "Old Man Trump" were written by the famous folksinger Woody Guthrie, before he died in the 1960s! In his later years, he lived in an apartment building owned by Donald's father Fred Trump, who not surprisingly was a racist asshole like his son. It's interesting to note that Guthrie complained about the Trump family's bias against black people even back then!

The song "Fergus Laing" by Richard Thompson is another interesting case. Thompson wrote it about Trump before Trump began his run for president, and released it on album the same week Trump's campaign began! It seems Thompson must have been one step ahead of everyone else.

By the way, this is an example of a song that may not appear to have anything to do about Trump at first glance. (Thompson has confirmed in interviews that it is.) Many of the other songs are like that, where they're more subtle. But if you listen closely, the relevance will sink in. The two Sheryl Crow songs are good examples of that. They just sound like really catchy pop songs until you pay attention to the lyrics with Trump in mind. (By the way, Crow is the only musician to have more than one song here.)

I debated whether or not to include a song by Barbra freaking Streisand! Who knew she would ever release a pointed protest song about Trump? It doesn't fit the rocking theme, and I'm not a Streisand fan at all. But in the end it was too good and too relevant to leave out. I'm very surprised to say that.

There are all sorts of really great songs here, too many for me to single out by name. But I'd be curious to hear which ones you like the most or the least.

Normally, I would make different blog posts for the two albums that make up this project. But I've only made one post to make it easy for you to share the whole thing with others if you want to. Note though that there are two zip file links below, not one, so click on both. I've made covers for both albums too.

VOLUME 1:

01 That's What Makes Us Great (Bruce Springsteen & Joe Grushecky)
02 Old Man Trump (Ryan Harvey, Ani DiFranco & Tom Morello)
03 Justice (Dumpstaphunk with Trombone Shorty)
04 Hail to the Chief (Prophets of Rage)
05 Make America Great Again (Pussy Riot)
06 Wouldn't Want to Be like You (Sheryl Crow with Annie Clark)
07 Tin Foil Hat (Todd Rundgren with Donald Fagen)
08 Million Dollar Loan (Death Cab for Cutie)
09 Season of Change (Stone Foundation with Bettye LaVette)
10 Make This World (Lee Fields & the Expressions)
11 Can't You Tell (Aimee Mann)
12 What's He Gonna Say Today (Eric Bibb)
13 Is This the Life We Really Want (Roger Waters)
14 Fergus Laing (Richard Thompson)
15 Don't Lie to Me (Barbra Streisand)

VOLUME 2:

01 March March (Chicks)
02 Two Steps Forward (Kirk Fletcher)
03 Above the Law (O'Jays)
04 Shame (Tedeschi Trucks Band)
05 [Keep Mar-a-Lago But] I Want America Back (Eric Hirshberg)
06 Man without a Soul (Lucinda Williams)
07 What the Hell (Elvin Bishop & Charlie Musselwhite)
08 Hands Off (Joan Osborne)
09 Hung Out to Dry (Hoodoo Gurus)
10 Despite Repeated Warnings (Paul McCartney)
11 In the End (Sheryl Crow)
12 Turntables (Janelle Monae)
13 Do or Die (Ani DiFranco)
14 This Man (Robert Cray)
15 Vote That Fucker Out (Wreckless Eric & Amy Rigby)
16 Lookin' for a Leader 2020 (Neil Young)

NOTE: I've removed the download links, because I replaced this with a three album version that is better in every way. You can find that here:

https://albumsthatshouldexist.blogspot.com/2020/10/various-artists-rock-trump-out-volumes_24.html

I couldn't decide what to do for the album cover art. Then I had the idea to do a Google image search for the phrase "Kick Trump Out." I found a poster with that phrase in big letters made by someone named 4personnen. So I took that and changed "Kick" to "Rock," as well as adding more text at the bottom. I also changed the colors. Note how there's a change from red to blue from the first volume to the second one. Let's hope that's what happens with the election as well. :)

Stephen Stills - Bread and Roses Festival, Greek Theatre, Berkeley, CA, 9-4-1978

I just posted a concert from Joni Mitchell which took place at the Bread and Roses Festival on September 3, 1968. I only discovered that a few days ago. When I did, I thought about the name of the festival and the year, and I realized I had a Stephen Stills concert that also took place at the same festival in the same year. So as long as I was posting that one, I'm posting this one too.

In my opinion, this is the best acoustic concert recording from Stills' long career, at least that I know of. It's an excellent performance, excellent sound, and he plays lots of interesting songs instead of just the usual suspects. So if you're a Stephen Stills fan at all, you should give this a listen.

It was a three day festival. This is from the last day, and took place one day after the Joni Mitchell concert I just posted. Apparently, Stills wasn't scheduled to play, but one or more of the big names on the last day couldn't make it, so Stills was a last minute addition.

I believe the reason a recording of this has been bootlegged is because it was played live on the radio at the time. So that's why the sound is so good, though there's a bit of background hiss. 

For nearly all the songs, it's just Stills on guitar. But he's briefly joined by a harmonica player, then by a fiddle player. As I mentioned above, some of the songs were only rarely done by him, especially a few cover songs. Of special note is "Spanish Suite." In my opinion, it's a great original song by him, but for some inexplicable reason he never really did anything with it. A very different studio version wasn't released until 2005, though that recording was done in the late 1970s.

I made a few minor fixes to the recording. For the talking between songs, I generally boosted the volume of Stills' voice some. Also, for three songs near the end, the audience reaction faded out quickly. I patched in some more cheering from the ends to other songs to make those sound complete.

Finally, the last song, "Come On in My Kitchen," is a bonus song of sorts, because it comes from a different concert altogether, in 1979. But the sound and performance is so similar that it fits exactly in, in my opinion. It even works great as an extra encore. The previous song had backing vocals by the Persuasions (who were playing at the festival too). I'm not sure, but they might be backing him up on the bonus song too.

01 talk (Stephen Stills)
02 Love the One You're With (Stephen Stills)
03 Not Fade Away (Stephen Stills)
04 talk (Stephen Stills)
05 Spanish Suite [One Moment at a Time] (Stephen Stills)
06 Everybody's Talkin' (Stephen Stills)
07 4 + 20 (Stephen Stills)
08 talk (Stephen Stills)
09 Colorado (Stephen Stills)
10 talk (Stephen Stills)
11 Take Me Back to the Ohio Valley (Stephen Stills)
12 talk (Stephen Stills)
13 Jesus Gave Love Away for Free (Stephen Stills)
14 talk (Stephen Stills)
15 Fallen Eagle (Stephen Stills)
16 talk (Stephen Stills)
17 Ole Man Trouble (Stephen Stills)
18 Thoroughfare Gap (Stephen Stills)
19 Crossroads - You Can't Catch Me (Stephen Stills)
20 49 Bye Byes - For What It's Worth (Stephen Stills with the Persuasions)
21 Come On in My Kitchen (Stephen Stills)

https://www.upload.ee/files/15288180/StephenS_1978_BreadRsesFestivalGreekTheatreBrkeleyCA__9-4-1978_atse.zip.html

The cover art photo is from 1978, but it's from another concert. It's from a Crosby, Stills and Nash concert in San Francisco. I cropped it so only Stills was in the frame. For the logo at the bottom, I found that from a concert poster of the 1978 festival. I cropped out just the part I wanted, and added some text at the bottom.

Joni Mitchell - Bread and Roses Festival, Greek Theatre, Berkeley, CA, 9-3-1978

I have some other albums from Joni Mitchell that I plan on posting as I continue to move through her music career in a roughly chronological manner. But this is a short concert that I didn't even know existed, and I just discovered it a few days ago. I like it so much that I've moved it to the front of the line on what to post.

I love all of Mitchell's music from the start of her career through about the mid-1970s. Then she went in much more of a jazz direction, and I'm not much of a jazz fan. She had some missteps in the 1980s, but came back strongly in the 1990s. 

The reason I really like this concert is because she performed most of them in the solo acoustic format. (For two songs, she was assisted by Herbie Hancock on piano.) Her songwriting has always been top notch, so this is a rare opportunity to hear some of her late 1970s jazz songs done in the acoustic style from earlier in her career.

Her performance was part of the Bread and Roses Festival, a three-day music festivals with lots of big names. She actually gave performances on two different days, if not all three days. But only one was played live on the radio, giving us an excellent sounding recording. It's known she did a few other songs in her other performances during the festival, such as "Coyote," "Shadows and Light," and "Just like This Train." Hopefully, those will become publicly available someday. As it is, the concert is fairly short, only about 35 minutes long.

By the way, for the last song, she's joined by some of the other musicians playing at the festival as a singalong encore.

01 talk (Joni Mitchell)
02 Furry Sings the Blues (Joni Mitchell)
03 talk (Joni Mitchell)
04 The Dry Cleaner from Des Moines (Joni Mitchell)
05 talk (Joni Mitchell & Herbie Hancock)
06 A Chair in the Sky (Joni Mitchell & Herbie Hancock)
07 Goodbye Pork Pie Hat (Joni Mitchell & Herbie Hancock)
08 talk (Joni Mitchell)
09 The Wolf that Lives in Lindsey (Joni Mitchell)
10 The Circle Game (Joni Mitchell with the Persuasions, Tim Hardin, Tom Paxton & Odetta)

https://www.upload.ee/files/15256337/JoniMchl_1978_BreadandRsesFestivlGreekTheatreBerkeleyCA__9-3-1978_atse.zip.html

I'm happy to say that the cover art photo comes from the 1978 Bread and Roses Festival. Since she gave two of three performances, I'm not sure if it's from the exact day or not.

For the logo at the bottom, I found that from a concert poster of the 1978 festival. I cropped out just the part I wanted, and added some text at the bottom.

Brandi Carlile - Home Concerts 1: Maple Valley, WA, 4-8-2020 to 9-26-2020

What has Brandi Carlile been up to musically during the coronavirus pandemic? I haven't posted any of her music until now, but she's been very busy. She's had a whole series of home concerts where she has performed each of her studio albums from start to finish. The problem for me is that one has had to pay to get access to those. Other than that, she's only played the occasional song here and there. But I've collected those, and I finally had enough for a full 45-minute-long album.

All the songs here are performed acoustically, and without drums. For some of the songs it's just Carlile by herself. For others, she was backed by "the twins," Tim and Phil Hanseroth, who are her long-time musical collaborators.

Most of the songs are originals, and Carlile is a talented songwriter. There are a few covers: "A Change Is Gonna Come" by Sam Cooke, "Your Flag Decal Won’t Get You into Heaven Anymore" by John Prine, "I Won't Back Down" by Tom Petty, and "Mad World" by Tears for Fears.

Nothing here has been officially released, but the sound quality is very good throughout.

01 Summer’s End (Brandi Carlile)
02 Hello in There (Brandi Carlile)
03 talk (Brandi Carlile)
04 Looking Out (Brandi Carlile)
05 Crowded Table (Brandi Carlile)
06 Most of All (Brandi Carlile)
07 Keep Your Heart Young (Brandi Carlile)
08 A Change Is Gonna Come (Brandi Carlile & Gary Clark Jr.)
09 talk (Brandi Carlile)
10 Your Flag Decal Won’t Get You into Heaven Anymore (Brandi Carlile)
11 Most of All (Brandi Carlile)
12 The Joke (Brandi Carlile)
13 The Things I Regret (Brandi Carlile)
14 The Mother (Brandi Carlile)
15 I Won't Back Down (Brandi Carlile)
16 Poison and Wine (Kelly Clarkson & Brandi Carlile)
17 Mad World (Brandi Carlile)
18 The Eye (Brandi Carlile)

https://www.upload.ee/files/17362424/BRANDICRLLE2020HomeConcrts1MpleValleyWA__4-8-2020_to_9-26-2020_atse.zip.html

alternate:

https://pixeldrain.com/u/ce7KUFAS

The cover art photo was taken during one of her home concerts, on June 24, 2020.

Neil Finn - Home Concerts 8, Los Angeles, CA, 5-12-2020 to 6-6-2020

Sadly, this is the eighth and last of my collections of home concert performances from Neil Finn of Crowded House (and, lately, Fleetwood Mac). 

As I mentioned in my last post about him, for the first two months or so of the coronavirus lockdown, mostly March and April of 2020, he played home concerts of about half an hour to an hour nearly every single day. But as you can see by the dates on this album, he began doing a lot fewer by May, and then stopped altogether in June. Since then, he hasn't done any more. Maybe that'll change, but for now this is the end of this series.

The material is the same as the rest of the series. It's a mix of originals and covers, mostly done totally solo by Finn. One song, "Find Your Way Back Home," is a brand new song. He recently released a full band version with Stevie Nicks and Christine McVie of Fleetwood Mac helping on vocals.

The covers are "God Only Knows" by the Beach Boys, "Sexy Sadie" by the Beatles, "Fire and Rain" by James Taylor, and "Something" by the Beatles. "Something" actually was performed in late April 2020, but I missed including in on any earlier album. I had an alert commenter point it out to me recently, so I found it and included it here. I was tempted to redo one of the earlier albums with that one added in, but that album was long and it would have made it longer. This album is shorter than the others, so I just stuck it on the end here.

Three of the songs are repeats of songs on earlier albums in this series. Normally, I would skip the repeats, but I included them here because each of them were played on piano on these versions whereas the previous versions were acoustic guitar versions.

01 People Are like Suns [Piano Version] (Neil Finn)
02 More than One of You (Neil Finn)
03 Pour le Monde (Neil Finn)
04 Gentle Hum (Neil Finn)
05 Faster than Light (Neil Finn)
06 God Only Knows (Neil Finn)
07 Walking on the Spot [Piano Version] (Neil Finn)
08 Try Whistling This [Piano Version] (Neil Finn)
09 What's the Matter with You (Neil Finn)
10 Sexy Sadie (Neil Finn)
11 Fire and Rain (Neil Finn)
12 Find Your Way Back Home (Neil Finn)
13 Weather with You (Neil Finn)
14 I Feel Possessed (Neil Finn)
15 Something (Neil Finn with Elroy Finn)

https://www.upload.ee/files/17363168/NEILFNN2020HmeConcrts08LsAnglesCA__5-12-2020_to_6-6-2020_atse.zip.html

alternate:

https://pixeldrain.com/u/UMs8Wk5n

The cover art photo comes from early 2020, just before the pandemic hit. In the photo, he actually was hugging people on each side, but I made some minor edits in Photoshop to make it look like it was just him.

Wednesday, September 30, 2020

Elton John - BBC Sessions, Volume 3: Sounds for Saturday, BBC Studios, Elstree, Britain, 12-8-1971

Here's the third in my series of albums of Elton John at the BBC. This one is a lot easier to explain that the previous two, because all but the last song is from a single appearance, in the last month of 1971.

The main show here was called "Sounds for Saturday." It was performed in front of a small studio audience. Although the audio has never been released on album, you can find high quality videos of it on YouTube. The sound is great, and he talks some between most songs.

The last song, "All the Nasties," is from an appearance on the "Old Grey Whistle Test" BBC TV show, recorded just two days prior to the main show here. He also played "Tiny Dancer," but I didn't include it because a very similar version is included here from the main show.

This album is 51 minutes long.

01 Tiny Dancer (Elton John)
02 talk (Elton John)
03 Rotten Peaches (Elton John)
04 talk (Elton John)
05 Razor Face (Elton John)
06 talk (Elton John)
07 Holiday Inn (Elton John)
08 Indian Sunset (Elton John)
09 talk (Elton John)
10 Levon (Elton John)
11 talk (Elton John)
12 Madman Across the Water (Elton John)
13 Goodbye (Elton John)
14 All the Nasties (Elton John) 

https://www.upload.ee/files/15835568/EltonJn_1971_BBSessionsVolume3SoundsforSaturday__12-8-1971_atse.zip.html

The cover art photo comes from the exact concert in question, thanks to the videos available from it.

Sunday, September 27, 2020

Adele - Acoustic - Morning Becomes Eclectic, KCRW, Santa Monica, CA, 11-17-2008

There are a lot of so-called "divas" who can really belt out a song. But, in my opinion, Adele stands heads and shoulders above the typical diva by having lots more talent than just an impressive voice. A real test of musical talent is how you do in a solo acoustic format. Adele's music is more acoustic than most people realize, especially her first album, and she's capable playing the guitar. So she excels playing acoustic.

As far as I know, she's never played a full concert acoustically. The closest she's probably come that is publicly available and has great sound are two performances for the KCRW radio station in 2008. She was promoting the same album and played many of the same songs. So I used all the songs from the second appearance, and just the different ones for the first appearance. The four songs from the first appearance start this album.

The KCRW material is forty minutes long, and makes up the bulk of this album. She also has some entertaining talk between most of those songs, though she's usually brief. There was no crowd noise since it was all recorded live at the radio station studio. Sometimes, a guitar backs her so she can concentrate on singing (though she's fully capable of playing the guitar for all those songs, as you can see in some YouTube videos). Occasionally, the backing instrument is keyboards or piano, though it's usually guitar.

But I wanted to make this into the ultimate Adele acoustic album, as much as possible. So I've added five extra songs at the end. Four of those are from her second album, including the all-time classics "Rolling in the Deep" and "Someone like You." There's also a cover of the Cure hit "Lovesong" to go with the earlier cover of "Make You Feel My Love" by Bob Dylan for the only two cover songs here.

Altogether, the album is an hour and two minutes long.

As you've probably noticed if you follow this blog, I'm not a fan of most of the musical mega-stars from the last couple of decades. But Adele is the real deal. If you're not that familiar with her, this is a good place to start.

01 Crazy for You (Adele)
02 talk (Adele)
03 Melt My Heart to Stone (Adele)
04 talk (Adele)
05 Make You Feel My Love (Adele)
06 talk (Adele)
07 That's It, I Quit, I'm Moving On (Adele)
08 Daydreamer (Adele)
09 talk (Adele)
10 Right as Rain (Adele)
11 talk (Adele)
12 Hometown Glory (Adele)
13 talk (Adele)
14 Fool that I Am (Adele)
15 First Love (Adele)
16 talk (Adele)
17 Cold Shoulder (Adele)
18 talk (Adele)
19 My Shame (Adele)
20 talk (Adele)
21 Chasing Pavements (Adele)
22 Lovesong (Adele)
23 Rolling in the Deep (Adele)
24 Turning Tables (Adele)
25 Don't You Remember (Adele)
26 Someone like You (Adele)

https://www.upload.ee/files/15123390/Adel_2008_AcousticMrningBecomesEclecticKCRW__11-17-2008_atse.zip.html

The cover art is a photo of Adele in concert in 2008. I don't know the exact date or location.

Liz Phair - XPNFEST Weekend, Manhattan Beach, CA, 7-26-2020

So far, I've only posted one Liz Phair album. I plan to continue moving forward through her career chronologically. But first, here's something relatively new, from July 2020.

What's Phair been up to doing the coronavirus pandemic? For a long time, there was no sign of any musical activity, She completely finished the recording of a new album, her first one in years, but its release has been postponed until 2021. She didn't do any home concerts at all that I could see, not even a single song.

Until this concert. She played a 22-minute set, just with her on acoustic guitar plus an extra guitarist. Most of the songs are originals from her earlier albums. However, she played "Good Side," a single release from last year that I think will be on her new album. She finished with "Soberish," a song she's never played in public before. It'll be the title cut of her new album. Both new songs sound quite good.

Because the show is so short, I've added two extra songs at the beginning. These actually come from very late 2019, before the pandemic. But you wouldn't know it wasn't from the same concert. They were recorded live for a radio station, with the exact same two guitar instrumentation.

I've also added an extra song at the end, from an even more recent single song home concert performance. It's a cover of the Tears for Fears hit "Everybody Wants to Rule the World." This has a full band backing, with the music sounding so much like the Tears for Fears version that it's a bit uncanny.

Even with the extra songs, this is still a short album, at 33 minutes. If she does one or two more short home concert performances, I'll add that to the end.

01 Divorce Song (Liz Phair)
02 Why Can't I (Liz Phair)
03 6'1 (Liz Phair)
04 talk (Liz Phair)
05 Mesmerizing (Liz Phair)
06 talk (Liz Phair)
07 Good Side (Liz Phair)
08 talk (Liz Phair)
09 Polyester Bride (Liz Phair)
10 talk (Liz Phair)
11 Explain It to Me (Liz Phair)
12 talk (Liz Phair)
13 Soberish (Liz Phair)
14 Everybody Wants to Rule the World (Liz Phair)

https://www.upload.ee/files/15262395/LizPh_2020_XPNFESTWeekndManhattnBeachCA__7-26-2020_atse.zip.html

I could have used a pretty decent screenshot from the main concert included here. But I prefer a screenshot I took from the radio station appearance that makes up the first two songs.

Saturday, September 26, 2020

Neil Finn - Home Concerts 7, Los Angeles, CA, 4-22-2020 to 4-27-2020

As a  reminder, Neil Finn is the main singer and songwriter for the band Crowded House, and now he's a part of Fleetwood Mac. For the first couple of months of the coronavirus pandemic, Finn was a home concert maniac. He played a home concert nearly every single day, and then made them available for free at his website: https://www.neilfinn.com/fangradio

I don't know what happened, but he began doing them less and less, and then seemingly stopped altogether. The last home concert he posted was in early June 2020. He mentioned working on a new album, so maybe that's still taking all his time.

I previously posted six albums of his home concert material. But I waited a long time before posting any more, because I wasn't sure how to organize it. If he did more home concerts, then I would have to shuffle things around. Since it's been so long since his last home concert, I'm going to post the rest of what I have. It happens to nicely fit on two albums. This one is 54 minutes long, and the one still to come is 45 minutes long.

As I've previously mentioned, Finn has played both acoustic and full band home concerts. I've focused entirely on the acoustic ones, because I find that more interesting. He also does a mix of originals from his Split Enz, Crowded House, and solo phases of his career, plus covers. This is more of that exact same good stuff.

The notable covers this time are "When Doves Cry" by Prince, "Here, There and Everywhere" by the Beatles, "Nobody's Fault but My Own" by Beck, "You Send Me" by Sam Cooke, and "Happy Together" by the Turtles. There are some other song snippets and repeats of songs he did in earlier home concerts and the like that I left out.

01 When Doves Cry (Neil Finn)
02 Fall at Your Feet (Neil Finn)
03 Here, There and Everywhere (Neil Finn)
04 Carried Away (Neil Finn)
05 True Colours (Neil Finn)
06 Pour le Monde (Neil Finn)
07 Nobody's Fault but My Own (Neil Finn)
08 Nobody Wants To (Neil Finn)
09 You Send Me (Neil Finn)
10 You Are the One to Make Me Cry (Neil Finn)
11 Happy Together (Neil Finn)
12 Lester (Neil Finn)
13 Pineapple Head (Neil Finn)
14 Distant Sun (Neil Finn)
15 Astro (Neil Finn)
16 Dirty Creature - You Sexy Thing (Neil Finn)
17 People Are like Suns (Neil Finn)
18 Recurring Dream (Neil Finn)

https://www.upload.ee/files/17363153/NEILFNN2020HmeConcrts07LsAnglesCA__4-22-2020_to_4-27-2020_atse.zip.html

alternate:

https://pixeldrain.com/u/A1PTb2jc

Finn posted a YouTube video of him playing the version of "When Doves Cry" that starts this album. So I took a screenshot from that video for the cover art photo.

Yet More on Vitamin D

I try to keep the focus here on music. But I've been posting from time to time about the coronavirus and vitamin D, since I see a baffling lack of attention from the media and politicians about it. Everybody's talking about a possible vaccine. But, in a sense, the vaccine is already here, and it's called vitamin D. 

Multiple studies now show that it's effective against the vaccine. This new article I'm linking to describes research where having a sufficient level of vitamin D cuts the chance of getting the coronavirus by 54%, and then cuts the chance of dying if you get it by another 51%. A vaccine, if and when it comes, may not be much better than that. The FDA has already indicated they're willing to approve a vaccine that's only 50% effective.

https://news.sky.com/story/amp/coronavirus-vitamin-d-reduces-infection-and-impact-of-covid-19-studies-find-12081132

Furthermore, a significant percentage of people have vitamin D deficiency, especially those who don't spend a lot of time in the sun. So I don't understand why medical professionals aren't pushing taking vitamin D regularly as much as they push social distancing and wearing masks. The virus is at a relative lull now in the US and many other countries, but it's very likely to surge back in the cold winter months, so it's more important than ever to take care. Oh, and vitamin D helps against other viruses too. Seems like taking it is a no-brainer to me.

Anyway, back to the music.

Sam Phillips - Variety Playhouse, Atlanta, GA, 7-25-1994

Have you even heard of Sam Phillips? Unfortunately, most people haven't. I think her music is really good, especially her poppy phase from the late 1980s through the 1990s. 

She's had a strange career. She started out as Leslie Phillips, doing Christian music. But after releasing a few albums like that, she changed her name to Sam and changed her musical style, almost entirely dropping the Christian aspect. Her new style was highly commercial, in my opinion, very catchy and Beatlesque, and with her writing all of it. But it didn't sell well at all, and she remained obscure. At the start of the 2000s, she switched styles again, going for a more sedate and stripped down sound.

Personally, her 1994 album "Martinis and Bikinis" is my favorite. It's a five-star album in my book, for sure. I would post that here, except I assume it's still in print. So instead I'm posting this concert. It's from the supporting tour for that album, and the vast majority of the songs from it are played, as well as some of the best songs from her previous album (though with the "Leslie Phillips" years forgotten). 

There are very few Sam Phillips bootlegs, since she'd never been that popular. But this is an excellent soundboard. I made a few minor fixes. For a couple of songs, such as "The Turning" and "Same Rain," the volume sometimes dropped down for no reason, so I balanced those spots to match the rest of the song. Also, because it's a soundboard with very little crowd noise, it sounded odd to me when each song ended and barely any audience reaction could be heard. So I boosted the volume of the clapping and cheering. It's still rather quiet, but at least now you don't have to strain to hear it.

This concert is an hour and two minutes long. Most of the songs are played with a full band. But a few, including the first one, are just done acoustically.

If you like this, definitely check "Martinis and Bikinis" too. Then also check out "The Turning," The Indescribable Wow," "Cruel Inventions," and her other albums.

Anyway, if you're looking for some lost gems, check this out.

01 talk (Sam Phillips)
02 The Turning (Sam Phillips)
03 Same Rain (Sam Phillips)
04 talk (Sam Phillips)
05 Signposts (Sam Phillips)
06 Circle of Fire (Sam Phillips)
07 talk (Sam Phillips)
08 Baby I Can't Please You (Sam Phillips)
09 Holding On to the Earth (Sam Phillips)
10 talk (Sam Phillips)
11 Strawberry Road (Sam Phillips)
12 talk (Sam Phillips)
13 Same Changes (Sam Phillips)
14 If I Fall (Sam Phillips)
15 Raised on Promises (Sam Phillips)
16 talk (Sam Phillips)
17 Fighting with Fire (Sam Phillips)
18 talk (Sam Phillips)
19 I Need Love (Sam Phillips)
20 Wheel of the Broken Voice (Sam Phillips)
21 Lying (Sam Phillips)
22 talk (Sam Phillips)
23 Private Storm (Sam Phillips)
24 Answers Don't Come Easy (Sam Phillips)

https://www.upload.ee/files/15249590/SamPhps_1994_VarietyPlyhouseAtlantaGA__7-25-1994_atse.zip.html

It's shocking to me how few photos I can find of Sam Phillips in the 1990s. I found a video of her playing on a song on TV in 1994, but it was rather low-res. So instead of using a screenshot from that, I prefer this photo of a concert from 1989. She's blonde, but I like how the red lighting makes it look like she has bright red hair and even reddish skin.

Wednesday, September 23, 2020

Duffy - Rain on Your Parade - Non-Album Tracks (2006)

Duffy has had a very strange musical career. She had a huge year in 2008. Her debut album "Rockferry" was the best selling album in Britain that year. But her next album, "Endlessly" in 2010, was a critical and commercial disappointment, and she hasn't released another album since then, apparently due to a sexual trauma in the early 2010s that totally derailed her career.

Personally, I really like the "Rockferry" album, but I think "Endlessly" is best forgotten. However, it turns out she has a de facto second album of all original material that's much, much better. Like Oasis with their first couple of albums, she blew lots of very good songs on B-sides that few people listened to. If one puts together all the "Rockferry" related B-sides, there's exactly enough songs for an album that's very much in the "Rockferry" style, and is nearly as good. This is that album.

The first song was a significant hit for her. It, plus the next three songs, were released as bonus tracks to a deluxe version of "Rockferry." All the other songs are B-sides, except for "Enough Love" and "Smoke without Fire," which were released first on movie soundtracks. 

In my opinion, "Endlessly" was a mistake, with terrible production that tried to make her sound like all the other generic pop crap on the radio, overwhelming the soulful singing that makes her special. It's much better to consider this her real second album. I think it is impressive that she wrote or co-wrote all the songs. Hopefully someday she'll fully reconnect with her musical mojo and put out more music like this and "Rockferry."

01 Rain on Your Parade (Duffy)
02 Fool for You (Duffy)
03 Stop (Duffy)
04 Breaking My Own Heart (Duffy)
05 Oh Boy (Duffy)
06 Save It for Your Prayers (Duffy)
07 Tomorrow (Duffy)
08 Loving You (Duffy)
09 Put It in Perspective (Duffy)
10 Big Flame (Duffy)
11 Enough Love (Duffy)
12 Frame Me (Duffy)
13 Smoke without Fire (Duffy)

https://www.upload.ee/files/15110776/Duff_2008_RainonYurParade_atse.zip.html

The album cover photo is a promotional photo from 2008. For the next of both her name and the album title, I exactly imitated the text on the cover of the "Rain on Your Parade" single. I originally wanted to use that single cover for the cover here, but I could only find blurry, low quality versions. I prefer this photo anyway.

Stephen Stills and Graham Nash, plus the Grateful Dead with Stephen Stills - The Winterland, San Francisco, CA, 10-25-1969

This is a very curious bootleg. I only found out it existed today, and I was so psyched about it that I posted it straight away. I didn't know about it because it only emerged in the last year or so. It's an excellent soundboard of an excellent performance. The main downside is that it's rather short.

Crosby, Stills and Nash released their first album, simply called "Crosby, Stills and Nash," in May 1969. By October 1969, they were well into recording their second album with Neil Young, which would turn out to be called "Deja Vu." I'm sure, Crosby, Stills, Nash and Young all either lived near San Francisco at the time or spent a lot of time there. On this night, October 25, 1969, both the Grateful Dead and Jefferson Airplane were going to play at the Winterland. One or more of the opening bands had to cancel, and Stephen Stills and Graham Nash were there. So they got up and performed a short acoustic set just as a duo, without any preparation whatsoever.

This is virtually the only time Stills and Nash appeared on stage as a duo, without David Crosby. (They also did about three concerts together in the early 1980s, when Crosby was flirting with death due to his drug use.)

It's fascinating to hear what the two of them came up with on stage at the spur of the moment. As they stated at the outset, their intention was to try out some new songs, and that's just what they did. Nash wanted to start out with "Teach Your Children." This could well be the very first time that classic song was sung in public. (Setlist.fm claims it was played four times with CSNY in 1969, but all of them were after this.) However, after introducing the song, Nash briefly left the stage to get something to drink, so Stills filled the time with a cover of the blues classic "Crossroads." Only then did they get around to doing "Teach Your Children" together.

"How Have You Been," a song written by John Sebastian of the Lovin' Spoonful, followed. Given that Stills and Nash worked out harmonies for it, and there's a studio outtake version of it, it's likely this song was strongly considered to go on "Deja Vu." In fact, CSN briefly toyed with having Sebastian join their band before settling on Neil Young instead.

The next song, "Lonesome Valley," is a real treat, because no version of CSN or any variation thereof has ever known to have sung the song. It was originally done by Woody Guthrie.

The short Stills and Nash concert ended with "Black Queen." Like "Crossroads," it was an acoustic guitar showcase for Stills.

That's the end of the short set they did together, only 22 minutes long. (By the way, the man welcoming them on and off the stage is Bill Graham.)

But that's not the end of this album. It turns out that when the Grateful Dead played their set later that night, Stills joined them for one song, "Turn On Your Lovelight." When the Dead played that cover song, it was always was sung by Ron "Pigpen" McKernan, and that's the case here. But Stills added backing vocals as well as helping with lead guitar. If you listen carefully, you can definitely hear his voice at times.

Since this version of "Lovelight" is over 20 minutes long, it almost doubled the length of this album, all by itself. By the way, McKernan's voice was very low in the mix. It was mostly in one stereo channel, so I boosted the volume of that channel and lowered the volume of the other channel. That helps, but it's still somewhat low. I didn't want to overdo things by making one channel much louder than the other.

That's the end of the material from the Winterland show. But Stills made one more guest appearance with the Grateful Dead a couple of months later. That also is available on a soundboard bootleg, and it's a nice performance, so I've added it in as a quasi-bonus track. It's the song "Black Queen," which was played in the Winterland show. But that had been Stills alone on his acoustic guitar. This drastically different version was played by all of the Grateful Dead, yet with Stills singing lead vocals as well as playing more lead guitar. Apparently, Stills wrote the song with the intention of giving it to the Dead to record, but they never did. However, they learned it well enough to back him up. 

If you include that last song from a different concert, this album is 55 minutes long. It's kind of a strange beast, half acoustic with Stills and Nash, and half electric with Stills and the Dead. But I think it's an interesting album just the same that's a "must have" for any fan of CSN in their glory years.

01 talk (Stephen Stills & Graham Nash)
02 Crossroads (Stephen Stills & Graham Nash)
03 talk (Stephen Stills & Graham Nash)
04 Teach Your Children (Stephen Stills & Graham Nash)
05 talk (Stephen Stills & Graham Nash)
06 How Have You Been (Stephen Stills & Graham Nash)
07 talk (Stephen Stills & Graham Nash)
08 Lonesome Valley (Stephen Stills & Graham Nash)
09 talk (Stephen Stills & Graham Nash)
10 Black Queen (Stephen Stills & Graham Nash)
11 talk (Stephen Stills & Graham Nash)
12 Turn On Your Love Light (Grateful Dead with Stephen Stills)
13 Black Queen (Grateful Dead with Stephen Stills)

https://www.upload.ee/files/17363397/STEPHNSTLLSNSH1969WnterlndSnFrncscoCA__10-25-1969_atse.zip.html

alternate:

https://pixeldrain.com/u/cMFJ9523

I have no idea when or where the cover art photo of Stills and Nash was taken. But judging by their appearance, I think it's a safe bet it's from either 1969 or 1970. If anyone knows, please let me know. It might be from the famous Woodstock concert. I moved Stills a little bit closer to Nash so I could make their heads larger.

Elton John - BBC Sessions, Volume 2: 1970

I got some good comments in response to posting the first in my series of Elton John's albums of his BBC performances. So here's the second one already.

The album mostly consists of two BBC appearances, one from April 4, 1970 and the other from June 25, 1970. The April one actually comes one month before the BBC performance that makes up the vast majority of the first album in this series. But I wanted to keep each of the appearances together, and it worked out best if I arranged them this way.

The first four songs are from the April 4th appearance. The next song ("Border Song") is from a different appearance that took place just one day later. The three songs after that are from the June 25th appearance. The album then ends with one song from August 1970 and one from March 1971.

Once again, with these BBC performances, it's either feast or famine. Meaning we either have the song in great quality, or we don't have it publicly available at all. Six of the songs here have been released as bonus tracks to deluxe versions of his albums "Elton John" and "Tumbleweed Connection." The rest remain unreleased, but sound just as good, in my opinion. The April 4th and June 25th appearances are complete and in the correct order. But there were more songs played at the April 5th and August appearances that haven't even leaked to bootlegs.

I have two bonus tracks this time. Normally, I include a song as a bonus track due to borderline sound quality: it's not good enough as the rest, but it's not so bad to be totally discarded. In this case, both of the bonus tracks sound great. One, "Take Me to the Pilot," has even been officially released on one of those deluxe editions. The only reason they're bonus tracks is because they're other versions of the same songs elsewhere on the album. As I've mentioned before, I hate having two versions of the same song on one album, unless there's something drastically different about them.

I included the unreleased version of "Take Me to the Pilot" over the officially released bonus track one because I thought it's more different from the album version, and thus more interesting. It has more of a gospel feel, with a bigger role for the backing vocals.

01 Take Me to the Pilot (Elton John)
02 My Father's Gun (Elton John)
03 Your Song (Elton John)
04 Ballad of a Well-Known Gun (Elton John)
05 Border Song [Holy Moses] (Elton John with Hookfoot)
06 Country Comfort (Elton John)
07 Amoreena (Elton John)
08 Burn Down the Mission (Elton John)
09 Bad Side of the Moon (Elton John)
10 The King Must Die (Elton John)

Border Song [Holy Moses] (Elton John)
Take Me to the Pilot (Elton John)

https://www.upload.ee/files/15904984/EltonJn_1970_BBSessionsVolume2_atse.zip.html

The cover art photo comes from an appearance by Elton John at "Top of the Pops" in 1971. Although "Top of the Pops" was a BBC TV show, I haven't included any songs from his appearances on that show because they were always lip-synced. 

Sunday, September 20, 2020

Elton John - BBC Sessions, Volume 1: 1968-1970

There's some good news for Elton John fans. He's releasing an archival box set in November 2020 called "Elton: Jewel Box." This eight CD collection will include three CDs of previously unreleased early demos from 1967 to 1971, and two more CDs of hard-to-find B-sides. But unfortunately what won't be included at all is any of his BBC performances. 

So I'm going to try to make up for that by posting a series of BBC albums. I've found seven albums of BBC material just for the years 1968 to 1976, with four of them being full concerts. I have to admit I'm still not a huge Elton John fan, although I've been getting into his stuff more lately. But I'm particularly impressed by his BBC performances. I think they're often better than the studio versions.

John performed for the BBC twice in 1968 and three times in 1969, playing 18 songs (some of them repeats). This is surprising, because he wouldn't make it to any charts until 1970. Unfortunately, nearly all of these early performances are lost, or at least not currently publicly available. Only two songs are known, a version of "Lady Samantha" from 1968 and a version of "Sails" from 1969. I like both of these performances a lot more than the studio versions.

He played for the BBC even more in 1970, appearing six different times and playing multiple songs each time. Unfortunately, most of those performances are lost or unavailable too. But one show that exists in full is his appearance on May 22, 1970. I've included all of it, including the talking between songs.

With Elton John and his early BBC performances, it's either feast or famine. Meaning, either the recording isn't available at all, or it is available and sounds great. I think that's because these particular performances on this album were all replayed by the BBC many years later. So these aren't copies of copies of copies recorded off the radio back in 1970.

About 30 seconds of instrumental music at the start of "Lady Samantha" was missing due to a BBC DJ talking over it. But I was able to find that section from a podcast, with the rest of the song missing or talked over! I put the two parts together to have the full song. "Sails" also had DJ chatter over the intro, but I was able to wipe that out using X-Minus sound editing software.

This album is rather short, at only 34 minutes. But hopefully it'll grow longer if and when more of his early BBC appearances emerge.

01 Lady Samantha [Edit] (Elton John)
02 Sails [Edit] (Elton John)
03 Your Song (Elton John)
04 Border Song [Holy Moses] (Elton John)
05 talk (Elton John)
06 Sixty Years On (Elton John)
07 Take Me to the Pilot (Elton John)
08 talk (Elton John)
09 The Greatest Discovery (Elton John)
10 I Need You to Turn To (Elton John)
11 talk (Elton John)
12 Burn Down the Mission (Elton John)

https://www.upload.ee/files/15904970/EltonJn_1968-1970_BBSessionsVolume1_atse.zip.html

Videos for all of the songs from the 1970 show here are available on YouTube. I took a screenshot from one of them for the cover art photo.

Friday, September 18, 2020

Norah Jones - Home Concerts 7, New York City, 6-25-2020 to 7-2-2020

Norah Jones is tireless. She's been holding her weekly home concerts once a week with the regularity of a Swiss watch. It's been about six months, and I don't think she's missed one yet. I've been falling behind in posting these. This is number seven, but I already have material for eleven. So here at least is a start in getting caught up.

The main reason I've delayed posting this is because on July 10, 2020, instead of posting her home concert on YouTube as usual, she only made it available through something called "Amazon Live." They posted it publicly, but only for a few days, and I missed it. I was hoping to add that to this. But I eventually realized that three of the songs she played then she'd played at other home concerts. So I'm really only missing the song "Flame Twin," and she'll probably play that one in a home concert eventually. Still, if anyone has that "Amazon Live" recording, please let me know. 

This album is a bit short, at only 37 minutes. But I'd prefer not to split up her weekly home concerts, and adding four or so songs would make it longer than usual. 

In terms of musical content and sound quality, this is more of the same good stuff, like the other albums in this home concerts series. The songs are all Norah Jones originals, or covers that she's done on album (such as "The Grass Is Blue," originally by Dolly Parton). Two of the songs, "Heaven Above" and "Say No More," are from her 2020 album, and have never been played live for the public before.

01 The Grass Is Blue (Norah Jones)
02 Something Is Calling You (Norah Jones)
03 talk (Norah Jones)
04 Heaven Above (Norah Jones)
05 I've Got to See You Again (Norah Jones)
06 Wintertime (Norah Jones)
07 Take It Back (Norah Jones)
08 Say No More (Norah Jones)
09 I'll Be Gone (Norah Jones)
10 talk (Norah Jones)

https://www.upload.ee/files/15634106/NorahJ_2020_HomeCncerts7__6-25-2020_to_7-2-2020_atse.zip.html

The cover art photo is a screenshot taken from the first of the two home concerts here.

Thursday, September 17, 2020

U2 - Pop - Alternate Version (1997)

Here's something that might be controversial, though I hope not. In short, I've made a lot of edits and changes to U2's "Pop" album. This is a pretty lengthy write-up explaining and justifying my changes. If you're interested in the details please read on, otherwise skip to the last two paragraphs.

I was a big U2 fan since their "War" album in 1983. I loved everything they did until their "Pop" album in 1997. That one left me feeling very disappointed. To this day, many U2 fans either love or hate "Pop." If you look at an average of fan ratings on rateyourmusic.com, it gets a much lower rating than all the band's earlier albums. Even the members of U2 had issues with it. They felt they had to rush finishing it in order to start a tour on time. Several years later, they redid a few of the songs to try to improve on them.

The band tried to be experimental with the album, while attempting to explore current electronic dance sounds.  But I don't think that's why I had such issues with the album. I liked all of their experimental stuff from earlier in the 1990s, including their often overlooked "Original Soundtracks 1" album from 1995. I wasn't prone to like their electronic dance style, but to be frank there isn't that much of that on the album, and what was there wasn't a problem for me.

Instead, I think the album suffers from several problems. One is that some of the songs just aren't up to U2's previously high standards. But two, that's compounded by the fact that many of the songs are overly long. The 1990s were a time of what I call "album bloat." Albums had been limited to about 50 minutes due to limitations of vinyl records. But when CDs became the dominant format, albums could be 70 or even 80 minutes long. In my opinion, bands stopped editing themselves as much as before, because they didn't have to. "Pop" suffers from that, with most of the songs four or five minutes long, when they didn't always merit that length. Finally, the songs didn't fully jell in the recording studio. Once the band went on tour for a couple of months, many of the arrangements of the songs were changed and improved. 

So this is my attempt to improve "Pop." On this blog, I've sometimes posted my improvements of other albums by removing some songs and adding others. I did that with "Cahoots" by the Band, for example. But for this album, I decided I wanted to improve it as much as possible without changing what songs were on it, or even the song order. Instead, I've made changes to every song but one, and I often made drastic changes.

In my opinion, my "secret weapon" for overhauling this album is a bootleg of the band playing a concert in Miami in late 1997. I listened to all the most popular soundboard bootlegs from the "Pop" tour, as well as the official (but somewhat obscure) live album "Hasta la Vista Baby! U2 Live from Mexico City." The problem with all of those for my purposes is that they contain lots of audience noise. But the Miami soundboard bootleg is different, with almost no audience noise at all. So I could use performances from that essentially as studio versions, better than the official album versions since the songs were honed from playing them at many live concerts.

Thus, I completely replaced the album versions with the live Miami versions for "Mofo," "Miami," "If You Wear that Velvet Dress," and part of "Wake Up, Dead Man." I carefully edited the songs to make sure no crowd noise could be heard. By the way, the Miami version of "If You Wear that Velvet Dress" is half as long as the album version, two-and-a-half minutes instead of five. I think the song is much improved in that shorter format.

I would have used the Miami bootleg version of "Do You Feel Loved" as well, except for the fact that the song was dropped from their set list by the time the tour reached Miami. So instead I used the same approach with a bootleg from a show in Las Vegas near the start of the tour. The sound quality isn't as excellent as the Miami one, but it was close. 

For another song, "Please," I was able to use the version from the "Please: PopMart Live" EP. That one was recorded at a concert in Rotterdam, Netherlands. The sound quality on that version is great, and had virtually no crowd noise until the song was over, allowing me to easily edit that out.2

As the tour went on, the band kept releasing singles from the album. Sometimes, they recorded the songs for the single versions, using the new, superior arrangements they had honed in concert. That's why I've used the single version of "Last Night on Earth." I also used the single version of "If God Will Send His Angels." In my opinion, that was one of the weaker songs on the album. But one remixed single version, called the "Grand Jury Mix," changed the song significantly by fixing the plodding pace with a more lively drumbeat. 

Of the redone versions the band did a couple of years later, for their best of collection released in 2000, I only used two, for "Discotheque" and "Gone." Those versions also were very influenced by the way the songs evolved in concert. So it would be much like using the versions from the Miami bootleg, except with even better sound quality.

That leaves just two songs, "The Playboy Mansion" and "Staring at the Sun." "The Playboy Mansion" was never played in concert, and I couldn't find any alternate versions of it anywhere, so I was stuck with the album version. 

"Staring at the Sun" though is a complicated case. When the band tried playing it in concert, they soon discovered that the album version didn't go over well. The resorted to playing a very different acoustic version, with just Bono singing and The Edge on guitar. I like this version much better. But the problem is that because it's quiet and acoustic, the crowd noises could often be heard during the song, even with the relatively pristine Miami bootleg version. I realized the best acoustic version comes from a 2011 concert where just Bono and The Edge played. Unlike most U2 concerts, which are played in vast stadiums, this one was done for a very small audience, so the audience noise wasn't much of a problem. Also, there were some string instruments backing them up. Normally, I'm weary of orchestral arrangements, but this was subtle and well done. I consider it the best version of the song by far, so I've used it, even though it comes from 2011 much later than the others.

So that explains the sourcing of all the songs. But wait, there's more! Because in some cases, I edited the songs down. As I'd mentioned, I think maybe the biggest problem with the original album was the bloat. I've cut the run time from 60 minutes to 48 minutes mostly by making edits here and there. One example is "Discotheque." The original album version, the redone version, and the live versions all have the song start with a slow build up that goes on for over a minute before the main riff comes in. I think the songs works much better with the riff right at the very start, so I cut all the slow build-up.

I made another drastic edit for "Wake Up Dead Man." The album version is five minutes long. But in concert, the band played a version that's only two minutes long. I like that version much better. Obviously, the band realized the five-minute version was bloated and problematic, or they wouldn't have drastically cut it down in concert. So I wanted to use the live version. But, like "Staring at the Sun," because it's a quiet acoustic song, even a little bit of crowd noise can mar the sound quality. So I used the first minute and a half of the album version. Then I switched to the Miami bootleg version for the last 30 seconds, where the song winds down instead of going into a more rocking section. Luckily, that section had almost no crowd noise, and it fits in well with the studio album section.

I made other edits here and there. For instance, I lopped off about a minute from "Do You Feel Loved" that was just repetition of the chorus chords near the end of the song. On "Gone," although I used the redone version from 2000, I liked how Bono said "Going, going, gone" near the beginning of the song in the live version from Miami. So I added that in. By contrast, for the song "Mofo," the Miami version had a couple gratuitous crowd-pleasing mentions of the word "Miami" in the song, so I carefully edited those out. There are some other edits here and there, most of them trying to cut out bloat.

The bottom line is that, after all these changes, I think this is a much stronger album. For one thing, it's stream-lined, with 12 minutes of bloat removed without losing anything important. For another, these versions generally are less electronic and experimental and more in line with the classic U2 rocking sound. That's what worked best in concert, because that's the band is best at.

I won't be surprised if some U2 fans complain that I butchered and mutilated the album. If you're very familiar with it, these changes could sound jarring. But I made these changes primarily for me, and they work for me. Hopefully, they'll work for you as well. I put a lot of time and effort into these changes, as you can probably guess from my comments here. I felt the album had a lot of good things going for it, but was flawed. I now feel I'm removed most of the flaws, and the revised version of the album can now hold its own with the high standards of their previous albums.

01 Discotheque (U2)
02 Do You Feel Loved (U2)
03 Mofo (U2)
04 If God Will Send His Angels (U2)
05 Staring at the Sun (U2)
06 Last Night on Earth (U2)
07 Gone (U2)
08 Miami (U2)
09 The Playboy Mansion (U2)
10 If You Wear that Velvet Dress (U2)
11 Please (U2)
12 Wake Up Dead Man (U2)

https://www.upload.ee/files/15256872/UTwo_1997_PopAlternte_atse.zip.html

For the album cover, I used the same cover as the official album, without any changes.

Wednesday, September 16, 2020

Morgan James - Acoustic Cover Songs, Volume 2, 2015-2016

A couple of weeks ago, I posted the first album of Morgan James performing acoustic cover songs. Here's the second, with lots more to come. Please check out the write-up for that first album for information about who she is and her background. But the bottom line is she's a fantastic singer with an unusual penchant for performing acoustic versions of songs.

As I mentioned in the write-up to that first album in this series, one thing I like about James's covers is that her taste in music is somewhat different from mine. That means she does covers of songs that I don't know or wouldn't pay much attention to. For instance, I haven't been following D'Angelo, Chris Stapleton, Sia, or Ariana Grande. If I did, I usually would have issues with the slick, modern pop or soul production. But thanks to Morgan James stripping those songs down to their simplest acoustic forms, I can appreciate them as good songs.

If you look at the below song list, she does some songs like that, but mixes them in with classic songs from previous decades too. I enjoy how she often puts her own spin on some of those songs. For instance, she plays "Roxanne" at a much slower pace than the Police original. And when she does "Melissa," she's backed only by a piano. That's different from even the acoustic versions the Allman Brothers Band have done on guitar.

So, bottom line, if you haven't given Morgan James a listen, you're missing out.

Here a list of the original artists for each song:

01 The Charade - D'Angelo
02 Roxanne - Police
03 Cecilia - Simon & Garfunkel
04 Jolene - Dolly Parton
05 Melissa - Allman Brothers Band
06 Dirty Diana - Michael Jackson
07 Alive - Sia
08 You're All I Need to Get By - Marvin Gaye & Tammi Terrell
09 Parachute - Chris Stapleton
10 If It's Magic - Stevie Wonder
11 Dangerous Woman - Ariana Grande
12 Shape of My Heart - Sting
13 Waiting on the World to Change - John Mayer

Here's the usual song list:

01 The Charade (Morgan James)
02 Roxanne (Morgan James)
03 Cecilia (Morgan James)
04 Jolene (Morgan James)
05 Melissa (Morgan James)
06 Dirty Diana (Morgan James)
07 Alive (Morgan James & Mykal Kilgore)
08 You're All I Need to Get By (Morgan James & Doug Wamble)
09 Parachute (Morgan James)
10 If It's Magic (Morgan James)
11 Dangerous Woman (Morgan James)
12 Shape of My Heart (Morgan James)
13 Waiting on the World to Change (Morgan James)

https://www.upload.ee/files/15266926/MorganJ_2015-2016_AcoustcCoverSongsVolume2_atse.zip.html

The cover art photo is from 2015.

Elton John - Hits '70 - Non-Album Cover Versions (1970)

Lately, I've been going through an Elton John phase, so I'll be posting more from him. Here's a very strange album that needs some explanation.

In 1969, Elton John was already starting to make it in the music business. He put out a single in 1968, and two more singles and an album in 1969. But none of them made the charts anywhere, and he needed money to live on while he waited for more success. He'd also been writing songs for other artists, but hadn't had much success with that either. 

At the time, it was very rare for record companies to put out compilations featuring recent hits from different artists, due to the difficulty of securing to rights from other companies and then splitting the profits. So instead, it was common practice to make compilation albums filled with nearly exact copies of hits done by anonymous musicians. Elton John made some extra money playing keyboards on some of these songs, and sometimes singing lead vocals on them. He did most of these in early to mid-1970, at a time when he was already starting to break out as a star. I guess the royalty checks for his own songs hadn't started coming in yet.

It was only after he became a superstar that some listeners realized that some of these anonymous copycat versions of hits were actually sung by him. Over the years, there have been various collections of these performances. But this generally has remained little more than a curiosity for his die-hard fans.

I think these recordings deserve more attention. Yeah, many of them just aren't good. Often they sound like the anonymous copies that they are. But on some of the songs, Elton John's talent and individual style shines through. So I've cut these songs about in half to the ones I think are the best. They're presented in the order they were recorded. He did a couple of lead vocals in late 1969, but those didn't make the cut. 

Generally speaking, I picked the songs where his lead vocals are the most clear and distinctive. (On many of the songs I rejected, he shared lead vocals with others, or double tracked himself to make his voice sound more generic.) I also rejected a few songs that were just weird. For instance, he sang a version of "Young, Gifted, and Black," which is silly when you know he isn't black. Also, some of his performances were more like parodies, and I wanted to keep this serious. Furthermore, I tried to avoid the versions that were too slavishly similar to the original hit versions.

The quality of this album is greatly helped by the fact that he didn't just sing copies of hit songs. In mid-1970, he also was asked to make demos for a handful of songs from lesser known artists in hopes that other artists would hear them and be more inclined to cover them. (Those are tracks 7 through 13.) Luckily, four of the seven songs from this batch were Nick Drake compositions. At the time, Drake was totally obscure, but he has risen in stature to become a music legend. So, ironically, you may find some of the Nick Drake songs here more familiar than some of the hits. 

The other three songs from that bunch were from an obscure folk duo, John and Beverley Martyn. Although the duo wouldn't last the year as a musical entity, John Martyn would go on to have a long and critically acclaimed career as a singer-songwriter. So it was a lucky thing that Elton John was assigned to record those songs too.

It wouldn't have been a smart thing for Elton John to release an all-covers album in 1970, the year he was hitting it big as a performer of the songs he co-wrote with Bernie Taupin. But in hindsight, this is a perfectly good album. By cutting out the lesser copycat songs, I think this goes from a marginal curiosity to an album that holds its own in his discography.

The album is 50 minutes long. That was on the long side for an album in that era, but some albums were that long or longer.

Here is a list of the artists who had the original and/or hit versions for each song:

01 Bridge Over Troubled Water - Simon and Garfunkel
02 I Can't Tell the Bottom from the Top - Hollies
03 Question - Moody Blues
04 Yellow River - Christie
05 Lady D'Arbanville - Cat Stevens
06 Love of the Common People - Nicky Thomas
07 Saturday Sun - Nick Drake
08 Sweet Honesty - John and Beverley Martyn
09 Stormbringer - John and Beverley Martyn
10 Way to Blue - Nick Drake
11 Go Out and Get It - John and Beverley Martyn
12 Day Is Done - Nick Drake
13 Time Has Told Me - Nick Drake
14 Natural Sinner - Fair Weather
15 Signed, Sealed, Delivered, I'm Yours - Stevie Wonder

Here's the usual song list:

01 Bridge Over Troubled Water (Elton John)
02 I Can't Tell the Bottom from the Top (Elton John)
03 Question (Elton John)
04 Yellow River (Elton John)
05 Lady D'Arbanville (Elton John)
06 Love of the Common People (Elton John)
07 Saturday Sun (Elton John)
08 Sweet Honesty (Elton John)
09 Stormbringer (Elton John)
10 Way to Blue (Elton John)
11 Go Out and Get It (Elton John)
12 Day Is Done (Elton John)
13 Time Has Told Me (Elton John)
14 Natural Sinner (Elton John)
15 Signed, Sealed, Delivered, I'm Yours (Elton John) 

https://www.upload.ee/files/15905281/EltonJn_1970_Hits70VariousCoverSongs_atse.zip.html

While I was collecting songs and information to put this album together, I came across the cover art to the many cheapo cheapo hits collections that contained one or more of Elton John's vocals. I could have tried to make a serious and respectable album cover. But instead, I decided it would be more fun to lean into the cheesy fly-by-night nature of those albums by basing my cover on one of those. 

So that's what I did. The title "Hits '70" is unchanged. The left side of the original cover was a list of the songs it contained. I replaced that with a photo of Elton John in concert from that time period. The bottom left of the cover contained some more text and the record company logo. I replaced that with Elton John's name, done in the same font as the album title.

Monday, September 14, 2020

The Allman Brothers Band - Unplugged - Radio and Records Convention, Los Angeles, CA, 6-11-1992

In the early 1990s, MTV's "Unplugged" series was a popular musical trend, a reaction to the overproduction excesses of the 1980s. The Allman Brothers Band had never really played in the acoustic musical format before, at least not more than for a song here and there. But they jumped on the "Unplugged" train in 1992. This presents the best of their acoustic phase.

The Allman Brothers Band never actually played for the MTV Unplugged TV show, as far as I know. But they put out an album called "IRSA Acoustic Set" based on this concert. Unfortunately, it was only released on a limited basis for a limited time, with the benefits going to charity. As a result, most fans of the band have never heard it.

I've supplemented it with two extra songs at the end. "Pony Boy" was played occasionally in concert in 1992, during short acoustic sets in the middle of longer electric concerts. The last song, "Steady Rollin' Man," was done in 1998. However, you wouldn't know it was six years later, since the acoustic sound is the same as the others. Both of these extra songs come from bootlegs, but the sound is pretty close to the main concert.

That main concert sounds fantastic. However, it had one problem that annoyed me: the audience applause at the end of each song faded out after just a few seconds. The fade-outs were so obvious that they ruined the impression of hearing one continuous concert. So I did two things to fix this. One, I unfaded the fade-outs as best I could, meaning I steadily increased the volume as it was dropping, until there was nothing left to increase. This typically restored a couple of seconds at the end of each song. Sometimes even that wasn't enough for the audience reaction to sound like it came to a natural conclusion. So I patched in bits of the applause from other sounds to extend the crowd response a couple more seconds. The final result still isn't great, but I think it's better than the fast fade-outs.

As far as the music goes, I much prefer the early 1970s version of the band to their later versions, with markedly different personnel. But the 1992 version still had the essential members Gregg Allman and Dickey Betts on lead vocals. (Betts was with the band until 2000, while Allman stayed until the end in 2014.) This version also features the excellent Warren Haynes on lead guitar.

If you're a fan of the Allman Brothers Band at all, you should listen to this. Sure, they were great at rocking, but they were just as good at playing on a porch with acoustic instruments. There's even a decent amount of jamming here.

The album is 56 minutes long.

01 Come On in My Kitchen (Allman Brothers Band)
02 talk (Allman Brothers Band)
03 Seven Turns (Allman Brothers Band)
04 Midnight Rider (Allman Brothers Band)
05 Southbound (Allman Brothers Band)
06 talk (Allman Brothers Band)
07 In Memory of Elizabeth Reed [Instrumental] (Allman Brothers Band)
08 talk (Allman Brothers Band)
09 Goin' Down the Road Feelin' Bad (Allman Brothers Band)
10 Melissa (Allman Brothers Band)
11 Midnight Blues (Allman Brothers Band)
12 talk (Allman Brothers Band)
13 Pony Boy (Allman Brothers Band)
14 talk (Allman Brothers Band)
15 Steady Rollin' Man (Allman Brothers Band)

https://www.upload.ee/files/15288746/TAllmanBB_1992_UnpluggdRdioandRcordsConventionLsAngelesCA__6-11-1992_atse.zip.html

The cover art photo doesn't come from the exact concert in question. But it's close. It's from an acoustic performance on TV just one month later. There were multiple photos from the same appearance. The photo I chose was good except for the fact that Warren Haynes (third from the left) had his face bent down so it was blocked by a microphone. So I used a different photo to patch in a better version of him from the waist on up.

For the band name, I used the artwork from the 1979 album "Enlightened Rogues" (a surprisingly good album for the year, by the way). I rearranged the wording and then inverted the colors.

Elton John - 11-17-70 (A&R Recording Studios, New York City, 11-17-1970) - Complete Version

There's surprisingly little officially released live music from Elton John's most acclaimed period, the early 1970s. The one that stands out as a classic, "11-17-70," is from very early in his music career, 1970. (It's named after the date it was recorded. In Britain, it's known as 17-11-70," because they have their dates and months backwards. ;) ) This album was released in early 1970, and was a critical and commercial success, helping to turn him into a superstar.

However, the original album is flawed. The concert, recorded in front of a crowd of only about 100 people in a New York City recording studio, was 80 minutes long. But the official record was only 48 minutes long, and the song order was jumbled. A more complete version was released for a limited time on Record Store Day in 2017. But this version was flawed too. While it had all the songs, the song order was still jumbled. So I set out to put them in the correct order.

I thought that would be an easy task, but boy, was I wrong. The record company doctored the recordings in order to make their jumbled song order not seem jumbled. They moved the between song banter around and manipulated the audience applause. For instance, they had the applause go over the start of a couple of songs when that hadn't happened in the actual concert.

I know this because the concert was broadcast live on the radio, and bootlegs of the full show in the correct order appeared almost immediately. But the sound quality on the 2017 official version was better than any of the bootlegs. So I kept that music, but used bits and pieces of the bootleg version to fix the banter and applause to how it actually sounded in the concert. The resulting combination is better than both versions, since there were some minor cuts and problems with the bootleg version too.

Here you can listen to the full concert, in the correct order, with the best sound. Elton John himself said this was the best concert he ever performed, so if you want a live album from him, it's hard to go wrong with this one. It's true that it doesn't have many of his huge hits, since most of them would come later. But I really like the sound. I'm not a fan of bombast and overproduction. Here, he keeps it simple, with just him on piano, plus a bassist and drummer. I much hearing him this way, when he was raw and hungry, than in later years when he sometimes played with a large band or even an orchestra.

01 talk (Elton John)
02 I Need You to Turn To (Elton John)
03 talk (Elton John)
04 Your Song (Elton John)
05 talk (Elton John)
06 Country Comfort (Elton John)
07 talk (Elton John)
08 Border Song (Elton John)
09 talk (Elton John)
10 Indian Sunset (Elton John)
11 Amoreena (Elton John)
12 Bad Side of the Moon (Elton John)
13 Take Me to the Pilot (Elton John)
14 Sixty Years On (Elton John)
15 Honky Tonk Women (Elton John)
16 Can I Put You On (Elton John)
17 Burn Down the Mission - My Baby Left Me - Get Back (Elton John)
18 talk (Elton John)
19 My Father's Gun (Elton John)

https://www.upload.ee/files/15835572/EltonJn_1970_111770_ARRecordngStudios__atse.zip.html

For the album cover, I considered just using the official cover. But I don't like that one. It's nearly entirely black, and not very fetching. Perhaps it was an attempt to look like the cheap bootlegs of that era. Instead, I went with a photo of Elton John playing on a German TV show in 1970. However, I took the exact same lettering from the official cover for his name and the album name.

Sunday, September 13, 2020

Matthew Sweet & Susanna Hoffs - Under the Covers, Volume 3.5 (2013)

Note that this isn't exactly an entirely new album. Back in 2018, I posted a "1.5" album to complement "Under the Covers, Volume 1" by Matthew Sweet and Susanna Hoffs, and a "2.5" album to complement their "Under the Covers, Volume 2." But although they released a "Volume 3" in 2013, I've have more trouble making a "3.5."

The problem was that Sweet and Hoffs obviously are big fans of 1960s and 1970s music, but much less so for 1980s music. Their "Volume 3" was all 1980s music, and while that album was fine, they didn't have that many extra 1980s covers, either as a duo or done solo. However, I realized I'd missed three bonus tracks to the "Volume 3." I also discovered a 2017 version of a 1980s Prince song done by Hoffs. Plus, two more songs actually squeak into the 1980s, being released in the year 1980: "Teacher, Teacher" and "The Tide Is High."

Still, that wasn't enough material for all 1980s covers material. In order to make up for that, I've moved a bunch of songs from my previous 2.5 album here with originals that date from the late 1970s. Specifically, I moved everything from 1977 or after to here. 1977 was a pivotal year, with punk and new wave becoming new musical trends, while disco became super dominant that year as well.

I bunched the late 1970s at the start, before the 1980s ones. However, I end this album with "Marquee Moon," a late 1970s song, since it's a ten-minute long guitar workout, and that seems like a fitting closing song to me.

01 Dreaming (Matthew Sweet & Susanna Hoffs)
02 I Wanna Be Sedated (Matthew Sweet & Susanna Hoffs)
03 You Say You Don't Love Me (Matthew Sweet & Susanna Hoffs)
04 American Girl (Matthew Sweet)
05 Magnet and Steel (Matthew Sweet with Lindsey Buckingham)
06 Train in Vain [Stand by Me] (Matthew Sweet & Susanna Hoffs)
07 The Tide Is High (Matthew Sweet)
08 Teacher, Teacher (Matthew Sweet & Susanna Hoffs)
09 I Would Die 4 U (Matthew Sweet & Susanna Hoffs)
10 You're My Favorite Waste of Time (Matthew Sweet & Susanna Hoffs)
11 Take Me with U (Susanna Hoffs)
12 Marquee Moon (Matthew Sweet & Susanna Hoffs)

https://www.upload.ee/files/15263815/MattSwtSusH_2013_UndrCovrsVolme3.5_atse.zip.html

The cover art photo was taken backstage at a concert at the Roxy in Los Angeles in 2007. There were two photos, and one was good except Hoffs looked dead serious. In the other one, she was smiling. So I used Photoshop to add her smile to the other photo.