Wednesday, January 31, 2024

Andy Sturmer - Scooby Songs - Non-Album Tracks (1999-2023)

Here's a strange album, probably one of the strangest I've ever posted on this blog. It mostly consists of songs about the Scooby Doo TV show and movies!

The only reason I care about such songs is due to the person who wrote and sang them: Andy Sturmer. If you're not familiar with his name, he was one of two main co-writers for the power pop group Jellyfish, and he sang most of their songs. In my opinion, he is a pop songwriting genius, and has a great voice. But after Jellyfish broke up in the early 1990s, he decided he didn't want to be in a band and live the rock and roll lifestyle. In all the years since then, he's kept a very, very low profile.

But that's not to say he hasn't still done music. He recorded an album's worth of demos around 1999, but never released him. Luckily, they were leaked to the public and you can find them here:

https://albumsthatshouldexist.blogspot.com/2023/11/andy-sturmer-holding-out-for-something.html

He also got deeply involved with Japanese pop music. He's had a long association with the Japanese duo Puffy AmiYumi, writing many hit songs for them and producing even more. I like a lot of their music, despite the fact that the vast majority of their songs are sung in Japanese, even most of the ones written by Sturmer. (I have to assume he learned to speak Japanese since he has such a deep connection the Japanese music. He even sang a song in Japanese back when he was in Jellyfish.) I may post a Puffy AmiYumi compilation, if there's enough interest and if I get around to it.

Sturmer's relationship with AmiYumi blossomed in the late 1990s and continued into the 2000s. But increasingly after 2000, he found more work applying his ability to write catchy pop songs for commercials, TV shows, and the like. The vast majority of these had him write the songs but other people would sing them. However, by and by, he developed a deeper relationship with the people making new Scooby Doo TV shows and TV movies, especially TV movies. 

Frankly, these sound pretty bad, with titles like "LEGO Scooby Doo! Haunted Hollywood" and "Scooby Doo and WWE: Curse of the Speed Demon." (Keep in mind WWE is the name of a professional wrestler association.) Even so, songs were needed, and Sturmer has such a magic touch that even songs about the Scooby Doo gang sound pretty good to me.

The vast majority of the songs here are from various Scooby Doo related projects. However, the first three songs are from different projects, including a song for a Winnie the Pooh project and one for a Batman one. Also, the fifth song, "Himawari," sounds very different from all the rest. It's sung entirely in Japanese. It comes from a 2007 tribute album to the Japanese band Unicorn, another band that he has connections to, including production work.

On the downside, these songs are often short, and about Scooby Doo related themes. They also sometimes have weird noises over them, because none of these have been officially released on record as far as I know (other than "Himawari"), so sounds from the TV show or movie often overlapped with the music. I tried to clean that up as best I could (that's why four of the songs have "[Edit]" in their titles, because those had more editing done than the others), but I couldn't clean everything.

On the upside, if you like the power pop hooks of Jellyfish, you should like this. It's somewhat different, more commercial and less rocking, for instance. But the songs are nothing if not catchy. Plus, I only selected the ones actually sung (or co-sung) by Sturmer, and he has a great voice. Furthermore, I don't think anyone has ever put together a collection of these songs before, so this should be new to just about everyone.

This album is pretty short, at only 31 minutes. However, Sturmer is still at it. The last two songs are from 2023. So I hope more songs will emerge and I'll be able to add to this album. Better yet, I hope he puts out some original music that doesn't consist of Scooby Doo songs!

01 Fourth of July Parade (Andy Sturmer)
02 The Little Things You Do (Andy Sturmer)
03 Batman, the Brave and the Bold [Instrumental] (Andy Sturmer)
04 When the Circus Comes to Town (Andy Sturmer)
05 Himawari (Andy Sturmer)
06 On the Case (Andy Sturmer)
07 I Don't Know about You (Andy Sturmer)
08 Appetite (Andy Sturmer)
09 Wake Me Up to Say Goodnight [Edit] (Andy Sturmer)
10 Brand New World [Edit] (Andy Sturmer)
11 Hollywood (Andy Sturmer)
12 No Pain, No Gain (Andy Sturmer)
13 Scooby-Doo, Scooby Don't [Edit] (Andy Sturmer)
14 Scoobystition [Edit] (Andy Sturmer)
15 Go Big (Andy Sturmer)
16 Where Only Heroes Go (Andy Sturmer)

https://www.upload.ee/files/16227824/ANDYSTRMR2003-2023_ScobySngs_atse.zip.html

I put the album cover together. I found a photo of Sturmer, but I have no idea where or when it's from. It's probably from his Jellyfish days, because he hasn't been photographed much (or at all) since then. I scattered some Scooby Doo characters around him, in keeping with the music content.

A U2 Update

Just last week, I posted "Volume 1" of U2 playing for the BBC. I hate to do this, but I'm already making a serious update to it, so you should download it again. Here's the link:

https://albumsthatshouldexist.blogspot.com/2024/01/u2-bbc-sessions-volume-1-1980-1983.html

The reason for the update is because I found a fourth BBC session in this time period consisting of three songs, this one from 1982. I'd missed it because it was from a BBC TV show instead of a studio session. It was total luck that I happened to stumble on it, since I was looking for music by another band and happened to notice it.

Paul Weller - BBC Sessions, Volume 6: 1996-1997

Here's another volume of Paul Weller performing for the BBC. This time, it consists entirely of BBC studio sessions.

In the middle of 1997, Weller released the studio album "Heavy Soul." Most of the songs (tracks 5 to 14) are from 1997, and many come from that album.

Everything here comes the box set "At the BBC." So sound quality isn't an issue, as it all sounds great.

There's a mix of solo acoustic and band performances. Two songs have "[Acoustic Version]" in their names, because there are band versions elsewhere on this album. The songs are generally originals, other than covers of "I Shall Be Released" and "The Poacher."

This album is 49 minutes long.

01 Up in Suzes' Room (Paul Weller)
02 The Circle (Paul Weller)
03 Driving Nowhere (Paul Weller)
04 I Shall Be Released (Paul Weller)
05 As You Lean into the Light (Paul Weller)
06 Brushed (Paul Weller)
07 Friday Street (Paul Weller)
08 Mermaids (Paul Weller)
09 The Poacher (Paul Weller)
10 Heavy Soul, Parts 1 & 2 (Paul Weller)
11 Driving Nowhere [Acoustic Version] (Paul Weller)
12 Waiting on an Angel (Paul Weller)
13 Friday Street [Acoustic Version] (Paul Weller)
14 Science (Paul Weller)

https://www.upload.ee/files/16224960/PALWLLR1996-1997_BBSssonsVlum6_atse.zip.html

The cover photo is from a concert at the Crystal Palace in London, on August 2, 1997.

Marshall Crenshaw - The Human Jukebox, Volume 8: 2009-2017

Here we are again, with the eighth volume of Marshall Crenshaw performing cover songs that he didn't put on his studio albums. There's just one more volume to go after this one.

Once again, Crenshaw has a good mix of classics and obscure gems. For instance, if you know "Out of Nowhere" by Smith Ballew & His Orchestra, then raise your hand. I don't see any hands. ;)

All but three songs here are officially unreleased. The three released ones are: "Donna the Prima Donna" (a bonus track), "Out of Nowhere" (from the soundtrack to the "Boardwalk" TV show), and "I Just Want to Celebrate" (from a 1970s themed various artists compilation).

The unreleased ones come from concert bootlegs. Note that Crenshaw's popularity peaked in the 1980s, and by this time it had gone down. He also wasn't playing as many concerts. Thus, the number of soundboard quality bootlegs went down. So some of these are from audience boots. But I still maintained quality control, and used all the audio editing tricks I could. A few sound a bit rough, but hopefully not too bad.

This album is 49 minutes long.

Here's a list of the original versions of each song:

01 Reminiscing - Buddy Holly
02 This Guy's in Love with You - Burt Bacharach & Hal David / Herb Alpert
03 Whiskey Man - Who
04 Donna the Prima Donna - Dion
05 Grow Old with Me - John Lennon
06 Poor Side of Town - Johnny Rivers
07 Manic Depression - Jimi Hendrix
08 Kit Kat Clock - Bottle Rockets
09 Out of Nowhere - Smith Ballew & His Orchestra
10 I Just Want to Celebrate - Rare Earth
11 Mona - Bo Diddley
12 Things Have Changed - Bob Dylan
13 Old Brown Shoe - Beatles
14 Baby She's Gone - Jack Scott

And here's the usual song list:

01 Reminiscing (Marshall Crenshaw)
02 This Guy's in Love with You (Marshall Crenshaw)
03 Whiskey Man (Marshall Crenshaw)
04 Donna the Prima Donna (Marshall Crenshaw)
05 Grow Old with Me (Marshall Crenshaw)
06 Poor Side of Town (Marshall Crenshaw)
07 Manic Depression (Marshall Crenshaw)
08 Kit Kat Clock (Marshall Crenshaw)
09 Out of Nowhere (Marshall Crenshaw with Vince Giordano & the Nighthawks)
10 I Just Want to Celebrate (Marshall Crenshaw)
11 Mona (Jimmy Vivino & Friends with Marshall Crenshaw)
12 Things Have Changed (Marshall Crenshaw)
13 Old Brown Shoe (Marshall Crenshaw with Los Straitjackets)
14 Baby She's Gone (Marshall Crenshaw with Los Straitjackets)

https://www.upload.ee/files/16224556/MARSHLLCRNSHW2009-2017_ThHmanJkebxVlum8_atse.zip.html

The cover photo comes from a concert to celebrate what would have been John Lennon's seventieth birthday, in New York City, in October 2010.

Ron Sexsmith - Reasons to Believe, Volume 1: 1995-1998

A few months ago, a follower of this blog named Pete the Greek contacted me with an idea. He's a huge fan of singer-songwriter Ron Sexsmith, and he suggested I made some albums of all of Sexsmith's non-album tracks. Now, I'm a fan of Sexsmith's music, but not a huge fan. I don't even have all of his studio albums. But Pete the Greek sent me a collection of non-album tracks, and I thought they were very good. I actually liked them more than a lot of his studio albums. It helps that a lot of them are cover songs, and Sexsmith has excellent taste in covers. 

So I began working with Pete the Greek on this, and things kind of snowballed. I think we originally started with four albums of material, but ended up with eight! That's a lot for a singer-songwriter who isn't even that well known. But it's all good stuff, in my opinion. Actually, I consider this very similar to the series of Marshall Crenshaw covers albums I've been posting, with a similar number of albums. Both of them are musician's musicians with deep, deep record collections. But this is somewhat different in that it includes all of Sexsmith's non-album tracks. Most are covers, but there are a fair number of originals. The only thing I didn't include was songs from his 2003 compilation album "Rarities." That's mostly a collection of B-sides from the earlier part of his music career. 

I'm calling this series "Reasons to Believe." I was looking over the song titles on the different albums I made, and I noticed he did the Tim Hardin classic "Reason to Believe." That made me think of "Reasons to Believe," as in, hopefully these albums will give you additional reasons to believe that Sexsmith is a very talented musician and songwriter, if you weren't aware of that already.

Note that Sexsmith has also posted hundreds of cover versions and alternate versions of his originals to his YouTube channel over the years. I'm not including ANY of that here, because that's an entirely different can of worms. I have posted two albums of Kinks covers mostly drawing from that. Perhaps I'll make other albums from that in the future, we'll see.

Thanks again to Pete the Greek. Without his help every step of the way, this series of albums wouldn't have happened.

If you want to know the sourcing for all the songs, check the mp3 tags for details (which is the case for ALL the albums I post here, by the way). But, in brief, tracks 2 and 11 through 13 are the officially released ones, from B-sides and other artists' albums. The rest come from a demo (track 10), in-person radio sessions (tracks 1, 4, and 5) or concert bootlegs (the rest). When it comes to concert recordings, I've used the new MVSEP audio editing program to wipe out the crowd noise as much as possible, so hopefully they all sound like studio versions.

This album is 50 minutes long.

Here's a list of the original artists for each song:

01 You're Gonna Make Me Lonesome When You Go - Bob Dylan
02 You're Learning - Ron Sexsmith
03 New Pony - Bob Dylan
04 Ribbon of Darkness - Gordon Lightfoot
05 Caroline, No - Beach Boys
06 To Ramona - Bob Dylan
07 Windows of the World - Burt Bacharach & Hal David / Dionne Warwick
08 Everyday I Write the Book - Elvis Costello
09 Love Minus Zero-No Limit - Bob Dylan
10 Dirty Windows [Demo] - Ron Sexsmith
11 We'll Manage - Ron Sexsmith
12 It's All Over but the Smoke - Jules Shears
13 Overcast - Mitchell Froom
14 Listen to What the Man Said - Paul McCartney
15 Sundown - Gordon Lightfoot
16 You Still Believe in Me -Beach Boys

And here's the usual song list:

01 You're Gonna Make Me Lonesome When You Go (Ron Sexsmith)
02 You're Learning (Ron Sexsmith)
03 New Pony (Ron Sexsmith)
04 Ribbon of Darkness (Ron Sexsmith)
05 Caroline, No (Ron Sexsmith)
06 To Ramona (Ron Sexsmith)
07 Windows of the World (Ron Sexsmith & Elvis Costello)
08 Everyday I Write the Book (Ron Sexsmith)
09 Love Minus Zero-No Limit (Ron Sexsmith)
10 Dirty Windows [Demo] (Ron Sexsmith)
11 We'll Manage (Ron Sexsmith)
12 It's All Over but the Smoke (Jules Shears & Ron Sexsmith)
13 Overcast (Mitchell Froom & Ron Sexsmith)
14 Listen to What the Man Said (Ron Sexsmith)
15 Sundown (Ron Sexsmith)
16 You Still Believe in Me (Ron Sexsmith)

https://www.upload.ee/files/16227872/RONSXSMTH1995-1998_ResnstoBliveVlum1_atse.zip.html

The cover photo is from 1995 or 1996. But I don't know the details.

Elliott Smith - Club Congo, Scottsdale, AZ, 1-12-1995

I'm excited to post this album, because it suggests a whole new way to improve sound quality using the powers of new audio editing programs. This is very interesting concert from early in Elliott Smith's solo career. It was recorded surprisingly well, considering it was just taped by someone in the audience. But there was a lot of talking from the audience all through the songs. There was so much that at one point Smith complained about it, asking why so many people would pay to attend a concert and then just talk.

I recently discovered a audio editing program called MVSEP. That stands for "Music and Voice Separation." It has lots of options, and one option I haven't seen with other programs is separating crowd noise from the rest of the music. It's not perfect and doesn't work all of the time, but it does a great job the vast majority of the time. I've been using it a lot on the albums I posted here, for instance removing crowd noise on live tracks that are mixed in with lots of studio tracks. 

So I tried it for this concert. Boy, did it work well! The recording went from a pretty good sounding audience bootleg to soundboard quality. There are very few Elliott Smith soundboards, and this sounds just as good as most of those. I removed nearly all of the crowd noise during the songs (with a couple of brief exceptions), but I kept the applause at the ends of songs the same. Then, during the banter between songs, I increased the volume of Smith's voice and lowered the volume of the audience talking.

As for the music, at this point in his career, Smith had been in the band Heatmiser, but he's only released one solo album in his new, more acoustic style, "Roman Candle," in 1994. This concert is just him in solo acoustic mode. There's only one other concert recording from this early part of his career with this level of sound quality, which was from Portland, Oregon, in September 1994. I would have posted that here, except it's been released in whole as part of a 25th anniversary edition of his 1995 album "Elliott Smith." 

I'd say this one now sounds as good as that one, but most of the songs are different. Only three were played at both: "Some Song," "Condor Ave.," and "No Confidence Man." For this concert, he also played one cover song, "Little Maggie." 

By the way, different dates have been posted for this concert, with most of them claiming December 1, 1994. But the person who taped it recently confirmed it took place on this date, January 12, 1995. 

Like the concert in Portland I mentioned, this one is pretty short, because Smith was only an opening act at the time. Furthermore, the crowd sounds quite small. I'm guessing only a few dozen people were there. So it's great to have another recording of this quality when he was so unknown.

This album is 36 minutes long.

If anyone knows of concert bootlegs that sound great but for lots of crowd noise during the songs, please let me know. I might be able to fix it using this new technique.

01 talk (Elliott Smith)
02 Some Song (Elliott Smith)
03 talk (Elliott Smith)
04 Single File (Elliott Smith)
05 talk (Elliott Smith)
06 No Confidence Man (Elliott Smith)
07 talk (Elliott Smith)
08 Little Maggie (Elliott Smith)
09 talk (Elliott Smith)
10 Needle in the Hay (Elliott Smith)
11 talk (Elliott Smith)
12 Antonio Carlos Jobim (Elliott Smith)
13 talk (Elliott Smith)
14 Last Call (Elliott Smith)
15 talk (Elliott Smith)
16 Condor Ave. (Elliott Smith)
17 talk (Elliott Smith)
18 Clementine (Elliott Smith)
19 talk (Elliott Smith)
20 Roman Candle (Elliott Smith)
21 talk (Elliott Smith)

https://www.upload.ee/files/16224781/ELLITTSMTH1995_ClbCngoScttsdleAZ__1-12-1995_atse.zip.html

I'm not entirely sure, but I think the cover photo is from 1997. I don't know any more about it.

Melanie - BBC In Concert, London, Britain, 7-14-1971

American folk singer Melanie Safka (better known as just "Melanie") passed away last week, as I write this near the end of January 2024. She was 76 years old.

I'm not that big of a Melanie fan, although I like some of her songs. But given that I've been working on a big BBC project for a few years now, I thought I would post a BBC album to mark her passing, if there was anything worth posting. Luckily, I found a short concert she did for BBC TV in 1971, which was around the peak of her popularity. 

About that time, the BBC had a TV show simply called "In Concert." (The BBC tends to call most of the live concerts they broadcast on the radio "In Concert," so things get confusing.) The show was only half an hour long. So that only makes up the first six songs here, for a total of 27 minutes.

I looked for BBC studio sessions, and I only found one. She did a session for BBC DJ John Peel in 1969. I decided to throw that session on at the end as quasi bonus tracks, even though that means a mix of live and studio tracks. One song was played on both occasions, "Tuning My Guitar." Actually, a second song was also played on both, "Beautiful People." However, I couldn't find the version from the 1969 Peel show.

As far as I know, everything here is officially unreleased. The sound quality is excellent. She played solo acoustic in both performances.

Melanie had three big hits in the years 1970 and 1971: "Brand New Key," "Lay Down (Candles in the Rain," and her version of the Rolling Stones song "Ruby Tuesday." In addition, a song she wrote, "What Have They Done to My Song Ma," wasn't a hit for her, but it was a big hit by the band the New Seekers, and it's been covered by many other artists. These two performances came before the release of "Brand New Key," so that's not here. Unfortunately, neither is "Lay Down" or "Ruby Tuesday," but this does include her version of "What Have They Done to My Song Ma."

This album is 40 minutes long. As mentioned above, the 1971 BBC concert is 27 minutes long. So the 1969 studio session is 13 minutes long.

01 Close to It All (Melanie)
02 Tuning My Guitar (Melanie)
03 The Nickel Song (Melanie)
04 Beautiful People (Melanie)
05 What Have They Done to My Song Ma (Melanie)
06 Peace Will Come [According to Plan] (Melanie)
07 Visit My Dreams (Melanie)
08 Uptown and Down (Melanie)
09 Baby Guitar (Melanie)
10 Tuning My Guitar (Melanie)

https://www.upload.ee/files/16224529/MELNI1971_BBInCncrtLndnBrtin__7-14-1971_atse.zip.html

The cover is a screenshot from the 1971 BBC TV show that I found on YouTube. The text is done in the same style as the show. The colors from her name and the album are the example same as those on the show (orange and purple - not the best combination). I added in the red text part.

Tuesday, January 30, 2024

U2 - BBC Sessions, Volume 2: In Concert, Salford University, Salford, Britain, 10-3-1981

Here's a U2 BBC concert. This one is from way back in 1981, before U2 hit it big. It was recorded two weeks before the release of the band's second album, "October." 

Unfortunately, this is only a portion of the full concert. (According to setlist.fm, at least, which lists 17 songs.) It looks like the band was only given a half an hour time slot on the radio, so when that time ran out, the DJ faded out the song that was playing and started talking over it. That song happened to be "Rejoice." So I found another live version from 1981 and I used that to fill in the missing ending.

The song "11 O'Clock Tick Tock" also had issues. There were some spots where the volume suddenly dropped way down. I tried to fix that by bringing the volume up to the rest, but those bits still some somewhat muffled compared to the rest. Additionally, this song also got cut off near the end. So I did the exact same thing as "Rejoice" and filled in the end from a different 1981 concert. That's why those two songs have "[Edit]" in their titles.

This recording remains completely unreleased, as far as I know. However, the sound quality is about the same as that of a soundboard bootleg.

According to the full set list, the band played a bunch of songs from their second album, "October." But only two happened to make it here, "With a Shout" and "Rejoice."

This album is 32 minutes long. (It's a bit over half an hour due to the missing bits I filled in.)

01 talk (U2)
02 11 O'Clock Tick Tock [Edit] (U2)
03 I Will Follow (U2)
04 An Cat Dubh - Into the Heart (U2)
05 With a Shout (U2)
06 Twilight (U2)
07 Out of Control (U2)
08 Rejoice [Edit] (U2)

https://www.upload.ee/files/16224162/UTOO1981_BBSessonsVlum2InCncrtSlfrdUnvrsitySlfrdBrtin__10-3-1981_atse.zip.html

The cover photo is from Onkel Pos Carnegie Hall, Hamburg, Germany, in February 1981. (That explains the words on the back wall in the photo.) This only has a good view of two band members, lead singer Bono and bassist Adam Clayton.

Rosanne Cash - Crawl into the Promised Land - Non-Album Tracks (2019-2024)

I've posted a lot of Rosanne Cash stray tracks albums in recent years. I believe I've posted nine before this one. Finally, I get caught up to the present day.

All but three of the songs here have been officially released in one way or another. Three songs, "We’re All in This Together Now," "Crawl into the Promised Land," and "The Killing Fields," were A-sides of singles not connected to any Rosanne Cash albums. "Time" is from a Tom Waits tribute album. "I've Got a Crush on You" is from a George Gershwin album. "I Am a Pilgrim" is from a Doc Watson tribute album. "Loving Her Was Easier" is from a Willie Nelson live album.

Cash has been married to John Leventhal since 1995. Leventhal is mostly a producer and back-up musician, but in early 2024, he released a rare solo album. The final two songs here are from that.

That just leaves the three unreleased songs: "Tryin' to Get Home," "Farewell Angelina," and "Crescent City." They're all from concert bootlegs. But the sound is generally close to the studio stuff.

This album is 44 minutes long.

01 Time (Rosanne Cash)
02 We’re All in This Together Now (John Paul White & Rosanne Cash)
03 Tryin' to Get Home (Rosanne Cash)
04 Farewell Angelina (Rosanne Cash)
05 Crawl into the Promised Land (Rosanne Cash)
06 The Killing Fields (Rosanne Cash)
07 Crescent City (Rosanne Cash & Lucinda Williams)
08 I've Got a Crush on You (Michael Feinstein & Rosanne Cash)
09 Loving Her Was Easier [Than Anything I'll Ever Do Again] (Rosanne Cash with Kris Kristofferson)
10 I Am a Pilgrim (Rosanne Cash)
11 If You Only Knew (John Leventhal & Rosanne Cash)
12 That's All I Know about Arkansas (John Leventhal & Rosanne Cash)

https://www.upload.ee/files/16224168/ROSNNECSH2019-2024_CrwlntothPrmsedLnd_atse.zip.html

 The cover is almost identical to the cover for Cash's "Crawl into the Promised Land." All I did was remove John Leventhal's name, which had been under Cash's, and cropped it a little.

The Police - The Scope, Norfolk, VA, 8-15-1983

The band the Police definitely are part of my big BBC project, although I haven't posted any BBC material from that band at the time I write this (in January 2024). Unfortunately though, it seems they only performed for the BBC in the years 1978 to 1980. In 1983, with the hit studio album "Synchronicity," the Police were one of the biggest musical acts in the world. Then they broke up. So, since there's no BBC material from 1983, I thought it would be a good idea to post a full 1983 concert.

There's only one official live album from the main time the Police were together, 1977 to 1983. (There were reunions in 1986 and 2007.) That album, simply called "Live," is a double album, and the second part contains selections from two 1983 concerts. But I prefer full concerts rather than shorter albums put together from different shows. 

I checked out some 1983 concert bootlegs, and they mostly were a disappointing lot. Some are incomplete or have other flaws. Others just sound okay. This is a soundboard bootleg, and it has the best sound quality of any 1983 boot that I heard. 

There were a few problems with this boot, but I believe I fixed them all. It was complete, except the last minute of the last song, "Can't Stand Losing You," was missing. So I found another version from another 1983 soundboard boot, and used that to fill in the missing bit. A second problem was that the soundboard recorded what was happening on the stage so well that the was much less crowd noise than one would normally expect. So I tried to boost the crowd response whenever I could. But also, I think the applause after some songs were completely missing. I can't be sure because maybe they just went directly from the end of one song to the start of the next one most of the time. But I added in some more applause in a few spots where I thought that makes sense (including at the start of the first song).

This album is an hour and 34 minutes long.

01 Synchronicity I (Police)
02 Synchronicity II (Police)
03 Walking in Your Footsteps (Police)
04 Message in a Bottle (Police)
05 talk (Police)
06 Walking on the Moon (Police)
07 talk (Police)
08 Oh My God (Police)
09 De Do Do Do, De Da Da Da (Police)
10 talk (Police)
11 Wrapped Around Your Finger (Police)
12 Tea in the Sahara (Police)
13 Spirits in the Material World (Police)
14 Hole in My Life - Hit the Road Jack (Police)
15 Invisible Sun (Police)
16 One World [Not Three] (Police)
17 talk (Police)
18 King of Pain (Police)
19 Every Breath You Take (Police)
20 Murder by Numbers (Police)
21 Don't Stand So Close to Me (Police)
22 Roxanne (Police)
23 Can't Stand Losing You [Edit] (Police)

https://www.imagenetz.de/dV9Ln

The cover art is made up of two pieces. I found a photo of a concert ticket at a Police fan site, so I used a portion of that for the top part. I compressed it some to give more room. For the bottom part, I used a photo of Sting and Andy Summers at a concert in London in December 1983.

Concert for Walden Woods, Foxboro Stadium, Foxborough, MA, 9-6-1993, Part 5: Don Henley with Jimmy Buffett

This is the fifth and last part of the 1993 Concert for Walden Woods. Don Henley, the most famous lead singer of the Eagles, founded the charity organization behind the concert, and this has been the charity cause he's most involved with over the years. Plus, he was massively popular at the time. So it made sense that he would be the headline, final act. However, he also got a significant assist from Jimmy Buffett on two songs.

I've explained more about the cause for this concert in my Part 1 write-up. So please refer to that to learn more. Henley also talked about it some in his lengthy banter before the song "Hotel California." But note that I edit the banter in that spot down considerably, probably cutting it in half. That's why it has "[Edit]" in the title. I cut off stuff I wouldn't want to hear every time I played this album. Most of it was a list of thanks, including a bunch of corporate sponsors supporting the concert.

Generally speaking, this concert was much like a typical full Don Henley concert from that era, including versions of many songs he'd done with the Eagles. However, one interesting twist is that Jimmy Buffett joined the stage about halfway through the set, and sang lead on two of his songs, including his classic "Margaritaville." The other song he chose, "Volcano," was less well known, but it had an environmental theme that fit with the charity cause of the concert. Furthermore, Henley sang lead on part of that song, and it seems some of the lyrics were tailored just for this concert. After that, Buffett left the stage and it continued like a typical Henley solo concert.

This album is an hour and 21 minutes long.

01 The Boys of Summer (Don Henley)
02 The End of the Innocence (Don Henley)
03 One of These Nights (Don Henley)
04 talk (Don Henley)
05 The Last Resort (Don Henley)
06 talk (Don Henley)
07 Well (Don Henley)
08 talk (Jimmy Buffett & Don Henley)
09 Margaritaville (Jimmy Buffett & Don Henley)
10 talk (Jimmy Buffett & Don Henley)
11 Volcano (Jimmy Buffett & Don Henley)
12 talk [Edit] (Don Henley)
13 Hotel California (Don Henley)
14 Life in the Fast Lane (Don Henley)
15 The Heart of the Matter (Don Henley)
16 Sunset Grill (Don Henley)
17 Dirty Laundry (Don Henley)
18 All She Wants to Do Is Dance (Don Henley)
19 Desperado (Don Henley)

https://www.upload.ee/files/16221517/VA1993_CncrtfrWldnWdsFxbroStdmFxbrghMA__9-6-1993_05DnHnlywthJmmyBfftt.zip.html

The cover is just like the cover for Part 1 of this concert, with only some of the text changed. Read my Part 1 write-up for more of an explanation.

Concert for Walden Woods, Foxboro Stadium, Foxborough, MA, 9-6-1993, Part 4: Aerosmith

Here's the fourth part of the 1993 Concert for Walden Woods. This time around, it's the band Aerosmith. For more about the concert and the cause it was for, check out my Part 1 write-up.

At first glance, it seems unexpected that Aerosmith would perform for free for a charity to preserve the nature around a pond made famous by the 1800s author Henry David Thoreau. They're not known for their activism, like other acts in this concert, such as Sting and Don Henley. But it makes more sense who you consider that Aerosmith is very much a Boston band, and the Walden Woods (and pond) are located on the outskirts of Boston. 

Anyway, this is a rather short set, considering that Aerosmith was hugely popular at the time. This was the shortest set of the concert (although I don't have the recording of the full Sting set). But a short set is better than no set at all, and all of the songs they played were hits and/or classics.

This album is 34 minutes long.

01 Toys in the Attic (Aerosmith)
02 Sweet Emotion (Aerosmith)
03 talk (Aerosmith)
04 Cryin' (Aerosmith)
05 Dude [Looks like a Lady] (Aerosmith)
06 Livin' on the Edge (Aerosmith)
07 Walk This Way (Aerosmith)

https://www.upload.ee/files/16216784/VA1993_CncrtfrWldnWdsFxbroStdmFxbrghMA__9-6-1993_04Arsmth.zip.html

The cover is just like the cover for Part 1 of this concert, with only some of the text changed. Read my Part 1 write-up for more of an explanation.

Concert for Walden Woods, Foxboro Stadium, Foxborough, MA, 9-6-1993, Part 3: Sting

Here's the third part of the 1993 Concert for Walden Woods. This time, it's a set by Sting. If you want to know more about the concert as a whole, please read my write-up to the first part.

Unfortunately, this is a very short album. There are only four songs by Sting here. According to the database at setlist.fm, Sting actually played a much longer set. This album only contains the first four songs. Here are all the songs he played after that, in order:

Synchronicity II
Every Little Thing She Does Is Magic
Roxanne
King of Pain
Bring on the Night
When the World Is Running Down, You Make the Best of What's Still Around
Nothing 'bout Me
Every Breath You Take

It was a surprisingly Police heavy set for that stage in Sting's solo career. Note that all but one of them ("Nothing 'bout Me") are Police songs.

I don't know why so much of his set is missing from the bootleg that I found. (According to setlist.fm, the sets from all the other performers are complete.) My guess is the whole thing was broadcast live on local radio, and someone didn't want his entire set broadcast. Let's hope that someday the rest of the recording is made public. 

Anyway, what's here is fine music. It's particularly interesting that included a cover of the Beatles classic "A Day in the Life." Sting never released this on any of his studio albums, but he did include a live version on an obscure 1994 EP called "Demolition Man."

This album is 21 minutes long.

01 If I Ever Lose My Faith in You (Sting)
02 Love Is Stronger than Justice [The Munificent Seven] (Sting)
03 talk (Sting)
04 A Day in the Life (Sting)
05 Fields of Gold (Sting)

https://www.upload.ee/files/16216751/VA1993_CncrtfrWldnWdsFxbroStdmFxbrghMA__9-6-1993_03Stng.zip.html

The cover is just like the cover for Part 1 of this concert, with only some of the text changed. Read my Part 1 write-up for more of an explanation.

Sunday, January 28, 2024

Concert for Walden Woods, Foxboro Stadium, Foxborough, MA, 9-6-1993, Part 2: Melissa Etheridge

Here's the second act in the 1993 Concert for Walden Woods. For more about the concert and the cause it was for, check out my Part 1 write-up.

The parts I'm posting are in chronological order of who played when in this concert. So next up after Elton John was Melissa Etheridge.

In 1993, Etheridge was probably at the peak of her popularity. In late September 1993, she released the studio album "Yes I Am." It went on to sell six million copies in the US, the best selling album of her career.

This concert took place two weeks before the release of that album. So that's probably why it's light on songs from that album. The only song from it was "I'm the Only One," which was released as the first single, one day after this concert. Otherwise, she played songs from her previous albums. However, "Let's Get It On" is a cover of the classic Marvin Gaye song.

This album is 43 minutes long.

01 Ain't It Heavy (Melissa Etheridge)
02 talk (Melissa Etheridge)
03 Must Be Crazy for Me (Melissa Etheridge)
04 talk (Melissa Etheridge)
05 I'm the Only One (Melissa Etheridge)
06 Chrome Plated Heart (Melissa Etheridge)
07 talk (Melissa Etheridge)
08 Bring Me Some Water (Melissa Etheridge)
09 Let's Get It On (Melissa Etheridge)
10 Like the Way I Do (Melissa Etheridge)

https://www.upload.ee/files/16216755/VA1993_CncrtfrWldnWdsFxbroStdmFxbrghMA__9-6-1993_02MlissEthrdge.zip.html

The cover is just like the cover for Part 1 of this concert, with only some of the text changed. Read my Part 1 write-up for more of an explanation.

Another One Bites the Dust

Crud. I had another album removed today due to copyright issues. This time, it was:

The Zombies - BBC Sessions, 1964-1967 

This is getting very concerning. These albums being taken down lately have been posted for a long time, so I don't know why these problems are happening now. Right now, I'm going to wait and see if more problems arise. That's why I'm not posting much lately.

Concert for Walden Woods, Foxboro Stadium, Foxborough, MA, 9-6-1993, Part 1: Elton John

Henry David Thoreau was an American author, poet, and philosopher. His 1854 book "Walden," about living a simple life in natural surroundings near Walden Pond, close to Concord, Massachusetts, has been highly influential. By the 1980s, a part of the forest around Walden Pond was protected as parkland, but a part of it was not, and housing developments were encroaching into the area.

Don Henley, the main leader singer for the Eagles, had been influenced by Thoreau's writings in college. He made it his cause to protect the Walden Pond area. In 1990, he founded the Walden Woods Project. Through a series of benefit concerts, this project was able to raise millions of dollars, which went to buying more of the land around the pond and converting it into more protected parkland.

If you want to know more, I suggest this Wikipedia page:

Walden Woods Project - Wikipedia

This is part of one of those series of concerts. I don't know much about the other ones, because I haven't found any quality recordings of them. But for whatever reason, an excellent bootleg exists of nearly this entire concert, which consisted of sets by Elton John, Melissa Etheridge, Sting, Aerosmith, and Don Henley. Probably, the concert was broadcast on a local radio station at the time.

Concord is not far from Boston, so this concert took place in Foxboro Stadium near Boston, a huge stadium where football and baseball games are played. I'm guessing there probably were 50 to 60,000 people at the concert.

The year prior to this concert, Elton John released the studio album "The One." So he played a few songs from that: "Simple Life," "The One," and "The Last Song." But mostly, he did his biggest hits.

This album is 52 minutes long.

01 The Bitch Is Back (Elton John)
02 Philadelphia Freedom (Elton John)
03 Levon (Elton John)
04 Simple Life (Elton John)
05 The One (Elton John)
06 The Last Song (Elton John)
07 Take Me to the Pilot (Elton John)
08 I Don't Wanna Go On with You like That (Elton John)
09 Don't Let the Sun Go Down on Me (Elton John)
10 talk (Elton John)
11 Pinball Wizard (Elton John)

https://www.upload.ee/files/16216757/VA1993_CncrtfrWldnWdsFxbroStdmFxbrghMA__9-6-1993_01EltnJhn.zip.html

For the life of me, I couldn't find ANY photos from this entire concert, other than one poor black and white one of Don Henley. However, I did find some artwork from a T-shirt sold at the concert to help raise more money. So I used that as the basis for the covers of all five albums of this concert, with only some text changes between them. I had to widen the design to get a better fit with the square album cover space. As a result, the trees in the design are a lot wider than they were on the T-shirt.

Thursday, January 25, 2024

U2 - BBC Sessions, Volume 1: 1980-1983

I've been focusing on posting BBC material at this blog for a few years now, what I think of as my big BBC project. But there's just so much to post. There are major artists I haven't even touched yet. U2 is one. I have a whole bunch of U2 BBC albums to post. This first one consists of BBC studio sessions.

I believe all the songs here are unreleased, except for three: "With a Shout," "I Threw a Brick through a Window," and "Scarlet." Those appeared on a deluxe edition of the band's 1981 album "October."

The first four songs come from a 1980 session. The next four (including the three released ones) come from a 1981. The next three after that are from a 1982 BBC TV show. That includes a version of "A Celebration," a good song that tends to get overlooked because it only appeared as the A-side of a single, and was rarely played in concert. Finally, the remaining three songs come from a 1983 session. However, this last session apparently was never actually broadcast. But since U2 is such a popular band, the recording somehow got bootlegged anyway.

The three songs from the 1982 TV show (tracks 9, 10, and 11) all have "[Edit]" in their names, because I had to do some editing for them. For one thing, an emcee talked over the starts and ends of some of the songs. I used the UVR5 program to get rid of that talking. I also had to fix some bits that got distorted by the talking.

This album is 53 minutes long.

01 I Will Follow (U2)
02 The Electric Co. (U2)
03 An Cat Dubh (U2)
04 Into the Heart (U2)
05 Boy-Girl (U2)
06 With a Shout (U2)
07 I Threw a Brick through a Window (U2)
08 Scarlet (U2)
09 Gloria [Edit] (U2)
10 A Celebration [Edit] (U2)
11 Rejoice [Edit] (U2)
12 Like a Song (U2)
13 Surrender (U2)
14 Sunday Bloody Sunday (U2)

https://www.upload.ee/files/16227842/UTOO1980-1983_BBSssnsVlum1_atse.zip.html

All I know about the cover photo of the band is taken is that it was taken in March 1981.

More Copyright Trouble

In the past couple of days, I've had two albums taken down here due to copyright violations. One is:

Joni Mitchell - Born to Take the Highway - On TV and Radio (1965-1968)

The other is:
The Clash - Jamaica World Music Festival, Montego Bay, Jamaica, 11-27-1982

These seem very random, especially since I have many other albums by Mitchell and the Clash that are still fine. (The Clash one is especially puzzling, since I thought that concert is totally unreleased.) But of course things could change at any time, and other albums could disappear. I'm always skating on thin ice when it comes to copyright issues. So grab what you can while you can.

In a similar vein, I've run into even more trouble with my YouTube page. As a reminder, that can be found here:

(570) Paul ATSE (Albums That Should Exist) - YouTube

One gets three strikes for copyright violations on YouTube. I recently got two. One was for a Mary Chapin Carpenter album that had been approved and posted for about five months, so again when and why these problems have is very puzzling. But anyway, if one gets a third strikes, then one's entire YouTube page is permanently banned. I had posted about 300 album there so far. I have turned about 250 of those to private mode, so they can't be seen. I'll make them public again if I manage to make it through the three month time period when the strikes are removed from your record. I've kept up some of the most popular ones though, especially Led Zeppelin, Bob Dylan, and the Kinks.

Looking to the future, I'll probably create multiple YouTube channels, so if one gets taken down, the others can still survive. I'm thinking of having different channels for different musical themes. For instance, maybe breaking things up by time periods, such as a channel mainly for 1960s artists, another for the 1970s, another for the 1980s, and so on. Or maybe different genres, like folk, soul, rock, hard rock, etc... Maybe one just from BBC stuff. But I haven't decided yet. If you have any suggestions, please let me know.

Tuesday, January 23, 2024

T. Rex - BBC Sessions, Volume 3: Live 1970

It's time for another T. Rex BBC album. This one is all concert material from 1970. However, it's actually two short concerts put together.

The first concert makes up tracks 1 through 14, for a total of 33 minutes. It was performed on January 1, 1970. The second concert makes up tracks 15 until the end. This one took place on December 10, 1970. So even though they both took place in 1970, they were almost one year apart. Both concerts are sourced from the "Marc Bolan at the BBC" box set.

Up until late 1969, Marc Bolan, lead singer and songwriter, was backed by Steve Peregrin Took on percussion and backing vocals. But by the time of the January 1970 concert, Took had been replaced by Mickey Finn, also on percussion and backing vocals. Furthermore, the band name changed in mid-1970, from "Tyrannasaurus Rex" to just "T. Rex."

Although the two concerts are separated by time, they are similar in many ways. For one thing, they were performed in the exact same venue, BBC's Paris Theatre in London. They both were hosted by BBC DJ John Peel, and he spoke most of the banter between songs for both shows. They also were both acoustic in nature, with Bolan playing acoustic guitar and Finn generally playing bongos.

The concerts luckily mostly feature different songs. However, two songs, "Deborah" and "Elemental Child," were played at both concerts. The commercial fortunes also drastically changed between the two concerts. In October 1970, the duo's single "Ride a White Swan" was released. Not only was this their first, it went all the way to Number Two in Britain by the time of this concert.

Not long after the second concert here, in early 1970, T. Rex's sound and image significantly changed. Bolan switched to an electric guitar and was usually backed by a full band. And he began wearing outrageous, daring clothes instead of the hippie-styled clothes he'd been wearing until then. This was considered the birth of the "glam rock" music trend.

This album is an hour and sex minutes long.

01 talk (T. Rex)
02 Hot Rod Mama (T. Rex)
03 talk (T. Rex)
04 Deborah (T. Rex)
05 talk (T. Rex)
06 Pavilions of Sun (T. Rex)
07 talk (T. Rex)
08 Dove (T. Rex)
09 talk (T. Rex)
10 By the Light of the Magical Moon (T. Rex)
11 talk (T. Rex)
12 Elemental Child (T. Rex)
13 talk (T. Rex)
14 The Wizard (T. Rex)
15 talk (T. Rex)
16 Deborah (T. Rex)
17 talk (T. Rex)
18 Elemental Child (T. Rex)
19 talk (T. Rex)
20 Woodland Bop - Conesuala - The King of the Mountain Cometh - Woodland Bop (T. Rex)
21 talk (T. Rex)
22 Ride a White Swan (T. Rex)
23 talk (T. Rex)
24 Jewel (T. Rex)

https://www.upload.ee/files/16189489/TREEX1970_BBSssnsVlum3Lve1970_atse.zip.html

The cover photo of Marc Bolan was taken at the Mayfair Club in London in either 1970 or 1970. My guess would be 1970.

Sunday, January 21, 2024

Procol Harum (Liquorice John Death) - Ain't Nothin' to Get Excited About (1970)

Normally, I have a rule of not posting an album that is the same as the officially released version. But I'm making an exception here because of the obscurity of this one. The reason it's so obscure is because it was performed by the British band Procol Harum, but they didn't use their name for reasons I'll explain, and it only came out decades after it was recorded.

Procol Harum started with a bang. Their debut single in 1967, "A Whiter Shade of Pale," was a massive worldwide hit. But they actually started around 1960 as the Paramounts, a rhythm and blues cover band. Gary Brooker was the lead singer and Robin Trower was the lead guitarist from the very start. They had a minor hit in Britain in 1963 with a cover of "Poison Ivy." But by 1966, they realized they were rapidly falling out of style. So they changed the name and switched to doing all originals.

In 1969, Procol Harum had some personnel changes. Two band members left and one former member of the Paramounts joined. The band members realized they once again had the exact same line-up as the Paramounts line-up for many years, minus one member. In January 1970, the band had a studio recording session for their next album. One night, they started feeling nostalgic for their years as the Paramounts. Instead of working on new songs, they spend many hours playing all the covers they could remember that they used to do as the Paramounts. They played almost forty songs. Everything was recorded, but most of them were discarded for one reason or another, such as forgetting the lyrics or stopping before the finish. 

But still, there were a bunch of songs they thought sounded good, enough for an album. However, Procol Harum was known for their original styles done in a progressive rock style. They never did covers on their albums and almost never did them in concert. Putting out an all-covers album didn't make sense for their career at that point. Furthermore, the tape of the recordings soon got lost. It wasn't recovered until the late 1990s. 

This album of covers was finally released in 2005. But even then, instead of releasing it under the Procol Harum name, they decided to release under the name "Liquorice John Death." This was a tribute to a friend of the band who knew them back in the early 1960s, hated the name Paramounts, and had suggested that other name instead.

I've used the officially released album cover. But that cover didn't mention "Procol Harum" at all. So I added that in a big font size at the top.

This album is very different from everything else released by Procol Harum, but I think it's pretty interesting. 

This album is 40 minutes long.

01 High School Confidential (Procol Harum)
02 Kansas City (Procol Harum)
03 Lucille (Procol Harum)
04 Brand New Cadillac (Procol Harum)
05 Matchbox (Procol Harum)
06 Breathless (Procol Harum)
07 Everything I Do Is Wrong (Procol Harum)
08 Old Black Joe (Procol Harum)
09 Shopping for Clothes (Procol Harum)
10 Well, I... (Procol Harum)
11 I'm Ready (Procol Harum)
12 The Girl Can't Help It (Procol Harum)
13 Keep A-Knockin' (Procol Harum)

https://www.upload.ee/files/16182495/PROCLHRM1970_AntNthintoGtExctdAbt_atse.zip.html

As I mentioned above, I used the official cover art, but I added the "Procol Harum" name at the top. Also, the names of the band members were mentioned. I removed those names in favor of the band name.

Marshall Crenshaw - The Human Jukebox, Volume 7: 2002-2009

Here's the seventh volume of Marshall Crenshaw performing cover songs that weren't on his studio albums. There are two more to go.

Only five of the 15 songs have been officially released. Those five are "I'm Barely Hangin' on to Me " (from a Johnny Paycheck tribute album), "Love Me Do" (from a Beatles tribute album), "(It's Going to Be A) Lonely Christmas" (from a Christmas-themed various artists compilation), and "Don't Leave Me This Way" (from a Ricky Nelson tribute album).

All the remaining songs are from concert bootlegs. The sound quality is generally high, with most of these soundboard recordings. I used audio editing software to remove the crowd noise wherever possible.

By the way, the song "Walk Hard" isn't actually a cover. Crenshaw wrote that as the theme song to the funny 2007 movie "Walk Hard: the Dewey Cox Story." However, in the movie and on the movie soundtrack the song was performed by the lead actor, John C. Reilly. Crenshaw never released a version of his own. This version comes from a concert bootleg.

This album is 49 minutes long.

Here's a list of the original artists for each song:

01 Taxman - Beatles
02 I've Gotta Be Me - Sammy Davis Jr.
03 Love You To - Beatles
04 You're a Wonderful One - Marvin Gaye
05 I'm Barely Hangin' on to Me - Johnny Paycheck
06 I Believe to My Soul - Ray Charles
07 Ticket to Ride - Beatles
08 Love Me Do - Beatles
09 [It's Going to Be A] Lonely Christmas  - Orioles
10 19th Nervous Breakdown - Rolling Stones
11 Twenty Four Hours from Tulsa - Gene Pitney
12 Don't Leave Me This Way - Ricky Nelson
13 Walk Hard [Demo] - John C. Reilly
14 Don't Look Back - Fine Young Cannibals
15 Didn't Want to Have to Do It - Lovin' Spoonful

Here's the usual song list:

01 Taxman (Marshall Crenshaw)
02 I've Gotta Be Me (Marshall Crenshaw)
03 Love You To (Marshall Crenshaw)
04 You're a Wonderful One (Marshall Crenshaw)
05 I'm Barely Hangin' on to Me (Marshall Crenshaw)
06 I Believe to My Soul (Marshall Crenshaw)
07 Ticket to Ride (Marshall Crenshaw)
08 Love Me Do (Marshall Crenshaw)
09 [It's Going to Be A] Lonely Christmas (Marshall Crenshaw)
10 19th Nervous Breakdown (Marshall Crenshaw)
11 Twenty Four Hours from Tulsa (Marshall Crenshaw)
12 Don't Leave Me This Way (Marshall Crenshaw)
13 Walk Hard [Demo] (Marshall Crenshaw)
14 Don't Look Back (Marshall Crenshaw)
15 Didn't Want to Have to Do It (Marshall Crenshaw) 

https://www.upload.ee/files/16191906/MARSHLLCRNSHW2002-2009_ThHumnJkebxVlum7_atse.zip.html

The cover photo is from an appearance at the Grammy Museum in Los Angeles in June 2009.

Saturday, January 20, 2024

Little Village - Orpheum Theatre, Boston, MA, 4-26-1992

Little Village was a roots rock "supergroup." It consisted of John Hiatt on guitar, piano, and vocals, Nick Lowe on bass and vocals, Ry Cooder on lead guitar and vocals, and Jim Keltner on drums. They first got together to play all the songs on Hiatt's acclaimed 1987 album "Bring the Family." Then they got together again for Lowe's 1990 album "Party of One." The third and final got together, they released the Little Village album "Little Village" in 1992. Most of the songs were sung by Hiatt, but Lowe sang two and Cooder sang one.

You may not have heard of Little Village because they only stuck around for that album, and it was a disappointing one. Even Lowe later said about it, ""Little Village was really good fun. Unfortunately, the record we did was no good. I suppose on some level, it worked, but [our record company] kind of gave us too much time to do it." However, the band promoted the album with tours of the U.S. and Europe. And I repeatedly heard that they were much better live and on that album. For instance, if you read the write-up about the band at allmusic,com, it states, "Although the record was a bit of a disappointment, the live shows were superb."

So if you like the artists involved, you should listen to one of their concerts. There aren't that many bootlegs of their shows (and no official releases). This is the best sounding one I could find. It was professionally recorded and broadcast on the radio.

One reason the concerts were better than the album was because the album was dominated by Hiatt's songs, while the concerts were more evenly split between songs by Hiatt, Lowe, and Cooder. Naturally, they played most of the songs from the album, but also many songs from their various solo careers. They had to, since the album was 45 minutes long, and this concert was almost two hours long.

More specifically, this album is an hour and 56 minutes long.

01 talk (Little Village)
02 She Runs Hot (Little Village)
03 talk (Little Village)
04 The Action (Little Village)
05 talk (Little Village)
06 Fool Who Knows (Little Village)
07 Crazy about an Automobile (Little Village)
08 Inside Job (Little Village)
09 talk (Little Village)
10 Do You Want My Job (Little Village)
11 talk (Little Village)
12 Alone in the Dark (Little Village)
13 talk (Little Village)
14 Take Another Look (Little Village)
15 talk (Little Village)
16 Solar Sex Panel (Little Village)
17 Don't Think About Her When You're Trying To Drive (Little Village)
18 talk (Little Village)
19 Memphis in the Meantime (Little Village)
20 Crying in My Sleep (Little Village)
21 talk (Little Village)
22 Don't Go Away Mad (Little Village)
23 talk (Little Village)
24 Big Love (Little Village)
25 talk (Little Village)
26 Little Sister (Little Village)
27 talk (Little Village)
28 Across the Borderline (Little Village)
29 talk (Little Village)
30 Don't Bug Me When I'm Working (Little Village)
31 talk (Little Village)
32 Half a Boy and Half a Man (Little Village)
33 talk (Little Village)
34 Thing Called Love (Little Village)
35 Lipstick Sunset (Little Village)
36 talk (Little Village)

https://www.imagenetz.de/a2cTy

The cover is from a concert in Brussels, Belgium, on July 2, 1992. Left to right: Lowe, Hiatt, and Cooder. In the original picture, there was a big gap between Cooder and the others, but I eliminated that gap in Photoshop.

Paul McCartney - BBC Sessions, Volume 5: In Concert, Maida Vale Studios, London, Britain, 10-16-2013

I've posted four Paul McCartney BBC albums prior to this one. Twice, I had to renumber them as I discovered earlier ones I'd missed. So I'm a bit reluctant to post this one, in case other ones I'd missed show, but I guess I'll take that chance.

In 2013, McCartney released the studio album "New," which was a pretty good one. So he went back to the BBC to promote. On this day, he actually did two performances in the BBC's Maida Vale Studios. He did one short show for a small studio audience around 11 a.m., took a lunch break, and then did a second show for a different audience around 1 p.m. The set lists were very similar, and mostly in the same order. So I've combined the two shows. Most of this is from the longer late show, but I added in a few songs from the early show.

Even though he was promoting his album "New," he only played four songs from it, "Save Us," "Queenie Eye," "Everybody Out There," and "New." "My Valentine" is from his 2012 album "Kisses on the Bottom." The rest are Beatles classics and solo classics.

McCartney had a fantastic voice for the vast majority of his music career. It was still pretty strong in 2013, when this concert happened. In my opinion, it got a lot weaker in the years right after this. So, although I know he did a BBC concert in 2022 (the big annual Glastonbury Festival), I don't think I'll be posting that one.

This album is an hour and 18 minutes long.

01 talk (Paul McCartney)
02 Coming Up (Paul McCartney)
03 talk (Paul McCartney)
04 Junior's Farm (Paul McCartney)
05 talk (Paul McCartney)
06 We Can Work It Out (Paul McCartney)
07 talk (Paul McCartney)
08 Ob-La-Di, Ob-La-Da (Paul McCartney)
09 Get Back (Paul McCartney)
10 Eight Days a Week (Paul McCartney)
11 talk (Paul McCartney)
12 Save Us (Paul McCartney)
13 Jet (Paul McCartney)
14 talk (Paul McCartney)
15 My Valentine (Paul McCartney)
16 Nineteen Hundred and Eighty-Five (Paul McCartney)
17 talk (Paul McCartney)
18 Another Day (Paul McCartney)
19 talk (Paul McCartney)
20 Everybody Out There (Paul McCartney)
21 talk (Paul McCartney)
22 Things We Said Today (Paul McCartney)
23 talk (Paul McCartney)
24 New (Paul McCartney)
25 talk (Paul McCartney)
26 Queenie Eye (Paul McCartney)
27 talk (Paul McCartney)
28 Lady Madonna (Paul McCartney)
29 talk (Paul McCartney)
30 Being for the Benefit of Mr. Kite (Paul McCartney)
31 Band on the Run (Paul McCartney)
32 Back in the U. S. S. R. (Paul McCartney)
33 talk (Paul McCartney)
34 Hey Jude (Paul McCartney)

https://www.upload.ee/files/16182143/PAULMCCRTNY2013b_BBSssonsVlum5InCncrtMidaVleStdosLndnBrtin__10-16-2013_atse.zip.html

The cover photo is from this exact concert.

Bonnie Raitt - I Feel So Damn Good - Non-Album Tracks (2007-2012)

I started posting Bonnie Raitt stray tracks albums in 2019. I've posted nine of them so far, and I'm still at it. Here's the tenth, with two more to go.

This is the usual mix of released and unreleased tracks, with an unusual amount of duets. The first five songs are officially released, along with track 9, "Ain't Nothin' in Ramblin'." They're the usual mix of songs from soundtracks, tribute albums, appearances on other artists' albums, and the like.

The unreleased songs all have excellent sound quality. "Done Changed My Way of Living" is from a TV show appearance with no studio audience, and "A Sunday Kind of Love" is from a TV show appearance with an audience. The other two are from concert bootlegs. Since this is a mix of live and studio tracks, I used audio editing programs to wipe out the crowd noise on the live ones.

The bonus track is just a bonus track for two reasons. One, the sound quality is rough. (It's from an audience bootleg.) But also, it's a Marc Cohn that had Cohn singing most of it, and Raitt only on backing vocals. Still, it has a lot of good slide guitar work from Raitt, so I figured it was worth bonus track status, at least.

This album is 40 minutes long, not including the bonus track.

01 Bartender's Blues (Bonnie Raitt)
02 Walking the Dog (Bonnie Raitt & Weepin' Willie Robinson)
03 Separation Blues [Mama's Gone, Goodbye] (Maria Muldaur & Bonnie Raitt)
04 Premature (Toots & the Maytals & Bonnie Raitt)
05 Yes We Can, Can (Maria Muldaur, Bonnie Raitt & Linda Tillery)
06 Done Changed My Way of Living (Taj Mahal & Bonnie Raitt)
07 She Caught the Katy and Left Me a Mule to Ride (Taj Mahal & Bonnie Raitt)
08 A Sunday Kind of Love (Alicia Keys & Bonnie Raitt)
09 Ain't Nothin' in Ramblin' (Bonnie Raitt)
10 I Feel So Damn Good [I'll Be Glad When I Got the Blues] (Bonnie Raitt with Mike Finnigan)

29 Ways (Marc Cohn with Bonnie Raitt)

https://www.upload.ee/files/16182058/BONNRITT2007-2012_IFelSoDmnGod_atse.zip.html

The cover photo is from 2007. I don't know any details.

Thursday, January 18, 2024

Depeche Mode - BBC Sessions, Volume 3: In Concert, Crystal Palace Sports Ground, London, Britain, 7-31-1993

Here is another full-length Depeche Mode concert done for the BBC. It apparently is also the last one, since I don't know of any others.

I previously posted concerts from the band's early years, with concerts from 1983 and 1984. There's a big leap from that time to this concert about ten years later, in 1993. In the meantime, the band had their most commercially successful years, with lots of big hits. So this is a good companion to those earlier concerts, with almost no songs from 1984 or before. (I think the only one is the finale, "Everything Counts.")

As far as the recording of this unreleased concert goes, kudos to Depeche Mode Live Wiki, at https://dmlive.wiki. They did all the grunt work to fix the flaws in this concert that I often have to do on my own. No single recording was complete, so this is seamlessly put together from no less than four different sources. And some minor flaws were fixed, so everything sounds great.

This album is an hour and 18 minutes long.

01 Higher Love (Depeche Mode)
02 Policy of Truth (Depeche Mode)
03 Walking in My Shoes (Depeche Mode)
04 Halo (Depeche Mode)
05 Stripped (Depeche Mode)
06 Condemnation (Depeche Mode)
07 Judas (Depeche Mode)
08 I Feel You (Depeche Mode)
09 Never Let Me Down Again (Depeche Mode)
10 Rush (Depeche Mode)
11 In Your Room (Depeche Mode)
12 Personal Jesus (Depeche Mode)
13 Enjoy the Silence (Depeche Mode)
14 Everything Counts (Depeche Mode) 

https://www.upload.ee/files/16177869/DPESHEMDE1993_BBSessnsVlum3InCncrtCrystlPlceSprtsGrndLndnBrtn__7-31-1993_atse.zip.html

The cover just shows the band's lead singer, Dave Gahan. It's from a concert in Brussels, Belgium, on May 25, 1993.

Mark Knopfler - BBC Sessions, Volume 5- Music Club, Simon Mayo Show, London, Britain, 10-5-2007

This is the fifth, and probably the last, album in my BBC series for Mark Knopfler. (I say "probably" because it's possible he'll recorded more for the BBC, who knows.) This is an unreleased concert. But it seems that instead of just having the BBC record one of his full concerts in some big arena, he did a truncated show for a small studio audience.

This concert was to promote his 2007 album "Kill to Get Crimson," which had just been released. But actually, only three songs here are from that: "True Love Will Never Fade," "The Fizzy and the Still," and "Let It All Go." The rest are from his earlier solo albums, plus three songs from his years with Dire Straits ("Going Home," "Brothers in Arms," and "So Far Away.")

The sound quality is excellent, as you'd expect. However, I suspect there was banter between songs that got removed. I base this on the fact that for many of the songs, though not all, the applause quickly faded out in an unnatural way. And Knopfler did make one brief comment near the end that seemed to be a follow up to an earlier comment that's missing. So if anyone has the complete version with the banter, let me know so I can use that.

I did my best to fix the edited applause. For those songs, I patched in more applause from other songs, so at least it should sound like there's a decent amount of applause after each song.

This album is 49 minutes long.

01 Donegan's Gone (Mark Knopfler)
02 Rudiger (Mark Knopfler)
03 True Love Will Never Fade (Mark Knopfler)
04 The Fizzy and the Still (Mark Knopfler)
05 Let It All Go [Electric Version] (Mark Knopfler)
06 Our Shangri-La (Mark Knopfler)
07 Going Home [Theme From 'Local Hero'] [Instrumental] (Mark Knopfler)
08 Postcards from Paraguay (Mark Knopfler)
09 Brothers in Arms (Mark Knopfler)
10 So Far Away (Mark Knopfler)

https://www.upload.ee/files/16177703/MRKKNPF2007_BBSessnsVlum5MscClbSmnMyoShwLndnBrtin__10-5-2007_atse.zip.html

The cover photo is from a concert in Rome, Italy, on June 6, 2008.

The Allman Brothers Band - BBC In Concert, Hammersmith Odeon, London, Britain, 6-25-1991

It seems that just about anyone who is anyone in the music world performed for the BBC at least once (though sometimes the recordings didn't survive). A case in point is the Allman Brothers Band. They're so closely associated with the U.S., and especially the South, that it seems surprising they toured Europe at all. But here we are, with an unreleased BBC concert in London in 1991.

This happens to be a particularly good time for a BBC concert from them, in my opinion. Sure, their peak years were in the early 1970s, especially while Duane Allman was still alive. But they were still a solid band for decades after that. The 1980s were kind of a lost decade for them. But they reunited in the late 1980s and put out a good new album in 1990, "Seven Turns," and another one in 1991, "Shades of Two Worlds." Their creativity slowed way down after that, with only two more new studio albums for the remaining fifteen or so years the band stayed together. The band also lost a lot when Dickey Betts was kicked out in 2000, apparently after a few years of causing problems.

But in 1991, the band was still firing on all cylinders, and proud to play their new songs. Six of the 14 songs here are from their 1990 or 1991 albums, and they're all pretty good.

The sound quality is excellent, as you'd expect from the BBC. And while the BBC often edited concerts down to an hour or so, this time they didn't, since the concert is nearly two hours long.

This album is an hour and 56 minutes long.

01 Don't Want You No More - It's Not My Cross to Bear (Allman Brothers Band)
02 Statesboro Blues (Allman Brothers Band)
03 talk (Allman Brothers Band)
04 Blue Sky (Allman Brothers Band)
05 talk (Allman Brothers Band)
06 Low Down Dirty Mean (Allman Brothers Band)
07 talk (Allman Brothers Band)
08 End of the Line (Allman Brothers Band)
09 Loaded Dice (Allman Brothers Band)
10 Southbound (Allman Brothers Band)
11 Jessica [Instrumental] (Allman Brothers Band)
12 Good Clean Fun (Allman Brothers Band)
13 talk (Allman Brothers Band)
14 Gambler's Roll (Allman Brothers Band)
15 talk (Allman Brothers Band)
16 In Memory of Elizabeth Reed [Instrumental] (Allman Brothers Band)
17 One Way Out (Allman Brothers Band)
18 talk (Allman Brothers Band)
19 Kind of Bird [Instrumental] (Allman Brothers Band)
20 Whipping Post (Allman Brothers Band)

https://www.imagenetz.de/bCxS7

It's really hard to find a photo of all the key members of the Allman Brothers Band on stage, since they usually were spread apart from each other. It's even harder to find such a photo specifically from 1991. I did find one, taken at a rather unusual angle. Not the greatest, so let me know if you have something better. This was taken at a concert in Dinkelsbuhl, Germany, in June 1991.

Wednesday, January 17, 2024

Steve Winwood - Soulful Cover Songs, Volume 2: 2006-2021

Here's Volume 2 of Steve Winwood performing cover songs. Since most of them are soul songs, or at least sang with his usual soulfullness, I'm calling this series "Soulful Cover Songs." If you're a Winwood fan, you really need to hear these albums.

Five of the ten songs here have been officially released. "Ain't No Love" is from a Sam Moore album. "Love Will Keep Us Alive," a song written by Jim Capaldi, who was in Traffic with Winwood, was done for a tribute concert for Capaldi that later got released as an album. "Thirty Second Lover" is from a Steve Cropper album, "When the World Gets Small" is from a Gov't Mule album, and "Whiter Shade of Pale" is from a Santana album.

The other songs are from concert bootlegs. But those generally were soundboard recordings, so they sound excellent. A couple were from audience boots, but I edited them carefully until they sounded better. For instance, one thing I'm doing lately for albums like this that mix studio and live cuts is using the latest computer technology to get rid of the audience cheering on the live ones.

This album is 56 minutes long.

01 Ain't No Love (Sam Moore & Steve Winwood)
02 Love Will Keep Us Alive (Steve Winwood & Joe Walsh)
03 Right On (Steve Winwood & Santana)
04 Pretzel Logic (Steve Winwood & Steely Dan)
05 Thirty Second Lover (Steve Cropper & Steve Winwood)
06 The Weight (Steve Winwood)
07 When the World Gets Small (Gov't Mule & Steve Winwood)
08 Crossroads (Bonnie Raitt & Steve Winwood)
09 Everybody's Everything (Steve Winwood & Sheila E.)
10 Whiter Shade of Pale (Santana with Steve Winwood)

https://www.upload.ee/files/16174770/STVEWNWD20062021_SoullCovrSngsVlum2_atse.zip.html

The cover photo is from a concert at the Mountain Winery in Saratoga, California, in 2005.

Tuesday, January 16, 2024

The Cars - The Cap'n Swing Years (1974-1976)

This is basically a completely unreleased, and rarely bootlegged, studio album by the Cars. Not a great one, mind you, since the band was still finding its sound, but if you like the Cars you should like this.

Get comfortable, because in order to explain this album, I need some time to explain the basics about the pre-history of the Cars. The two lead singers in the band, Ric Ocasek and Ben Orr, were lifelong best friends (though they had some estranged years after the Cars broke up). They met way back in 1968, while they were both living in Cleveland, Ohio, as teenagers. They began collaborating musically, and were involved together in numerous bands that had little success. 

Their biggest success came in 1972, when the band they were in, "Milkwood," put out a studio album called "How's the Weather?" This album soon went out of print, and has stayed out of print. If you listen to it today, it's strange, because the voices are clearly recognizable as Ocasek and Orr, but the music is totally different. Blowing with the musical winds of the time, they sounded very much like a mellow Crosby, Stills and Nash, with lots of vocal harmonies and acoustic guitars. I considered putting a song or two from that album on this album, but it's average stuff and the style would be wildly out of place. However, note that one song here, "Dream Trader," was originally on the Milkwood album, but the version here is a 1976 remake with a drastically different, and more rocking, arrangement.

Milkwood, a trio, fell apart soon after their album failed to sell. Ocasek and Orr moved to Boston, and they continued trying to make it in the music business, but still without music success. The timing isn't clear, but sometime between 1973 and 1975, they were joined by Elliott Easton, who would stay as the lead guitarist for the Cars. 

The first three songs here come from 1974. I know very little about them. I don't even know what band name they were using at the time, although "Richard and the Rabbits" is a possibility, since that was used for a while in this time period. But presumably these three songs are originals by Ocasek, who wrote the vast majority of songs for the Cars, especially in the early years. The mellow Milkwood sound was gone and the Cars sound was starting to form.

Some time in early 1976, the band changed their name again, to "Cap'n Swing." By this time, Greg Hawkes had joined them. He'd been occasionally playing with Ocasek and Orr for a couple of years, but he'd had other musical commitments to fulfill for a while. He would become the permanent keyboard player for the Cars.

At first, the band was completed by a drummer named Glenn Evans and a bass player named Kevin Robichaud. Neither would last to the Cars. (Orr would eventually take the bass player spot while continuing to sing.)

This five-member band began having lots of success in the Boston area. They recorded some demos and got an opportunity to take them to New York City, with hopes of getting a record contract. But this didn't go well. Easton later recalled, "We took [the tape of demos] back to Boston with our tails between our legs." It's likely that most of the songs here are from that demo tape. The first three songs are from 1974, as I mentioned previously, and "Lover and a Holiday" was recorded by Cap'n Swing in 1976, but at a different session. Versions of most of these songs appeared on the Internet, but only since around 2020 have most of them shown up with the excellent sound quality you hear here, after a band member leaked better versions to the public.

Listening to these songs, I can understand why the record companies rejected them. The band was getting better, but they still hadn't perfected their own style. On one hand, they were heavily influenced by the Velvet Underground and the similar sounding Modern Lovers. On the other hand, they were heavily influenced by Steely Dan. Apparently, some record executives specifically complained that many of their songs went on too long, with lots of jazzy keyboard noodling in a Steely Dan style that didn't suit the songs. 

Ocasek and Orr took this advice to heart. Back in Boston, they shortened their songs, cut out most of the jazzy noodling, and moved towards a more rocking direction. Unfortunately, we don't have any Cap'n Swing recordings from after they made that stylistic change. 

But they didn't stay as Cap'n Swing for long in any case. Around the start of 1977, they got a new drummer, David Robinson. This was a promising development, because he'd previously been the drummer for the Modern Lovers, which I mentioned already as one of their biggest influences. He would stay on as the permanent drummer for the Cars. He also disliked the band name, "Cap'n Swing," which is an objectively bad name. The way "Captain" gets shortened is strange, and having "Swing" in the name implied they played swing music from the 1940s, which they definitely did not. Robinson suggested "The Cars," and that name stuck. They began playing as the Cars in January 1977, and thereafter went from success to success, helped by the changes they'd made. In 1978, their debut album "The Cars" was released, and it went on to become one of the most critically and commercially successful debut albums of the era.   

So now you know all about Cap'n Swing. I'm calling this a "Cars" album because A) I think the name Cap'n Swing is awful, and B) they effectively were the Cars already, with only a change of drummers to come. (Besides, the first three songs are from before they used the Cap'n Swing name.)

Let me explain some more about the music here. I've included most of the songs from this time period I could find. However, I didn't include some songs, especially from the 1974 session, because I didn't think they were good enough. I also didn't include a few 1976 songs. I passed on "Bye Bye Love," because that was released on the debut album in a better version. Another song, "Twilight Superman," was so clearly "inspired" by "Sweet Jane" by the Velvet Underground that it's best forgotten. A couple more might have been worthy, but had poor sound quality.

Furthermore, after hearing all these songs, I had to agree with the record company execs who complained that their songs went on too long, with too much jazzy noodling. So to make this more palatable, I've made drastic cuts to six songs (the ones with "[Edit]" in their titles). In the most drastic example, "City Lights" originally was six and a half minutes long, but I've edited it down to three minutes. Trust me, you're not missing much with these cuts. For instance, a majority of the cuts got rid of repeated verses and/or choruses that just repeated what happened earlier in the songs. But if you want to hear the full versions, they all can be found on YouTube and other places. Oh, and also, I edited all the songs to boost the lead vocals in the mix. For many of the songs, the vocals were buried way down.

Interestingly, with the exception of "Bye Bye Love," virtually none of these songs would go on to become Cars songs. It is said Cap'n Swing played "You're All I've Got Tonight," from the Cars debut album, in concert, but apparently they never made a studio version of it. I've previously posted an album of Cars non-album tracks, which you can find here:

https://albumsthatshouldexist.blogspot.com/2019/09/the-cars-take-me-now-various-songs-1977.html

Most of those are from 1977 and 1978, and were not released at the time, Yet all or most of all of those songs are different than the Cap'n Swing songs. So at least two albums worth of songs were left unreleased. I'm sure there are more songs from the early and mid-1970s that didn't get recorded, or the recordings didn't survive. I suppose one key reason the Cars' debut album is so good is because Ocasek and Orr had spent well over a decade working up to it, and they discarded many songs along the way.

By the way, note that most Cars songs are sung by Ocasek, though there are some key exceptions sung by Orr, such as "Just What I Needed," "Let's Go," and "Drive." Their voices are very similar, so it's often hard to tell. (They claimed this was because they sang together for so long, especially through their formative years.) But back in this time period, the vast majority of the songs were sung by Orr (who arguably had the better voice). I could be wrong, but I think the only song here sung by Ocasek is "City Lights," while "Dream Trader" has shared lead vocals between Ocasek and Orr.

All of this material remains unreleased because members of the Cars consider it "juvenile" material they would just as soon forget. For similar reasons, they've never allowed the Milkwood album to be released. But while I don't hear any lost classics here, I think this is a pretty decent bunch of songs (especially after the edits and remixing).

One song, "Will You Still Love Me Tonight," is a bonus track. I actually think it's one of the better songs, but it's downgraded due to sound quality. This is one of only three live Cap'n Swing songs I've found. (The others, "Strawberry Moonlight" and "Start It All Again," sound better in their studio versions.)

01 Harlequin (Cars)
02 I Need Spring (Cars)
03 Start It All Again (Cars)
04 Strawberry Moonlight (Cars)
05 Jezebel [Edit] (Cars)
06 Goes On Sleeping [Edit] (Cars)
07 You're Always Brighter [Edit] (Cars)
08 City Lights [Edit] (Cars)
09 Dream Trader (Cars)
10 You Can Have 'Em [Blue Moon Saloon] (Cars)
11 Come Back Down [Edit] (Cars)
12 Magic Pants [Crazy Rock and Roll] [Edit] (Cars)
13 Lover and a Holiday [See Through My Eyes] (Cars)

Will You Still Love Me Tonight (Cars) 

https://www.upload.ee/files/17362752/TCARZ1974-1976ThCapnSwngYers_atse.zip.html

alternate:

https://pixeldrain.com/u/KBTRPBU8

The cover photo is a bit of a mystery. From right to left, it shows Ben Orr, Elliott Easton, Greg Hawkes, Ric Ocasek, and Danny Lewis. The first four would go on to be members of the Cars, but Lewis was the drummer briefly, before David Robinson became the drummer. So this probably is from late 1976, right before Cap'n Swing was renamed the Cars. It's the only photo of the band that I could find.