What Are You Listening To?
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Here’s another excellent bootleg recording from the 70’s. A+++Johnny Winter - LIVE at Selland Arena (Fresno, CA) March 31, 1974
Johnny Winter ~ Jumpin' Jack Flash (1974) -
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Lol. You better believe they are related. I saw Edgar in mid-1970's in Milwaukee at a packed arena, really excellent show. Took me two more decades to see Johnny. Another smoking show even though he had to be helped onto stage by then and sat in a chair the whole time. The entire crowd on their feet standing ovation before long.
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Patriotism is the last refuge of a scoundrel…….Samuel Johnson
Since we don’t know where we are going we have to stick together in case someone gets there….Ken Kesey
To learn who rules over you, simply find out who you are not allowed to criticize.
– Kevin Alfred Strom -
$2 section CD. Best of;

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rednedtugent wrote: »

I have this same boxset but don't remember the "Parental Advisory" disclaimer on it though? -
Another recently-unearthed Led Zeppelin treasure!
A must-have for any serious Zeppelin collector.Led Zeppelin - Haven't We Met Somewhere Before
Seattle, WA (03-17-1975) [3CD] Soundboard (2011) A++++


Led Zeppelin - Haven't We Met Somewhere Before Disc 1 (2011)
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=U09kzN9I5Mc
Led Zeppelin - Haven't We Met Somewhere Before Disc 2 (2011)
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XUTlqsCdVLc
Led Zeppelin - Haven't We Met Somewhere Before Disc 3 (2011)
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=emjuydYHSGUPublished on Jul 13, 2016
The latest Led Zeppelin soundboard to escape the Showco archives is the March 17th, 1975 Seattle show. There have been many releases of this show in the past sourced from two audience tapes, but Haven’t We Met Somewhere Before? is the debut of the complete professional recording. Unlike the Nassau Coliseum and Baton Rouge soundboards, Seattle is very clean and enjoyable sounding. John Paul Jones’ bass is a bit high in the mix, but overall it is closer in timbre to the Dallas recordings. The first night is very good and is sometimes neglected in comparison to the more well known second Seattle show on March 21st. Plant’s voice, which had been quite weak at the beginning of the tour is very strong and he’s able to unleash some impressive vocal dynamics. A rather negative review was published in the newspapers. “Squeeze all the air out of a three-hour Led Zeppelin concert at the Coliseum and you might have an hour of music and visual effects worth your attention. Nevertheless, a sellout crowd that broke four plate-glass doors and brought a two-feet-deep stack of counterfeit tickets gust to get into the place, sat spellbound, despite the fact that ushers and police relieved them of the equivalent of a green garbage dumpster full of booze. Led Zeppelin’s appeal might be explained by the fact that they’re known in the trade as a ‘street band,’ meaning that their following precedes critical attention by about two years.” Although calling Zeppelin a “street band” is a bit condescending, the author does correctly point out that the band were ahead of the critics in the seventies. The appeal is best summed up by Donna Gaines when she writes in Teenage Wasteland that Zeppelin brought grace to bleak suburban landscapes. A trip to the record store to buy a Zeppelin LP was a trip to Camelot by restoring dignity to an otherwise humiliating life. The setlist in 1975 was all about journey, movement and travel, dramatically carrying along the listener. Robert Plant himself emphasizes this ethic repeatedly on this (and other tours). Opening with the fanfare “Rock And Roll” segueing into “Sick Again,” a short commentary upon their previous tour, Plant sets the stage, joking with the audience how they’re happy to be back in Seattle “a town of great fishermen, including our drummer,” and that they will offer “a cross section” of their catalogue. “Over The Hills And Far Away,” which “sums up the looking ahead and wondering,” follows. Instead of being a travelogue, it sets an anticipatory mood for things to come. The melody came out of various “White Summer” improvisations in 1970 and the solo lifted (more or less) from “Immigrant Song,” two other tunes with strong connotations of movement and change.
The newspaper article called “Kashmir” a “spooky tune” which has some distortion in this recording. But the epics come off very well. John Paul Jones’ piano solo in “No Quarter” sound meandering in the audience recording, but sounds much better on the soundboard. Page’s dramatic crescendo is one of the high points of the night. Plant begins to babble before “Trample Underfoot,” rambling on about the meaning of the song and offering soccer scores, telling Seattle “Wolverhampton Wanderers seven, Chelsea One. Trampled Underfoot. ”Before “Dazed And Confused,” while Plant is giving his long introduction, someone throws something on stage. He reacts by singing the first line of Max Bygraves 1954 novelty tune “You’re A Pink Toothbrush.” (Could we assume a toothbrush was thrown onstage?) The song (sort of) gives this release a title. “Dazed And Confused” reaches thirty-five minutes and includes the “Woodstock” snippet. By this time in the tour the song began to take life past the previous tour’s improvisation to be a much more deliberate, slow, and drawn out affair. Some may call it self-indulgence, but Page is taking his time to explore ideas more fully. “Stairway To Heaven” closes the show and the encores include “Whole Lotta Love,” with a long “Licking Stick” interlude, segueing into “Black Dog.” Haven’t We Met Somewhere Before? is packaged in a quad fatboy jewel case with high quality inserts with tour photographs. The design is clean and basic, recalling the great Silver Rarity releases from the protection gap days. Unlike the previous couple of soundboards, this one is worth seeking out. -
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DonnerUndBlitzen wrote: »Those have been up at Youtube 10 months without getting shut down.
Many entertainment reviews miss the mark and, while the audience is in rock heaven at most concerts, the reviewers are on the "Highway to Hell" with their pseudo intellectual approach to the music.
The review they are referring to was from a local newspaper in 1975. You see a lot of them like that for just about every band. Some old **** who hates hard rock goes to the concert with a bunch of rowdy kids and is subjected to three hours of blistering-loud Led Zeppelin.
If you listen to this excellent bootleg release you can be the judge. It's Led Zeppelin at their peak and Robert Plant hasn't lost his voice yet like he has on some other concerts. Led Zeppelin toured hard and put on one heck of a show.
To me these excellent boots are some of the best material you can have. -
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more mono;

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Gatecrasher wrote: »rednedtugent wrote: »I have this same boxset but don't remember the "Parental Advisory" disclaimer on it though?
Mine has it. Surely it is for the 'Trogg Tapes' CD. -
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Here you go MD



2-channel: Modwright KWI-200 Integrated, Dynaudio C1-II Signatures
Desktop rig: LSi7, Polk 110sub, Dayens Ampino amp, W4S DAC/pre, Sonos, JRiver
Gear on standby: Melody 101 tube pre, Unison Research Simply Italy Integrated
Gone to new homes: (Matt Polk's)Threshold Stasis SA12e monoblocks, Pass XA30.5 amp, Usher MD2 speakers, Dynaudio C4 platinum speakers, Modwright LS100 (voltz), Simaudio 780D DAC
erat interfectorem cesar et **** dictatorem dicere a -
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Best Davey Crockett mullet ever!
Badfinger - Straight Up
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Family Room, Innuos Statement streamer (Roon Core) with Morrow Audio USB cable to McIntosh MC 2700 pre with DC2 Digital Audio Module; AQ Sky XLRs to CAT 600.2 dualmono amp, Morrow Elite Speaker Cables to NOLA Baby Grand Reference Gold 3 speakers. Power source for all components: Silver Circle Audio Pure Power One with dedicated 20 amp circuit to main panel.
Exercise Room, Innuos Streamer via Cat 6 cable connection to PS Audio PerfectWave MkII DAC w/Bridge II, AQ King Cobra RCAs to Perreaux PMF3150 amp (fully restored and upgraded by Jeffrey Jackson, Precision Audio Labs), Supra Rondo 4x2.5 Speaker Cables to SDA 1Cs (Vr3 Mods Xovers and other mods.), Dreadnaught with Supra Rondo 4x2.5 interconnect cables by Vr3 Mods. Power for each component from dedicated 20 amp circuit to main panel, except Innuos Statement powered from Silver Circle Audio Pure Power One. -
An excellent Cars bootleg A+++The Cars - Live At The El Mocambo (09-14-1978) KBFH [Pre-FM, SBD] (1978)
You’re All I’ve Got Tonight -
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When you talk about bootleg recordings the Grateful Dead always enter the conversation. There are so many excellent soundboards and audience recordings. No other band has been so well-documented.
This bootleg has historical significance. While this is not their best show, it was their last. Jerry Garcia would die in his sleep a month later on Aug. 9, 1995, a week after he turned 53.
Even though this show has its flaws, this soundboard recording (like a lot of the dead bootlegs) is technically-superb in audio quality.
Jerry Garcia's final performance.....Grateful Dead - Soldier Field, Chicago, IL 07-09-95 [3CD] Excellent Soundboard

Grateful Dead - So Many Roads 7/9/1995 Soldier Field Chicago, IL
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BwCKeXsdWBI
Grateful Dead’s July 9, 1995, Set List
“Touch of Grey”
“Little Red Rooster”
“Lazy River Road”
“When I Paint My Masterpiece”
“Childhood’s End”
“Cumberland Blues”
“Promised Land”
“Shakedown Street”
“Samson and Delilah”
“So Many Roads”
“Samba in the Rain”
“Corrina”
“Drums / Space”
“Unbroken Chain”
“Sugar Magnolia”
Encore: “Black Muddy River”
“Box of Rain” -
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https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XlmrOE3_WYM













https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hWtFhYIkbZo