FORMAT: Lossless (Flac)
SIZE: 684 mb (3% Recovery)
Recorded live at New York City, New York, Madison Square Garden, (Evening Show), September, 19th, 1970.
Remastered Audience Recording, (A Group/Personal Project).
TRACKLIST:
Disc One:
1) Scott Muni Introduction
2) Immigrant Song
3) Heartbreaker
4) Dazed And Confused
5) Bring It On Home
6) Tribute/Eulogy To Jimi Hendrix
7) That's The Way
8) Bron-Yr-Aur
9) Since I've Been Loving You
10) Organ Solo
11) Thank You
Disc Two:
1) What Is And What Should Never Be
2) Moby Dick
3) Rice Pudding (Tease)
4) Whole Lotta Love (Medley)
Includes:
- Boogie Chillen
- Dust My Broom
- Trucking Little Mama
- Bottle Up And Go
- Lawdy Miss Clawdy
- For What It's Worth
- Cinnamon Girl
- Some Other Guy
- Train Kept-A-Rollin'
- I'm A King Bee
- C.C Rider
- Baby Don't You Wanna Go
- Honey Bee
- The Lemon Song
5) Out On The Tiles
6) Communication Breakdown (Includes: "It's Your Thing" and "Gallows Pole")
7) Scott Muni Announcement
8) The Girl Can't Help It
9) Talking 'Bout You
10) Twenty Flight Rock
11) How Many More Times (Medley)
Includes:
- The Hunter
- Cadillac (No Money Down)
- Blueberry Hill
Notes:
The last show/stop of the band's 1970 North American tour, the group played 2 shows on this date (an afternoon, and an evening performance) because of overwhelming demand for tickets.
The afternoon show took place at 2 p.m, and the evening performance took place at 8 p.m, this project is a remaster of the evening show.
Both shows are excellent, and were luckily recorded in good quality by people who were close to the stage and who used good equipment, but some collectors do have their preferences on which performance they prefer (I'm partial to the afternoon show myself).
These shows are special for various reasons, some I've already discussed (i.e: the band played 2 performances on the same date, it's the last stop of the North American 1970 tour) but there are other factors that make these performances special like the group doing a lot of experimentation and rare numbers during both shows, and the fact that this is the band's first time playing Madison Square Garden.
But the thing that makes this show special is that this concert was played the day after Jimi Hendrix died, something that definitely shocked the music world.
During both performances, Robert called attention to this to the audience, and did a sort of brief tribute to Jimi during both performances, which I personally found to be quite a decent thing for him to do because although they (the band) were probably not as close to him as other musicians and bands were, his death was indeed a terrible loss to the music industry.
Jimi's style and performances changed the way artists could play rock and roll, and alot is owed to him.
Zeppelin being one of the biggest and hottest bands at the time could've just not said anything on his passing, they could've thought what many artists think from time to time when a band becomes hot that they're "the future", and that people like Hendrix were "the past", and therefore obsolete, but calling attention to his passing and saying that his death was a great loss I think was very big of them to do.
For those that may not know, there are 3 audience recordings for the afternoon performance, and only one recording for the evening show.
(links in comments)
(PASSWORD = ra)
Enjoy !
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