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Brian Eno-801 Live (Size: 106.66 MB)
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801 Live @320Kpbs
Ok, I usually just cut and paste reviews and Album info. A) Because it is easy and saves time and B) because I just get lazy and don't want to have to write stuff from off the top of my head and rely on "faulty Memory". I make a partial exception in this case.... This is one of my all time favorite "Desert Island" picks, La Grima>> Tomorrow Never Knows is one of the coolest early electronica/psychedellic versions of this song done live by a band, but not just any band - a band comprised of mostly Roxy Music members after the band disbanded in 1976 for a while. I love Brian Eno's early work, he wrote such quirky, eccentric and twisted pop songs! I think the only other songs that made such an impact on my young and impressionable mind back then was Donna Summer/Georgio Moroder - I Feel Love, Georgio Moroder - Midnight Express and of course Heart Of Glass- Blondie I guess Gergio Moroder has alot to account for! I hope folks out there will enjoy this music as much as I do! now to the "Cut and Paste" details! 801 Live From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia 801 Live Live album by 801 Released November 1976 Recorded London, Queen Elizabeth Hall, 3 September 1976 Genre Experimental rock, Art rock, Progressive rock Length 46:26 (LP) 56:59 (1999 Reissue) 114:13 (Live Collectors Edition) Label Expression, Polydor Producer 801 801 chronology 801 Live (1976) Listen Now (1977) 801 Live is the debut live album by 801, released in November 1976. In 1976, while Roxy Music had temporarily disbanded, 801 got together as a temporary project and began rehearsing at Island Studios, Hammersmith, about three weeks before their first gig. 801 performed three critically highly acclaimed concerts: in Norfolk, at the Reading Festival, and on 3 September at London's Queen Elizabeth Hall. This last concert was recorded and released as the album 801 Live. The music consisted of more or less mutated selections from albums by Phil Manzanera, Brian Eno and Quiet Sun, plus a full-scale rearrangement of Lennon-McCartney's "Tomorrow Never Knows" and an off-the-wall excursion into The Kinks' 1964 hit "You Really Got Me". 801 Live set new standards for live recordings because it was one of the first in which all outputs from the vocal microphones, guitar amps and others instruments (except the drums) were fed directly to the mobile studio mixing desk, rather than being recorded via microphones and/or signals fed out the front-of-house PA mixer. The album became a significant cult success in many countries, notably in Australia, where it was heavily promoted by the ABC's new 24-hour rock station Double Jay (2JJ). In 2006, the official Phil Manzanera Web site Manzanera.com reported that 801 Live was soon to be reissued as a double CD with "minor tweaks" to the original recordings and restoration of the "proper ending" to the song "Third Uncle".[citation needed] In April 2011, Burning Shed announced the availability of the double CD under the title 801 Live Collectors Edition[1] Material for the second CD was taken from a studio rehearsal on a sound stage at Shepperton Film Studios. 1999 Reissue (Collectors Edition) "Lagrima" (Manzanera) – 2:33 "TNK (Tomorrow Never Knows)" (John Lennon, Paul McCartney) – 6:15 "East of Asteroid" (Manzanera, MacCormick) – 4:56 "Rongwrong" (Charles Hayward) – 5:09 "Sombre Reptiles" (Eno) – 3:12 "Golden Hours" (Eno) – 4:30 "Fat Lady of Limburg" (Eno) – 6:02 "Baby's on Fire" (Eno) – 5:02 "Diamond Head" (Manzanera) – 6:21 "Miss Shapiro" (Manzanera, Eno) – 4:21 "You Really Got Me" (Ray Davies) – 3:22 "Third Uncle" (Eno) – 5:15 Please seed and leave a comment or two, Thanks! Related Torrents
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