ショッピングカート
Rock/Pop
CD
Live At The Isle Of Wight Festival 1970
★★★★★
★★★★★
0.0

在庫状況 について

商品の情報

フォーマット

CD

構成数

1

国内/輸入

輸入

パッケージ仕様

-

発売日

2009年01月06日

規格品番

EAGCD380

レーベル

SKU

5034504138025

作品の情報
メイン
アーティスト
商品の紹介
Record Collector - 3 stars out of 5 -- "Mike Pinder's key wizardry complements Graeme Edge's mad beat on 'Tortoise & The Hare'..."
Rovi
Live recordings by the original Moody Blues are surprisingly scarce -- considering the amount of touring that they did do from 1968 through 1973, especially of the United States, and the way they were selling records after 1968, amazingly little in the way of actual concert recordings were apparently done, and even less have turned up across the years; one live album from Royal Albert Hall in 1969 (and that was released almost begrudgingly, in 1978, to pave the way for the band's reuniting), and that's been it. That is, until the release of this CD of just over an hour in length, containing the band's performance from the 1970 Isle of Wight Festival, in front of an audience many hundreds of thousands strong (no one knows for sure, as the gate-crashers took the place over). And its shortcomings may explain why there haven't been more extensive efforts at documenting the group's live sound from this period. Oh, there are some very good moments -- many, in fact -- and they do well on numbers such as "Tuesday Afternoon" and "Nights in White Satin," from their classic repertory -- and then-new songs such as "Gypsy," "Tortoise and the Hare," and "Minstrel's Song" come off well; and even "Melancholy Man," which this reviewer has always regarded as a weak number from A Question of Balance, works better here with more emotional immediacy and connection. But the group's efforts at embellishing their work, adding little flourishes for the sake of live performance, generally don't come off well, and their harmony vocals -- despite a lot of effort -- are frequently ragged and mis-timed. Perhaps the latter shortcomings are inevitable in performing in front of something like a half-a-million people, but they do leave this recording short of being definitive, even as a concert document. There is a lot of good here, to be sure, mostly in the individual contributions of the members -- Justin Hayward's lead guitar playing is first-rate, and the rhythm section of John Lodge and Graeme Edge is rock-solid throughout; Michael Pinder's Mellotrons do generate some strange and beautiful sounds; and Ray Thomas' flute is better recorded than one would have expected, given the limitations of the equipment of the era (listen to Ian Anderson's instrument on the Carnegie Hall Jethro Tull sides of the same era to hear the distortion one expected to find). But pulling their sound together on the most complex of their compositions on-stage was still a little bit beyond them, at least in an outdoor setting, based on the evidence here. And all of this doesn't mean that fans won't embrace and appreciate what is here -- some of the musicianship is quite bracing, and the 70-percent of the what is here that works will satisfy. But it's also easy to see why the band has been so cagey, if not downright evasive over the years about the existence of live tapes of this vintage. All of that said, this performance was also captured on film, by a full professional crew using state-of-the-art equipment, which was scheduled for release sometime later in 2008 or 2009, and it's entirely possible that this performance may work much better on visual terms than it does as a pure audio release. ~ Bruce Eder|
Rovi
収録内容

構成数 | 1枚

合計収録時間 | 00:00:00

Live recordings by the original Moody Blues are surprisingly scarce -- considering the amount of touring that they did do from 1968 through 1973, especially of the United States, and the way they were selling records after 1968, amazingly little in the way of actual concert recordings were apparently done, and even less have turned up across the years; one live album from Royal Albert Hall in 1969 (and that was released almost begrudgingly, in 1978, to pave the way for the band's reuniting), and that's been it. That is, until the release of this CD of just over an hour in length, containing the band's performance from the 1970 Isle of Wight Festival, in front of an audience many hundreds of thousands strong (no one knows for sure, as the gate-crashers took the place over). And its shortcomings may explain why there haven't been more extensive efforts at documenting the group's live sound from this period. Oh, there are some very good moments -- many, in fact -- and they do well on numbers such as "Tuesday Afternoon" and "Nights in White Satin," from their classic repertory -- and then-new songs such as "Gypsy," "Tortoise and the Hare," and "Minstrel's Song" come off well; and even "Melancholy Man," which this reviewer has always regarded as a weak number from A Question of Balance, works better here with more emotional immediacy and connection. But the group's efforts at embellishing their work, adding little flourishes for the sake of live performance, generally don't come off well, and their harmony vocals -- despite a lot of effort -- are frequently ragged and mis-timed. Perhaps the latter shortcomings are inevitable in performing in front of something like a half-a-million people, but they do leave this recording short of being definitive, even as a concert document. There is a lot of good here, to be sure, mostly in the individual contributions of the members -- Justin Hayward's lead guitar playing is first-rate, and the rhythm section of John Lodge and Graeme Edge is rock-solid throughout; Michael Pinder's Mellotrons do generate some strange and beautiful sounds; and Ray Thomas' flute is better recorded than one would have expected, given the limitations of the equipment of the era (listen to Ian Anderson's instrument on the Carnegie Hall Jethro Tull sides of the same era to hear the distortion one expected to find). But pulling their sound together on the most complex of their compositions on-stage was still a little bit beyond them, at least in an outdoor setting, based on the evidence here. And all of this doesn't mean that fans won't embrace and appreciate what is here -- some of the musicianship is quite bracing, and the 70-percent of the what is here that works will satisfy. But it's also easy to see why the band has been so cagey, if not downright evasive over the years about the existence of live tapes of this vintage. All of that said, this performance was also captured on film, by a full professional crew using state-of-the-art equipment, which was scheduled for release sometime later in 2008 or 2009, and it's entirely possible that this performance may work much better on visual terms than it does as a pure audio release. ~ Bruce Eder

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