Rock/Pop
CDアルバム

Parklive

0.0

販売価格

¥
2,690
税込
還元ポイント

廃盤

在庫状況 について

フォーマット CDアルバム
発売日 2012年12月03日
国内/輸入 輸入(ヨーロッパ盤)
レーベルEMI
構成数 2
パッケージ仕様 -
規格品番 X72150528
SKU 5099972150528

構成数 : 2枚
合計収録時間 : 02:00:15

  1. 1.[CDアルバム] DISC 1:
    1. 1.
      Girls and Boys

      アーティスト: Blur

    2. 2.
      London Loves

      アーティスト: Blur

    3. 3.
      Tracy Jacks

      アーティスト: Blur

    4. 4.
      Jubilee

      アーティスト: Blur

    5. 5.
      Beetlebum

      アーティスト: Blur

    6. 6.
      Coffee and Tv

      アーティスト: Blur

    7. 7.
      Out of Time

      アーティスト: Blur

    8. 8.
      Young and Lovely

      アーティスト: Blur

    9. 9.
      Trimm Trabb

      アーティスト: Blur

    10. 10.
      Caramel

      アーティスト: Blur

    11. 11.
      Sunday Sunday

      アーティスト: Blur

    12. 12.
      Country House

      アーティスト: Blur

    13. 13.
      Parklife

      アーティスト: Blur

  2. 2.[CDアルバム] DISC 2:
    1. 1.
      Colin Zeal

      アーティスト: Blur

    2. 2.
      Popscene

      アーティスト: Blur

    3. 3.
      Advert

      アーティスト: Blur

    4. 4.
      Song 2

      アーティスト: Blur

    5. 5.
      No Distance Left to Run

      アーティスト: Blur

    6. 6.
      Tender

      アーティスト: Blur

    7. 7.
      This Is a Low

      アーティスト: Blur

    8. 8.
      Sing

      アーティスト: Blur

    9. 9.
      Under the Westway / Intermission

      アーティスト: Blur

    10. 10.
      End of a Century

      アーティスト: Blur

    11. 11.
      For Tomorrow

      アーティスト: Blur

    12. 12.
      The Universal

      アーティスト: Blur

作品の情報

メイン
アーティスト: Blur

ゲスト
アーティスト: Phil Daniels

その他
エンジニア: Matt ButcherWill Shapland

オリジナル発売日:2012年

商品の紹介

Blur headlined a Brit-pop blowout at Hyde Park on the final day of the London 2012 Olympic games, a concert that not so coincidentally also capped off a flurry of Blur-related activity. The band celebrated its 21st anniversary in grand fashion, reissuing its catalog as deluxe double-disc sets, boxing these deluxe editions in a mammoth rarities-laden box set called Blur 21, releasing a good reunion single in "Under the Westway"/"The Puritan," and, finally, performing this concert, releasing it digitally the following week as the double-album Parklive (which is due to be expanded into a five-CD box later in the year). Given the amount of time the reunited Blur spent trawling through their back pages, it's not much of a surprise that the set list of Parklive is constructed as a chronicle of their past, one that touches lightly on their beginnings and end -- there's one song apiece from Leisure and Think Tank -- one that accentuates two through-lines in their history: the churning, darkly psychedelic art rock band and the proudly patriotic, albeit wildly sardonic, British pop group. Considering the occasion, Blur serve up plenty of the former, playing roughly half of Parklife -- Phil Daniels himself comes out to bark out the title track -- and have fun digging deep, playing "London Loves," which has rarely ever been played on-stage. This isn't the only rarity here -- they haul out the Modern Life Is Rubbish B-side "Young and Lovely," which Damon Albarn introduces with a preamble dedicating it to the band's children, an acknowledgment of Blur's advancing years, a subject he also alludes to by changing a lyric on "End of a Century" to "as you get closer to 50." Blur are indeed now 20 years on from their '90s peak and it's evident in the music: where they were once frenetic they are now muscular and Albarn's ambition has mellowed into a quiet confidence. The passing of time has only increased Blur's stature as a British treasure and this is a concert that suits their status: it's crowd-pleasing without pandering, the knotty "Caramel" and "Trimm Trabb" fitting neatly next to "Sunday Sunday," the new "Under the Westway" gaining resonance when placed near "Sing" and "For Tomorrow." The latter is just enough to suggest that Blur could continue to build upon their legacy, but if this turns out to be a farewell, it is one that is triumphant. ~ Stephen Thomas Erlewine|
Rovi

Blur headlined a Brit-pop blowout at Hyde Park on the final day of the London 2012 Olympic games, a concert that not so coincidentally also capped off a flurry of Blur-related activity. The band celebrated its 21st anniversary in grand fashion, reissuing its catalog as deluxe double-disc sets, boxing these deluxe editions in a mammoth rarities-laden box set called Blur 21, releasing a good reunion single in "Under the Westway"/"The Puritan," and, finally, performing this concert, releasing it digitally the following week as the double-album Parklive (which is due to be expanded into a five-CD box later in the year). Given the amount of time the reunited Blur spent trawling through their back pages, it's not much of a surprise that the set list of Parklive is constructed as a chronicle of their past, one that touches lightly on their beginnings and end -- there's one song apiece from Leisure and Think Tank -- one that accentuates two through-lines in their history: the churning, darkly psychedelic art rock band and the proudly patriotic, albeit wildly sardonic, British pop group. Considering the occasion, Blur serve up plenty of the former, playing roughly half of Parklife -- Phil Daniels himself comes out to bark out the title track -- and have fun digging deep, playing "London Loves," which has rarely ever been played on-stage. This isn't the only rarity here -- they haul out the Modern Life Is Rubbish B-side "Young and Lovely," which Damon Albarn introduces with a preamble dedicating it to the band's children, an acknowledgment of Blur's advancing years, a subject he also alludes to by changing a lyric on "End of a Century" to "as you get closer to 50." Blur are indeed now 20 years on from their '90s peak and it's evident in the music: where they were once frenetic they are now muscular and Albarn's ambition has mellowed into a quiet confidence. The passing of time has only increased Blur's stature as a British treasure and this is a concert that suits their status: it's crowd-pleasing without pandering, the knotty "Caramel" and "Trimm Trabb" fitting neatly next to "Sunday Sunday," the new "Under the Westway" gaining resonance when placed near "Sing" and "For Tomorrow." The latter is just enough to suggest that Blur could continue to build upon their legacy, but if this turns out to be a farewell, it is one that is triumphant. ~ Stephen Thomas Erlewine
Rovi

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