The Rolling Stones – Chicago, IL (06/21/19)

The Rolling Stones
No Filter in Chicago 1st Night -XAVEL ORIGINAL MASTER-」
XAVEL-Silver Masterpiece Series-205
Recorded Live at Soldier Field
Chicago, IL, USA
21st June 2019



[XAVEL ORIGINAL MASTER : Multiple Stereo IEM Sources Matrix Recording]

Trade FLACs >WAV > Change File Names To Reflect Etree Standards, FLAC (Level 8) + Tags Via xACT 2.47 By OldNeumanntapr

(Disc 1)
01. Opening
02. Street Fighting Man
03. Let’s Spend the Night Together
04. Tumbling Dice
05. Sad Sad Sad
06. You Got Me Rocking
07. You Can’t Always Get What You Want
08. Angie
09. Dead Flowers
10. Sympathy for the Devil
11. Honky Tonk Women

(Disc 2)
01. Band Introductions
02. You Got the Silver (Keith Richards on lead vocals)
03. Before They Make Me Run (Keith Richards on lead vocals)
04. Miss You
05. Paint It Black
06. Midnight Rambler
07. Start Me Up
08. Jumpin’ Jack Flash
09. Brown Sugar
Encore:
10. Gimme Shelter
11. (I Can’t Get No) Satisfaction

Lineage: Silver CDs > XLD (secure and accurate ripper) > FLAC

2019/06/21 Soldier Field, Chicago, IL IEM SBD

No Filter in Chicago 1st Night Disc 1 XAVEL

The Rolling Stones – Los Angeles, CA (07/13/24)

Rolling Stones
Sofi Stadium
Los Angeles,CA
07-13-2024

Lineage>SP-CMC-4U -> A10
taken from the ijwthstd blog>raw wav file>Roxio Sound Editor>Split tracks>Traders Little
Helper>flac 6>Us

Start Me Up
Get Off of My Cloud
Tumbling Dice
Angry
Doo Doo Doo Doo Doo (Heartbreaker)
(fan-voted song)
Fool to Cry
(tour debut)
Whole Wide World
Monkey Man
You Can’t Always Get What You Wa
Band Introductions
You Got the Silver
(Keith Richards on lead vocals)
Little T&A
(Keith Richards on lead vocals)
Before They Make Me Run
(Keith Richards on lead vocals)
Sympathy for the Devil
Honky Tonk Women
Miss You
Gimme Shelter
Paint It Black
Jumpin’ Jack Flash

Encore:
Sweet Sounds of Heaven
(I Can’t Get No) Satisfaction

The Rolling Stones – Los Angeles, CA (07/10/24)

The Rolling Stones
“Hackney Diamonds Tour”
SoFi Stadium
Inglewood, CA
July 10, 2024

** 24 BIT **

Source: SP-CMC-8 (cardioids) > SP-SPSB-10 > Roland R-07 @ 24 bit/48 kHz
Mastering: .WAV > iZotope RX11 Advanced v11.0.1.3871 (De-click) > Sound Forge Pro 14.0 Build 140 [minor edits, normalize, & fades, Boz Digital Labs T-Bone2 plug-in (tilt EQ)] > CDWav
(tracking) > Trader’s Little Helper (level 5) > FLAC > TagScanner 6.1.17 (tagging)
Location: Close to the rail, 10 meters left of DFC (last few songs – at the rail, closer to the front speakers)
Recorded by: toshi
Mastered by: Dennis Orr

Setlist: (2:03:30)
01 Intro
02 Start Me Up
03 You Got Me Rocking
04 It’s Only Rock ‘N’ Roll (But I Like It)
05 Angry
06 Beast Of Burden
07 Wild Horses
08 Mess It Up
09 Tumbling Dice
10 Chat
11 You Can’t Always Get What You Want
12 Chat & Band Intros
13 Tell Me Straight (1)
14 Little T & A (1)
15 Before They Make Me Run (1)
16 Sympathy For The Devil
17 Honky Tonk Women
18 Midnight Rambler
19 Gimme Shelter
20 Chat
21 Paint It Black
22 Jumpin’ Jack Flash
23 Encore Break

  • Encore –
    24 Sweet Sounds Of Heaven
    25 (I Can’t Get No) Satisfaction
    26 Crowd

(1) Keith – lead vocals

Mick Jagger – lead vocals, guitar, & harp
Keith Richards – guitars & backing vocals
Ronnie Wood – guitars
Chuck Leavell – keyboards
Darryl Jones – bass
Steve Jordan – drums
Bernard Fowler – backing vocals & percussion
Matt Clifford – keyboards, percussion, & French horn
Tim Ries – saxophone & keyboards
Karl Denson – saxophone
Chanel Haynes – backing vocals (co-lead vocals on “Gimme Shelter”)

The Beatles – Arrive Without Travelling

THE BEATLES
Arrive Without Travelling: Remastered Edition

A Remasters Workshop edition
Pitch, phase and levels corrected, further declicked and denoised

  1. Sgt. Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band (from “The Making Of Sgt. Pepper”)
  2. That Means A Lot (takes 23, 24 & ‘test’)
  3. I’m So Tired (take 14, from remix session 10-15-68)
  4. We Can Work It Out (take 2 with single lead vocal)
  5. Lucy In The Sky With Diamonds (from “The Making Of Sgt. Pepper”)
  6. It’s All Too Much (take 2, unedited version)
  7. She’s A Woman (11-17-64 Top Gear seesion outtake)
  8. Being For The Benefit Of Mr. Kite! (from “The Making Of Sgt. Pepper”)
  9. Within You Without You (from “The Making Of Sgt. Pepper”)
  10. Norwegian Wood (take 2)
  11. Penny Lane overdub session (excerpt)
  12. I’m In Love (John piano demo)
  13. 12-Bar Original (takes 1, 2 & end of prior rehearsal)
  14. I Feel Fine (11-17-64 Top Gear seesion outtake)
  15. Good Morning Good Morning (from “The Making Of Sgt. Pepper”)
  16. The Inner Light (instrumental track)
  17. Hold Me Tight (take 20 breakdown)
  18. A Day In The Life (from “The Making Of Sgt. Pepper”)

The Friday Night Horror Movie: Dr. Terror’s House of Horror (1965)

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I was planning on watching The Substance tonight and writing about it. I’ve wanted to watch it since it came out. I ordered a free 7-day trial of Mubi just to watch it. I had to force myself to wait until Friday to watch it so I could make it my Friday Night Horror Movie.

Then Friday finally came. It was a long, busy day at work. I was unable to knock off early like I usually do. By the time I was done my daughter had already taken over the television upstairs in my bedroom. That’s usually where I watch my horror films these days as my wife doesn’t like them and she’s usually downstairs.

That’s where she was this evening, watching some crafting videos on YouTube. I was being blocked from watching The Substance, or any horror movie. I wound up back in my office playing games until supper.

After eating I did talk my wife into watching a movie, just not a horror movie. We watched Certified Copy, a very arthouse film about…well I’m not entirely sure what it was about, but I’ll be writing about it soon for Foreign Film February.

As it started getting late I started having little panic attacks. It was Friday Night and I’d not watched a horror movie, let alone written this article.

It was too late for The Substance as it is a bit long and I didn’t want to be up past midnight trying to write something. We are both big fans of Hammer Horror films and so I talked her into this film (which is from Amicus Productions, not Hammer, but they always treaded in the same waters).

Dr. Terror’s House of Horrors is an anthology film consisting of five short films all tied together by an encompassing story. Five men board a train in the dead of night. Just before it leaves another man (Peter Cushing in heavy makeup) joins them in their car.

He is a soothsayer, a fortune teller, and he agrees to tell everyone their future by reading his deck of Tarot Cards. Naturally, their futures are our movie.

Five stories plus introductions to them on the train all told in 98 minutes doesn’t leave much time for each story. This is one of the reasons I don’t tend to like anthologies. All you get are quick sketches of a story. The good ones leave you wanting more and the bad ones only accentuate the fact that you could have more of the good ones.

Four of the five here are pretty good and quite economical. If your story is only going to last fifteen minutes or so it needs to be slim and lean – no fat on that bone. The one bad one is all fat. It takes time for no less than three musical interludes.

Quickly here they are.

Werewolf: A man returns to his ancestral home to help the new owner with some renovations. In the basement, he discovers a coffin in a secret room and a curse. The curse is, of course, a werewolf. It comes with a nice twist ending.

Creeping Vine: A couple comes home to find a large vine growing in their garden. When they try to cut it down it attacks them back.

Voodoo: A jazz musician gets a gig in the West Indies. There he stumbles upon a voodoo ritual and digs the music. He takes the mad beats home with him and is cursed by the voodoo gods.

Disembodied Hand: By far the best story stars Christopher Lee as a snobby art critic who lambasts artists he doesn’t like (Michael Gough) resulting in his suicide. The, you guessed it, disembodied hand of the dead guy takes its revenge.

Vampire: A doctor (a young Donald Sutherland) takes his bride home only to discover she’s a vampire (the titles of these stories are pretty obvious don’t ya think?)

The film does pretty much exactly what these types of things are supposed to do. The stories all have a very basic premise and they get in and get out with economical speed. None of them are great, but most of them are quite fun, and that’s all I’m looking for.

Well, what I was really looking for was getting to watch The Substance, but this will do in a pinch. I guess I’ll be paying for a month of Mubi in order to finally watch that movie.

Bela Fleck & The Flecktones – Nashville, TN (06/06/02)

BELA FLECK & the Flecktones feat. Karl Denson
2002-06-06
(june 6, 2002)
Riverfront Park
Nashville, TN

audience recording
Neumann KM140 > Sonosax SX-M2 > Panasonic SV-255
Lineage: Sony PCM-R500 > HHb CDR-850 (CDRW) > EAC > Cool Edit Pro (fades only) >
CD Wave (track splits) > mkwACT (SHN)
Taped by: Dr. Tom & The Silencer, Transfered by: Dirk Cota

CD1

  1. announcements/intro 6:03
  2. tuning jam -> 3:20
  3. Next 7:50
  4. Puffy Is Free 10:06
  5. Throwdown At The Hoedown 10:09
  6. Big Country 10:41
  7. Imagine This* 12:13
  8. Vic solo 3:04
  9. Sherpa 13:45

CD2

  1. Bela solo 4:16
  2. Stomping Grounds 12:56
  3. Sojourn Of Arjuna 12:24
  4. A Moment So Close 9:48
  5. Hoe Down 11:35
    encore
  6. Flight Of The Cosmic Hippo 6:51

*with Karl Denson – saxophone

cover artwork inside

taping policy:
http://www.archive.org/details/BelaFleckandtheFlecktones

last seed by FBAUER on 2009-10-07 as torrent #270172
re-seeded by FBAUER 2014-11-02

Foreign Film February: The Third Murder (2017)

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Our second film in this year’s Foreign Film February is a Japanese legal thriller that starts out strong but quickly gets muddled and ultimately wound up kind of boring me.

In the opening scene, we see a man bludgeon another man to death and then set him on fire. Then the film moves forward in time with the killer, Misumi Takashi (Kōji Yakusho) under arrest and being questioned by his defense attorneys.

He fully admits to killing the man but his story regularly changes in regards to what actually happened and why he did it. His attorneys argue over the best way to defend their client and keep him from being executed.

The devil, they say, is in the details, and while there are a lot of details in this film, I had a difficult time caring about them. This is a film that makes quite a to-do over whether he should be charged with Robbery-Murder or Murder-Robbery. The difference being in his intentions. If his intentions were robbery and the murder came after then his motive is greed, but if he murdered him for some other emotional reason (such as anger over being fired – for the dead man was his boss) and robbed him afterward then the jury might be more sympathetic.

That’s an important legal distinction, I guess, but not one that makes for compelling cinema.

It is well-acted and well made and some of the revelations are interesting, but overall I found myself ready for it to be over long before it actually was.

Five Cool Things and The Fantastic Four: First Steps

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I wanted the sixth cool thing to be that picture of Bob Weir and Taylor Swift at the Grammys that’s been circulating around, but I couldn’t afford the rights to it. I wonder what those two people talked about. Do you think Taylor learned some improvisational tips from Bob? Will she start performing a fifteen-minute version of “Cruel Summer?” Will Bob start wearing a onesie on stage?

Alas, we shall never know. But since I couldn’t talk about that I instead talked about a couple of movies (Lost Highway, Marty) and a few TV shows (Would I Lie To You, Arcane & The Long Shadow) and finished it off with a dumb-looking trailer for yet another attempt at a Fantastic Four movie. You can read it all right here.

Fleetwood Mac – San Francisco, CA (06/09/68)

Fleetwood Mac
June 9, 1968 plus another partial set from the same run of shows (June 7 or 8, 1968).
Carousel Ballroom
San Francisco, CA

Excellent stereo soundboard recording from low gen. source

CD#1 60:55
June 9, 1968 first set
01 [cuts in] Madison Blues 4:31
02 My Baby’s Gone 6:00
03 My Baby’s Skinny 4:48
04 Worried Dream 9:57
05 Dust My Broom 4:32
06 Got To Move 3:00
07 Worried Mind 4:41
08 instrumental 10:29
09 Have You Ever Loved A Woman? 7:58
10 Lazy Poker Blues 4:49

CD#2 55:38
June 9, 1968 second set 36:44
01 [cuts in] Stop Messin’ ‘Round [with Paul Butterfield] 2:12
02 I Loved Another Woman [with Paul Butterfield] 7:03
03 I Believe [with Paul Butterfield] 5:17
04 The Sun Is Shining [with Paul Butterfield] 6:27
05 Long Tall Sally [with Paul Butterfield] 4:53
06 Willie & The Hand Jive 4:04
07 > Tuti Frutti 3:02
08 thanks by Peter Green, announcer band intros + crowd noise before encore 0:32
09 Ready Teddy [cut] 3:16

June 7 or 8, 1968 S.F. Carousel Ballroom 18:52
10 [cuts in] I Need Your Love So Bad 1:46
11 I Believe 4:59
12 Shake Your Moneymaker 9:12
13 Ready Teddy 2:30
14 Peter Green says thanks, announcer outro + crowd noise 0:19

Peter Green – guitar, vocals
John McVie – bass
Mick Fleetwood – drums
Jeremy Spencer – guitar, vocals
Paul Butterfield – harp (where noted)

There are minor channel fluctuations in a few spots but this mostly sounds spectacular with a very 60’s sounding mix (vocals in one channel and guitars in the other). To be able to hear Paul Butterfield with Fleetwood Mac is a highlight but Peter Green sounds really great too!

I have heard that this was posted back in the STG era, but this version has been remastered with the sets separated better between discs and some minor “nip and tuck” type edits. No EQ or noise reduction was used in the remastering process.

From Peter Green’s stage comments, this is from one week into Fleetwood Mac’s first U.S. tour and he sounds like he’s having a really good time on the last night of a 3 show run with Grateful Dead and Jefferson Airplane. This is presumed to be the last night because Peter Green makes a comment about how they’ll be back in 2 weeks (not the following night). I think that they returned to the Carousel on the 22nd or 23rd of June.

A Dime member offered to create some cover art and it contains some rare cover photos that came from another Dime member so thanks to both of them and to the original source for this terrific recording!

I should mention that the poster for this concert was one of the strangest designs ever. It was a rendition of some medals that was supposed to be cut out and worn. I guess you’d have to see it to understand the concept…

Transfer info: unspecified lineage CD’s received in trade // CD extraction with Toast Titanium > Macintosh Pro Tools (minor edits, normalization & retracking) > AIFF > FLAC > CD.

FLAC files (level 8) created with xACT with sector boundaries verified.
md5 file created with checkSUM+.

ENJOY & SHARE!

Foreign Film February: The Vanished Elephant (2014)

the vanished elephant

Welcome to Foreign Film February 2025. I started the month off with a bang, watching three movies over the weekend. Then I got busy and distracted and forgot to actually write about them. Here we are nearly one week into this, the shortest of months, and I have neither watched any other movies nor written anything.

Hopefully, the rest of the month will go better. But considering…well *waves hands frantically in all directions*…everything else going on in the world, I wouldn’t count on it.

The Vanished Elephant is a beautiful, strange, moody, and confounding neo-noir mystery that questions the very fabric of the story it is telling the longer it is spun.

Edo Celeste (Salvador del Solar) is a successful crime writer who has decided to end his long-running detective series. Naturally, as these things go, a real-life mystery forms. New clues have come to light which might let him understand what happened to his fiancee who disappeared several years prior.

He keeps finding packages full of photographs which, when placed together in a certain order will reveal a much larger picture. There is a whole complicated procedure that I did not at all understand that led him to figure out in what order to place the photographs.

Some murders happen. He investigates on his own despite the real police constantly telling him not to. Eventually, he will become a suspect.

As the film progresses this fairly standard mystery formula begins to dissolve to be replaced by an even bigger mystery about the nature of story and reality. To say more would be to spoil its many surprises.

Ultimately, it didn’t work that well for me. I found it more unintelligible than mysterious. It is definitely a film that will work better for the viewer on a second viewing as you’ll likely discover details that will help you understand what it is doing. I’m just not sure I care enough to give it another go.

It is well-made and quite beautiful to look at. It reminded me a bit of David Lynch’s movies, but that might just be because he just died and I’ve been thinking about him of late. But it does have that beautiful weirdness about it.