Pink Floyd – Vegetable Man/Scream Thy Last Scream Acetate, 1967

Pink Floyd
1967
“Vegetable Man / Scream Thy Last Scream” from rare acetate
(Vinyl rip FLAC)

Vegetable Man:
“Guitar Can be heard a little better”
“More Echo on Vocals towards the ending of the song’

Scream Thy Last Scream:
“Nick Mason or Syd Barrett could be heard coughing at 1:29 into the track”
“There is an extremely disturbing low-toned cry/moan at 4:13 in the track”

Notes by the uploader:
“A while ago, I met a guy name Saq who lives in Los Angeles who had a very nice record in his possession. Saq had,
what I believe to be the only known Acetate copy of “Vegetable Man” and “Scream Thy Last Scream” from 1967. I
tried desperately to obtain it from him but he informed me that he would only let it go for $10,000 US Dollars (CASH!!!)

I tried to stay in communications with him for more than a year and begged him to at least have the tracks recorded. He
agreed to do me the favor, and sent the Acetate to a professional studio in San Francisco to have the tracks recorded
properly.

After months of desperately waiting, he finally received his Acetate back along with the digital tracks. Thankfully, the
same day he picked up his record was the same day he sent me the magical tracks.

After more than a year of waiting, I finally got the tracks and now want to share them with all of you. We are the real
Syd Barrett crazies and we all deserve to listen to his art. There should be no discovery made that ends up back in the
vaults.

There a notes from my friend and collector, Giuliano Navarro. So, this is absolute unheard new mix of “Scream”.
Thank you very much for sharing this with all fans, Giuliano!

Elton John – London, England (12/14/85)

Elton John
Wembley Arena
London, UK
14th December 1985

Recorded by Soledriver
Broadcast in two one-hour programs just to make it easier for us to record the show…

BBC Radio FM Broadcast > Cassette
AIWA Tape Deck > Tascam DA-20 Mk 2 DAT machine > HHb burnit CDr recorder…no EQ
CDr > EAC > Traders Little Helper > Flac8 sector aligned

Disc 1:

01 – Highlander…Tonight
02 – One Horse Town
03 – Better Off Dead
04 – Rocket Man
05 – Honky Cat
06 – Burn Down The Mission
07 – Someone Saved My Life Tonight
08 – The Bitch Is Back
09 – Song For You/Blue Eyes/I Guess That’s Why They Call It The Blues
10 – Restless

Disc 2:

01 – Passengers
02 – Bennie And The Jets
03 – Band Introductions…
04 – Sad Songs (Say So Much)
05 – Shoot Down The Moon
06 – This Town
07 – Nikita
08 – I’m Still Standing
09 – Your Song
10 – Wrap Her Up
11 – Candle In The Wind
12 – Can I Get A Witness

Band :
Elton John…Vocals/ Piano
Davey Johnstone…Guitars
David Paton…Bass
Fred Mandel…Keyboards/ Guitars
Charlie Morgan…Drums
Ray Cooper…Percussion
Raul D’Oliveira…Trumpet
Paul Spong…Trumpet
Rick Taylor…Trombone
David Bitelli…Saxophones
Shirley Lewis…Vocals
Helena Springs…Vocals
Alan Carvell…Vocals

Feel free to do whatever you like with this recording as long as you don’t charge money for it!
MP3, Who Cares? Just remember to support the artists, and live music!!

Westerns in March: Vera Cruz (1954)

vera cruz

In my review of Blood on the Moon I talked a little about how the Western slowly changed from a genre about moral absolutes to one that sometimes lived in the grey. That film does have some grey tones to it. Robert Mitchum’s character is someone with a dark past, who contemplates destroying a family for money. But ultimately he chose the path of righteousness, and if we’re being honest, we always knew he would.

Anthony Mann and James Stewart would team up for five westerns (the first and probably best – Winchester ’75 came out in 1950) that explored the darker sides of men living in wild, lawless times. As the 1950s rolled along the genre changed in other ways too. They became more violent and dirty. Oh, Westerns had always lived by violence – gunfights and brawls are staples of the genre – but for decades the violence had been rather bloodless. But as times changed, as the culture changed, this violence became more explicit, more real.

Vera Cruz is often cited as a lynchpin for this change. All of its characters are amoral, cynical, and aggressively violent. At one point Burt Lancaster’s character threatens to murder several children if he doesn’t get what he wants.

Set just after the Civil War, Vera Crus follows Ben Trane (Gary Cooper) and Joe Erin (Burt Lancaster) as they look for work. Both fought during the war and now they aren’t cut out for much more than that. They head to Mexico because they’ve got their own war going on (the Franco-Mexican War). Ben has at least some sense of a moral code, those he’s still willing to kill for money, whereas Joe (and his band of cutthroats) is willing to do just about anything if the price is right.

They are recruited by both sides of the war – the Juarists and Emperor or Miximillian – but they get with Maximillian since he has deeper pockets. They are charged with escorting Countess Duvarre (Denise Darcel) to the city of Vera Cruz. Naturally, there are complications including the discovery of gold hidden in her stagecoach.

It is a dirty, cynical, violent film and both Cooper and Lancaster are good in it, but something about it just didn’t hit with me. I suspect part of the problem is the way it sits somewhere in between the Classic Western and the Revisionist Westerns that would follow in its wake. It has a classic structure to it, and while it is certainly more violent than those films, and its characters are more morally reprehensible, it never goes quite fully into those darker motifs. As such it feels a little out of sorts.

Or something. I really don’t know exactly why I didn’t love it, and to be honest I watched it a couple of weeks ago and its already faded in my memory banks. I’d say it is worth watching if you are a fan of the genre or those two actors. But it isn’t necessarily a must-see for everyone.

Westerns in March: The Searchers (1956)

the searchers

When we went to visit Monument Valley I knew I’d be watching a John Ford western soon after, I just wasn’t sure which one it was going to be. Ford made some half a dozen films there and it was really those movies that made the location famous. There is even a spot in the Valley called John Ford Point.

He shot at least a couple of scenes on that point, but I couldn’t remember which ones so I decided to watch my favorite Ford Western, The Searchers.

In some ways, The Searchers was John Ford and John Wayne’s response to many of the previous Westerns they made together. Like a lot of Westerns at the time their previous films depicted American Indians as deplorable enemies – faceless, nameless, and utterly brutal. In The Searchers the Native Americans aren’t exactly kind and generous, but the white folks are just as brutal.

Wayne plays Ethan Edwards an independent loner. The film begins with one of cinema’s most striking images. Matha Edwards (Dorothy Jordan) stands in her doorway. The camera sits inside her house which is dark and small, it looks outside into the wild, expanse of the West. In the distance rides Ethan, small and alone. This image will be bookended at the end of the film with Ethan standing just outside the door, always on his own.

He fought in the Civil War on the side of the Confederates. He still wears the uniform and takes pride in having never surrendered. It’s been three years since the war ended, but he’s just now returning home. He’s got gold in his pocket and it is hinted that he got it by ill-gotten means. The way he looks at Martha, his brother’s wife, indicates he’s in love with her.

When a neighbor’s cattle are stolen by someone – probably Indians – Ethan rides off to help. When he realizes that the cattle were a diversion, that the Indians were really a “murder party” he heads home but too late. His brother, wife and one of their children are dead. The older daughter Lucy and the youngest Debbie (played by Natalie Wood later in the film) have been abducted.

Ethan and Lucy’s fiancee Martin (Jeffrey Hunter) spend the next many years pursuing the tribe. Soon they find Lucy murdered (and by implication, raped) but Debbie remains with the tribe, taken in as one of their own.

We soon realize that Ethan isn’t tracking her as a rescue mission, but aims to kill the girl, as living as an Indian is worse than being dead in his warped mind. Martin stays with him, acting as something of a moral compass, but mostly there to keep Ethan from doing what he’s set out to do.

It’s fascinating to see Wayne in this mode. He’s so often played the hero. Here his actions are often very similar to what he’s done in previous movies – killing Native Americans with a vengeance – but The Searchers allows the audience to view those actions in a different light. We see the black heart of racism deep inside his character and it’s chilling. It’s also one of Wayne’s finest performances.

Ford shoots it beautifully. The western landscapes, especially those of Monument Valley are uncanny and utterly beautiful. This is the West of the movies, and it has never looked better.

I’ve seen The Searchers three times now and I’ve liked it more with each viewing. On the surface level it is a terrifically told Western adventure, but a closer look finds Ford really digging deep into the mythos of the Old West and what it meant for Native Americans and the Europeans who conquered it.

A terrific movie all around.

U2 – Las Vegas, NV (10/05/23)

U2
October 5, 2023
Las Vegas, NV
Sphere

Taper: Massu2
Rig: OKMIIr > Sony PCM-M10
Location: Sec 105, Row 20

  1. Lemon Intro
  2. I Could Have Lost You/Zoo Station
  3. The Fly
  4. Even Better Than The Real Thing
  5. Mysterious Ways
  6. One
  7. Until the End of the World
  8. Who’s Gonna Ride Your Wild Horses
  9. Tryin’ to Throw Your Arms Around the World
  10. All I Want Is You
  11. Desire
  12. Angel of Harlem
  13. Love Rescue Me
  14. So Cruel
  15. Acrobat
  16. Ultraviolet (Light My Way)
  17. Love Is Blindness
  18. Elevation
  19. Atomic City
  20. Vertigo
  21. Where the Streets Have No Name
  22. With or Without You
  23. Beautiful Day
  24. Outro

Queen – Frejus, France (07/30/86)

Queen
July 30, 1986
Amphitheatre
Frejus, France


01.Intro
02.One Vision
03.Tie Your Mother Down
04.In The Lap Of The Gods…Revisited
05.Seven Seas Of Rhye
06.Liar
07.Tear It Up
08.A Kind Of Magic
09.Day-O
10.Under Pressure
11.Another One Bites The Dust
12.Who Wants To Live Forever
13.I Want To Break Free
14.impromptu
15.Guitar Solo
16.Now I’m Here

Dics 2
01.Love Of My Life
02.Is This The World We Created?
03.You’re So Square (Baby I Don’t Care)
04.Hello Mary Lou
05.Tutti Frutti
06.Bohemian Rhapsody
07.Hammer To Fall
08.Crazy Little Thing Called Love
09.Radio Ga Ga
10.We Will Rock You
11.Friends Will Be Friends
12.We Are The Champions
13.God Save The Queen

Queen – Dallas, TX (10/28/78)

Queen
Dallas, TX
10/28/78
Dallas County Convention Center Arena
ìPremier Jazzî



Disc 1 from first generation copy

  1. We Will Rock You (fast)
  2. Let Me Entertain You
  3. If You Canít Beat Them
  4. Somebody To Love
  5. Medley: Death On Two Legs/
  6. Killer Queen/
  7. Bicycle Race/
  8. I’m In Love With My Car
  9. Get Down Make Love
  10. You’re My Best Friend
  11. Now I’m Here
  12. Spread Your Wings
  13. Dreamer’s Ball
  14. Love Of My Life
  15. ’39
  16. It’s Late
  17. Brighton Rock
    Disc 2 from Master Tape
  18. Fat Bottomed Girls
  19. Sheer Heart Attack/
  20. Keep Yourself Alive
  21. Bohemian Rhapsody
    Encore 1
  22. Tie Your Mother Down
    Encore 2
  23. We Will Rock You
  24. We Are The Champions
    God Save The Queen(faded per moderators)

Taperís Notes:
This is the first recording by V4TX. It was recorded using a $20 GE cassette recorder with the external microphone that came with it. I was sitting in the lower part of the balcony. I am making this tape available to the community due to the fact that all research I have done indicates that this show does not circulate in a complete form. This tape contains the complete performance. It is not a great recording by any stretch of the imagination, but it is far from awful. Even though I was in the balcony, the concert was loud, and there is very little audience interference, most interference is during the encores. I would say this is a cut above ìfor completists only.î All instruments and vocals are present. Itís clear, but not high fidelity. The historical significance of this tape is it is the first show of the Jazz tour, I believe played before the album was released. This tape was traded a bit around the time it was recorded, but never in this quality. So I wouldnít call this uncirculated, just undercirculated.

Transfer Notes:
The tape was originally made on 2 Ampex 90 minute normal bias tapes. Unfortunately time was not kind to either tapes. However, soon after the concert, if I remember, that weekend, I transferred the show to another set of cassettes. That turned out to be a good thing. What is on CD 1 is from that first generation copy. What I did was take only the right channel from that tape and split it. The left channel had a lower signal and much more hiss. Believe me, with the rig that was used, the tape was a mono recording, so nothing is missing by dropping the left channel. I then played it directly to a Sony CDR-W33. I did equalize it a bit There was no use of the Limiter, or any attempt to reduce hiss. I know some purists will cringe at this, but I did the transfer for my ears, and I believe it makes the recording better. The change is minimal. Another thing about the first disc. There is a break after ìNow Iím Here,î for a tape flip, unfortunately there is also a brief break after ìSpread Your Wings.î This is due to the fact that as a 16 year old, when I made the transfer, I decided to fill the tape up as much as possible and moved that song from the beginning of side 2 to the end of side 1. But as I said, if I didnít make the transfer we wouldnít have this show at all. Who knew 27 years later people would still want a copy. At least I hope they do. I didnít try to fix the break, I wanted to leave the tape as close to how I have it. There is nothing missing, just a brief cut. CD 2 however is taken from the master. For some reason this tape didnít fall apart as much as the first tape. The same method of transfer was used for it as with CD 1. The encores are what seem to be missing from the other source of this show, and unfortunately this is where most of the crowd interference happens. They do not ruin the tape, just make it a bit annoying. I hope the Queen community likes this tape. Again, Iím not sharing it as a great document, but a unique one of the first Jazz show.

One other Note: This was the night ìKiss Meets the Phantom of the Park,î originally aired, and in the pre-VCR days the group that went to this concert were somewhat bummed they were missing that show. However, by the end of the concert, and after reading reviews of the Kiss program, we knew we made the right call.

Pink Floyd – Basel, Switzerland (08/06/94)

Pink Floyd
“Basel 6.8.94”
Fussballstadion, St. Jacob
Basel, Switzerland
August 6th, 1994

source: Unknown?? >wav>shn

Disc 1:

  1. Shine on you Crazy Diamond 1-5
  2. Learning to Fly
  3. High Hopes
  4. Take it Back
  5. Coming Back to Life
  6. Sorrow
  7. Keep Talking
  8. Another Brick in the Wall, pt. 2
  9. One of These Days

Disc 2:

  1. Speak to Me/Breathe
  2. On the Run
  3. Time/Breathe (reprise)
  4. The Great Gig in the Sky
  5. Money
  6. Us and Them/Any Colour you Like
  7. Brain Damage/Eclipse
  8. Wish You Were Here
  9. Comfortably Numb
  10. Run Like Hell

I Downloaded this from DC++ No source info included and I’m still trying to track it down.
so any help would be great! -SoulPanic

Pink Floyd – Hannover, Germany (06/25/88)

Pink Floyd
1988 June 25
Hannover, Niedersachsenstadion, Germany


HANNOVER, NIEDERSACHSENSTADION 25.6.1988
Release Sandor (2002)
source audience – gen: ? (Low)

Lineage

?gen. tape ? SoundBlaster Live 5.1 ‘creative recorder’ ? WAV ? GoldWave ? WAV ? CDR(00)

CD1
01 Shine On You Crazy Diamond 12:12
02 Signs of Life 4:13
03 Learning To Fly 5:56
04 Yet Another Movie 7:17
05 Sorrow 11:10
06 Dogs Of War 8:18
07 On The Turning Away 10:50
08 One Of These Days 8:03
09 Time 5:47

CD2
01 On The Run 3:38
02 The Great Gig In The Sky 4:57
03 Wish Your Were Here 5:03
04 Welcome To The Machine 8:35
05 Us And Them 7:42
06 Money 12:17
07 Another Brick in The Wall 6:00
08 Comfortably Numb 10:41
09 One Slip 6:27
10 Run Like Hell 8:29

TOT LENGTH: 147.49

notes:

recorded in Dolby B

very good audience recording, excellent sound.
audience full of enthusiasm, singing here and there, especially on Welcome To The Machine and Another Brick.

Another spectacular German show …