YES – Los Angeles, CA (03/18/74)

Yes
March 18, 1974
Inglewood, California
Great Western Forum

Source: Millard Master > VHS > DAT > CDR(x) > EAC/Flac > flac(8)

Disc One
1) Firebird Suite 1:50
2) Siberian Khatru 9:44
3) And You and I 10:18
4) Close To The Edge 19:34
5) The Revealing Science Of God 22:34
Total Time 64:00

Disc Two
1) The Ancient 23:10
2) Ritual 23:37
Total Time 46:47

Missing encore of:

Roundabout
Starship Trooper

Jon Anderson – Vocals
Steve Howe – Guitars
Chris Squire – Bass
Rick Wakeman – Keyboards
Alan White – Drums

Tales of a Topographic Tour

ìTonight you’ll see and hear five musicians who have dedicated themselves to involving not only themselves but their audience in a shared experienced in which love is not too strong a word to apply. That is certainly at the basis of much of Jon Anderson’s lyrics, together with a plea for ever growing awareness of self and others.î Chris Welch, Melody Maker

Welchís words are taken from page 19 of the 1974 Yes tour book, available to all who attended the North American ëTales From Topographic Oceansí tour. Jon and the band had written 4 new songs based on the ancient Sanskrit language and this tour was their attempt to share the experience with their fans. After touring Europe, Yes came to North America with the new tour. They began in Gainesville, Florida on February 7th, 1974 and quickly made their way across the continent. After 36 performances the band found themselves at the Great Western Forum in Inglewood, California. This was to be their third time at the Forum, a venue have played seven times during their long career.

The Forum was opened in 1967 and has played host to many concerts and sporting events. At a cost of 16 Million US Dollars it was considered spectacular for the time. The Los Angeles Lakers, Los Angeles Kings and a number of other sports teams have called this site home for many years. In 1984 the Forum was even used to host the Olympic Basketball competition. For concert events, the Forum can seat 18,000 people and despite its large size can provide a great musical experience for those who attend.

When Yes arrived at the Forum they were prepared to present material from both of their most recent albums. During the European tour and this American tour, the set would begin with all the material from the ëClose To The Edgeí album. The band would then introduce and perform all four parts of ëTales From Topographic Oceansí. Jon Anderson explains each song separately, trying to draw the audience into why each song was written. This material seemed to be received well during the tour but not all members of the band were enthusiastic about the new pieces. Of note, Rick Wakeman found Tales to be redundant and uninspiring. Was this the reason the setlist was changed? We’re not sure, but after presenting the established setlist in Detroit on February 28th, (PRRP 013 by the way) the band went to Hershey, Pennsylvania where the songs ëThe Rememberingí and ëRevealing Science Of God’ were cut from the setlist. There was an overflow crowd that night which delayed the beginning of the performance. Was this a necessary move given the time constraint or a convenient excuse to cut back on the Tales’ material? The next night, in Louisville, Kentucky ëThe Revealing Science Of Godí was again part of the set but ëThe Rememberingí was dropped, never to be included again. The Detroit audience would be the last to see ëTales From Topographic Oceansí performed in its entirety. The performance at the Inglewood Forum 16 days later would only include three of the four songs from the new album.

So, March 18th 1974 saw Yes perform at the Great Western Forum in Inglewood, California. How was this show received by the audience? We can only present you with the words of someone who was there.

“Yes’ immense popularity is one of the most unlikely in a world dominated by the lascivious likes of Led Zeppelin and brutal thrashers like the Who and Emerson, Lake and Palmer. The group’s concerns are the dead opposite of the secular and hedonistic, and the sight of a rock audience paying attention to a good hour of musical interpretation of Sanskrit scriptures (as did Monday’s Forum crowd) approaches the surreal.

Yes is most enjoyable when you take it less seriously than it seems to want you to take it, and the tremendous ovations were surely responses to the music rather than expressions of gratitude for spiritual enlightenment. But Yes projects its role convincingly, with pretense, particularly singer/writer Jon Anderson, a pure, innocent, white-clad eye in the midst of the musical storm.

Although that gap between what Anderson wants to communicate and what the audience is actually getting is a slightly disorienting factor throughout the show, the sheer power and exalted complexity of the music finally shatters any reservations.

Yes’ performance on Monday night was virtually flawless, and though it offered little in the way of surprises, it managed miraculously to avoid dryness and sterility. Abetted by a magnificent sound and lighting setup, Yes played current, middle-period and old (a tantalising gesture that whetted the appetite for more of the earlier, more pop-oriented songs) material.

The new music is a slight refinement of the familiar sound, a gradual, unforced progression. Like all of Yes’ music, it features bold shifts, from angelically ethereal to primevally violent, and it functions on a multitude of levels. Although at odds with traditional rock ‘n’ roll attitudes, Yes has made it work and refreshing, challenging alternative.”

Richard Cromelin
“Yes Offers Unique Material”, AT INGLEWOOD FORUM
Wednesday March 20, 1974, Los Angeles Times

Notes from the Re-Master

For this remaster we were fortunate to begin with a digital copy of the Mike Millard Master tape. For those not familiar with Mike Millard, he was a Los Angeles area resident who devoted much of his time in the 1970ís to creating very high quality audience recordings of rock music concerts. This 1974 Yes concert was one of his earlier recordings but still, outstanding quality and far better than most audience recordings from the era. Sadly, the recording is not complete. We have the full concert up to the song Ritual but the encores of Roundabout and Starship Trooper were not included. We have chosen not to fill in these missing songs with recordings from other performances because we do not think it is philosophically appropriate. However, there were a few brief gaps in the recording that were patched using other sources.

Upon listening to the raw recording it is clear that the music runs too fast. On detailed analysis and comparison of this recording with established references, we confirmed that speed errors did exist. Once identified, they were corrected. The next issue was general noise level. Both the Tales and CTTE material contain soft, quiet sections. These were not heard well in the raw recording because of the general noise floor. Once this was reduced, the subtleties of the music could be appreciated more clearly. Peak crackle was also present and reduced as much as possible. Tonality was adjusted to both smooth out the excesses and boost segments of the frequency range that were deficient. Dynamics and balance also needed to be adjusted to correct errors and emphasise the dramatic nature of the music. A couple of patches were needed to fill in presumed tape flip gaps. Fortunately, the segments that were missing were small. Overall, a very nice result.

PRRP Staff

Bruce Hornsby – Oakland, CA (11/06/98)

Bruce Hornsby
Yoshiís
Oakland, CA
11-6-98

— Early Show
01 //Horns Intro >
02 Sneakiní Up On Boo Radley
03 Look Out Any Window
04 Fortunate Son
05 King Of The Hill-(Baby Hold On To Me)-(First There Is A Mountain)-(Surrey With A Fringe On Top)-King Of The Hill
06 Phil & Steve introduced – Intrumental Intro >
07 Scarlet Begonias *
08 Rainbowís Cadillac *
09 Loser *
10 Tennessee Jed *
* w/ Phil Lesh & Steve Kimock

— Late Show
11 The Great Divide
12 The Way It Is
13 Fortunate Son
14 Evangeline >
15 Western Skyline >
16 Maggieís Farm (Dark As The Night)
17 Walk In The Sun
18 Pete & Manny
19 Valley Road > (I Was Made To Love Her)

all in Late show w/ Steve Kimock

Source:
DSBD> CD-R> EAC> FLAC

Jerry Garcia & Friends – San Francisco, CA (05/22/81)

Jerry Garcia, Bob Weir, John Kahn, Brent
Mydland, Bill Kreutzmann & Mickey Hart
Warfield Theater
San Francisco, CA
5/22/81
“Benefit for Nuclear Disarmament”

01. Emcee talk & tuning
02. Deep Elem Blues
03. The Race Is On ->
04. Friend of the Devil
05. Cassidy
06. To Lay Me Down
07. Monkey and the Engineer
08. Oh Babe It Ain’t No Lie
09. On the Road Again
10. Bird Song ->
11. Ripple ->
12. Drums ->
13. Oh Boy
14. Show Closing

Tom Waits – Huntington Beach, CA (xx/xx/78)

TOM WAITS
The Golden Bear
Huntington Beach, CA
1978-xx-xx

Setlist

01 Summertime > Burma Shave
02 Step Right Up
03 Jitterbug Boy > I Never Talk To Strangers
04 Muriel
05 Red Shoes//
06 //Annie’s Back In Town > A Sight For Sore Eyes
07 I Wish I Was In New Orleans > When The Saints Go Marching In
08 Pasties And A G String
09 Silent Night > Christmas Card From A Hooker//
10 Blue Valentines

Lineage: Aud > ? > CDr(x) > Eac > Wav > CDWave [re-tracked] > Flac (Level 8)

NOTES:
Good Points:
A fine audience recording especially given it’s age, of an excellent performance from circa 1978 [exact date unknown]. You really get the feeling Tom is enjoying himself here …….

Bad Points:
The show is alas incomplete 😦 There are quite a few cuts present where music is lost & it would appear that it was indeed that way on the master. You can hear the dreaded short whurr of the recorder button being depressed on more than one occasion.
– Track 01 has a cut at approx 13:29secs [the remainder of Burma Shave was originally tracked seperately]
– There is a cut where the end of ”Red Shoes” [track 05] & the beginning of ”Annie’s Back In Town” [track 06] is missing.
– There is a fade at the the end of track 07 although it would appear that no music is lost
– Following on from ‘Silent Night”, track 09, ”Christmas Card From A Hooker…….” is cut after 0:55secs appx

On top of all of the above, this show was in quite a mess when i received it as it was also tracked poorly & had numerous blank/dead segments, Believe it or not, it’s presented here in a better state than it was but the imperfections [cuts] that are irrepairable, date back i believe to some smokey evening in California ’78.

ANB – June 2008

The Who – San Francisco, CA (06/19/69)

The Who
June 19, 1969
Fillmore West
San Francisco, California, USA

CD1 – 19:10
01 [00:30] talk (intro to show)
02 [04:03] Heaven And Hell
03 [03:43] I Can’t Explain
04 [02:35] Fortune Teller >
05 [03:06] Tattoo
06 [05:13] Young Man Blues

CD2 – 70:03
01 [02:11] talk (intro to Tommy)
02 [00:40] It’s A Boy >
03 [02:25] 1921 >
04 [03:14] Amazing Journey >
05 [04:32] Sparks
06 [01:57] Eyesight To The Blind >
07 [03:19] Christmas >
08 [03:47] The Acid Queen
09 [02:50] Pinball Wizard [first notes cut slightly]
10 [00:22] Do You Think It’s Alright >
11 [01:14] Fiddle About >
12 [00:22] There’s A Doctor >
13 [03:29] Go To The Mirror! >
14 [01:08] Smash The Mirror >
15 [02:27] I’m Free >
16 [01:02] Tommy’s Holiday Camp
17 [08:44] We’re Not Gonna Take It [first notes cut slightly]
18 [02:34] Boris The Spider
19 [03:20] Summertime Blues >
20 [03:51] Shakin’ All Over >
21 [15:47] Magic Bus
22 [00:48] talk (why the show is over)

lineage: audience cassette master [unknown original equipment] >
primary source: 1st gen. cassette rebuilt in the 1990’s > Nakamichi Dragon
secondary source: 1st gen. reel > unknown playback deck > CDR standalone

> Pro Tools (“nip and tuck” edits, normalization and tracking – no equalization or digital noise reduction) > AIFF > xACT (flac level 8 files with sector boundaries verified).

Since this had fallen off the tracker I thought I’d reseed it one more time before archiving it to a backup off of the drive it’s on. I think the first time I seeded this here was in 2009, and it’s been posted at least once more. This time the files are named and tagged but no changes were made to the audio content.

Recording specifics:
From the same original source as all other circulating copies of this show but this one is verified 1st generation with many problem spots seamlessly repaired. And from what I’ve heard of the many alternate versions, it’s much better sounding besides being less cut up. This is combined from a rebuilt 1st gen. cassette with splices from an older 1st gen. reel.

This show has circulated widely from higher gen. copies. The master was taped by Neil Ferris to a cassette which self destructed within a year or two of the show. Luckily first gen. cassette and reel copies were traded and survived. All the older copies that circulated were 2nd gen. or higher and had various tape tracking problems and cuts. By the 1990’s the 1st gen. cassette no longer played at all but was revived by Dave White who laboriously transferred it into a new housing. It took more than one try but the final result sounds much better than the other previous sources. It’s almost entirely complete – lots of seamless repairs were done, with splices from the older 1st gen. reel where necessary. The disc separation point was also changed, since after many tape change splices were seamlessly removed this show sounded most logical when the CD change is before “Tommy” starts.

U2 – San Jose, CA (05/08/18)

U2
SAP Center
San Jose, CA
May 08, 2018

Source: Schoeps CCM4ís > Tinybox > Sony PCM-M10

Taper: from a friend

01. Intro
02. Love Is All We Have Left
03. The Blackout
04. Lights of Home
05. Beautiful Day
06. I Will Follow
07. Gloria
08. Red Flag Day
09. The Ocean
10. Iris (Hold Me Close)
11. Cedarwood Road
12. Sunday Bloody Sunday
13. Raised by Wolves
14. Until the End of the World
15. Hold Me, Thrill Me, Kiss Me, Kill Me (recorded intermission)
16. Elevation
17. Vertigo
18. Desire
19. MacPhisto Speech
20. Acrobat
21. You’re the Best Thing About Me
22. Staring at the Sun
23. Pride (In the Name of Love)
24. Get Out of Your Own Way
25. American Soul
26. City of Blinding Lights
27. “Women of the World”
28. One
29. Love Is Bigger Than Anything in Its Way
30. 13 (There Is a Light)
31. Outro

Thanks to Sharebear on both nights for gear assistance

Prince – Los Angeles, CA (11/07/88)

PRINCE
The Palace
Hollywood, CA
11/7/88
(aftershow)

D3 Master -> Untracked Aiff File -> Soundforge -> FLAC

01. Positivity
02. Eye No
03. Wade In The Water
04. God Is Alive
05. Ballad Of Dorothy Parker
06. Four
07. Down Home Blues
08. Rock Me Baby
09. Cold Sweat
10. Just My Imagination
11. Superfunkycalifragisexy
12. Take This Beat
13. (no encore)

Joni Mitchell – Berkeley, CA (09/12/79)

JONI MITCHELL
Greek Theater
Berkeley, CA
September 12, 1979

1) Big Yellow Taxi
2) Just Like This Train
3) In France They Kiss on Main Street
4) Coyote
5) Edith and the Kingpin
6) Free Man in Paris
7) Goodbye PorkPie Hat
8) Jaco’s Solo
9) The Dry Cleaner from Des Moines
10) Amelia
11) Pat’s Solo
12) Hejira
13) Don’s Solo
14) Dreamland
15) Black Crow

Removed: 16) Raised on Robbery (partial track. Most likely from a differeent show and date)

Incomplete show.

AUD>?CASS>CDR

Joni Mitchell Electric Guitar, Piano
Don Alias Drums, Percussion
Michael Brecker Sax
Lyle Mays Keyboards
Pat Metheny Lead Guitar
Jaco Pastorius Bass
The Persuasions Vocals

Joni Mitchell – San Francisco, CA (09/07-08/79)

Joni Mitchell
San Francisco Civic Auditorium
San Francisco, CA
September 7 and 8, 1979

This is from the “Shadows and Light” tour with
the great group of backing musicians:

3 Discs, two complete shows.
(audience recording)

Disc 1:
(September 7th)
01) Big Yellow Taxi
02) Just Like This Train
03) In France They Kiss on Main Street
04) Coyote
05) Edith and the Kingpin
06) Free Man in Paris
07) Goodbye Porkpie Hat
08) Jaco’s Solo
09) Amelia
10) Pat’s Solo
11) Hejira
12) Don’s Solo
13) Dreamland
14) Black Crow

Disc 2:
01) Furry Sings the Blues
02) God Must be A Boogie Man
03) Raised on Robbery
04) Shadows and Light
05) The Last Time I Saw Richard
06) Woodstock

(September 8th)
07) Just Like This Train
08) Edith and the Kingpin
09) Free Man in Paris
10) Goodbye Porkpie Hat
11) Jaco’s Solo
12) Dry Cleaner From Des Moines

Disc 3:
01) Amelia
02) Pat’s Solo
03) Hejira
04) Don’s Solo
05) Dreamland
06) Black Crow
07) Furry Sings the Blues
08) God Must be A Boogie Man
09) Raised on Robbery
10) Shadows and Light
11) The Last Time I Saw Richard
12) Woodstock

Pat Metheny
Lyle Mays
Jaco Pastorious
Michael Brecker
Don Alias

Eric Clapton, The Band & Van Morrison – San Francisco, CA (11/24/76)

THE BAND with ERIC CLAPTON and VAN MORRISON
1976-11-24
The Last Waltz rehearsals
Winterland
San Francisco, California

01. All Our Past Times – Eric Clapton
02. Further On Up The Road – Eric Clapton
03. Tura Lura Lura – Van Morrison

FLAC FINGERPRINTS:
01. All Our Past Times – Eric Clapton.flac:12e84f6ec5015cac32e1bed3a06c313d
02. Further On Up The Road – Eric Clapton.flac:de95176393998491a28c2e8610037523
03. Tura Lura Lura – Van Morrison.flac:60b229070fd77e74dd11005acf3e10b4

SOURCE: Soundboard
LINEAGE: unknown generation type-II cassette tape > Tascam Porta 02 MKII MiniStudio + TDK 4X Digital Audio CD Recorder DA-3826 > CD-R (Audio) > EAC wav (hard drive) > Audacity amplified & separated wav > Trader’s Little Helper flac level 8 & torrent > HungerCity

NOTES:
There is a fair amount of tape hiss present, but still an enjoyable listen. There must be more of this rehearsal among collectors; if you have any to share please step up. Thanks!