Tags
Language
Tags
May 2024
Su Mo Tu We Th Fr Sa
28 29 30 1 2 3 4
5 6 7 8 9 10 11
12 13 14 15 16 17 18
19 20 21 22 23 24 25
26 27 28 29 30 31 1

The Who - Live At Leeds (1970) {1994, Japanese Reissue}

Posted By: popsakov
The Who - Live At Leeds (1970) {1994, Japanese Reissue}

The Who - Live At Leeds (1970) {1994, Japanese Reissue}
EAC Rip | FLAC (Img) + Cue + Log ~ 266 Mb | MP3 CBR320 ~ 138 Mb
Full Scans | 00:38:14 | RAR 5% Recovery
Hard Rock, Blues Rock, Classic Rock | Polydor K.K. #POCP-2335

Live at Leeds is the first live album by English rock band the Who. It was recorded at the University of Leeds Refectory on 14 February 1970, and is their only live album that was released while the group were still actively recording and performing with their best-known line-up of Roger Daltrey, Pete Townshend, John Entwistle and Keith Moon. The Who were looking for a way to follow up their 1969 album Tommy, and had recorded several shows on tours supporting that album, but disliked the sound. Consequently, they booked the show at Leeds University, along with one at Hull City Hall the following day, specifically to record a live album. Six songs were taken from the Leeds show, and the cover was pressed to look like a bootleg recording. The sound was significantly different from Tommy and featured hard rock arrangements that were typical of the band's live shows. The album was released on 11 May 1970 by Decca and MCA in the United States, and by Track and Polydor in the United Kingdom. It has been reissued on several occasions and in several different formats. Since its release, Live at Leeds has been ranked by several music critics as the best live rock recording of all time.

Rushed out in 1970 as a way to bide time as the Who toiled away on their follow-up to Tommy, Live at Leeds wasn't intended to be the definitive Who live album, and many collectors maintain that the band had better shows available on bootlegs. But those shows weren't easily available whereas Live at Leeds was, and even if this show may not have been the absolute best, it's so damn close to it that it would be impossible for anybody but aficionados to argue. Here, the Who sound vicious – as heavy as Led Zeppelin but twice as volatile – as they careen through early classics with the confidence of a band that had finally achieved acclaim but had yet to become preoccupied with making art. In that regard, this recording – in its many different forms – may have been perfectly timed in terms of capturing the band at a pivotal moment in its history.

There is certainly no better record of how this band was a volcano of violence on-stage, teetering on the edge of chaos but never blowing apart. This was most true on the original LP, which was a trim six tracks, three of them covers ("Young Man Blues," "Summertime Blues," "Shakin' All Over") and three originals from the mid-'60s, two of those ("Substitute," "My Generation") vintage parts of their repertory and only "Magic Bus" representing anything resembling a recent original, with none bearing a trace of their mod roots. This was pure, distilled power, all the better for its brevity; throughout the '70s the album was seen as one of the gold standards in live rock & roll, and certainly it had a fury that no proper Who studio album achieved. It was also notable as one of the earliest legitimate albums to implicitly acknowledge – and go head to head with – the existence of bootleg LPs. Indeed, its very existence owed something to the efforts of Pete Townshend and company to stymie the bootleggers.

The Who had made extensive recordings of performances along their 1969 tour, with the intention of preparing a live album from that material, but they recognized when it was over that none of them had the time or patience to go through the many dozens of hours of live performances in order to sort out what to use for the proposed album. According to one account, the band destroyed those tapes in a massive bonfire, so that none of the material would ever surface without permission. They then decided to go to the other extreme in preparing a live album, scheduling this concert at Leeds University and arranging the taping, determined to do enough that was worthwhile at the one show. As it turned out, even here they generated an embarrassment of riches – the band did all of Tommy, as audiences of the time would have expected (and, indeed, demanded), but as the opera was already starting to feel like an albatross hanging around the collective neck of the band (and especially Townshend), they opted to leave out any part of their most famous work apart from a few instrumental strains in one of the jams. Instead, the original LP was limited to the six tracks named, and that was more than fine as far as anyone cared.

And fans who bought the LP got a package of extra treats for their money. The album's plain brown sleeve was, itself, a nod and nudge to the bootleggers, resembling the packaging of such early underground LP classics as the Bob Dylan Great White Wonder set and the Rolling Stones concert bootleg Liver Than You'll Ever Be, from the latter group's 1969 tour – and it was a sign of just how far the Who had come in just two years that they could possibly (and correctly) equate interest in their work as being on a par with Dylan and the Stones. But Live at Leeds' jacket was a fold-out sleeve with a pocket that contained a package of memorabilia associated with the band, including a really cool poster, copies of early contracts, etc. It was, along with Tommy, the first truly good job of packaging for this band ever to come from Decca Records; the label even chose to forgo the presence of its rainbow logo, carrying the bootleg pose to the plain label and handwritten song titles, and the note about not correcting the clicks and pops. At the time, you just bought this as a fan, but looking back 30 or 40 years on, those now seem to be quietly heady days for the band (and for fans who had supported them for years), finally seeing the music world and millions of listeners catch up.

~ Bruce Eder, All Music

***************

Track List:

01. Young Man Blues [4:57]
02. Substitute [2:24]
03. Summertime Blues [3:30]
04. Shakin' All Over [4:36]
05. My Generation [14:50]
06. Magic Bus [8:00]

Exact Audio Copy V1.3 from 2. September 2016

EAC extraction logfile from 3. April 2017, 22:09

The Who / Live at Leeds

Used drive : MATSHITADVD-RAM UJ8A0AS Adapter: 1 ID: 0

Read mode : Secure
Utilize accurate stream : Yes
Defeat audio cache : Yes
Make use of C2 pointers : No

Read offset correction : 102
Overread into Lead-In and Lead-Out : No
Fill up missing offset samples with silence : Yes
Delete leading and trailing silent blocks : No
Null samples used in CRC calculations : Yes
Used interface : Native Win32 interface for Win NT & 2000

Used output format : Internal WAV Routines
Sample format : 44.100 Hz; 16 Bit; Stereo


TOC of the extracted CD

Track | Start | Length | Start sector | End sector
––––––––––––––––––––––––––––-
1 | 0:00.37 | 4:56.12 | 37 | 22248
2 | 4:56.49 | 2:23.25 | 22249 | 32998
3 | 7:19.74 | 3:29.53 | 32999 | 48726
4 | 10:49.52 | 4:35.22 | 48727 | 69373
5 | 15:24.74 | 14:49.28 | 69374 | 136076
6 | 30:14.27 | 7:59.32 | 136077 | 172033


Range status and errors

Selected range

Filename F:\Alexharvey\The Who - Live at Leeds.wav

Peak level 94.3 %
Extraction speed 2.2 X
Range quality 99.9 %
Test CRC 81882DD6
Copy CRC 81882DD6
Copy OK

No errors occurred


AccurateRip summary

Track 1 accurately ripped (confidence 4) [BD114B00] (AR v2)
Track 2 accurately ripped (confidence 4) [3DA2ED60] (AR v2)
Track 3 accurately ripped (confidence 4) [93D5A12D] (AR v2)
Track 4 accurately ripped (confidence 4) [06CEF3D4] (AR v2)
Track 5 accurately ripped (confidence 4) [36B694BD] (AR v2)
Track 6 accurately ripped (confidence 4) [B06D1040] (AR v2)

All tracks accurately ripped

End of status report

–– CUETools DB Plugin V2.1.6

[CTDB TOCID: ix1F2quekXkesgwmOnbFa.eFA2k-] found
Submit result: ix1F2quekXkesgwmOnbFa.eFA2k- has been confirmed
Track | CTDB Status
1 | (9/9) Accurately ripped
2 | (9/9) Accurately ripped
3 | (9/9) Accurately ripped
4 | (8/9) Accurately ripped
5 | (9/9) Accurately ripped
6 | (9/9) Accurately ripped


==== Log checksum 3F328C9258263090A63390EA601EC770BBE9D4930D9BEE01204F49B6D9D0DF15 ====

[CUETools log; Date: 27.01.2024 18:30:13; Version: 2.1.6]
Pregap length 00:00:37.
[CTDB TOCID: ix1F2quekXkesgwmOnbFa.eFA2k-] found.
Track | CTDB Status
1 | (24/24) Accurately ripped
2 | (24/24) Accurately ripped
3 | (24/24) Accurately ripped
4 | (23/24) Accurately ripped
5 | (24/24) Accurately ripped
6 | (23/24) Accurately ripped
[AccurateRip ID: 000758d9-00294a5a-4b08f506] found.
Track [ CRC | V2 ] Status
01 [bdd5851a|bd114b00] (00+06/10) Accurately ripped
02 [f4e2809c|3da2ed60] (00+06/10) Accurately ripped
03 [f764a63b|93d5a12d] (00+06/10) Accurately ripped
04 [e7781789|06cef3d4] (00+06/10) Accurately ripped
05 [badc5251|36b694bd] (00+06/10) Accurately ripped
06 [9bfba8f6|b06d1040] (00+05/09) Accurately ripped
Offsetted by -133:
01 [8ede6b1b] (00/10) No match (V2 was not tested)
02 [237b6527] (00/10) No match (V2 was not tested)
03 [0a45abb8] (00/10) No match (V2 was not tested)
04 [a613e233] (00/10) No match (V2 was not tested)
05 [790e0a14] (00/10) No match (V2 was not tested)
06 [de3c62a8] (00/09) No match (V2 was not tested)

Track Peak [ CRC32 ] [W/O NULL] [ LOG ]
– 94,3 [81882DD6] [DBEE8114] CRC32
01 83,4 [99657FE3] [B633B4EC]
02 87,2 [A44D4974] [7B1B9B0E]
03 93,9 [B2ED75C4] [EFCE4FAD]
04 94,3 [24A3AB44] [F8D78B53]
05 91,0 [5133430C] [B38B1D91]
06 92,7 [0CC48703] [099442F7]

The Who - Live At Leeds (1970) {1994, Japanese Reissue}


All thanks go to Alexharvey

>>> The Who in my Blog <<<

DOWNLOAD: