10 Of The Best Live Albums Ever Recorded - Page 3

Part of: Music Playlist

Selected by Pantagruel of the Radish Message Board

Otis Redding/Jimi Hendrix - Live at The Monterey Pop Festival (original vinyl version)
Of all the rock festivals of the 60's, the Monterey Pop Festival had the best lineup, the best vibes, the best performances, and the most music history moments; on a weekend that included the Who, Jefferson Airplane, The Byrds, Buffalo Springfield, Grateful Dead, et. al., Otis Redding was a show-stopper in a frenetic night of showstoppers. High points were his spinechilling "I've Been Loving You Too Long" which oozes soul, "Respect", "(I Can't Get No) Satisfaction" all of them record of a gifted man just entering his peak and bantering with the 'love crowd' as he put it, sounding somewhat surprised by the electrified audience. Jimi Hendrix was introduced in America after honing his act in England and played "Like a Rolling Stone" and "Wild Thing"; he humps and burns his guitar and turns feedback into music, making everyone forget they've just seen one of the Who's greatest performances ever. For the longest time, you couldn't get most of the Monterey Pop Festival except on bootlegs; only a single document existed, Live at the Monterey Pop Festival, which featured six Otis Redding songs on one side, and four Hendrix songs on the other side. This editing actually makes the original album (now out of print) actually better than the expanded version now available. Hendrix' set in particular comes across as one thrill after another as its only highlights. Otis Redding and Jimi Hendrix are an interesting contrast on a single disc too. Redding died within the year, and was gone before his breakthrough was complete. Hendrix, of course, was doomed in his own way, but here is presented in his emergent glory.

Selected by uao of Freeway Jam

Neil Young - Time Fades Away
This is one of the few albums that Neil Young has still not released on CD. If you like On the Beach and Tonight's the Night, you should dig up a copy of Time Fades Away on vinyl. Recorded on the 1973 tour that followed his middle of the road success with Harvest, this is a classic case of Neil heading for the ditch. Raw and ragged, sloppy and wasted, these eight songs remind us that the 70s weren't all sunshine and harmony. Time Fades Away is a mean drunk, slurring and stumbling, and pissing off everyone arounded him-in this case, the fans who showed up to hear "Heart of Gold." Cross your fingers and hope that Neil
eventually releases this as part of his Archives.

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Article Author: Robert Burke

Robert Burke spends much of his time lovingly crafting thematic music playlists for the Rhapsody Radish and the Yahoo Radish.

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  • 1 - Joel Elliott

    Oct 20, 2005 at 9:25 am

    Johnny Winter And Live from 1970 has got to be one of the best live albums, esp. for electric blues.

    recorded in march, 1970, at the fillmore east.

  • 2 - Rodney Welch

    Oct 20, 2005 at 9:38 am

    Nice list. I'm nostalgic for Babylon by Bus, which disappeared from my collection some years ago. I never listen to the Allman record. I know, I know, "Whipping Post" and all that. It just doesn't move me.

    Three quick picks:

    *Van Morrison, Too Late to Stop Now

    *Cheap Trick, Live at Budokan

    *Bob Dylan, Royal Albert Hall, 1966

  • 3 - Mark Saleski

    Oct 20, 2005 at 9:43 am

    here's my list from a coupla years ago.

  • 4 - Hazy Dave

    Oct 20, 2005 at 9:46 am

    Last Of The Red Hot Burritos

  • 5 - DJRadiohead

    Oct 20, 2005 at 10:32 am

    This one comes to mind... more will later, I am sure: Muddy Waters - Muddy at Newport Jazz Festival 1960 (Chess). Great performance and the re-mastered version gives fabulous sound to a terrific performance.

    ABB - Fillmore is a defenite keeper, too. I have bought nearly every incarnation of that set.

  • 6 - Vern Halen

    Oct 20, 2005 at 10:43 am

    OK - my two cents' worth:

    The Sensational Alex Harvey Band - Live! - Great sound, great performance.

    Grand Funk Railroad - Live Album - Terrible sound, with bass, drums, guitar, vocals & audience rolled into one big distorted mush. So awful it's brilliant, expecially Side 4's 12 minute version of "Into the Sun," about halfway through when the feedback wraps all the assorted noises into itself and distills it down to rock 'n' roll at its most primal form. More fun than Metal Machine Music, with fewer machines to boot.

  • 7 - MT

    Oct 20, 2005 at 11:11 am

    1) "Moondance" & "Astral Weeks" by Van Morrison
    2) "Paris 1919" by John Cale
    3) "Suicide" - Self titled

  • 8 - MT

    Oct 20, 2005 at 11:13 am

    Just realized this was about "Live" albums -- sorry 'bout that -- but these were great albums that are vastly under-rated

  • 9 - Rob

    Oct 20, 2005 at 11:38 am

    I would definitely add:
    UFO - Strangers in The Night
    Neil Young - Live Rust
    Love these!

  • 10 - Mark Saleski

    Oct 20, 2005 at 11:45 am

    how does Miles of Aisles compare to Shadows and Light? (love that one)

  • 11 - jim

    Oct 20, 2005 at 11:47 am

    While we're talkin' Fillmore East, ya can't forget The Mothers of Invention Fillmore East June 1971, nor Humble Pie's Performance: Rockin' The Fillmore, which I believe was recorded the same week, just before the legendary hall closed down. And what about Bob Dylan and The Band, After The Flood (1974)? Ferocious!

  • 12 - jim

    Oct 20, 2005 at 11:48 am

    oops, i meant BEFORE the flood. sorry

  • 13 - Michael J. West

    Oct 20, 2005 at 11:55 am

    James Brown Live at the Apollo is the greatest live recording of all time. Period.

  • 14 - JR

    Oct 20, 2005 at 12:10 pm

    Art Blakey - A Night at Birdland, Vols. 1 & 2
    Blue Oyster Cult - On Your Feet Or On Your Knees
    Dave Brubeck Quartet - Jazz at the College of the Pacific
    Deep Purple - Made In Europe
    Al DiMeola/Paco de Lucia/John McLaughlin - Friday Night In San Francisco
    Bill Evans - The Last Waltz/Consecration
    Ben Folds - Ben Folds Live
    Elton John - 11/17/70
    Pink Floyd - Ummagumma (1st disk)
    Rainbow - On Stage
    Scorpions - Tokyo Tapes
    Jimmy Smith - Paris Jazz Concert
    Thin Lizzy - Live and Dangerous
    Pat Travers Band - Go For What You Know
    Stevie Ray Vaughan - Live At Montreux
    Yes - Yessongs
    Frank Zappa - You Can't Do That On Stage Anymore Vol. 2: The Helsinki Concert

  • 15 - steve

    Oct 20, 2005 at 12:29 pm

    KISS - Alive and Alive 2

  • 16 - Robert

    Oct 20, 2005 at 12:39 pm

    Kiss only deseve to be included on one list: Best Gimmick

  • 17 - Douglas Mays

    Oct 20, 2005 at 12:49 pm

    re: comment #11, I do give a thumbs up for The Mothers of Invention. "Willie the Pimp" is a great track for instance. And Humble Pie, "4 Day Creep" is a fun track...

  • 18 - The Proprietor

    Oct 20, 2005 at 12:51 pm

    "Get Yer Ya-Yas Out" - Rolling Stones
    "Live At The Regal" - BB King

  • 19 - Dave

    Oct 20, 2005 at 12:55 pm

    In no particular order:

    Keith Jarrett - The Koln Concert;
    Frank Zappa - Make A Jazz Noise Here;
    King Crimson - The Night Watch;
    Oregon - Live at Yoshi's;
    Tangerine Dream - Logos;
    John Coltrane - 1961 Village Vanguard;
    Cream - Royal Albert Hall;
    Gov't Mule - Deepest End;
    Bruford/Levin Upper Extremities - Blue Nights;
    UK - Concert Classics Vol IV.

  • 20 - DJRadiohead

    Oct 20, 2005 at 2:18 pm

    I am a huge Stones fan and "Ya-Ya's" is the best of their live albums but there was too much post-production done on it for me to really consider it an all-time great.

    I also love Hendrix's "Live at the Fillmore East" (which is basically an expanded "Band of Gypsies"). I wish it were all from one show rather than a compilation of 4 but it is still very good.

  • 21 - drake

    Oct 20, 2005 at 2:18 pm

    Right on Michael!

    I don't listen to a lot of live albums multiple times... really, the only one I go back to over and over is James Brown's Live at the Apollo (1962.) Even the second volume is great.

  • 22 - JR

    Oct 20, 2005 at 2:42 pm

    Dave: UK - Concert Classics Vol IV.

    Hey, that sounds interesting; who's on it? I heard Holdsworth didn't tour with them.

  • 23 - zingzing

    Oct 20, 2005 at 2:50 pm

    live at the apollo. how did this not make the list? i guess it's not racism. maybe ignorance? forgetfulness? drugged-up-edness? the fact that frampton comes alive made the list (i can only hope that's a joke)?

  • 24 - Dyrkness

    Oct 20, 2005 at 2:52 pm

    James Brown, "Live at Studio 54"- hyperspeed FUNK
    Tom Waits, "Nighthawks At The Diner"-Live in the studio at least
    Cream, Wheels of Fire- the first live album I ever owned
    Jefferson Airplane,Bless It's Pointed Little Head-includes songs not on any other JA albums and you get to hear their folk-jazz inspired instrumental interplay
    Mahavishnu Orchestra,Between Nothingness & Eternity-Jazz fusion before "soft jazz" gave it a dirty name.Equal parts Jazz and Rock.
    Parliament,P-Funk Earth Tour-Actually Parliament and Funkadelic together on one stage.The sound quality is not the best,but,what the funk?
    Jimi Hendrix,The last concert at the Isle of Wight. I think this is a bootleg. I have it on cassette and there is no info but the cover packaging


  • 25 - Dave

    Oct 20, 2005 at 2:59 pm

    JR:

    Dave: UK - Concert Classics Vol IV.
    Hey, that sounds interesting; who's on it? I heard Holdsworth didn't tour with them.
    This is a Bruford/Holdsworth/Jobson/Wetton show from July, 1978 in Boston. Unfortunately, Jobson had the CD taken off the market shortly after it was released (or so I've heard).

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