Quantcast
Channel: _Bootlegs via Rick Shide on Inoreader
Viewing all 462257 articles
Browse latest View live

Upgrade Bonanza: Van Morrison – Mechanical Bliss

$
0
0

Van Morrison - V.M. Mechanical Bliss front [300DPI]

Van Morrison
Mechanical Bliss [no label, 2CD]

The notes for this show are really long, I have left them as is for this post.

DownloadFLAC/MP3

I have previously posted this as an MP3@256kps.

Soon after the release of Veedon Fleece in 1974, Van Morrison was already talking about a follow-up album. Several titles have been associated with the album – Naked In The Jungle, Not Working For You, Stiff Upper Lip – but the one common to most fans is Mechanical Bliss. Due to whatever reasons, the album was never released and, as Wikipedia reported, “Morrison later was to say the project was nothing more than an extended jamming session.”

But the songs were recorded and Morrison fan David Chance has tried to piece together the lost album, which at one time was scheduled for a February 1975 release.

In a lengthy article (www.harbour.sfu.ca/~hayward/van/discography/mechanicalbliss.html), while reconstructing the album, Chance notes: “Keeping in mind the format of vinyl recordings in the mid-’70s (with a playing time of approximately 40-45 minutes),and a lot of (perhaps erroneous) intuition, I place the track and side listing of this album as:

Side A
1. Joyous Sound (2:23)
2. Mechanical Bliss (3:46)
3. Much Binding In The March (4:34)
4. The Twilight Zone (7:56)
5. Naked In The Jungle (3:46)
Total time: (22:25)

Side B
1. Flamingoes Fly (6:08)
2. Foggy Mountain Top (5:25)
3. When I Deliver (6:10)
4. I Have Finally Come To Realize (4:55)
Total time: (22:38)

Total play approximately 46 minutes with 7-second blank song-separations.

While Chance saw the album as containing nine tracks, a two-CD version of Mechanical Bliss has surfaced among Morrison fans:
As Shared Here:
Disc 1
1. Joyous Sound
2. Naked In The Jungle
3. Much Binding In The March (instr)
4. Mechanical Bliss
5. T For Texas
6. This Is Not The Twilight Zone
7. When I Deliver
8. Flamingos Fly
9. I Have Finally Come To Realize
10. Foggy Mountain Top

Disc 2
1. I’m Not Waiting For You
2. You Move Me
3. Feedback Out On Highway 101
4. I Shall Sing
5. Laughing In The Wind
6. Come On Out Child
7. There There Child
8. It Hurts To Want It So Bad
9. The Streets Only Knew Your Name

The artwork notes: “Mechanical Bliss – The Record Plant Sausalito, California June 1975 Session + ‘additional recordings possibly made at Mercury Studios, New York, March/April 1974 and at Wisseloord Studios, Hilversum, The Netherlands, June 1974’.” These stereo soundboard tracks can be rated between very good and excellent minus. Unfortunately, the musicians for these sessions have never been positively identified.

In 1977, Van Morrison would go into the studio and the result was A Period Of Transition, which featured a version of Joyous Sound. The song was also released as a 7-inch single together with Mechanical Bliss in 1977. As far as we are aware, none of the tracks recorded in 1974 and 1975 have been officially released.

In his article, David Chance also mentioned an interesting anecdote regarding the proposed artwork for Mechanical Bliss:

In The Complete Guide to the Music of Steely Dan there is the following information regarding the cover art for Steely Dan’s 1976 album, The Royal Scam:

“Another superb cover showed a man asleep on a Boston bus station bench as skyscrapers and angry skies towered above him. Each building had a different animal’s snarling head superimposed onto it. At the center of the cover was a king cobra about to strike at a mongoose on the neighboring edifice. The skyscrapers had been painted by Zox for a Van Morrison album cover. When Morrison abandoned his project, photographer Charlie Ganse and Ed Caraeff came up with the idea of using Ganse’s photo of the vagrant with the Zox painting. They took the photo to a Hollywood specialist and succeeded in matching the tone of the painting.”

The (completely speculative) artwork [shown above] was sent in by Van fan Volker Klar, who modified the artwork of the Steely Dan album. To further fan speculation on Van’s “missing album”, Volker also notes encountering a reference in a German book Rock Lexikon (Schmidt-Joos/Barry Graves, Rowohlt) from February 1975: “there is a chapter about Van Morrison with a list of albums in it. On page 244 you can find ‘[…] Stiff Upper Lip (1975)’.”

Disc I
Track 101 Joyous Sound (3.4MB)
Track 102 Naked In The Jungle (6.3MB)
Track 103 Much Binding In The March (instr) (5.1MB)
Track 104 Mechanical Bliss (5.1MB)
Track 105 T For Texas (7.4MB)
Track 106 This Is Not The Twilight Zone (11.5MB)
Track 107 When I Deliver (8.9MB)
Track 108 Flamingos Fly (8.8MB)
Track 109 I Have Finally Come To Realize (7.0MB)
Track 110 Foggy Mountain Top (6.9MB)
Disc II
Track 201 I’m Not Waiting For You (11.5MB)
Track 202 You Move Me (9.4MB)
Track 203 Feedback Out On Highway 101 (5.4MB)
Track 204 I Shall Sing (4.6MB)
Track 205 Laughing In The Wind (5.6MB)
Track 206 Come On Out Child (6.7MB)
Track 207 There There Child (4.1MB)
Track 208 It Hurts To Want It So Bad (5.2MB)
Track 209 The Streets Only Knew Your Name (8.8MB)

Mechanical Bliss
an attempt to reconstruct Van Morrison’s unreleased 1975 album by David Chance

Side A

Joyous Sound (2:23)
Mechanical Bliss (3:46)
Much Binding In The March (4:34)
The Twilight Zone (7:56)
Naked In The Jungle (3:46)
Total time: (22:25)
Side B

Flamingoes Fly (6:08)
Foggy Mountain Top (5:25)
When I Deliver (6:10)
I Have Finally Come To Realise (4:55)
Total time: (22:38)
Total play approximately 46 minutes with 7-second blank song-separations

Title | Songs | Musicians | Album | Artwork

In mid/late-1974 and throughout 1975 there was mention of a soon-to-be released album from Van Morrison, following Veedon Fleece. This album never made it to the public, for reasons unknown. Here I am attempting to reconstruct what that album may have been, with as many clues as I have been able to find. Acknowledgement goes to many, especially David Walker, Kevin Sheets, Art Siegel, Scott Thomas, and Joost Van Erkel for their opinions and information.

Please bear in mind that what follows is comparable to swiss cheese…lots of holes in it… dcat…

1. The Title:
Possibilities: Mechanical Bliss, Stiff Upper Lip, Naked In The Jungle, Not Working For You.

It is generally agreed that the album was to be called Mechanical Bliss. Van and Tom Donahue state this several times throughout the KSAN ’74 radio interview. There, Van indicates the release date to be in February 1975, only 4 to 5 months after the release of Veedon Fleece, an announcement that even Tom Donahue found astonishing (“Hard on the heels, I would call that.”).

In Johnny Rogan’s book Van Morrison (1984), on page 126, it is noted that this working title was, “retitled, at least briefly, Stiff Upper Lip, the work was twice scheduled for release in 1975 and during the year the lengthy “This Is Not The Twilight Zone” and “Mechanical Bliss” were aired on American radio”. The second release date Rogan mentions would be September 1975, as noted _____?_____.

Detouring briefly, mention should be made of some other “unreleased” albums rumoured at this time. One would be an album called Highlights, as mentioned in the KSAN interview, just after playing the song “Just Like A Woman”:

“That’s gonna be on an album called Highlights, which is gonna highlight, ya’ know, various things over the years that I’ve done that I haven’t, ya’ know, gotten on an album, you know, like uh, historical things like uh, you know, um, a live performance with John Lee, and there’s a couple-a things from this performance, and uh, maybe some other kinky stuff…”
This is re-stated in the coffeehouse interview done with Van (by Donahue) in the video production of the 1974 concert at the Orphanage in San Francisco, California (39 minutes into the tape).

From “Reliable Sources”, the press-release pamphlet, circa spring 1974, from Caledonia Productions, page 12: “He is currently interested in video and is expected to do a soundtrack for a major film soon.” And on page 14: “Van has instrumental material with himself on horn and piano without vocals which may turn into an album quite different from his past albums.” The unreleased song (but played during the KSAN interview) “Much Binding In The March” may have been a likely candidate for this project, as well as the instrumentals known as “Buffyflow” and “Heathrow Shuffle” played in concerts during this period.

In “Reliable Sources”, on page 173: “I’ve definitely got a country and western album planned,” he says. “It will have songs like ‘Wild Side Of Life’, ‘Crying Time’, ‘Banks Of The Ohio’ and stuff like that.” [In some observations on this project, David Walker {Internet Nov. 9, 1997} brings up the point that Van was performing such C&W songs as Hank Williams’ “Hey, Good Lookin'” and Merle Kilgore’s “More and More” in concert {The Troubadour Club, Los Angeles CA, May 7, 1973}. David also notes the unreleased studio songs in circulation among collectors, Leadbelly’s “Goodnight Irene”, and W. Warren & A. Carter’s “Wild Side Of Life”, which sound to be recorded around or before the time of the Tupelo Honey album.]

“One of these years, he’s going to release a Christmas album. “We tried to do one in 1972 but we were under too much pressure. You have to start making a Christmas album on January 1 if you want to get it out in time. We’ll probably do some originals and a few of the old things like ‘White Christmas’ and ‘Chestnuts Roasting On An Open Fire’. All that romantic stuff.”

Joost Van Erkel notes that an album called Manchild was announced as about to be released in The Netherlands around this time, though it never was. He remembers seeing an advertisement for Manchild, for sale, in the New Music Express in July 1979, but is unclear as to when this album was first announced in Holland, perhaps as early as 1972.

2. The Songs:
In issue #8 (Nov. 1992) of The Van Morrison Newsletter, it is noted that in an interview with John Tobler in the late-’70s that Van “talked about the album, recorded in Holland in 1974 which has never been released. It came about because a promoter pulled the band out of a gig with a number of other artists and paid them for the concert. He [Van] hired a studio and went in and laid down 8 tracks in an afternoon.”

This event is what Joost Van Erkel remembers as an open air concert on June 24, 1974 in Hilversum. His words: “On June 24, 1974 Van was supposed to perform on a one day open air festival at Hilversum. I don’t remember all the acts performing that day, but in the afternoon a Canadian singer performed who was not on the original schedule. Because the municipality didn’t allow music to be played after 6 or 8 PM (I forgot the exact time) and The Allman Brothers Band (top of the bill) for contractual reasons had to perform a 2 hours show, there was no time left for Van. There is a short story (in Dutch) by Bert Jansen describing this event (Van fighting with a woman photographer while leaving the scene). It was rumored then (music papers and radio) that Van recorded in Holland the day before the festival.”

These 8 tracks are most likely the following songs recorded at Wisseloord Studios in Hilversum, Holland: Twilight Zone, Foggy Mountain Top, Flamingoes Fly (all 3 noted so in The Philosopher’s Stone notes), Mechanical Bliss, Much Binding In The March (both aired on KSAN ’74), Naked In the Jungle (version 1, not The Philosopher’s Stone version from 1975), Buffyflow (?), and Heathrow Shuffle (?). [Or possibly Caldonia and What’s Up Crazy Pup?, though as Joost points out, “Caldonia and What’s Up Crazy Pup? sound like these were performed with the Caledonia Soul Express, who according to Wavelength no. 12 performed in Amsterdam on April 8, 1974; see also Brian Hinton’s Celtic Crossroads page 167.”]

In the KSAN interview Van says the album will be released in February 1975. This did not occur. More studio sessions took place in June 1975 (see below). I suspect these were to alter the, at that time, track listing of the album, i.e. to add a few and lose a few. So, we are probably looking at 2 possible incarnations of the album, the first one to be titled “Mechanical Bliss” for a February 1975 release, and the second one “Stiff Upper Lip” for a September 1975 release.

I use the KSAN interview selections and notes from Howard A. DeWitt’s book (1983), Van Morrison: The Mystic’s Music, as reference points in the song selections (“Definite” and “Probable”). In the later, on page 72, it is noted:

“Best Unreleased Van Morrison Album
Recorded June, 1975 at the Record Plant in Sausalito, California
Songs in Order of Recording:
I’m Not Working For You
You Move Me
When I Deliver
I Have Finally Come To Realize
Joyous Sound
Naked In The Jungle
If The Street Only Knew Your Name”

Definite:

Mechanical Bliss [stated in the KSAN interview]
Twilight Zone [so said prior to singing it in Frankfurt, W. Germany, July 8, 1974]
Naked In The Jungle [there are 2 versions of this, one recorded in Hilversum ’74 and the other in Sausalito ’75 –this song was also performed in concerts during this period]
Much Binding In The March [KSAN interview] [this song, an instrumental, is sometimes erroneously titled “Much Binding In The Marshes” among collectors, a title taken from a song by the English comedian Richard Murdoch; according to one source, the copyright records show it as “March”, which is clearly the title given in the KSAN interview]
Probable:

Foggy Mountain Top [performed in concerts at the time, and at The Orphanage concert 1974, prior to singing this song Van says, “This is a new song. It’s gonna be on an album sometime when they get around to crankin’ ’em out.”]
When I Deliver
I Have Finally Come To Realise Joyous Sound Flamingoes Fly [performed on the Don Kirschner’s Rock Concert in 1974] The Street Only Knew Your Name
Possible:

Not Working For You
You Move Me [these 2 songs have a very similar sound instrumentally, both very charged “rockers” complete with stinging electric slide guitar–although it isn’t known who the guitarist is performing here, I would guess it to be Elvin Bishop, with whom Van performed at The Keystone in Berkeley CA, Dec. 30, 1974]
Down To Earth
Don’t Change On Me [as David Walker suggests, these 2 songs have a very similar “feel” to them musically as the other songs recorded in Sausalito; and to my ears, Van’s occasional fit of scream/singing in these songs also links them–see {hear} also the concert performance from the G.A.M.H. in San Francisco @April 21, 1975 where Van rips his lungs out on a medley of “St. Dominic’s Preview / Walk On The Wild Side / You Can’t Always Get What You Want”]
Western Plain [Sausalito CA 1975]
Buffyflow [live & studio? 1974]
Heathrow Shuffle [live and studio? 1974]
Caldonia
What’s Up Crazy Pup?
There There Child [performed live in 1974]
There are a number of other songs from circa 1973-75 that are possibilities, but I feel the above may be the strongest. I also omit “(I’m) Not Working For You” for the reason that due to the lyric line, “What the fuck do they care”, it is unlikely that Warner Brothers would have allowed it to appear on an album, censorally (and future release elsewhere is also doubtful, for the same reason). “You Move Me” is sparse lyrically and seems an unlikely candidate (to my ears) for inclusion on an album; it sounds like more of a workout to loosen up the band.

3. The Musicians:

Mercury Studios, New York, New York circa March/April 1974 (?):
[this is noted in the KSAN interview, and Van was playing in this area in mid-March 1974, in Cambridge, Massachusetts. This may be the studio source of Caldonia and What’s Up Crazy Pup?]

Wisseloord Studios, Hilversum, Holland circa June 1974:
Van (acoustic guitar, sax, piano, harmonica), Peter Van Hooke (drums), Pete Wingfield (piano), and Jerome Rimson (bass). [At the Montreux Jazz Festival in July 1974, Dallas Taylor is on drums in place of Peter Van Hooke.]

March 24-25, 1975 at the Great American Music Hall in San Francisco:
Bernie Krause (keyboards) and David Hayes (bass) [the other backing musicians are not readily known].

April 21, 1975 at the Great American Music Hall in San Francisco:
Van (sax and harmonica), Mark Jordan (keyboards), John Blakely (guitar), Tony Day (drums), and David Hayes (bass).

The Record Plant, Sausalito, California June 1975 session:
Van (sax, harmonica), Mark Jordan (piano), John Allair (piano), Smith Dobson (piano), Bernie Kraus (moog synthesizer), John Blakey (guitar), Tony Day (drums), David Hayes (bass), Judy Clay (backing vocals), Elvin Bishop?? (slide guitar).

4. The Album:
Keeping in mind the format of vinyl recordings in the mid-’70s (with a playing time of approximately 40-45 minutes), the notes above, and a lot of (perhaps erroneous) intuition, I place the track and side listing of this album as shown above…

5. The Artwork:
Thanks to John Miller for spotting this tidbit; could Van’s ‘abandoned project’ mentioned in the quote have been Mechanical Bliss?

In The Complete Guide to the Music of Steely Dan there is the following information regarding the cover art for Steely Dan’s 1976 album The Royal Scam:

“Another superb cover showed a man asleep on a Boston bus station bench as skyscrapers and angry skies towered above him. Each building had a different animal’s snarling head superimposed onto it. At the center of the cover was a king cobra about to strike at a mongoose on the neighboring edifice. The skyscrapers had been painted by Zox for a Van Morrison album cover. When Morrison abandoned his project, photographer Charlie Ganse and Ed Caraeff came up with the idea of using Ganse’s photo of the vagrant with the Zox painting. They took the photo to a Hollywood specialist and succeeded in matching the tone of the painting.”
The (completely speculative) artwork shown above was sent in by Van fan Volker Klar, who modified the artwork of the Steely Dan album. To further fan speculation on Van’s “missing album”, Volker also notes encountering a reference in a German book Rock Lexikon (Schmidt-Joos/Barry Graves, Rowohlt) from February 1975: “there is a chapter about Van Morrison with a list of albums in it. On page 244 you can find ‘[…] Stiff Upper Lip (1975)’.”


Lossless Bootleg Bonanza: Van Morrison – San Francisco, CA (04/21/75)

$
0
0

van morrison - 1975

Van Morrison
Great American Music Hall
San Francisco, Ca
04/21/75
Early Show

Download: FLAC/MP3

Walking the Dog – Missing
Help Me – Missing
TB Sheets
Saint Dominic’s Preview
Gloria – Missing

John Blakely – Guitar
Tony Dey – Drums
David Haynes – Bass
Mark T. Jordan – Keyboards

Dumpstaphunk Live at Peach Music Festival, Montage Mountain, Peach Stage on 2018-07-22

$
0
0
get-item-image.php?identifier=dumpstaphu

Dumpstaphunk Peach Music Festival Peach Main Stage Montage Mountain Scranton, PA Sunday July 22nd, 2018 all set: 01:18:56 d1t01. set up/tuning d1t02. I Wish You Would d1t03. Let's Get At It d1t04. I'm Gonna Make It d1t05....

This item belongs to: etree/Dumpstaphunk.

This item has files of the following types: Archive BitTorrent, Checksums, Columbia Peaks, Flac, Flac FingerPrint, Item Tile, JPEG, JPEG Thumb, Metadata, Ogg Vorbis, PNG, Spectrogram, Text, VBR MP3

Dead Affect Live at Terminal West on 2018-07-29

$
0
0
get-item-image.php?identifier=deadaffect

Dead Affect 2018-07-29 Jerry Day Terminal West Atlanta, GA Source:  Telefunken TK62 > Telefunken M60 > Zoom F8 @2448 + SBD > Zoom F8 Transfer: SDXC > Samplitude Pro X3 > dBpoweramp Music Converter > Foobar2000 v1.3.10 (Live Show Tagger) Location:  DFC, 10' high, DIN, 38' from stage Recorded by Jef....

This item belongs to: etree/DeadAffect.

This item has files of the following types: 24bit Flac, Archive BitTorrent, Columbia Peaks, Flac FingerPrint, Item Tile, JPEG, JPEG Thumb, Metadata, Ogg Vorbis, PNG, Spectrogram, Text, VBR MP3

Jeff Austin Band Live at Planet Bluegrass on 2018-07-29

$
0
0
get-item-image.php?identifier=jab2018-07

01. New Horizons 02. Don't Give Me Up 03. Run Down 04. Half Moon Rising 05. No Expectations 06. Rag Doll> 07. Snow On The Pines> 08. Hey Baby Ya Wanna Boogie> 09. Snow On The Pines> 08. Rag Doll 09. Sideshow Blues 10....

This item belongs to: etree/JeffAustinBand.

This item has files of the following types: Archive BitTorrent, Columbia Peaks, Flac, Flac FingerPrint, Item Tile, JPEG, JPEG Thumb, Metadata, Ogg Vorbis, PNG, Spectrogram, Text, VBR MP3

Upgrade Bonanza: Van Morrison – Mechanical Bliss

$
0
0

Van Morrison - V.M. Mechanical Bliss front [300DPI]

Van Morrison
Mechanical Bliss [no label, 2CD]

The notes for this show are really long, I have left them as is for this post.

DownloadFLAC/MP3

I have previously posted this as an MP3@256kps.

Soon after the release of Veedon Fleece in 1974, Van Morrison was already talking about a follow-up album. Several titles have been associated with the album – Naked In The Jungle, Not Working For You, Stiff Upper Lip – but the one common to most fans is Mechanical Bliss. Due to whatever reasons, the album was never released and, as Wikipedia reported, “Morrison later was to say the project was nothing more than an extended jamming session.”

But the songs were recorded and Morrison fan David Chance has tried to piece together the lost album, which at one time was scheduled for a February 1975 release.

In a lengthy article (www.harbour.sfu.ca/~hayward/van/discography/mechanicalbliss.html), while reconstructing the album, Chance notes: “Keeping in mind the format of vinyl recordings in the mid-’70s (with a playing time of approximately 40-45 minutes),and a lot of (perhaps erroneous) intuition, I place the track and side listing of this album as:

Side A
1. Joyous Sound (2:23)
2. Mechanical Bliss (3:46)
3. Much Binding In The March (4:34)
4. The Twilight Zone (7:56)
5. Naked In The Jungle (3:46)
Total time: (22:25)

Side B
1. Flamingoes Fly (6:08)
2. Foggy Mountain Top (5:25)
3. When I Deliver (6:10)
4. I Have Finally Come To Realize (4:55)
Total time: (22:38)

Total play approximately 46 minutes with 7-second blank song-separations.

While Chance saw the album as containing nine tracks, a two-CD version of Mechanical Bliss has surfaced among Morrison fans:
As Shared Here:
Disc 1
1. Joyous Sound
2. Naked In The Jungle
3. Much Binding In The March (instr)
4. Mechanical Bliss
5. T For Texas
6. This Is Not The Twilight Zone
7. When I Deliver
8. Flamingos Fly
9. I Have Finally Come To Realize
10. Foggy Mountain Top

Disc 2
1. I’m Not Waiting For You
2. You Move Me
3. Feedback Out On Highway 101
4. I Shall Sing
5. Laughing In The Wind
6. Come On Out Child
7. There There Child
8. It Hurts To Want It So Bad
9. The Streets Only Knew Your Name

The artwork notes: “Mechanical Bliss – The Record Plant Sausalito, California June 1975 Session + ‘additional recordings possibly made at Mercury Studios, New York, March/April 1974 and at Wisseloord Studios, Hilversum, The Netherlands, June 1974’.” These stereo soundboard tracks can be rated between very good and excellent minus. Unfortunately, the musicians for these sessions have never been positively identified.

In 1977, Van Morrison would go into the studio and the result was A Period Of Transition, which featured a version of Joyous Sound. The song was also released as a 7-inch single together with Mechanical Bliss in 1977. As far as we are aware, none of the tracks recorded in 1974 and 1975 have been officially released.

In his article, David Chance also mentioned an interesting anecdote regarding the proposed artwork for Mechanical Bliss:

In The Complete Guide to the Music of Steely Dan there is the following information regarding the cover art for Steely Dan’s 1976 album, The Royal Scam:

“Another superb cover showed a man asleep on a Boston bus station bench as skyscrapers and angry skies towered above him. Each building had a different animal’s snarling head superimposed onto it. At the center of the cover was a king cobra about to strike at a mongoose on the neighboring edifice. The skyscrapers had been painted by Zox for a Van Morrison album cover. When Morrison abandoned his project, photographer Charlie Ganse and Ed Caraeff came up with the idea of using Ganse’s photo of the vagrant with the Zox painting. They took the photo to a Hollywood specialist and succeeded in matching the tone of the painting.”

The (completely speculative) artwork [shown above] was sent in by Van fan Volker Klar, who modified the artwork of the Steely Dan album. To further fan speculation on Van’s “missing album”, Volker also notes encountering a reference in a German book Rock Lexikon (Schmidt-Joos/Barry Graves, Rowohlt) from February 1975: “there is a chapter about Van Morrison with a list of albums in it. On page 244 you can find ‘[…] Stiff Upper Lip (1975)’.”

Disc I
Track 101 Joyous Sound (3.4MB)
Track 102 Naked In The Jungle (6.3MB)
Track 103 Much Binding In The March (instr) (5.1MB)
Track 104 Mechanical Bliss (5.1MB)
Track 105 T For Texas (7.4MB)
Track 106 This Is Not The Twilight Zone (11.5MB)
Track 107 When I Deliver (8.9MB)
Track 108 Flamingos Fly (8.8MB)
Track 109 I Have Finally Come To Realize (7.0MB)
Track 110 Foggy Mountain Top (6.9MB)
Disc II
Track 201 I’m Not Waiting For You (11.5MB)
Track 202 You Move Me (9.4MB)
Track 203 Feedback Out On Highway 101 (5.4MB)
Track 204 I Shall Sing (4.6MB)
Track 205 Laughing In The Wind (5.6MB)
Track 206 Come On Out Child (6.7MB)
Track 207 There There Child (4.1MB)
Track 208 It Hurts To Want It So Bad (5.2MB)
Track 209 The Streets Only Knew Your Name (8.8MB)

Mechanical Bliss
an attempt to reconstruct Van Morrison’s unreleased 1975 album by David Chance

Side A

Joyous Sound (2:23)
Mechanical Bliss (3:46)
Much Binding In The March (4:34)
The Twilight Zone (7:56)
Naked In The Jungle (3:46)
Total time: (22:25)
Side B

Flamingoes Fly (6:08)
Foggy Mountain Top (5:25)
When I Deliver (6:10)
I Have Finally Come To Realise (4:55)
Total time: (22:38)
Total play approximately 46 minutes with 7-second blank song-separations

Title | Songs | Musicians | Album | Artwork

In mid/late-1974 and throughout 1975 there was mention of a soon-to-be released album from Van Morrison, following Veedon Fleece. This album never made it to the public, for reasons unknown. Here I am attempting to reconstruct what that album may have been, with as many clues as I have been able to find. Acknowledgement goes to many, especially David Walker, Kevin Sheets, Art Siegel, Scott Thomas, and Joost Van Erkel for their opinions and information.

Please bear in mind that what follows is comparable to swiss cheese…lots of holes in it… dcat…

1. The Title:
Possibilities: Mechanical Bliss, Stiff Upper Lip, Naked In The Jungle, Not Working For You.

It is generally agreed that the album was to be called Mechanical Bliss. Van and Tom Donahue state this several times throughout the KSAN ’74 radio interview. There, Van indicates the release date to be in February 1975, only 4 to 5 months after the release of Veedon Fleece, an announcement that even Tom Donahue found astonishing (“Hard on the heels, I would call that.”).

In Johnny Rogan’s book Van Morrison (1984), on page 126, it is noted that this working title was, “retitled, at least briefly, Stiff Upper Lip, the work was twice scheduled for release in 1975 and during the year the lengthy “This Is Not The Twilight Zone” and “Mechanical Bliss” were aired on American radio”. The second release date Rogan mentions would be September 1975, as noted _____?_____.

Detouring briefly, mention should be made of some other “unreleased” albums rumoured at this time. One would be an album called Highlights, as mentioned in the KSAN interview, just after playing the song “Just Like A Woman”:

“That’s gonna be on an album called Highlights, which is gonna highlight, ya’ know, various things over the years that I’ve done that I haven’t, ya’ know, gotten on an album, you know, like uh, historical things like uh, you know, um, a live performance with John Lee, and there’s a couple-a things from this performance, and uh, maybe some other kinky stuff…”
This is re-stated in the coffeehouse interview done with Van (by Donahue) in the video production of the 1974 concert at the Orphanage in San Francisco, California (39 minutes into the tape).

From “Reliable Sources”, the press-release pamphlet, circa spring 1974, from Caledonia Productions, page 12: “He is currently interested in video and is expected to do a soundtrack for a major film soon.” And on page 14: “Van has instrumental material with himself on horn and piano without vocals which may turn into an album quite different from his past albums.” The unreleased song (but played during the KSAN interview) “Much Binding In The March” may have been a likely candidate for this project, as well as the instrumentals known as “Buffyflow” and “Heathrow Shuffle” played in concerts during this period.

In “Reliable Sources”, on page 173: “I’ve definitely got a country and western album planned,” he says. “It will have songs like ‘Wild Side Of Life’, ‘Crying Time’, ‘Banks Of The Ohio’ and stuff like that.” [In some observations on this project, David Walker {Internet Nov. 9, 1997} brings up the point that Van was performing such C&W songs as Hank Williams’ “Hey, Good Lookin'” and Merle Kilgore’s “More and More” in concert {The Troubadour Club, Los Angeles CA, May 7, 1973}. David also notes the unreleased studio songs in circulation among collectors, Leadbelly’s “Goodnight Irene”, and W. Warren & A. Carter’s “Wild Side Of Life”, which sound to be recorded around or before the time of the Tupelo Honey album.]

“One of these years, he’s going to release a Christmas album. “We tried to do one in 1972 but we were under too much pressure. You have to start making a Christmas album on January 1 if you want to get it out in time. We’ll probably do some originals and a few of the old things like ‘White Christmas’ and ‘Chestnuts Roasting On An Open Fire’. All that romantic stuff.”

Joost Van Erkel notes that an album called Manchild was announced as about to be released in The Netherlands around this time, though it never was. He remembers seeing an advertisement for Manchild, for sale, in the New Music Express in July 1979, but is unclear as to when this album was first announced in Holland, perhaps as early as 1972.

2. The Songs:
In issue #8 (Nov. 1992) of The Van Morrison Newsletter, it is noted that in an interview with John Tobler in the late-’70s that Van “talked about the album, recorded in Holland in 1974 which has never been released. It came about because a promoter pulled the band out of a gig with a number of other artists and paid them for the concert. He [Van] hired a studio and went in and laid down 8 tracks in an afternoon.”

This event is what Joost Van Erkel remembers as an open air concert on June 24, 1974 in Hilversum. His words: “On June 24, 1974 Van was supposed to perform on a one day open air festival at Hilversum. I don’t remember all the acts performing that day, but in the afternoon a Canadian singer performed who was not on the original schedule. Because the municipality didn’t allow music to be played after 6 or 8 PM (I forgot the exact time) and The Allman Brothers Band (top of the bill) for contractual reasons had to perform a 2 hours show, there was no time left for Van. There is a short story (in Dutch) by Bert Jansen describing this event (Van fighting with a woman photographer while leaving the scene). It was rumored then (music papers and radio) that Van recorded in Holland the day before the festival.”

These 8 tracks are most likely the following songs recorded at Wisseloord Studios in Hilversum, Holland: Twilight Zone, Foggy Mountain Top, Flamingoes Fly (all 3 noted so in The Philosopher’s Stone notes), Mechanical Bliss, Much Binding In The March (both aired on KSAN ’74), Naked In the Jungle (version 1, not The Philosopher’s Stone version from 1975), Buffyflow (?), and Heathrow Shuffle (?). [Or possibly Caldonia and What’s Up Crazy Pup?, though as Joost points out, “Caldonia and What’s Up Crazy Pup? sound like these were performed with the Caledonia Soul Express, who according to Wavelength no. 12 performed in Amsterdam on April 8, 1974; see also Brian Hinton’s Celtic Crossroads page 167.”]

In the KSAN interview Van says the album will be released in February 1975. This did not occur. More studio sessions took place in June 1975 (see below). I suspect these were to alter the, at that time, track listing of the album, i.e. to add a few and lose a few. So, we are probably looking at 2 possible incarnations of the album, the first one to be titled “Mechanical Bliss” for a February 1975 release, and the second one “Stiff Upper Lip” for a September 1975 release.

I use the KSAN interview selections and notes from Howard A. DeWitt’s book (1983), Van Morrison: The Mystic’s Music, as reference points in the song selections (“Definite” and “Probable”). In the later, on page 72, it is noted:

“Best Unreleased Van Morrison Album
Recorded June, 1975 at the Record Plant in Sausalito, California
Songs in Order of Recording:
I’m Not Working For You
You Move Me
When I Deliver
I Have Finally Come To Realize
Joyous Sound
Naked In The Jungle
If The Street Only Knew Your Name”

Definite:

Mechanical Bliss [stated in the KSAN interview]
Twilight Zone [so said prior to singing it in Frankfurt, W. Germany, July 8, 1974]
Naked In The Jungle [there are 2 versions of this, one recorded in Hilversum ’74 and the other in Sausalito ’75 –this song was also performed in concerts during this period]
Much Binding In The March [KSAN interview] [this song, an instrumental, is sometimes erroneously titled “Much Binding In The Marshes” among collectors, a title taken from a song by the English comedian Richard Murdoch; according to one source, the copyright records show it as “March”, which is clearly the title given in the KSAN interview]
Probable:

Foggy Mountain Top [performed in concerts at the time, and at The Orphanage concert 1974, prior to singing this song Van says, “This is a new song. It’s gonna be on an album sometime when they get around to crankin’ ’em out.”]
When I Deliver
I Have Finally Come To Realise Joyous Sound Flamingoes Fly [performed on the Don Kirschner’s Rock Concert in 1974] The Street Only Knew Your Name
Possible:

Not Working For You
You Move Me [these 2 songs have a very similar sound instrumentally, both very charged “rockers” complete with stinging electric slide guitar–although it isn’t known who the guitarist is performing here, I would guess it to be Elvin Bishop, with whom Van performed at The Keystone in Berkeley CA, Dec. 30, 1974]
Down To Earth
Don’t Change On Me [as David Walker suggests, these 2 songs have a very similar “feel” to them musically as the other songs recorded in Sausalito; and to my ears, Van’s occasional fit of scream/singing in these songs also links them–see {hear} also the concert performance from the G.A.M.H. in San Francisco @April 21, 1975 where Van rips his lungs out on a medley of “St. Dominic’s Preview / Walk On The Wild Side / You Can’t Always Get What You Want”]
Western Plain [Sausalito CA 1975]
Buffyflow [live & studio? 1974]
Heathrow Shuffle [live and studio? 1974]
Caldonia
What’s Up Crazy Pup?
There There Child [performed live in 1974]
There are a number of other songs from circa 1973-75 that are possibilities, but I feel the above may be the strongest. I also omit “(I’m) Not Working For You” for the reason that due to the lyric line, “What the fuck do they care”, it is unlikely that Warner Brothers would have allowed it to appear on an album, censorally (and future release elsewhere is also doubtful, for the same reason). “You Move Me” is sparse lyrically and seems an unlikely candidate (to my ears) for inclusion on an album; it sounds like more of a workout to loosen up the band.

3. The Musicians:

Mercury Studios, New York, New York circa March/April 1974 (?):
[this is noted in the KSAN interview, and Van was playing in this area in mid-March 1974, in Cambridge, Massachusetts. This may be the studio source of Caldonia and What’s Up Crazy Pup?]

Wisseloord Studios, Hilversum, Holland circa June 1974:
Van (acoustic guitar, sax, piano, harmonica), Peter Van Hooke (drums), Pete Wingfield (piano), and Jerome Rimson (bass). [At the Montreux Jazz Festival in July 1974, Dallas Taylor is on drums in place of Peter Van Hooke.]

March 24-25, 1975 at the Great American Music Hall in San Francisco:
Bernie Krause (keyboards) and David Hayes (bass) [the other backing musicians are not readily known].

April 21, 1975 at the Great American Music Hall in San Francisco:
Van (sax and harmonica), Mark Jordan (keyboards), John Blakely (guitar), Tony Day (drums), and David Hayes (bass).

The Record Plant, Sausalito, California June 1975 session:
Van (sax, harmonica), Mark Jordan (piano), John Allair (piano), Smith Dobson (piano), Bernie Kraus (moog synthesizer), John Blakey (guitar), Tony Day (drums), David Hayes (bass), Judy Clay (backing vocals), Elvin Bishop?? (slide guitar).

4. The Album:
Keeping in mind the format of vinyl recordings in the mid-’70s (with a playing time of approximately 40-45 minutes), the notes above, and a lot of (perhaps erroneous) intuition, I place the track and side listing of this album as shown above…

5. The Artwork:
Thanks to John Miller for spotting this tidbit; could Van’s ‘abandoned project’ mentioned in the quote have been Mechanical Bliss?

In The Complete Guide to the Music of Steely Dan there is the following information regarding the cover art for Steely Dan’s 1976 album The Royal Scam:

“Another superb cover showed a man asleep on a Boston bus station bench as skyscrapers and angry skies towered above him. Each building had a different animal’s snarling head superimposed onto it. At the center of the cover was a king cobra about to strike at a mongoose on the neighboring edifice. The skyscrapers had been painted by Zox for a Van Morrison album cover. When Morrison abandoned his project, photographer Charlie Ganse and Ed Caraeff came up with the idea of using Ganse’s photo of the vagrant with the Zox painting. They took the photo to a Hollywood specialist and succeeded in matching the tone of the painting.”
The (completely speculative) artwork shown above was sent in by Van fan Volker Klar, who modified the artwork of the Steely Dan album. To further fan speculation on Van’s “missing album”, Volker also notes encountering a reference in a German book Rock Lexikon (Schmidt-Joos/Barry Graves, Rowohlt) from February 1975: “there is a chapter about Van Morrison with a list of albums in it. On page 244 you can find ‘[…] Stiff Upper Lip (1975)’.”

Lossless Bootleg Bonanza: Van Morrison – San Francisco, CA (04/21/75)

$
0
0

van morrison - 1975

Van Morrison
Great American Music Hall
San Francisco, Ca
04/21/75
Early Show

Download: FLAC/MP3

Walking the Dog – Missing
Help Me – Missing
TB Sheets
Saint Dominic’s Preview
Gloria – Missing

John Blakely – Guitar
Tony Dey – Drums
David Haynes – Bass
Mark T. Jordan – Keyboards

Drive-By Truckers Live at Fox Theatre on 2018-07-26

$
0
0
get-item-image.php?identifier=dbt2018-07

DRIVE-BY TRUCKERS 7/26/18 FOX THEATRE, ST. LOUIS, MO 01 Intro 02 Zip City 03 The Living Bubba 04 Three Dimes Down 05 Sink Hole 06 A Ghost To Most 07 Goodes Field Road 08 Ramon Casiano 09 What It Means 10 Surrender Under Protest 11 The KKK Took My Baby Away 12 Let There Be Rock TAPER: SHANE E....

This item belongs to: etree/Drive-ByTruckers.

This item has files of the following types: Archive BitTorrent, Columbia Peaks, Flac, Flac FingerPrint, Item Tile, Metadata, Ogg Vorbis, PNG, Spectrogram, Text, VBR MP3


Falling Fences Live at City Park on 2018-07-20

$
0
0
get-item-image.php?identifier=ff2018-07-

FALLING FENCES 7/20/18 CITY PARK, EDWARDSVILLE, IL DISC ONE: 01 Intro 02 Dream Lightning 03 Beer Can Hill 04 Little Cersei 05 Going Home 06 Break It Up 07 Peola Road 08 No One Loves You 09 Parlor Room 10 Songwriters Hell DISC TWO: 01 Sloop John B 02 Dear Illinois 03 Shot To The Devil 04 Mind The Dar....

This item belongs to: etree/FallingFences.

This item has files of the following types: Archive BitTorrent, Columbia Peaks, Flac, Flac FingerPrint, Item Tile, Metadata, Ogg Vorbis, PNG, Spectrogram, Text, VBR MP3

Marcus King Band Live at Fox Theatre on 2018-07-26

$
0
0
get-item-image.php?identifier=mkb2018-07

MARCUS KING BAND 7/26/18 FOX THEATRE, ST. LOUIS, MO 01 Virginia 02 Love To 03 Ain't Nothing Wrong 04 Side Door 05 Plant Yo Corn Early TAPER: SHANE E. CALHOON        (tapersec1968(at)gmail(dot)com) GEAR USED: SP-CMC-1 Audio Technica Stereo Cardiod >   Tascam DR-07 Portable Recorder >   Sound Fo....

This item belongs to: etree/MarcusKingBand.

This item has files of the following types: Archive BitTorrent, Columbia Peaks, Flac, Flac FingerPrint, Item Tile, Metadata, Ogg Vorbis, PNG, Spectrogram, Text, VBR MP3

Innasci Live at Lost Trail Fest on 2018-07-28

$
0
0
get-item-image.php?identifier=innasci201

Adventure Crew Presents: Lost Trail Fest, Lost Trail Powder Mountain, MT/ID 1. Raffle Jam > 2. No Vacancy 3. Funk In A Box 4. Already Gone 5. I Bit The Dog > 6. Money For Nothing > 7. Graveyard > 8. Crust City, USA > 9....

This item belongs to: etree/Innasci.

This item has files of the following types: Archive BitTorrent, Metadata, Ogg Vorbis, VBR MP3, WAVE

Corty Byron Band Live at Campmeeting on 2018-07-28

$
0
0
get-item-image.php?identifier=Corty_Byro

01)  Intro 02)  Born On The Bayou 03)  Green River 04)  Down On The Corner 05)  Tombstone Shadow 06)  Proud Mary 07)  Bad Moon Rising 08)  Feelin' Blue 09)  I Heard It Through The Grapevine 10)  Have You Ever Seen The Rain 11)  Wrote A Song For Everyone 12)  Lodi 13)  Lookin' Out My Bac....

This item belongs to: etree/CortyByronBand.

This item has files of the following types: 24bit Flac, Archive BitTorrent, Checksums, Item Tile, JPEG, Metadata, Text

Stir Live at Heritage & Freedom Festival on 2018-07-04

$
0
0
get-item-image.php?identifier=stir2018-0

STIR 7/4/18 HERITAGE AND FREEDOM FEST, O'FALLON, MO 01 Intro 02 Holy Dogs 03 Looking For 04 Lady Bug 05 Hold On 06 Clear 07 Ten Dances 08 Climbing The Walls 09 One Angel 10 Velvet Elvis 11 Train 12 Baba O'Riley TAPERS: SHANE E....

This item belongs to: etree/StirBand.

This item has files of the following types: Archive BitTorrent, Columbia Peaks, Flac, Flac FingerPrint, Item Tile, Metadata, Ogg Vorbis, PNG, Spectrogram, Text, VBR MP3

Sam Bush Live at Grey Fox Bluegrass Festival, High Meadow Stage, Walsh Farm, on 2018-07-21

$
0
0
get-item-image.php?identifier=SamBushBan

01 track one 02 Play By Your Own Rules 03 Transcendental Meditation Blues 04 They Gonna Miss Me When I'm Gone 05 band intros 06 Greenbrier 07 Sneakin Sally Through The Alley > 08 I Just Want to Feel Something 09 Hard Hearted 10 Dooley 11 Circles Around Me 12 Only You, And You Alone 13 Same Old River....

This item belongs to: etree/SamBush.

This item has files of the following types: Archive BitTorrent, Flac, Flac FingerPrint, Item Tile, JPEG, Metadata, Ogg Vorbis, Text, VBR MP3

Tedeschi Trucks Band Live at Fox Theatre on 2018-07-26

$
0
0
get-item-image.php?identifier=ttb2018-07

TEDESCHI TRUCKS BAND 7/26/18 FOX THEATRE, ST. LOUIS, MO DISC ONE: 01 Anyhow 02 Do I Look Worried 03 Laugh About It 04 Sweet & Low 05 Down In The Flood 06 Don't Know What It Means 07 Comin' Home 08 Right On Time DISC TWO: 01 The Sky Is Crying 02 He Treats Your Daughter Mean 03 Bound For Glory 04 Goin....

This item belongs to: etree/TedeschiTrucksBand.

This item has files of the following types: Archive BitTorrent, Flac, Flac FingerPrint, Metadata, Text


Consider the Source Live at The Blind Tiger on 2018-07-22

$
0
0
get-item-image.php?identifier=CtS2018-07

Disc 1 1. Moisturize the Situation 2. Many Words of Disapproval 3. It's Known 4. Tihai for the Straight Guy 5. Sketches From a Blind Man 6. You Won A Goat! Disc 2 1. New Song? 2. Vagiant 3. IS? 4. ? 5....

This item belongs to: etree/ConsidertheSource.

This item has files of the following types: Archive BitTorrent, Checksums, Columbia Peaks, Flac, Flac FingerPrint, Item Tile, JPEG, JPEG Thumb, Metadata, Ogg Vorbis, PNG, Spectrogram, Text, VBR MP3

Grandpa Bananas Band Live at Station House Cafe on 2006-06-25

$
0
0
get-item-image.php?identifier=banana2006

disc one/set one d1t01 Used To Be d1t02 Elephant Mountain Back-Step d1t03 banter d1t04 The Blues My Naughty Sweetie Gives To Me d1t05 Hippie From Olema d1t06 banter d1t07 On My Mind d1t08 banter d1t09 Married To The Blues d1t10 banter d1t11 Love Is A Five Letter Word d1t12 banter d1t13 Come All Ye F....

This item belongs to: etree/GrandpaBananasBand.

This item has files of the following types: Archive BitTorrent, Flac, Metadata, Text, VBR MP3

Slipknot - 2011 - Rock In Rio 4

$
0
0
2011 - Rock In Rio 4, Cidade do Rock, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil



01 - Iowa - Circle - Danger - Keep Away
02 - 742617000027
03 - (Sic)
04 - Eyeless
05 - Wait and Bleed
06 - The Blister Exists
07 - Liberate
08 - Before I Forget
09 - Pulse of the Maggots
10 - Disasterpiece
11 - Psychosocial
12 - The Heretic Anthem
13 - Duality
14 - Spit It Out
15 - People=Shit
16 - Surfacing

Earn money on short links. Make short links and earn the biggest money - ouo.io

Slipknot - 2011 - Sonisphere UK

$
0
0
2011 - Sonisphere UK, Knebworth House, Stevenage, England, UK



01 - Iowa - Danger - Keep Away - 742617000027
02 - (Sic)
03 - Eyeless
04 - Wait And Bleed
05 - The Blister Exists
06 - Liberate
07 - Before I Forget
08 - Pulse Of The Maggots
09 - Frail Limp Nursery
10 - Purity
11 - Left Behind
12 - Disasterpiece
13 - Psychosocial
14 - The Heretic Anthem
15 - Duality
16 - Only One
17 - Spit It Out
18 - (515)
19 - People = Shit
20 - Surfacing
21 - Til We Die

Earn money on short links. Make short links and earn the biggest money - ouo.io

Slpiknot - 2012 - Knotfest Minneapolis

$
0
0
2012 - Knotfest Minneapolis, Somerset Amphitheater, Somerset, WI, USA



01 - 742617000027
02 - (Sic
03 - Eyeless
04 - Sulfur
05 - The Blister Exists
06 - Wait and Bleed
07 - Before I Forget
08 - Disasterpiece
09 - Gently
10 - Vermillon
11 - Everything Ends
12 - The Heretic Anthem
13 - Psychosocial
14 - Spit It Out
15 - (515)
16 - People=Shit
17 - Surfacing

Earn money on short links. Make short links and earn the biggest money - ouo.io
Viewing all 462257 articles
Browse latest View live


<script src="https://jsc.adskeeper.com/r/s/rssing.com.1596347.js" async> </script>