Live at Leeds
Encyclopedia : L : LI : LIV : Live at Leeds
Live at Leeds (1970) is The Who's first live album, and indeed is their only live album that was released while the band was still recording and performing regularly.
Background
After releasing Tommy in mid-1969 The Who went on an extended world tour to promote it, and returned to England at year's end with a desire to release a live album from the tour. However, they balked at the prospect of listening to the hundreds of hours of accumulated recordings to decide which would make the best album, so they ritually burned the tapes (to prevent bootlegging) and scheduled two shows, one at Leeds University and the other at Hull, for the express purpose of recording and releasing a live album. The shows were performed on February 14th (Leeds) and 15th (Hull) 1970, but technical problems with the recordings from the 15th - the bass guitar had not been recorded - made it necessary for the show from the 14th to be released as the album.Perhaps because of these circumstances, or perhaps because The Who were hyped up due to their international success with Tommy, or perhaps simply because The Who were in their prime at the time of recording, Live At Leeds turned out to be a wildly popular recording.
The album cover looks like the simple cover of a bootleg LP of the era: it is of plain brown cardboard with "The Who | Live At Leeds" printed on it in plain blue or red block letters as if stamped on with ink. The original LP's cover opened out, butterfly-style, and had a pocket on either side of the interior, with the record in a paper sleeve on one side and facsimiles of various memorabilia on the other, including a photo of the band from the My Generation photoshoot, handwritten lyrics to the "Listening to You" chorus from Tommy, a receipt for smoke bombs, and the early black "Maximum R&B" poster showing Pete Townshend windmilling his Rickenbacker in mid-leap. The label was handwritten (apparently in Townshend's hand), and included instructions to the engineers not to attempt to remove any crackling noise (the recording is in fact very clean, except of course for the deliberate electronic distortion of the amplified instruments).
Track listing
Original 1970 LP
The original LP contained these six tracks:
- "Young Man Blues" (Allison) – 4:45
- "Substitute" (Townshend) – 2:05
- "Summertime Blues" (Capeheart, Cochran) – 3:22
- "Shakin' All Over" (Kidd) – 4:15
- "My Generation" (Townshend) – 14:27
- "Magic Bus" (Townshend) – 7:30
Remastered 1995 CD
The digitally remastered CD, released in 1995, had the original tracks, which were expanded, and many new ones:
- "Heaven and Hell" (Entwistle) – 4:50
- "I Can't Explain" (Townshend) – 2:58
- "Fortune Teller" (Neville) – 2:34
- "Tattoo" (Townshend) – 3:42
- "Young Man Blues" (Allison) – 5:51
- "Substitute" (Townshend) – 2:06
- "Happy Jack" (Townshend) – 2:13
- "I'm a Boy" (Townshend) – 4:41
- "A Quick One, While He's Away" (Townshend) – 8:41
- "Amazing Journey/Sparks" (Townshend) – 7:54
- "Summertime Blues" (Capeheart, Cochran) – 3:22
- "Shakin' All Over" (Kidd) – 4:34
- "My Generation" (Townshend) – 15:46
- "Magic Bus" (Townshend) – 7:46
"Fortune Teller", "Young Man Blues", "Summertime Blues", and "Shakin' All Over" are R&B tunes that were a standard part of The Who's stage repertoire at the time.
"My Generation" is drawn out into an almost sixteen minute medley including "See Me, Feel Me" / "Listening To You", the instrumental riff from the end of "Naked Eye", "The Seeker," and a number of other mostly unfamiliar themes. "Magic Bus" is drawn out to seven and a half minutes. The rest of the tracks are fairly straightforward renditions of the original songs, albeit with a consistent hard-rock power trio sound rather than any attempt to re-create the various studio sounds of their original recordings.
A similar concert from later the same year was released in 1996 as Live at the Isle of Wight Festival 1970, along with a film of the same even titled Listening to You: The Who at the Isle of Wight Festival. In general the Live At Leeds version makes a better listen for the non-Tommy material, though the performance of Tommy was better on the Isle of Wight recording.
See also 1970 in music.
Deluxe Edition 2002 CD
Disc One- "Heaven and Hell" (Entwistle)
- "I Can't Explain" (Townshend)
- "Fortune Teller" (Naomi Neville)
- "Tattoo" (Townshend)
- "Young Man Blues" (Mose Allison)
- "Substitute" (Townshend)
- "Happy Jack" (Townshend)
- "I'm a Boy" (Townshend)
- "A Quick One, While He's Away" (Townshend)
- "Summertime Blues" (Eddie Cochran & Jerry Capehart)
- "Shakin' All Over" (Johnny Kidd a.k.a Fred Heath)
- "My Generation" (Townshend)
- "Magic Bus" (Townshend)
- "Overture" (Townshend)
- "It's a Boy" (Townshend)
- "1921" (Townshend)
- "Amazing Journey" (Townshend)
- "Sparks" (Townshend)
- "Eyesight to the Blind" (Sonny Boy Williamson)
- "Christmas" (Townshend)
- "The Acid Queen" (Townshend)
- "Pinball Wizard" (Townshend)
- "Do You Think It's Alright?" (Townshend)
- "Fiddle About" (Entwistle)
- "Tommy, Can You Hear Me?" (Townshend)
- "There's a Doctor" (Townshend)
- "Go to the Mirror" (Townshend)
- "Smash the Mirror" (Townshend)
- "Miracle Cure" (Townshend)
- "Sally Simpson" (Townshend)
- "I'm Free" (Townshend)
- "Tommy's Holiday Camp" (Townshend though the Holiday Camp Premise was Provided by Keith Moon)
- "We're Not Gonna Take It" (Townshend)
Editions
[ 1970] Track 2406 001 (in the UK), Decca DL 79175 (in the USA)- The original LP release. Released separately but almost simultaneously in the UK and the USA. Cover, inserts, label, and track list as described above. Produced by The Who.
[ 1990] MCAD-37000 / DIDX-353- The original CD re-release. Cover as described above, except no fold-out and no inserts. Standard MCA silver label with title and track listing. Tracks as on the original LP. No production credits listed.
[ 1995] MCAD-11215- The re-mastered CD. Cover as described above, except with better inking on the simulated stamp (possibly a bow to contemporary marketing requirements). Custom label similar to the original LP, with the engineering notice changed to "Crackling noises have been corrected!". Extended track list as described above. The front insert is a 10 leaf booklet with notes by Chris Charlesworth, notes on each track, reduced-size facsimiles of all the original inserts, facsimiles of press clippings pertaining to the concert or the album, and photos of the band taken during one of the two Leeds University concerts. Producer
References
- For more information, see the inserts to either of the two remastered editions.
External links
| The Who |
|---|
| Roger Daltrey | Pete Townshend | John Entwistle | Keith Moon |
| Kenny Jones - John "Rabbit" Bundrick - Pino Palladino - Zak Starkey Simon Townshend - Jon Carin - Simon Phillips - Doug Sandom - Colin Dawson |
| Listings |
| Discography - Filmography |
| Other related people |
| Peter Meaden - Kit Lambert - Chris Stamp |
From Wikipedia, the Free Encyclopedia. Original article here. Support Wikipedia by contributing or donating.
All text is available under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License See Wikipedia Copyrights for details.
