Rory Gallagher Irish Tour 74 Rar
2021年11月20日Download here: http://gg.gg/wymh3
In the end, music is a personal soundtrack to one’s life. It is tied to a specific time and place, circumstances and memories that are so tightly integrated in one’s experience that having memory with no music cannot even be imagined, much less considered. In the summer of 1974, I went from Little Rock to Chicago to visit my closest childhood friend. While there I purchased two LPs for our listening pleasure, Eric Clapton’s 461 Ocean Boulevard (RSO, 1974) and Rory Gallagher’s Irish Tour ’74 (Polydor). I had just started listening to the blues and had fallen under the spells of the Allman Brothers Band and Joe Cocker. Like most middle-class white kids of the era, I was introduced to the blues through the British Invasion and southern rock only to discover the real story much later. I had previously invested in Gallagher’s Tattoo (Polydor, 1973) after having heard Gallagher’s ’Walk on Hot Coals’ from his previous recording, Blueprint (Polydor, 1973). Tattoo sported the song ’Sleep on a Clothes Line’ that was thematically similar to ’Walk on Hot Coals.’ The album was also to contribute ’Cradle Rock,’ ’Tattoo’d Lady,’ ’A Million Miles Away’ and ’Who’s That Coming’ to this resulting document of Gallagher’s tour of his homeland in the early days of 1974. While still getting a handle on blues music and where it came from, I heard Irish Tour ’74 as a part of an evolution that involved other bands I had been listening to (Rolling Stones, Faces, Who, and Led Zeppelin). Gallagher’s tour took place during a most challenging and violent time in Northern Ireland, when IRA terrorism was at a global peak. The tour was filmed by rock film director Tony Palmer for a television special he originally envisioned. When all of the material was assembled, Palmer found the footage of such quality that he edited and released it as a theatrical motion picture, to which Irish Tour ’74 (taken from Gallagher’s Cork, Belfast and Dublin concerts and a Cork soundcheck) represented the soundtrack. Irish Tour ’74 was originally released as a 2-LP live set by Polydor Records. Its program contained 10 songs, several lengthy electric workouts by Gallagher. Long considered one of the finest live rock recordings, Irish Tour ’74 saw several CD releases that resulted in better sound, but no additional material. Was any recorded concert set wanting for unreleased material it is Irish Tour ’74. Sony Legacy has brought the goods with this 6-CD, 1-DVD (the DVD being of Tony Palmer’s documentary) set plus a more modest 2-CD Deluxe release of the entire Cork concert. The big box sports, in addition to the Cork concert, the one from Dublin (January 2, 1974), Belfast (December 29, 1973) and The City Hall Session (the Cork concert soundcheck, January 3, 1974). Gallagher’s talent was such that he was broadly admired by artists such as Queen’s Brian May, U2’s The Edge and Slash from Guns n’ Roses, as well as, Joe Bonamassa and Gary Moore. Gallagher died of acute liver failure June 14, 1995. He was a very capable guitarist and composer with a keen ear for Piedmont-style blues and ragtime. On the original Irish Tour ’74 release, only a single acoustic song (Tony Joe White’s ’As the Crow Flies’) was included. Each of the included concert appearances had an acoustic set consisting of ’As the Crow Flies’ (played on a steel resophonic guitar), Blind Boy Fuller’s ’Pistol Slapper Blues,’ Gallagher’s own ’Unmilitary Two-step,’ and Big Bill Broonzy’s ’Bankers Blues’ (on acoustic guitar) and Gallagher’s own ’Going to my Hometown (on mandolin). These acoustic pieces are among the most consistently played songs of the tour. Gallagher appeared as a free spirit, changing song arrangements on a whim. Muddy Water’s ’I Wonder Who’ appears three times in the set, each time played differently from the others, but the version originally released remains his best performance (it deserves to be ranked with the perfection Allman Brother’s ’One Way Out’ and ’Statesboro Blues’). Gallagher slays his ’Cradle Rock’ and ’Walk on Hot Coals’ each time he plays, changing the arrangements ever so much with each performance. The 1974 tour was undertaken to ostensibly support his studio recording Tattoo (Polydor, 1973). ’A Million Miles Away,’ from that recording, emerges as a juggernaut over the course of its three performances while J.B. Hutto’s ’Two Much Alcohol’ receives three inconsistent readings, the best coming from the Dublin show, where Gallagher eschews his standard-tuning slide guitar for standard lead guitar introduction. This version should have been put on the original release, omitted due to its additional length. Gallagher’s slide guitar playing on the song is grand in the future tradition of Derek Trucks, who plays the best lead guitar with a slide of anyone. But this Irishman was there first. On the slide guitar side, Gallagher plays his tour-de- force ’Who’s That Coming’ (from Tattoo) at every show and well he should. The lengthiest and best performance was released and is molten rock tempered with blues, country, and skiffle. Gallagher pulls all of the influences into an open-G tuning that sears in its intensity. And intensity is what defines this box set. There is nothing refined, exact or precise about this music. It is raw and pathos filled. It is of exposed nerves in a furnace. It is ’sleep on a clothsline / It’s easy as pie.’ This is music of hunger and worth deserving of acknowledgement.
*Rory Gallagher Irish Tour Deluxe
*Rory Gallagher Irish Tour DvdTrack Listing
Irish Tour captures the dichotomy of Rory Gallagher, too. Away from the crowds, the on stage avenger in full valiant flight, galvanising the feeling of fresh excitement and “open, loving” quality Palmer felt, becomes a lone meditative figure, keeping his own thoughts and counsel. Find album reviews, stream songs, credits and award information for Irish Tour ’74 - Rory Gallagher on AllMusic - 1974 - The companion piece to director Tony Palmer’s. Rory Gallagher: Rory Gallagher - Irish Tour ’74, the 40th Anniversary Deluxe Box Set album review by C. Michael Bailey, published on November 8, 2014. Find thousands jazz reviews at All About Jazz! Listen to Irish Tour ’74 (Live - 40th Anniversary Deluxe) on Spotify. Rory Gallagher Album 1974 56 songs. Two thousand people were overjoyed as Gallagher – a native of Cork, Southern Ireland – took the stage, just 24 hours after the city had witnessed its biggest bomb blast during a night of at least 10 explosions. “I see no reason for not playing Belfast. Kids still live here,” said Gallagher.
Disc 1 & 2: Cork (5th of January 1974) - Messin’ With The Kid; CradleRock; I Wonder Who; Tattoo’d Lady; Walk On Hot Coals; Laundromat; AMillion Miles Away; Hands Off; Too Much Alcohol; As The Crow Flies;Pistol Slapper Blues; Unmilitary Two-Step; Bankers Blues; Going To MyHometown; Who’s That Coming; In Your Town. Disc 3 & 4: Dublin (2ndof January 1974) - Cradle Rock; Tattoo’d Lady; Hands Off; Walk On HotCoals; Laundromat; Too Much Alcohol; A Million Miles Away; As The CrowFlies; Pistol Slapper Blues; Bankers Blues; Unmilitary Two-Step;Going To My Hometown; In Your Town; Bullfrog Blues. Disc 5 & 6:Belfast (29th of December 1973) - Messin’ With The Kid; Cradle Rock;I Wonder Who; Tattoo’d Lady; Walk On Hot Coals; Hands Off; A MillionMiles Away; Laundromat; As The Crow Flies; Pistol Slapper Blues;Unmilitary Two-Step Bankers Blues; Going To My Hometown; Who’s ThatComing; In Your Town; Bullfrog Blues. Disc 7: City Hall in Session(3rd of January 1974) - Maritime (The Edgar Lustgarden Cut); I WantYou / Raunchy Medley; Treat Her Right; I Wonder Who; Too Much Alcohol;Just A Little Bit; I Can’t Be Satisfied; Acoustic Medley; Back On MyStompin’ Ground (After Hours); Stompin’ Ground (Alt version). Disc 8(DVD): The Tony Palmer directed documentary Irish Tour ’74.Personnel
Rory Gallagher: guitar, vocals; Lou Martin: keyboards; Gerry McAvoy:bass; Rod De’Ath: drums.Album information
Title: Rory Gallagher - Irish Tour ’74, the 40th Anniversary Deluxe Box Set| Year Released: 2014 | Record Label: Sony MusicPost a comment about this albumPlease enable JavaScript to view the comments powered by Disqus.About Rory GallagherArticles |Music |Photos |Similar |Search |ShopTags Review by Thom JurekRory Gallagher Irish Tour Deluxe
Irish Tour ’74 is one of the great electric blues-rock documents from the 1970s. Throughout his life, Irish guitarist Rory Gallagher was celebrated among guitar geeks, but never received the kind of popular acclaim given to most six-string heroes of the era (insert your own here). This 40th anniversary edition of his glorious and now historic live offering (and the fantastic film documentary by Tony Palmer) has been painstakingly remastered by nephew Daniel Gallagher. Though the original release contained ten tracks from the Cork, Belfast, and Dublin gigs, this edition contains the entirety of the 16-song Cork City Hall performance. There are some different versions of tunes from the original album, some others are added, and still others are left off, because they come from the remaining two shows. As such, the track listing looks quite different. The package is a bit confusing because nowhere on it does it say this is the 40th anniversary edition. The Cork concert is presented in precise running order. It commences with an absolutely burning read of ’Messin’ with the Kid’; ’Cradle Rock’ follows immediately thereafter. Also included here is a different version of ’Walk on Hot Coals,’ but it features some of Gallagher’s thorniest solos, followed by ’Laundromat’ -- a song not on the original. ’A Million Miles Away’ and the long rave-up boogie ’Hands Off’ -- another new addition -- and J.B. Hutto’s ’Too Much Alcohol’ close it out. The second disc kicks off with an acoustic set that features some excellent covers: Tony Joe White’s ’As the Crow Flies,’ a brief rag called ’Unmilitary Two-Step’ (a take on Jimmy Shand’s ’Military Two Step’), Blind Boy Fuller’s ’Pistol Slapper Blues,’ and Big Bill Broonzy’s ’Bankers Blues,’ before he picks up a mandolin accompanied by the full band on ’Hometown Blues,’ a traditional tune. The electricity returns for ’Who’s That Coming,’ but it’s a different version; the one on the original album was from the Belfast gig. Have no fear, Gallagher’s slide work is every bit as inventive and intense. The set closes not with the relatively brief, intimate, loose jam ’Back on My Stompin’ Ground (After Hours)’ and ’Just a Little Bit,’ but a barnstorming, 16-minute workout on ’In Your Town’ that sends the crowd off demanding more. The original Irish Tour ’74 is one of the greatest live rock & roll albums of all time -- even if a lot of people don’t know it -- and this set doesn’t replace it. That record is readily available, so purists needn’t get worked up about rewriting history. But this is killer and irreplaceable all on its own, because not only is it inspired musically, but it sets the actual record straight for the first time on this amazing run of shows. [The complete tour is available on Legacy’s eight-disc box set -- seven audio, the Palmer film, and a 10’ vinyl record.] Title/ComposerPerformerTimeStream 1 Rory Gallagher 06:42 Amazon 2 Rory Gallagher 07:16 Amazon 3 Rory Gallagher 07:48 Amazon 4 Rory Gallagher 05:08 Amazon 5 Rory Gallagher 10:46 Amazon 6 Rory Gallagher 08:06 Amazon 7 Rory Gallagher 09:18 Amazon 8 Rory Gallagher 11:11 Amazon 9 Rory Gallagher 07:44 AmazonTitle/ComposerPerformerTimeStream 1 Rory Gallagher 06:08 Amazon 2 Rory Gallagher 03:24 Amazon 3 Rory Gallagher 02:16 Amazon 4 Rory Gallagher 03:17 Amazon 5 Rory Gallagher 07:58 Amazon 6 Rory Gallagher 09:17 Amazon 7 Rory Gallagher 16:13 AmazonRory Gallagher Irish Tour Dvdblue highlight denotes track pick
Download here: http://gg.gg/wymh3
https://diarynote-jp.indered.space
In the end, music is a personal soundtrack to one’s life. It is tied to a specific time and place, circumstances and memories that are so tightly integrated in one’s experience that having memory with no music cannot even be imagined, much less considered. In the summer of 1974, I went from Little Rock to Chicago to visit my closest childhood friend. While there I purchased two LPs for our listening pleasure, Eric Clapton’s 461 Ocean Boulevard (RSO, 1974) and Rory Gallagher’s Irish Tour ’74 (Polydor). I had just started listening to the blues and had fallen under the spells of the Allman Brothers Band and Joe Cocker. Like most middle-class white kids of the era, I was introduced to the blues through the British Invasion and southern rock only to discover the real story much later. I had previously invested in Gallagher’s Tattoo (Polydor, 1973) after having heard Gallagher’s ’Walk on Hot Coals’ from his previous recording, Blueprint (Polydor, 1973). Tattoo sported the song ’Sleep on a Clothes Line’ that was thematically similar to ’Walk on Hot Coals.’ The album was also to contribute ’Cradle Rock,’ ’Tattoo’d Lady,’ ’A Million Miles Away’ and ’Who’s That Coming’ to this resulting document of Gallagher’s tour of his homeland in the early days of 1974. While still getting a handle on blues music and where it came from, I heard Irish Tour ’74 as a part of an evolution that involved other bands I had been listening to (Rolling Stones, Faces, Who, and Led Zeppelin). Gallagher’s tour took place during a most challenging and violent time in Northern Ireland, when IRA terrorism was at a global peak. The tour was filmed by rock film director Tony Palmer for a television special he originally envisioned. When all of the material was assembled, Palmer found the footage of such quality that he edited and released it as a theatrical motion picture, to which Irish Tour ’74 (taken from Gallagher’s Cork, Belfast and Dublin concerts and a Cork soundcheck) represented the soundtrack. Irish Tour ’74 was originally released as a 2-LP live set by Polydor Records. Its program contained 10 songs, several lengthy electric workouts by Gallagher. Long considered one of the finest live rock recordings, Irish Tour ’74 saw several CD releases that resulted in better sound, but no additional material. Was any recorded concert set wanting for unreleased material it is Irish Tour ’74. Sony Legacy has brought the goods with this 6-CD, 1-DVD (the DVD being of Tony Palmer’s documentary) set plus a more modest 2-CD Deluxe release of the entire Cork concert. The big box sports, in addition to the Cork concert, the one from Dublin (January 2, 1974), Belfast (December 29, 1973) and The City Hall Session (the Cork concert soundcheck, January 3, 1974). Gallagher’s talent was such that he was broadly admired by artists such as Queen’s Brian May, U2’s The Edge and Slash from Guns n’ Roses, as well as, Joe Bonamassa and Gary Moore. Gallagher died of acute liver failure June 14, 1995. He was a very capable guitarist and composer with a keen ear for Piedmont-style blues and ragtime. On the original Irish Tour ’74 release, only a single acoustic song (Tony Joe White’s ’As the Crow Flies’) was included. Each of the included concert appearances had an acoustic set consisting of ’As the Crow Flies’ (played on a steel resophonic guitar), Blind Boy Fuller’s ’Pistol Slapper Blues,’ Gallagher’s own ’Unmilitary Two-step,’ and Big Bill Broonzy’s ’Bankers Blues’ (on acoustic guitar) and Gallagher’s own ’Going to my Hometown (on mandolin). These acoustic pieces are among the most consistently played songs of the tour. Gallagher appeared as a free spirit, changing song arrangements on a whim. Muddy Water’s ’I Wonder Who’ appears three times in the set, each time played differently from the others, but the version originally released remains his best performance (it deserves to be ranked with the perfection Allman Brother’s ’One Way Out’ and ’Statesboro Blues’). Gallagher slays his ’Cradle Rock’ and ’Walk on Hot Coals’ each time he plays, changing the arrangements ever so much with each performance. The 1974 tour was undertaken to ostensibly support his studio recording Tattoo (Polydor, 1973). ’A Million Miles Away,’ from that recording, emerges as a juggernaut over the course of its three performances while J.B. Hutto’s ’Two Much Alcohol’ receives three inconsistent readings, the best coming from the Dublin show, where Gallagher eschews his standard-tuning slide guitar for standard lead guitar introduction. This version should have been put on the original release, omitted due to its additional length. Gallagher’s slide guitar playing on the song is grand in the future tradition of Derek Trucks, who plays the best lead guitar with a slide of anyone. But this Irishman was there first. On the slide guitar side, Gallagher plays his tour-de- force ’Who’s That Coming’ (from Tattoo) at every show and well he should. The lengthiest and best performance was released and is molten rock tempered with blues, country, and skiffle. Gallagher pulls all of the influences into an open-G tuning that sears in its intensity. And intensity is what defines this box set. There is nothing refined, exact or precise about this music. It is raw and pathos filled. It is of exposed nerves in a furnace. It is ’sleep on a clothsline / It’s easy as pie.’ This is music of hunger and worth deserving of acknowledgement.
*Rory Gallagher Irish Tour Deluxe
*Rory Gallagher Irish Tour DvdTrack Listing
Irish Tour captures the dichotomy of Rory Gallagher, too. Away from the crowds, the on stage avenger in full valiant flight, galvanising the feeling of fresh excitement and “open, loving” quality Palmer felt, becomes a lone meditative figure, keeping his own thoughts and counsel. Find album reviews, stream songs, credits and award information for Irish Tour ’74 - Rory Gallagher on AllMusic - 1974 - The companion piece to director Tony Palmer’s. Rory Gallagher: Rory Gallagher - Irish Tour ’74, the 40th Anniversary Deluxe Box Set album review by C. Michael Bailey, published on November 8, 2014. Find thousands jazz reviews at All About Jazz! Listen to Irish Tour ’74 (Live - 40th Anniversary Deluxe) on Spotify. Rory Gallagher Album 1974 56 songs. Two thousand people were overjoyed as Gallagher – a native of Cork, Southern Ireland – took the stage, just 24 hours after the city had witnessed its biggest bomb blast during a night of at least 10 explosions. “I see no reason for not playing Belfast. Kids still live here,” said Gallagher.
Disc 1 & 2: Cork (5th of January 1974) - Messin’ With The Kid; CradleRock; I Wonder Who; Tattoo’d Lady; Walk On Hot Coals; Laundromat; AMillion Miles Away; Hands Off; Too Much Alcohol; As The Crow Flies;Pistol Slapper Blues; Unmilitary Two-Step; Bankers Blues; Going To MyHometown; Who’s That Coming; In Your Town. Disc 3 & 4: Dublin (2ndof January 1974) - Cradle Rock; Tattoo’d Lady; Hands Off; Walk On HotCoals; Laundromat; Too Much Alcohol; A Million Miles Away; As The CrowFlies; Pistol Slapper Blues; Bankers Blues; Unmilitary Two-Step;Going To My Hometown; In Your Town; Bullfrog Blues. Disc 5 & 6:Belfast (29th of December 1973) - Messin’ With The Kid; Cradle Rock;I Wonder Who; Tattoo’d Lady; Walk On Hot Coals; Hands Off; A MillionMiles Away; Laundromat; As The Crow Flies; Pistol Slapper Blues;Unmilitary Two-Step Bankers Blues; Going To My Hometown; Who’s ThatComing; In Your Town; Bullfrog Blues. Disc 7: City Hall in Session(3rd of January 1974) - Maritime (The Edgar Lustgarden Cut); I WantYou / Raunchy Medley; Treat Her Right; I Wonder Who; Too Much Alcohol;Just A Little Bit; I Can’t Be Satisfied; Acoustic Medley; Back On MyStompin’ Ground (After Hours); Stompin’ Ground (Alt version). Disc 8(DVD): The Tony Palmer directed documentary Irish Tour ’74.Personnel
Rory Gallagher: guitar, vocals; Lou Martin: keyboards; Gerry McAvoy:bass; Rod De’Ath: drums.Album information
Title: Rory Gallagher - Irish Tour ’74, the 40th Anniversary Deluxe Box Set| Year Released: 2014 | Record Label: Sony MusicPost a comment about this albumPlease enable JavaScript to view the comments powered by Disqus.About Rory GallagherArticles |Music |Photos |Similar |Search |ShopTags Review by Thom JurekRory Gallagher Irish Tour Deluxe
Irish Tour ’74 is one of the great electric blues-rock documents from the 1970s. Throughout his life, Irish guitarist Rory Gallagher was celebrated among guitar geeks, but never received the kind of popular acclaim given to most six-string heroes of the era (insert your own here). This 40th anniversary edition of his glorious and now historic live offering (and the fantastic film documentary by Tony Palmer) has been painstakingly remastered by nephew Daniel Gallagher. Though the original release contained ten tracks from the Cork, Belfast, and Dublin gigs, this edition contains the entirety of the 16-song Cork City Hall performance. There are some different versions of tunes from the original album, some others are added, and still others are left off, because they come from the remaining two shows. As such, the track listing looks quite different. The package is a bit confusing because nowhere on it does it say this is the 40th anniversary edition. The Cork concert is presented in precise running order. It commences with an absolutely burning read of ’Messin’ with the Kid’; ’Cradle Rock’ follows immediately thereafter. Also included here is a different version of ’Walk on Hot Coals,’ but it features some of Gallagher’s thorniest solos, followed by ’Laundromat’ -- a song not on the original. ’A Million Miles Away’ and the long rave-up boogie ’Hands Off’ -- another new addition -- and J.B. Hutto’s ’Too Much Alcohol’ close it out. The second disc kicks off with an acoustic set that features some excellent covers: Tony Joe White’s ’As the Crow Flies,’ a brief rag called ’Unmilitary Two-Step’ (a take on Jimmy Shand’s ’Military Two Step’), Blind Boy Fuller’s ’Pistol Slapper Blues,’ and Big Bill Broonzy’s ’Bankers Blues,’ before he picks up a mandolin accompanied by the full band on ’Hometown Blues,’ a traditional tune. The electricity returns for ’Who’s That Coming,’ but it’s a different version; the one on the original album was from the Belfast gig. Have no fear, Gallagher’s slide work is every bit as inventive and intense. The set closes not with the relatively brief, intimate, loose jam ’Back on My Stompin’ Ground (After Hours)’ and ’Just a Little Bit,’ but a barnstorming, 16-minute workout on ’In Your Town’ that sends the crowd off demanding more. The original Irish Tour ’74 is one of the greatest live rock & roll albums of all time -- even if a lot of people don’t know it -- and this set doesn’t replace it. That record is readily available, so purists needn’t get worked up about rewriting history. But this is killer and irreplaceable all on its own, because not only is it inspired musically, but it sets the actual record straight for the first time on this amazing run of shows. [The complete tour is available on Legacy’s eight-disc box set -- seven audio, the Palmer film, and a 10’ vinyl record.] Title/ComposerPerformerTimeStream 1 Rory Gallagher 06:42 Amazon 2 Rory Gallagher 07:16 Amazon 3 Rory Gallagher 07:48 Amazon 4 Rory Gallagher 05:08 Amazon 5 Rory Gallagher 10:46 Amazon 6 Rory Gallagher 08:06 Amazon 7 Rory Gallagher 09:18 Amazon 8 Rory Gallagher 11:11 Amazon 9 Rory Gallagher 07:44 AmazonTitle/ComposerPerformerTimeStream 1 Rory Gallagher 06:08 Amazon 2 Rory Gallagher 03:24 Amazon 3 Rory Gallagher 02:16 Amazon 4 Rory Gallagher 03:17 Amazon 5 Rory Gallagher 07:58 Amazon 6 Rory Gallagher 09:17 Amazon 7 Rory Gallagher 16:13 AmazonRory Gallagher Irish Tour Dvdblue highlight denotes track pick
Download here: http://gg.gg/wymh3
https://diarynote-jp.indered.space
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