Il Dizionario Del Rock – N.° 51
1 Medley: Money, Us And Them, Any Colour You Like, Brian Damage, Eclipse
2 Medley: Speak To Me, Breathe, On The Run, Time, The Great Gig In The Sky
Note:
Recorded live in London, Rainbow theatre, February 17, 1972
Line-up:
Bass, Voice – Roger Waters
Drums – Nick Mason
Guitar, Voice – David Gilmour
Keyboards – Richard Wright
Tracks in different order; very good quality and perfect performance by the band.
This album is part of the italian series made by Armando Curcio Editore.
This album as been digitally remastered in 1991, it has a fine cover, fine audio quality for the time.
Due to its rarity and good quality, this disc is recommended. These bootlegs offer an excellent image of the various bands, in some cases, better than the official material of the time. Please note that many of these bootlegs and songs have been released officially in different moments:
Please read below for other infos.
This album is part of the italian series made by Armando Curcio Editore.
This album as been digitally remastered in 1991, it has a fine cover, fine audio quality for the time.
Due to its rarity and good quality, this disc is recommended. These bootlegs offer an excellent image of the various bands, in some cases, better than the official material of the time. Please note that many of these bootlegs and songs have been released officially in different moments:
Please read below for other infos.
Quality content:
__________________________________________________________
London 1972
Taken from a direct rip of the original vinyl, here is a great early version of The Dark Side Of The Moon album as recorded by the BBC from the Rainbow in London. Sound is pristine. Pretty much well circulated Roio among the floyd community but in case you missed this one now it's the time! Some debate whatever this comes from the 17th or the 20th.
Definitely worth a listen!
Some bands turn into shorthand for a certain sound or style, and Pink Floyd belongs among that elite group. The very name connotes something specific: an elastic, echoing, mind-bending sound that evokes the chasms of space. Pink Floyd grounded that limitless sound with exacting explorations of mundane matters of ego, mind, memory, and heart, touching upon madness, alienation, narcissism, and society on their concept albums of the '70s. Of these concept albums, Dark Side of the Moon resonated strongest, earning new audiences year after year, decade after decade, and its longevity makes sense. That 1973 album distilled the wild psychedelia of their early years -- that brief, heady period when they were fronted by Syd Barrett -- into a slow, sculpted, widescreen epic masterminded by Roger Waters, the bassist who was the band's de facto leader in the '70s.
Waters fueled the band's golden years, conceiving such epics as Wish You Were Here and The Wall, but the band survived his departure in the '80s, with guitarist David Gilmour stepping to the forefront on A Momentary Lapse of Reason and The Division Bell. Throughout the years, drummer Nick Mason and keyboardist Rick Wright appeared in some capacity, and the band's sonic signature was always evident: a wide, expansive sound that was instantly recognizable as their own, yet was adopted by all manner of bands, from guitar-worshiping metalheads to freaky, hippie, ambient electronic duos. Unlike almost any of their peers, Pink Floyd played to both sides of the aisle: they were rooted in the blues but their heart belonged to the future, a dichotomy that made them a quintessentially modern 20th century band.
Download
https://mega.nz/#F!0qwlhbCZ!xkv0BKNTNPwlujIuPWp86A
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