Il Dizionario Del Rock – N.° 58
1 Changes 3:42
2 Space Oddity 4:50
3 Andy Warhol 3:55
4 Moonage Daydream / John I'm Only Dancing 8:20
5 Ziggy Stardust 3:18
6 Life On Mars ? / Five Years 7:38
7 The Supermen 2:47
8 My Death 6:06
Note
Recorded at Santa Monica Civic Auditorium on 20 October 1972
Lineup
Bass – Trevor Holder
Drums – Mick Woodmansey
Electric Guitar – Mick Ronson
Lead Vocals – David Bowie
Piano – Mike Garson
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.
Audio quality:
Quality content:
© Official released material:
This concert has been released as: "Santa Monica '72" by Golden Years in 1994 and in 2007 by EMI.
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Santa Monica '72
Santa Monica '72 is a live album by David Bowie, recorded at Santa Monica Civic Auditorium on 20 October 1972 during the Ziggy Stardust Tour. Taken from KMET FM's radio broadcast,[3][4] it was available only as a bootleg for more than 20 years; according to author David Buckley, possessing a copy was the test of a "proper Bowie fan".[5] The recording was issued officially by the Golden Years label in 1994, with Griffin Music handling the American release in 1995.
This live album features a quite different setlist to the one found on Ziggy Stardust - The Motion Picture (1983) (namely that, with the exception of The Jean Genie, the setlist contains no songs from Aladdin Sane, which were very present by the end of the tour), which was recorded nine months afterwards and similarly bootlegged prior to its belated official release. The Santa Monica recording is generally considered a superior representation of the Ziggy Stardust concerts in terms of both sound quality and standard of playing.[6] In 1981, NME critics Roy Carr and Charles Shaar Murray called it not simply "the performer's best ever bootleg", but "far superior to either of Bowie's official location recordings" to that date, David Live (1974) and Stage (1978).[4]
A gold disc edition with the DJ's closing remarks at the end was made available in the Netherlands, while in the US a special limited box set was released that included a T-shirt, a key chain and a short video. The video was not actually from the Santa Monica show, but was previously unseen footage from a silent colour film made at a concert in Dunstable, England on 21 June 1972. The video was combined with the live audio recording from the Santa Monica concert. This box was limited to only 1000 copies. In addition, an even more limited edition was released as a small wooden box with Bowie's image carved into the lid, and a brass plate indicating the series number. Only 250 copies were made.[6][7]
This semi-legal release was one in the series of mid-nineties releases by MainMan, Bowie's former management company during the seventies (other ones being RarestOneBowie and the Ava Cherry & The Astronettes album People from Bad Homes). All these albums were released without Bowie's approval and are currently out of print.
An official version — Live Santa Monica '72 — was issued by EMI/Virgin in 2008.
Download
https://mega.nz/#F!Ev4XmRDA!Ls1DWAbnwLbHqlrjOf2O2A
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