The 30th Anniversary Concert Celebration is a live double-album - TopicsExpress



          

The 30th Anniversary Concert Celebration is a live double-album release in recognition of Bob Dylans 30 years as a recording artist. Recorded on October 16, 1992, at Madison Square Garden in New York City, it captures most of the concert, which featured many artists performing classic Dylan songs, before ending with three songs from Dylan himself. To commemorate 30 years since the release of Dylans first Columbia album, a marathon tribute concert was held at New Yorks Madison Square Garden, with a galaxy of stars and voices from the past taking part. The cumulative effect of this tribute was staggering, revealing just how much truly great Dylan material there is to choose from all of his periods. A firm nucleus of the three surviving members of Booker T. & the MGs, plus G.E. Smith on guitar and Jim Keltner and Anton Fig on drums, anchors the bands, and most of the stars offer fresh slants on songs familiar and obscure. Among the more memorable interpretations are Richie Havens moving Just Like a Woman, completely within his style; the Clancy Brothers fervent conversion of When the Ship Comes In to an Irish folk idiom; the swinging, countrified You Aint Goin Nowhere from Mary Chapin Carpenter, Shawn Colvin, and Rosanne Cash; and a sullen Masters of War by Eddie Vedder and Mike McCready on acoustic guitars. Lou Reed went through the bootlegs to come up with the pounding Foot of Pride, which is perfectly suited to Reeds declamatory style. Eric Clapton shrugs off his diffident manner to deliver one of the most electrifying performances of his life in Dont Think Twice, Its All Right -- each guitar lick and vocal cuts angrily to the bone -- and George Harrison makes his first U.S. concert appearance in 18 years with Absolutely Sweet Marie. Dylan himself appears at the end, wildly improvisational and harshly authentic in voice on Its Alright, Ma and Girl of the North Country. By no means does this box contain the entire concert, though, and while the reason was probably to make the thing fit on two well-packed CDs, some of the deletions are inexplicable. To cite just a few examples, Harrisons If Not for You is missing; so are Claptons Love Minus Zero, No Limit and some numbers by Booker T. & the MGs (Gotta Serve Somebody and Lay Lady Lay are in Staxs Time Is Tight box). Even Dylans own performance of Song to Woody is not here; the booklet pleads technical problems but it sounded fine on the live telecast. Nevertheless, enough of the concert is here to suggest its triumph -- and all were reminded that the fountainhead of all of this music was still alive, creative, and unwilling to be consigned to the history books. Review by Richard S. Ginell
Posted on: Thu, 16 Oct 2014 09:46:37 +0000

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