50 Greatest Live Albums of All Time!!
Feb 16, 2021 10:57:53 GMT -5
AeroCooper, tomass, and 2 more like this
Post by bartman2001 on Feb 16, 2021 10:57:53 GMT -5
Legal disclaimer refer to this on my feelings of such lists (this one is no different):
aeroforce2.freeforums.net/thread/3720/ranking-best-rock-bands-1970
Was going to, and probably should have, put this in the "Random Aerosmith Mentions" (which it is) but since it's been SO SLOW 'round this bored... I mean board I thought I would give it some prime time space. Once again this is a readers poll so it should be taken with a grain of salt and Live Bootleg's spot on this isn't the only one that should be questioned.
46. Aerosmith - Live! Bootleg
Whole list here:
www.loudersound.com/features/the-50-greatest-live-albums-ever
aeroforce2.freeforums.net/thread/3720/ranking-best-rock-bands-1970
Was going to, and probably should have, put this in the "Random Aerosmith Mentions" (which it is) but since it's been SO SLOW 'round this bored... I mean board I thought I would give it some prime time space. Once again this is a readers poll so it should be taken with a grain of salt and Live Bootleg's spot on this isn't the only one that should be questioned.
46. Aerosmith - Live! Bootleg
On July 4, American Independence Day, Aerosmith top-billed at the Texxas World Music Festival at the 100,000-capacity Dallas Cottonbowl, with Ted Nugent and Heart as support acts, along with Journey and Eddie Money.
They also played a few low-key club shows, billed as Dr. J. Jones And The Interns, which were recorded by Jack Douglas for the live album that was released on October 27. They named it Live! Bootleg, and the titled implied, it was, by design, the antithesis of Peter Frampton’s sweet-sounding mega-hit Frampton Comes Alive!
"I love that record," Slash tells us. "That to me is the quintessential live rock’n’roll album of all time. It’s amazing. The way that Live! Bootleg starts with Back In The Saddle, that whole intro with the crowd going crazy and the flash-pots going off, that whole build-up, made it so exciting to me."
"The great thing about live records at the time was if you didn’t have any other records by the band, you could get a good cross section of their material all on one album," says broadcaster Eddie Trunk. "I remember getting Live! Bootleg, putting the poster up on my wall, and to this day, I think it is an unbelievably underrated live record. And it is actually a true live record. It just reeks of the ‘70s - it really puts you into the space of when the songs were recorded."
They also played a few low-key club shows, billed as Dr. J. Jones And The Interns, which were recorded by Jack Douglas for the live album that was released on October 27. They named it Live! Bootleg, and the titled implied, it was, by design, the antithesis of Peter Frampton’s sweet-sounding mega-hit Frampton Comes Alive!
"I love that record," Slash tells us. "That to me is the quintessential live rock’n’roll album of all time. It’s amazing. The way that Live! Bootleg starts with Back In The Saddle, that whole intro with the crowd going crazy and the flash-pots going off, that whole build-up, made it so exciting to me."
"The great thing about live records at the time was if you didn’t have any other records by the band, you could get a good cross section of their material all on one album," says broadcaster Eddie Trunk. "I remember getting Live! Bootleg, putting the poster up on my wall, and to this day, I think it is an unbelievably underrated live record. And it is actually a true live record. It just reeks of the ‘70s - it really puts you into the space of when the songs were recorded."
Whole list here:
www.loudersound.com/features/the-50-greatest-live-albums-ever