I plan on redoing and expanding that effort, starting here. I've already posted a couple of stray tracks albums in the time period covered by the box set, 1972 to 1976. If you're a Neil Young fan at all, I highly recommend that you get it. Man oh man! I've been waiting to hear the songs on that for decades. That portion mainly mentioned the name of the supporting bands, which were Cuby + Buzzards, and Livin' Blues.Ī few days ago as I write this, the Neil Young box set "Archives, Volume II" was released. To make it fit, I cut out the portion of it below the band name. I didn't change a thing, so I hope your Dutch is good if you want to read all of it. But I happened to find the concert poster for the exact Amsterdam concert featured here. What a nice lucky break! I've had a hard time finding any good photos of the band on stage in 1969. The Hague portion includes the very first track (which is only a few seconds of an MC introducing the band in Dutch), then from track 13 to the end.īy the way, for the very delicate types out there, there are some X-rated improvised lyrics to the "Blue Suede Shoes" medley.Ġ7 Greeny Alone (Fleetwood Mac)ġ4 San-Ho-Zay (Fleetwood Mac)ġ6 Albatross (Fleetwood Mac)ġ9 Blue Suede Shoes - Whole Lotta Shakin' Goin' On - Blue Suede Shoes (Fleetwood Mac) The Amsterdam portion is 35 minutes long and the Hague portion is 24 minutes long. Note that two of the exact performances here, "One Sided Love" and "Greeny Alone," were used on the stray tracks album I made called "One Sided Love." That led into "Twist and Shout," but less than a minute of that was recorded. A short snippet of "Teenage Darlin'" was played, but it really was only the bass line while the audience was cheering. There were two versions of "One Sided Love," so I only used one of them. A few of the talking bits between songs come from worse sources, but that doesn't matter much since it's only a little bit of banter. He made some nice improvements, but sometimes one can only do so much. I worked with my musical associate MZ on improving the sound quality. That's probably because the bootlegs were cobbled together from different sources. Some songs sound fantastic and some sound merely good. That said, some parts sound better than others. Generally speaking, the sound quality is excellent, since this was professionally recorded for either radio or TV. That's because we have the ending of the first concert but not the ending of the second one, so it makes sense to end with an ending. However, I've organized it so that most of the second concert comes first. This album consists of the broadcast portions from those two concerts. The two broadcast portions were bootlegged over the years, while the rest of both concerts seem to have gotten lost. (It seems they didn't go on stage until around midnight.) I don't know if it was by chance or what, but over the next few months, about half an hour of the Hague concert was played on Dutch radio or TV, from a longer show, then about half an hour of the Amsterdam concert was played on Dutch radio or TV, also from a longer show. Then they played another concert in Amsterdam at a venue with the exact same name later that same evening. Fleetwood Mac played at a venue called the Concertgebouw in The Hague around 6 P.M. This is a strange one, because it's made up of two concerts that were performed in different cities in the Netherlands on the exact same night. But I found one more that's worthy, and anything featuring Peter Green in his prime is worth hearing, so here it is. In terms of live material, there are only so many concerts that haven't been officially released yet still have high sound quality. I thought I was all done posting material from the Peter Green era of Fleetwood Mac.
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