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Wednesday, October 1, 2008

Concerts I've listened to, September 2008

  • 1984-07-19 Vernon Reid's Living Colour New York City NY CBGB's - Much better sounding that it should be. Only about 20-30 people at the show. No other LC people playing other than Vernon, so it doesn't really sound like LC, except for Funny Vibe.

  • 1986-12-20 David Lee Roth Inglewood CA Forum - Probably fun to be at, not as much fun to listen to. Dave is a complete showman!

  • 1968-07-27 Pink Floyd Los Angeles CA Shrine Exposition Hall - Only two songs, probably incomplete. But a very rare 68 shows. Great sound. Would love the rest to surface.

  • 2008-08-26 Oasis Seattle WA WaMu Theater - Liam's voice sound completely gone. Almost like a Liam impersonator.

  • 1983-12-02 New Order Bournemouth UK Town Hall - OK, totally worth listening to for Hooky's Satisfaction riff!

  • 1983-02-?? Prince 1999 Tour Rehearsals - 13 minute DMSR with made up lyrics! Awesome. Otherwise it sounds like a 1999 show.

  • 2008-06-05 She Wants Revenge Detroit MI St. Andrews Hall - Nothing special.

  • 1974-05-09 Bruce Springsteen Cambridge MA Harvard Square Theater - Recently surfaced master of the soundcheck and early show. This is the show that prompted Jon Landau to say "I've seen the future of Rock And Roll and his name is Bruce Springsteen". Great sound. Includes a bit of the soundcheck!

  • 2008-08-01 Radiohead Chicago IL Grant Park - For like the 2nd or third time. Not the greatest sound. Thudding bass.

  • 1987-04-27 Eric Clapton New York City NY Madison Square Garden - Seems like all of the April 87 shows have leaked soundboards. Supposedly this show was going to be a live album. Nothing really wrong with it. 22 minute Same Old Blues. I believe it was closer to 30 minutes long. HOT!

  • 1979-06-28 DEVO Santa Cruz Civic Auditorium - In the last couple of days tons of DEVO masters have popped up. Why? Who cares??? Some songs I've never heard before (or have forgotten about). Boogie Boy sung a lot!

  • 1988-11-11 Prince San Francisco CA Warfield Theatre - Nice tight aftershow. Certainly not the guitar workout of the 8/18/88 show.

  • 1989-09-08 The Rolling Stone East Troy WI Alpine Valley Music Theater - I always love getting copies of shows that I was at. I don't think that I ever even had this show on tape.

  • 1988-10-03 Prince New York City NY Roseland Ballroom - More like the November 88 aftershow than the August one. Seems more controlled and R&B-ish. Not a complete freakout.

  • 1989-06-27 The Who New York City NY Radio City Music Hall - The Who touring in '89 was a big deal. Good show. Great sound. Nothing else special except that Pete Townshend is pretty concited.

  • 1988-11-07 Prince Reseda CA The Palace - Nice jam on Superfunkicalifragisexi. Beyond that, snoozefest.

  • 2008-09-23 OMD London UK BBC 6 Music Studios - A nice little in studio show.

  • 2000-12-21 Living Colour New York City NY CBGB's - First reunion show. Very firey. Sadly, no Release the Pressure which was a highlight of seeing them in Chicago 2001.

  • 1979-21-31 DEVO Long Beach CA Long Beach Arena - One of the shows with Dove (DEVO as "the band of Love") opening for them. Some songs played were never recorded. A little hissy, but very listenable. Boogie Boy doing a new years countdown is as creepy as you can imagine.

  • 1984-02-07 Genesis St. Paul MN Civic Center - First concert I ever went to. Never had a copy of it until a couple of weeks ago. Incomplete and far from a quality listen. AND, just slightly too big to put on a single CD.

  • 1983-08-03 Prince Minneapolis MN First Avenue - The rehersal for the "Purple Rain" show. I think that I was aware that there was second show that day, but I don't think that I've ever heard it. Nice soundboard, amazing sounds, and some good improv, like Abracdabra by the Steve Miller Band, Our House by Madness, and Stand Back by Stevie Nicks.

  • 1977-08-24 DEVO West Hollywood CA Starwood - Another recently circulated master. Slightly hissy, but very listening. A couple of unreleased songs, like my favorite "I Need A Chick".

  • 2008-09-07 Ben Folds with the Nashville Symphony Nashville TN Schermerhorn Symphony Center - A quiet recording. Performance is lacking of bit of fun due to the symphony.
  • Posted by Adam @ 05:28 AM CST [Link] [No Comments]

    Tuesday, September 23, 2008

    Lotus Leadership Alliance: Day 2

    Last night's dinner went way too late, and thus I was up too late. And never quite got a chance to finish my notes.

    Today was slightly more managable. Big group Q&A session in the morning that really wasn't as good as it could have been. 8.30am was not the time to try something like that. The rest of the day was traditional breakout sessions. Learned more about WCM and SameTime. Spent a solid chunk of the afternoon with Portal chief architect Rob Will. He's a hoot! Basically the day was drilldowns on what was presented yesterday. Made some good contacts.

    Must leave soon to do another dinner/party/activity. I'll never catch up on email and my notes (heh, Notes and notes).

    Posted by Adam @ 05:45 PM CST [Link] [No Comments]

    Monday, September 22, 2008

    Lotus Leadership Alliance: Day 1

    So I'm a whore for IBM at times. This is now the third customer council that I've participated in. I'm accompanied to this event with two coworkers who have collaboration interests. I'm working with an IBM IT Architect that I've known for a while to help them through the maze of IBMers.

    Last night was good, but I was reminded this morning that sushi is not a good base for a lot of gin. I was hoping to read email on my balcony this morning, but it was pitch black at 6am! And humid. And the wireless was just not with it. Nice room though. It's a handicap room so there's no tub. Just a walk in shower. Crappy head though. I always miss my shower when I travel.

    So today I believe that I'll be sitting in a room from about 8am until 5.30 and then there's a dinner. So another long social day. Get it... social networking. Tomorrow will be full of breakouts (sadly, not the classic 80s game).

    I'm sure that I'll post more later.

    So now it's later. Quite the interesting day and conference format. ALL DAY IN THE SAME ROOM! Not so cool. Got updates and directions on each of the major Lotus product families. All I can say is that they are taking E2.0 very seriously and I wish that I could licence Bluehouse to run internally. I'll have to talk to some product managers about that.

    At the end of the day Chris Gardner, the guy who is profiled in The Pursuit of Happyness spoke. Very charasmatic guy and very inspiring... and sniff sniff, makes me miss my kids.

    A nice short break (about an hour or so) and then we've got a group dinner. So I'm jacked in with the door open to the ocean breeze. Can't sit out tonight since the wifi is not quite robust enough and neither is my blackberry signal. But now my hotel room is all humid.

    Very happy to have some robes delivered with housekeeping. How could I live without them???

    Posted by Adam @ 06:41 AM CST [Link] [No Comments]

    Saturday, September 20, 2008

    Rick Wright's final interview (from Summer 2006)

    Thanks to The Times Online and Paul Sexton:


    Which one’s Pink, they used to ask. Sadly, it took the early death of their keyboard player and co-founder to make people ask: which one’s Rick?

    Richard Wright, who died on Monday at 65, was the mystery inside the enigma of Pink Floyd. If his profile had been any lower, he could have been reported missing. He was the unostentatious exception to the rule of rock stardom, rarely recognised beyond the obsessive fan base of a group so huge that they have sold three million albums in the UK this decade, without even making a new album for 14 years. He liked that anonymity just fine.

    Like Charlie Watts with the Stones, Rick Wright just turned up when he was asked to and played brilliantly. To paraphrase Watts, one year’s playing and 39 years’ hanging about. Yet the outpouring of appreciation for him this week has been intense. One message board contributor said: “I’ve never met you, but you’ve been a huge part of my life for 40 years.”

    Wright himself was baffled. “God, I don’t understand the whole cult of Floyd,” he told me. “I think all you writers need to talk about that. I know we’ve made some great songs and great music, but I can’t tell you why we’re so popular.”


    Times Archive, 1972: Pink Floyd
    Shrill shrieks, notes and even at one time the sepulchral tones of Malcolm Muggeridge reverberate around the hall

    Light and sound: Pink Floyd at the Albert Hall
    Related Links
    Richard Wright’s Greatest Hits: 10 Pink Floyd Classics
    Pink Floyd's Richard Wright dies
    Rick Wright
    Guy Pratt, who in 1987 inherited Roger Waters’s bass part on stage after his toxic departure from Floyd, says: “It took a while to get to know him, but he did get very close to people, especially around the band.” Pratt would later marry Gala, Wright’s daughter from the first of three marriages (to Juliette Gale, whom he wed in 1964) before the group was formed.

    “He was a very quiet man, he was happiest on his boat. That was the nicest place to see him, because he was in charge there. Some bands spawn real families around them and some don’t, and Floyd did. For me, that turned into something else. It’s strange to think that I knew my father-in-law before I knew my wife.”

    In the summer of 2007 I went to Wright’s modest mews house in Kensington, at the time of the 40th anniversary of Floyd’s first album, Piper at the Gates of Dawn, for what turned out to be Wright’s last interview. A slight figure, he had been grey for years so seemed not to have aged much beyond a few more lines on his face. As I arrived he was playing the album to himself, as if even he couldn’t quite believe that those were his keyboards bringing a jazz sensibility to Britain’s most avant-garde new scenesters of the day.

    “Very interesting to listen to it,” he mused in his quiet, absent-mindedly mischievous way. “Now I know why it had an influence on so many bands. I can hear punk stuff going on in there.”

    Wright may have seemed wary of the interview environment at first, but, having committed to it, clearly wanted it to be as natural as possible. When his publicist, keen to monitor the conversation for inadvertent controversies, said she would sit out of the way in his kitchen, he said “Yes, but I’ll still be able to see you,” and sent her out of the house altogether.

    When Wright blew the dust off his memories of the pre-Floyd years, his future role began to make perfect sense. “I’m trying to think how it all started,” he said, as if the question had never been asked before. “Roger had his guitar and wanted to become a musician, Nick Mason wanted to be an architect but had played drums with various groups.”

    As a child, he played trumpet, trombone and then guitar as well as piano. “When I left school, my careers master said: ‘What do you want to do?’ I said: ‘I have no idea, but I want to play music,’ and he said: ‘Well, you’re pretty good at drawing, go to architecture school.’ So I went, but I wasn’t interested in architecture at all. I was into forming shapes, but I wanted to be a musician.

    “So when I was at polytechnic, I went off and had private lessons in composition at the Eric Gilder School of Music, then I went to the London School of Music; all this while I was studying architecture.

    “The tutor came up to me and said: ‘You’re not into architecture, are you?’ I said: ‘No.’ He said: ‘It’s a waste of time you coming; go off and be a musician.’ But thank God I went there, because that’s where I met Roger and Nick.”

    Pratt says: “His playing was very structural, maybe because they were architecture students. When he was on my bedroom wall in that 1970s age of jazz-fusion and pointless virtuosity, his subtle injection of a few chords made you see the relevance of jazz to one’s own musical world. He was responsible for me and millions of people investigating Miles Davis.”

    More than that, he smuggled Davis into the group. “There was a Making of Dark Side of the Moon documentary,” Pratt goes on, “and he came up with one little gem on there, that the chords for Breathe came from Kind of Blue. Then you listened again and thought, ‘It’s true’.”

    Wright said at the time: “I don’t want to be the fastest pianist on the planet, I don’t want to be Dizzy Gillespie, who could play a zillion notes a bar, I’d like to be Miles, who can play one note a bar.”

    Wright was as quick to apportion praise elsewhere as he was keen to deflect it from himself. “I don’t remember the first time I met Syd Barrett. Roger knew him from Cambridge. I do have memories of sitting down with him in Highgate working out songs and being completely awe-struck by this personality that was Syd.

    “He was so vibrant. It’s hard to talk about Syd, but he was unique, he had an incredible way of looking at things. One day he wrote a song in ten minutes. Me, an aspiring songwriter, I couldn’t believe it.” He took Barrett’s self-destruction and inevitable firing from the band particularly badly. “I think he was being spiked, quite honestly, with too much acid. Syd was obviously losing it, yet we all loved him dearly, and had so much respect for what he’d done.

    “That’s why David [Gilmour] came into the band, the idea being we’d have a second guitarist and then do a Beach Boys thing and Syd could stay at home [like Brian Wilson] and write songs, and we’d go out and play them. Didn’t work, unfortunately. Very, very sad.

    “But I remember when David Bowie came and guested when I was playing with David. He was a huge fan, and said when he heard Syd, he realised it was OK to sing in an English accent. Damon Albarn said the same thing.”

    Wright kept his counsel about the infamous power struggle within Floyd, in which Waters edged him out of the group, only for Gilmour to reinstate him in the post-Roger years. Their reunion at Live 8 was a means to a charitable end: enjoyable, but unrepeatable.

    “It was wonderful that we did it, because of all the arguments and issues that Roger’s had with me, and with David. But we did learn something. It would be very hard for the four of us to go together and do a world tour, simply because our ideas are so different musically.”

    But he clearly loved playing on the guitarist’s later solo albums and tours, and it was mutual, as shown on the Live in Gdansk album and DVD, out next week and featuring them together on a roof-raising 25-minute version of Echoes.

    “Musical telepathy,” Gilmour called it. “I’ve never played with anyone quite like him,” he said. “In my view all the greatest Pink Floyd moments are the ones where he’s in full flow. Without Us and Them and The Great Gig in the Sky, both of which he wrote, what would Dark Side of the Moon have been? And without his quiet touch, Wish You Were Here wouldn’t quite have worked. It’s a mark of his modesty that those standing ovations on my tour in 2006 came as a huge surprise to him, though not to the rest of us.”

    Pratt recalls: “David would pretend to forget to introduce him, and then when he did the crowd would go bananas. It had us on the verge of tears every night.”

    Having dabbled in two solo albums, in 1978 and 1994, Wright was pottering with new songs when we spoke, developing an instrumental album on the piano. When his cancer was diagnosed in December, he spent more time on his boat, trying to get well.

    He’d also given up some time to one of the writing sessions organsed by Chris Difford of Squeeze at Huntsham Hall in Devon. The English singer-songwriter Helen Boulding met him there.

    “Rick came down with Guy Pratt and being a Pink Floyd fan I was so excited to meet him,” she says. “As it turned out, I was put with Rick and Chris on the first day to write, which was very exciting and very daunting, but it was one of the most relaxed writing experiences I’ve ever had. Rick was the most gentle, humble, down-to-earth guy. I couldn’t believe that someone so talented and so successful was so low-key and gracious.”

    If Wright ever was recognised, it was for the right reasons. “I really appreciate that I can walk around the streets of London or anywhere and people come up and say 'Thank you for your music.' Not 'Can I have your autograph?’ It's really nice,” he told me. “I don’t want to prove anything, I don't need to go out and advertise myself. I don’t have the ego to do that.”

    As we shook hands and he went about his business, his expression betrayed just a hint of relief that a rare moment under the microscope was over.

    Posted by Adam @ 07:20 AM CST [Link] [No Comments]

    Monday, September 15, 2008

    Remember A Day: Rick Wright dies at age 65

    A very sad day to remember indeed.

    Wright was 65 when he died on September 15, 2008, following a battle with cancer. His spokesman said, "The family of Richard Wright, founder member of Pink Floyd, announce with great sadness that Richard died today after a short struggle with cancer. The family have asked that their privacy is respected at this difficult time."

    Posted by Adam @ 01:08 PM CST [Link] [1 Comment]

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