Label: Parlophone Records (Europe), 0946 381959 2 4
Style: Hard Rock
Country: London, England
Time: 53:47, 36:07
Format: Flac Tracks 16/44,1 kHz
Size: 399, 257 Mb
Charts: UK #5, GER #56, US #146.
Sides 1 and 2 of the vinyl are recordings made with the Rolling Stones Mobile Studio at the Hammersmith Odeon, during the band's 1980 World Tour.
Sides 3 and 4 are from a 1978 recording, previously released in Japan in March 1980 as Live at Hammersmith.
In North America, the album was released as a single record, excluding the live material from 1978.
The first UK CD version (EMI CZD 94) was a double set, issued in 1988, in what is now known as a 'fat-boy' double-CD case. Sides 1 and 2 of the 2-LP set were CD1; sides 3 and 4 were CD2.
The later 1994 release was a single CD version, the 1978 recording of "Come On" being dropped to match the restrictive running time of the single CD.
Live...in the Heart of the City has since been remastered and was released in March 2007 as a 2-CD set (in a slimline double-CD case), once again featuring all the tracks of the original album, plus a 1980 recording of "Ain't No Love in the Heart of the City".
The 1978 performance of Might Just Take Your Life, originally recorded by singer David Coverdale and keyboardist Jon Lord as members of Deep Purple in 1974, featured guitarist Bernie Marsden singing the middle eight part as originally sung by Glenn Hughes on the Deep Purple recording.
The sleeve art is by British artist Jeff Cummins.
"We were sent on some silly promotional stunt for the album that involved a circus elephant," recalled David Coverdale. "Yes, an elephant, not a snake. Lord knows why."
(en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Live..._in_the_Heart_of_the_City)
Sides 1 and 2 of the vinyl are recordings made with the Rolling Stones Mobile Studio at the Hammersmith Odeon, during the band's 1980 World Tour.
Sides 3 and 4 are from a 1978 recording, previously released in Japan in March 1980 as Live at Hammersmith.
In North America, the album was released as a single record, excluding the live material from 1978.
The first UK CD version (EMI CZD 94) was a double set, issued in 1988, in what is now known as a 'fat-boy' double-CD case. Sides 1 and 2 of the 2-LP set were CD1; sides 3 and 4 were CD2.
The later 1994 release was a single CD version, the 1978 recording of "Come On" being dropped to match the restrictive running time of the single CD.
Live...in the Heart of the City has since been remastered and was released in March 2007 as a 2-CD set (in a slimline double-CD case), once again featuring all the tracks of the original album, plus a 1980 recording of "Ain't No Love in the Heart of the City".
The 1978 performance of Might Just Take Your Life, originally recorded by singer David Coverdale and keyboardist Jon Lord as members of Deep Purple in 1974, featured guitarist Bernie Marsden singing the middle eight part as originally sung by Glenn Hughes on the Deep Purple recording.
The sleeve art is by British artist Jeff Cummins.
"We were sent on some silly promotional stunt for the album that involved a circus elephant," recalled David Coverdale. "Yes, an elephant, not a snake. Lord knows why."
(en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Live..._in_the_Heart_of_the_City)
CD1: Live In The Heart Of The City: 23rd/24th June 1980
01. Come On (03:39)
02. Sweet Talker (04:15)
03. Walking in the Shadow of the Blues (05:01)
04. Love Hunter (10:41)
05. Ain't No Love in the Heart of the City (07:20)
06. Fool for Your Loving (04:52)
07. Ain't Gonna Cry No More (06:21)
08. Ready an' Willing (04:47)
09. Take Me With You (06:47)
CD2: Live At Hammersmith: 23rd November 1978
01. Come On (04:01)
02. Might Just Take Your Life (05:39)
03. Lie Down (04:17)
04. Ain't No Love in the Heart of the City (06:29)
05. Trouble (04:55)
06. Mistreated (10:45)
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