Showing posts with label 1991. Show all posts
Showing posts with label 1991. Show all posts

Monday, November 10, 2025

Keith Richards & The X-pensive Winos - Live At The Hollywood Palladium, December 15, 1988 (1991)

Year: 10 December 1991 (CD )
Label: Virgin Records (UK), CDVUS 45, 262 439
Style: Rhythm and Blues, Rock and Roll
Country: Dartford, Kent, England (18 December 1943)
Time: 67:31
Format: Flac Tracks 16/44,1 kHz
Size: 440 Mb

Live at the Hollywood Palladium, December 15, 1988 is a live album by Keith Richards, released on 10 December 1991 in the United States and 24 February 1992 in the United Kingdom. Recorded during a brief American tour in support of Richards debut solo album Talk Is Cheap in late 1988, Richards is supported by a set of musicians and friends dubbed "The X-Pensive Winos".
At the end of the opening song, Richards says that the Palladium is "a stage I've been thrown off many times"; he was referring to Chuck Berry's concert there on January 21, 1972, when Richards tried to perform with his idol, but was purportedly kicked off for playing too loudly, though Berry later claimed he had not recognized Richards.
Richards' set during the tour was composed primarily of material from his solo debut album – he played nine of the eleven songs from the record.
Live at the Hollywood Palladium, December 15, 1988 was recorded, videotaped, and ultimately released as an album at the suggestion of Jane Rose, Richards tenured manager. Officially credited as executive producer, she encouraged Richards to consider the official release after showing the reluctant star bootlegs of inferior audio quality.[4] The album was released in North America during the Christmas season, in the wake of the Stones live album Flashpoint, and before the recording of Richards' second solo studio album, Main Offender.
(en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Live_at_the_Hollywood_Palladium,_December_15,_1988)

01. Take It So Hard (04:28)
02. How I Wish (04:04)
03. I Could Have Stood You Up (04:29)
04. Too Rude (07:45)
05. Make No Mistake (06:30)
06. Time Is On My Side (04:29)
07. Big Enough (03:47)
08. Whip It Up (05:34)
09. Locked Away (05:48)
10. Struggle (04:35)
11. Happy (07:07)
12. Connection (02:30)
13. Rockawhile (06:19)

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Sunday, August 17, 2025

Yes - Union [Japanese Ed.] (1991)

Year: April 30, 1991 (CD Jul 21, 1991)
Label: Arista Records (Japan), BVCA-116
Style: Symphonic Rock
Country: London, England
Time: 69:55
Format: Flac Tracks 16/44,1 kHz
Size: 512 Mb

Charts: CAN #15, US #15, JPN #11, GER #15, NLD #17, SWE #32, SWI #16, UK #7. US: Gold.
While Tony Kaye, Trevor Rabin, Chris Squire and Alan White was working on a follow-up to Big Generator, Jon Anderson, Bill Bruford, Rick Wakeman and Steve Howe was working on a follow-up to their latest album (that was released under the name ‘Anderson Bruford Wakeman Howe’, since the Squire/White/Rabin camp owned the rights to the name ‘Yes’ at the time).
The idea that came about was that of a Union between these two versions of Yes. And what a great idea it was! It features eight people! The material is a mix between the two camps and this seems to have spurred them all to write better songs. Great rock songs like Shock To The System, Lift Me Up and Miracle Of Life, great pop melodies like I Would Have Waited Forever and Saving My Heart, instrumentals like the beautiful Steve Howe solo piece Masquerade.
The most surprising for me are the Trevor Rabin songs. I did not like those Yes albums that Rabin worked on before very much, but here even Rabin’s songs are great. Especially Lift Me Up, which rocks harder than anything from 90125 or Big Generator. Rabin also does a lot of vocals which gives the album more strengh and diversity than usual.
The tracks Angkor Wat, Dangerous (Look In The Light Of What You’re Searching For), Holding On, Evensong and Take The Water To The Mountain are perhaps not too interesting in their own right. But since the running time is so long it is ok. The closing track Give & Take, on the other hand, is again a great song, tying the album together in a nice way.
It is really strange that so many tend to dislike this album so much. I agree that it has some weak moments and it probably could have been better if they recorded it more as a unit instead of sending tapes to each other around the globe. However, Union is a very good and very underrated album (much, much better than 90125 and Big Generator and almost as good as the Anderson Bruford Wakeman Howe album) and a must for all serious Yes fans!
(classicrockreview.wordpress.com/2021/08/25/yes-union-1991-2/) Review by SouthSideoftheSky.

01. I Would Have Waited Forever (06:33)
02. Shock To The System (05:09)
03. Masquerade (02:17)
04. Lift Me Up (06:30)
05. Without Hope You Cannot Start The Day (05:18)
06. Saving My Heart (04:41)
07. Miracle Of Life (07:30)
08. Silent Talking (04:01)
09. The More We Live - Let Go (04:53)
10. Angkor Wat (05:23)
11. Dangerous (Look In The Light Of What You're Searching For) (03:38)
12. Holding On (05:24)
13. Evensong (00:51)
14. Take The Water To The Mountain (03:12)
15. Give And Take (04:28)

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