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Friday, March 11, 2022

Mott The Hoople - Live (Great Live Performance UK 1974 + Bonus Tracks)



Size: 256 MB
Bitrate: 256
mp3
Ripped by: ChrisGoesRock
Artwork Included
Source: Japan 24-Bit Remaster

Mott The Hoople Live is a 1974 album by British band Mott the Hoople. A remastered and expanded 30th Anniversary Edition was released by Sony BMG on the Columbia label (516051). The release of the album in its original form in 1974 coincided with the announcement of the band's demise and it was, therefore, their final release. It was a single disc album in its original format but the addition of thirteen extra tracks has seen it expand to a double CD package.


By 1974, Mott the Hoople was quite possibly the greatest concert band in the world, a blur of high-energy rock, high content poetics, and high camp costuming — Ian Hunter the tough guy in leather and shades; Ariel Bender the street kid, all satin hat flash; Overend Watts, the freakoid in skyscraper thigh boots; and a live show which out-dressed the lot of them. If any band deserved a live album, it was Mott. And if any live album failed to deliver, it was this one. Today, the album's deficiencies seem less severe. 


Though the band's Bender era remains considerably less well-documented than the earlier Mick Ralphs period, still live material has poured out from a variety of sources, from the Shades of Ian Hunter compilation to the All the Young Dudes box set, and onto the spring 2001 reissue of Bender's own Floodgates solo album (an excellent version of "Here Comes the Queen"). 


There's even a quasi-legal fan club release for the 1974 King Biscuit broadcast which remains the highpoint of the band's live career. Live, however, remains the only official document of the glory, and the problems commence on the back cover — a great shot of the band performing "Marionette" on a stage hung with puppets, when the song itself is nowhere in sight. Two shows recorded five months and two continents apart (London's Hammersmith Odeon in December 1973; New York's Uris Theater in May 1974) are highlighted by just seven songs and one medley. 


The hits "All the Young Dudes" and "All the Way From Memphis," of course, are present, but the remainder of the track list is bizarre to say the least — the ballads "Rest in Peace" and "Rose" were British B-sides only, while "Sucker," "Walking With a Mountain," and "Sweet Angeline" were never much more than filler on their own original albums (Dudes, Mad Shadows, and Brain Capers, respectively). 


The medley is mightier, spanning both Mott's own history, and rock & roll's in general — who, after all, would deny the band their own exalted place in the lineage which stretches from "Whole Lotta Shakin'" to "Get Back" and beyond (the uncredited snatch of Bowie's "Jean Genie")? But even here, one cannot help but think more must have happened that night than a breakneck assault on a handful more cuts — and sure enough, it did. The Hammersmith show was the night when the management tried to halt the gig during the closing number, and wound up causing a riot. 

Single 1971

The liner notes remember it well, but the "Mountain" here was found in New York. It is a great album in its own way, the band are in terrific form, and Bender plays the guitar hero better than anyone else of his entire generation. But Mott gigs, like their albums, were about more than simple snapshots — that was what made the band so important, that's what made their music so memorable. And that's what the fearfully episodic Live completely overlooks. 

CD1 Broadway
01.Intro - "Jupiter" from "The Planets" (Holst) – 0:46
02."American Pie"/ "The Golden Age of Rock'n'Roll" (McLean / Hunter) – 4:16
03."Sucker" (Hunter, Ralphs, Watts) – 5:59
04."Roll Away the Stone" / "Sweet Jane" (Hunter / Reed) – 3:52
05."Rest in Peace" (Griffin, Hunter, Watts) – 6:01
06."All the Way from Memphis" (Hunter) – 5:02
07."Born Late '58" (Watts) – 4:51
08."One of the Boys" (Hunter, Ralphs) – 5:32
09."Hymn for the Dudes" (Allen, Hunter) – 5:46
10."Marionette" (Hunter) – 5:04
11."Drivin' Sister" / "Crash Street Kidds" / "Violence" (Hunter, Ralphs) – 9:06
12."All the Young Dudes" (Bowie) – 3:49
13."Walking with a Mountain" (Hunter) – 4:54

CD2 Hammersmith
01.Intro - "Jupiter" from "The Planets" (Holst) – 0:46
02."Drivin' Sister" (Hunter, Ralphs) – 3:51
03."Sucker" (Hunter, Ralphs, Watts) – 6:03
04."Sweet Jane" (Reed) – 5:10
05."Sweet Angeline" (Hunter) – 6:47
06."Rose" (Buffin, Hunter, Ralphs,...) – 4:42
07."Roll Away the Stone" (Hunter) – 3:31
08."All the Young Dudes" (Bowie) – 3:53
09."Jerkin' Crocus" / "One of the Boys" / "Rock'n'Roll Queen" / "Get Back" / "Whole Lotta Shakin' Goin On" / "Violence" (David, Hunter, Lennon, McCartney, Ralphs, Williams) – 16.16
10."Walking with a Mountain" (Hunter) – 9:09

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2 comments:

Rhodb said...

Thanks for the Mott share a really good band that was a lot of fun

Regards

Rochacrimson said...

Thank you so much Chris!!!!