andyman wrote:Apparently the Vinyl's been reissued without any remastering. Anyone know how it sounds?
Woah! I wonder if the packaging still falls apart...
Moderator: Greg
andyman wrote:Apparently the Vinyl's been reissued without any remastering. Anyone know how it sounds?
kerble wrote:Ernest Goes to Jail In Your Ass
andyman wrote:Apparently the Vinyl's been reissued without any remastering. Anyone know how it sounds?
dontfeartheringo wrote:I need people to act like grown folks and I just ain't seeing it.
Brett Eugene Ralph wrote:andyman wrote:Apparently the Vinyl's been reissued without any remastering. Anyone know how it sounds?
I don't know about any reissue, but I picked up an original pressing in St. Louis recently, and it sounds as good as any record I've ever heard. I never knew it was printed with a black and silver Reprise label. Pretty cool.
Flaneur wrote:Another record to keep an eye out for is Time Fades Away, which is out of print but not impossible to find.
Minotaur029 wrote:I love all three of these records, but I just don't see how Tonight's the Night always seems to be a distant third in this trilogy for everybody on the board.
Mark Lansing wrote:
In Jimmy McDonough's book Shakey, David Briggs claims there's a far superior version of Tonight's The Night that Neil opted not to release, but I have a hard time imagining how that album could be improved. As far as messed-up dark-night-of-the-soul rock records go, that album is one of the champs.
andyman wrote:Apparently the Vinyl's been reissued without any remastering. Anyone know how it sounds?
Pure L wrote:I get shocked whenever I use my table saw while barefooted.
sandinojones wrote:There's something glorious about a record that's such a high-wire act like this: to my ears Neil et. al. seem like they're barely able to keep it together at all, much less able to produce a record of such heart-breaking honesty and astounding beauty.
From the Liner Notes: (translated from Dutch. (WTF??? ) )"The death of Neil's discovery and friend, Danny Whitten seems to have affected him deeply. Since 'The Needle & the Damage Done' most of Neil's songs about Danny's death reflect his guilt complex. Neil seemed to fall back into an even deeper depression. Then he began drinking, became sentimental and generally intolerable for anyone who had anything to do with him. It's said that those around him treated him with great caution for fear of provoking him, causing him to retreat and become a recluse. During this evening at the Rainbow, Neil makes particular reference to Miami Beach where he was safe from external influences and where a highly emotional and introverted process went its course
Marsupialized wrote:A male playing an acoustic guitar.
Come on.
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