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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
9 of 9 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars
MISSING THE 3RD LIVE DISC!,
By
This review is from: Bowie at Beeb: Best of BBC Radio 68-72 (Audio CD)
If you have any notion of buying this great set, look at the used listings for the earlier, limited edition, now OOP, 3CD BBC set. It contains a fabulous live disc recorded at the BBC London Theatre 06/27/00 that this later edition does not have. Check out the tracklist for the live disc:
Disc: 3 1. Wild Is The Wind 2. Ashes To Ashes 3. Seven 4. This Is Not America 5. Absolute Beginners 6. Always Crashing In The Same Car 7. Survive 8. Little Wonder 9. Man Who Sold The World 10. Fame 11. Stay 12. Hallo Spaceboy 13. Cracked Actor 14. I'm Afraid Of Americans 15. Let's Dance As of this writing, the OOP 3CD is available here on Amazon for less, used, than this 2-disc set, new. Don't pass up the opportunity to get the live CD. The audio is first rate, and the performance is excellent.
8 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Stripped down and worth it.,
This review is from: Bowie at Beeb: Best of BBC Radio 68-72 (Audio CD)
Unlike a lot of the overblown versions on his first five albums, one of which being the magnificent Ziggy Stardust, those presented here are live and very stripped down, allowing you to hear the song instead of the studio. Surprisingly, the primitive sound of these recordings sound fresher when heard for the first time today than the produced album versions, which can sound dated due to the use of late '60's/early '70's production techniques. Also, the versions of Space Oddity songs with Mick Ronson on guitar add a more rock feel and therefore fit better alongside the Ziggy stuff, which start to appear toward the album's end. A good representation of a hungry pre-fame Bowie, when he still sang in a higher register. The energy on this is as electric as it can get, and that's all that he was shooting for back then.
11 of 12 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Bowie Learning How to Fly, Then Flying,
By
This review is from: Bowie at Beeb: Best of BBC Radio 68-72 (Audio CD)
This is yet another interesting byproduct of the recent rush to re-release Brit groups and stars who performed during rock's glory age for various BBC TV and radio programs. Usually these are a mixed bag, as they often collect different time periods, different settings, different styles, and different sound dynamics, all wrapped onto one or two discs. Notable recent BBC collections include an early collection by the Beatles, a generally enthusiastic release from the Kinks, a great Led Zeppellin cd, and a very strong late-period Procol Harum set.
This one is no different. Like those I mentioned, the first cd of Bowie at the Beeb collects several early live performances of a red-hot Bowie fresh off the high of "Space Oddity" performing an eclectic set of solo, small group acoustic, and rock performances. Leaving aside the annoying BBC host who is always omnipresent in these sets, Bowie turns in a strong yet tentative collection of his early songs, some joined by Mick Ronson toward the end of the disc. Standouts include "Janine," "The Width of a Circle," and a rave-up performance of "It Ain't Easy." Those familiar with the early Bowie sound will find it in abundance on the first cd, an obvious talent looking for the right sound and fit for his muse, trying on and abandoning different styles but always a solid performer throughout. The second cd finds a far more confident Bowie a few years later (1972) in a studio setting, bringing his amped-up Ziggy Stardust persona and ripping through a blistering set of highlights from that period. The sound (recorded with overdubs in the studio) is especially fine, and the performances first-rate -- Mick Ronson leaves no prisoners as he slashes through "Hang on to Yourself" and "Ziggy Stardust." Bowie even brings on a large contingent of supporters later on to help him with a superb set that includes "Starman," "Space Oddity," and "Changes." Bowie fans will rejoice. I hope the Bowie archivists start releasing more of his early and mid-period live sets, as we have seen with other similar artists, so we can fill in the missing pieces in the evolution of a singular rock icon.
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