Live Acoustic America

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ALBUM INFORMATION
LIVE

Total Tracks: 17   Total Length: 71:09

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One of the finest of Howard

MARKUS

Here you can see that mister 80'hits can do almost alone with a grand piano some nice percussions played by a woman, and the best communication between artists and public I never heard, like "Life in one day" where howard to give a singing lesson to the audience, or the funny glitch beginning of "Everlasting love". Very fine too the medley from "Exodus" to Beatles "come together", you can think it's the same song continuing. The Instrumentals changing moods like, "Out in thin Air" or "Tape Rag", where HJ become Debussy with little Keith Jarrett licks or Scott Joplin, are most welcome. So electro-tunes can sound accoustically very well too, and works perfectly - this is why, when a song is well built and created it can stand out without artifices. An Overwhelming happening that is delicious to listen to.

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Perhaps the best live album ever!

beensaved

All the hits in a stripped down, acoustic performance. Howard Jones on Piano and Carol Steele on drums.

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They Say All Media Guide

In 1992, coinciding with the release of his fifth album, In The Running, Howard Jones undertook a tour of the U.S. accompanying himself on acoustic piano with only a percussionist in support. The tour doesn’t seem to have had the desired effect of successfully promoting his current album, which became his first to miss the charts in the U.S. and the U.K. (despite the hit “Lift Me Up”) and ended his career as a major-label act. But it was artistically satisfying for an artist usually consigned to the synth-pop category, who could emphasize his melodies and hopeful lyrics, not to mention his instrumental virtuosity and elastic voice, in the format. This recording was made early in the tour, on April 28, at the Variety Arts Theater in Los Angeles. Jones plays all of his hits and a representative sampling of songs from his five albums. Jones’ hits collection may make a better sampler, but this set demonstrates that he can generate his own electricity even when his machines are unplugged. – William Ruhlmann

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