Live in New York City

Rate It! Avg: 4.5 (35 ratings)
ALBUM INFORMATION
LIVE

Total Tracks: 20   Total Length: 130:32

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Always great live

EMUSIC-00CE9F06

Highlights on this set are My Love Will Not Let You Down, Atlantic City, and Ramrod

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Boss and E Street in top form

Jimerica

There are pleasant surprises here like the muscular version of "Youngstown" bleeding into "Murder Incorporated." There are great versions of classics like "Badlands" and "Ramrod" also. Add in some solid new (at the time) songs like "Land of Hope and Dreams" and "American Skin". There is some bloat here though--new versions of "Born in the USA" and "The River" fall flat, but, on the whole, a great live set.

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ALBUM ONLY ... BS!!

Jerswing

"ALBUM ONLY" -- What's wrong with this picture??? ----- The raison d'etre of websites like Emusic is to provide discriminating music consumers a way to purchase and download JUST [emphasis_essential] that music which they want to buy & own - whether that is one single cut, or an entire album! ----- Now comes the infuriating and increasingly prevalent "ALBUM ONLY" notation by numerous popular cuts ----- If the RIAA - and its member labels - prefer to have otherwise honest consumers "share" music rather than buy it legally ... this is a GREAT incentive! ----- To Emusic: In your own economic interests - you need to do everything within your power to discourage this [misguided] behavior by labels you are providing [yet_another] marketing channel ----- Aside: gotta love these "crude composer" webforms on otherwise sophisticated websites!

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Emusic pricing

RPR

If there was any doubt Emusic would screw over subscribers in the new pricing structure, look no further. It's only $11.99 on amazon.com, and everything but Tenth Avenue Freeze-Out is available as an individual download.

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They Say All Media Guide

Compared to the gargantuan Live/1975-85, 2001′s Live in New York City seems like the very definition of restraint, but consider this — not only does it span two discs, it leaves out a considerable portion of the set list from the show and thereby the set list of Springsteen’s celebrated 2000 reunion with the E Street Band. Some critics complained that this record was little more than a tie-in to the HBO special of the same name, but even if that’s true, the record would have merit since it illustrates exactly why this group should never have parted ways. In a sense, even if this is the third live album in Springsteen’s catalog, it’s the first that attempts to replicate the feeling of an evening out with the E Street Band (the Live/1975-85 box tried too hard to be an ultimate experience; MTV Plugged captured a transitional phase). Though most reunions feel a little forced, this feels natural, yet never nostalgic, since the track listing never relies on the predictable. There are no hits in the conventional sense — outside of “Born in the U.S.A.” tucked away on the second disc and an initially uncredited “Born to Run” — but there are many fan favorites interspersed with a few obscurities and new songs, most notoriously the protest song “American Skin (41 Shots).” This works in Springsteen’s favor, since there’s no pandering — only the joy of making music with the band that understands him best. This doesn’t really result in something essential, even if the new songs are quite good, but if you’ve ever been a fan, it’s hard not to warm to Live in New York City. – Stephen Thomas Erlewine

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