|

Click here to expand and collapse the player

Live '69

Rate It! Avg: 4.5 (13 ratings)
Live '69 album cover
01
Introduction
2:06 $0.99
02
Why Are You So Mean To Me
4:30 $0.99
03
As The Years Go Passing By
8:47 $0.99
04
Please Come Back To Me
17:03
05
Crosscut Saw
5:02 $0.99
06
Personal Manager
6:48 $0.99
Album Information
LIVE

Total Tracks: 6   Total Length: 44:16

Find a problem with a track? Let us know.

Write a Review 2 Member Reviews

Please register before you review a release. Register

user avatar

Albert Live!

jefff

This is a great recording - especially good if you like Albert King. I agree that this is a great 'B' side to Live Wire as you get a great selection of songs between the two. Albert really rips this show up and you can just imagine being in a small club hearing this. Amazing stuff. I'd give it five stars for content, but knocked it down to four due to the sound quality. The sound doesn't get in the way at all, but it could have been better and could easily be cleaned up a little. Overall this is a keeper...

user avatar

Combine with "Live Wire / Blues Power"

Streetblues

This album works great alongside his album "Live Wire/Blues Power". Though the shows and recordings took place about a year apart, they're part of a great performance time frame in his life. They fit together much like a team up of his "Wednesday" and "Thursday" show recordings (which are from the same time as the "Live Wire..." recording). This is a show I'm glad is available and I think the sound and recording is very good and have no complaints about their quality. If Albert King's playing and singing doesn't kickstart and feed your electric blues hunger, I'm not sure what will.

Recommended Albums

eMusic Features

0

The Cincinnati Blues Sound

By John Morthland, eMusic Contributor

To the best of my knowledge, nobody has ever made a good case for a Cincinnati blues sound, but the Queen City was no stranger to the blues. A rough-hewn, urban backwater on the banks of the Ohio River (which is also the Kentucky state line), Cincinnati is arguably the most southern city to find itself misplaced north of the Mason-Dixon line, and as home to King Records played occasional host to a variety of… more »

They Say All Music Guide

Recorded at a single show on May 29, 1969, in Madison, WI’s 400-seat club The Cue, these tapes were first released in 2003. The performance finds Albert King, who had just turned 46, arguably at his career peak. Even though there are just five tracks, it’s enough to understand why he remains one of electric postwar blues’ most seminal figures. Since this shares no songs with Live Wire/Blues Power, which was recorded a year earlier, and features concert versions of “Crosscut Saw,” “Personal Manager,” and “As the Years Go Passing By” from his legendary Born Under a Bad Sign album, it’s an important document. King’s in excellent form too, ripping into the tunes with edgy energy, even if many of his solos and licks will be familiar to blues listeners. The well-written liner notes neglect to mention who is in his backing band, but the group fades into the background anyway through a poor mix that relegates the drums to sounding like trash cans. Thankfully King is front and center, and although the audio is inferior to the Fillmore West shows documented on the Live Wire and Wednesday/Thursday Night In San Francisco albums, it’s clear enough to get a feel for how powerful the guitarist could be, even in front of a small crowd. At over 17 minutes, “Please Come Back to Me” is the set’s longest and most intense track as King pulls out all of his tricks on a rare rendition of a song found on only a few discs. It alone is worth the price of this album, which, with crisper sound, would be the guitarist’s best live show from this period. Even with its abbreviated length, a few bum notes, and a barely audible band, this is prime King and an essential acquisition for all fans. – Hal Horowitz

more »