What are you listening to? June 2023

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:mrgreen:

Isn't Bib Tucker a brand of Whiskey?
I never heard of this libation before. But I well remember “put on your best bib and tucker” as one of the archaisms that made my grandmother so charming. :heart:
 
Fenella Fielding, Michael Flanders, Members Of The Academy Of St. Martin-in-the-Fields (Neville Marriner, dir.) - Walton: Façade - An Entertainment (1972)

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Davy Jones, Micky Dolenz & Peter Tork - 20th Anniversary Tour 1986 (1987)

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Reading "You Never Give Me Your Money: The Beatles After The Breakup" gave me a totally different perspective on The Monkees. :oops:

Why? Because the Prefab Four, despite their personal ups and downs, never surrendered themselves to years of fruitless litigation. This was probably because none of them (other than Michael Nesmith) could afford it. In fact, the need for money combined with the unexpected longevity of their TV show enabled them to keep fanning the flames of Monkeemania to this day, despite the death of all but one member.

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This live album is an artifact of their 1986 reunion tour which started off with all four guys on board but Mike jumped ship when the tour was extended. The remaining three not only couldn't use the group name, they couldn't even sell this album through the usual retail channels. Copies were available only at their shows, making this their rarest release. I bought my copy a few weeks ago but today I couldn't even find one on Discogs, eBay, or Amazon.

So it must be just a lame concert souvenir, right? Wrong! 20th Anniversary Tour 1986 is an action packed double LP featuring all the hits and a a few new songs that hold up remarkably well. Wiki says it was recorded at the two final shows, in Charleston, West Virginia and Bethlehem, Pennsylvania. Not exactly hotbeds of live music but you would never know it from the animated crowds, which are mixed low enough to permit enjoyment of the topnotch sound quality. The performances are also fine, with just enough self-deprecating repartee to convey the joyous mood without going over the top. It is a real plus that that Micky and Peter left the playing to their hot road band.

One can only regret that The Beatles didn't figure out a way for two or three of them to perform together on stage in the decades after they imploded. But then their live shows were never more than a chance to make a lot of money from screaming teenagers. The Monkees may not have had the same artistic pretensions but they sure had a lot more fun.

:5.0: on the Sam-O-Meter.
 
Breathless ~ Chasing Promises (1989)



A number of RYM reviewers say that this is their favorite album by this band, but I find I can't rate it that highly, since it's too damn bright.

"They are potentially great songs, but just can't listen to them as they are so bright - sounds like the band don't have a bass player or drummer."
 
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