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Chic - Live at the Budokan (CD)

Album Details: Live at the Budokan

Release Date:02/23/1999
Label:Sumthing Else
UPC:669311100320

Other Available Formats: Live at the Budokan

User Reviews: Live at the Budokan

  • Overall:

    A Very Good Effort

    By Yahoo! Shopping User  Dec 11, 1999

    This may not be the best live recording ever, but it's a fitting tribute to the late bass player Bernard Edwards. There's an appearence by Slash, Sister Sledge and Steve Winwood, a fantastic version of Good Times and a fourteen minute long Chic Chee...r. Any fan will be happy. Read more Less

Pro Reviews: Live at the Budokan

  • All Music Guide

    In the '90s, two albums resulted from various reunions of Chic's co-founders/co-leaders Nile Rodgers and Bernard Edwards. The first was 1992's Chic-ism, a decent though uneven studio project that had its moments but fell short of the excellence of classics like C'est Chic and Risque. The other was Live at the Budokhan, a gem that was recorded in Toyko, Japan in April, 1996 for the JT Super Producers series. Sadly, this concert would be Edwards' last live appearance before his death, and for that reason, Budokhan would be historically important even if Chic had given a mediocre performance that night. But this CD is far from mediocre. Rodgers and Edwards oversee an excellent band that includes, among others, singers Sylver Logan Sharp and Jill Jones, and drummer Omar Hakim -- and the sparks fly in a major way when this Chic lineup turns its attention to late '70s favorites like "Good Times" (which is combined with the Sugarhill Gang's "Rapper's Delight"), "Le Freak," "Dance Dance Dance"... and "I Want Your Love." Listeners will notice that on stage, these songs have a tougher, harder edge than they did in studio, and the same things happen with the Sister Sledge classics "He's the Greatest Dancer" and "We Are Family" (both of which find Sister Sledge joining Chic on stage). An interesting surprise comes when Chic moves into rock territory and joins forces with Steve Winwood and Guns N' Roses guitarist Slash for Jimi Hendrix's "Stone Free." (Considering how racist some of the lyrics to Guns N' Roses' "One in a Million" are, it's rather ironic to hear Slash playing with Chic). When Rodgers was preparing to release Live at the Budokhan on his Sumthing Else label, he decided against adding any overdubs or smoothing any of the rough edges. Clearly, he made the right decision. - Alex Henderson, All Music Guide Read more Less

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Biography

Chic

There can be little argument that Chic was disco's greatest band; and, working in a heavily producer-dominated field, they were most definitely a band. By the time Chic appeared in the late '70s, disco was already slipping into the excess that eventually caused its downfall. Chic bucked the trend by stripping disco's sound down to its basic elements; their funky, stylis... Read more