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Emerson, Lake & Palmer - Welcome Back My Friends to the Show That Never Ends (Remastered) (CD)

Album Details: Welcome Back My Friends to the Show That Never Ends (Remastered)

Release Date:01/08/2002
Label:Shout Factory
UPC:826663105391

Other Available Formats: Welcome Back My Friends to the Show That Never Ends (Remastered)

User Reviews: Welcome Back My Friends to the Show That Never Ends (Remastered)

  • Overall:

    See the show

    By Joerg  Mar 26, 2002

    Incredible live album. A lot of improvisations and arrangements are totally different from the studio versions. Originally the vinyl redords 1 and 3 had the electric tracks with hammond organ and moog, while on record 2 Keith is playing some jazz pia...no and Greg performs Lucky Man and Still... only accompanied by himself on ac guitar. I like that versions more than the original studio versions. Carl has a fine drum solo on Karn Evil 9 1st impression). One of the best concert I saw back in 1974, which is documented very well by this album. Read more Less

  • Overall:

    Very ambitious, very big egos and very g

    By bob198991  Sep 9, 2001

    The major of these songs are so good to the studios one, excpet to the karn evil 9 that the studio are ver superior than these.

Pro Reviews: Welcome Back My Friends to the Show That Never Ends (Remastered)

  • All Music Guide

    Upon its release, the 1973 LP Brain Salad Surgery had been hailed as Emerson, Lake Palmer's masterpiece. A long tour ensued that left the trio flushed and begging for time off. Before disbanding for three years, they assembled a threeLP live set (something of a badge of achievement at the time, earned by Yes in 1973 with Yessongs and, somewhat more dubiously, Leon Russell with Leon Live). Welcome Back My Friends to the Show That Never Ends gives a very accurate representation of ELP's shows at the time, including their uncertain sound quality. It isn't that the group didn't try hard to give a good show; they did, but left to just his two hands, without the use of multitracking and overdubs to build layeruponlayer of electronic keyboard sounds, Keith Emerson was at a singular disadvantage on some of the boldest material in the trio's repertory. And even allowing how far the art and science of recording rock concerts had advanced in the 1970s, there were still inherent problems in recor...ding a fully exposed bass Greg Lake's primary instrument in an arena setting that couldn't be overcome here. Even the most recent remastered editions could not fix the feedback, the occasionally leakages, the echo, the seeming distance the listener often gets the impression of being seated in the upper mezzanine of an arena. That said, the group still had a lot of fire, enthusiasm, and cohesion at this point in its history, and that does come through. And if they don't solve every problem with the sound, the remastered editions from Rhino, Japanese WEA, and Sanctuary do give Lake's voice and Emerson's piano their richest, fullest possible tone and a fighting chance in these surroundings, and bring Carl Palmer's drumming much more up close and personal than it ever was on the LP. On the down side, the division into two CDs (as opposed to three LPs) means that the 26minute "Take a Pebble"/"Piano Improvisations"/"Take a Pebble" chain complete with Lake's excellent acoustic guitar spot for "Still You Turn Me On" and "Lucky Man" is broken up between the two discs. The song selection if not quite the careerranging array of repertory that Yessongs was for Yes is stellar and features all the material from Brain Salad Surgery (with the exception of "Benny the Bouncer"), including a complete 36minute rendition of "Karn Evil 9," which filled both sides of the third LP in the original set. The latter is thoroughly bracing, with a level of visceral energy that was lacking in some moments of the original studio version, and is also almost as good a showcase for Lake, whose singing and playing here are better than they were on the studio original, as it is for Emerson and Palmer. Add to that a 27minute "Tarkus" complete with one Pete Sinfieldauthored verse from King Crimson's "Epitaph" (which they'd been adding to the piece in concert at least since the Trilogy tour) and you now have three quarters of the music. Hearing any of those three pieces (and the stunning "Toccata") performed live, obviously without any overdubs, makes one realize how accomplished these musicians were, and how well they worked together when the going was good. This was the group's last successful and satisfying tour, as subsequent journeys on the road, in association with the Works album, were mired in acrimony about expenses, repertory, ego clashes, and the decision about going out with an orchestra (or not), or were motivated purely by contractual and financial obligations, whereas here they proved that even their most ambitious ideas could work musically, done by just the three of them. The sometimes disappointing sound quality should not be too much of a turnoff for fans, but newcomers should definitely start with the studio albums, and make this the third or fourth ELP album in their collection. And it should be listened to loud. - Francois Couture Bruce Eder, All Music Guide Read more Less

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Biography

Emerson, Lake & Palmer

Emerson, Lake Palmer were progressive rock's first supergroup. Greeted by the rock press and the public as something akin to conquering heroes, they succeeded in broadening the audience for progressive rock from hundreds of thousands into tens of millions of listeners, creating a major radio phenomenon as well. Their flamboyance on record and in the studio echoed the b... Read more