"...Is There Anyone Out There Would Like A Little More Irish In Them..."
"Live And
Dangerous" was the third of three Deluxe Edition sets released
Monday 24 January 2011 in the UK (22 February 2011 in the USA) - the other two
were March 1976's "Jailbreak" and November 1976's "Johnny The
Fox" (both 2CD sets).
"Live And Dangerous: Deluxe Edition" even gave us
the visuals too in an extra DVD. Here are the bad boy details for
Universal/Mercury 5332073…
Disc 1 (36:16 minutes):
1. Jailbreak
2. Emerald
3. Southbound
4. Rosalie/Cowgirl’s Song
5. Dancing In The Moonlight
(It’s Caught Me In The Spotlight) - Side 2
6. Massacre
7. Still In Love With You
8. Johnny The Fox Meets Jimmy
The Weed
Disc 2 (51:15 minutes):
1. Cowoy Song - Side 3
2. The Boys Are Back In Town
3. Don’t Believe A Word
4. Warrior
5. Are You Ready
6. Suicide - Side 4
7. Sha La La
8. Baby Drives Me Crazy
9. The Rocker
BONUS TRACKS:
10. Opium Trail (Live &
Dangerous Outtake)
11. Bad Reputation (Live & Dangerous Outtake)
Tracks 1 to 8 on Disc 1 are
Side 1 and 2 of the double-album "Live And Dangerous” - their 9th album
released 2 June 1978 in the UK on Vertigo 6641 807 and July 1978 in the USA on
Warner Brothers 2BS-3213 (it peaked at 2 in the UK and 84 in the USA). Tracks 1
to 9 on Disc 2 are Side 3 and 4. The booklet states that ANDY PEARCE and MATT
WORTHAM have remastered the first generation master tapes in 2010 at Wired
Masters in the UK.
DVD:
Filmed live at The Rainbow
Theatre in Finsbury Park in London in late March 1978, this was originally a
video released at the time of the album - restored for DVD release in 2007. The
2007 issue had 2 discs (DVD and CD) - 'only' the DVD is presented here, but it
does have its full 11-track compliment (no new footage). Audio-wise there's
disappointment also - BOTH the rear sleeve of the DE and the DVD itself list two
audio settings - 2.0 and 5.1 Surround Sound, but on playing the DVD it offers
only the 2.0 Digital Dolby playback - and I think it's only in Mono. The
picture quality is hardly state-of-the-art either - very sloppy Seventies it
has to be said, but the power of the band is still intact - especially the
astonishing guitar solo Brian Robertson pulls out on "Still In Love With
You" and the rocking last two tracks where they were arguably the best
live band in the world bar none (note: the last track on the DVD is "Me
And The Boys" which is NOT on the 2LP live set).
PACKAGING:
The 3-way foldout digipak is
the same design as most of Universal's 2010 DE doubles - the outer plastic wrap
has now been replaced with a 'Deluxe Edition' bandana around the base of the set
and you have to split it to get the package open - bit fiddly, but it's easier
to access the discs and the booklet. Unlike "Jailbreak" and
"Johnny The Fox" which have packed 20-page booklets and original
artwork - this booklet is very
disappointing - as is the digipak itself. First up - the impact of the
double-live album was made huge by its display of colour photos both on the
inner gatefold and the two festooned inner sleeves - NONE of which appears
here. Instead there are black and white shots of the boys on each flap with the
space beneath the trays wasted on some barely visible 'Thin Lizzy' logo. It
amounts to a huge amount of viewing space covered in a whole lot of nothing.
The paltry 8-page CD booklet of the 1996 remaster has these photos - so why
aren't they here - and enhanced? Also Universal could have used the original
vinyl look on the CDs themselves - the UK 'Spaceship' Vertigo label design for
Disc 1 with the USA Warner Brothers label design on Disc 2 (something Rhino has
been doing on their reissues for years). I know it sounds like a bit of a
whinge, but the effect of the original LPs is completely lost here.
Also - the booklet has only
16 pages (the other 2 have 20) with two of those are taken up with the original
album credits. The MALCOME DOME essay on the LP lasts bits of 5 pages - much of
which is taken with the tedious Tony Visconti versus The Band remembrances that
have dogged the album for years - how much of it is 'actually' live... Overdubs
to the tune of 75% are quoted by Visconti - disputed vigorously by Gorham and
Lynott who say it was a 'lot less' - Downey say the drums weren't touched at
all... (the truth probably lies somewhere in between - 25% maybe). Who cares if
it was doctored after the event (most live albums were and are to this day), it
stills rocks like Godzilla trampling through New York and roaring his head off.
But it has to be said - that after the excellent extras on the
"Jailbreak" and "Johnny The Fox" DE versions (see separate
reviews), this is a let down, when it wouldn't have taken a lot to make it a
screaming success.
SOUND/EXTRAS:
The remaster is great - it
has to be said, and only accentuates the power of them live - and by the time
you get to the "Ba-Ba-Ba-Baby..." Phil versus The Audience exchanges
on "Baby Drives Me Crazy" - resistance is futile. However, hand on my
heart, I would have to say that the sound is very similar to the 1996 version -
only ever so slightly more amplified or tweaked. The two bonus tracks are good
- especially "Opium Trail", but the sound on "Bad
Reputation" is a bit corroded - even if the performance is good.
Ok - there are absolutely two
ways of looking at this reissue - the lapsed buyer and newcomer will see this
package, buy it and be sonically and visually pleased, but long-time fans
who've bought the two superb Deluxe Editions of "Jailbreak" and
"Johnny The Fox" will be wondering what the Hell happened here?
Packaging that doesn't expand the original, only 2 extra tracks and a DVD we
already own - fans are being asked to spend money on this. It won’t take long
for them to work out that if they buy the 1996 CD and the 2-disc “Live And
Dangerous” DVD/CD set from 2007 – they’ll get more and probably spend less! It
seems odd to me that Lizzy's defining moment should be the one DE that lets the
side down. Surely - and backtrack to take a look at the playing times for both
discs - surely there could have been more? Where’s the audio for "Me And
The Boys" for God’s sake – a B-side surrounding the album? And for the DVD
to not have a 5.1 mix or more importantly 'anything' new is a huge
disappointment.
To sum up – a superb album of
course, but a mixed bag on the packaging front and a visual many will already
have. Newcomers should just dive in and enjoy - but fans may want to wait until
it drops into a sale in a few months...
Phil Lynott has his fist
raised up on the front cover of "Live And Dangerous" - and on the 3
to 4-star presentation of this iconic and much loved double album -
unfortunately I think I know why...