Chuck Mangione - An Evening Of Magic, Live At The Hollywood Bowl (1979) [Vinyl]
Artist: Chuck Mangione
Title: An Evening Of Magic, Live At The Hollywood Bowl
Year Of Release: 1979
Label: A&M Records – SP-6701
Genre: Jazz, Easy Listening
Quality: FLAC (tracks) [24/192] [Vinyl, LP]
Total Time: 01:41:19
Total Size: 3.8 GB
WebSite: Album Preview
Tracklist:Title: An Evening Of Magic, Live At The Hollywood Bowl
Year Of Release: 1979
Label: A&M Records – SP-6701
Genre: Jazz, Easy Listening
Quality: FLAC (tracks) [24/192] [Vinyl, LP]
Total Time: 01:41:19
Total Size: 3.8 GB
WebSite: Album Preview
A1. Feels So Good (9:17)
A2. The XIth Commandment (6:38)
A3. Chase The Clouds Away (9:34)
B1. Hill Where The Lord Hides (5:24)
B2. Doin' Everything With You (7:35)
B3. Love The Feelin' (7:20)
B4. I Get Crazy (4:13)
C1. Land Of Mark Believe (9:05)
C2. Hide And Seek (8:36)
C3. The Day After (Our First Night Together) (7:35)
D1. Children Of Sanchez (Main Theme) (6:47)
D2. B'Bye (5:06)
D3. Children Of Sanchez (Finale) (3:53)
D4. Main Squeeze (6:35)
D5. Feels So Good (Encore) (3:10)
Recorded at the height of Chuck Mangione's fame when "Feels So Good" was still busting up the charts, this double-LP set attempts to recapture the dynamism of his earlier live albums but falls short on a few counts. For one thing, the sound gives the listener no idea of what it was like to be in the audience that evening; there are only fleeting traces of the live presence and electricity of the event in this tightly mic'ed recording. For another, the sense of fresh discovery of a new voice in the Mercury sets is replaced by a mostly self-congratulatory round of reprises from earlier albums, centered in the jazz-funk idiom of Mangione's then-current quintet (the funkified "Hill Where the Lord Hides" in particular lacks the majesty and tension of the original live version). Mangione and his sidemen (Chris Vadala, winds; Grant Geissman, guitars; Charles Meeks, bass; James Bradley, Jr., drums) are sufficiently pumped up and energetic, sometimes outdoing the studio performances of the material, and there is a 70-piece orchestra of L.A. musicians who mostly form part of the scenery. The only "new" stuff (as of July 1978) is a set of excerpts from the film score to Children of Sanchez -- a heavily truncated selection from what was heard that night -- that comes off pretty well. Of the two live Mangione A&M albums, this one is a more accurate career retrospective, but Tarantella is quirkier and thus more fun.