Trapeze - Live At The Boat Club (Reissue) (1975/2003)
Artist: Trapeze
Title: Live At The Boat Club
Year Of Release: 1975/2003
Label: Major League Productions
Genre: Rock, Hard Rock, Prog Rock
Quality: Mp3 320 / Flac (image, .cue, log)
Total Time: 01:08:26
Total Size: 201/493 Mb (scans)
WebSite: Album Preview
Title: Live At The Boat Club
Year Of Release: 1975/2003
Label: Major League Productions
Genre: Rock, Hard Rock, Prog Rock
Quality: Mp3 320 / Flac (image, .cue, log)
Total Time: 01:08:26
Total Size: 201/493 Mb (scans)
WebSite: Album Preview
Tracklist:
1. Back Street Love (Mel Galley, Tom Galley) - 5:13
2. You Are The Music (Mel Galley) - 5:20
3. Jury (Mel Galley) - 14:00
4. Star Breaker (Mel Galley) - 3:37
5. Way Back To The Bone (Glenn Hughes) - 9:45
6. Medusa (Glenn Hughes) - 8:08
7. Black Cloud (Mel Galley, Tom Galley) - 15:30
8. Sunny Side Of The Street (Mel Galley, Tom Galley) - 2:58
9. The Raid (Mel Galley) - 3:55
Line-up::
Mel Galley - Guitars, Lead Vocals
Rob Kendrick - Guitars
Pete Wright - Bass
Dave Holland - Drums, Percussion
With
Terry Rowley - Synthesiser
For many, Trapeze truly hit their peak in the early '70s, with such releases as Medusa and You Are the Music...We're Just the Band, and more specifically, when their lineup consisted of Glenn Hughes, Mel Galley, and Dave Holland. By 1975, Hughes was long gone from the group (having split to join up with Deep Purple a couple of years earlier), but Galley and Holland soldiered on with Hughes' replacement, Pete Wright, and another guitarist, Rob Kendrick (with Galley assuming vocal duties). And it's this era and lineup that are featured on Live at the Boat Club 1975. For those who assume that the Hughes-less Trapeze was incapable of creating some on-stage excitement, this set will certainly prove you wrong. For starters, Galley has a surprisingly strong voice, and is able to -- for the most part -- match Hughes' soulful delivery on such ditties as "You Are the Music" and "Jury." But the group blows the doors off the venue with a simply explosive/set-closing rendition of "The Raid." While most fans will understandably seek out a Hughes-era live recording if they're on the hunt for a Trapeze concert disc, Live at the Boat Club 1975 is better than you'd think.