Steven Wilson 2013-03-11 Amsterdam FLACseeders: 0
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Steven Wilson 2013-03-11 Amsterdam FLAC (Size: 699.02 MB)
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Steven Wilson
Melkweg (Rabozaal) Amsterdam The Netherlands 11th March 2013 (2013-03-11) BAND: Marco Minnemann - drums Adam Holzman - keyboards Theo Travis - flute Nick Beggs - bass/Chapman Stick Guthrie Govan - guitar RECORDING: Type: Audience master, recorded 8 - 10 metres back from the left-hand side, suspended PA stack. Source: Factory-matched pair of Schoeps CCM 41V microphones (DINa mounted) -> Marantz PMD661 recorder with Oade Concert Mod (-18 dB gain/44.1 kHz/24 bit WAV) Lineage: Audacity 2.0.3 * Individual attenuation of peaks caused by nearby clapping. * Normalised to 0 dB. * Applied variable amplification across recording for consistent listening experience. * Attenuation of audience noise. * Added fades. * Split tracks. * Converted to 16 bit. -> FLAC (compression level 8) [libFLAC 1.2.1 20070917] Taper: Ian Macdonald (ianmacd) SET LIST: 01. [00:42] [intro] 02. [12:30] Luminol 03. [00:43] [banter] 04. [07:46] Drive Home 05. [05:12] The Pin Drop 06. [00:31] [banter] 07. [04:33] Postcard 08. [10:14] The Holy Drinker 09. [09:04] Deform To Form A Star 10. [03:24] [The Watchmaker video interlude] 11. [11:59] The Watchmaker 12. [00:38] [banter] 13. [04:52] Index 14. [04:21] Insurgentes 15. [00:33] [banter] 16. [05:11] Harmony Korine 17. [06:02] No Part Of Me 18. [01:56] [banter] 19. [19:43] Raider II 20. [07:54] The Raven That Refused To Sing 21. [02:41] [encore break] 22. [01:12] [banter] 23. [11:50] Radioactive Toy 24. [02:13] [bows] Total running time: 135:45 NOTES: It's freezing outside the Melkweg tonight. Last week, the first hint of spring had been in the air, but winter has reclaimed the country over the last few days and it's below zero as I stand here waiting to get inside. Coaches line the Lijnbaansgracht and there's at least one other sold-out show taking place at the Melkweg this evening. The venue's web site makes it appear as if an unnamed support band will be kicking off the evening at 19:30, but that turns out not to be the case. It's just as well, too, because I don't make it inside until something like 19:40. The evening starts off humorously; humorously, that is, if you're only reading about what happens next, as opposed to actually being the person it happens to. I head to the lavatories to prepare myself for recording the gig, but I fumble one of my batteries and it falls to the floor. As I crouch to grab it, it rolls under the partition wall, into the cubicle to the left of this one. Shit! Now, I don't know about you, but starting up a conversation with the man in the toilet cubicle next to mine is not something that comes naturally to me. I think for a moment and then announce, in my best heterosexual voice, that my battery has rolled into his cubicle, and would he be so kind as to give it a tap with his foot to send it back my way. Well, he informs me that the bloody thing has rolled straight past his feet and on into the cubicle to the left of his. Fuck! How many toilet-goers am I going to have to harass this evening? I exit my cubicle and discover, somewhat to my relief, that there is no second cubicle on the left. Bending, I see that my battery has finally run out of momentum under one of the urinals, where some bloke is now standing, having a piss. I wait for him to finish and then retrieve the errant item from the piss-spattered floor. Let's hope that little adventure forms the extent of my mishaps the evening. I enter the Rabozaal, which is filling up fast, and move into position. It's not the easiest of places to record in, because of the positioning of the PA, which is suspended high above the audience. I must either stand further forward, sacrificing an ideal line to the PA, or move further back and to the centre, which will inevitably increase crowd noise. Moving further back in this particular venue would also entail positioning myself close to the sound desk and, with Steven Wilson's well-documented dislike of taping, that's a particularly undesirable place to stand this evening. Similarly, I don't wish to stand too far off to the side, because the security gorillas are out in force this evening and they may have been instructed to keep a particularly vigilant eye open for tapers on this occasion. No, discretion is key tonight, so I opt for a forward position, slightly to the right of the suspended left-hand PA stack. Bodies soon assemble around me, ensuring that I can't be observed by security from either the front or the sides. This should work out OK. Steven Wilson is a punctual man. It can't be a more than a few seconds past half eight when his band take to the stage and slide into 'Luminol' from the new album, 'The Raven That Refused To Sing (And Other Stories)'. The album is performed in its entirety this evening, along with selected songs from Wilson's previous solo outings. A translucent curtain drops after 'Deform To Form A Star'. As the band file from the stage, a video interlude begins, projected onto the curtain and forming an introduction to the next song, 'The Watchmaker'. The band are presumably off enjoying a toilet break, a beer, a fag or some combination of all three. They reemerge a few minutes later and continue. Wilson has assembled an amazing band, it has so be said. Nick Beggs oscillates between the bass and the amazingly cool-looking Chapman Stick (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chapman_Stick). I don't recognise Beggs at the time, but in the course of my research of the band, he turns out to be none other than Kajagoogoo's old bass player; yes, the one with the platinum blonde locks and beads. Well I never. Guitarist Guthrie Govan is dazzling to watch at work. Wilson is no novice of the fretboard himself, but he's made to look like one next to Govan, who is an absolute master of the instrument. All of the band have an impressive CV, to be honest. They've all played with a list of known-name musicians as long as your arm. Prog-rock is not really my thing, but I wanted to catch Wilson on this tour. I didn't bother the last time he was in town, but I enjoyed hearing the new album and thought it would be fun to see him perform it live. And it has been. The encore turns out to be Porcupine Tree's 'Radioactive Toy', justified by Wilson on the grounds that 1992's 'On The Sunday Of Life' album was, in fact, technically a solo record. It probably forms the highlight of tonight's set for me. It's a respectably long show, clocking in at two hours and fifteen minutes, with the band turning in a blinding performance. They finish, stood at the front of the stage, taking bows to rapturous applause from the assembled throng. The quality of the recording is excellent, if not quite amongst my very best work. No fan will be disappointed, however. Samples are included to help you decide whether the recording is worth your while. Related Torrents
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