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Live 1986

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Download links and information about Live 1986 by The Blasters. This album was released in 2011 and it belongs to Rock, Rock & Roll genres. It contains 17 tracks with total duration of 57:49 minutes.

Artist: The Blasters
Release date: 2011
Genre: Rock, Rock & Roll
Tracks: 17
Duration: 57:49
Buy on iTunes $9.99

Tracks

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No. Title Length
1. Rock and Roll Will Stand (Live) 3:17
2. Trouble Bound (Live) 4:19
3. Jubilee Train (Live) 3:44
4. Mystery Train (Live) 3:59
5. Just Another Sunday (Live) 4:24
6. I Don't Want To (Live) 2:04
7. Somebody Done Hoodooed the Hoodoo Man (Live) 3:43
8. Help You Dream (Live) 3:34
9. Crazy Baby (Live) 3:27
10. I'm Shakin' (Live) 2:17
11. Border Radio (Live) 2:42
12. Dark Night (Live) 4:16
13. Off the Wall (Live) 2:00
14. Red Rose (Live) 2:43
15. American Music (Live) 3:02
16. Long White Cadillac (Live) 5:36
17. Marie Marie (Live) 2:42

Details

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The Blasters were arguably the finest American roots rock band to emerge in the 1980s, a group that fused rockabilly, blues, first-generation rock, R&B, and country into powerful roadhouse music that was street smart, passionate, and capable of keeping the dancefloor rockin' all night long. The Blasters cut four fine studio albums during their original run from 1979 to 1986, and a 1982 live EP (Over There: Live at the Venue, London) and two full-length concert albums from their 2002-2003 reunion (Trouble Bound and The Blasters Live: Going Home) testified to their reputation as a top-shelf live act. Live 1986 lowers their batting average on live releases just a bit; it documents a show at The Coach House, a club in San Juan Capistrano, California on Valentine's Day, 1986, and while it's a long, long way from bad, it's also a weaker release than the Blasters' other live documents. Live 1986 appears to have been taken from a soundboard tape that has a few distracting technical anomalies; it's not until the midpoint of the second song that Dave Alvin's guitar finally rises to its proper level in the mix, the reverb on Phil Alvin's vocals is weirdly thick on several tunes, and the overall recording is a bit flat and lacking in detail. More importantly, this recording captures the Blasters a few months away from Dave Alvin's departure from the group and their initial breakup, and while the performances are tight and expert, there's less fire in this show than in the other extant recordings of the Blasters on-stage. Pianist Gene Taylor and sax players Lee Allen and Steve Berlin were already out of the band, and though the Alvin Brothers, drummer Bill Bateman, and bassist John Bazz play like the pros they are, Live 1986 sounds like a bit of the life had already gone out of the group. That said, Phil Alvin is in fine voice here, and it's good to hear live versions of many of the tracks from the flawed but ambitious Hard Line album, and die-hard fans will be glad to see another live Blasters show has been given a non-bootleg release. But if you want to hear the Blasters firing on all cylinders in front of an audience, you're better off with 2002's Trouble Bound.