翻訳と辞書
Words near each other
・ Live -n- Kickin'
・ Live / Magic
・ Live 04
・ Live 05
・ Live 06
・ Live 1.0
・ Live 10.13.2001
・ Live 12-5-87 (Aprite i vostri occhi)
・ Live 17th October 1974
・ Live 1967
・ Live 1967 (Red Krayola album)
・ Live 1967 (The Monkees album)
・ Live 1969
・ Live 1973
・ Live 1974
Live 1975–85
・ Live 1976
・ Live 1976–1977
・ Live 1976–1993
・ Live 1977
・ Live 1980
・ Live 1980 (Sammy Hagar album)
・ Live 1980/86
・ Live 1981-82
・ Live 1983–1989
・ Live 1984
・ Live 1986
・ Live 1990
・ Live 1990 (Hatfield and the North album)
・ Live 1990 (Hawkwind album)


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Live 1975–85 : ウィキペディア英語版
Live 1975–85

''Live/1975–85'' is a live album by Bruce Springsteen & the E Street Band. It consists of 40 tracks recorded at various concerts between 1975 and 1985.
"In November of '85," Springsteen wrote in the liner notes, "Jon Landau sent a four-song cassette of 'Born in the U.S.A.', 'Seeds', 'The River' and 'War' down to my house with a note attached saying he 'thought we might have something here'. Over the following months we listened to 10 years of tapes, the music did the talkin', and this album and its story began to emerge. We hope you have as much fun with it as we did. I'd like to thank Jon for his friendship and perseverance and the E Street Band for 1,001 nights of comradeship and good rockin'. They're all about the best bunch of people you can have at your side when you're goin' on a long drive."
It was released as a box set with either five vinyl records, three cassettes, or three CDs. There was also a record club only release which came on three 8-track cartridges.
==Release and reception==
Springsteen's long-awaited and highly anticipated live album generated advance orders of more than 1.5 million copies, making it the largest dollar-volume pre-order in the history of the record business at the time.〔Selvin, Joel. "New Boss Work - Springsteen Five LP Set: A $30 Million Pre-Order" ''The San Francisco Chronicle'' November 2, 1986: 49〕 Record stores around the country found fans waiting in line on Monday morning before opening and one New York store reportedly sold the album right off the back of the delivery truck. The album debuted at #1 on the Billboard album chart, a then-rare occurrence that hadn't happened in ten years since Stevie Wonder's ''Songs in the Key of Life'' in 1976. It also became the first five-record set to reach the top 10 and the first to sell over a million copies.
Not surprising, given Springsteen's reputation as a live performer and the sheer scope of the 40-song set, most reviews were overwhelmingly positive. There were, however, a few critics that felt the album could have been better, citing the omission of several concert highlights such as Springsteen's live rendition of "Prove It All Night" and his rousing cover of John Fogerty's "Who'll Stop the Rain", among others. Another complaint was that some of his many unreleased songs such as "The Fever" were ignored in favor of recent album tracks like "Darlington County".〔Pond, Steve. "Bruce's Live LP Battles Great Expectations" ''Los Angeles Times'' November 9, 1986: 5〕〔Barton, David. "It's Not That Good" ''Sacramento Bee'' December 7, 1986: EN1〕
''Live/1975–85'' is the second-best-selling live album in U.S. history based on RIAA certification. It has been certified by the RIAA for 13x platinum, trailing only Garth Brooks' ''Double Live''. This figure reflects the RIAA practice of counting each disc in a multi-disc set as a separate unit sold; the actual number of copies sold is instead over 4 million. Based on sets sold, ''Live/1975–85'' also trails several others including Eric Clapton's ''Unplugged'' (10 million) and Peter Frampton's ''Frampton Comes Alive!'' (8 million). The box set's sales performance attracted considerable media attention at the time, first for setting records during the 1986 holiday shopping period, then later for fizzling out in sales in early 1987, leaving many retailers overstocked.〔Harrington, Richard. "Springsteen 'Live' in a Sales Coma" ''The Washington Post'' March 25, 1987: C7〕
Two singles were released from the box set: "War" (a cover of the 1970 Edwin Starr hit), which was a #8 success on the U.S. pop singles chart, and "Fire" (a Springsteen song that was a top 10 hit for The Pointer Sisters in 1979), which only reached #46 on the Billboard charts, breaking Springsteen's string of eight consecutive Top 10 singles. Two non-album tracks—"Incident on 57th Street", recorded at Nassau Coliseum in December 1980, and "For You", taken from the July 1978 Roxy show—materialized on B-sides from the album's singles and on a Japanese release titled ''Live Collection''. The music video for "War" was taken from the concert where it was recorded, while the video for "Fire" was from a completely unrelated 1986 acoustic performance at a Bridge School Benefit concert. A third video, for "Born to Run", was also released, which showed a melange of clips from the band's 1984–85 Born in the U.S.A. Tour.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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