Boston Garden - A Full 'Lestat Audio Projects' Remaster (24 bits) 1974 - 12 - 11 Boston - Massachusetts, USA Boston Garden Download Audio 2.49 GB
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Audience recording by Dan Lampinski - Mastered by Carl Morstadt - Remastered by Lestat 2009 1.01 Firebird Suite ~ Sound Chaser (10.59) 1.02 Close To The Edge (20.20) 1.03 To Be Over (10.29) 1.04 The Gates Of Delirium (22.54) 1.05 And You And I (10.03) ============================== 2.01 Ritual (29.29) 2.02 Roundabout (9.23) ============================== YES DATE: 11 December 1974 LOCATION: Boston, Massachusetts, USA VENUE: Boston Garden RECORDING TYPE: Audience ["AR"] VERSION: Full Lestat Audio Projects remaster at 24 bit/96KHz ART: To follow - Gromek dealing with computer problems at present. We thank all for their patience SOURCE: Original Dan Lampinski master cassettes, whose raw version canbe found on Dime at CD resolution here: [Link] and at 24 bit/96KHz resolution here: [Link] FUNDAMENTALS: Lineup: Jon Anderson - Vocals and various instruments Steve Howe - Guitars Chris Squire - Bass guitars Patrick Moraz - Keyboards Alan White - Percussion Setlist*: [Vol. 1] 1.01 Firebird Suite ~ Sound Chaser (10.59) 1.02 Close To The Edge (20.20) 1.03 To Be Over (10.29) 1.04 The Gates Of Delirium (22.54) 1.05 And You And I (10.03) [Vol. 2] 2.01 Ritual (29.29) 2.02 Roundabout (9.23) Fades and sector boundary alignment follow this standard CD track distribution, but ending disc 1 with To Be Over makes a really nice transition somehow :] LINEAGE: As given by djscomics in the torrents linked above: Sony TC-152SD Tape Recorder, Sony ECM-99 Stereo Microphone > Maxell cassettes [type not stated] > Carl Morstadt: Master Cassette -> Nakamichi CR-3A cassette deck with azimuth correction -> M-Audio Firewire Audiophile 2496 -> CDWAV 24-bit/96-KHz wav files -> Goldwave (normalizing and crossfades) -> CDWAV (track breaks) -> FLAC Front End (FLAC 8). FLAC files tagged with Foobar2000 Live Show Tagger, no EQ Lestat: Spectral, graphic and playback analysis, FFT filtering, pitch/tempo correction, excavation EQ, retracking [to reunite announcements with announced Yes pieces], downsampling - Izotope RX and Ozone, CEP 2.0> FLAC 1.7.1 > Back to Dime. [24/96 note: this is the downsampled 16-bit lineage; disregard downsamplin for 24/96 version] ORIGINAL [RAW] TORRENT NOTES: "Once in a while, karma smiles and something really special just sort of falls in your lap. This is one of those moments. Carl was up in Foxboro, Mass to see John Wetton and The School Of Rock All-Stars, and being the friendly guy that he is, he started talking with the guy sitting next to him. Turns out they had more than a little common musical ground, starting with King Crimson and it worked rapidly downhill from there. Shockingly, the topic of tapes came up and it just so happens this guy taped a bunch of shows in the 1970s that he essentially kept to himself. You don't have to be a rocket scientist to figure out what happened next. This series of torrents represents the fruits of Carl's labour - multiple trips to Dan's house to pick up tapes, lovingly and carefully transfer the recordings and then prepare them for our collective listening pleasure. It is my honour to be able to seed these recordings and I hope that everyone who downloads them will get as much enjoyment out of them as we have. The master list of the shows Dan recorded is still under construction and we will circulate that as well as some photographic documentation of the project somewhere down the line. Please don't clog my inbox with requests for your favourite band(s) or a show you hope may exist after all these years.....just kick back, relax and let the surprises unfold..... "Dan Lampinski recorded over 100 concerts in the Providence/Boston area, mostly between 1974 and 1978. His earliest recordings were made with an internal microphone deck, and though they are somewhat lo-fi compared to his later work, some very great moments in rock history were captured for posterity. In late 1974 he bought a Sony TC-152SD tape recorder, a Sony ECM-99 stereo microphone, and began using Maxell cassettes. He was also fortunate enough to have a friend who provided excellent taping seats for many shows, resulting in high quality recordings. In 1977, he switched over to a Nakamichi 550 tape recorder, two Nakamichi CM-300 microphones, and continued using Maxell cassettes. "He recorded many of the major 70's bands: Yes, Genesis, Pink Floyd, Queen, Blue Oyster Cult, Frank Zappa, Jethro Tull, ELP, Kiss, Black Sabbath, The Who, Al Stewart, Alice Cooper, Jeff Beck, Bruce Springsteen, Supertramp, Jean-Luc Ponty, Moody Blues, Neil Young, The Faces, Rush, Rick Wakeman, Kansas, as well as several "under the radar" acts. "Since Dan never traded copies of his recordings, they are all essentially uncirculated. Some copies were made for friends, but these releases are the first time most of these recordings have ever seen the light of day, and are direct from his master cassettes. No EQ'ing has been done to any of the transfers. Feel free to EQ, matrix, patch, etc and re-post if you like, just give Dan credit for the original recording. "Dan was very meticulous about taking good care of his tapes and is very pleased that these recordings will now circulate among the trading community. Please honour his kindness and generosity by sharing these recordings freely. "The transfers are available as 16bit/44.1KHz flac files suitable for CD burning, and also as 24bit/96KHz flac files for those who prefer the higher resolution. "Always remember - the more generous you are with your music, the more it comes back to you. "Kev & Carl June 2009" NOTES FROM LESTAT: Many, many thanks to Mr. Lampinski, to djscomics and to Mr. Morstadt for their efforts in unearthing what may be the best quality AR of Yes from 1974 and bringing it to Dime. Like everyone, I was floored when I heard this recording for the first time. Even raw it surpasses every other pre-1977 Yes AR on Dime I’m aware of for sound quality. Taper Dan’s achievement here is unique and speaks for itself. Even the best raw AR masters made with the best, skill equipment, and media available nearly always have not just flaws but hidden strengths undetectable to most. This one makes a typical example, having some largely correctable weaknesses but more importantly a broad spectrum of detail nearly inaudible in its raw form. When I upload original sources I make sure such things are dealt with in advance. What was possible with this recording has now been fully attained, and provides its own best illustration of why. It also generated this response from a participant in the remaster ‘beta test’, an integral part of the process - "I just finished listening to the remastered samples over my main rig, and just did another comparison between the remastered and raw versions on my computer. As always, you have done very fine work on what was already an astounding audience capture for 1974: everything sounds considerably crisper and more defined, and you seem to have tamed a certain upper midrange harshness, making for a more pleasant listen overall. For me, a standout moment is Howe's solo in "Sound Chaser"-- while listening, I forgot for a moment that I was not right there in the hall. The degree of holographic spatial realism you helped bring out in this tape is extraordinary (and one of the qualities I most appreciate in your mastering). "Close to the Edge" was a joy as well, and your mastering helped bring out the amazing detail in Squire's bass accompaniment at the end of "I Get Up, I Get Down," which adds an element of drama to the climax not found on the studio version. "Particularly with your careful mastering, this tape is a real holy grail for Yes collectors like myself, who count the 1974 Relayer tour as possibly the peak of Yes live performances. The only other documents of that tour I've heard that even approach this are the Pre-FM version of the same show (which was oddly mixed, had a very harsh midrange, and was missing "Ritual"), and the (in)famous Baton Rouge recording. This release may very well sit at the very top of the heap now in terms of overall quality". The raw master had a number of issues. 1] Pitch and tempo were both off [fast]. 2] Low frequencies with poor definition or nearly absent - a common drawback of condenser microphones but Dan’s was top shelf and it got more than most. They still desperately needed ‘liberation’, as did frequencies in every other part of the spectrum except the very uppermost highs occurring prior to mid-Ritual. 3] Some quite noticeable midrange distortion occurs at different points in the raw upload, especially during Close to the Edge and Ritual. Most likely it’s in the master cassettes and a consequence of age - even well-cared for Maxells don’t last forever - although it may also be a condenser mike issue. 4] A jolting change in sound properties occurs during Ritual, at about 16:45 and constant through Roundabout. It seems likely to have started with a tape flip and probably involves a bias or Dolby switch on the record deck, or possibly a tape manufacture defect. Whatever the cause, symptoms include a severe high frequency dropout, an increase in at least one type of distortion [‘swish’] and weirdly but on the upside better low frequency definition. All of these mitigated well except the distortion, which can only be treated with signal-damaging compression and not very effectively. While now more detailed along with more desirable sound, it does not overwhelm by any means. The dynamic range transition in Ritual Roundabout is treated with slightly different EQ settings and less noticeable, with high frequency definition better matching the rest of the recording. The recording’s especially miraculous hidden tones in several frequencies, including the lows, are now much more apparent. As one example, different cymbal types can now be easily discerned where in the raw recording they’re nearly indistinguishable from each other despite the absolutely fantastic uppermost frequencies [which needed no work at all]. Other Yessounds, from nonmetal percussion to guitars to keyboards to voices, now have considerably more identity, presence, and detail in all their tones All work was done at the 24/96 resolution, before downsampling. EQ work designed to reveal detail, as the audience heard and felt it. No attempts to alter band-crowd-venue sound balance. If crowd sound as real and detailed as band sound isn't desired, please pass this by and stick to soundboards or industry releases. No compression or noise reduction. - Lestat, July 2009 NOTES FROM BARRY (BALROG): Up until the discovery of the Lampinksi tape, the only known audience recording of this show was the one I made with a mono recorder from the back of the Boston Garden. Once I had a copy of the FM broadcast, I copied the "Missing Ritual," the only song not included in the broadcast, to a reel-to-reel deck. That tape, along with the master tapes, was stored at a friend's house and lost for many years. Over the years, I received many anxious requests from people wanting to hear the "Missing Ritual" no matter how bad it might be. Eventually, my friend dug out the reel. I digitized it and shared the raw transfer with everyone who had inquired about it. I intended to combine Ritual with the FM broadcast to create the first-ever complete concert recording. So I asked every serious Yes trader I could find for the best source of the pro recording. I also tried to find someone with expertise willing to remaster Ritual. I eventually received 22 different sources and narrowed them down to a "short list" of the five best. I planned to determine the winner using a blind comparison test. However, no one remastered Ritual. Even Shaun Toole (Tooleman), the best known Yes remastering expert turned it down. Once everyone had heard the recording, it was no longer the famous "Missing Ritual." It was just another audience tape from 1974. Everyone lost interest in the project, including myself. So it sat on the shelf until a few months ago. What brought it back to life was Lestat's willingness to do the remaster. The sound quality turned out much better than I had hoped. We were planning to upload the project to Dime. But now that the Lampinski recording has surfaced, the "Missing Ritual" project is obviously never going to see the light of day. The Lampinski is vastly superior to my audience recording and I consider it to be superior to the professional recording made for the FM broadcast. Some of what I had written for the "Missing Ritual" project may still be of interest. So here's an edited version. Yes concerts have always had a very special significance in my life and 12/11/74 was my first one. It was also one of the first concerts that I taped from the audience, not knowing that the performance was being professionally recorded for the King Biscuit Flower Hour, a nationally syndicated radio program of live concert performances. The Relayer album was released on December 5, 1974 less than one week before the concert and roughly a month into the tour. No one in the audience knew the album very well, which was quite unfortunate. Like Tales From Topographic Oceans, the songs on Relayer are much too intense and complex to fully appreciate on the first listen. Similarly, no one knew how the songs from the other Yes albums would sound with new band member Patrick Moraz on keyboards. I had been listening to Refugee, the album that he had recorded with Brian Davidson and Lee Jackson (formerly of The Nice) for several weeks and knew that Moraz had way too much talent and style of his own to simply fill in for Rick Wakeman. Hearing the familiar Firebird Suite opening climax into Sound Chaser instead of the anticipated Siberian Khatru might have surprised some of the audience, but no one who was there could have possibly been disappointed with the tight but excellent performance. Make sure to read the concert page on Forgotten Yesterdays. The original two-part broadcast, hosted by Bill Minkin, in "SQ Matrix" quadraphonic sound was aired only six weeks after the concert. It came as a complete surprise to those who had been there as nothing had been said about it being recorded for an FM broadcast. SQ Matrix was one of several early matrix schemes from the quadraphonic era. The matrix concept was similar to today's surround sound technologies and SQ is considered by some to be the origin of Dolby Pro Logic. The broadcast included the entire Yes concert except for one song: Ritual. It also included the entire insipid opening set by Gryphon. That decision, to omit part of the Yes concert in favor of the entire Gryphon set, has angered countless Yes fans for more than three decades, none more than myself. The original broadcast and subsequent rebroadcasts have been used as the source of countless collector and commercial "pirate" bootleg cassettes, LPs, and CDs. I have collected images of 21 different pieces of cover art and I'm sure there have been many more. Some contain the full setlist (except Ritual of course) and some are partial. Some of these bootlegs claim to be from radio station (pre FM) tapes or LPs. Based on the lack of compression, it's possible that some of these bootlegs are actually pre-FM tapes. ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS: Many thanks to Yes, then and now And thanks once more to Taper Dan, Carl and djscomics When the cheaper speakers begin to fart, remember - it's a true audience sound capture! OTHER LESTAT REMASTERS ON DIME: These are "BLG" productions [taped by Balrog and graced with the fine art of Gromek]. All offer experiences as or even more stunning in their own right, and are audience captures among the very best of their artists and respective tours. More are coming - - RETURN TO FOREVER, 1983 [quite simply the most incredible dynamic range I’ve ever come across in an analog AR, any artist, any year. Splendid and in some ways quite Yes-like RTF performance too] [Link]">[Link]">[Link]">[Link]">[Link] cp.php&id=231443 - WEATHER REPORT, 1981 [possibly the best AR for sound quality of WR prior to 1983 or so] [Link]">[Link]">[Link]">[Link]">[Link] cp.php&id=197090 - YES, 1980 [considered by many the best live recording of its tour - period] [Link]">[Link]">[Link]">[Link]">[Link] cp.php&id=206205 - YES, 1979 [probably the best AR of its tour for sound quality] [Link]">[Link]">[Link]">[Link]">[Link] cp.php&id=177371 - YES, 1978 [on the hissy side, but a real standout of its tour and torrent comments should say it all] [Link]">[Link]">[Link]">[Link]">[Link] cp.php&id=158894 *************************************************************** If you like what you hear in this torrent, please help it - and all your favorite torrents - reach as many downloaders as could want it with regular PMs and torrent comments. After a torrent has been up roughly a week, many will never see it. The search word "Yestorrent" seems to do a better job in Yes’ case, but even it misses some and generates false hits. Please share freely but losslessly, and never, EVER even THINK of selling for any sum anywhere. Reseed or redistribute this recording in its complete and original form only. Should we become aware of an incomplete reseed or distribution, we will publicly discredit the party responsible. On that note, be also vigilant against for-profit ‘boot factory’ ripoffs. We’ve seen this done with our work already. While flattering they’d covet it on the one hand, the dishonesty of it and idea of anyone spending good money for what can be had freely are both infuriating. Last time it happened Gromek’s fabulous art was dumped in favor of the usual boot factory crap, and none of the lineage/process info provided here was included in the ripoff either. Truly criminal - intellectually as much as legally. |