(With eternal thanks to Dearest Friend of the blog Cee for visual assistance with the physical media. And also many thanks to everyone who has helped spread the word about my coverage of Trevor. I truly appreciate everyone who has taken the time to read the blog and also provide engagement via links and other comments on social media.)
Note: I know I had promised this installment in the review series much earlier but it took me a long time to write this entry mostly because I was doing so much comparative listening. We're talking five different sources, which you might very well say is overkill. And you may be right about that, but for some reason I felt it was necessary in order to render a well-informed opinion.
https://rabinesque.blogspot.com/2014/10/some-traveling-music.html
https://rabinesque.blogspot.com/2016/07/a-guide-to-field-recordings-1989-tour.html
In my album review I provided the original setlist for the tour and I wanted to reprise it here as a starting point to discussing the recordings and for the sake of clarification.
Entrance: Lift Me Up (intro)
Cover Up
Sorrow (Your Heart)/Birdland (excerpt)
Heard You Cry Wolf
Changes
Etoile Noir (with Jim's bass solo)/Eyes of Love
Solly's Beard
Something To Hold On To
You Know Something I Don't Know* (with Mark's keyboard solo)/Promises
Sludge (featuring Lou's epic drum solo)
Encore:
Make It Easy/Owner of a Lonely Heart
Love Will Find A Way
*(Recently on an episode of Yes Music Podcast, the only two fans to actually witness Cinema performing [in 1982 at the John Henry rehearsal facility in London] referred to the former song as "Carry On" and that may well be the actual title. It's the title which became associated with the song as their recording of the rehearsal circulated in fandom during the intervening years. The reason I think it's titled as I've indicated has to do with the chorus, long-time fans know very well that Trevor normally places the song title in the chorus. To be fair, both phrases can be heard in the chorus. I believe I have seen a copyright filing with the title I use, but I can't conclusively verify that.)
Let's discuss the provenance of this recording. My apologies but I don't have the name/pseudonym of the original taper/seeder. If that person wishes to make themselves known to me or someone has that information and can impart it to me (via email) then I do wish to give proper credit.
It was originally a simulcast of the show on December 5th, 1989 from Boston's Paradise Theater on local FM station WBCN. Any and all versions of the Live in Boston recording stem from this single source. It was recorded onto cassette from the radio and then transferred to digital and speed-corrected using a Roland VS-1680 DAW then downloaded to CD-R and converted to FLAC for seeding/trading. At some point the Highland Project took this source and created the Cry Lonely Wolf version and released it on CD in 2008 (long after it had been put into circulation online) but that particular bootleg is not the original source of this recording even if it was used as the source, if that makes sense. And they're out of business now, so I consider that karma because...well...philosophically no one should be paying for bootlegs.
Of the three recordings from the '89 club tour which I have found it is absolutely the best quality because it was a radio simulcast. But despite whatever "remastering" (yes, I am using scare quotes in this case) has been utilized on the source and hence on this particular release, the source is actually at least a generation removed from what is available in trading circles. Plus, c'mon, Cry Lonely Wolf doesn't even have period-appropriate photos on the cover! Those are both Talk tour era photos. At least with Live in L.A. the effort was made to use images from 1989.
Of course, it could very well be that the source of this iteration is not the Highland Project release, and only the artwork is being referenced in the packaging. I don't actually know. But because I do believe a full show from the '89 tour should be widely-circulated and I have personally lobbied for such a thing for years, and this is the only way it's going to happen? My morals are just going to have to sit down and shut up. And Rob Ayling has already set a historical precedent for this kind of thing with Union Live.
The main goal I wanted to accomplish was comparative listening using my copy of the original seed versus the copy included in the boxset. But also, my primary point as regards the release itself - as a document of the '89 club tour - is this: Live in L.A. is the best listening experience in terms of the recording, mix-down and mastering, originally. You can really appreciate the performance of the songs, Trevor's peak as a guitar hero, and how the band as a whole worked quite well to entertain at an arena level within a club setting. The Live in Boston bootleg is the best listening experience of what the show was actually like from a historical standpoint, and that is something fans can definitely appreciate, whether they actually attended one of these gigs or not. I've encountered more fans over the years (myself included) who didn't see Trevor on the club tour than did and I think it's something we deserve to possess and enjoy. I remarked to Trevor during our latest exchange that because I was unable to travel to Tempe to see him (being a cash-strapped grad school student living in Albuquerque at the time) having a full show to listen to means a lot to me as a fan. I'm still regretful to this day but at least I can have a memory of what it was like. And so including both recordings in the Changes boxset is a nice completionist gesture, even as I'm not entirely certain it's really necessary.
In regards to having compared the two sources of the bootleg, there has been some "goosing" I would say, in terms of boosting the mid-range, making some elements cut through a bit more, like the vocals and the guitar lines. I'm not certain that was the best decision. But overall you can still tell this is a bootleg, which I believe just goes to show there's only so much you can do with such a source. There's a lot of hiss. But because we're hearing the actual document of Trevor playing to less than a thousand people there is a certain immediacy which might be missing from the official version of the experience.
I believe most of us can agree that the intro to "Lift Me Up" makes for great entrance music. And I think "Cover Up" makes for a great opener as well, it's quite dramatic. It serves to establish everyone's acumen from the very beginning. But there is a very serious recording glitch in the Boston recording which is not on my original copy as far I'm aware. Again, how could this have gotten past quality control?! I remain unconvinced there was any. And it features the first of more than a few instances of Trevor flubbing the lyrics.
Sorrow (Your Heart)/Birdland (excerpt)
I love that "Birdland" was used as the coda to this song, it's such a treat and it fits in terms of utilizing a different ending. I don't particularly mind the post-production edits on the official release.
Best version? Live in L.A.
Heard You Cry Wolf
I love this song, as long-time readers of the blog are aware. But at the Boston show, Trevor was having a really hard time with staying in key, yikes! And this was a song recorded after his range had already dropped, historically-speaking. Honestly, I wouldn't be surprised if Trevor re-recorded his vocal for Live in L.A. And I don't take issue with that myself. At least he got the title right, because in San Diego he said it was "Cry Wolf." And because "Changes" was edited out on the Boston disc there's an abrupt cut which obliterates the ending, again, totally shoddy post-production work. Maybe because those songs directly segue one into another that wasn't the best choice in terms of making the edit.
Changes
I feel like this song was a benchmark on the tour - like, it was important to get it right every night. But again, it seems like Trevor might have rerecorded his vocal, or mixed it really dry in the recording. The version on Live in L.A. sounds better than other sources even as there's not much difference in the performances. What really makes me think this is the attack on the long note at the end of the first verse. We know if he can do that, then it's all okay. And none of the live versions I've heard are as good as the officially-released one in that respect. In Boston, Trevor can do it, but it's obvious that he's straining, and he can't hold it to let it fall off the way it's supposed to.
Best version? Live in L.A.
Etoile Noir/Eyes of Love
Solly's Beard
That intro? Priceless. As I've written an entire essay about this piece I feel like I don't need to expound upon it further, except to say that it's wonderful to hear an actual version from this tour. There's that one part though, which sort of almost becomes both "Memphis" and "Dueling Banjos" and how fun is that?!
Best version? Aaaaah, that's a trick question! But I think having an actual recording from the club tour is a good thing, so the point goes to Live in Boston.
Something To Hold On To
You Know Something I Don't Know/Promises
Sludge
Make It Easy/Owner of a Lonely Heart
On both the Live in L.A. and Boston versions the crowd does the majority of the singing so it's interesting to listen to recordings where Trevor is actually singing. "Owner" in its' final form is not in his range, as we know, so that always makes me tense. In San Diego it's not so bad, but it's not that good either. But I am disappointed Trevor edited out that funky breakdown which comes right before the last chorus. I think the party atmosphere of audience participation makes the song more fun, as is fitting for an encore. The L.A. crowd sounds better at singing, but that might also be the result of post-production tweaking.
Best version? Whichever one you prefer.
Best version? Whichever one you prefer.