Tags
Language
Tags
March 2024
Su Mo Tu We Th Fr Sa
25 26 27 28 29 1 2
3 4 5 6 7 8 9
10 11 12 13 14 15 16
17 18 19 20 21 22 23
24 25 26 27 28 29 30
31 1 2 3 4 5 6

Roger Waters - The Wall - Live in Berlin 1990 - Original Recording Remastered (2003)

Posted By: perkow
Roger Waters - The Wall - Live in Berlin 1990 - Original Recording Remastered (2003)

Roger Waters - The Wall - Live in Berlin 1990 - Original Recording Remastered (2003)
Rock | MP3 CBR 320 Kbps | 244 MB | Cover | RS

Disc 1

01. In the Flesh - Scorpions
02. Thin Ice - Ute Lemper, Roger Waters
03. Another Brick in the Wall, Pt. 1 - Roger Waters
04. Happiest Days of Our Lives - Joe Chemay, Stan Farber, Jim Haas, John Joyce, Roger Waters
05. Another Brick in the Wall, Pt. 2 - Cyndi Lauper
06. Mother - Sinéad O'Connor
07. Goodbye Blue Sky - Joni Mitchell
08. Empty Spaces - Bryan Adams, Roger Waters
09. Young Lust - Bryan Adams
10. Oh My God / What a Fabulous Room - Jerry Hall
11. One of My Turns - Roger Waters
12. Don't Leave Me Now - Roger Waters
13. Another Brick in the Wall, Pt. 3 - Roger Waters
14. Goodbye Cruel World - Roger Waters

Disc 2

01. Hey You - Paul Carrack
02. Is There Anybody Out There?
03. Nobody Home - Roger Waters
04. Vera - Roger Waters
05. Bring the Boys Back Home - Military Orchestra of the Soviet Army
06. Comfortably Numb - Van Morrison, Roger Waters
07. In the Flesh - Bleeding Heart Band, Military Orchestra of the Soviet Army, Roger Waters
08. Run Like Hell - Bleeding Heart Band, Military Orchestra of the Soviet Army, Roger Waters
09. Waiting for the Worms & Stop - Bleeding Heart Band, Military Orchestra of the Soviet Army
10. Trial - Company
11. Tide Is Turning - Company

320 Kbps
244 MB
Covers

Download



Pink Floyd's 1979 double album "The Wall" was that strangest of beasts: a concept album, driven by a tortured rock-star protagonist, so obtusely personal it sometimes bordered on the inscrutable. But history was kind to the Roger Waters-spawned epic; when the communist bloc crumbled in 1989, taking the symbolic Berlin Wall with it, it inspired the ex-Floyd bassist and singer to frame his most ambitious work as another familiar tortured-rock-star conceit: the all-star benefit-concert TV broadcast. The shifting tides of history have undermined much of this remastered, double-disc soundtrack's momentous context, leaving behind a larger-than-life spectacle that, depending on one's viewpoint, could represent rock's most overarching populism–or the beginning of the end. Still, the star-heavy concept yields some unexpected surprises, from the Scorpions' bracing opening blast through haunting reinventions of "Mother" (Sinead O'Connor) and "Goodbye Blue Sky" (Joni Mitchell)–performances that blunt the oft-suspect misogyny of Waters's sprawling tale. Bryan Adams injects some vocal fire into "Empty Spaces" and "Young Lust," but by the time Waters, company, a massed German orchestra, choir, and the Military Orchestra of the Soviet Union reach the album's crescendos the event has gone so far over the top that it seems like nothing short of a neo-operatic Andrew Lloyd Webber wet dream.

Hailed as a musical, visual and historic landmark, Roger Waters' The Wall - Live In Berlin has been remixed and remastered (by Nick Griffiths, the original engineer) for the first time since its original 1990 premiere. The CD contains the entire two-hour-plus concert, featuring performances by Bryan Adams, The Band, Thomas Dolby, Cyndi Lauper, Sinead O'Connor, Van Morrison, Scorpions and more. - amazon.com