The Wall Vienna
Data: 23 August 2013 Miejsce: Donauinsel, Vienna, Austria |
CD 1 1. Announcement 2. Spartacus 3. In The Flesh? 4. The Thin Ice 5. Another Brick In The Wall (Part 1) 6. The Happiest Days Of Our Lives 7. Another Brick In The Wall (Part 2) 8. The Ballad of Jean Charles de Menezes 9. Speech 10. Mother 11. Goodbye Blue Sky 12. Empty Spaces 13. What Shall We Do Now? 14. Young Lust 15. One Of My Turns 16. Don't Leave Me Now 17. Another Brick In The Wall (Part 3) 18. Goodbye Cruel World CD 2 1. Hey You 2. Is There Anybody Out There? 3. Nobody Home 4. Vera 5. Bring The Boys Back Home 6. Comfortably Numb 7. The Show Must Go On 8. In The Flesh 9. Run Like Hell 10. Waiting For The Worms 11. Stop 12. The Trial 13. Outside The Wall 14. Band Introduction |
This is Kaspersky's untracked master of the show. It is
2 files as Set 1 and Set 2. He borrowed a Zoom H2 from a friend and left it on
automatic to record. I don't think it pushed to many decibels, but it does seem
to have an echo or something. If someone takes a stab at tweaking the sound,
please repost it so I can share it with him.
Enjoy
Roger Waters: The Wall, Vienna Ernst Happel Stadium, 23 August 2013
Posted on September 1, 2013
I've never shed tears at a concert before, but I
don't mind admitting that a few burned my eyes during Roger Waters' performance
of The Wall in Vienna. They didn't come because of the concert itself, though,
but rather because my son was a member of the 15-strong children's choir that
graced the stage for ôAnother Brick in the Wall Part 2ö, singing and dancing his
heart out to Waters' bilious diatribe against the excesses of the British
education system. While that was, naturally enough, the emotional highlight of
the show for me, this epic, vast piece of music theatre was also overwhelmingly
powerful as a whole.
Those interested can go here for a brief history of
my liking for Pink Floyd and Roger Waters in particular. Little did I imagine,
when I wrote that piece, that I would indeed be seeing The Wall live three years
later, albeit as a Waters show rather than a Floyd show, and in a stadium rather
than the arenas for which it was originally designed. There was apparently some
talk, a couple of years ago, of putting the show on in the Stadthalle, but in
the end that soulless barn proved too small to cope with the massive scale of
this concept. For years Waters held out against playing The Wall in stadiums,
saying that by imposing such a distance between performer and audience they
represented exactly what he was railing against in the piece. Recent advances in
audio-visual technology, however, have made it possible to mount the show in
large venues and still provide audiences with a viable concert-going experience.
And certainly from my vantage point a mere seven rows back, the Ernst Happel
Stadium was just fine as a setting for the grim psychodrama being played out on
stage.
Unusually for me, I seem to have backed a winner in
throwing my hand in with Waters rather than his nemesis David Gilmour. I have
nothing but respect and admiration for the way Waters, at the age of 70, has
kept the spirit of Pink Floyd alive by taking a scaled-up and redesigned version
of The Wall on tour around the world for the last three years. Meanwhile the
inveterately lazy Gilmour, who made such an almighty fuss in the 1980s about
being allowed to keep the rights to the group's name, put out two mediocre Floyd
albums (which were really Gilmour solo albums in all but name) and since then
has sat back in Sussex counting his money. If, as is rumoured, this summer's
Wall shows are to be the last, then Waters will certainly have earned a good
long rest of his own, although I wouldn't bet against him coming back with
another project before too long.
That unswerving commitment to the value of live
performance was evident in every moment of this monumental concert, in which
Waters proved himself to be a remarkable showman as well as a strikingly
powerful singer. Prowling the length of the enormous stage, gesticulating wildly
to the audience or just to himself, caught up in the mad-eyed terror of the Pink
character, Waters is the charismatic centre around whom the whole show revolves.
The Bleeding Heart Band, who famously become gradually invisible during the
first half of the show and are hardly seen at all in the second half, make up
for their enforced lack of stage presence with playing of incomparable energy
and toughness.
As for the visual aspects of the concert, there were just too many devastating
scenes and images to take in. I was particularly affected by ôMotherö, which saw
Waters framed by a ghostly image of himself singing the song with Pink Floyd in
the 1980 concerts; by the nerve-shredding symbolism and stunning pyrotechnics of
ôIn The Fleshö; and by my favourite Floyd moment of all, ôComfortably Numbö, in
which singer Robbie Wyckoff and guitarist David Kilminster appeared on top of
the wall to join Waters in performing this most incendiary and soul-searching of
songs. What impressed me most, however, was the way Waters has transformed this
supposedly (and, to its critics, excessively) self-obsessed piece into an
impassioned howl of rage against conflict and a lament in memory of its victims.
Proceeding with ominous and tortured inevitability, its haunted solipsism
disturbed by livid imagery of tragedy and death, The Wall is a deeply moving and
humane intervention.
http://viennesewaltz.wordpress.com/2013/09/
Dodano: 1.1.2018