Today, April 28 in l978, Cheap Trick recorded the first of two shows from which Cheap Trick at Budokan was culled. Initially a Japanese only release, it proved a popular import and was released domestically in early l979. It was my first real album purchase aside from some Beatles and Beach Boy ‘Best Ofs” and...um...Paperlace (when I was 8). I remember the booklet that came with the album –– the lyrics were in English, there were some tour photos and everything else was written in Japanese.
Five (and a half) of the album's lO songs were from In Color. I read somewhere that the band wasn't happy with that LP's slick production, and wanted a do-over. It certainly worked with "I Want You to Want Me" and "Clock Strikes Ten"...the other three songs on this expanded version do not disappoint.
Later, during the summer of '79, my dad took me and three friends to see Cheap Trick. The Pez Band (later Off Broadway) opened up. Dad was over 4O...a Waylon Jennings fan. We were like l3. Looking back, I see that he took one for the team, there. Wow....Dadrock.
Later, during the summer of '79, my dad took me and three friends to see Cheap Trick. The Pez Band (later Off Broadway) opened up. Dad was over 4O...a Waylon Jennings fan. We were like l3. Looking back, I see that he took one for the team, there. Wow....Dadrock.
Years later, I picked up the CD. Listening to “Ain’t That a Shame” and noticed that the “dueling” guitar solos at the end were different, largely missing. They hadn’t included the studio overdubs...and so it is with the April 28 disc from BUDOKAN! (3Oth Anniversary)...the keyboards from "Surrender" are also gone. That's all good, because live music is better....but either because of the source tape, or version used, we do lose the "Ballad of John and Yoko" quote in "Ain't That a Shame", and I guess it is.
Gonna get down, gonna get on down...
If you would like to be able to read this in Cheap Trick font on your computer, you can download it here:
Are you sure of this ? "The Pez Band (later Off Broadway) opened up. " I though they were two different bands.
ReplyDeleteYou know, that's right. Off Broadway was formed by two ex-Pezzers, but they WERE two different bands by then. I think it was the next year that I saw Off Broadway open up for the Milwaukee Brewers at County Stadium.
ReplyDeletePart of the golden age of live albums. I love it as much today, as I did 40 years ago.
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