- Audio Cassette (Oct 17 1990)
- Format: Import
- Label: Sony
- ASIN: B0000026ND
- In-Print Editions: Audio CD
- Average Customer Review: 3.9 out of 5 stars See all reviews (89 customer reviews)
Product Details
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| Disc: 1 |
|---|
| 1. Shine on You Crazy Diamond |
| 2. Learning to Fly |
| 3. Yet Another Movie |
| 4. Round and Around |
| 5. Sorrow |
| 6. Dogs of War |
| 7. On the Turning Away |
| Disc: 2 |
| 1. One of These Days |
| 2. Time |
| 3. Wish You Were Here |
| 4. Us and Them |
| 5. Money |
| 6. Another Brick in the Wall, Pt. 2 |
| 7. Comfortably Numb |
| 8. Run Like Hell |
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Most helpful customer reviews
2 of 2 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars
Well documented look back on Floyd's comeback tour,
By
This review is from: Delicate Sound Of Thunder (Audio CD)
Pink Floyd's first official multiple disc live album entitled Delicate Sound of Thunder was released in November of 1988(the satellite video was released in June of 1989). The album(and video) was recorded over five nights at the Nassau Coliseum in New York in August of 1988(the end of the regular Momentary Lapse tour '87-'88. The band would tour Europe again in 1989/90 in support of Delicate Sound with the tour called Another Lapse). The band first attempted to record a live album and video in November of 1987 in Atlanta but the band were not up to par. Subsequently, they tried again in the summer of 1988. As a result, a great live album. The album has superb live versions of Yet Another Movie, Round and Around, On The Turning Away and One of These Days. The fans' much reviled track The Dogs of War is superior to its studio counterpart with Nick Mason playing drums this time and Rick Wright playing on keyboards like he did in the old days(the two are the only two original Floyd members who did every tour) and of course David Gilmour's vocals and superb guitar work. Other standouts are Wish You Were Here and Learning To Fly. The other tracks are great like Shine on You Crazy Diamond and the Dark Side and Wall material but are much better on the 1995 live disc Pulse. Missing on this disc is Signs Of Life and One Slip which are available on the now out-of-print video version. Gilmour produced the album and mixed it at Abbey Road Studios. The album did well for a live album as it peaked at #11 on the album charts in the US and #4 on the US CD charts and went Triple Platinum upon release with 3 million sold. Not too shabby for a live release. I first got this album in November of 1988 on cassette and this was the 20th CD I ever owned when I upgraded in September of 1991 when my father bought me this CD. Highly recommended!
4.0 out of 5 stars
Great tracks from the first post-Waters concert tour,
By Daniel Jolley "darkgenius" (Shelby, North Carolina USA) - See all my reviews (TOP 50 REVIEWER) (REAL NAME)
This review is from: Delicate Sound Of Thunder (Audio CD)
I believe there is something of a generation gap in terms of Pink Floyd fans' appreciation of this live double album released in 1988. Older fans who experienced all of the band's genius in the 1960s and 1970s may have had a little trouble adjusting to the reconstitution of the band (without Roger Waters) in the 1980s. As for me, I had only recently discovered the band at that time - 1987's A Momentary Lapse of Reason was actually the first Floyd CD I bought. I had seen The Wall and was somewhat familiar with some of the classic cuts from Dark Side of the Moon, but Delicate Sound of Thunder was essentially my first real introduction to the musical mystique of Pink Floyd. I happen to much prefer Roger Waters' vocals on vintage Floyd tracks, but I am still impressed with David Gilmour's vocals and the energy with which Waters' former band mates resurrected Pink Floyd after the bitter breakup of the band. The fact that I really learned such songs as Comfortably Numb and Time from Gilmour's versions on this live album actually allows me to appreciate Waters' original vocals even more while never looking down on these recordings as inferior versions. Had I been a fan of Pink Floyd since the beginning (and I would have been if I had been born a decade or two earlier), I imagine I would have had trouble adjusting to the Waters-less ensemble showcasing their wares here. The only unhappy feelings I personally have toward this album come from the fact that I didn't get the chance to see them perform in the concert tour from which this music is derived.The fifteen tracks included on these two CDs represent a mix of the new and the timeless. Five of the ten songs from 1987's A Momentary Lapse of Reason are included: Learning to Fly, The Dogs of War, On the Turning Away, Yet Another Movie, and Sorrow. I happen to think AMLR was a great album, and the live performances of these songs really do them justice; On the Turning Away is a particularly incredible live track. Of course, one's attention is always fixed most closely on the timeless Pink Floyd songs. Dark Side of the Moon is represented here by three songs: Time, Money, and Us and Them (of course, the second CD in 1995's Pulse contains a live performance of the entire Dark Side of the Moon album). The backup singers do get to be a little annoying on the drawn-out version of Money. Wish You Were Here supplies its own title track, an always-welcome addition to the fun, as well as this album's opening number Shine on You Crazy Diamond. One of These Days stands out as the only purely instrumental track on the double album. I am not a big fan of extended instrumental pieces, but Pink Floyd prove to be the exception to the rule - largely due to Gilmour's devastatingly impressive guitar work. Shine on You Crazy Diamond always reminds me a little bit of the old Doctor Who theme song, and that bit of nostalgia only makes me enjoy the music even more. This second disc closes with three songs from The Wall: the ever-popular Another Brick in the Wall Part II, Comfortably Numb (featuring a particularly scintillating guitar solo by Gilmour), and Run Like Hell. Delicate Sound of Thunder has, in some ways, been superseded by 1995's Pulse double live album - but a number of the timeless tracks found here on Delicate Sound of Thunder cannot be found there. I can understand why some Floyd fanatics aren't overly impressed with this 1988 release, but a newly-reconstituted Pink Floyd (sans Waters) at slightly less than their best is still way, way better than almost everything else out there. The fact that Gilmour and the guys could deliver such quality performances of songs so intimately associated with Roger Waters proves just how timeless the music of Pink Floyd is.
5.0 out of 5 stars
two discs of the greatest live music,
By crazy aboutfloyd (the wall) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Delicate Sound Of Thunder (Audio CD)
mere words cannot describe the greatness of this classic live album from floyd containing sorrow,on the turning away,wish you were here and comfortably numb.buy it today!!!!!.
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