Alan Parsons Live is the first live album by Alan Parsons, recorded in May 1994 during his European tour, and released late that year by Arcade Records in Europe.[2] RCA/BMG added three new studio tracks and changed the cover art when releasing the album in the rest of the world in 1995, renaming it The Very Best Live; stylized on the cover with "The Very Best" in a smaller font between Alan Parsons and Live. Despite the tour promoting Try Anything Once with seven songs from the album in the setlist, the live performances on the album are all songs from his years with The Alan Parsons Project.[3]

Alan Parsons Live /
The Very Best Live
Live album by
Released1994 (EU)
1995 (worldwide)
RecordedMay 1994-February 1995
GenreProgressive rock
Length57:10 (EU)
74:40 (USA/Canada)
LabelArcade Records (EU)
RCA Victor/BMG (elsewhere)
ProducerAlan Parsons
Alan Parsons chronology
Try Anything Once
(1993)
Alan Parsons Live /
The Very Best Live

(1994)
On Air
(1996)
Professional ratings
Review scores
SourceRating
AllMusic[1]

Project regulars Ian Bairnson, Andrew Powell, Stuart Elliott and Richard Cottle anchor the band with Parsons, Gary Howard (Freudiana) and ex-Manfred Mann's Earth Band vocalist Chris Thompson (Try Anything Once) providing vocals for the live tracks.

The album is notable for instrumental track "Luciferama" (a blending of "Lucifer" and "Mammagamma" that first appeared on Andrew Powell's 1983 instrumental album The Philharmonia Orchestra Plays The Best of The Alan Parsons Project, was played like this at the Project's Night of the Proms live performance in 1990 and remains in Parsons' live set to this day); "When", another Parsons songwriting contribution by Bairnson, sung by Thompson; "Take the Money and Run", the second songwriting and first lead vocal contribution to a Parsons album by Elliott; and Thompson's first non-demo studio recording of his co-composition "You're The Voice", a song first recorded and released by John Farnham in 1986.

It is also the only Parsons live album that contains a full rendition of "The Raven" with the vocoder part. The track is prefaced by the second part of "A Dream Within a Dream" (uncredited on the album; bootlegs show that the Orson Welles introduction from the 1987 remix of Tales of Mystery and Imagination was used as an opening tape, but edited out of the official release). Later performances opt for seguing "Breakdown" into the second half of "The Raven".

Reception edit

Despite rating the album 2.5 stars out of 5 for AllMusic, reviewer Mike DeGagne praised "When" for "being the catchiest of the trio" of the new songs, as well as the "explosiveness" of the live performances, especially on "Prime Time" and "Standing on Higher Ground", "which both sound livelier than the album versions". He further praised the "fresh and crisp" sound throughout, and concluded, "The stellar execution of the songs played live on this album proves that the group - which remained shy of the spotlight - should have toured more frequently."[3]

Mark Jenkins, reviewing the album for The Washington Post prior to a joint Parsons concert with Kansas, had equal criticism of his keyboard-oriented rock as "rather prim and a bit stiff; it betrays little of the spontaneity of live performance," yet praise for its being "less bombastic than much British art-rock" as well as "a cunning balance between mainstream and snob appeal." Jennings concluded that "slick, tame adult-rock may be out of vogue, but "Live" shows that its melodic quotient is undiminished."[4]

Track listing (EU edition) edit

All songs written by Alan Parsons and Eric Woolfson.[2]

1. Sirius - 2:25
2. Eye In The Sky - 4:55 Lead Vocal: Gary Howard
3. Luciferama - 4:56
4. Old And Wise - 4:49 Lead Vocal: Gary Howard
5. Psychobabble - 5:22 Lead Vocal: Chris Thompson
6. The Raven - 5:39 Lead Vocal: Alan Parsons (first verse, vocoder), Gary Howard (second verse) and Chris Thompson (finale)
7. Time - 5:08 Lead Vocal: Gary Howard
8. You're Gonna Get Your Fingers Burned - 4:18 Lead Vocal: Chris Thompson
9. Prime Time - 5:15 Lead Vocal: Gary Howard
10. Limelight - 4:40 Lead Vocal: Chris Thompson
11. Don't Answer Me - 4:13 Lead Vocal: Gary Howard (first verse), Chris Thompson (second verse)
12. Standing On Higher Ground - 5:30 Lead Vocal: Chris Thompson

Track listing (US and Canada) edit

All songs written by Parsons and Woolfson, except as indicated.[3]

Side 1
1. Sirius - 2:25
2. Eye In The Sky - 5:04
3. Psychobabble - 5:31
4. The Raven - 5:58
5. Time - 5:19
6. Luciferama - 5:04
7. Old And Wise - 4:52
8. You're Gonna Get Your Fingers Burned - 4:27

Side 2
9. Prime Time - 5:28
10. Limelight - 4:48
11. Don't Answer Me - 4:28
12. Standing On Higher Ground - 5:17
13. When (Bairnson) - 4:15
14. Take The Money And Run (Elliott, Powell) - 6:18
15. You're The Voice (Andy Qunta, Chris Thompson, Keith Reid, Maggie Ryder) - 5:06

Personnel edit

  • Jeremy Meek - Bass, backing vocals (1-12)
  • Felix Krish - Bass (13-15)
  • Chris Thompson - Vocals (live, 13, 15)
  • Gary Howard - Vocals (live)
  • Stuart Elliott - Drums; Vocals (14)
  • Ian Bairnson - Lead guitar, assistant producer
  • Richard Cottle - Keyboards, saxophone
  • Andrew Powell - Keyboards
  • Alan Parsons - Producer, Mixer, Backing Vocals, Keyboards, Rhythm guitar
  • Artwork – Julien Mills
  • Tour coordinator – Keith Morris
  • Design – Peter Curzon, Storm Thorgerson
  • Layout (EU edition) – Myosotis
  • Cover (non-EU editions) - Jon Crossland, Peter Curzon, Storm Thorgerson
  • Management – Pete Smith, Isis Music
  • Mastering – Simon Heyworth
  • Photography – Paul Maxon, Storm Thorgerson
  • Live Engineering – Bill Irving, Gary Bradshaw
  • Recorded Digitally on Tascam DA-88s using Audio Technica Microphones.
  • Mastered at Chop'em Out.
  • Recorded on tour in Europe in May 1994.
  • Live Postproduction at Parsonics, Sussex, October 1994.
  • Tracks 13-15 Recorded and mixed at Parsonics, February 1995.

References edit

  1. ^ DeGagne, Mike. Alan Parsons Live at AllMusic. Retrieved 20 January 2019 (2019-01-20).
  2. ^ a b DeGagne, Mike. "Alan Parsons Live (Arcade release)". AllMusic. Retrieved 20 January 2019.
  3. ^ a b c DeGagne, Mike. "Alan Parsons Live". AllMusic. Retrieved 20 January 2019.
  4. ^ Jenkins, Mark (11 August 1995). "Parsons comes alive". The Washington Post. p. WW14. Retrieved 22 January 2019.

Further reading edit

  • Creedy, Steve (23 July 1995). "Recording Review". Pittsburgh Post-Gazette. p. G-8.
  • Colling, John (27 July 1995). "Album Reviews". San Diego Union-Tribune. p. 14.
  • Konz, Joe (28 July 1995). "Alan Parsons "The Very Best Live," RCA Records". Indianapolis Star. p. D 3.
  • Sculley, Alan (10 August 1995). "Solo Sojourn Parsons' Latest Project Returns Him to the Driver's Seat". St. Louis Post-Dispatch. p. 13.
  • Jenkins, Mark (11 August 1995). "Parsons comes alive". The Washington Post. p. WW14.