Xenu wrote:Oh lord. Sign me up if you find these. What're some major differences? And NINE discs?
It was a great broadcast that ran over the course of a weekend - maybe it was the actual Festival dates, or Labor Day Weekend, I can't remember. It might have even been 1988 the more I think about it, but that doesn't make much sense. It was right around the time I moved out on my own, my first apartment, that's all I know for sure. Like I said, I taped the whole thing off the radio on a few Beta Hi-Fi cassettes...but managed to lose/misplace them somehow. Sadly, most of my Live Aid and first Farm Aid video tapes went the same direction.
The special had mostly complete sets and was interspersed with interviews from the artists and organizers. The Simon and Garfunkel set was broadcast complete, the Springfield wasn't as I recall - more like 3 or 4 songs for them. The Big Brother/Joplin "encore" from the next day was broadcast also. Moby Grape...I can't remember if anything was broadcast. John Phillips was behind the whole radio show and had a hand in the mixing as I seem to recall. Mind you, this was the first time since the original movie (save for the Hendrix, Redding, and M&P lps) that most of the stuff saw the light of day...so it was all pretty awesome.
The mix, as I remember, was a bit more "flattering" to the artists - particularly vocally. The box set seemed more interested in a cleaner, more fidelity-driven experience with the vocals upfront. The Airplane set comes to mind.
A few years ago, I saw the original 9 CD set go for several hundred dollars on Ebay. It was the source of nearly all the Monterey boots that followed leading up to the boxset, the VH1 Lost Performance special from '96/'97 (which broadcast 2 Simon and Garfunkel performances) and the expanded DVD.