Richard Thompson Electric Trio January 29, 2019 Fremont Theater San Luis Obispo, CA Recorded By OldNeumanntapr, 9th Row, Just Right Of Center: Neumann AK 40s (ORTF) >LC3 >KM 100s >Beyer MV-100 >Tascam DR100mkII (24bit/48khz) Post Production By Flying -M- Har-Bal 3.0 & iZotope RX6 Advanced (Prep & 16/44.1) Tracking & Tagging By OldNeumanntapr Audacity (Track Splits) >FLAC (Level 8) + Tags Via xACT 2.47 Disc I: 01. Intro/Tuning 02. Bones Of Gilead 03. Her Love Was Meant For Me 04. Take Care Of The Road You Choose 05. Tale In Hard Time 06. Guitar Heroes 07. The Storm Wouldn't Come 08. They Tore The Hippodrome Down* 09. Dry My Tears And Move On* 10. 1952 Vincent Black Lightning** Disc II: 01. The Rattle Within' 02. Can't Win 03. Genesis Hall 04. I'll Never Give It Up 05. Wall Of Death 06. Put It There Pal 07. Tear Stained Letter Encore 1: 08. Beeswing** 09. Waltzing For Dreamers** Encore 2: 10. Pride 11. Take A Heart Richard Thompson - Guitars, Vocals Taras Prodaniuk - Bass Michael Jerome - Drums, Percussion Ryley Walker Opened * Acoustic ** Solo Acoustic The Historic Fremont (Movie) Theater Was Built In 1942 OldNeumanntapr Notes: I'd wanted to see Richard Thompson for a long time, but until recently it has never been convenient. I've loved his music since first hearing '1952 Vincent Black Lightning'. I think he is a very gifted song writer and guitarist, and paints wonderful stories with his music. I love seeing shows at the Fremont because it is such a cool old building with so much history, and has really good acoustics because of its curved interior walls. The Art-Deco style theater also has a really ornate inlayed ceiling. Formally a movie theater that was built during WWII, the new concert promoters are morphing the historic Fremont into a performing arts theater which, to me, draws parallels to the fabled Fillmore East in New York. However, the Fremont, which seats just under 1,000, doesn't have a balcony. I have seen many films at the Fremont starting in 1977, and first recorded there in 1992 when I was front row on the left side for Los Lobos, before they allowed open recording. Thanks to Mike as always for his awesome post production skills, and thanks to my friends who supplied me with some band / theater photos from the night. I hope everyone enjoys this, and appreciates the efforts required to reap the benefits of the superior Neumann sound in the midst of the dark ages of gun violence that this country is currently saddled with that necessitates the added security presence of metal detectors. Here's to the continued pursuit of the archival of live music throughout these dark times. Do NOT Convert To MP3. Enjoy! Share freely, don’t sell, play nice, don’t run with scissors, etc. ;)