The Clash – Live At Shea Stadium (2008/2013) [Official Digital Download 24bit/96kHz]

The Clash – Live At Shea Stadium ‘1982 (2008/2013)
FLAC (tracks) 24-bit/96 kHz | Time – 49:12 minutes | 1,24 GB | Genre: Punk
Studio Master, Official Digital Download – Source: HDTracks  | @ Sony Music UK

Live at Shea Stadium is a live album by The Clash and was recorded at Shea Stadium in New York City on October 13, 1982. This was the band’s second night opening for The Who, and the recordings were originally discovered by Joe Strummer while packing for a move. It was first released in October 2008. Glyn Johns made the original recording from the live show, while David Bates and Mark Frith restored and remastered the recording.

In Clash lore, the band’s stint as the opening act for the Who’s farewell tour in 1982 is where the band had stardom in its hand and dropped it on the floor. That’s how Joe Strummer phrased it in retrospect, but in 1982 the pairing was seen as a rock cultural clash, with the Who’s audience bristling at the punks, and the punks not quite being comfortable operating on a larger scale – a suspicion somewhat proven by the band’s implosion within months of the Shea Stadium gig. Given all the stories about how poorly received this tour with the Who was – that the Clash were routinely greeted by boos as they hopped from stadium to stadium across the U.S. – it comes as a mild surprise that this unearthed recording of the band’s opening set at Shea Stadium isn’t bad at all. There were some signs prior to this 2008 archival release that this particular gig was pretty good – some of the cuts surfaced on the posthumous live 1999 comp From Here to Eternity and the video to “Should I Stay or Should I Go” came from this gig – but all the decades of disastrous myths help turn Live at Shea Stadium into a pleasant surprise. That doesn’t mean that this is a definitive portrait of the Clash live, or even that it captures the band at their best, but it’s fascinating to hear how they pitched their set to the Who’s audience, only slowing down for the reggae of “Armagideon Time” and “The Guns of Brixton,” but otherwise sticking with high-octane, breathlessly paced rock & roll – the kind of set designed to placate a stadium full of classic rock fans, or at least keep them buying beer instead of throwing it. As a historical document, it’s a worthy one. It not only illustrates that the Clash did turn in some strong performances on this often disaster-plagued tour, but it gives us the first officially released Clash concert instead of the re-creation of From Here to Eternity. And if it’s not all terrific – strangely, the Combat Rock songs can sometimes sound stiff, particularly “Rock the Casbah” – when the group clicks, as they do on a closing stretch that includes “Career Opportunities,” “Clampdown,” “Should I Stay or Should I Go,” and a furious “I Fought the Law,” they sound like the greatest band on earth and a sure bet to have blown the Who off the stage.

Tracklist:
01 – Kosmo Vinyl Introduction
02 – London Calling
03 – Police on my Back
04 – The Guns of Brixton
05 – Tommy Gun
06 – The Magnificent Seven
07 – Armagideon Time
08 – Magnificent Seven (Return)
09 – Rock the Casbah
10 – Train in Vain
11 – Career Opportunities
12 – Spanish Bombs
13 – Clampdown
14 – English Civil War
15 – Should I Stay or Should I Go
16 – I Fought the Law

Please Note: Track 12 is a 44kHz file mastered at 96kHz/24bit.

Download:

http://subyshare.com/hllfnwoibgp0/TheClashLiveAtSheaStadium198220082013HDTracks2496.part1.rar.html
http://subyshare.com/5tx2dktphf8q/TheClashLiveAtSheaStadium198220082013HDTracks2496.part2.rar.html

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