Rainbow - On Stage
Facts
| Artist(s) | Rainbow |
| Studio | Polydor / Umgd |
| Release Date | April 27, 1999 |
| UPC Code | 731454736220 |
| Buy this item | $11.98 at Amazon.com As of Jul 23 17:18 EDT (details) 1 Audio CD, Usually ships in 24 hours, Original recording reissued, Original recording remastered, Live |
About Rainbow - On Stage
When Ritchie Blackmore left Deep Purple, they barely skipped a beat replacing him. And he barely skipped a beat forming Rainbow, a mirror image of his old band. Vocalist Ronnie James Dio, though, provided Blackmore with a clipped, howl-free voice, hardening Rainbow's sound considerably despite the presence of Mellotron, organ, and other keyboards. By the time it released On Stage, the band had developed its dominion: songs about killing kings, men on silver mountains, and women locked in towers. Subjects were grandiose and the execution heavy, even ponderous. But there's charm in the way Dio intones, "Do you waaant some love? / Well, here we are to give you love," as Blackmore strums in the background. But Dio and Blackmore turn to hard, hard rock with the sprawling "Man on the Silver Mountain" and slow, sad-sack blues with "Mistreated." For gearheads, there's a full accounting of the band's equipment on the back cover. This remastered edition boasts a warmer sound, but who needs warmth with that big guitar spilling over onto your shirt and shoes while the crowd claps along? --Andrew Bartlett Amazon.com
Tracks
- Kill The King
- Medley: Man On The Silver Mountain/Blues/Starstruck
- Catch The Rainbow
- Mistreated
- Sixteenth Century Greensleeves
- Still I'm Sad
Similar CDs
| Rising | Ritchie Blackmore's Rainbow [ORIGINAL RECORDING REMASTERED] | Long Live Rock 'n' Roll | Live in Munich 1977 | Down to Earth |
User Reviews
Average user review:| Cozy On Up |
| Ready for The "Deluxe" Treatment |
The Epic Version of; "Stargazer" {With Drum Solo by Cozy and The Big Explosion in that Solo} is not here. That was by Far one of the Highlights of this Amazing Show. "Black Sheep Of the Family" was far better than it's studio counterpart {Not included as well}. "Do You Close Your Eyes" {Where is that?}. 31 Years is indeed a Long Time, and as I don't remember everything from that night, I do know that the 1976 Show was 2 Hours in length, and lot's more of that Show could and should be presented here to tell the Complete Story.
Still this is one of the very Best live Records ever released, but if there was a CD that needed a: "Deluxe/Expanded Edition", of 2 CD's to be released: "On Stage" should be at the Top of that List.
Any Fan of Ritchie, Tony, Cozy, Ronnie James and Jimmy, should already own this Monster, but there is more that needs to be heard!
December 14, 2007
| Classic 70's Hard Rock... Live and Loud! |
A number of people have complained that this doesn't capture Rainbow circa 1977 or that it is not a comprehensive snapshot of one of their live performances or even that it lacks songs from Rising and/or led off with a song that was on an album yet to be released. These may be valid criticisms, however, as a slice of late 70's hard rock this is very hard album to beat! Ronnie James Dio was at his hungriest and simply on top form, Blackmore was, as always, inventive and beguiling. Two of the 70's most underrated artists also appear; Cozy Powell is so very solid and punchy while Tony Carey's collection of Moogs, Clavinettes and cut down Hammond play the perfect foil to Blackmore, much like Jon Lord did in Deep Purple. Simply, these guys were at the top of their game and they came together and made memorable music. Music which may sound dated now but will somehow always retain a timelessness. An album to crank-up loud... as you grow old and cranky... September 19, 2007
| Ronnie James Dio |
| No songs from "Rising" |
First! There is not 1 song from their BEST (or even one of the best albums ever for that matter), that being "Rising", on this live effort. Sure you get the short "blurb" of Starstruck during the Man on the Silver Mountain medley, but that only lasts about 20 seconds.
Secondly! Catch the Rainbow is a great ballad but it is WAY too long and took a complete side of an LP when originally released. It also had some long silent moments. I was willing to get by this but then Mistreated was also a complete "side-stealer". That being said, those 2 took too much time and should've left room for songs like "Tarot Woman, Stargazer, the complete Starstruck or even Light in the Black", songs that are certainly worthy of playing live.
The live versions of Kill The King and Still I'm Sad are the best tracks.
I'm still giving this 4 stars simply because it's the classic lineup and it sounds good.
July 5, 2007
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