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A Live Record is the first live album by the progressive rock band Camel, released in April 1978. [5] It is a double LP, composed of recordings from three different tours. LP one features recordings from the Mirage tour in 1974, and the Rain Dances tour, in 1977. Tracks 1–4 on the LP are from the Rain Dances tour and 5–6 are from the Mirage ...
The album was remastered and reissued in 2002 on London Records with two bonus tracks: the single version of "Never Let Go" and a live version of "Homage to the God of Light", a staple of the band's early shows. A studio version of the latter had appeared on keyboard player Peter Bardens' debut solo album The Answer in 1970.
In 1970, Bardens recorded The Answer, an album featuring Peter Green and Andy Gee. Bardens recorded an eponymous album in 1971 which was released in the United States as Write My Name in the Dust before forming Camel in 1972. [2] He left Camel in 1978 to join Them bandmate Van Morrison's band.
Mikael Åkerfeldt of Swedish progressive death metal band Opeth has cited Camel to be an influence for the song "Hessian Peel" [41] and previously joked on the Lamentations (Live at Shepherd's Bush Empire 2003) DVD that material from their Damnation (2003) album was a "rip-off" of Camel.
Album details Greasy Truckers Live at Dingwalls Dance Hall: Released: 1973; Label: Greasy Truckers; Formats: 2xLP; Various artists live album that includes a 19 minute version of Camel's "God of Light Revisited" The Snow Goose: Released: 4 November 2013; Label: Camel Productions; Formats: CD; Extended re-recording of 1975 album
But Wild God, his 18th album with The Bad Seeds, feels more like a baptism: an ecstatic immersion in the rushing, pooling waters of love and loss that the sexagenarian artist has experienced since ...
Pages in category "Camel (band) live albums" The following 5 pages are in this category, out of 5 total. This list may not reflect recent changes. C.
Starting in 1963, Preston put out a series of three albums built around his organ playing. The third of them, “Wildest Organ in Town!” (1966), was a collaboration between Preston and Sly Stone.