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1969: The Velvet Underground Live is a live album by the Velvet Underground.It was originally released as a double album in September 1974 by Mercury Records.The September 1988 CD re-release was issued as two separate single CD volumes, with one extra track per disc.
The live album 1969: The Velvet Underground Live (with Reed, Yule, Morrison and Tucker) was recorded in October 1969 but not released until 1974, on Mercury Records, at the urging of rock critic Paul Nelson, who worked in A&R for Mercury at the time.
The Velvet Underground (1969) Live recordings: November 12 – December 3, 1969 ; July 26, 1970 (Live at Max's Kansas City) "The Black Angel's Death Song" Studio recording: The Velvet Underground & Nico (1967) Live recording: November 23, 1969 (The Quine Tapes) "Booker T" Live recording: April 30, 1967 (Peel Slowly and See)
"New Age" is the fifth song on The Velvet Underground album Loaded (1970). It is one of the four songs that feature Doug Yule on vocals, encouraged by main singer and songwriter Lou Reed. [1] The song also appears on 1969: The Velvet Underground Live, with Reed on vocals, singing an earlier, significantly different version of the lyrics ...
The discography of the American rock band The Velvet Underground consists of five studio albums, six live albums, 14 compilation albums, six box sets and eleven singles.. The first line-up was formed in New York City consisting of Lou Reed on vocals and guitar, John Cale on several instruments (viola, keyboards and bass), Sterling Morrison on guitar and bass and Angus MacLise on percussion ...
The Complete Matrix Tapes is a live album by the New York City-based experimental rock band the Velvet Underground, released on November 20, 2015.It features unexpurgated recordings of the band's two-night stint on November 26 and 27, 1969, at San Francisco club The Matrix, owned and operated by Jefferson Airplane's Marty Balin.
"What Goes On" is a song by the Velvet Underground. It was the only single released from their third album, The Velvet Underground (1969). The song was recorded in 1968 at TTG Studios in Hollywood. A concert performance of the song, with Doug Yule on keyboards, was included on their double live album 1969: The Velvet Underground Live. [2]
"After Hours" is a 1969 song written by Lou Reed [3] and originally performed by the Velvet Underground, "about a timid person watching others having fun and wishing they could join in". [4] It is the tenth and final track on their self-titled third album. [5]