With Success Comes A Price

I received my first notice from a copyright holder to remove a post. King Crimson to be exact. It has me a little scared. I had assumed I was safe posting bootlegs. Now, maybe not. I removed the post. What do I do now? Shut down the blog? Try to take it private again? I may have a way, but it may crap out like the last time. Your thoughts? Insights? Ideas? Send me an email at blind-pig@live.com or leave a comment under any post.

Leave A Question / Comment


Gotta Itch To Post? The Free For All Is For You!

Enter The Free For All - where blog readers can post their bootlegs.

Do you want to be an Author and post your own shows? Put a request to be an Author of the Free For All in the comment box or send an email. I will need your email address to send an invitation. The number of Authors is limited. Reserve your spot before they are gone.

Got Lossless? Need FLAC?

Only lossless can trip your trigger? Then Flac Off! Get some bootlegs in Flac, SHN, and APE.

Monday, September 17, 2007

The Go Betweens 09/29/87 Club Soda On Park Avenue, Montreal, Canada @ 192

In The Core Of The Flame
Head Full Of Steam
Right There
Twin Layers Of Lightning
Cut It Out
Learn To Live Again
I Just Get Caught Out
Part Company
Bye Bye Pride
The Clarke Sisters
Spring Rain
The House That Jack Kerouac Built
Don't Call Me Gone
Apology Accepted

http://link-protector.com/291865/

1 comment:

Anonymous said...

It's great to here a mixing desk / sound board recording - probably the first tour with Amanda Brown on violin + more making a fewer of the songs from the older album 'Liberty Belle'interesting listening - particularly 'Apology accepted' + 'Part company'.

Learn to Live Again is 'Spirit of a Vampyre" and Right There is 'Right Here'

'The House Jack Kerouac Built' is a particularly fine version, with variation in the lyrics a shame there appears to be a little drop out on the recording.

Any idea of the correct order of the songs? At the end of Jack Kerouac, Grant announces the next song as Don't Call Me Gone.

I saw them earlier that year when they played around 18 songs often ending with an old song such as Karen so I presume the encores are missing. Nevertheless a truly lovely bit of aural history. Many thanks.