2016-06-16

Rainbow - Third Stone From The Sun (1978)2010 FLAC

GENRE: Hard Rock
FORMAT: Lossless (Flac) 
SIZE: (495+295) mb (3% Recovery)

Recorded Live at Kenmin-Kaikan Dai-Hall, Niigata, Japan - January 31, 1978.







TRACKLIST:

Disc1
101. Yoninbayashi Ending
102. Rainbow Monitor Check
103. God Save The Queen
104. Opening
105. Over The Rainbow
106. Start
107. Kill The King
108. Guitar Solo
109. Mistreated
110. Guitar Solo
111. Mistreated
112. Greensleeves
113. 16th Century Greensleeves
114. MC
115. Announcement in Japanese
116. Silence Prayer
117. Announcement in Japanese
118. Guitar Solo
119. Catch The Rainbow
120. Guitar Solo
121. L' Amour Est Bleu
122. Catch The Rainbow
123. MC
124. Long Live Rock'n Roll

Disc2
201. MC
202. Lazy
203. Man On The Silver Mountain
204. Guitar Solo
205. Blues
206. Break
207. Third Stone From The Sun
208. Break
209. unknown tune
210. Starstruck
211. Man On The Silver Mountain
212. Rainbow Light Show
213. Improvisation / Love Maker Trouble Maker
214. Man On The Silver Mountain
215. MC
216. Keyboard Solo
217. Still I'm Sad
218. Beethoven Sinfonie Nr. 9 D-moll Op. 125
219. Keyboard Solo
220. Drum Solo
221. The Year 1812 Festival Overture in E Flat Major
222. Still I'm Sad
223. Over The Rainbow
224. Announcement
225. SE

Ritchie Blackmore – guitar,
Ronnie James Dio – lead vocals,
Cozy Powell – drums,
David Stone – keyboards,
Bob Daisley – bass, backing vocals.

NOTES
This set from Tarantura offers the Mr Peach recording of Rainbow’s 15th concert on their tour of Japan to support the Long Live Rock and Roll album. The recording is good to very good, slightly distant that really captures the atmosphere well. The crowd is very enthusiastic and the band rewards them with inspired playing. A brief instrumental take of God Save The Queen by Ritchie segues the Over The Rainbow into a furious instrumental that leads directly into Kill The King, the crowd greats the band with huge applause and follows them at every turn.

After a brief thank you Dio introduces Mistreated as a “bit of blues and a bit of few others things as well” The crowd erupts a Blackmore plays the quiet opening notes, with someone close to the recording yelling “Ritchie, Ritchie”.

They cheer as the tension of notes builds before and the crowd claps along as Blackmore played the familiar opening notes to the songs. While the Coverdale sung version of the songs sound remorseful the Dio versions sound almost angry. The audience claps and cheers during the song but is distant enough to add the feel, not over power and by this time the recording sounds much more clear and very enjoyable at higher volumes.

The guy next to the recorder shouts for Cozy Powell and Ritchie as well as other comments as Dio introduces a song from their first album. Again the crowd is totally behind the band as they plow through 16th Century Greensleeves, cheers back at Dio as he chants “Down Down Down” at the end as Blackmore almost plays notes resembling the intro of Purple Haze. The Rainbow is colored full red for the people of Japan as the silent prayer is read and observed.

A beautiful rendition of Catch The Rainbow follows, the crowd clapping in unison through out. Dio is the star in this tune, his passionate vocals shine. The lone song from the new record, Long Live Rock and Roll is warmly greeted and enjoyed even though it will not be released for another two months, nonetheless the crowd claps and cheers like an old favorite.

Dio introduces Man On The Silver Mountain as a haunting beautiful song that leads into the new band member introductions that get wild cheers from the audience and Dio dedicates the song to Bob Daisley’s trousers, from there the band plays a quick snipped of Purples Lazy and finally gets into MOTSM. New members Bob Daisley and David Stone along with Cozy Powell get a chance to shine during the blues section and the band toys briefly with the Hendrix classic Third Stone From The Sun and Dio sings an unknown tune acapella before they get into the Startstruck section. The crowd wildly cheers and follows the band on every twist and turn.

They introduce the sheriff of Niigata, aka the guy who operates the rainbow over the stage and improvise the Love Maker section for one of the most intimate parts of the show as the band are obviously enjoying themselves. The part of the show is taken up by a lengthy Still I’m Sad, a vehicle for improvisation and solos from the band.

The Beethoven Sinfonie Nr. 9 d-moll op. 125 section is wildly cheered by the audience as is the David stone solo but the crowd really goes wild for Cozy Powell, they clap and shout his name throughout. The listener and crowd are ground to a pulp after the conclusion of the song and then  the crowd goes wild during the Judy Garland sung Over The Rainbow plays over the PA system. Its obvious the crowd wants more as they cheer over the announcements after the show but it is not to be.

All in all a fantastic concert for a equally fantastic audience whose enthusiasm takes this show to a high level of emotion and performance. This great show comes in a gatefold packaging of what looks to be the ticket to the concert adorning the cover while the inside has a picture of the recording devise and master cassette tapes and a shot of Blackmore. the only negative being the track listing and information on the back cover is printed in very light lettering and is difficult to read. Nothing but praise goes to Tarantura for their continuing efforts in releasing these important recordings of Rainbow in Japan, they are enjoyed by this collector and hopefully many others.

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