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The Carnegie Hall Concert 1971
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The Carnegie Hall Concert 1971  (Audio CD) 
by Carole King

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List Price: $9.98
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Description:

2008 archive live album from the songstress, an unmissable Tapestry-era performance recorded live at Carnagie Hall. With her album Tapestry on it's way to selling millions upon millions of copies, Carole sounds relaxed, joyful and in total control of her audience. During this set, King performs 17 of her most well-known songs including, "I Feel The Earth Move", "(You Make Me Feel Like) A Natural Woman", "It's Too Late" and "You've Got A Friend" (performed with James Taylor, who joins her for her encore). Sony/BMG.

Product Details:
Audio CD Release Date: October 29, 1996
Studio: Sony
Number Of Discs: 1
Format: Live
Average Customer Rating: based on 17 reviews
Track Listing:
1. I Feel the Earth Move
2. Home Again
3. After All This Time
4. Child of Mine
5. Carry Your Load
6. No Easy Way Down
7. Song of Long Ago
8. Snow Queen
9. Smackwater Jack
10. So Far Away
11. It's Too Late
12. Eventually
13. Way over Yonder
14. Beautiful
15. You've Got a Friend - Carole King, James Taylor
16. Will You Love Me Tomorrow?/Some Kind of Wonderful/Up on the Roof [Medle - Carole King, James Taylor
17. (You Make Me Feel Like) A Natural Woman
 
Customer Reviews:
Average Customer Review:5.0
Write an online review and share your thoughts with other customers.

1 of 1 found the following review helpful:

4Great Live Album...  Aug 12, 2009
...from way before my time but its like I'm there that night with this great album.

5wonderful  Aug 09, 2009
This is a great live CD do yourself a favor and get it.I found my copy at the movie trading company for real cheap.

0 of 4 found the following review helpful:

5"a black arrow of death"  Apr 26, 2008
It takes a lot of courage for a man to admit liking the music of Carole King. It takes a great deal of courage for a man to admit owning a copy of Carole King: The Carnegie Hall Concert. Lots of men own a copy of Tapestry, because it was a very popular record, and it's always a good idea to see what the other side is up to. Carole King's music is foreign territory for men, she was a woman's musician. She was not a sex kitten, or a disturbed witch woman, she was just a normal sensible nice person of a kind that men do not generally go for. Nonetheless she sold lots of records and made a fortune, and so clearly she appealed to a lot of people, hidden secret normal people that should not exist, and that are not usually targeted by the record industry. It is therefore understandable that a man would own a copy of Tapestry, so that he could understand this phenomenon, and perhaps pretend to like it, in order to impress women. The Carnegie Hall Concert is not Tapestry, however, it is an archive release of a long-gone live show. The only people who buy archive releases of long-gone live shows are fans, and most men would not admit to being a fan of Carole King, but I am not like most men. I am better than most men. I have courage. I own this album. I like it. I am not scared of you, or of Carole King, or women. Your words bounce off me, because I have the pure light.

The Carnegie Hall Concert is the most likeable record I have heard in a long time. On the record Carole King is endearing, she comes across as a bit overwhelmed by the audience, a bit scared and uncertain. I am not sure if the concert predates or postdates the first million sales of Tapestry. Perhaps Carole King's humility is an act, I imagine she had an iron will to get where she got, but if it is an act it is a superb act. The audience is clearly on her side, they like her, and applaud. The songs zip past, and even though I am not a fan of Carole King, I find nothing to dislike in her music. She isn't an obnoxiously flashy vocalist like Mariah Carey. Her voice wobbles a bit, and it shreds on "Song of Long Ago", but it doesn't matter. Carole King's music wasn't about virtuoso performance, it was about songwriting craft and extremely professional artificial sincerity.

The first half of the concert is basically Carole King singing and playing the piano. The recording tapes have nothing wrong with them. The song choice is heavy on material from Tapestry (it has the whole album, except for the title track) with some songs from her debut album, Writer, sprinkled here and there. The minimal piano-and-voice arrangement doesn't hurt, because King plays a lot of notes. I believe she plays all of the notes, several times over, even the black ones. I wonder; when she toured, did she have groupies? Did she tour the United States in a Boeing jet, with in-flight debauchery? Did she have a rider that specified only green M&Ms? I'm genuinely curious.

Towards the end of the record Carole King brings on James Taylor, and the audience applauds like mad. It is this, more than anything else, that anchors the album in the early 1970s. James Taylor is not the star he was. Neither is Carole King, but Tapestry will probably go into the time capsule, whereas James Taylor will remain buried. Carole King interests me in one particular way. Her lyrics and music were deliberately simple and universal, and this is one of the reasons why she was so popular at the time. The newspapers and magazines of 1971 and 1972 liked to run features about how Carole King was the harbinger of a new age of honesty in music, and in society. She emerged at a time when sincerity was valued in serious rock music, and her image was one of wholesome genuineness. At the same time, she was a professional musician and hitmaker, and her music was thoroughly constructed and artificial. She was a fake that seemed real, and it didn't seem to matter. I have no idea if she had experienced the emotions and sensations described in "I Feel the Earth Move" or "So Far Away" or "It's Too Late". I get the impression that she sat down in front of her piano at 09:00 each morning with the goal of writing a song about being in a love, another song about being lonely, a third song about a failed relationship, and the end result could not have been more artificial if it had been constructed by a computer program. But, again, it doesn't matter, and I do not intent this as a criticism of Carole King's music. There is an art to fakery.

The Carnegie Hall Concert scuffs up this artificiality, because of its live nature; the minimal production style and wobbly vocals help the material. In comparison, the studio recordings from Tapestry sound a bit early-70s, with early-70s bass and drums, whereas this record is timeless. Even though I know that the songs are from the early 1970s, I cannot tell just from listening that this is a concert from that period, it could just as easily be a modern-day Carole King concert with a retro setlist. Except that she probably doesn't sound like this nowadays. Although having said that, I believe that she basically repeated the piano-and-voice concept in 2004, with another live record called The Living Room Tour. I wonder what it's like?

DJ Crystal's Warpdrive / Meditation 12" is the greatest 12" drum'n'bass single of all time, and one of the greatest singles of all time in any genre. That has nothing to do with Carole King, I just thought I'd say it. And it's true.

5I love her live stuff  Jul 03, 2007
Find Me: How Psychic Detectives from Around the World Have Banded Together to Find Missing People Co-author of Find Me

I grew up listening to Carole, and still love her to this day! Thank you Mom for the introduction:) She is inspiring and uplifting to all:)

1 of 1 found the following review helpful:

5I feel the earth move under my feet   Jun 12, 2006
Carole King has a special kind of lilt in her voice. it is simply pleasant to listen to her, especially on her best songs like , 'It's Too Late' 'You've Got a Friend' 'You make feel like a natural woman'. On the one hand there is a certain sense of simplicity in her and a kind of directness. But on the other she seems reaching out to new places all the time.
One of the best songwriter singers of the Sixties.

 
 
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