![]() Proceeded by DJ Nicky Horne whipping up the crowd and announcing that they were struggling to find the band, the Bad Company set was one of the first times that they would appear fully formed before the public. Reports vary between whether punches were thrown between the audience members, it tends to depend where you were stood. To up the ante, those who didn’t make use of the facilities will have smuggled their own booze in and not wanting to have to bring it home again, that will have been drunk in quantities, ending in, what Pete Townshend considered to be one of the bawdiest audiences that they’d played to. ![]() The premier on this release is the full Humble Pie set, it has never been booted before and so makes it’s entry point here.īy all accounts the day was a warm one, apparently it rained early on but when the sun shone, the good folk who attended will have done what nearly everybody does at an outdoor concert of this kind and will eventually have been rendered shirtless, a pile of hot pink bodies searing in the English sunshine. We also get two other acts from the day – Some of the earlier acts seem not to have been recorded and the Lou Reed set was captured but the tape was not considered to have been of the best quality and so has been left from the set. This new set of recordings expands the experience by giving the full Who selection an airing from a brand new audience recording from close to the stage. None of these boots seem ever to have captured the full event however, mainly taken from partial recordings, the boots have generally been incomplete for the whole Who show. Released a multitude of times after a broadcast on the BBC, pretty much since the broadcast was made it has appeared on vinyl bootlegs such as ‘When The Sun Was Going Down’ (no label) to CD boots such as ‘Soccer Rock’ (Past Masters), ‘Boris The Spider’ (The ever dependable Oil Well), ‘Live At Charlton, ’74’ (Midas Touch) and Charlton 1974 – Expanded edition’ (MS) – from very good audience recordings to ’soundboard’, presumably from the BBC broadcast, it became a bootleg staple. Jimmy (59:55)ĭisk 2 – The Who – Won’t Get Fooled Again / Pinball Wizard / See Me, Feel Me / 5:15 / Magic Bus / My Generation / Naked Eye – Let’s See Action / My Generation blues (56:09)ĭisk 3 – Humble Pie – Introduction / What’cha Gonna Do About It / Thunder Box / Sweet Peace and Time / 30 Days In The Hole / Let me Be Your Lovemaker / C’Mon Everybody – I Want A Little Girl / I Don’t Need No Doctor (53:46)ĭisk 4 – Bad Company – Introduction / Place Of The King / Little Miss Fortune / Rock Steady / Ready For Love / Easy On My Mind / Bad Company / Deal With The Preacher / Band introduction / Movin’ On / Can’t Get Enough Of Your Love / Announcement (47:38)Ĭharlton ’74 is one of those bootlegs that must be in your collection even if you’re not so much a Who fan but a fan of bootlegs anyway. The Who, Humble Pie and Bad Company, “Summer of ’74” (Empress Valley EVSD – 858/861)ĭisk 1 – The Who – Introduction / I Can’t Explain / Summertime Blues / Young Man Blues / Baba O’ Riley / Behind Blue Eyes / Substitute / I’m A Boy / Tattoo / Boris The Spider / Drowned / Bell Boy / Dr.
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