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THE WHO collection, double album, gatefold, SMR 570

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The Hypertext Who› History of The Who› 1971–1974". Thewho.net. 16 October 2007. Archived from the original on 14 June 2013 . Retrieved 7 November 2012. Year-end charts [ edit ] 2021 year-end chart performance for Dangerous: The Double Album Chart (2021)

Van Morrison was at the peak of his powers and touring with his greatest band– the eleven-piece Caledonia Soul Orchestra was a brilliant blend of blues, jazz and classical musicians – when he recorded the remarkable double live album It’s Too Late to Stop Now. Belfast-born Morrison is an unpredictable stage performer, but these shows – taken from concerts in London, Los Angeles and Santa Monica – are inspirational. The highlights include extended, improvisational versions of his own compositions “Saint Dominic’s Preview,” “Listen to the Lion,” and “Cyprus Avenue” (during which he cries out “it’s too late to stop now”), along with magnificent cover versions of songs that inspired him as a youngster, such as Sam Cooke’s “Bring it On Home to Me” and Sonny Boy Williamson’s “Help Me.” 26: Louis Armstrong: Satchmo At Symphony Hall (1947) Dangerous: The Double Album debuted at number one on the US Billboard 200 and US Top Country Albums charts, earning 265,000 album-equivalent units (including 74,000 copies as pure album sales) in its first week, according to MRC Data. [5] This became Wallen's first US number one debut and his second on the latter. [5] The album also accumulated a total of 240.18 million on-demand streams, becoming the largest streaming week ever for a country album at the time. [5] This more than doubles the record set by Luke Combs' What You See Is What You Get. [5] In its second week, the album remained at number one on the chart, earning an additional 159,000 units making it the first country album to spend two weeks at number one since Chris Stapleton's Traveller in 2015 and the first country set to spend its first two weeks at number one since Luke Bryan's 2015 album Kill the Lights. [18] In its third week, the album remained at number one on the chart, earning 130,000 more units. [19] In its fourth week, the album remained at number one on the chart, earning 149,000 units. [20] It received a 14 percent increase from the previous week, despite the nationwide removal of Wallen's music throughout radio stations in the United States following his use of a racial slur outside of his Nashville home on February 2, 2021. [20] It concurrently became the first country album to spend its first four weeks atop the Billboard 200 chart since Shania Twain's Up! did so in January 2003. [20] In addition, it later extended its run with a fifth and sixth week at the top, [21] marking the longest run atop the charts for a country album since Garth Brooks' The Chase in 1992. [22] The album eventually spent a total of ten weeks at number one on the Billboard 200 and ended up becoming the best selling album for the first half of 2021. [23] [24] As of September 2021, the album has earned 2,539,000 album-equivalent units and has sold 267,000 copies in the United States. [25] What it’s really all about is the fact that … he’s seeing things basically as vibrations which we translate as music. That’s really what we want to do: create this feeling that when you listen to the music you can actually become aware of the boy, and aware of what he is all about, because we are creating him as we play.” Pete Townshend, Rolling Stone, 1968 Morgan Wallen - Dangerous: The Double Album (Target Exclusive, Vinyl)". Target Corporation . Retrieved November 21, 2020. Johnny Cash’s pioneering example of recording a live album in a prison was emulated by blues titan B.B. King in September 1970, when he went to Cook County Jail in Chicago to record this masterpiece. King’s Live In Cook County Jail stands next to his Live At The Regal and features superb performances of classics such as “Every Day I Have the Blues” and “Sweet Sixteen.” His guitar opening on “How Blue Can You Get?” is spell-binding and King holds the concert together with his own inimitable banter with the audience. King’s singing has never been better and the album features perhaps his greatest live version of the magnificent “The Thrill Is Gone,” in which the stirring horns from John Browning (trumpet), Louis Hubert (tenor saxophone), and Booker Walker (alto saxophone) take the place of the original version’s strings. This is King at his rapturous best. 28: The Band: The Last Waltz (1978)Italian album certifications – The Who – Tommy" (in Italian). Federazione Industria Musicale Italiana. Select "2016" in the "Anno" drop-down menu. Select "Tommy" in the "Filtra" field. Select "Album e Compilation" under "Sezione". Wolff, Sander (12 July 2013). "Scott Devours: From Here to the Who - Part 3". Long Beach Post. Archived from the original on 27 June 2019 . Retrieved 27 June 2019. That level of success was like nothing we had ever experienced before. It was such a huge record for us”: how Rush’s prog classic Moving Pictures marked their great reinvention

Various artists- Alice in Wonderland & Other Rainy Girls: The Great Lost Southern Popsike Trip (2013) – 2×CD compilation reissue ARIA Top 100 Albums for 2021". Australian Recording Industry Association . Retrieved January 13, 2022.

a b c d e f "The Official Charts Company – The Who". Official Charts Company . Retrieved 14 December 2019. ARIA Top 100 Albums Chart for 2022". Australian Recording Industry Association . Retrieved January 4, 2023. In 2013, Townshend and Daltrey participated in a documentary about the making of the album Tommy. The documentary is titled Sensation: The Story of the Who's Tommy and features in-depth interviews with them. [75] Editions and cover art [ edit ] In 1998, the album was inducted into the Grammy Hall of Fame for "historical, artistic and significant value". [48] In 2000 it was voted number 52 in Colin Larkin's All Time Top 1000 Albums. [66] In 2003, Rolling Stone magazine ranked Tommy number 96 on its list of the 500 greatest albums of all time, [67] it maintained the rating in a 2012 revised list, [68] and was re-ranked at number 190 on the 2020 list. [69] The album is one of several by the Who to appear in 1001 Albums You Must Hear Before You Die. [70] According to Acclaimed Music, it is the 132nd most ranked record on critics' all-time lists. [71] Top 50 Albums of 1976" (PDF). Music Week. 25 December 1976. p.14. Archived (PDF) from the original on 9 March 2021 . Retrieved 30 November 2021– via worldradiohistory.com.

Live albums [ edit ] Townshend and Daltrey at Leeds University Refectory in June 2006 unveiling a Leeds Civic Trust Blue Plaque commemorating the recording venue of The Who's Live at Leeds gig in February 1970. Title Cecil Taylor, Charles Tolliver, Grachan Moncur& Archie Shepp- The New Breed (1978) – 2×LP – compilation a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v "American album certifications – The Who". Recording Industry Association of America. Missing is 24 Nights by Eric Clapton unique and very live put together with 4 different bands/groups/orchestras recorded at the same venue…a must have in any library.

26: Louis Armstrong: Satchmo At Symphony Hall (1947)

He released the set without even bothering with a single to precede it, preferring fans to hear it as a whole entity – an archetypically progtastic move”: Prince’s Around The World In A Day

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