Live at the Greek Jimmy Page, The Black Crowes

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CD

  • Release Date: 07/04/2000
  • Sales Rank: 2,408
  • Label: TVT
  • UPC: 016581214026

Listener Rating: (3 ratings)

Detailed Rating: "Essential" See All

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CD - Bonus Tracks$64.99

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  • Overview
  • Tracks
  • Editorial Reviews
  • Customer Reviews
  • Details & Credits

About Jimmy Page

About The Black Crowes

Editorial Reviews

Often, combinations that sound great on paper end up falling woefully short in practice. Not so with this double-disc set, recorded early on in the collaborative life of this cross-generational rock juggernaut. Live at the Greek readily lives up to the advance hype. Page and the Crowes mesh mesmerizingly on a wide array of tracks from the guitarist's Zeppelin days -- most of which see Chris Robinson splitting the difference between his own unique vocal style and a more wailing, Robert Plant-styled approach -- as well as a passel of blues chestnuts. Thankfully, none of the musicians treat the Zep tunes as sacrosanct, reworking such tunes as "The Lemon Song" (stretched to nine minutes via a pair of slow-burn breakdowns) and "Hey, Hey, What Can I Do" (which gains a pastoral vibe from acoustic guitars and chiming mandolin) in much the same way Page's contemporaries revamped the music they grew up on. To that end, the combo slinks through classics such as Elmore James's "Shake Your Money Maker" and Jimmy Rogers's "Sloppy Drunk" with a blend of sultriness and threat -- exactly what the music calls for. Beefed up considerably from its initial Internet-only release, Live at the Greek adds one new song -- a version of Willie Dixon's "Mellow Down Easy" -- and plenty of video footage taken from the show and from backstage sources. David Sprague, Barnes & Noble



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Customer Reviews

Heard betterby ljparker2983

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December 14, 2009: I'm not sure I can describe how I feel about this CD. I've heard much better. I didn't hate it. I can listen to it. You'd expect more from someone that was in one of the greatest rock band ever. There are a lot better musicians out there working their butts off. I like guitars.

I Also Recommend: Live at Chan's, Combo Platter No. 2.

Jimmy Page/Black Crowsby PageyGirl

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May 11, 2009: I purchased this CD simply to hear Jimmy Page's performance outside of the Led Zeppelin box. I was completely unprepared for the creativity of this collaboration. I found myself almost liking his work on this one even better than some of his work with Zeppelin. He sounds fresh, even on the Zeppelin standards. His playing has often been labeled "sloppy" and Page has admitted that he doesn't consider himself a technical guitarist. But listen to "Oh Well", "Mellow Down Easy", "Shake Your Moneymaker" and "Woke Up This Morning". Sloppy has no home here.

Page's guitar is also a great fit with Chris Robinson's voice, who steps up and delivers on every song. Every few years or so someone makes a ridiculous comment that Page isn't playing guitar anymore or that he can't play, and then he comes out with something that raises the bar. He's due for something new again and we can only wonder where he'll take it this time.


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