Simple Minds
Live 2011
£15.00 £10.00
Format: CD
Concert Live was excited to have teamed up with Simple Minds to produce Exclusive Live CDs for their 'Greatest Hits + Tour 2011.'
The Scottish rock band, who have been responsible for some of the most innovative and enduring anthems in rock music, played scenic locations around the UK in the summer of 2011.
Now, a re-release of two amazing shows are available to order as deluxe 2 disc sets!
Choose Gig:
10.06.2011
Bedgebury Pinetum & Forest
tracklisting
CD 1
- Moscow Underground
- Waterfront
- Once Upon a Time
- All the Things
- Sanctify
- Sons of Fascination
- Celebrate
- Speed Your Love to Me
- Catwalk
- Earth That You Walk Upon
- Hypnotise/Mandela Day
- Someone Somewhere
- Miracle/Glittering Prize
- Dont You
- New Gold Dream
CD 2
- Stage Fright
- Alive and Kicking
- Ghostdancing
- Gloria
1 review
Still great LIVE!!!
by NAMELOC | 11-06-2011
22 years on from the last time I saw them...Simple Minds still can compete with the best of them...classic tracks from the last 30 odd years still ringing in my ears...the most well known tracks like Alive & Kicking, Don't You (Forget About Me) and Promised You A Miracle right down to oldies like This Earth That You Walk Upon, Celebrate and one of my faves New Gold Dream 81,82,83,84. I was a little disappointed they never played Love Song or The American...mind you, we would still have been there now if they were to play all their hits...great job lads...see you again soon.
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16.06.2011
Hampton Court Palace
tracklisting
CD 1
- Moscow Underground
- Waterfront
- Once Upon a Time
- All the Things
- Sanctify
- Sons of Fascination
- Celebrate
- Speed Your Love to Me
CD 2
- Catwalk
- Earth that you Walk Upon
- Hypnotise/Mandela Day
- Someone Somewhere
- Miracle/Glittering Prize
- Don't You
- New Gold Dream
CD 3
- Stage Fright
- Alive and Kicking
- Broken Glass Park
- Ghostdancing
- Gloria
5 reviews
Simple Minds at Hampton
by Taff55 | 20-01-2012
The band are excellent, delivering a great set and on top form. The reservation is the backing vocalist whose contribution does not add anything to the sound and indeed detracts from it, which is a great pity. Every song she appears on suffers from that , any she is not on is great.
Simple Minds Alive and Kicking
by New Gold Dream | 08-09-2011
I played this recording and i enjoyed it immediately! Thankfully it is very well recorded and it does The Minds justice, and shows that they are still Alive and Kicking! Jims voice is excellent very forward with good ambiance, the rest of the band are coming through very well also. I listen on very high quality HI-FI equipment, so this is a very accurate report of the sound quality. On sound quality alone in my view this is a better recording than Live in the City of Light.
i'VE LOST COUNT..........
by Ian Sargeant | 07-07-2011
................of the times I've seen this band live - this was one of the best. I only live a few miles away from Hampton Court and was never going to miss this - super venue - tight and intimate - the rain didn't spoil it one iota - if anything it made it. Clad only in a t-shirt and shorts (no waterproofs for this 40-something eh kids) I was bang in front of Jim from the off. The mike wasn't working well for the first half of the show (which explains his comments halfway through) but for a lot of us the 'live karaoke' was great. The set list was good - though I'm always disappointed when Book of Brilliant Things doesn't get an airing - Earth that you Walk Upon was simply stunning, the bass riff of that song thudding into the Old Speckled Hen addled brain 3/4 of the way thorugh was the highlight for me. buy it - enjoy it.
Rain keeps falling down, down
by J Patten | 23-06-2011
Hampton Court Music Festival, June 16, 2011 It had been raining off and on all day in East Molesy, threatening to ruin a planned Simple Minds concert and pre-concert picnic at Hampton Court, the castle and home of Henry VIII. In the hours before the show, the sky cleared enough to allow picnickers to dine on the lawn. At 7:30, just as Jim Kerr and Simple Minds took the stage, the skies let loose and the rain poured heavily down for a good twenty minutes, thoroughly soaking the audience in what Kerr announced was a typical Scottish summer day: "Get used to it. We are." Surrounded by the historic brick walls of Henry's home, Kerr led the audience through the comparitively shorter history of Simple Minds, plucking songs from older albums like Sons and Fascination and New Gold Dream and, of course, drawing heavily from the Once Upon A Time album. While the bulk of the concert was made up of both obscure and famous oldies (Moscow Underground and Stagefright being the only modern songs performed), I never got the feeling that this was an oldies package tour of aging rockers. Kerr's amazingly energetic performance, plus some heavily reworked and rearranged older songs, made it clear that we were seeing a major arena rock band still in control and still at the height of their creative powers (this in sharp contrast to a rather tired sounding and lame performance of Don McLean, who had played at the Hampton Court Music Festival on the prior evening). And Henry's home, the majestic Hampton Court Palace, whose walls surrounded the band and the crowd that had come to see them? Even Kerr was noticably awed, acknowledging that the Scots had come a long way since Henry's time: "I can't believe they let a bunch of Scotsmen in here" were the first words out of Kerr's mouth as he took the stage and looked up and around, marveling at the historic structure. Henry's house returned the favor in a strange way. Kerr's voice, both at the show and in the recording, is gently echoed by the surrounding brick walls, adding a richness and depth to the sound that would be missing in a more open venue, while, strangely, the band's sound is echoed much less, ever so slightly in fact, thus avoiding a potentially cacophenous sound while adding a richness and depth to the recording in a subtle way that is only noticable when you listen for it. As a result, this is a gorgeous sounding recording, one of the best live recordings the band has made, of a memorable and historic performance. Whoever the engineer on the evening this recording was made (uncredited in the sadly non-existent liner notes), kudos to you on an utterly brilliant job. As for Simple Minds, if this performance is any indication, they still have a successful and long rock n roll ride ahead of them. Now if only they would wander over to the U.S. once every decade or so, I wouldn't have to travel all the way from America to the U.K. just to see them again.
Hampton Court Concert
by Gary Charman Review | 17-06-2011
One of the best concerts I have seen from them, the rest period from touring has done them the world of good as concert was full of energy. Jim Kerr vocals was superb and is one the few lead vocalists who interacts with the crowd throughout. The song's rolled off one after another and were as clear and crisp as ever, would quite happily stand in the poring rain again to see them. Ive got a copy of this cd already and it's superb quality.
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