Search - Style Council :: In Concert

In Concert
Style Council
In Concert
Genres: Alternative Rock, Pop, Rock
 
20 track compilation of live recordings from London, Tokyo, Newcastle, Melbourne, Dusseldorf and Edinburgh, 1983-1987. Includes covers of 'One Nation Under A Groove', 'Hanging On A Memory' & 'Meeting Over Yonder', plus...  more »

     
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CD Details

All Artists: Style Council
Title: In Concert
Members Wishing: 3
Total Copies: 0
Label: Universal I.S.
Release Date: 2/16/1998
Album Type: Import, Live
Genres: Alternative Rock, Pop, Rock
Styles: New Wave & Post-Punk, Adult Contemporary
Number of Discs: 1
SwapaCD Credits: 1
UPCs: 731453314320, 0731453314320, 0602517838222, 766484348426, 731453314320

Synopsis

Album Description
20 track compilation of live recordings from London, Tokyo, Newcastle, Melbourne, Dusseldorf and Edinburgh, 1983-1987. Includes covers of 'One Nation Under A Groove', 'Hanging On A Memory' & 'Meeting Over Yonder', plus classics from Paul Weller & Mick Talbot's duo like 'Long Hot Summer', 'Here's One That Got Away', 'My Ever Changing Moods', 'Speak Like A Child' and 'Move On Up'. 1998 Polydor release. Only 25 available at this special low price!! Standard jewel case.
 

CD Reviews

More Evidence Proving They Were Groovilicious
TomKat | Arroyo Grande, CA | 12/01/2003
(5 out of 5 stars)

"If you're a Style Council fan you must own this album. Phony musicians stink when recorded live but The Style Council sounded even better live than in the studio ("Home and Abroad" is also a necessity). This disc spans several years and features covers of some soul gems along with their own songs. They groove so hard on One Nation Under a Groove, Meeting (Over) Up Yonder and Hanging On To A Memory to justify the cost. The only downers are some snippets of Mick Talbot singing lead (oy vey) and a couple mediocre tracks, but those are minor trifles with this gem for us Council fans."
A rare chance to hear them play live!
Michael Erisman | Seattle, WA | 11/12/2003
(5 out of 5 stars)

"The Style Council was one of the more difficult bands of the 1980's to categorize. A little bit new wave pop, some jazz, some house, some blues, some ballads, some rock and roll and all thrown together with excellent musicians and political lyrics. Band leader and singer Paul Weller has always been one of the more talented songwriters, from The Jam to his solo work today, his band the Style Council was his most experimental and unrestrained musical period. What more can you ask for from the 80's?This CD is a compilation of hits and unreleased tracks recorded live. This is a gift in that the Style Council rarely played live in the States. Included are the super hits (in Europe anyway) like "Long Hot Summer", "My Ever Changing Moods", and "Money Go Round". This is the slow version of "My Ever Changing Moods" from the Cafe Blue album, as opposed to the pop US hit version. What makes this a classic and wonderful release though are the unreleased tracks such as the blues inspired Curtis Mayfield hit "Move on Up", the Parliament song "One Nation Under a Groove" and the underrated classic "Heavens Above". The musical styles on this CD are typical of them, a little bit of everything. In addition, the liner notes and insert are excellent. If you are unfamiliar with the Style Council, check out this rare chance to hear them play at their best, live."
One of the best live albums period
emvb | SEATTLE | 05/13/2004
(5 out of 5 stars)

"For those of us who follow all of wellers work from the jam to present day- we know wellers quality of songwriting (great lyrics- diverse music- and true belief in his own talent. For some the council betrayed the working class ethics of the jam but to some this was the bravest and lasting statement of the eighties. though the style council lost the plot"as weller would say" after the our favourite shop album- this live album which includes only few songs after that period" mainly "heavens above" which is excellent indeed. what you get here is all those older classics delivered in a horndrenched wah wah guitared juggernaut that is superbly recorded and played with a buyount energy seldom seen today. Live weller and crew sound better than the album versions- songs like my ever changing moods are delivered in a faster more passionate style- weller actually has abit of that anger lingering. Big boss groove actually grooves- ( the mantra of "get on up' is growled by weller in his best soul voice) the original sparseness of the whole point of no return is flushed out in a full jazz number that transcends the original. The playing and arrangements are all top class and guitar wise paul has never sounded more confident and skilled. there are a few tunes that dont work mostly cuts that are unfamilair in the first place or covers-though the move on up mayfield tune is great. most interesting is the guitar and voice driven version of a stones throw away (without the melancholy string arrangment) that comes off like a raw jam tune. Otherwise you get all the soulpopfunkr&b delivered with wellers sharpedged political tongue that sings bout love-uniting-about youth and self-empowerment with some bitterness and that angry young man vibe that made wellers experiment more success than failure. A very good if not great album that outshines any jam or solo weller live album ive heard( and ive heard most of them.) strings-horns-wah-social commentary- DC LEES soaring vocals- steve whites superb drumming- the fingerskills on the keys with mickey talbot- and a youthful weller who believed in it all without any regret. Essential for style council-weller fans- and proof that all eighties music wasnt synthsized soulless bombast."