Live Scenes from New York
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Average customer review:Track Listing
- Regression
- Overture 1928
- Strange Deja Vu
- Through My Words
- Fatal Tragedy
- Beyond This Life
- John And Theresa Solo Spot
- Through Her Eyes
- Home
- Dance Of Eternity
- One Last Time
- Spirit Carries On
- Finally Free
- Metropolis
- Mirror
- Just Let Me Breathe
- Acid Rain
- Caught In A New Millennium
- Another Day
- Jordan Rudess Keyboard Solo
- Erotomania
- Voices
- Silent Man
- Learning To Live
- Change Of Seasons
Product Details
- Amazon Sales Rank: #46546 in Music
- Released on: 2001-09-24
- Number of discs: 3
- Formats: Box set, Enhanced, Live
- Dimensions: .18 pounds
Editorial Reviews
CD Description
'Live Scenes From New York' highlights Dream Theater's legendary live performances. The set comprises of a complete live version of the album, 'Scenes From A Memory' and a selection of tracks from Dream Theater's various studio recordings.Also included is unreleased video footage of the song Another Day.
Customer Reviews
They've done it again!
Once again dream theater have managed to stun me!
They have got to be one of the best live bands to ever grace the rock circuit. They are definately crowd pleasers.
From Jordan Rudess and John Petrucci's amazing ability to combine guitar and keyboard smoothly and make it look simple, to Mike Portnoys sheer intensity and ability to groove in odd time signatures and combining with John Myung on the bass to lay down the foundations for all 25 of these great tracks. How can I forget the unmistakable vocals of James LaBrie, truly one of a kind. Most of all there ability to combine all there instrumental talents in to co-writing there own tracks, there is one word for this highly talented group of musicians........ awesome!
Amazing amazing amazing
I held off DT for some time, because I always feared they were a little up their own you-know-whats, but I couldn't have been more wrong. I'm a big jazz fan with a rock background, and kinda left it all behind, sticking some Whitesnake or something on for a riff fix every once in a while. DT satisfy the muso in me, and somehow their music appeals to the teenage rocker in me and the adult jazz buff. As musicians they are impeccable, and they rock like nothing on earth.
I started with Live at Budokan, and thought that it couldn't get better. It can. Imagine that - this live set blows even that away. It's tighter, and yet seems more varied.
Oh, just get it. Now.
Amazing tour de force, if you're into a "live" sound
DT play a set of about 3 hours worth of their material (including the complete "Scenes from a memory" album and --- as an encore --- all of "A change of seaons"). It's great material, and these guys are AWESOME musicians (the singer, the only one without a conservatory degree, sounds understandably fatigued near the end of the performance --- although he's in much better shape than on Once in a Livetime), but the polish of their studio albums is missing (this sounds like a direct-to-2-track DAT recording, and at times the mix is just not up to snuff). If you love "live" sounds, or if you've seen the band live and want to recall the experience, get this album. If you're new to DT, get any of their studio albums instead --- in fact, just get *all* of them!





