1997-April-4 Leon Russell Flood Volume 3: The Concert Of Unknown Music IMAC Theatre Huntington, NY Disc 1 - 79.28 1 Arrival On Stage .18 2 Delta Lady 3.34 3 Watching The Sun Go Down 2.40 4 This Love I Have For You 2.19 5 Lost Inside The Blues 3.17 6 Unknown Song 2.24 7 Dark Carousel 3.23 8 My Hummingbird 4.04 9 Magic Mirror 4.03 10 Strange Power Of Love 3.37 11 Unknown Song 3.12 12 Let The Good Times Roll 2.57 13 I'm So Lonesome I Could Cry 1.55 14 Tightrope 2.12 15 Out In The Woods 3.40 16 Band Intros .26 17 This Masquerade 5.23 18 A Song For You 5.04 19 Unknown Song 2.41 20 Jumpin' Jack Flash 3.05 21 Don't Let My Suit Hang Long 5.19 22 Paint It Black > Kansas City 3.45 Notes that came with this recording: Finally, welcome to Volume 3 of the Leon Russell Flood!! Have you ever wished for a show where your favorite artist performed material that you never heard before, and that never really came out afterwards? This is the closest I can get you to a show where Leon Russell performs mostly unheard music. Even the songs you do know are arranged so differently as to make it take a moment to realize exactly which song this is. Check out the "Out in the Woods". The following is mostly conjecture, but I believe it to be true. If you know otherwise, please correct me: The "Blues" album, not to be confused with "Guitar Blues", was put out by Leon and Teddy Jack and probably only sold at their concerts. This is based upon the fact that there's no attestation to it on their website, plus Amazon and other collectible record sites do not list this album. The gold-colored pressed CD states: "produced by Teddy Jack and Dad". Could it be that this was done at a time when they weren't doing so well, and the CD was put out to boost revenues? This, to me, is the ultimate high: Going to a concert, and finding privately-produced record albums. There were rumors during the vinyl era that private LPs were sold at concerts (Peter Townsend comes to mind), but it had never happened before to me. Since then, Leslie West has also sold music in that fashion. A mind-twister for you: When an artist sells his own material privately, is it still a bootleg? Technical Notes: Taped on cassette on a Sony D3, with a German Fisher lapel mike. There is a tape flip between Let The Good Times Roll and I'm So Lonesome I Could Cry. The microphone slipped off on the second side of the tape, resulting in a decline of sound quality. The right channel was boosted up in volume 6.3db to compensate for resulting volume loss. No noise reduction was used. This is 70 min of a 90 min show, it's all I have. The 20 minute loss came from accidently fast-forwarding the first part of the tape before recording, a known issue with the D3. This is the master tape. A couple of the unknown songs I couldn't remember the titles, please help me out if you know! Enjoy! A DoinkerTape This is a test of my new cassette/digital recording process, please let me know if you like the results: Lineage: MC > Tascam112mkII cassette deck with balanced outputs > Echo Layla 3G processor > Sound Forge 6.0 > Flac Frontend