I skipped reviewing this one by accident..
Opening standard. Nirvana at 1:48 (no Vibration of Life build-up).
The Nirvana section is well-played and Page noodles well. Mike's
solo-section at 2:30 is dark and freakish as it often is, and he gets
low on that damn 'doc of his. Pre-charge section is good, and
Trey
sustains the First Note well.. and jams a bit. Jamming around
the
second shot at the Note is decent but not anything special.
"Boy" at 5:05. Mike vigorously snaps his 'doc in this BMGS/WUDMTF
segment!! Decent segment but nothun sahweet. Tramps jam
begins
around 7:04 with Mike giving the signals, and Page noodling away on
the Hammond. Page gets going pretty damn well in here, fwiw,
and
really JAMS on da hammond..
At 8:26 the jam segment begins, and Trey almost immediately rips it
up
with a theme that he repeats a little bit.. before he begins
melodiously soloing. Trey is extremely active in here, soloing
passionately and vibrantly, as if he were trying to win a bet.
He
gets into the upper reaches of the 'doc around 10:15 and soon begins
trilling for a climactic close. Short.
Bass and drums at 10:33 and it is fairly straightforward. Mike
is
pretty repetitive and doesn't truly inspire. Still a pleasant,
reasonably melodious and active effort, which picks up a little steam
around 11:25. Fish's accompaniment is typically strong, but certainly
nothing profound. Just fades out... that's different.
Closing WUDMTF segment at 11:49. And ensuing vocal jam.
Trey
vocalizes "Roots" (with rolled "r") a few times in the beginning.
And
at about 12:50 I thought Trey might vocalize "Makisupa Policeman"'s
theme.. but it is dropped after 4 seconds. CUT!!! At 13:20, the
vocal
jam just ends, since my copy cuts here. Total time is probably
around
15 minutes. C+ rating easily for this YEM. Trey's soloing
is great,
but it is typically great, in my opinion.
two cents
cough(ack)wheeze420