There and Now: Live in Vancouver 1968
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
There and Now: Live in Vancouver 1968 | ||
Live album by Phil Ochs | ||
Released | 1990 | |
Recorded | 1969, Vancouver, Canada | |
Genre | Folk |
There And Now: Live in Vancouver 1968 [sic] was a 1990 archival release of a concert in Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada, given by Phil Ochs at Vancouver Gardens on March 15, 1969. Backed solely by his guitar, except on "The Bells", where Allen Ginsberg played the bells, it showed a worn and weary Ochs destroyed by the disastrous aftermath of Chicago 1968. Presenting new tracks such as "The Doll House" and "William Butler Yeats Visits Lincoln Park And Escapes Unscathed" alongside classics such as "There But For Fortune", "Changes" and "The Highwayman", it is a presentation of the two eras of Ochs in one seventy-minute show.
[edit] Track listing
- "There But For Fortune" (P. Ochs, – 3:02)
- "Outside Of A Small Circle Of Friends" (P. Ochs, – 4:04)
- "Where Were You In Chicago? / William Butler Yeats Visits Lincoln Park And Escapes Unscathed" (P. Ochs, – 5:05)
- "The Scorpion Departs But Never Returns" (P. Ochs, – 4:41)
- "Pleasures Of The Harbor" (P. Ochs, – 7:07)
- "The World Began in Eden and Ended in Los Angeles" (P. Ochs, – 3:22)
- "The Bells" (E. A. Poe with musical interpretation by P. Ochs, – 3:12)
- "The Highwayman" (A. Noyes with musical interpretation by P. Ochs, – 6:54)
- "I Kill Therefore I Am" (P. Ochs, – 3:50)
- "The Doll House" (P. Ochs, – 4:08)
- "Aonther Age" (P. Ochs, – 4:56)
- "Changes" (P. Ochs, – 4:45)
- "Crucifixion" (P. Ochs, – 8:01)
- "I Ain't Marching Anymore" (P. Ochs, – 4:25)
[edit] Participants
- Phil Ochs - guitar, vocals
- Allen Ginsberg - bells (on "The Bells" only)