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Renaissance - Academy Of Music 1974 CD (album) cover

ACADEMY OF MUSIC 1974

Renaissance

Symphonic Prog


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4 stars Despite it's horrid album cover painting, which I doubt the band had any control over, especially after the passing of guitarist/songwriter Michael Dunford, who had owned many of the group's copyrighted materials, Live At The Academy Of Music 1974 is both a concert and professional high point for Renaissance as it solidified the band's Tri-state area reputation as well as paving the way for the group's acclaimed Carnegie Hall concerts which took place the following year in 1975.

Live At The Academy is another Renaissance concert album, a double CD this time, put out by Pyramid Records that has no credits as to the source of a the radio broadcast tape. The broadcast was originally aired on WNEW FM Radio, who were one of the major FM radio supporters and proponents of the group, especially in their Ashes Are Burning and Turn Of The Cards album release and touring years from 1973-74.

Joining the band for probably their first orchestral concert was a twenty four piece orchestra which pumped up both the band and the concert crowd. Indeed, as this is probably the most raucous Renaissance audience that you will probably ever hear recorded. Everyone from vocalist Annie Haslam through to drummer Terry Sullivan raised their game and the performances are stellar. Especially prominent were the fantastic bass runs of John Camp, who also sounds in exceptional form as a backing vocalist to Haslam. John Tout's fingers literally dance around his piano in an enthusiastic speed and style which is quite unusual and welcome from him.

The concert starts with the now familiar opener Can You Understand? that features Annie in wonderful vocalise and scat style colorings in this song's wonderful melodies. Outstanding.

The concert focuses almost exclusively on songs from Ashes Are Burning and Turn Of The Cards and it's odd not to hear the song in it's now familiar extended encore version. For this concert, Andy Powell, from Wishbone Ash, is once again a guest performer and does a fantastic solo as well as mirroring John Tout's synths in the song's compelling instrumental section. What is also odd and now idiosyncratic is that the band reprise the title rack Prologue from the mark II line up's debut album.

The sound quality is more than decent and sound's exactly as a FM radio broadcast would at the time with an exaggerated top end (bright sounding) along with some very good bottom end that was really never heard in that era's technology of 15 inch woofers and no subwoofers. Also adding to the sound quality is the excellent "in your face" sound mix that shows off every instrument without causing the sound mix to sound congested.

Live At The Academy is defiantly not for the audiophile as some minor stage buzzing, feedback and offstage chatter can be heard at times, but the band's stellar performance makes it a must have for Renaissance fans. 4 stars.

Report this review (#1407407)
Posted Friday, May 1, 2015 | Review Permalink
Aussie-Byrd-Brother
SPECIAL COLLABORATOR
Honorary Collaborator
4 stars Despite the sad loss of long-time members Michael Dunford and John Tout, there has been a lot of activity and releases keeping symphonic progressive legends Renaissance in the spotlight over the recent years. Live concert DVD's of the band performing some of their classic Seventies albums in their entirety, Annie Haslam's vivid and imaginative art works, a new studio album from a reworked version of the band with `Grandine il Vento' in 2013, and archived recordings from the group in their prime being dusted off for a fresh release like this album. `Academy of Music 1974' is a double CD that showcases the band performing alongside a 24 piece orchestra from the 17th of May of that year, and they deliver a set of favourite tracks from the first three albums that featured Annie as the leading lady of the group.

Thankfully the orchestra only enhances the performances during this concert, never leading the way, overwhelming the band or stealing the attention away from the main musicians. Although the compositions don't differ too much from the studio versions, there's an added urgency to the playing and a livelier energy that long-time fans of the band will appreciate. Annie's voice is vibrant yet more relaxed and perfectly controlled, there's an added warmth to the acoustic guitars, and Jon Camp's thrashing upfront bass mixed thick and upfront is especially satisfying. Superior versions of `Ashes are Burning' (showcasing some wilder guitar soloing in the extended instrumental middle from guest Andy Powell of Wishbone Ash), `Can You Understand?', `Carpet of the Sun' and the classic opener `Prologue' all feature.

But the band most seem to relish playing the new material from their just released `Turn of the Cards' album (they even mention between tracks that it "just came out a few days ago"). The orchestra rises to the occasion for grand interpretations of `Running Hard' and `Mother Russia', Annie's voice is full of wounded purity on the darkly regal majesty of `Black Flame', `Cold is Being' is even more of a chilly mournful dirge than the studio version, and there's a snapping driving heaviness to Terrence Sullivan's drumming on `Things I Don't Understand.'

Always an enjoyable aspect of Renaissance live shows is the cheerful, charming onstage banter between the group members. Considering their music was mostly always serious and dramatic, the band members are light-hearted, amusing and genuine in their interaction with the audience, and the occasionally rowdy crowd in between songs seem to be loving every minute of the show. And why wouldn't they? They're witnessing an amazingly talented band at the peak of their abilities delivering an impeccable performance!

This is a companion release to the `DeLane Lea Studios 1973' CD released earlier this year, and like that one, despite some audio imperfections popping up here and there throughout the recording, this set is certainly fancier than some mere `official bootleg'. After overdosing on the studio versions for so many years, it's a welcome and refreshing change to hear a different kind of life breathed into these classic works, and `Academy of Music 1974' is highly recommended for all fans of this defining and important symphonic prog band.

Four stars.

Report this review (#1453217)
Posted Friday, August 14, 2015 | Review Permalink
3 stars This live album is rather good sounding. Mostly live-recordings salvaged from the beginning of the seventies have a terrible bootleg-quality.

Mostly when it was recorded for radio, the quality is much better. I don't know the history of this live album, but it sounds good. Although there's a lot of audience talking throughout the recording. Wich is rather annoying. So apart from playing the album as a novelty, I won't come back to this album rather often.

The tracklist isn't really suprising, the band play their stand-out tracks. Because the band wasn't a singles-band, they could just go on and play their 10+ minute epics. Annie is of course outstanding, but that is no suprise. The rest of the band is really tight, and one of the tightest progbands from that era.

Anway, because I'm a fan, I'm rather happy listening to it, but I cannot imagine other music-lovers to have an interest. So I recommend this one to Renaissance-fans and not so much to other listeners.

Report this review (#1910575)
Posted Saturday, March 31, 2018 | Review Permalink
Warthur
PROG REVIEWER
4 stars Buyer beware: as well as this show being released by itself in 2015 via Cleopatra's Purple Pyramid imprint, it is also now available in Esoteric's remaster of Turn of the Cards. Therefore, if you have the Esoteric set - or you intend to get it in the future - you'll get this with it (minus the garish artwork!), so there's no need to get it separately in that instance.

Renaissance hit New York's Academy of Music in 1974 to perform accompanied by a live orchestra, and Academy of Music 1974 - with its generic title and its bafflingly inappropriate cover art - presents that set. Of the 9 compositions here there's 1 from Prologue, 3 from Ashes Are Burning, and five from Turn of the Cards, with only I Think Of You from that album not represented.

It's no surprise that the tracklist includes nothing from the first two Renaissance albums (the self-titled one and Illusion); indeed, the DeLane Lea live album from 1973 shows they'd exiled all those songs from their setlist even before Turn of the Cards came out, and it's really best to think of the Haslam-fronted Renaissance as a brand new band with some aesthetic ideas in common with the band's original incarnation. But it's particularly impressive that Renaissance were able to fill out a satisfying concert setlist with just the material from three albums - really two, since Prologue is basically offered as an encore.

It just goes to show that they'd come into an all-killer no-filler phase of their career. The vast majority of the songs on here would become regular concert staple of theirs - which does have the side effect that if you have a healthy collection of Renaissance live albums, you've probably already heard live renditions of a lot of these - but that's just a mark of how good the songs really are. Black Flame and Cold Is Being would vanish from the band's live set in due course - they'd both be revived for live runthroughs of the entire Turn of the Cards album in 2011, of course, but this is more or less the only official source for live performances of those two songs. (Things I Don't Understand would also slip out of sight a bit, but would be revived later - it's on the Dreams & Omens live concert from 1978, for instance.)

Since the concert was recorded for radio, the sound quality is overall excellent, though there's a couple of moments of feedback which slightly hurt the flow but do at least provide evidence that this was indeed a live recording - and that the band and orchestra were doing a dynamite job of presenting this material in a live context. It's striking to think that a year or so before Camel conquered the world with The Snow Goose, Renaissance were already showing how a prog band and an orchestra could work together vastly more harmoniously than many clunkier attempts to fuse the two in the past.

Report this review (#2677628)
Posted Saturday, January 29, 2022 | Review Permalink

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