Velvet Underground: Live with Lou Reed
Label: Mercury
Sadly, outside of a handful of audience tapes of extremely variable fidelity, no one thought to make a live recording of The Velvet Underground during their 1967-68 peak period with John Cale prodding Lou Reed
into remarkable flights of noise rock fancy. However, in 1969 a VU fan
who was a recording engineer brought a reel-to-reel tape machine to two
shows the band played during an engagement at a club in Dallas called
The End of Cole Avenue; a few months later, the band played The Matrix
in San Francisco, where a tape machine had been installed into the
hall's sound system, and the band was allowed to record their set. Five
years later, long after The Velvet Underground had collapsed and Lou Reed's
solo career was on the rise, Mercury Records compiled highlights of
the Dallas and San Francisco tapes into a two-record set, 1969: Velvet Underground Live,
and it is without question the best (legally-released) document of this
band's considerable strengths as a live act. While they were a somewhat
more sedate band with Doug Yule on bass rather than Cale, they still had plenty of life left in them at this stage of the game; there are few voyages into the sonic unknown here, but Lou Reed and Sterling Morrison had matured into one of rock's most potent guitar combinations, Maureen Tucker was as distinctive a drummer as even picked up a pair of mallets, and with Doug Yule
at her side they comprised a truly superb rhythm section. Sounding
tight, confident, and passionate on every cut, this set finds the band
visiting highlights from all four of their studio albums, as well as a
handful of previously unreleased numbers. From the delicacy of "New Age"
and "I'll Be Your Mirror" to the rave-up energy of "What Goes On" and
"White Light/White Heat," 1969: Velvet Underground Live captures the many sides of their musical personality with commendable skill. - All Music Guide



