Fats Domino
Umbria Jazz Festival
Stadio Renato Curi, Perugia, Italy
July 11, 1985

Source : Video SBD > low gen cassette (c60) (courtesy of M.R. archive)

Editing : Zoom H4n (16/44) > Sound Forge (pitch, tracking & volume) > Wave > TLH (sbe aligned) > Flac 8

Traders Den - May 4, 2020

Pitch & Tracking by kingrue upload #2502
------------------------------------------------

This is audio taken from the pro-shot video, it's a low gen cassette.

It played a little fast, so i used the video as a guideline to dial in the correct pitch.

You can watch 1 song "After Hours" on youtube.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WNJLl150vuU

Check samples., it's pretty good quality.


Total Time = 55:13

Set list
01 Instrumental > Fats Intro
02 I'm Walking
03 Blueberry Hill
04 Instrumental
05 I Want To Walk You Home -- dropout @ 0:42 --
06 Shake Rattle and Roll
07 After Hours
08 I'm In Love Again
09 Jambalaya -- tape break @
10 Instrumental
11 I'm Gonna Be A Wheel Someday
12 Ain't That A Shame
13 Blue Monday
14 I'm In The Mood For Love
15 My Girl Josephine
16 When The Saints Go Marching In


Umbria Jazz Festival held 5 - 14 July 1985

https://www.umbriajazz.it/en/storia/umbria-jazz-1985/

A miracle was witnessed at Perugia’s football stadium: the divine, inaccessible Miles Davis, who loved to play with his back turned on the audience, stepped down from the stage with his famous red trumpet and played for some time (and brilliantly) amidst te public. Once again the Festival got off to a start in the city of Terni, with the magnificent Liberation Music Orchestra, the realisation of Charlie Hadendi’s musical dream of combining passionate music with his political commitment in favour of the third world, and with McCoy Turner.The Orchestra’s concert was not one of its best, but John Coltrane’s former pianist, brought in at the very last moment to replace Jaco Pastorius left behind in New York after a moment of madness had seen him burn his own passport, offered an intense, virtuoso display of musical bravura. The memorable events held in the central arena (the “Frontone”) that year – apart from the digression created in the stadium due to the excessive number of spectators – included Art Blakey’s irresistible Jazz Messengers; Horace Silver back in Umbria with his quintet, the belly rolls of Fats Domino at the piano, together with Stevie Ray Vaughan’s concert in the city square.