Live at Shepperton '74

Live at Shepperton '74 is a live album by British rock band Uriah Heep, released in 1986. It was recorded live in studio in 1974 for radio broadcasting.[2]

Live at Shepperton '74
Live album by
Released10 November 1986
Recorded1974
StudioShepperton Studios, Surrey, England
GenreHard rock, progressive rock
Length31:00
LabelHeep
Uriah Heep live chronology
Live in Europe 1979
(1986)
Live at Shepperton '74
(1986)
Live in Moscow = Сам В Москве
(1988)
Professional ratings
Review scores
SourceRating
AllMusic[1]
Collector's Guide to Heavy Metal6/10[2]

Track listing

Original version

Side A
  1. "Easy Livin'" (Hensley) – 2:57
  2. "So Tired" (Box, Byron, Hensley, Kerslake, Thain) – 3:58
  3. "I Won't Mind" (Box, Byron, Hensley, Kerslake, Thain) – 5:41
  4. "Something or Nothing" (Box, Hensley, Thain) – 2:51
Side B
  1. "Stealin'" (Hensley) – 4:42
  2. "Love Machine" (Hensley, Byron, Box) – 2:16
  3. "The Easy Road" (Hensley) – 2:43
  4. "Rock 'n' Roll Medley" – 5:52

1999 version

  1. "Easy Livin'" (Hensley) – 2:57
  2. "So Tired" (Box, Byron, Hensley, Kerslake, Thain) – 3:58
  3. "I Won't Mind" (Box, Byron, Hensley, Kerslake, Thain) – 5:41
  4. "Sweet Freedom" (Hensley) - 6:59
  5. "Something Or Nothing" (Box, Hensley, Thain) – 3:21
  6. "The Easy Road" (Hensley) – 2:43
  7. "Stealin'" (Hensley) – 4:42
  8. "Love Machine" (Hensley, Byron, Box) – 2:16
  9. "Rock 'n' Roll Medley" – 7:46
  10. "Out-Takes (a. The Easy Road, b. Sleazy Livin', c. Easy Livin')" – 5:28
  11. "Stealin'" (Hensley) – 6:19

Personnel

Uriah Heep
gollark: Do cloud providers start stuff that much faster than generic VPS ones? All the VPS providers I've used can manage initialisation in a few minutes.
gollark: But it still seems like a big price delta given that, like you said, they have ridiculous economies of scale.
gollark: I have an old tower server which costs maybe £5/month to run, which provides ~4x the CPU/RAM and ~10x the disk I'd get from a cloud provider at similar pricing, plus I could install a spare GPU when I wanted that. This is a very extreme case since I am entirely ignoring my time costs on managing it and don't have as much redundancy as them.(Edit: also terrible internet connectivity, and colocation would be expensive)
gollark: Possibly also that you can hire fewer sysadmins? But I'm not sure they're that expensive if you have a lot of developers anyway.
gollark: I think the argument for cloud is mostly that it's much faster to scale than "have a bunch of servers in your office", but it seems like you pay an insane amount for that.

References

  1. "AllMusic review".
  2. Popoff, Martin (1 November 2005). The Collector's Guide to Heavy Metal: Volume 2: The Eighties. Burlington, Ontario, Canada: Collector's Guide Publishing. p. 380. ISBN 978-1-894959-31-5.
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