Monday, May 15, 2023

Pendragon - 1986 - 9:15 Live

Pendragon 
1986
9:15 Live



01. Victims Of Life (2:37)
02. Higher Circles (3:29)
03. Circus (6:57)
04. Leviathan (6:22)
05. Red Shoes (3:03)
06. Alaska (8:41)
07. The Black Knight (10:05)
08. Please (4:48) (bonus studio track)
09. Dark Summer's Day (5:31)
10. Excalibur (6:30)

Fudge Smith: Drums
Clive Nolan: Keyboards
Peter Gee: Bass
Nick Barrett: Vocals, Guitars



Recorded at one of the band's regular appearances at the Marquee, the main London home of the neo-prog revival in the 1980s, 9:15 Live captures Pendragon in smashing form, presenting the best songs from their debut album, The Jewel, as well as the instrumental Please and Red Shoes, the studio version of which would be the band's next single preceding the Kowtow album.

The album marks Clive Nolan's entry to the band, original keyboardist Rik Carter having departed. (He'd later be more of a presence on the goth scene, appearing on releases by The Mission and All About Eve.) The Jewel material, being quite keyboard-heavy, represents the perfect chance for Clive to showcase his skills; his lively interpretations of Rik's original keyboard contributions lend these songs a spark which makes this album an interesting companion to The Jewel.

The album also shows how Nick Barrett is an endearing frontman; the audience can't help but be caught up in his enthusiasm and good cheer. The mixture of radio-friendly, melodic pop-prog and more progressive songs is more immediately gripping than it is on The Jewel (which took a long time to grow on me to the extent that it did), perhaps because the catchy pop tunes carry more energy live, and the live portion of the album concludes with an absolutely incredible rendition of The Black Knight, a song which I don't think Pendragon ever managed to top in the first decade or so of their existence.

Aside from Red Shoes, which just isn't quite as solid a song as the others, this is a an enjoyable live effort, and I would recommend it to anyone interested in the early days of neo-prog, though Pendragon's early material tended to be a little shakier than that of their peers and arguably their music only really firmed up on The World.

The first Pendragon album featuring the now classic line up of Barret - Nolan - Gee - Smith. And it shows. This early live album is a proof of how good they were from the start and promises a lot (which, after a little while, was fullfilled). At the time a live album seemed to be a little too soon, since the band had only a LP out, The Jewel. But now I treasure this CD as a good look at their first years and it's really interesting to hear how Pendragons's classic line up gels from the very beginning, and the songs are actually better sounding here then on The Jewel. 9:15 (the title refers to the time the show started) has a good production for its time and shows the band playing in front of a fanatical crowd. Those were the times! The addtional studio tracks (one in the orignal LP and two on the CD version) are ok, but they'd be much better if they were live versions of the same, since those songs appear on various best of CDs and early albums re-releases.

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