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History in Five Songs Episode 349: Live Albums That Meant Little

History in Five Songs Episode 349: Live Albums That Meant Little

In Episode 349 of History in Five Songs with Martin Popoff, Martin contrasts his previous celebration of career-defining concert records by spotlighting “live albums that meant little," from messy hybrids and poorly timed releases to reputation-denting misfires that felt unnecessary, undercooked, or simply forgettable within their bands’ catalogs.

Pantheon - Podcasts for Music Lovers

March 11, 202635m 21s

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Show Notes

In Episode 349 of History in Five Songs with Martin Popoff, Martin contrasts his previous celebration of career-defining concert records by spotlighting “live albums that meant little," from messy hybrids and poorly timed releases to reputation-denting misfires that felt unnecessary, undercooked, or simply forgettable within their bands’ catalogs.

  1. Ozzy Osbourne – “Symptom of the Universe”
  2. Rolling Stones – “Twenty Flight Rock”
  3. Rainbow – “Kill the King”
  4. The Clash – “I Fought the Law”
  5. The Eagles – “The Long Run”


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