Rod McKuen - Sold Out at Carnegie Hall (1969) 2-LP Vinyl • Live Birthday Concert
Catalog Number:
2WS-1794Musical Styles:
1960s, Ballad, Country Pop, Folk Pop, Pop Rock, VocalSleeve Grade:
Very Good Plus (VG+)Record Grade:
Very Good (VG)Condition Details:
Vinyl plays with crackles and a few light-clicks (play-graded). Double LP. Gate-fold cover has a few creases near edges; light-scuffing on inner-gate; heavier scuffing and tiny surface abrasions (front/back); slight discoloration with darker discoloration spots (front/inner-gate); surface impressions (front/back/inner-gate). Inner-sleeves are generic white. Spine is easy-to-read (printed off-center) with mild-wear and discoloration. Some shelf-wear along top-edge, heavier wear along bottom-edge and corners. Openings are crisp with signs of light use and divots. (Not a cut-out.)
Tracks:
- Rod McKuen Overture Part 1: If You Go Away / A Cat Named Sloopy / So Long, Stay Well / Doesn't Anybody Know My Name / The World I Used To Know / Kaleidoscope
- So Long, Stay Well
- The Importance Of The Rose
- I've Been To Town
- Everybody's Rich But Us
- A Cat Named Sloopy
- Bend Down And Touch Me
- Joanna
- The Things Men Do
- Gee, It's Nice To Be Alone
- Trashy
- Stanyan Street
- If You Go Away
- Seasons In The Sun
- Rod McKuen Overture Part 2: The World I Used To Know / Jean / Joanna / I'll Catch The Sun / Listen To The Warm / The World I Used To Know
- Kaleidoscope
- Ally, Alley, Oxen Free
- I'll Catch The Sun
- Do It Yourself Protest Songs & Don't Ban The Bomb
- We
- The Ivy That Clings To The Wall
- People On Their Birthdays
- Champion Charlie Brown
- Love's Been Good To Me
- The Art Of Catching Trains
- To Watch The Trains
- Amsterdam
- Play Off: The World I Used To Know, Happy Birthday
- Merci Beaucoup
- Jean
- Closing Remarks
About The Record:
Sold Out at Carnegie Hall, by Rod McKuen, include some stellar liner notes written by Ed Habib. "This album is a documentary of Rod McKen's birthday concert at Carnegie Hall, April 29, 1969...The list of what Rod McKuen has done with his life is staggering: poet, classical composer, writer of film scores and screenplays, lumberjack, best-selling recording artist, entertainer, composer, actor, cowboy, etc. But somehow, what Rod is doing with our lives is more important. He cares and sometimes he gets clobbered for it. Not on that Tuesday night in April. If you were there you know. Robert Sherman of the Times concluded his review of the concert by saying, 'Mr. McKuen would be pleased to know that Odetta, the folk singer, had to spend much of the concert in the rear of the hall because, as she explained, I can't dance in my seat.' As a human being, as a writer and in his performing Rod McKuen is totally honest. It is perhaps a tribute to this honesty that even though he forgot some of his own lyrics during the concert and was still attempting to master a song he had written with Henry Mancini only days earlier, these forgotten lyrics and that less than perfect performance of the new Mancini-McKuen song remain a part of this album. Far from flawing an otherwise perfect concert, they add to it."