Procol Harum: Live at the Union Chapel is a document of the final efficiency of the band's 2003 world tour, taped on December 12 prior to a small London crowd. The location was a passionate option. As a performance room, the Gothic church is at when both intimate as well as grand, a best mirror for the band's strange however strong mix of bar-band boogie and classically tinged prog rock. The 21-song performance includes 8 options from The Well's on Fire, Procol Harum's 2003 studio cd. The majority of the newer tunes are solid (especially "The Concern" as well as "An Old English Dream"), and also the band, having actually honed its plans to a T, does a phenomenal task of mixing its recent music with its older material. Singer-pianist Gary Brooker as well as organist Matthew Fisher, both initial members, blaze a trail via classic faves like "Homburg," "Conquistador," as well as their never-ceasing 1967 hit "A Whiter Color of Pale."
Procol Harum: Live at the Union Chapel is a document of the final efficiency of the band's 2003 world tour, taped on December 12 prior to a small London crowd. The location was a passionate option. As a performance room, the Gothic church is at when both intimate as well as grand, a best mirror for the band's strange however strong mix of bar-band boogie and classically tinged prog rock. The 21-song performance includes 8 options from The Well's on Fire, Procol Harum's 2003 studio cd. The majority of the newer tunes are solid (especially "The Concern" as well as "An Old English Dream"), and also the band, having actually honed its plans to a T, does a phenomenal task of mixing its recent music with its older material. Singer-pianist Gary Brooker as well as organist Matthew Fisher, both initial members, blaze a trail via classic faves like "Homburg," "Conquistador," as well as their never-ceasing 1967 hit "A Whiter Color of Pale."