Tyrannosaurus Rex - There Was a Time: Live at Middle Earth September 23, 1967

Tyrannosaurus Rex - There Was a Time: Live at Middle Earth September 23, 1967
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Album Details

Title: There Was a Time: Live at Middle Earth September 23, 1967
Artist: Tyrannosaurus Rex
Release Date: 11/26/2002
Re-Released On: 9/25/2006
Label: Ascend Records, United States Of Distribution LTD.
Album Type(s): Greatest Hits, live
UPCs: 604388601721, 825947106123, 766487841924
Genre: Rock
Styles: Hard Rock, Prog-Rock, Glam Rock, Proto-Punk, Album Rock, British Folk-Rock
Moods: Confident, Gleeful, Theatrical, Amiable/Good-Natured, Boisterous, Cheerful, Energetic, Exuberant, Freewheeling, Irreverent, Swaggering, Campy, Carefree, Druggy, Earnest, Fun, Playful, Sexy, Stylish, Trippy, Whimsical, Wry, Delicate, Eerie, Gentle, Intimate, Sparse, Laid-Back/Mellow, Light, Rollicking, Sensual, Sexual, Silly
Total Copies: 0
Members Wishing: 4
Number of Discs/SwapaCD Credits: 1

Track Listings

  1. Hot Rod Mama
  2. Sara Crazy Child
  3. Scenescof
  4. Hippy Gumbo
  5. Graceful Fat Sheba
  6. Misty Mist
  7. The Wizard
  8. Mustang Ford
  9. Menthol Dan
  10. Beginning of Doves
  11. Child Star
  12. Dwarfish Trumpet Blues
  13. Knight
  14. Chateau in Virginia Waters
  15. Pictures of Purple People
  16. Lunacy's Back
  17. Scenescof [*]
  18. Child Star [*]
  19. Hot Rod Mama [Different Lyrics!]
  20. Dwarfish Trumpet Blues

Additional Releases

YearTypeLabelCatalog #
2006CDAscend Records2000
2002CDUnited States Of Distribution LTD.136

Other Editions

  • No other editions were found for this album.

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Album Review

What a find this is! On September 23, 1967, Tyrannosaurus Rex -- a simple acoustic duo of Marc Bolan and Steve Peregrin Took -- made their live debut at Middle Earth, one of London's most legendary psychedelic dungeons. And somebody was there to record it. There Was a Time might be no more than an above-average audience recording; might suffer from some serious distortion around Bolan's vocals; and might offer little hint of the symphonic grandiosity that Tyrannosaurus Rex would achieve on record just a few months later. But still, the 16-song selection captures the duo already in full control of their musical destiny. It's a mixed bag of material. Several of the songs had been road-tested by Bolan during his time with John's Children, but the lack of that band's electric assault is barely noticed. "Sara Crazy Child," "Mustang Ford," and "Menthol Dan," the three songs most familiar from John's Children's repertoire, are equally accomplished in this new format, and one reels from just how powerful and exciting an acoustic guitar and a set of bongoes can sound. Bolan and Took's resurrection of two even older numbers, the 1965 singles "The Wizard" and "Hippy Gumbo," is similarly successful. But it's the "new" material that most captivates the listener, songs destined either for the duo's eventual debut album, or for the various demo collections that now collect up Tyrannosaurus Rex's earliest rattlings. "Child Star," "Chateau in Virginia Waters," and "Lunacy's Back" are simply majestic, a point that is reiterated when the first-named reappears among four bonus tracks, credited to an unknown venue in late 1967, but most likely hailing from a John Peel session that November. The sound quality here, incidentally, is all but flawless, but even if it weren't -- a failing that does dog the rest of the disc -- still we'd have nothing to complain about. All too often, after all, a disc's "historical value" is such that other considerations (listenability among them) are held to be meaningless. Here the opposite is true. Forget the history, and just enjoy the show. ~ Dave Thompson, All Music Guide

Credits

NameCredits
Angela WallsLiner Notes
Peter SandersPhotography