Looking for Something?

LOOKING FOR SOMETHING??
Never Been Here Before?

Check The Right Sidebar


@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@


Follow The Sign To Where...

Showing posts with label Cinderella. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Cinderella. Show all posts

Sunday, March 16, 2025

Moscow Music and Peace Festival Westwood One In Concert I 90-34

Westwood One In Concert I 90-34 
broadcast date the week of August 20, 1990
The Moscow Music and Peace Festival

The Scorpions
Ozzy Osbourne
Gorky Park
Cinderella
Motley Crue
Bon Jovi

Recorded at:
Central Lenin Stadium
Moscow, U.S.S.R.

Recorded on:
August 12 & 13, 1989

01 Phil Hendrie - In Concert 90-34 Intro
02 Commercial - Miller (The Joneses)
03 Commercial - Beef Industry Council
04 Scorpions - Big City Nights
05 Scorpions - Dynamite
06 Commercial - Miller (The Rave-Ups)
07 Commercial - BFGoodrich
08 Commercial - Crunchy Nut Kudos
09 Phil Hendrie - In Concert 90-34 Break
10 Ozzy Osbourne - I Don't Know
11 Ozzy Osbourne - Paranoid
12 Commercial - Miller (Mason Ruffner)
13 Commercial - Flintstones Vitamins
14 Phil Hendrie - In Concert 90-34 Break
15 Gorky Park - Bang
16 Cinderella - 18 & Life
17 Cinderella - Shake Me
18 Commercial - Trident (Al Franken)
19 Commercial - Miller (Billy Hill)
20 Commercial - Greyhound
21 Phil Hendrie - In Concert 90-34 Break
22 Motley Crue - Looks That Kill
23 Motley Crue - Girls, Girls, Girls
24 Commercial - BFGoodrich
25 Commercial - Miller (The Joneses)
26 Commercial - U.S. Army
27 Phil Hendrie - In Concert 90-34 Break
28 Commercial - Miller (The Rave-Ups)
29 Bon Jovi - Wild In The Streets
30 Bon Jovi - You Give Love A Bad Name
31 Bon Jovi - Blood On Blood
32 Commercial - Miller (Mason Ruffner)
33 Commercial - Trident (Al Franken)
34 Commercial - Beef Industry Council
35 Phil Hendrie - In Concert 90-34 Break
36 Bon Jovi - Bad Medicine
37 Bon Jovi - Livin' On A Prayer
38 Phil Hendrie - In Concert 90-34 Outro
39 Commercial - Miller (Billy Hill)
40 Phil Hendrie - In Concert 90-34 Promo

Another from the Sam Eliot's Mustache Collection.

This is a companion piece to the recent digitizations done by JustDave from over at The New JDP.  A few weeks back, JustDave digitized Westwood One Superstar Concert 90-02 (syndicated broadcast date of Feb. 16-18, 1990).  Sam Eliot's Mustache had a copy of the In Concert 90-34 version. It's the same set of songs in the same order as the Superstars version... but Blood On Blood is a longer version than on the Superstars Concert. 

You can visit the most excellent The New JDP herehttps://thenewjdp.blogspot.com/

JustDave also tells me that there are differences "Westwood One #90-34 actually edits around Ozzy's swearing differently than on my #90-02. On #90-34 they edit around the cuss words and use parts of the sentence."

You'd think that Westwood One would master and edit the shows just once, and swap in different announcers and commercials, but we keep finding examples where the source material is edited differently but with the same set list.

JustDave and Sam Eliot's Mustache both had copies of the original satellite broadcast, so JustDave tackled converting both copies.

The In Concert version has the Miller Genuine Draft commercials that featured bands doing their jingle.  Unlike the Budweiser ads, the bands get their name mentioned.  My take on this is the Miller bands tended to be less well known acts, whereas the Bud bands already had airplay, and you were expected to be reminded of a recent hit that you'd already heard and recognize them just from their sound.
Yes, you can own his
used clothing...

There are two here I've never heard of (The Joneses, Billy Hill), and two I have (Mason Ruffner, The Rave-Ups).  Hey, the Rave-Ups were Molly Ringwald's favorite band!
We're missing the cues and disc labels on this one, but I put a stack of newspaper articles about the Moscow Peace Concert into a folder for your reading pleasure.

From Wiki:
The Moscow Music Peace Festival was a rock concert that took place in the USSR on 12 and 13 August 1989 at Central Lenin Stadium (now called Luzhniki Stadium) in Moscow. Occurring during the glasnost era, it was one of first hard rock and heavy metal acts from abroad that were granted permission to perform in the capital city, (being the first the ten shows the British band Uriah Heep played from 7 to 16 December 1987 at the Olympic Stadium). Over 100,000 people attended and it was broadcast live to 59 nations including MTV in the United States. The event promoted understanding between the Western Bloc and the Eastern Bloc during the Cold War and also raised money to help those addicted to drugs and alcohol. The concert featured six bands from abroad and three Russian bands. The concert ended with the various band members participating in jam session. An album and documentary were released.

It inspired the 1990 song "Wind of Change" by Scorpions, one of the bands that performed at the concert. The song became one of the best selling singles of all time.

Modeled as a "Russian Woodstock" the concert was a joint production by Russian musician Stas Namin and American music manager Doc McGhee.