Back by popular demand ;-) the Bootleg Top 100 downloads!
Released today on QOL:
Killer Queen: 23/04/1975 (Kobe, Japan)
Xmas at the Beeb: 24/12/1975 (London, UK)
Warehouse Copenhagen: 12/05/1977 (Copenhagen, Denmark)
Walter B. wrote: Back by popular demand ;-) the Bootleg Top 100 downloads!
Released today on QOL:
Killer Queen: 23/04/1975 (Kobe, Japan)
Xmas at the Beeb: 24/12/1975 (London, UK)
Warehouse Copenhagen: 12/05/1977 (Copenhagen, Denmark)
Walter, thanks for this info, but do you know the dates for the 3 that were released on the 12th:-
Live And Alive USA
Procession
Seven Seas Of Tsumogoi
It's a real pain that Queenonline don't tell you what date the boots are anymore that they have for download.
Yes, A Word in Your Ear, QOL inundates fans with information, don't they?
Info about the bootlegs you asked for can be found here: link
Every time a new batch is released I will try and find the concertdates for those who are interested.
You're welcome! I try to "collect" releasedates, so you could ask me anytime!
deleted user 17.01.2006 11:59
has no one downlaoded the Q+PR hyde park ones yet? audio AND video? when you do share it on here, fuck QOL and the offficial policy, technically they are breaking the law by selling bootlegs!
erm, THE law? it is a law right, or even f itsillegal t sell them, by Queen standards who say its illegal they are sill doing watswrong,
in the endtey are SELLING bootlegs, hichis llegal, i say bootleg the bootleggers and share wat they are selling, make the freely avaialble and shut tem down lol, its only qol who givesa uck!
they're quite obviously NOT breaking the law. they are their songs - a bootlegger can't legally own the copyright of an audience recording which shouldn't legally have ever been made, so QP can do what they please with any bootleg recording.
Negative Creep wrote: they're quite obviously NOT breaking the law. they are their songs - a bootlegger can't legally own the copyright of an audience recording which shouldn't legally have ever been made, so QP can do what they please with any bootleg recording.
Only if they have the rights to the recording. In the majority of cases they do, but there are numerous exceptions...
not at all - whoever owns the publishing rights can do what they like with a bootleg recording. a bootlegger could NOT claim ownership of an audience recording, as it wasn't their legal right to record in the first place.