(Audience/Soundboard FLAC)
LIVE ON BLUEBERRY HILL
Inglewood Forum
Label: Trade Mark Of Quality
Source Original "The Trademark of Quality Years" LPs
(Matrix # EV 664 A,B - EV 666 A,B)
Lineage:
LP>CDR>Wavelab>CD Wave>WAV>SHN>FLAC
Mono & Stereo AUD.
CD1
01.Immigrant Song
02.Heartbreaker
03.Dazed & Confused
04.Bring It On Home
05.That´s The Way *
06.Bron-Y-Aur *
07.Since I´ve Been Loving You
08.Organ Solo
09.Thank You
10.What Is & What Should Never Be / Moby Dick
CD2
01.Moby Dick
02.Whole Lotta Love (Medley)
- Boogie Chillen
- Moving On
- Red House
- Some Other Guy
- Think It Over
- Honey Bee
- The Lemon Song
03.Communication Breakdown (Medley)
- Good Times Bad Times
- For What It's Worth
- I Saw Her Standing There
04.Out On The Tiles
05.Blueberry Hill
* Three Days After LP (matrix # 72016).
TMQ, TMOQ or TradeMark Of Quality was a bootleg record label that originated in the Los Angeles, California area during the late 1960s and early 1970s. TradeMark of Quality was established in 1970 by two bootleggers, "Dub" Taylor and Ken Douglas. Dub & Ken had released several albums under different names before settling on "TradeMark Of Quality" in 1970, the first being the (in)famous "Great White Wonder" by Bob Dylan. According to Ken, "Dub" recorded several of TMQ's releases himself, including The Rolling Stones' "Live'r Than You'll Ever Be" and Led Zeppelin's "Live On Blueberry Hill". TMOQ also employed the services of William Stout, whose unique artwork graced many of TMOQ's albums.
"Blueberry Hill" was originally issued before the inauguration of the TMQ label, so the very first pressings were on Blimp Records and were packaged in two single plain white sleeves with two insert covers printed in two colors. The album was subsequently pressed on the Trade Mark of Quality label and shipped to England. The album sold so many copies that many fans initially thought it was a legal record. The sleeve notes described it as "One hundred and six minutes and fifty three seconds of pure alive rock."
Live on Blueberry Hill derived its name from the fact that at this concert Led Zeppelin performed Fats Domino's "Blueberry Hill" as a final encore. The bootleg also features one of the few known live performances of "Out on the Tiles", a track from the group's third album. It also features "Bron-Yr-Aur", a song that wouldn't be released officially until five years later, on Physical Graffiti.
Added were the 2 missing 9/4/70 tracks from Three Days After. The show is now in original order of preformance and not in the original lp side friendly order.
Caveat Emptor: These are from 20+ year old lps and the inherent surface noise and anomalies associated with those recordings are present here, please remember the limits of the original medium when listening to these recordings.

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