
Its 17 cds, 7+ gigs, flac and includes artwork and setlists...current stats are:
Full Size: 7.60 GB, Seeders: 13, Leechers: 21, Completed: 43, UL Speed: 22.25 KB/s, DL Speed: 22.97 KB/s, Size: 191.2 KB, 166 views.
~Scott
Moderator: Moderators
Incidentally, from what I read Page and Plant are embarrassed by the performance, and in particular, embarrassed that Phil Collins was their drummer. But I guess since he was so popular back then (Su-su-sudio) that he was able to bully his way into their set. And because they thought he did such a piss-poor job as their drummer, they refused to allow their set to be included on the official DVD.jkdiamond wrote:Why don't they show the Zepplin set, Phil Collins played with them in the US and then flew to England and played there after.
Nevermind it's listed as page plant jones
Hello pot, kettle here...chris wrote:soquester... I think you're right; and as copyrighted material, Everyday Jones shouldn't be hosting the download.
I fully agree that legitimate copyrighted material shouldn't be distributed in any other fashion than through legitimate legal channels. Based upon what I know of commercially available Live-Aid content and taking the uploader at "his word", unless the source recordings are some sort of nefariously acquired master recordings, the issue is murky, at best.chris wrote:soquester... I think you're right; and as copyrighted material, Everyday Jones shouldn't be hosting the download.
That's pretty much where I'm at; the sheer magnitude of the boot is almost incomprehensible. If it were posted as 17 different torrents I might grab a disc or two, but for the performances that I'd like to have, it isn't worth the effort / bandwidth / disc space. It's been pretty much acknowledged by all involved that Queen freakin' owned Wembley that day, and the clips I've seen and heard are an awe-inspiring testament to their abilty to bring the crowd straight into the center of the show.hipfan39 wrote:I gotta be honest! Non of them bands excite me!
But i stillt hink it's cool, how the entire show/bootleg is up for download.
with some download clients (like azureus), you can select which files you do not want to download, and thus be selective in the pieces you do download.scottitude wrote:If it were posted as 17 different torrents I might grab a disc or two, but for the performances that I'd like to have, it isn't worth the effort / bandwidth / disc space.
I just posted a message on Everyday Jones asking if someone could post a torrent for CD #8 only or just the Queen performance.scottitude wrote:That's pretty much where I'm at; the sheer magnitude of the boot is almost incomprehensible. If it were posted as 17 different torrents I might grab a disc or two, but for the performances that I'd like to have, it isn't worth the effort / bandwidth / disc space. It's been pretty much acknowledged by all involved that Queen freakin' owned Wembley that day, and the clips I've seen and heard are an awe-inspiring testament to their abilty to bring the crowd straight into the center of the show.hipfan39 wrote:I gotta be honest! Non of them bands excite me!
But i stillt hink it's cool, how the entire show/bootleg is up for download.
Even if you don't dig all their music, you can't imagine what it's like to see and hear 72,000 people moving in unison at Freddie's command and singing along with every word. It was truly laminar flow!