Now I haven’t featured Guitars one-oh-one for a while they are SO big and have such a lot of stuff it is not really in need of my support and so here I share the link (below) which regulars will know I rarely do . . . . . . this is about the time I discovered Dwight through my old pal John Northcote who bought me the album on import Guitars, Cadillacs etc and for the longest time I had a life size cardboard cut out sales promo of Dwight from John that sat behind the TeeVee! (yes really!)
NOW I don’t find much Dwight Yoakam and this early set from '85 is REALLY worth it and whilst still a bit bright and hot for my taste it is FLAC format and the guys have done a lot of work on it, so it seemed right to share directly. If the guys at Guitars101 want me to remove the link please get in touch and I will do the usual [I live for sharing posts from the respective music sites I check on a daily basis to guide folks in their direction usually, so this is a bit of a change - feel free to challenge me if sometimes I make the mistake of sharing the link - it is all in the interests of sharing live music and if anyone objects I am always willing to take times down!
P.S. there are also various version of this concert available on YouTube but if you want a much better quality download try this one!
Andy 😉
Dwight Yoakam
Fillmore Auditorium
San Francisco, CA
31 DEC 1985
Tech spec:
SOURCE: SBD audio in 16/44 FLAC. The source was troubled with several problems, including a narrow and left-tilted binaural field, a hot snare hit, high mid-range harsh resonances, distracting hum and a buried fiddle.
BACKGROUND: Dwight performed at the Fillmore Auditorium in San Francisco, CA in December 1985, the year following his release of the six-song EP titled Guitars, Cadillacs, Etc. Etc. on Oak Records in 1984. Three months after this performance, Guitars, Cadillacs, Etc. Etc. would be released as a full-length album on Reprise Records.
SETLIST:
01. emcee introduction
02. Can't You Hear Me Calling
03. Guitars, Cadillacs
04. Down The Road
05. 1,000 Miles
06. Rocky Road Blues
07. Readin', Rightin', Rt. 23
08. Heartaches By The Number
09. I'll Be Gone
10. It Won't Hurt
11. My Bucket's Got A Hole In It
12. Miner's Prayer
13. Grand Tour
14. Long Black Train
15. Ring Of Fire
16. band intros/Jambalaya (On The Bayou)
17. Since I Started Drinkin' Again
18. Always Late (With Your Kisses)
19. This Drinkin' Will Kill Me
LINEUP:
Dwight Yoakam - vocals, acoustic guitar
Pete Anderson - electric guitar
Jeff Donavan - drums
J.D. Foster - bass
Brantley Kearns - fiddle
CORRECTIONS: Each track underwent clip repair (occasional digital clipping in most tracks), DC offset/hum removal (60Hz plus harmonics), phase correction, azimuth correction and initial gain setting. I had 2 sources for this show. The first, labelled a "soundboard," had distortions for the first 3/4 of Can't You Hear Me Calling. The second source apparently sought to solve this by deleting the first 3/4 of the song and applying a fade in. I decided to solve this by patching with another SBD version of Can't You Hear Me Calling from another show in the 1980s, around the same timeframe. The source used as the patch, to replace the first 3/4 of the song, had a much wider stereo field than the Fillmore West performance. This made for a noticeable transition at the start of the last 1/4 of the song, which was so stark as to sound as if the audio had been collapsed to mono. To soften this transition, I went back and narrowed the stereo field of the patch segment. There wasn't a terrific way to fix this track, but I felt that this was a better option than offering the last 1 minute and 19 seconds of the song.
REMASTERING: The harsh resonances were mitigated using a dynamic resonance suppressor. This was followed by a dynamics processor. EQ was then applied, using a small dynamic low shelf, a small dynamic high shelf and a spectral EQ bell to enhance the vocal range and help revive the fiddle. Stereo field optimization was done, collapsing the lowest bass frequencies to mono and keeping a watchful eye on the correlation meter. A bus compressor was used to help tame the mighty snare whacks. Gentle plate reverb was applied. Saturation was then added to help camouflage some of the remaining resonances. Finally, the final level was set with true peak and 8x oversampling to achieve a target integrated LUFS of ~ -15.0.
NOTES: This is a fantastic performance which highlights Dwight's songwriting and his re-interpretation of country classics made famous by the likes of George Jones, Hank Williams, Johnny Cash, Ray Price, Johnny Horton and Lefty Frizzell. It also showcases the musicianship of the Babylonian Cowboys, including Pete Anderson's fiery handling of the Fender Telecaster.
DOWNLOAD here



