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List Price: $9.98 | | Label: Sanctuary Records
Salesrank: 341802
Released: September 11, 2001 |
| Our Price: $5.99 |
| Used Price: $4.99 |
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| Media: Audio CD |
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Live at the Marquee, 1967 Track Listing:
1. Talk to Me Baby
2. I Held My Baby Last Night
3. My Baby's Sweet
4. Looking for Somebody
5. Evil Woman Blues
6. Got to Move
7. No Place to Go
8. Watch Out
9. Mighty Long Time
10. Dust My Broom
11. I Need You, Come on Home to Me
12. Shake Your Moneymaker
Live at the Marquee, 1967 Reviews:
For Completists Only 
2007-06-08 - When one is shopping for arhival music, one has to balance sound quality with performance quality (one assumes you already have a passion for the artist...). Not including the rockabilly throwback Green and Spencer loved to perform, there are a little over 250 officially released unique Fleetwood Mac w/ Peter Green tracks available off and on in the market place. This recording is for the completist only - while the performance is a rare glimpse of the very first formal incarnation of Fleetwood Mac (Bob Brunning on bass, not John McVie), and a view into the famed Marquee club atmosphere, the sound quality is at the bottom of the aforementioned 250+ tracks one can collect. BTW, while Green would always play backup to Spencer, the reverse was rarely true. Much Peter Green listening requires attention to subtleties.
Live @ the Marquee 
2001-10-09 - It is a neverending search to try to find good quality recordings of early Peter Green and this is not the end of that search. The sound quality is fair, at best, and Green stays in the background too much for my taste. This maybe due to Danny Kirwan not being on this one, leaving too much Jeremy Spencer. I am glad I have this recording though as Mean Woman Blues is GREAT despite the sound quality. Green is dynamite at the end of it. So far, I still think you're better off with the Live at the Boston Tea Party discs.
Watch Out Peter Green Fans 
2001-09-27 - I just picked up this new issue of the 1967 Live at The
Marquee recordings of Peter Green's Fleetwood Mac.
I am a collector of all Peter Green era recordings
and was really hoping to find something along of the
lines of Dinky Dawson's excellent Shrine '69 on Ryko.
Unfortunately, this CD can't compare. The sound
quality on Live At The Marquee is extremely poor.
The performance is good especially considering that
the band had been together for a very short time at
this point. Peter Green's guitar playing is tentative
at the beginning of the set but he seems to quickly
gain confidence. By the time they start "Watch Out",
he is clearly in control but again, the recording
quality is so poor that only a true Green-o-phile
will stick it out long enough to find out. There
is some kind of disclaimer about the sound inside
the brief booklet but even that doesn't prepare you
for how bad this sounds. It claims that the recording
stems from a sound board source but I would be very
surprised if that were true. The only thing I can
compare this to is 12/31/62 Star Club recordings of
The Beatles. That night was captured by an alleged
friend of the band on unprofessional recording equipment.
Fleewood Mac Live At The Marquee sounds to me like
it has similar origins. Original Mac bassist Bob
Brunning supplies some interesting notes inside (first
published with the 1992 of this release) and the
period photos from the band are nice (although familiar
to Green fans). If you need all of the available
Peter Green material out there, you will need this
but newcomers to this amazing band would be much
better served by the aforementioned live "Shrine '69"
or the even better three disc "Live at the Boston Tea
Party" (Red Snapper edition-remixed) and the very
reasonable priced six disc Blue Horizon Years box set
(essential for any blues collection).