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Tracy Chapman Concert

Estadio River Plate (Buenos Aires, Argentina)

Tracy Chapman concert at Estadio River Plate on Oct 15, 1988

10.15.1988
Tracks: 8 / Total Time: 33:23
Catalog: King Biscuit

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Concert Summary

Singer-songwriter Tracy Chapman released her debut album in April of 1988, a mere six months prior to this now legendary concert. "Fast Car," the album's first single, gained immediate attention and garnered strong sales. Fans of that first album will be delighted with this performance, which, with one exception, focuses on its material, stripped down to the essence of just Chapman's acoustic guitar and soulful voice. It is hard to believe that these songs were the work of such a young artist, not to mention from a debut album. Chapman's strong convictions, which are relayed in the lyrics…entire summary

Concert Set List

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  • ger26 | Thursday, October 22, 2009 | 5:15 pm

    Well, that?s the way we argentinians are, but believe me, musicians love that, it?s not noise, it?s good energy from 200.000 people or so being returned to whoever is on stage. Live concerts are meant to be lived more than listened to, so if the audience takes some participation and makes some noise I think that?s ok, this was a concert for the human rights, and it sounds like everybody there had something to say.

  • Frankss | Friday, September 04, 2009 | 9:33 am

    In 1988, I heard this concert on the radio and taped it. It soon became one of my most precious concerts, especially the Baby Can I Hold You version with Branford Marsalis. Then, when everything went digital and I got rid of my cassette deck I lost the music. I've been searching the web since 2005 to recapture my memories. So I can't describe how lucky I felt today when I tried once more. Thanks very much for posting this, in even higher quality than my TDK 90 tape!

  • mishap13 | Wednesday, February 04, 2009 | 1:15 pm

    Fine concert. The crowd is a bit distracting, but good-natured and forgivable. I imagine the reactions to the word "police" in Behind the Wall may have come from the Sting aficionados in the audience....

  • Negroperro | Saturday, January 31, 2009 | 5:13 pm

    As m99 said, by the time Tracy Chapman touch our land we knew nearly nothing about her and her wonderful music, not to mention her beautiful voice and huge talent. So there we, in a sold out concert, with a huge stage and there she comes, with only a guitar holding down her shoulders. And there was magic. And we shout out loud because we love Tracy at fisrt sight(or may I say from first hear?). I personally recon the Tracy segment of the whole concert as one of the high and mos emotive moments. Later in the night Peter Gabriel call her to the stage and they give us an emotive performance of "In your eyes". Cheering at the voice "police" is to fright up our painfully past, as I?m sure the world remembers that by 1998 our democracy was as old as 5 years, and we were still shocked by the bloody years of dictatorship we were leaving behind. Thank for this moment. Tracy did magic for us that night.

  • m99 | Thursday, January 29, 2009 | 1:45 am

    been a fan of Tracy since the first time I saw her at the Mandela gig in London where she more or less stole the show. But you have to put this performance and, more to the point the audience in context. It's in the main football stadium in Buenos Aires, as any rock band who have played there will tell you Argentinian crowdss are amongst the noisiest - along with Spain and Italy, at the time Tracy was virtually unknown the first album had only just come out so in a way any kind of reaction is an achievement. The subsequent acts on this the final night of the human rights now tour were peter gabriel, sting and bruce springsteen, in reality the vast majority would have gone to the gig to see Bruce as he had never played in Argentina, I think Sting had only been once with the police up to this point but not certain. So yes the audience do get in the way a bit, but it's still a great performance and if they had been as impatient as many crowds would have been in this situation they would have totally ruined it.

  • Jeff044 | Thursday, January 29, 2009 | 12:36 am

    "Across The Lines" an acoustic guitar strums into the night to end the fight, but when do we truly listen? So many goon, so many turn to fists and stones. When can we open up our hearts? When will we rise as equals? Two months before this concert was played an uprising was started by students with the hope for a democratic and peaceful Burma. They were met with brute force as the military government shot and killed over 3000 innocent civilians. This same brutality continues today by the military government in Burma. The people of Burma want peace. They voted for peace. They elected Nobel Peace prize laureate, Daw Aung San Suu Kyi. She has been incarcerated for over 13 years. This is no way to treat the democratically elected leader of a country. I am sad to say that I do not have the answers for this country. I am just one soul calling those who are moved by the spirit of this concert, to help the people of Burma. "Please use your liberty to promote ours," as Daw Aung San Suu Kyi says. Join the International Campaign for Freedom of Aung San Suu Kyi and Burma. Go to http://www.USCampaignForBurma.org and learn more how you can help. Freedom Now. Freedom Forever. Peace, Love, Namaste, Jeffrey Karl Hellman International Campaign for Freedom of Aung San Suu Kyi and Burma (Spokesperson)

  • John Frame | Wednesday, January 28, 2009 | 8:30 pm

    It's an equally fine performance and technical recording - but this audience ruins the ambience of most of the songs. They never shut up - it's like they're at a soccer match rather than a concert where a songwriter would like her music to be listened to and understood. They treat "Behind The Wall" as if it's a feel-good groovy pop song - even cheering at the word "police". You hear enough from his recording to know you'd love to see or hear a Tracey Chapman performance with a respectful and restrained audience.

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