Boz Scaggs: Greatest Hits Live (2004)

ALL 08/03/2004 (en) Documentary, Music 115 Min
  • Release
    08/03/2004
  • Production
  • Rotten tomato
    0%
  • Original title
    Boz Scaggs: Greatest Hits Live
  • Original language
    en
  • Production Cost
  • 0.00
    -

Overview

Singer-songwriter-guitarist Boz Scaggs has kept a fairly low profile since his heyday in the '70s and '80s--a circumstance more than rectified with Greatest Hits Live, a great-looking, great-sounding concert recorded in San Francisco in 2004. For the most part, this is Silk Degrees-style Boz, drawing from a large catalog that favors ballads (some quite lovely, like "Harbor Lights," "We're All Alone," and "Look What You've Done to Me") and deft pop-R&B-jazz à la Steely Dan (albeit with more soul and less verbal wit and sophistication). But while "Lido Shuffle," and other expected hits are here, so are several grittier, bluesier moments, including Earl King's "It All Went Down the Drain" and extended versions of the big band blues "Runnin' Blue" and the slow lament "Loan Me a Dime" (a tune from Scaggs's 1969 solo album that featured great guitar playing by the late Duane Allman).

  1. Lawrence Jordan

    Director

  2. Story

  3. Editor

  4. Producer



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Boz Scaggs: Greatest Hits Live (2004) 115 Min

ALL 08/03/2004 (en)
Documentary, Music
  • Release 08/03/2004
  • Production
  • Original title Boz Scaggs: Greatest Hits Live
  • en
  • Revenue0.00

Overview

Singer-songwriter-guitarist Boz Scaggs has kept a fairly low profile since his heyday in the '70s and '80s--a circumstance more than rectified with Greatest Hits Live, a great-looking, great-sounding concert recorded in San Francisco in 2004. For the most part, this is Silk Degrees-style Boz, drawing from a large catalog that favors ballads (some quite lovely, like "Harbor Lights," "We're All Alone," and "Look What You've Done to Me") and deft pop-R&B-jazz à la Steely Dan (albeit with more soul and less verbal wit and sophistication). But while "Lido Shuffle," and other expected hits are here, so are several grittier, bluesier moments, including Earl King's "It All Went Down the Drain" and extended versions of the big band blues "Runnin' Blue" and the slow lament "Loan Me a Dime" (a tune from Scaggs's 1969 solo album that featured great guitar playing by the late Duane Allman).

  1. Lawrence Jordan

    Director

  2. Story

  3. Editor

  4. Producer