U.K. (the original) Allan Holdsworth- guitar Eddie Jobson- violin and keyboards John Wetton- bass and vocals Bill Bruford- drums Central Park, N.Y.C. July 7, 1978 (opening for Al DiMeola) (OR possibly The Palladium New York City, N.Y. October 6, 1978) (it's from one of these 2 dates but not sure which one.) low gen. audience tape (either 1st or 2nd gen. TDK-SA 90 min. no dolby on source copy or my copy.) > played on Nak. 300 into soundforge (wav) > flac (sb's aligned) > torrentially yours. runtime: 64:57 setlist: 1: Alaska > 4:05 2: time to kill 5:12 3: the only thing she needs 7:06 4: carrying no cross 9:51 5: Sahara of snow 9:56 6: thirty years > presto vivace (tape flip, spliced) > in the dead of night 17:48 7: forever until Sunday 6:14 8: Caesar's Palace blues 4:41 a this and that production. Made in the U.K. but recorded live in the U.S.A. Do not sell this recording. Share freely, losslessly and gaplessly. (worth what it holds, and not a dime more.) comments: A very good stereo audience recording of U.K. in N.Y. Oct.6 is the only N.Y. date listed in etree, but their setlist for it doesn't include "forever until sunday" as this does. although very few cities got a second helping of UK's 1978 tour, the only one with this lineup, NYC got a return engagement. I recieved it only as "U.K. in N.Y. 1978" (no date or venue info) on cassette tape many years ago, probably just a few months after the concert. a few U.K. 78 shows were longer than this, such as London May 15, but this is a bit longer than the "standard" U.K. show in the USA which usually ran just about an hour. the source of this recording is one of the few 70's era tapers I ever knew who was even less organized about labeling his tapes than I was then. I am glad to have it though since this source's recordings were mostly made on a Sony 152 deck (including this one). It's not actually a Dan Lampinski audience recording, but comparable in sound quality to one since he was using a 152 just a few months before this.) the source does not want to be named but did give me this with no restriction of sharing it, only to never sell it which I've never done and I'd never do anyway. this is a nice recording and a fine performance of a band that lasted far too little time together with this lineup (only this one tour of the U.S. and Europe.) If this is actually from the Oct. 6 date, it would be just a few days after the Yankees had pulled off their biggest Red Sox upset since they signed Babe Ruth, finishing off their almost impossible comeback season with a 163rd game of season pennant clincher 5-4 win at Fenway Park thanks to Bucky Dent's 3 run home run. that was not a happy day for Red Sox fans, although this was a good one for U.K. fans from anywhere.