![]() It has all the songs, great sound and is very enjoyable. However, if indeed you never bought the original Budokan album, I would just go with the double-disc version. ![]() I haven't heard Legacy's remaster of the single-disc At Budokan, but if their track record is any indication, I'm sure it's good. Besides, Robin Zander's spoken intro to "Clock Strikes Ten" is not on the two disc version because apparently it was lifted from a concert on the American tour and not the Japanese. I like the double-disc, but there's times when I want to hear the album that I listened to for nearly twenty years, so I have the best of both worlds. It would be nearly a decade before the situation was rectified.and that was done by MFSL!!Īnyway, I have both the double-disc and MFSL versions. I attribute it to the lack of quality control the labels employed when they were rushing to get their catalogs on CD. ![]() It wasn't until years later that I found out they used a master with an alternate mix. Click to expand.I remember buying the original Epic CD and being confused when I listened to it. ![]()
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