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Disc One contains the original album digitally remastered by Peter Mew at Abbey Road plus 3 songs recorded in session for the BBC plus 4 songs recorded live for John Peel's Sunday Live in Concert programme for the BBC.
Disc Two gathers together 16 alternative versions of songs from the album including a previously unreleased version of Fire and Water and previously unreleased versions of All Right Now recorded for the video.
"While it may seem excessive to close the set with three versions of the same song we felt that these are so good, and all quite different performances, that it would be absurd not to let you hear them and simply leave them languishing in the vaults."
David Clayton - Winter 2007
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
30 of 31 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
A true landmark,
This review is from: Fire And Water (Audio CD)
I really can't speak highly enough about this fabulous album. How on earth could such brilliantly original material be created by such a young group? It's truly staggering. The more I delve into Fire and Water, the more I'm struck by the subtlety and beauty, as well as the obvious power and technique. Check out Kossoff's gentle solo's on Remember and Heavy Load and you'll begin to appreciate there's so much more to enjoy than 'just' the acclaimed classics on this album. It speaks volumes that, although Free are remembered mainly for All Right Now, Fire and Water maintains a level of quality throughout the album that's astonishing. Rodgers and Kossoff contribute to so many glorious moments on this album, supported by the ever reliable Kirke, but for me, the genius of Free had more to do with Andy Fraser than people realise. Barely 18 at the release of Fire and Water and he'd already co-wrote much of Free's material, including the music for All Right Now. Wow! Buy it, revel in it, and then tell your mates to buy it.
11 of 11 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Road to Highway,
By Alice Cribbins (Northern England) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Fire And Water (Audio CD)
Let's get one or two things straight. Free, one of the most underrated bands of the late 60s? Oh, yes. Fire and Water, a masterpiece? No, of course not. At the time this short record represented an advance on the previous album, "Free", which itself was both an advance on the first album (Tons of Sobs) and a change of direction. Here on Fire and Water we see the band moving further outward from their blues origins, becoming now much more interested in original songwriting. The key here is heard in the burgeoning talent of Andy Fraser, 15 years of age when he became a founding member of the band in 1968, a true prodigy. The composer to Rogers lyricist, on this album he wrote three outstanding pieces: the title track, the monster single and true genre classic, All Right Now and Don't Say You Love Me. For these, Fire and Water is worth any amount of money you want to pay.
Don't Say You Love Me is probably the most widely unknown work of greatness of the whole 1966-1976 period. It's structure and elegant melody are so memorable, the piece has the immediate sound of an established R n B classic ballad: "It's a cover, isn't it?" you think. No. The fact that the song is missing from first compilation The Free Story probably explains its obscurity. The elegance of the chord structure, the simplicity of its arrangement - a constant Free trademark -and Paul Rogers's brilliant, understated vocal make this one of the progressive rock movement's outstanding creations. Fire and Water represents the commercial breakthrough for the band thanks to the stupendous sales of All Right Now. However, artistically it's a stepping stone on the path to one of the greatest albums of modern music, ironically one almost totally unheralded: Highway. This was, and remains, Free's masterpiece. CT
15 of 16 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Fiery brilliance!,
This review is from: Fire And Water (Audio CD)
This, the third Free album, represents a step forward for the band's music, as they steer away from writing around traditional blues forms, and into their own, more rock-based songwriting. Rockers such as "Mr Big" and the grinding "Fire and Water" contrast with softer material like "Oh I Wept" and the heartrending "Don't Say You Love Me." And, of course, there's "All Right Now," the classic track guitarist Paul Kossoff dismissed as "frivolous." As a bonus, this reissued CD features another six songs, with alternate versions of "Fire and Water," "All Right Now" and "Oh I Wept" included. The sound quality is faultless, this disc being remastered, and the price sets the seal on this disc. A fine issue of a fine album.
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