No Substitutions: Live in Osaka
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2001 live album by Larry Carlton and Steve Lukather
No Substitutions: Live in Osaka | |
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Live album by Larry Carlton and Steve Lukather | |
Released | March 20, 2001 |
Recorded | November 1998 |
Venue | The Blue Note (Osaka, Japan) |
Genre | Jazz pop |
Length | 52:27 |
Label | Favored Nations |
Producer |
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Larry Carlton chronology | |
Fingerprints
(2000) No Substitutions: Live in Osaka (2001) Deep Into It (2001) | |
Steve Lukather chronology | |
Review scores | |
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Source | Rating |
Allmusic | [1] |
No Substitutions: Live in Osaka is a live album by Larry Carlton and Steve Lukather, released in 2001 through Favored Nations. In 2002, the album won Carlton and Lukather, along with engineer/recorder Yoshiyasu Kumada and editor/producer Steve Vai, the Grammy Award for Best Pop Instrumental Album.[2]
Track listing
[edit ]- "The Pump" (Hymas, Phillips) – 14:28
- "Don't Give It Up" (Carlton) – 6:38
- "(It Was) Only Yesterday" (Carlton) – 12:09
- "All Blues" (Davis) – 14:06
- "Room 335" (Carlton) – 5:06
Personnel
[edit ]- Larry Carlton – guitar (left side)
- Steve Lukather – guitar (right side)
- Rick Jackson – keyboards
- Chris Kent – bass
- Gregg Bissonette – drums, percussion
Production
[edit ]- Steve Lukather – producer
- Steve Vai – producer, mixing, editing
- Yoshiyasu Kumada – recording
- TakeshI Sasaki – recording assistant
- Mark Dawson – second engineer
- Neil Citron – mixing, editing
- The Mothership (Hollywood, California) – mixing location
- The Harmony Hut (Encino, California) – mixing location
- Ken Blaustein – art direction, art production, photography
- Gina Zangla – design, cover illustration
- Robert Knight – photography
- Kenju Uyama – photography
- Fitzgerald Hartley Co. – management
- Sonny Abelardo – album coordinator, sound mixer, tour manager
- Ric "Reg" Britton – guitar technician, stage manager
- Josh Henson – guitar technician, bass technician
References
[edit ]- ^ "No Substitutions: Live in Osaka". Allmusic . Retrieved October 19, 2010.
- ^ "The Complete List of Winners". Los Angeles Times . February 28, 2002. p. 1. Retrieved October 19, 2010.