URIAH HEEP LIVE DE LUXE EDITION
AVAILABLE FROM APRIL 16

Disc 1
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Sunrise
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Sweet Lorraine
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Traveller In Time
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Easy Livin'
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July Morning
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Tears In My Eyes
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Gypsy
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Circle Of Hands
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Look At Yourself
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The Magician's
Birthday
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Love Machine
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Rock'N'Roll Medley
Disc 2
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Something Or Nothing
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I Won't Mind
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Look At Yourself
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Gypsy
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Easy Livin'
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So Tired
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I Won't Mind
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Something Or Nothing
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The Easy Road
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Stealin'
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Love Machine
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Rock'N'Roll Medley
The story of Uriah Heep is
one that is now within its 40th year and as
such, is testament to the band’s talent and
tenacity as both recording and touring
artists.
From their early incarnation
as The Gods and Spice, through record
breaking tours, gold and platinum selling
albums, timeless chart scaling anthems and a
fiercely dedicated fan base of worldwide
proportions, Uriah Heep can rightly claim to
be one of the greatest U.K. progressive
heavy rock bands of both the 20th and 21st
centuries. Read on
here....
Lead by original lead
guitarist Mick Box since 1982, whose
Cheshire cat grin has endured throughout all
the highs and lows that are inevitable for
such a lengthy musical career, Uriah Heep
returned in 2008 from a recording hiatus
that had lasted ten years with Wake The
Sleeper, a brand new studio album that
floored the critics and fans in equal
measure, such was the strength of the music
on display. The fresh material proved why
Uriah Heep have enjoyed such a lengthy
career supported by an equally strong and
enduring fan base.
Always ‘Eavy, Always ‘Umble!
Dateline: January 1973.
Three years of dogged hard work and steady
musical evolution had paid off and Uriah
Heep were well on the way to becoming one of
the biggest bands in the world. Issued
within six heady months of each other the
previous year, their most recent two albums
– Demons And Wizards and The Magician’s
Birthday – had seen the four-fifths British
quintet (New Zealander bassist Gary Thain
joined English-born vocalist David Byron,
guitarist Mick Box, keyboard
player/guitarist Ken Hensley and drummer Lee
Kerslake) perfecting a colourful sound and
achieving a well-deserved international
breakthrough.
But there was still one
important thing missing. Deep Purple already
had Made In Japan, the Rolling Stones had
released Ger Yer Ya-Ya’s Out and The Who’s
Live At Leeds was already on the way to
assuming legendary status. Somebody in the
Heep camp (the favourite would have been
manager Gerry Bron) realised that five
studio records into their own career, Uriah
Heep needed their own live concert recording
– preferably a top of the range double
gatefold job, with all the trimmings.
Live January ’73 was rightly
hailed as one of the best live records of
the year and whilst the band were on tour in
the States, the album reached reached #13 in
the UK charts and became their third US Gold
album.
Due for release on Sanctuary
26 April