Of the dozen or so shows Jack Bruce, Robin Trower and Gary Husband played together in Europe/UK in 2009 this recording captures why the performances were so amazing. Most of the material is from the 2008 released Seven Moons-hence Seven Moons Live. The Seven Moons songs were co-written by Jack and Robin when Jack suggested they write and record a couple new songs when discussions about re-releasing their 1981 recordings brought them together. The two musicians found some highly expressionistic moods and the Seven Moons material is all fresh and evocative of their deep wells of experience. Blues flavored rock numbers such as Lives of Clay; Perfect Place; Bad Case of Celebrity; and Come to Me; are perfect. Trower's guitar is simply excellent throughout. Jack Bruce sings all vocals and plays his instrumental role with the exceptional talent-those of us who have long admired him for enjoy. As a vocalist Jack not only sings the notes but expresses character. The song Carmen (from the duo's 1981 recording) which was kind of a plaintive haunting piece on BLT, is here a tortured song of loss and regret. The richness of Distant Places of the Heart; and Just Another Day are gorgeous mood pieces that after awhile are candidates for Best songs of the album but they must compete with the 3 Cream songs. Sunshine of Your Love, White Room and Politician are Jack Bruce compositions and usually featured in a trio format. With Robin Trower and Gary Husband on drums they alone are worth the price of the recording. Trower has a great tone and he does something different with the opening chords on White Room that is delicious and his solo on Politician is a pleasure. The Last Door is a rocker which along with the title track Seven Moons is a joy for repeat plays. Robin Trower wrote most of the lyrics and arrangements with Jack writing the vocal melody. Gary Husband is the hardest worker in this trio and his drums are strong and original.I purchased this CD-Rom following viewing videos of portions of this concert on YouTube. Purchasing the CD as opposed to the DVD allowed me to focus more closely on the quality of the music itself without the distraction of the video.It is time to admit that the many of the hits by Jack Bruce as part of the megaband Cream were successful due to the fact that they were studio recordings. Prime case in point is the mega hit "White Room". I remember the four note introduction to the song being attempted vocally during live renditions (which didn't really work), it was particularly pathetic with Trower attempting this on the guitar. The result of this was extremely weak and unconvincing. It is painful for me to write this about Trower.Jack's vocals at one time were great but now, along with his Bass playing have deteriorated, he actually missed a note very visibly during this performance. As a musician it is critical to be on tune and on time. The work by Gary Husband on drums did not really seem to mesh with the band. Much like Cream, here we had a band with three HUGE names with the end being a fraction of the sum of the parts. There can be only one leader of the band.Although a fan of all these musicians, I believe that there is no real replacement for Jim Dewar's very competent Bass playing and unsurpassed vocals, or Bill Lordan's cymbal work as part of an earlier and far superior Robin Trower Band. Knowing this, Robin would be better served sticking with the better disciplined Dave Bronze on Bass and Pete Thompson on drums.Jack, Gary and Robin played a few live dates in Europe and this is one of them. I really enjoyed the studio version of "Seven Moons" and playing live give the musicians room to stretch out more. Jacks' bass is more up front, and he reaches on a few notes, but he sounds great to my ears. Robin is playing great as always, playing his own interpertation of the Cream classics, not imitating Clapton, and Gary completes the rhythmn section effectively.With the exception of an early 80's tune from a previous Trower/Bruce collaboration, and the Cream tunes, all other songs are from "Seven Moons". If you liked that CD, I would say you would like this. If you enjoy blues/rock, or great power trios, try listening to the samples and you should enjoy this, 4.5 stars.If you are a Jack Bruce or Robin Trower fan, this is a very good live performance album.Both Trower and Bruce are wonderfully accomplished musicians.So it follows that the songs on this album are a nice pairing of two greats in that 60s-70s classic rock / blues style.The passing of Jack Bruce was a huge loss to the music world.Just listen to his bass lines on this live album. He was one of the best bassists in rock music.Jack Bruce and Robin Trower, two legendary rockers. I have listened to this CD a couple of times -- it is full of great playing, but somehow none of the songs have really impacted me. I expected this to affect me like the Bruce,Baker, Moore CD of 10 or 15 years ago, but so far it hasn't.With these two on the same stage how can you go wrong. This is the live version of Seven Moons with some added tracks from Trower and Bruce's work in previous band (BLT, Cream, Robin Trower). This is a good solid album and it is nicely produced. The musicianship is great. I am not that a huge fan of the songs from the Seven Moons studio album as it gets a little slow and a little to sullen at times but I like this album. This is a great addition to anyone's collectionNot a review of the music, but of the product:Caution: This is the same as "Songs From the Road" which comes with a DVD (CD/DVD in a 2-CD case). Looks like if you buy this "Seven Moons Live" you would have to get the DVD separately.First, I'm a massive Robin Trower fan, and I have nothing but love for Jack Bruce. The drummer in this band could have been anyone - sorry, but he's nothing special at all. The performance is just phoned in. Jack Bruce works hardest, but Robin sounds like he's filling in for someone else. It's just not an inspired show. I found it difficult to listen to everything - even the cover tunes sound lifeless. I just can't see ever listening to this cd again.Jack Bruce has clearly found a groove that he has been well into since the Cream reunion: This cd evidences two great musicians and a very talented drummer producing one of those stellar performances that make you wish you'd been in the audience. Simply brilliant! Jack's voice remains a remarkable instrument despite all of his serious health problems in recent years-pretty fair bass playing too-and Robin's never been anything but terrific!two great blues legends complementing each other - highly recommended for blues fans anywhere.niceGreat album