I Can See You - by Paddy Summerfield c. 1986

Wednesday, April 08, 2026

Mo’ guitar but with a Blues touch? Justin Johnson “Hellhound Boogie"

JUSTIN JOHNSON


 ROCKIN' ROOTS MUSIC • Old-School Foot-Stompin' Slide Guitar • "Hellhound Boogie

TUNING: Open E: E-B-E-G#-B-E
GEAR:
• Gretsch Honeydipper Resonator Guitar
• JJ Signature Low-Profile Humbucker Pickup (https://www.justinjohnsonstore.com)
• JJ Signature Ceramic Guitar Slide (https://www.justinjohnsonstore.com)
GUITAR: Justin Johnson
BASS: Will Lee
KEYS: Mike Webb
DRUMS: Rick Lonow
PRODUCED BY: Justin Johnson, Nikki Johnson, Rick Lonow, & Mike Webb
EXECUTIVE PRODUCER: Steve "Spricy" Price

Joe Turner · Honey Hush

Dancin’ pachuco to Joe Turner - Honey Hush

Pachucos just jump and jivin’ in the hood


David Lopez El Pachuco

Tommy Emmanuel "Copper Kettle" featuring Rob Ickes and Trey Hensley

 oh still more guitar? Greedy this morning aintcha!? Well this should do! 

"Copper Kettle" featuring Rob Ickes and Trey Hensley

Kurt Vile - New Album/New Single : Chance To Bleed [Philadelphia's Been Good To Me]

 

Listen to "Chance to Bleed": here

Order the album Philadelphia's been good to me: https://KurtVile.lnk.to/Philadelphias...
Sign up for tickets, music, merch, and more from Kurt Vile: https://KurtVile.lnk.to/Laylo

See Kurt Vile on Tour: https://www.kurtvile.com/tour 

Lyrics:
Now you got a chance to bleed now
Now you got a chance to bleed now…
down south, east coast blues on a comeback
With a microphone too hot too hold, scream into it
Now you got a chance to bleed now
playin a sad refrain… all down your brain
Aw but, baby, I do, and it’s all… for… you
That’s why I’m gonna sing it for you 
S’all right…” sweet mama doncha let that feedback fall You got a chance to bleed now… That’s why I’m gonna sing it for you: “Well, now’s your chance…” “with that old time, lofi, diy, rock n’ roll… nights!” (x2)
in real time, from the heart, playin live, band o’ bros
And I’ve been comin back my whole damn life
Now you’ve got a chance to bleed now, you know it’s true…
like the days of old, my jelly b-b-baby, my roll my roll,
“So open up and bleed, Kurt”
(Things these days don’t seem to be connecting)
“with that old time, lofi, diy, rock n’ roll… nights!”
Scream into it like the days of old, my jelly b-b-baby,
my roll my roll, sweet mama doncha let that feedback fall
from your fingertips a wurlitzer is covered in blood
“You got it!” (You got that chance to…)
“things these days don’t seem to be connecting”
Now you got a chance to bleed now…
“with that old time, lofi, diy, rock n’ roll nights!”
Now you got a chance to bleed now
“with that old time, lofi, diy, rock n’ roll… nights!”
You got a chance to bleed now
(with that old time, lofi, diy…)
Ya’ do… that’s why I’m gonna sing it for
(“open it up and bleed!”)

 

"Movie Concept by KV + Lucky"
DP — Zach Langford
Director — Lucky Marvel
The Band
Kurt Vile / Guitar + Vocals
Matt Jugenheimer / Keys + Cassette
Kyle Spence / Drums Greg Cartwright / Guitar + Vocals Natalie Hoffmann / Vocals



DANGEROUS MINDS | Bob Dylan’s Screen Test with Andy Warhol 1965

 DANGEROUS MINDS: ART

The day of Bob Dylan’s screen test with Andy Warhol, 1965

Famous visitors and “beautiful people” with “star potential” who flocked to Andy Warhol’s Factory studio in the 1960s were often shot for one of his notorious “screen tests”. 

These quirky audition tapes, usually for nothing at all, were silent “parodies” of the Hollywood studio system. No one was really auditioning for anything; it was just an excuse to run a single reel of 16mm film through his Bolex camera and engage someone in a staring contest with it, one they normally lost.  

 





Some of the more notable subjects included Italian model Benedetta Barzini, model/actrress Marisa Berenson, poet Ted Berrigan, manic artist Salvador Dalí, folk gobshite Donovan, toilet man Marcel Duchamp, Mama Cass, Allen Ginsberg, Beck’s mother, Bibbe Hansen, Baby Jane Holzer, Dennis Hopper, actress Sally Kirkland, Nico, Yoko Ono, Lou Reed, photographer Francesco Scavullo, Edie Sedgwick, Susan Sontag, Paul Thek, Viva and Mary Woronov. 

That’s quite a list, and it isn’t even complete. So, it is suffice to say that Warhol was rather fond of these little experimental films. They formed the perfect confluence of everything he loved: fame, experimentalism, simplicity, and how stars can be made and unmade in a few minutes flat. 

(Credits: Dangerous Minds / Nat Finkelstein)

When Dylan stopped by the tin-foil-covered Factory, he is alleged to have taken an immediate dislike to Warhol and the “phonies” of his entourage. It has long been suspected that the spitting lyrics of ‘Like a Rolling Stone’, in part, describe Dylan’s feelings about Warhol. Was Warhol “the diplomat on the chrome horse” at the centre of his tirade against tired posers?

Beyond being wary that Warhol’s ‘causes’ might be paper-thin, Dylan was also enraged about the artist’s perceived exploitation of Edie Sedgwick. The seething ‘Blowin’ in the Wind’ singer was at one point romantically involved with Sedgwick. She was even his muse for some of Blonde on Blonde.

All the same, Dylan trudged along for a screen test and a chat. After the sequence was shot, Dylan grabbed a large silkscreen (as “payment”) that Warhol was going to give him anyway and headed for the door before allegedly strapping the canvas to the roof of a station wagon. Such was his dislike of the artist that he later traded the piece to his manager, Albert Grossman, for a couch. 

That silkscreen, ‘Double Elvis’ – and artwork that loomed over Dylan’s surreal Factory meeting – is now part of the permanent collection at MOMA. It is said to be worth many times more than a crooked second-hand couch.

Beyond the inherent value behind Warhol rustling up an Elvis print, it is now also imbued with a mad cultural moment. It is a moment that Factory photographer Nat Finkelstein remembered very clearly. “Andy gave Bobby a great double image of Elvis. Bobby gave Andy short shrift. Shooting and plundering finished, the Dylan gang headed for the door, me and my Nikon on their heels,” he wrote back in 1965 in his diary. 

“They left as they had entered… ‘Bobby the Waif’ emerging as ‘Robert the Triumphant’. They departed having tied the Elvis image to the top of their station wagon,” he comically recalled, “Like a deer poached out of season.” 

In truth, maybe that analogy is pretty apt. If Warhol had stationed the looming Elvis purposefully, then perhaps Dylan proverbially shot it down like prey and claimed his mantle as the new type of icon who stood outside the clique of fame Warhol was clearly so keen on. As Dylan would soon sing in a line loaded with meaning in light of this anecdote, “He really wasn’t where it’s at”.

Bob visits The Factory

Bob Dylan- Like a Rolling Stone (Newcastle 1966 )

Modigliani’s Muse: The artist Jeanne Hébuterne 1898-1920



Jeanne Hébuterne (6 April 1898 – 26 January 1920)


She was a French painter and artist's model best known as the frequent subject and common-law wife of the artist Amedeo Modigliani. 
She died by suicide two days after Modigliani's death, and is now buried beside him.

Portrait of The Day: Björk by Nobuyoshi Araki

 


Björk by Nobuyoshi Araki

I love this portrait by the notoriously graphic photographer Araki

WALK OFF THE EARTH - Somebody That I Used to Know [Gotye cover] oh you wanted more Guitar!

 5 Peeps 1 Guitar!

Stream/download our new album here: https://orcd.co/meetyouthere
Watch and listen to our Greatest Hits!: http://bit.ly/WOTEgreatesthits

Walk off the Earth performs a cover of Gotye's "Somebody That I Used to Know" using five people on one guitar.

THE (YOUNG) RASCALS - Groovin’ Earworms and one hit wonders - Summer’s a comin' in

 

THE (YOUNG) RASCALS - Groovin’ etc 25 mins of SUNNY

Barcelona Guitar Trio & Dance - Billie Jean (Homage to Paco de Lucía)

 

Barcelona Guitar Trio & Dance - Billie Jean (Homage to Paco de Lucía) 
New Version

Barcelona Guitar Trio & Dance (Luis Robisco, Xavier Coll & Alí Arango) fuses both Spanish and flamenco guitar and pays tribute to Paco de Lucía during their performances.
In this video, they perform Billie Jean by Michael Jackson as a joke in Palau de la Música Catalana, in Barcelona, during one of its performances at the festival Maestros de la Guitarra. 
The Palau, one of the most admired buildings in the city, is famous for hosting some of the best musicians worldwide and it's also known as "jewel of the Catalan modernism". 
They are accompanied on stage by the percussionist Lucas Balbo and the Flamenco dancers Carol Morgado and Jose Manuel Alvarez.