I Can See You - by Paddy Summerfield c. 1986

Friday, November 21, 2025

The Gregg Rolie Band - Rain Dance Live 2007 | Voodoo Wagon

speaking of SANTANA . . . . . 


The Gregg Rolie Band - Rain Dance Live (Out Of Print)

An Xray Special

The Gregg Rolie Band - Rain Dance Live 
Recorded during 2007 tour

No longer in print

01. Jingo

02. Going Home

03. No One To Depend On

04. As the Years Go Passing By

05. Evil Ways

06. Across the Water

07. Give It To Me

08. Soul Sacrifice

09. Black Magic Woman

10. Gypsy Queen

11. Oye Como Va

12. Bailamos El Son


"So retro that it is actually cool! Rain Dance Live is an amazing concert recording by a bunch of veteran blues rockers led by legendary keyboardist / vocalist / producer Gregg Rolie. Rolie was a long time member of Carlos Santana’s band and a founding member of Journey (as well as founder of bands The Storm and Abraxas Pool). Gregg and band recorded this album while on tour in 2007. After giving this a listen it is obvious why Rolie was inducted into the Rock And Roll Hall Of Fame. Fans of Carlos Santana or Stevie Ray Vaughn won’t want to miss this one." XRay

Jingo . . . . 2007

Santana : Savor/Jingo Live in Tanglewood ’70 | jt1674

 weren’t we just after saying the other day that Santana prior to his conversion to the teachings of guru Shri Chrinmoy was the best era . . . . . . around Woodstock and the first three albums in particular!? 

Well here they are Live at Tanglewood 1970  . . . . . it doesn’t get any better . . . . . . 

https://www.tumblr.com/jt1674/800830032706666496/santana-savor-jingo

XTC - COAT OF MANY CUPBOARDS : BALL & CHAIN (unused single recording version) | jt1674

 Coat of Many Cupboards is my favourite XTC compilation boxed set . . . . . 

https://www.tumblr.com/jt1674/800822898030936064/xtc-ball-and-chain-unused-single-recording

Neil Young - Expecting to Fly [Live at The Cellar Door] | jt1674

 Speaking of 1970 . . . . . . here’s our Neil . . I’ve been expecting to fly ever since

https://www.tumblr.com/jt1674/800736129948188672/neil-young-expecting-to-fly

Tom Petty and The Heartbreakers - Live at BBC THEATRE | OLD GREY WHISTLE TEST IN CONCERT 1978

Rockin' Pretty Steady 'til The Sky Went Light...



Captured from the UK TV show,
The Old Grey Whistle Test back in '78.  
Just after the release of
You're Gonna Get It
Another great performance from Tom and the band.



Highly Recommended,one of the best 
Music Documentaries/Concert Films.


SMOKER says he has new links for this great set from Tom and the boys
from the Old Grey Whistle Test (BBC Theatre in concert) Intro by Whispering Bob Harris

with a shameless plug for the Run-in’ Down a Dream DVD filmed by Peter Bogdanovich (The Last Picture Show etc)

Bridget St. John - Yep (The Complete . . . ) | Herberg De Kelder

YepBridget St. JohnThe Complete …image

HERBERG DE KELDER

formerly Le Ramasseur De Mégots,

Jimi Hendrix as Session Musician, Volume 3: 1969-1970 | Albums That Should Exist

 Jimi Hendrix & Various Artists - Jimi Hendrix as Session Musician, Volume 3: 1969-1970

Paul says: Here's the third and last album showcasing the session work by Jimi Hendrix, arguably the greatest lead guitarist of all time. This deals with the last two years of his life, 1969 and 1970.

By 1969, Hendrix was a big star. He loved performing live, and often dropped in as a guest in concerts put on by other musicians he liked, especially when they played in small clubs near where he lived. However, he still didn't guest on records that much, especially those that got released while he was alive. 

A couple examples of him doing this are "Yes I Need Someone" and "The Clown" by Eire Apparent. Hendrix actually produced the entire debut album by this band from Northern Ireland, and these are just two of the songs from it. Unfortunately, he mostly kept a low profile with his guitar playing on this album, with these two songs probably showing the most playing by him. His Experience band mates Noel Redding and Mitch Mitchell also played on many of the songs. The band broke up after that single album. 

Another song released in his lifetime was "Old Times, Good Times," which came out on the 1970 debut solo album by Stephen Stills (of Crosby, Stills and Nash fame), simply called "Stephen Stills." Hendrix and Stills formed a musical connection and often jammed with each other, but very little of it saw the light of day. "30 Dollar Fine" and "No-Name Jam (Instrumental)," and "White Nigger (High and Dry)" are all Stills songs with Hendrix that didn't get officially released until decades later. In fact, "White Nigger (High and Dry)" is still unreleased, probably due to song title, obviously now considered quite offensive.

A song that almost came out in Hendrix's lifetime is "The Everlasting First," released by Love. This came out at the very end of 1970, a couple of months after Hendrix's death. Hendrix had a natural bond with Arthur Lee, the lead singer and main songwriter of Love, due to both of them being Black men in a overwhelmingly Causasian rock world at the time. This song was cowritten by Hendrix and Lee. The two of them actually knew each other before either of them became famous. Hendrix even played guitar on a song written by Lee back in 1964. 

Generally speaking, the other songs here came out much later, on archival releases. Tracks 3 and 4 are from the "West Coast Seattle Boy" box set. Track 6 is from "The Experience Sessions." Track 10 is from "People, Hell and Angels." Track 13 is a jam session, and remains unreleased. Track 5, "Doriella Du Fontaine," is a curious case, because the lead vocals weren't added until 1973. That's from "Change the Beat: The Celluloid Records Story."

That just leaves the three bonus tracks. These all sound fine, despite the fact they're all still unreleased. But the reason I made them bonus tracks is because they actually are from concerts where Hendrix guested, and the theme here is him guesting with studio sessions. Perhaps someone could help me find enough songs for a full album (or albums?) of Hendrix being a guest star in concerts, then I could move these to that. Unfortunately, in my opinion, a lot of the recordings of his guest appearances have poor sound quality. "Baby's Gone Away" and "The Sky Is Crying" come from the Newport 69 Festival in Northridge, California. "Mother Earth" is from a concert at a club in London on September 16, 1970. I'm not sure, but I think that might be his last public performance, because he died of a drug overdose just two days later, on September 18, 1970. I don't remember why I put "[Edit]" since I did that a long time ago. But I think I cleaned up a lot of the audience noise (it being from an audience boot), and possibly boosted the vocals.

This album is 52 minutes long, not including the three bonus tracks.

01 30 Dollar Fine (Stephen Stills with Jimi Hendrix)
02 Yes I Need Someone (Eire Apparent with Jimi Hendrix)
03 Instant Groove (King Curtis with Jimi Hendrix)
04 Mastermind (Larry Lee with Jimi Hendrix)
05 Doriella Du Fontaine (Lightnin' Rod with Jimi Hendrix & Buddy Miles)
06 Noel's Tune [Instrumental] (Noel Redding with Jimi Hendrix)
07 The Clown (Eire Apparent with Jimi Hendrix)
08 No-Name Jam [Instrumental] (Stephen Stills with Jimi Hendrix)
09 The Everlasting First [Extended Version] (Love with Jimi Hendrix)
10 Mojo Man (Albert Allen & the Ghetto Fighters with Jimi Hendrix)
11 Old Times, Good Times (Stephen Stills with Jimi Hendrix)
12 White Nigger [High and Dry] (Stephen Stills with Jimi Hendrix)
13 Dreamin' [Instrumental] (Eric Oxendine with Jimi Hendrix & Richie Havens)

Baby's Gone Away (Jimi Hendrix with Buddy Miles & Lee Oskar)
Mother Earth [Edit] (Eric Burdon & War with Jimi Hendrix)
The Sky Is Crying (Buddy Miles with Jimi Hendrix & Lee Oskar)


Now as Paul says this is the third of these and I post only because it is Jimi\s last contributions of value to other people’s work . . the [revious two vols are f less interest to me  . . the early show band work is well know to me and I don’t need to bother with here . . 

if interested the links are here


Jimi Hendrix & Various Artists - Jimi Hendrix as Session Musician, Volume 2: 1967-1968

Jimi as Session musician Vol II here . . . 

Jimi Hendrix & Various Artists - Jimi Hendrix as Session Musician, Volume 1: 1964-1966

Jimi as Session musician Vol I here . . . . .

. . .with you I can be Professor Longhair! Ahmet Ertegün recalls meeting the ‘Fess!

 
Fess


BUT I SIGNED WITH THEM AS ROELAND BYRD. . .

WITH YOU, I CAN BE PROFESSOR LONGHAIR


Ahmet Ertegün (co-founder and president of Atlantic Records) : 
"While we were down South, someone mentioned Professor Longhair, a musical magician who played in a style all his own. We asked around and finally found ourselves taking a ferryboat to the other side of the Mississippi, to Algiers, where a white taxi driver would deliver us only as far as an open field. 
"You're on your own,' he said, pointing to the lights of a distant village. 'I ain't going into that nigger town. Abandoned, we trudged across the field, lit only by the light of a crescent moon. The closer we came, the more distinct the sound of distant music - some big rocking band, the rhythm exciting us and pushing us on. Finally we came upon a nightclub - or rather a shack which, like an animated cartoon, appeared to be expanding and deflating with the pulsation of the beat. A big man at the door barred our way and told us we couldn't go in. I was going to say, 'We're from Atlantic Records, but then I remembered that hardly anyone had even heard of Atlantic, so I said, 'We're from Life magazine. And he said, 'Oh really?' I said, 'Yeah and we've come to hear Professor Longhair. So the guy said, 'Well, I don't think you should be coming in here. So I said, 'Well, just put us in a corner, hide us, we want to hear the music. I mean it was blaring out of there - drums, a mike on the piano and on the vocals the place was packed, people hanging out of the windows and everything. Finally the guy on the door said, 'Okay, I can put you right behind the bandstand. I said, 'Fine put us anywhere, it doesn't matter. So he walked us in, and a lot of people actually scattered because they figured the law had arrived. We were put in a corner and I was amazed to see that there wasn't a full band, there wasn't even a drummer, there was only a single musician - Professor Longhair. He was using the upright piano as both keyboard and bass drum, pounding a kick plate with his right foot to keep time, playing two and four against the thing, creating these weird, wide harmonies and singing in the open-throated style of the blues shouters of old. 
'My God!' I said to Herb, 'We've discovered a primitive genius.' I'd never heard music like that and I've never to this day heard anybody else play the piano quite like that. So after the set he came over and I said, 'You know what, you're going to be recording for Atlantic Records. So he said, 'I'm terribly sorry, but I signed with Mercury last week. Then he added, 'But I signed with them as Roeland Byrd. With you, I can be Professor Longhair.”

Professor Longhair - Red Beans  - (Crawfish Fiesta) a favourite Fess album and a favourite track


said to be released every year for Mardi Gras . . . how could you not go?
Professor Longhair - Go To The Mardi Gras


Birthdays: Björk

 Happy birthday to Björk, born as Björk Guðmundsdóttir in Reykjavík, Iceland on this day in 1965. You blow a fuse, zing boom, the devil cuts loose, zing boom.

Go on click it anyway . . . . . it works I swear!

Björk performing 'It’s Oh So Quiet' on the Tonight Show with Jay Leno in 1995

Route

image


Actors we like . . . . well some mo’ gals basically!

 . . . .  (we don’t say actresses [too sexist] but these are mostly if not exclusively gals! So sue me!


How to make an entrance!

Rebecca Ferguson
Blimey . . .  More Rebecca!


great actor our Saoirse Ronan


Saoirse in Little Women


Sad loss - Diane Keaton

a pensive Emilia Clarke in 

Budding great actor Jodie Foster with Andy Warhol

Sigourney

Cybil

Legendary Tuesday Weld


We like Anya too don’t we? 

 Léa Seydoux

more Léa



Helena Bonham Carter photographed by Annie Leibovitz at the Freud Museum in Hampstead, London, on January 14, 1998, for the April 1998 issue of Vanity Fair.

Andrea Blanch - Helena Bonham Carter (Vogue UK 1987)


another terrible loss the incandescent Olivia Hussey

Local gal and burgeoning great actor we think Florence Pugh

Little (sic! ahem) Millie Bobby Brown

Kaya!

Isabella Rossellini, 1975 | © Fabrizio Ferri

Starting in the OC we followed the lovely Michelle Williams 
and fully expect more and more great work

Cissy

Another truly great actor (see the Chess film!) Anya



Eva Green



Emma S

Gillian


Claire Bloom Look Back In Anger 1959


we like Margot too don’t we?


Lèa


Juliet


Daisy has class

Aubrey Plaza as a blonde!


Sandy B in Practical Magic

Lèa

Rachel in the Laudromat!

More Helena


Theresa Russell

Dakota Fanning and Riley Keough as Cherie and Marie Currie 
in Fiona Sigismondi’s 'The Runaways

Gem

Damn! She grewd!

Wow! Elle or Dakota you tell me

You know they say that men improve with age!?
Just a thought but women do too!
Evidence?
Two words = Gillian Anderson!

our Jodie

I mean Hayley!
ya get me?
I think you do!

Wynona

Emma scrubs up well too

I meant every word! . . . don’t hang up Amanda!


Mind you we quite liked Monica B too!


Not a lot like Joan Baez!

Monica Barbaro


the wondrous Eleanor

Kat

Daisy


Saoirse

Emma


with her BAFTA!

Emily


Mercy, it’s Dakota!




and we won’t forget Pru
Lost this  past month . . .