THE MASTER . . . . . . JEFF BECK
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I Can See You - by Paddy Summerfield c. 1986
Sunday, April 26, 2026
Jeff Beck - Pork Pie (From "Performing This Week Live at Ronnie Scotts”) 2007 [Track of The Week]
again with the clips . . . so here’s the full version it's PORK PIE at Ronnie Scotts
Jeff Beck - Pork Pie (From "Performing This Week Live at Ronnie Scotts”)
Jeff Beck - Guitar
Vinnie Colaiuta - Drums
Tal Wilkenfeld - Bass
Jason Rebello - Keys
as the guys at The Rock n Roll Bible and Jazz Rock Fusion who posted the snippet post out watch out for Robert Plant in the audience smiling as he is transported like everyone else (even Tal!)
Lambchop - The Saturday Option [What Another Man Spills] | Herberg De Kelder
The Saturday Option

HERBERG DE KELDER
Young Marble Giants - Cakewalking | jt1674
We have had tracks from this album before and yes it was one of those bought when it came out . . .I was so excited by this lot when they first hit . . .still love this debut album
#alison statton#phil moxham#stuart moxhamDr. John - Such A Night (1982) PBS Soundstage | Guess I’m Dumb

Dr. John - Such A Night (1982)
Dr. John recorded the original version of Such A Night in 1971, and while I like that version, this rendition from a PBS Soundstage program in 1982 is so alive, exuberant and filled with the New Orleans spirit.
If I don’t do it somebody else will
Full set here . . . .Chicago Sound Stage 1982 with Allan Toussaint and Etta James
Molly (Tuttle) and cohorts warmup (in the car park!?)
Molly Tuttle
And this is in the car park!!!?
A Doc Watson warm up!
Holy Moly!
Teenage Fanclub - Going Places (1995) | Guess I’m Dumb

Teenage Fanclub - Going Places (1995)
"Superlative power pop from the Fannies.” Can you say that GID? “I just did!” Guess I’m Dumb
Drank the ocean
Moved my feet to a different sound
Junior Wells Chicago Blues Band with Buddy Guy - Yonder Wall [Hoodoo Man Blues] | HERBERG DE KELDER
Yonder Wall

HERBERG DE KELDER
now like Baby Please Don’t Go, Goodnight Irene How Come Your Dog Don’t Bark etc etc and too many others to mention Yonder Wall is one of those public domain blues standards that I was so fascinated by as youngster (13 or so) and I think the first time I heard it was from The Paul Butterfield Blues Band and/or John Mayall (Bluesbreakers?) and it has stuck . . . . I have it as Yonders Wall [as indeed it is sung here] by loads of folk and the pluralisation intrigued me always.
Written in 1945 by Memphis Jimmy [James "Beale Street” Clark] it is most associated with Elmore James upon whose version most contemporary versions are based (1961?) and Jazz Gillum recorded the earliest about a year after Clark wrote it and many folks think that it his despite the label acknowledgment that it is written by Clark. It is also frequently known as Hand Me Down My Walking Cane . . . . but the ‘Yonders’ intrigued me the most. Who was Yonder and why did he have a wall, why do I need to get my walking cane and is his wife expecting him back any minute now!?😉
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