I Can See You - by Paddy Summerfield c. 1986

Tuesday, April 14, 2026

HIS MASTER’S VOICE! | THE LEGEND That is the King of The Blues | JOHN LEE HOOKER 16 albums (10 CDs) | BUTTERBOY

 John Lee Hooker - 16 Original Albums & Bonus Tracks [2015] (10 x CDs)

JOHN LEE HOOKER

John Lee Hooker (August 22, 1912 or 1917 - June 21, 2001 was an American blues singer, songwriter, and guitarist. 

The son of a sharecropper, he rose to prominence performing an electric guitar-style 

adaptation of Delta blues that he developed in Detroit. Hooker often incorporated 

other elements, including talking blues and early North Mississippi hill country blues. 

He developed his own driving-rhythm boogie style, distinct from the 1930s-1940s 

piano-derived boogie-woogie. 

Hooker was ranked 35 in Rolling Stone's 2015 list of 100 greatest guitarists and 

has been cited as one of the greatest male blues vocalists of all time. (Wikipedia)


There is a particular way to approach a set like 16 Original Albums & Bonus Tracks, 

and it usually begins with accepting what it is rather than what the title suggests. 

Issued in Germany in 2015 by Documents in association with Intense Media, the box 

gathers ten discs of early John Lee Hooker recordings, built from material originally 

released across the late 1950s and early 1960s.


The physical presentation suggests abundance more than narrative. 

Ten discs, sixteen album titles, and a final disc of bonus tracks, all laid out in a way

 that invites long stretches of listening rather than careful study. 

The sequence does not behave like a run of original LPs. Instead, it moves in blocks, 

albums grouped together, styles overlapping, familiar songs appearing in slightly 

different forms as the discs turn.


Early on, the core of Hooker’s sound settles in. 

Solo performances, electric and acoustic, built around repetition and rhythm rather 

than strict structure. 

Tracks from Burning Hell and I’m John Lee Hooker introduce that steady pulse, 

voice and guitar moving together in a way that feels self-contained. 

From there, the set widens. Studio recordings with fuller backing sit alongside 

more stripped performances, yet the underlying approach remains unchanged.


Because the material comes from multiple original sources, the pacing develops 

through accumulation. One song leads into another with a similar tempo, 

then shifts slightly, then returns again. The effect is less about contrast and 

more about immersion. Variations in recording quality, arrangement, and session 

context become part of the listening rather than interruptions.


By the later discs, the repetition has its own logic. 

Certain phrases, rhythms, and melodic patterns reappear often enough to feel 

like a language rather than a set of songs. 

The final disc of bonus material extends that feeling, adding more sides 

without changing direction.

This set does not organise the material into a strict narrative, 

it simply lays it out in volume, allowing the sound to build through time and familiarity. 

It plays like a long, continuous field of early Hooker recordings. (Butterboy)

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KALEIDA : Take Me To The River (cover Al Green and Mabon "Teenie” Hodges covered so famously by TALKING HEADS)

 Found this too . . . but this one’s just from me wondering about . . . . . . . and it’s a Talking Heads cover song so . . . .[original Al Green and Mabon "Teenie” Hodges]


 . . . . .what you gonna do? 

Do we know these gals? . . . . . . I didn’t! [yeah yeah we know . . .what you don’t know could fill books! - ED] RUDE!

. . . . . and another found via the algorithm on Facebook | Exposure Therapy by Khatumu Miatta

 Khatumu Miatta - Exposure Therapy



youngster yet to release an album I think but hark to that voice and the guitar virtuosity 


Khatumu - Matador (live)

now this is what the Internet is for!

Kelly Jean Carter - Yellow Back Novel (Facebook finds)

 Kelly Jean Carter - Yellow Back Novel 


Found this on the algorithm via Facebook . . . I like her!

LITTLE FEAT - Rock ’N’ Roll Doctor! Gary Lucas recommends !

 LITTLE FEAT - Rock ’N’ Roll Doctor!

now I am not the greatest fan of Little Feat despite buying Dixie Chicken as a single when it come out and I really don’t know why and I fully expect shock and horror from my regulars but I don’t know what it is. . .  they just don’t grab me and they always leave me wanting . . . . . Gary loved them, Bonnie (Raitt) loved them, heck every rocker and slide fan loves ‘em . . . .except this one! Sorry! I’ll get me coat!

as recommended by Gary Lucas (on his Flickennabok page) 
well you gots to follow Garry who says "one of my favorite songs, and the slide solo by Lowell is out of this world” which frankly coming from one of the planet’s finest guitarists is praise indeed!

FLAGGING DOWN THE DOUBLE ES : The Bob Dylan Newsletter (April) Sometimes there’s shows in April . . . .

Sometimes There's Shows in April

Four requests: Asheville 2004, Atlantic City 2005, Atlanta 2015, West Lafayette 2025

The newsletter is already coming fast and furious with the current tour, and it’s about to come even faster and furious-er with a big anniversary series coming up. So, since I know your inboxes are already groaning under the digital weight, I’m combining April’s four paid-subscriber requests into one newsletter. Let’s go.

By the way, I’m finally catching the spring tour in a few days! I will report back from Bowling Green, Chattanooga, and Jackson (paid subscribers only). Hope to see some of you there.

PS. If you don’t get the reference in the subject line, as I was laying this entry out I happened to be listening to this Meshell Ndegeocello cover of a Prince song. Kind of a stretch, but I went with it.


Request #1: Asheville 2004

Requester Josh knocks it out of the park with a killer first show. This spring Asheville date coincidentally came only a few weeks after my own first-ever Dylan show. (This will be a trend with these requests: The first three connect closely, in different ways, with my very first Dylan shows).

This Asheville show was also, unfortunately, one of Freddy Koella’s last. Not that he knew it at the time. I interviewed the wonderfully inventive guitarist for my book, and he explained that he experienced sudden kidney failure during time off between tours:

“I called the manager and I told him,” Koella recounted. “This is when I’m at the hospital in really bad shape. I missed the tour after, and I was still sick for the next one, and the third one I was still sick. So they said, we’re gonna keep the guy who replaced you. I lost the gig because of that, which I will say was very depressing at the time.”

He went out blazing. This Spring 2004 tour was mostly small venues (The Orange Peel’s capacity is 1,050), and Dylan pulls some wild songs. “If Dog Run Free,” “I Believe in You,” “If Not For You,” and, for the first time in almost 10 years, “Unbelievable.”

None of those rarities are the highlights for me though. To me, the Time Out of Mind songs stand out the most. Even though Love & Theft is the newer album, there’s something about Time Out of Mind that inspires him to dig deep. It’s one of the most fiery “Can’t Wait”s I’ve ever heard, growly and menacing. And check out “Cold Irons Bound” with that killer vocal echo:

LISTEN NOW · 5:52

George Receli’s thundering drums shine on that one, as they do everywhere. He’s also the recipient of the dad joke in the band intro.

 “George comes from a broken home,” Bob tells the crowd. “His kids break everything in it.” ðŸ˜‚


subscribe and read on here . . . . . .

Brothers and Sisters! | The Brothers Comatose + The Sister Sadie Band : 'The Climb’ - Miley Cyrus (Hannah Montana)

 The Brothers Comatose x ‪@sistersadieband‬ - "The Climb" by ‪@MileyCyrus‬ (Hannah Montana)


I like this one from the boys and the gals!
covering Miley Cyrus no less!

ART: THE GHOST BETTING SHOP - DANGEROUS MINDS: The Glass Exchange - The Making of Ryan Gander’s Ghost Shop SUNDERLAND

The betting shop in Sunderland that’s a living piece of art

In March 2022, a piece of art that looked like a betting shop opened on High Street West in Sunderland. 

The betting shop in Sunderland that's a living piece of art

(Credits: Ryan Gander / National Glass Centre / George Darrell)

This is nothing new, to be clear – this gives High Street West something in common with basically every single high street in the United Kingdom, and it’s not the only one on the street that runs parallel to the River Wear, but all you have to do is take one cursory look and see that many things about this betting shop set it apart from all the rest. It’s abandoned, for a start. Strange for a place that could only be four years old, and perverse as it seems, times of economic hardship are often boom times for the betting industry.

Yet it’s true. The first thing you’ll see in the window is a To Let sign from a company called Lofthouse Mortgages. A closer look will see a floor strewn with crumpled up betting slips, discarded pens, sweet rappers and a pile of unread mail collecting at the front door. The door is obviously locked, and no matter how long you look through the window, you won’t see anyone actually working there. Which leads to the second strange thing about the betting shop.

There are no sponsors or corporate logos anywhere – in fact, it’s quite easy to miss that it’s a betting shop at all until you look a little closer, that’s when you’ll see the signs set up for the greyhounds, the football, Formula One, the roulette machine set up in the corner, a giant mural of a horse and jockey on one of the walls, yet all of it is still easy to miss on first glance due to the sheer lack of colour anywhere.

The reason for this is the ultimate thing that makes it stand out. Everything inside it is made of glass.

Inside the artwork on High Street West. Ghost Shop, 2022.

(Credits: Ryan Gander / National Glass Centre / George Darrell)

Why is there a glass betting shop in Sunderland?

I do mean everything as well. The roulette machine? Glass. The post on the floor? Glass. The crumpled-up betting slips? Yep, glass too. The potted plant drooping over an errant table? Take a wild guess. Even the fire extinguishers tucked away in the corner are made of glass. The only colour anywhere in the room is the grey etching on said glass that makes any words or images. Other than that, anything that isn’t a wall is glass, with absolutely no exceptions.

So obviously, it’s not and never was a functioning betting shop, so what is it? It’s actually a piece of art called Ghost Shop. It’s the work of Ryan Gander in collaboration with glassmaker James Maskrey, working together for a new National Glass Centre exhibition. Gander was one of four British artists that the NGC contacted to make glass art installations in collaboration with their glassmakers. For his piece, he decided to turn an abandoned tanning salon in the middle of Sunderland into a comment on how we look past the most obvious signs of societal decay.

Speaking to The Guardian, Gander said, “We see betting shops, but they are kind of invisible because we pay no attention to them. They just become deleted from our awareness. We cancel out other people’s problems with addictions… we just blank these things out. We make them transparent.” Ghost Shop stood for five months until September 2022, and one wonders what it was replaced with.


Given the way things are going now, I wouldn’t rule out an actual betting shop.

The Glass Exchange- The Making of Ryan Gander’s Ghost Shop

Monday, April 13, 2026

Dave Mason - Mississippi Riverbank Club, Minneapolis, MN, 7-25-1986 | Albums That Should Exist

 Dave Mason - Mississippi Riverbank Club, Minneapolis, MN, 7-25-1986

Paul says: Recently, a commenter named nytvf pointed out a Dave Mason concert on YouTube, and suggested I post that on my blog. I checked out the link, and I was impressed by the concert. It's an acoustic concert with great sound quality, but somehow it seems to only exist as that one YouTube. Well, until now, that is. Here it is converted by me into mp3s. Thanks to nytvf for the suggestion. (I'm always open to suggestions.)

Mason had commercial and critical success, highlighted by two big hits, "Only You Know and I Know" in 1970, and "We Just Disagree" in 1977. But his commercial fortunes went way down in the 1980s. He didn't even release a new studio album between 1980 and 1987. This concert happened near the end of that time. Pretty much all the songs he performed were songs he wrote in the 1960s or 1970s, or covers of classic songs. But while he didn't seem to be very creative with new songs during this time period, his performing skills were still a good as ever.

Mason played guitar, and was backed up by only one other person, Jim Krueger, also on guitar (and backing vocals). That's worth noting because Kreuger also wrote a couple of the songs performed here, "The Word" and "We Just Disagree." Kreuger was a member of Mason's band since the mid-1970s.

The one thing that surprises me here is that it seems Mason didn't play "Only You Know and I Know," which I would guess is the second best known song he's written, behind "Feelin' Alright." (Perhaps there was more to this concert that what's on the recording, I don't know.) 

Anyway, this previously obscure recording is one of the best live recordings of his music, in my opinion. The music is unreleased. The sound quality is excellent. I would guess it either has to be a soundboard or an FM radio broadcast.  

This album is an hour and 17 minutes long.

01 Feelin' Alright
02 World in Changes 
03 talk
04 Every Woman 
05 talk
06 Sad and Deep as You
07 That's Alright Mama [Instrumental Version] 
08 talk 
09 The Words 
10 Not Fade Away 
11 talk
12 Let It Go, Let It Flow 
13 talk
14 Shouldn't Have Took More than You Gave - Dear Prudence
15 talk
16 Bird on the Wind 
17 talk
18 We Just Disagree
19 talk
20 Maybe
21 talk 
22 Dust My Blues
23 talk 
24 All Shook Up
25 Bring It on Home to Me 
26 Dear Mr. Fantasy 
27 talk
28 All Along the Watchtower 
29 talk 
30 Take It to the Limit 

(all tracks Dave Mason) 

Billy Gibbons on 'La Grange’ | Don's Tunes

Photo: Jay Dickman

 

Billy Gibbons: “The “La Grange” riff is another interpretation of one of the cornerstone staples of that splendid American art form, the blues. There are many ways to chop it, we just got really lucky and landed something with resonance that lasts and lasts.” 


As Gibbons recalls, “Growing up in Texas, there were two requirements toward manhood: You had to visit La Grange, and you had to go to the Mexican border. We somehow captured both in one single trip.” 

The guitarist points to Buddy Holly’s “Peggy Sue Got Married,” the rock pioneer’s sequel to “Peggy Sue,” as compositional inspiration. “That song showed us you didn’t have to rhyme every single stanza or verse,” Gibbons says. 

“Plus, Holly left things open to interpretation: ‘I heard it’s a rumor from a friend.’ Did she get married or not? So with ‘La Grange,’ we tagged the closing with lines like, ‘I hear it’s fine… but I might be mistaken.’ The invitation stood at that moment.”

Regarding a failed lawsuit by the copyright holder of John Lee Hooker’s “Boogie Chillen’,” which resulted in a court ruling that the rhythm was in the public domain, Gibbons says, “It seemed to be a somewhat egregious and curious accusation. At the end of the day, we were kind of flattered to know that our music had taken a very important position in the history of rock and roll.” 

Don's Tunes







any excuse to revisit Peanuts covering their favourite boogie! Charlie and Snoopy can really rock!