Again on TikTok someone posted a clip of this!?!??!!!? I mean what IS TikTok for?
Saturday, January 04, 2025
WEEKEND IS HERE! | Janis Joplin - Move Over - The Full Tilt Boogie Band on Dick Cavvett 1970
Sunday, June 16, 2024
BUMP! Daily mewsics | Janis Joplin - ‘To Love Somebody’ Live on the Dick Cavett Show July 1969
Cavett always seemed like a really nice guy. . . he looked like a ‘square’ but always seemed to appreciate the contemporary scene; Janis and the Airplane to name but two . . . . Here is Janis singing the Bee Gees!
Wednesday, May 22, 2024
David Bowie (feat. David Sanborn) Young Americans live on the Dick Cavett Show 1974 - for the Davids . . . . . .
YOUNG AMERICANS
Sunday, November 14, 2021
DAVID BOWIE 'FOOTSTOMPIN'' cover of The Flairs live on Dick Cavett 1974
Fascinating cover from David Bowie and the germs of a song that was to become another this morning from Sounds of 71
Someone asked soundsof71:
David Bowie on The Dick Cavett Show, aired December 5, 1974, with David Sanborn (sax), Earl Slick, Carlos Alomar (guitars), and Pablo Rosario (percussion)
I need to find this somewhere on the interwebs
soundsof71 says: Here ya go! It’s quite ragged, coming at the end of 74 Diamond Dog/Soul Dog shows. David’s voice is shredded, but this stompin’ cover of “Footstompin’” by The Flairs features a Carlos Alomar riff that evolved into the foundation of Bowie’s track “Fame”, which the band recorded the following month.
Also featured: Geoff MacCormack (aka Warren Peace) and Luther Vandross on vocals, David Sanborn on sax, and a cutaway to a dancing Ava Cherry.
Poke around and you can find this entire episode of Cavett online, with a highly animated (coked up?) Bowie chattering away, as well as edited performances of “1984″ and the recently recorded but still unreleased title track of “Young Americans”.
Keep in mind that in the US, we were still nearly a full year before Bowie’s prime time TV debut (on Cher, November 23, 1975), so this was the first time that much of mainstream America got a look at our boy in action– as well, indeed, as the first look most of us got of Luther Vandross and the wailin’ David Sanborn.