I Can See You - by Paddy Summerfield c. 1986

Saturday, April 25, 2026

Bonnie Raitt - Live Amsterdam, NL. 1989 (updated - FLAC) | FLOPPY BOOT STOMP

Bonnie Raitt - Live Amsterdam, NL. 1989

THE QUEEN OF SLIDE

Bonnie Raitt - The Paradiso
April 16, 1989
Amsterdam, The Netherlands
FM Source @256
FM broadcast by Dutch public radio 3FM in 1989
&
Flac link added!! 
 

Set List:
01 Talk To Me
02 Green Lights
03 Intro
04 Have A Heart
05 Intro
06 To Soon To Tell
07 Intro
08 Three Time Loser
09 Intro
10 Nick Of Time 
11 Intro
12 Willya Wontcha
13 Guilty 
14 Nobody's Girl
15 Intro
16 Angel From Montgomery
17 Intro
18 Love Me Like A Man
19 Intro
20 Women Be Wise
21 Band intro
22 Give It Up
23 Love Letter
24 Thanks and goodbye
25 Think


Lineup:
James "Hutch" Hutchinson - bass
Tony Braunagel - drums
Johnny Lee Schell - guitar
Marty Grebb - saxophone
Walt Richmond - keyboards

Source: FM broadcast by Dutch public radio 3FM in 1989. 

same year
Bonnie Raitt - Thing Called Love - 11/26/1989 - Henry J. Kaiser Auditorium Oakland, CA



Dangerous Minds - ‘Performance' the Cult movie 1970 - Will Howard


 

‘Performance’: the 1970 cult movie that drove a wedge through The Rolling Stones

There are a few moments in the history of The Rolling Stones that I wouldn’t want to be a fly on the wall for, especially in the late 1960s and early 1970s, but the one I would most like to sit in on probably doesn’t have any of the actual band members in it. 

It occurred in 1968, when the execs who’d given the band and a production company a ton of money to make a Rolling Stones motion picture all got together in a Soho screening room to watch the finished product. I can only imagine the backslapping and self-satisfaction in that room prior to the projector starting up. A bunch of men in suits that cost more than your car, convinced they’ve got a surefire hit on their hands, and they’re all going to be cumming money until the 1980s at least. Because surely, this is exactly what they asked for, right?


This film is just A Hard Day’s Night but with The Rolling Stones, right? Sure, it’ll be a little bit different, the movie was made four years after the Fabs’ knockabout comedy larks, and the world was a very different place than it was then. It’ll essentially provide the same service, though, some larks and fun for the teeny boppers to watch their favourite pop stars get up to some shenanigans with. Perhaps with a little more sex and salaciousness, as The Stones were a little more dangerous, but beyond that, fun for all the family? Right?


Then the picture was screened. One of the execs had brought along their wife to see the film, and she vomited in shock. Their money had been spent not on A Hard Day’s Night but with Jagger, Richards and chums, but on a surreal, violent crime thriller that – well, it was a little more sexual than A Hard Day’s Night, as they expected, but they probably weren’t expecting it to feature bisexuality, gender fluidity and threesomes between the main cast members.


Because this wasn’t a knockabout romp. This was Performance, and if it was any consolation to those scandalised suits, it wasn’t really going down any better in the Stones’ camp either.



Why did ‘Performance’ nearly split up The Rolling Stones?

Now, to be clear, on the one hand, the finished article of Performance was exactly the kind of film The Stones wanted it to be. The trouble was everything else. The Rolling Stones weren’t a great place to be in 1968. Brian Jones was in the process of systematically Syd Barrett-ing himself into an early grave. The cops, the taxman and the English press had each made The Stones public enemy number one. Then Jagger took the lead role in this picture, and the role of his girlfriend was given to Anita Pallenberg.

This should have been inspired casting. Pallenberg was exactly the kind of cool that Jagger was, a style icon and high-profile model/actress of the era. The problem was that Anita Pallenberg had a high-profile boyfriend in real life. Who might that be, I hear you ask? Why, that would be Rolling Stones guitarist and lifelong Mick Jagger frenemy, Keith Richards. It was bad enough that Pallenberg and Jagger would be playing romantic partners. When Richards heard that directors by Donald Cammell and Nicolas Roeg were filming unsimulated sex scenes between his girlfriend and his singer, he took to spending entire shooting days sat in his car outside the shooting location.

To make matters worse, this made the chances of a full-on Rolling Stones album as the film’s soundtrack vanishingly thin. Jagger and Richards were barely talking during the production. As the band’s core creative partnership, this was a problem. Only one Jagger/Richards original made it onto the movie’s soundtrack, and, in true Stones fashion, it’s one of their best songs of the late 1960s. ‘Memo From Turner’ points to a tantalising what might have been if a full album had been made to soundtrack Performance.

The film was shelved in disgust in 1968, but by 1970, the world had darkened sufficiently for its release. It was still not a hit by any stretch, but it has since gone down as a cult classic and one of the best British crime gangster flicks ever. I’m sure if you explained that to Keith Richards at the time, he would have completely understood and perhaps even embraced being cucked by his own lead singer. Maybe.
Performance - Theatrical Trailer

Performance - Soundtrack - Randy Newman and ensemble - Gone Dead Train
 . . . .still a favourite track

I don’t know how many times I have watched this film and even sought out the houses featured in London used in it.

Kelly Boesch - The Light Between and ‘Goodbye ‘ UK!

 Kelly says Goodbye to the UK and heads home with this . . . . . (note the different voice? Male?)



Kelly says:
"My last night in London. I head home tomorrow. I have lots of new songs and videos to start posting next week. This is an older song that just got put up on streaming. It’s called ‘The Light Between’. I wrote this one early last year. It’s about finding beauty in imperfection, brokenness and the in-between moments in life.
Midjourney v8.1 is very cool. I’ve just been playing around with it on my phone. Made this one tonight. I got early access. It’s very different. It’s so much fun when a new version comes out. So many new ideas. "
The Light Between
(Verse 1)
Light finds the cracks,
In walls we build.
Joy sneaks in gaps,
Where doubt gets filled.
(Pre-Chorus)
The gold’s in the break,
The bloom’s in the fall.
What bends won’t break
It holds it all.
(Chorus)
Chase the glow, not the ghost,
Find the most in the least.
Life’s a dance, slightly strange,
Every fall is a chance to change.
(Verse 2)
Time marks your skin,
With stories true.
Scars where you’ve been,
Show what you knew.
(Pre-Chorus)
The gold’s in the break,
The bloom’s in the fall.
What bends won’t break
It holds it all.
(Chorus)
Chase the glow, not the ghost,
Find the most in the least.
Life’s a dance, slightly strange,
Every fall is a chance to change.
(Bridge)
Between dark and dawn,
Between gone and here.
Between lost and found,
That’s where we appear.
(Outro)
Every crack, every break,
Every heart learns to wake.
There’s light in the wound
Heal slow, bloom soon.

Faeland revisited for Spring

 Faeland - We're Just a Love Song


8 years ago I found these two and bought everything and helped them fund raise via Crowfodfuner r their last album (their 3rd) which was delayed for the longest time . . . .illness Covid and you know that life stuff . . . I like them



Funding the last album


Capitol Theatre, Port Chester, New York - archives opened! Check out ALBUMS THAT SHOULD EXIST


 

 seeing as how my entire raison d’être for doing this was to share links to other blogs posting ROIOs that I liked and hope that my taste was suitable catholic enough to warrant other’s interest here is today’s post from Paul at ATSE . . . .mentioning a new batch of recordings via the legendary Guitars101 . . . . . follow his links heck visit his site and place your orders or try the list!

Another Poll

Here's a really interesting thing that just happened. Yesterday, somebody posted a list of dozens of newly liberated bootlegs, nearly all of them recorded at the Capitol Theater in Port Chester, New York. They're generally from about 2012 to 2019, though there are some exceptions. They include many of the biggest name musical acts to pass through there. Here's the list (scroll down the thread a bit to see it):

https://www.guitars101.com/threads/you-didnt-get-this-from-me.843644/

Actually, I see that's only a partial list. Here's a PDF file of the complete list, which is twice as long:

https://pixeldrain.com/u/86W6nJCY

If you're interested, I highly recommend you grab the ones you want for yourself, while the grabbing is good. Who knows, the links may all die at any time. 

There's good news and bad news. The good news is that, of the ones I've sampled so far, the sound quality is fantastic. Every single one is a soundboard. Many also are high quality videos. The bad news is that most of them are mono, and most are just a single sound or video file, with no song list or anything else. I can't do anything about the mono, but I could fix the other issues. I want to take some of these and give them my usual treatment, chopping them into mp3s, giving them song titles, making cover art, and so forth. But I can only do that for a small percentage of this very long list, especially since I have so much other music I want to post too.

So that gets me to a poll. If you want to see me fix up and post certain concerts from that list, please write which ones you want the most. Just give the artist name and year, and I can figure out the rest. To keep things reasonable, please list no more than ten. I don't know how many I will convert, but I'll try to do at least the top vote getters. Thanks. Paul ATSE

The David Grisman Quintet - Ricochet

  . . . .and of course it takes Gary Lucas to focus my attention with this wonderful post of The Dave Grisman Quintet - RICOCHET!


thanks Gary

Ежин Спажин . . . .say what now?

All a bit too heavy . . .and serious? Well here's a lil ditty I posted a year or so ago on that there Flackennahoek!?  

[Polish? 1970]

Prurient · Some Pain Has To Be Endured (Retaliation) [Dominick Fernow]

 

Prurient - Dominick Fernow

some contemplative ambience for a Saturday

Iranian Jazz · Silk roads fade, but melodies remain | 1 Hour Endless Night

So how about some Iranian music!?  . . . .don’t know where I found this last night wandering the blogosphere but here . . . . . .  it caught my ear

Iranian Jazz · Silk roads fade, but melodies remain | 1 Hour Endless Night

we are separated by nothing but language and joined by music

Toumani Diabaté - Elyne Road

 Might start the day with some peaceful contemplative meditation musics . . . we love Diabaté


‘The Mandé Variations’ is probably the most ambitious and challenging African instrumental album yet released. It is at once the definitive statement on where the kora is today and simply one of the most beautiful and melodically accessible albums you will hear this year. An important album for Africa, an important album for the world.

Recorded unaccompanied and entirely without overdubs, ‘The Mandé Variations’ is an African classical album that rocks and swings, that has learnt from Miles Davis and Jimi Hendrix, yet remains entirely true to the kora player’s Mandé griot tradition.

Superbly recorded so that we can hear every touch of the strings, every throb and creak of the instrument’s wood and sinew, ‘The Mandé Variations’ takes us not only to the deep places of the Mandé soul, but almost physically into the kora itself. This is the ultimate statement on one of the world’s great instruments – until the next Toumani Diabaté album.