I Can See You - by Paddy Summerfield c. 1986

Friday, November 14, 2025

Little Red Rooster - The Rolling Stones Ready Steady Go 1964

somebody posted a clip for this tidied up tape . . . 

we want the whole thing don’t we?

Little Red Rooster - The Rolling Stones {Stereo} Ready Steady Go! 1964

The Rolling Stones - Little Red Rooster on R.S.G. with interview with Brian first?
 w/ Keith Fordyce

Thursday, November 13, 2025

Dylan Daily - Setlist from Wales this month

 Home of namesake Dylan Thomas greets the bard!









From last year Bob Dylan Mother Of Muses 09.11.2024 A Woolhall Original


Peter G - Lead A Normal Life|jt1674

 

https://www.tumblr.com/jt1674/800104079626993664/peter-gabriel-lead-a-normal-life

Buck Owens & His Buckaroos - Fallin’ For You (1965)


image

Buck Owens & His Buckaroos - Fallin’ For You (1965)

Prime Bakersfield country with Don Rich’s telecaster twang bringing the honky tonk.

Neil Young - Forever Young (San Francisco '91) Archives Be Damned 2000

https://citizenkanejrblues.tumblr.com/post/754481296989978624/neil-young-forever-young-san-francisco-11-3-91
Forever Young (San Francisco 11-3-91)Neil YoungArchives Be Damned 2000 (Disc 1)

HERBERG DE KELDER

The Sundays - 35th Anniversary 1990-2025

 Butterboy has posted a superb profile on the Sundays by regally K Special not entirely sure why - seems a tad out of the box from BB but hey 6 CDs can’t be bad Despite the undoubted appeal of singer Harriet Wheeelr they were something of a one (two?- ED) hit wonder and not sure the warrant a 6 CD profile but hey K knows best

The Sundays - Here's Where the Story Ends... 35th Anniversary 1990-2025 (6CD) (2025)


K SPECIAL

The Sundays - Here's Where the Story Ends... 35th Anniversary 1990-2025 (6CD) (2025)

This year (2025) marks the 35th anniversary of the legendary debut album 'Reading, Writing and Arithmetic' released by The Sundays on 15th January 1990.




David Byrne at The New Yorker [profile by Amanda Petrisich, photos by David LaChapelle]


 



David Byrne seems “unusually organized for a rock star,” Amanda Petrusich writes. This past summer, the musician was concurrently planning his wedding, the launch of his new album, “Who is the Sky?,” and a 68-date world tour. Byrne’s career has been marked by experimentation and intensity, first as the front man of Talking Heads, the new-wave band that he started in 1975 with the drummer Chris Frantz and the bassist Tina Weymouth, two friends from art school, and then as a solo artist. His music has grown increasingly earnest over the years, but it is still almost always about alienation. Conversely, it is also about searching for home—how to find synchronicity, peace, wholeness. The most recent era of Byrne’s life has been dedicated to perpetuating ideas of hopefulness and service. He has come to understand this as a kind of mandate. “The days of just providing entertainment, they’re over—we have an obligation to do more,” he said recently.


 Read the full story: https://www.newyorker.com/magazine/2025/11/17/david-byrne-profile?utm_source=facebook&utm_medium=social&utm_campaign=dhfacebook&utm_content=app.dashsocial.com%2Fnewyorkermag%2Flibrary%2Fmedia%2F605283677