We have had this before (see above there years ago now) and wouldn’t you know
it its old gobshite here who spouts off on the first time around i the comments
section but what I said then still stands. I said the other day that the collectors
of Bowie boots will find the 90s his heyday of ROIOs and they are, as a body
of work, simply astonishingly good.
I ruminated that where Brian Eno his erstwhile frequent collaborator there is hardly
anything of any quality in the same genre but for his close David they are legion!
Enjoy! I certain did thanks again to the Boss at FBS/VW
David Bowie - Point Depot Dublin, Ireland 1995-11-24 Soundboard @flac
CD1: 01 The Motel 02 Look Back In Anger 03 The Heart's Filthy Lesson 04 Scary Monsters 05 The Voyeur of Utter Destruction (As Beauty) 06 I Have Not Been to Oxford Town 07 Outside 08 Andy Warhol 09 The Man Who Sold the World 10 A Small Plot of Land 11 Boys Keep Swinging 12 Strangers When We Meet 13 Jump They Say 14 Hallo Spaceboy
CD2: 01 We Prick You 02 Band Introductions 03 Nite Flights 04 My Death 05 DJ 06 Teenage Wildlife 07 Under Pressure 08 Moonage Daydream
Silent Way says:
*Original Notes*
This is the source used for the 3xLP release "Dublin: I'm In Clover”
by Bureau Supply that is scheduled for release tomorrow.
Tom Waits picked his 20 favourite albums of all time
FAROUT Magazine 2023
"For a songwriter, Dylan is as essential as a hammer and nails and a saw are to a carpenter. I like my music with the rinds and the seeds and pulp left in – so the bootlegs I obtained in the sixties and seventies, where the noise and grit of the tapes became inseparable from the music, are essential to me.”
Tom Waits
Tom Waits’ 20 favourite albums:
In the Wee Small Hours – Frank Sinatra
Solo Monk – Thelonious Monk
Trout Mask Replica – Captain Beefheart
Exile On Main Street – The Rolling Stones
The Sinking of the Titanic – Gavin Bryers
The Basement Tapes – Bob Dylan
Lounge Lizards – Lounge Lizards
Rum Sodomy and the Lash – The Pogues
I’m Your Man – Leonard Cohen
The Specialty Sessions – Little Richard
Startime – James Brown
Bohemian-Moravian Bands – Texas-Czech
The Yellow Shark – Frank Zappa
Passion for Opera Aria
Rant in E Minor – Bill Hicks
Prison Songs: Murderous Home – Alan Lomax Collection
Cubanos Postizos – Marc Ribot
Houndog – Houndog
Purple Onion – Les Claypool
The Delivery Man – Elvis Costello
"Being inspired by Bob Dylan and The Beat Generation, Waits would later move to Los Angeles, where he signed his first recording contract with Asylum Records. The development of Waits’ sound would gradually move closer to rock, blues and experimental genres, so it was clear that he would cite Trout Mask Replica by Captain Beefheart as an album that had a significant impact on his life.
“The roughest diamond in the mine, his musical inventions are made of bone and mud,” Waits said of Beefheart’s album. “Enter the strange matrix of his mind and lose yours. This is indispensable for the serious listener. An expedition into the centre of the earth, this is the high jump record that’ll never be beat, it’s a merlot reduction sauce. He takes da bait. Dante doing the buck and wing at a Skip James suku jump. Drink once and thirst no more.”
I have eight of these amongst the collection down in the vaults (down past the dungeon and turn right by the Ha-ha) Despite my tutor at Art School being on his list I have to disagree with Lee here as "perfectly balanced” “neatly constructed” a list as its possible to get?
Nope it is ODD!
Marc Ribot? Les Claypool? Lounge Lizards? ( I own this one but top twenty in anyone’s collection? I think not?!
Despite the mention of Dylan being as indispensable as "a hammer and nails" - the Basement Tapes? Odd and perverse choice I thought . . . . .
How about you? Discuss . . . .aaaaaand GO!
Gavin Bryars - Jesus’ Blood Never Failed Me Yet (feat. Tom Waits)
If you love the blues, you need to know the name Johnny Jones.
Before he became Nashville’s undisputed guitar king, Johnny’s journey started deep in the American South.
Born in Jackson, Mississippi, United States August 17, 1936, he grew up surrounded by the roots of the blues.
By the time he was a teenager in the early 1950s, his prodigy-level talent caught the attention of blues royalty.
He landed his very first professional gig touring with harmonica master Junior Wells, a massive launchpad that quickly established Johnny as a fierce new voice on the scene. Soon after, he spent years on the road backing the legendary Bobby “Blue” Bland, sharpening the razor-sharp phrasing and soulful tone that would soon define the Nashville sound.In the 1960s, Johnny made his way to Nashville’s Jefferson Street, then a blazing hotbed for R&B and the rest is history.
Johnny’s prominent early 1960s band The Imperial Seven, were a fixture at Nashville’s famous New Era Club on Jefferson Street, where a young Jimi Hendrix would regularly show up to watch Johnny play and pick up guitar tips.
Before he was a global icon, a young Jimi Hendrix was stationed near Nashville.
Johnny took him under his wing, helping the young guitarist turn raw talent into a focused, undeniable force.
Nashville folklore still talks about the night Johnny and Jimi went head-to-head in a guitar battle at the Club Baron. The verdict? Johnny won the crowd’s applause that night. When Jimi left town, Johnny even took over his band, the King Casuals!
He brought the underground sound to national TV, tearing it up in the house bands for pioneering 1960s R&B shows like The!!!! Beat and Night Train.
Johnny Jones passed away on October 14, 2009, at the age of 73 in Nashville, Tennessee.
He’s widely recognized as a chief architect of the Nashville R&B and blues movement.
He bridges the gap between traditional Southern blues and the foundational roots of psychedelic rock through his heavy mentorship and stylistic influence on a young Jimi Hendrix.
Johnny Jones and The King Casuals - Purple Haze
The poster on Youtube said:
Johnny Jones and the King Casuals were a Nashville, Tennessee, rhythm and blues group active in the 1960s. They were regular performers at the North Nashville club district, Printer's Alley clubs, as well as often serving as the house band for the local television program, Night Train.
The band, which was originally named 'The King Kasuals', was founded in 1962 by Jimi Hendrix and bassist Billy Cox in Clarksville, Tennessee, United States, after the two were discharged from the adjacent Fort Campbell Army post, and eventually relocated to Nashville.
Johnny Jones (born John Albert Jones, August 17, 1936, Eads, Tennessee)[1] moved to Chicago where he practised the blues with Junior Wells and others. He moved back to Nashville in the early 1960s to become a session musician, and eventually assumed leadership of the King Casuals, circa 1964, replacing Hendrix. The band recorded a portfolio of singles in later years. The final recording featuring Jones was his 2001 solo release, Blues Is In the House.
"Purple Haze" by Johnny Jones and the King Casuals was a popular R&B single, played in the Northern soul clubs of the Midlands and the North of England during the late 1960s and early 1970s.
Johnny Jones died on October 14, 2009, at age 73
I feel ashamed not to know the name Johnny Jones. I knew the name of King Curtis who employed our James Marshall Hendrix and the showband stuff and early soul support acts Jimi featured in but was so struck by the single I assumed it was a fake and AI maybe!?)
Speaking of Guitarists . . . here’s our Albert on his beginnings and first guitars (we were talking about them I swear - pay attention at the back!) Albert may be well know as the guitarist in Emmylou Harris’ Hot Band for the longest time but he’s a Manchester (UK) lad!
"Throwback to Albert Lee on his first guitars and inspiring Jimmy Page"
Molly Tuttle - "Friend and a Friend" (Live on The Morse Code Podcast)
"Molly Tuttle performs "Friend and a Friend" — a song she co-wrote with Korby Lenker ten years ago, when Molly had just moved to Nashville and "Friend and a Friend" was her first Nashville co-write. The song made her debut album. She still plays it live. This is the first time they've played it together in the Morse Code Podcast studio.
🎙️ Watch the full conversation: • Molly Tuttle on What the Grammys Are Actua...
📝 Read Korby's Substack essay, After the Conversation: https://open.substack.com/pub/korby/p...
Watch MORSE CODE (the 30 minute short film that inspired this podcast ) feature Sierra Ferrell with music from John Prine, Gillian Welch, Korby Lenker and more 📺 👉 • Nashville’s Indie Music TV Pilot (ft. Sier...
The Morse Code Podcast is a weekly pod produced by Korby Lenker and Jared Hammond featuring deep conversations with top shelf artists, musicians and writers.
Thematically, The MCP is based on a television pilot created by Korby called MORSE CODE, which won several awards across more than a dozen festivals during the 2023-24 season: Audience choice awards at the Nashville Film Festival and Berlin Short Film Festival, Best Pilot at the Ramsgate International Film Festival, Best Leading Actor for Korby Lenker at the NYC Television Festival, and more. "
Going back through the James Rigby compositions for different tunings as I got side tracked by the one DGDDGD here’s another to see you to bed . . . . . . N.B. I play a lot of open tunings from drop D to Open E but some of these that James uses are mesmerising . . . . Fellow guitar fans and players will be interested to note I have a Line 6 guitar in my collection when set up through an amp can play in multiple open tunings at the flick of a switch - it requires a set up so I play my Kalamazoo (Gibson Robert Johnson had one about as old as mine! )and my beloved Harmony [H162] but lately too my oldest guitar my Eko 12 string too (bought in 1972) . . . . .
‘ Night!
THE CONJURER - BY JAMES RIGBY
TUNED - CGCGCE
go to his page if you're interested and lets all buy his albums!
there’s currently 90+ items on display and you can book em out the library and stop by and have a beer read a book and don’t forget to leave a comment!
Brother Jobe he say: "Where are you going to find such an eclectic collection. In my opinion this is truly one of THE BEST SITES on the blogosphere. If you don't find something (t)here that you've been searching for or just trying to find something new to listen to just hang around and it's gonna pop-up (t)here if it's not (t)here already"
Teddy Thompson & Kelly Jones - "Only Fooling" (Live in Austin, TX 2016)
Let's not forget the excellent graphics by Johnny Q! Of course this is another killer comp…
After Vol 11 this is funky too! Dr John and Gene & Eunice still upholding the Nawleaas sound but enjoy everything else too You gots to MAMBO! IKO IKO!
trax: 1. Taboo - Juanito Fernandez & Orchestra 2. Fat Daddy - Dinah Washington 3. Snake Eyes - King Curtis 4. Tortilla - Joey Giam and the Noblemen 5. Love, Honor and Obey - B.B King 6. Long Gone Baby - B.B King 7. Dorothy Mae - Joe Hill Louis 8. Betty Lou - Long John Hunter 9. Betty Lou - The Marcels 10. Do-Whop-A-Do - The Five Dapps 11. Ko Ko Mo (I Love You So) - Gene & Eunice 12. Iko Iko - Dr. John 13. Help Me - The Aladdins 14. Greetings - The El Capris 15. Wild Boy - Rocky Holman 16. Dynamite At Midnight - King Curtis 17. Polly Molly - The Five Masks 18. Do You Love Me - Little Willie John 19. New Hound Dog - Frank Motley & His Crew 20. Yeah! Yeah! Guitar - Bill Harris 21. Hot Rod Queen - Roy Tann 22. Service With A Smile - The Kuf-Linx 23. Chippin' Little Baby - Little David 24. You Ain't Treatin' Me Right - Mac Curtis 25. Thinkin' 'bout Your Love - Lee Dresser & The Krazy Kats 26. Voodoo - The Del Ricos 27. Night Rider - Sugarboy Crawford 28. mary ann - Texas Ray 29. Ooooh Baby - Bobby Jackson 30. Whirlwind - Roy Morton & The Temp-Tones 31. Si si no no - Graciela & Machito
Compiled by Johnny Q from his music collection - originally served by Gyro1966