I always think it brave that anyone takes on Who Knows Where The Time Goes after Sandy’s peerless version . . . but this is NINA and frankly the women could sing the telephone directory and make it her own (ask your grandparents!?)
MAN ON THE RUN: MUSIC FROM THE MOTION PICTURE SOUNDTRACK
MAN ON THE RUN (MUSIC FROM THE MOTION PICTURE SOUNDTRACK) CELEBRATES PAUL MCCARTNEY’S POST-BEATLES ERA, BRINGING TOGETHER DEEP CUTS, FAN FAVOURITES AND PREVIOUSLY UNRELEASED RECORDINGS.
AVAILABLE ON VINYL FOR THE FIRST TIME, THE ALBUM FEATURES RARE AND UNRELEASED TRACKS INCLUDING ‘LIVE AND LET DIE (ROCKSHOW),’ ‘GOTTA SING GOTTA DANCE’ AND ‘ARROW THROUGH ME (ROUGH MIX).’
OUT NOW IN LIMITED EDITION COLOURED VINYL, BLACK VINYL, CD AND DIGITAL, WITH AN EXCLUSIVE MAN ON THE RUN POSTER INCLUDED IN EVERY VINYL EDITION.
Doc Watson poses backstage at the legendary McCabe's Guitar Shop in Santa Monica, California, in 1986.
DOC WATSON
Doc was a legendary performer who blended his traditional Appalachian musical roots with bluegrass, country, gospel and blues to create a unique style and an expansive repertoire.
Watson, who was blinded before his first birthday, won seven Grammy Awards, in addition to the Grammy for lifetime achievement he received in 2004. In 2006 he won in the category of best country instrumental performance for his playing on "Whiskey Before Breakfast."
The more than 50 albums to Watson's name testify to the extraordinary breadth of his musical interests and skills. He made several recordings of backwoods old-time music with members of his family, including his wife, Rosa Lee, and her father, the fiddler Gaither Carlton, yet he could cross from that rugged milieu to a Nashville studio and work easily with country music's leading session musicians on albums such as Good Deal (1968), while on the 1995 album Docabilly he recalled his rockabilly days, 40 years on.
He also revealed on many occasions a deep knowledge and understanding of the blues, drawn from black musicians such as Mississippi John Hurt and white predecessors such as Jimmie Rodgers and the obscure Frank Hutchison, whose mesmerising Worried Blues and Train That Carried My Girl From Town Watson reinstated into the folk canon. His musical memory was remarkable, his repertoire packed with songs from old 78rpm recordings – some remembered from his youth, some supplied on tapes from record-collector friends – by artists such as Rodgers, the Carter Family (whose When the Roses Bloom in Dixieland was the first song he had learned to play) and another blind guitarist, Riley Puckett. Given those resources, he hardly needed to write material of his own, and he seldom did, but with Rosa Lee he composed the poignant threnody Your Long Journey, heard by a fresh audience on Alison Krauss and Robert Plant's 2007 album, Raising Sand.
A favourite of my brother Steve’s and I adopted his passion for all things fingerpicking from this man
I couldn’t quite believe it when Steve brought his first Doc album home . . . . . BLISS!
Earliest shot I could find - young young YOUNG!
Doc Watson - Deep River Blues
and of course Doc passed it on!
Doc and Merle Watson (Michael Coleman bass) - Sitting On Top Of The World
Oops have we had this one before? Don’t care it’s FAB!
Kelly says:
Between Imagining & Real. I know some people think I’m insane when I post weird videos like this. In my workflow I am really just experimenting in #Midjourney using different strange images to get these weird styles. Animated using #VEO3. VEO is so good. I used one word for the prompt for each image. Transform, interact, change or move, and veo did the rest. The song was made using @suno. I wanted the song to be about being in the space between imagination and reality. That’s what these scenes reminded me of.
Paul says: Arlo Guthrie was a prominent folk singer in the early 1970s, yet there are very few live recordings from that time with worthy sound quality. I've posted live recordings from him from 1969 and 1974, but there's basically nothing in between. So I decided to try to make something worthy. I found the best sounding audience bootleg from that era and used audio editing to bring it up close to soundboard-level sound quality.
I checked out a handful of audience boots from the era, and this one easily had the best sound quality. I wouldn't have given this a try if I didn't find this one with potential. The biggest problem was a lot of echo on the vocals. So I used the MVSEP program to split the vocals from the instruments. While I was at it, I boosted the vocals to a good level in the mix. Then I took the vocals track and ran it through the Reverb Removal option in MVSEP. But even that wasn't enough. I further ran those results through Adobe's vocal enhancer. I also ran all the banter between songs through that.
Between all these things, the very echo-y vocals sound almost normal now. Not quite, but close. So, while the sound quality still isn't ideal, I'm confident this is very listenable, and the best sounding live recording of him between 1969 and 1974.
In 1972, Guthrie would have the biggest hit of his career, with "City of New Orleans." But this is some months away from that, so that song wasn't performed here. According to the original notes I found, there was at least one more song played at the end of the concert, "Hobo's Lullaby." It's quite possible there were other missing songs, since this is relatively short compared to most concerts from that time period. Also, it seems the beginning of the first song, "Anytime," is cut off. So there could have been one or more missing songs there too. The way "Anytime" started sounded okay to me, even with the cut off, so I left it that way. Plus, I didn't have any other good live recordings of that song from that time period to use to fix it.
By the way, I find it interesting that although this concert is only two years after the 1969 concert I posted by him, only two songs are the same between those concerts: "Coming into Los Angeles" (his other hit) and "Stealin'."
This album is an hour and two minutes long.
01 Anytime 02 talk 03 I Could Be Singing 04 talk 05 1913 Massacre 06 Don't Think Twice, It's All Right 07 talk 08 Mapleview (20%) Rag [Instrumental] 09 talk 10 Coming into Los Angeles 11 talk 12 Waiting for a Train 13 talk 14 Days Are Short 15 Stealin' 16 talk 17 Gabriel's Mother's Hiway Ballad No. 16 Blues 18 talk 19 Lay Down Little Doggies 20 talk 21 Ring-Around-A-Rosy Rag
Arlo At Cambridge Folk Festival interviewed by OGWT’s Bob Harris (1974)
I think we have mentioned ’Stealin’ t’other day and Arlo was my source for a favourite song. Arlo would be my generation’s Woody figure I guess whilst acknowledging his dad and Bob Dylan's great hero it was Arlo and his sojourn at Alice’s Restaurant that hit me and struck more chords somehow . . not to mentioned coming into Los Angeles! I bought my first Arlo Album ‘Running Down The Road' in 1969
"Put your arms around me like a circle round the sun . . . . . .
you know I love ya baby when my easy ridin’s done
You don’t believe I love ya look at the fool I’ve Been
You don’t don’t believe I love ya look at the hole I’m in!”
Arlo Guthrie - Steakin’ - Running Down The Road (Remastered)