Always Lovers - Cindy Lee
Friday, January 31, 2025
Oh go on then . . . . . . . The Ballad of Lucy Jordan [Shel Silverstein] - Marianne Faithfull
Marianne . . . . . the blogs join in. . . . .Guess I’m Dumb, YouTube and jt1674
Marianne Faithful - Green Are Your Eyes
Bert Jansch wrote this - it’s called Courting Blues on his first album.
R.I.P. Marianne
Marianne Faithfull - “Never apologize, never explain — didn’t we always say that? Well, I haven’t and I don’t.”
I was going to post Lucy Jordan . . . or As Tears Go By or maybe a clip from Girl on a Motorbike . . . but then I thought . . . . a Bob Dylan cover . . . .
this from
Don's Tunes
Marianne Faithfull, rock ’n’ roll chanteuse and Rolling Stones muse died peacefully in London on Thursday.The singer, actress, steely-eyed “It” girl of Swinging ‘60s London and subject of numerous Rolling Stones songs including “Wild Horses” and “Sister Morphine,” opened her 1994 autobiography with a disclaimer: “Never apologize, never explain — didn’t we always say that? Well, I haven’t and I don’t.”Along the way, she channeled her cigarette-stained rasp to interpret the work of Berthold Brecht and Kurt Weill, Elton John and Bernie Taupin, Tom Waits and Kathleen Brennan, Leonard Cohen, PJ Harvey, Neko Case, Dolly Parton, Morrissey and others.She was a soprano when she met her future boyfriend Jagger at a party in London also attended by Richards, Paul McCartney and Peter Asher. Scouted by Rolling Stones producer Andrew Loog Oldham, Faithfull was in the recording studio with him, Jagger and Richards a few weeks later.A regular in London’s gossip press of the 1960s, Faithfull was soon at the center of the thriving music and fashion scenes. She sang backing vocals on the Beatles’ “Yellow Submarine” and the Rolling Stones’ “Sympathy for the Devil,” and hung with Bob Dylan during his historic 1965 run of shows in England. In 1967, Faithfull was famously photographed draped in a fur rug during a drug bust at Richards’ estate.With sharp wit, keen intellect and disarming beauty, Faithfull accessed rooms where millions of Beatles-loving teens longed to be. She wrote in her autobiography of hanging out with Dylan and the Beatles during their peak success: “Jesus, how could I have ever thought these scared little boys were gods?”
Joan Plowright - 28 October 1929 – 16 January 2025
Thursday, January 30, 2025
The Daily Prophet [Special Edition] It’s NOT a newspaper you know! | TWILIGHTZONE!
Chuck Prophet - First Came The Thunder (Live on KEXP)
Chuck Prophet - Vocals, Electric & Acoustic GuitarJames DePrato - Vocals, Electric GuitarVicente Rodriguez - Vocals, DrumsJoaquin Zamudio Garcia - Bass, GuitarMario Cortez - Vocals, PercussionAlejandro Gomez - Vocals, Keyboard, Acoustic Guitar
Common Burn - Mazzy Star | O My Soul
We like Hope Sandoval and enjoy Mazzy Star very much . . . turned onto this by my children!
"simple things like your over coat, and your beauty, that’s still burning me. let me hang around, even it it’s just some way to have, some common burn.” Alice at O My Soul points out . . .
Spirit - Boston Tea Party, Boston, MA, USA 1969 | Albums That Should Exist
Spirit - Boston Tea Party, Boston, MA, 10-11-1969
I had previously mentioned there are almost no good live recordings of the original version of Spirit, which existed from 1966 to 1970. The only ones with excellent sound quality are the 1969 Texas International Pop Festival one mentioned above, and a 1970 Fillmore show that I've posted here. But now this concert too can be added to that very short list. It's an excellent sounding soundboard bootleg. I had come across this concert years ago, but I had decided not to post it because it had one major sonic flaw: the vocals were too loud. That's unusual, because I've come across dozens and dozens of concert recordings with the vocals too low, but almost not where they were too loud. And it wasn't just a little bit too loud. No, the vocals went way into to the red.
Back then, that was a killer for me. But since then, audio editing technology has improved. Using the UVR5 program, I split all the songs into two, then lowered just the vocal track to a reasonable level. Luckily, the vocals weren't so loud as to have gotten badly distorted, so this sounds perfectly fine now, about as good as a typical soundboard bootleg from the era.
There has been some confusion about the date and location of this concert. The bootleg has been passed around with a date of May 1970 from Boston, as well as May 1970 from Seattle. But I looked into this, and found solid evidence that it actually comes from a three date stand at the "Boston Tea Party" venue in Boston on either October 11th, 12th, or 13th.
At first, I didn't know which of the three dates this concert was from exactly. But then I remembered that one song from this show was included on the 2022 deluxe edition of the band's "Twelve Dreams of Doctor Sardonicus" album. The liner notes showed that was from October 11th. I checked that version to the bootleg version, and they were identical, so the whole thing must be from the 11th. And no, I don't know why only that one song was officially released. Perhaps they also had trouble with the vocals, and that song was an exception since it was mostly instrumental. (That version includes a long drum solo, while I have included it as a separate track.) Maybe now the technology exists to fix the vocals, we can hope to see the full concert officially released someday.
The one snag about this recording is that it was missing the last song, "I Got a Line on You." One can tell it's the last song because the very last few seconds of the bootleg are the start of that song, and right before it gets cut off, you can hear the vocalist say "We're going home." I think it's a good assumption that means the concert is coming to an end. So since that song definitely got played at this concert, I found a different live version of it to fit there, from a French TV show appearance in early 1970. That didn't have any applause at the end, but I added in some from earlier in the concert to help it fit in. I carefully edited it to fit with the tiny portion that exists at the start from the bootleg, including the "We're going home" comment. That's why it has "[Edit]" in the title.
Finally, I've added in "1984" from an appearance on the German TV show "Beat Club" in January 1970 at the very end. I wasn't going to do that, but I did add it at the end of the Spirit set from the 1969 Texas International Pop Festival that I had previously posted, and if I didn't include it here, I wouldn't have anywhere else to put it. I also added some crowd noise at the end to help that one fit it as well.
This album is 54 minutes long.
01 It's All the Same
02 Fresh Garbage
03 talk
04 Jealous
05 It Shall Be
06 Poor Richard
07 talk
08 Groundhog
09 I'm Truckin'
10 New Dope in Town
11 Drum Solo [Instrumental]
12 Mechanical World
13 I Got a Line on You [Edit]
14 1984
I still don’t fully understand how come I managed to see these guys (well Randy*) at my local pub next door to where I worked for so many years after returning to my home town at the Penny Farthing Pub basement!
But I am assured that I did!
*Randy California Guitar Vocals / Scott Monahan keyboards vocals / Mike Shepherd Bass Vocals/ Les Warner Drums 1985
Donovan - BBC Sessions, Volume 6: In Concert, BBC Paris Theatre, London, UK 1981 | Albums That Should Exist
Donovan - BBC Sessions, Volume 6: In Concert, Paris Theatre, London, Britain, 11-14-1981
Boy, did I get lucky with this recording! I had been aware of this recording for years. But when I posted the first five volumes of Donovan at the BBC, I avoided posting this one due to sound quality issues. There was a lot of hiss on it, and I wasn't sure how to get rid of it. (One can use noise reduction for that, but it degrades the music too, so I almost always avoid that.) So I decided to deal with this problem later. Recently, here in early 2025, I'm trying to finish off all the series of BBC albums for musical acts where I've posted some already, so I can get to new ones. I was just about to tackle this, when I noticed that someone posted a brand new version of this concert just two days ago, because the BBC recently re-broadcast it. This version had excellent sound quality, saving me the trouble of dealing with the earlier version. God bless the BBC!
In the late 1970s, Donovan's musical style fell out of favor, thanks to new musical trends like disco, punk, and new wave. He generally kept a low profile, living in the desert in California raising his family for a few years and not releasing much new music. This, apparently, was part of his first tour of Britain in six years. Thankfully, rather than trying to ape new trends, like going new wave with synths all over his music, he kept to his old style. This sounds like it could be from 1971 as easily as 1981. That may not have been the popular move to make at the time, but it looks smart in retrospect.
I believe this is entirely unreleased. "
This album is 56 minutes long.
01 talk
02 Sunshine Superman
03 talk
04 Jennifer Juniper
05 talk
06 Lelena
07 talk
08 Universal Soldier
09 Catch the Wind
10 talk
11 Love Is Only Feeling ( with Astrella Leitch)
12 Lady of the Flowers
13 talk
14 Johnny Tuff
15 talk
16 Neutron
17 Hurdy Gurdy Man
18 Colours
19 Season the Witch
20 Mellow Yellow
The Byrds ‘ Eight Miles High’ Live 1971
The Byrds - Eight Miles High (1971)
another version of the instrumental jam ‘Eight Miles High’ by Dave Crosby here celebrating the double album ‘untitled’ which at the time struck me as the most brave and usual title (sic! guess you had to be there!) Instrumental I presume after it being banned in the USA and reaches the first verse after about 12 mins, poor Jim never looks quite at home to me but Skip Battin and Parsons (Gene), White and McGuinn are having fun with this and it went on to 16 minutes on the album so be grateful for small mercies. Not their best attempt of jazz and raga inspired jam version. The fifth member here is percussionist is their roadie Jimmy Seiter
Gosh this period and these sets really divide Byrds fans and jamming fans too! I grant you this isn’t the best version and I have posted better but the version on ‘untitled’ at 16 minutes and a full side of the double vinyl album was legendary at the time . . . .
Top Hat Crew's "Live Music Archives"
The Singing Brakeman - Jimmie Rodgers : My Rough and Rowdy Ways
My Rough and Rowdy Ways
Song by Jimmie Rodgers
For years and years I've rambled, drank my wine and gambled
But one day I thought I'd settle down
I met a perfect lady, she said she'd be my baby
We built a cottage in the old hometown
But somehow I can't forget my good old rambling days
The railroad trains are calling me always
I may be rough, I may be wild, I may be tough and countrified
But I can't give up my good old rough and rowdy ways
Sometimes I meet a bounder who knew me when I was a rounder
He grabs my hand and says, "Boy, have a drink"
We'd go down to the poolroom, get in the gang and then soon
The daylight comes before I'd had a wink
But somehow I can't forget my good old rambling days
The railroad trains are calling me always
I may be rough, I may be wild, I may be tough and countrified
But I can't give up my good old rough and rowdy ways
Wednesday, January 29, 2025
Alan Pasqua - Vienna |jt1674
Mexican President Claudia Sheinbaum suggests renaming the USA "MEXICAN AMERICA"! [Bob and Joan - Deportee 1976]
Bob Dylan & Joan Baez | Deportee | Woody Guthrie Cover | 1976
Mexican President Claudia Sheinbaum mocked Donald Trump on Wednesday for his suggestion to rename the Gulf of Mexico to the “Gulf of America.”
During a press conference held in Mexico’s National Palace, Sheinbaum stood in front of a map from 1607 that labeled the United States as “Mexican America” and the gulf as the “Gulf of Mexico”—nearly 170 years before the United States was founded in 1776.
“Why don’t we call it Mexican America? It sounds pretty, no?” Sheinbaum mockingly asked.
Large portions of the United States were originally part of Mexico. At the conclusion of the Mexican-American War in 1848, the country lost 55% of its territory, which became California, Utah, Nevada, New Mexico, and most of Colorado and Arizona.
Sheinbaum also accused Trump of living in the past, noting, “I think they told President (elect) Trump wrong, they told him Felipe Calderón is still president.”
Calderón was Mexico’s president from 2006 to 2012.
During his Tuesday press conference at Mar-a-Lago, Trump said, “We’re going to be changing the name of the Gulf of Mexico to the Gulf of America. What a beautiful name. And it’s appropriate. It’s appropriate. And Mexico has to stop allowing millions of people to pour into our country.”
Joan Baez & Bob Dylan, “Plane Wreck at Los Gatos (Deportee)” Fort Worth, TX, May 16, 1976.
“We’ve died in your hills and we’ve died in your deserts. We’ve died in your valleys, we’ve died on your plains. We’ve died 'neath your trees and we’ve died in your bushes, Both sides of the river we’ve died just the same...
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Some of us are illegal, and others not wanted Our work contract's out and we have to move on But it's six hundred miles to that Mexican border They chase us like outlaws, like rustlers, like thieves.
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Is this the best way we can grow our big orchards? Is this the best way we can grow our good fruit? To fall like dry leaves and rot on the top soil and be called by no name except "deportee"
Goodbye to my Juan, goodbye Rosalita Adios mis amigos, Jesus y Maria You won't have a name when you ride the big airplane
All they will call you will be deportees.”
Goodbye to my Juan, goodbye Rosalita
Adios mis amigos, Jesus y Maria
You won't have a name when you ride the big airplane
All they will call you will be deportees.”