I Can See You - by Paddy Summerfield c. 1986

Sunday, May 17, 2026

Blind Willie Johnson - Dark Was The Night, Cold Was the Ground (remastered 2002)

 The amazing BBC America correspondent Gary O'Donaghue chose this track on his Desert Island Discs this morning with Lauren Laverne and it is well worth a listen (the whole programme too) 

N.B. Gary is blind and his coverage of America is second to none (including a random twenty odd minute phone convo with The POTUS late one night!!) 


More Mason from MARIOS! Dave Mason - Headkeeper (1972 UK) / Dave Mason - Alone Together (1970 UK) | ROCKASTERIA

 Dave Mason - Headkeeper (1972 uk, amazing classic rock with psych blues and folk tinges, japan SHM-CD 2010 remaster)




Tommy Li Puma, Dave Mason's coproducer at Blue Thumb, has notified by mail various radio stations and record distributors across the country to go ahead and promote Headkeeper, in spite of the fact that Mason has brought a lawsuit against the label. For those of you who do not boycott the album, Headkeeper has plenty of moments to justify your purchase, and yet leaves you feeling that it is an incomplete, unfinished album.

Each of all the five songs on side two is a live recording of material Mason had recorded elsewhere. "Pearly Queen," a song that here is attributed to Mason and on the Traffic album is credited to Winwood and Capaldi, got itself a better treatment the first time around, simply because Winwood's vocal was funkier, grittier, more edged with irony. 

The song itself has enough propulsion in it that it doesn't need the extra added bit of soul that Winwood gives it, but then why not? Mason's interpretation here of "Feelin' Alright" is different from the one he delivered on Traffic. Then he sang with a whimpering, quaveringly insecure voice which, when joining the chorus, instantly picked up sarcastic strength. The change was always sudden and dramatic as Clark Kent leaping out of a broom closet dressed as Superman. 

In the present version, latin jazz rhythms open the song and right from the beginning all the way through, Mason sings with extroversion and authority. Now he even takes a supposedly humbled line like "Well, boy, you sure took me for one big ride," and turns it inside out to read like a gorgeous put-down. Whatever Chris Wood offered in the way of bluesy saxophone on the first version, Mark Jordan matches well with his jazz electric piano on this. 

Maybe if Headkeeper had had two sides of new material rather than just one, Mason as an artist to our view would have been standing less like "a mist upon the shore." He never has been an easy one to figure out, in his public life or in his music. With Headkeeper he by no means has painted his masterpiece, but instead has left us with some fine sketches and life studies.
by David Lubin, Rolling Stone, 4-13-72.


Tracks
1. To Be Free  - 3:19
2. In My Mind  - 3:19
3. Here We Go Again  (Solomon Burke, Cass Elliot, Bryan Garo, Jerry Gray) - 1:56
4. A Heartache, A Shadow, A Lifetime - 3:35
5. Headkeeper - 4:39
6. Pearly Queen (Jim Capaldi, Steve Winwood) - 3:32
7. Just A Song - 3:01
8. World In Changes - 4:47
9. Can't Stop Worrying, Can't Stop Loving - 3:04
10.Feelin' Alright - 5:40
All titles by Dave Mason, except where noted.

Musicians
*Dave Mason - Electric, Acoustic Guitar, Vocals
*Mark Jordan - Piano, Keyboards
*Lonnie Turner - Bass
*"Dr." Rick Jaeger - Drums
*Felix Falcon aka "Flaco" - Conga, Percussion
Special thanks to:
*Rita Coolidge - Vocals
*Spencer Davis - Vocals
*Graham Nash - Vocals
*Kathi McDonald - Vocals



rep>>> Dave Mason - Alone Together (1970 uk, fabulous classic rock with drops of psych folk, 2010 japan SHM remaster)




Like Traffic's album "John Barleycorn Must Die", former Traffic member Dave Mason's Alone Together is a good album -- careful, well played, occasionally brilliant and well-conceived -- but like John Barleycorn, Alone Together never breaks its vinyl bonds and soars. The songwriting talent of Mason remains undiminished on Alone Together, and his easy fluid voice, long in Traffic vocalist Stevie Winwood's giant shadow, is used to maximum effect.

This is, of course, the marbled LP, a brilliant burst of color spinning on the turntable, the grooves barely discernible so the needle seems to be floating across the record. Maybe the next step could be a little cartoon around the edge of the record, like those flip-the-pages funnies, or a slow inward spiral so you could be literally hypnotized by the record.

The music is vintage Mason, veering here and there towards commercialism but never quite getting there, slick but not offensive. Falling in line with the rest of Great Britain, Mason chose old Delaney and Bonnie sidemen for the session, including Leon Russell, Jim Keltner, Carl Radle and Rita Coolidge, plus old Mother Don Preston. Russell, as always, is much in evidence, and his piano (if it is him -- the album doesn't say and we have only internal evidence), particularly on "Sad and Deep As You," is masterful.

The high point of the album is clearly "Look at You Look at Me," a song Mason wrote with Trafficker Jim Capaldi, whose tight, urgent drumming on the cut moves the song along with descretion and skill. Mason's singing is simply superb. The other exceptional cuts are "Shouldn't Have Took More Than You Gave" (Mason is not, between you and me, a great song titlist), which features the best wah-wah guitar since Clapton's initial exposition on "Tales of Brave Ulysses"; and "World in Changes," with Mason's deceptively simple lyrics pulled along by some brilliant organ work.

High commercial potential on the album is represented by "Only You Know and I Know," which has a rick-ticky rhythm reminiscent of "You Can All Join In." It's really a trivial song (like others on the album, particularly "Waitin' On You" and "Just A Song"), but it will sound great on a tinny AM radio at 60 miles an hour.
by Jon Carroll, Rolling Stone, 9/3/70.


Tracks 
1. Only You Know and I Know - 4:05  
2. Can't Stop Worrying, Can't Stop Loving - 3:02  
3. Waitin' on You - 3:05  
4. Shouldn't Have Took More Than You Gave - 6:00  
5. World in Changes - 4:30  
6. Sad and Deep as You - 3:35  
7. Just a Song - 2:59  
8. Look at You, Look at Me - 7:22  
All songs by Dave Mason except track #8 co-written with Jim Capaldi

Musicians
*Dave Mason - Guitar, Vocals
*Delaney Bramlett - Guitar, Vocals
*Bonnie Bramlett - Vocals
*Leon Russell - Keyboards
*Carl Radle - Bass
*Chris Ethridge - Bass
*Larry Knechtel - Bass
*Jim Capaldi - Drums
*Jim Gordon - Drums
*Jim Keltner - Drums
*Michael DeTemple - Guitar
*Don Preston - Keyboards
*John Simon - Keyboards
*John Barbata - Drums
*Rita Coolidge - Vocals
*Mike Coolidge - Vocals
*Claudia Lennear - Vocals
*Lou Cooper - Vocals
*Bob Norwood - Vocals
*Jack Storti - Vocals

Dave Mason And Cass Elliot - Dave Mason And Cass Elliot (1971 uk / us, remarkable delicate folk rock, 2008 remaster) | Plain & Fancy

  Dave Mason And Cass Elliot (1971 UK / USA 2008 remaster)



Ostensibly a Dave Mason solo album, this became one of his finest when he was coupled with Cass Elliot, a stroke of genius. Elliot's involvement is, while not suspect, somewhat limited. Although she provides excellent background vocals, she tends to get a little lost in the harmony stack. Nevertheless, this is a great moment for her too. The album, though, is propelled by Mason's awesome songwriting talents, and tracks such as "On and On," "Walk to the Point," and several others bear this out. 

His guitar playing is some of his finest recorded work, especially the epic "Glittering Facade," where he layers acoustic and electric guitars with a scintillating effect. Elliot's "Here We Go Again" showcases her ability as a great lead vocalist, and Paul Harris provides some excellent keyboard and string arrangements, providing a glimpse of the fine work that was to follow in Stephen Stills' Manassas. Overall, this was a highly underrated album, but in the end, it is also one of the finest from the '70s. 
by Matthew Greenwald
Tracks
1. Walk To The Point (Dave Mason) - 4:01
2. On And On (Ned Doheny) - 3:36
3. To Be Free (Dave Mason) - 3:37
4. Here We Go Again (Cass Elliot, Bryan Garo) - 2:50
5. Pleasing You (Dave Mason, M. Juster) - 3:03
6. Sit and Wonder (Dave Mason) - 3:31
7. Something To Make You Happy (Dave Mason, Cass Elliot) - 2:18
8. Too Much Truth, Too Much Love (Dave Mason) - 3:52
9. Next To You (Bryan Garo) - 2:31
10.Glittering Façade (Dave Mason) - 4:45

Personnel
*Mama Cass Elliot - Vocals
*Dave Mason - Vocals, Guitars
*Bryan Garo - Bass
*Russ Kunkel - Drums
*Paul Harris - Keyboards, Strings
*Leah Kunkel - Vocals

Interesting none the less for what Greenwald says is right and the guitar work here is excellent

The Yardbirds - Stroll On [The Soundtrack BLOW UP Antonioni] | jt1674

  . . . . not the best Yardbirds track ever but hey it's in a film with cult status! Curiously haunting however . . . . . 

https://www.tumblr.com/jt1674/816763289050775552/the-yardbirds-stroll-on

XTC - I Bought Myself a Liarbird [The Big Express] | jt1674

 

https://www.tumblr.com/jt1674/816769125971034112/xtc-i-bought-myself-a-liarbird

Captain Beefheart and The Magic Band - Click Clack [The Spotlight Kid] | jt1674

  . . . a favourite track from a favourite album

https://www.tumblr.com/jt1674/816693673257500672/captain-beefheart-click-clack

Humble Pie - Walk On Gilded Splinters 1969 Belgium [ I Love Live Blues]

 


I Love Live Blues : 
"Experience the raw, earth-shaking power of a newly formed rock supergroup as Humble Pie delivers a sprawling, heavy-blues reimagining of Dr. John’s voodoo classic, "I Walk on Gilded Splinters."
Recorded on August 29, 1969, at the historic Bilzen Pop Festival (Jazz Bilzen) in Belgium, this rare archival footage captures a band with something to prove. Freshly assembled from the ashes of the Small Faces and The Herd, this performance shows Humble Pie laying down the blueprint for the heavy, blues-drenched arena rock that would dominate the coming decade.
The Performance In this staggering live take, the quartet stretches a swampy, atmospheric track into a massive, blistering guitar jam.
The Vocals and Guitars: The sheer force of Steve Marriott’s voice is the absolute center of gravity here. He tears into the microphone with his signature gritty, soul-tearing wail, proving why he is widely considered one of the greatest white soul singers in rock history. Flanking him is an impossibly young Peter Frampton, whose fluid, searing guitar lines perfectly counterbalance Marriott's heavy, aggressive rhythm chops. Driven by the thunderous rhythm section of bassist Greg Ridley and drummer Jerry Shirley, the band locks into a heavy, hypnotic groove that completely hypnotizes the festival crowd.
The Atmosphere: Often referred to as the "Mother of all European Festivals," the gritty, open-air environment of Jazz Bilzen perfectly suits the band's massive volume. Playing to a sea of European rock fans just weeks after the Woodstock festival concluded in America, the energy on stage is aggressive, hungry, and dangerously electric. You are watching a legendary band finding its footing in real-time.
About the Song: "I Walk on Gilded Splinters" A masterpiece of New Orleans mysticism, the track became the ultimate improvisational canvas for Humble Pie's heavy blues-rock assault.
The Origins: Written by Mac Rebennack (famously known as Dr. John) and released on his landmark debut album, Gris-Gris 1968, the original track is a murky, acoustic-driven blend of R&B and Louisiana voodoo chants. Humble Pie recognized the dark, hypnotic potential of the song's central riff and turned it into a monumental staple of their live shows, famously dedicating an entire side of a vinyl record to a 23-minute version of it a few years later.
The Theme: The song is steeped in the folklore and imagery of New Orleans voodoo, with lyrics boasting of supernatural power, hexes, and spiritual invincibility. Delivered through Marriott’s blistering rock-and-roll snarl, the mystical threats take on the swagger of an unstoppable, heavy metal freight train.
Bilzen Pop Festival 1969 Beginning as a jazz festival in the mid-1960s, Jazz Bilzen quickly evolved to embrace the booming rock, blues, and pop movements of the era. By 1969, it was a crucial proving ground for British rock bands looking to conquer the European continent. For Humble Pie, who had only formed a few months prior, this blistering 1969 set served as a massive declaration that they had arrived.
Performance Details Lead Vocals & Guitar: Steve Marriott Lead Guitar & Vocals: Peter Frampton Bass & Vocals: Greg Ridley Drums: Jerry Shirley Song: "I Walk on Gilded Splinters" Composer: Mac Rebennack (Dr. John) Event: Bilzen Pop Festival (Jazz Bilzen) Venue: Bilzen, Belgium Date: August 29, 1969"


 

Paul Butterfield Better Days - Meet Me In The Bottom [The Midnight Special]

 a favourite number by a favourite blues maestro band leader and harp player . . .


Meet Me in the Bottom - Paul Butterfield's Better Days | The Midnight Special

Paul Butterfield's Better Days, with drummer Chris Parker, guitarist Amos Garrett, singer Geoff Muldaur, pianist Ronnie Barron and bassist Billy Rich

I think the full tilt of this may ( I say may!?) be a bit too fast but I do wonder if the recording is that way or the performance? . . . . . either way Paul keeps up on Harmonica but then he would wouldn’t he?!

(Try it at .9 of running speed and it sounds a whole lot better . . . . . . )



Cradle to . . . .

 Mama done raised Rock ’n’ Rollers


Three of these gals are Quatros!
That’s Suzi on the left!

Simple Minds - Love Song (live on ‘Countdown' 1981)

We haven’t posted enough Simple Minds given my roots it seems odd but here someone posted a clip of this and it is still great song and performance