I Can See You - by Paddy Summerfield c. 1986

Wednesday, May 13, 2026

David Bowie - Pinups 3 (Raise Arms) | Voodoo Wagon - An XRay Special

 David Bowie - Pinups 3 (Raise Arms)

 An XRay Special


Pinups 3 (Raise Arms), Secondary, 2 of 2
Tracklist:
1 Shakin All Over (Live)
2 Bang Bang
3 Waiting For The Man (Live)
4 Criminal World
5 20th Century Boy (Live)
6 Maggies Farm (Live)
7 Fill Your Heart - Radio Sesion 1972
8 Footstompin (Live)
9 Round & Round
10 I Can't Explain (Live)
11 Kingdom Come
12 It Ain't Easy (Live)
13 Growin Up - Outtake
14 Moon Of Alabama (Live)
15 Sister Midnight (Live)

David Bowie - Pinups 3 (Raise Arms)

Liberated Bootleg 2002

Taj Mahal with John Fogerty, Bob Dylan, George Harrison, and Jesse Ed Davis - Palomino Club, Los Angeles, CA, 2-19-1987 | Albums That Should Exist

 

Taj Mahal with John Fogerty, Bob Dylan, George Harrison, and Jesse Ed Davis - Palomino Club, Los Angeles, CA, 2-19-1987

This is a pretty amazing Taj Mahal concert, because just look at who his special guests were: John Fogerty, Bob Dylan, AND George Harrison! And all three of them stayed on stage for the vast majority of the concert, with Fogerty and Harrison singing several songs each. (Dylan was content just to play guitar and sing backing vocals.) I had known about this concert for a long time, but I'd never had it in my collection due to sound quality issues. But recently I revisited it, because advances in audio editing technology enabled me to make some improvements. Now, it sounds like a soundboard, even though the sound quality still is not ideal.

I found an extensive quote about this concert that George Harrison gave to Q Magazine in 1988, so I'll start with that:

"I'll tell you what happened there. I'd gone to America, and Bob [Dylan] rang me and said, you know, did I want to come out for an evening and see Taj Mahal who was playing at the Palomino? So we went there and had a few of these Mexican beers, and had a few more. And Jesse Ed Davis, who played guitar on 'Watching the River Flow,' is in the audience, and Bob says, 'Hey, why don't we all get up and play - we've had a few beers, right - and you can sing!' So we get up there and I'm in the spotlight and Bob's hanging back in the shadows and I start singing: 'What’s the matter with me? I don't have much to say...' and every time I get near the microphone, Dylan comes running up and just starts singing this rubbish in my ear, trying to throw me off. But it was really funny because when I got pushed on stage at Wembley [in London, with Tom Petty and the Heartbreakers and Dylan] and sang a bit of 'Rainy Day Women' I couldn't remember the words and just made up this stuff. And Bob came up to me afterwards, backstage, and said, 'So you got even with me!' But it was nice to recapture the feeling of what it was like on stage to make sure I could go back into that situation in the future."

Most of that is correct, but a couple of things he said were slightly off. We can tell a lot about what really happened because the video of this entire recording is available on YouTube, though the picture quality is extremely poor. It seems Jesse Ed Davis - a very talented lead guitarist who had worked with many big names since the late 1960s - was already there as part of Taj Mahal's backing band from the start of the recording. Then, after just the first song, Harrison went up on stage. It seems he went up unprompted, and there was absolutely no comment made by Mahal or anyone else about him being there. But if you watch the video, you can see Mahal give him an electric guitar and help him get in position to play by the start of the second song, "Checkin' Up on My Baby."

For a few songs, it was Taj Mahal and four members of his backing band on stage (Jesse Ed Davis, Mark Shark, Bobby Tsukamoto, and Gary Ray), plus Harrison. Then, before the start of "Matchbox," Mahal very strongly encouraged Dylan to also join them on stage, teasing him that he was going to come get him if he didn't. So Dylan went on stage, got a guitar, and started playing it.

Halfway through "Matchbox," Harrison surprised by taking over lead vocals for most of the rest of the song. Then, near the very end of the song, John Fogerty went on stage too. He was plugged in and ready to join in by the start of the next song, "Lucille." Once again though, there's no mention by Mahal or anyone else about him being there.

Up until that point, it had basically been a Taj Mahal concert. And Mahal was the sole lead singer for the next few songs. But Harrison, Dylan, and Fogerty stayed on stage for the entire rest of the concert. And from "Knock on Wood" to the end of the concert, 11 songs in all, Harrison and Fogerty stepped up and basically dominated. They sang lead on all but two of the songs from that point on.

However, if you're a Dylan fan, there's a lot less here for you. He was definitely involved playing guitar. If you watch the video, you can see he even got a couple of the songs started. And he did sing some backing vocals. But he seemed determined not to sing any lead vocals. When Harrison started singing "Watching the River Flow," it happened just as Harrison described in the above quote: Dylan basically shouted nonsense words right into Harrison's ear, playfully trying to get him to screw up! Perhaps Harrison, being a huge Dylan fan, started that song because he knew that Jesse Ed Davis played the guitar solo on Dylan's studio version, recorded in 1971. Davis got to reprise his solo in this performance.

One historic aspect of this concert was that it caused John Fogerty play a Creedence Clearwater Revival (CCR) song in public for the first time in 15 years. Many years later, he explained how it happened:

"I'd gone there to see Taj Mahal, who I love, and sat down. And at some point, I heard a rumor that George Harrison was there, that he was kind of in this cloak room. So I went in and talked to George for a little bit, and that was really fun. Then I went back and sat down. Then I heard a rumor that Bob Dylan was somewhere in the room. I didn't know until much later that actually George and Bob were really tight, they were great friends, and they had arrived together."

Fogerty watched from the audience as first Harrison and then Dylan joined Mahal on stage. "I'm usually kinda shy, but for some reason I thought, 'Man, I hope they have another guitar! Please call me up there!' I just wanted to get up there. It just looked historic and a lot of fun."

Apparently, Mahal saw Fogerty in the audience and gave him a signal to come up. After a while, the crowd wanted the famous guests to play some of their original songs. As mentioned above, Dylan's "Watching the River Flow" was played, although that seemed to be against Dylan's wishes. Then Harrison sang "Honey Don't." Although it was originally by Carl Perkins, it had been recorded by the Beatles. Plus, Harrison had helped sing "Matchbox," which also had been recorded by the Beatles. So now the pressure was on for Fogerty to do one of his songs. 

Fogerty further explained, "And then the audience started going, 'John, John! C'mon! Play "Proud Mary!" And this was during the time that I had sworn off playing my own songs from the Creedence days because of legal and emotional entanglements. I'm really being kind of, let's say, stubborn about it. But suddenly Bob Dylan turns me and he goes, 'John, if you don't play "Proud Mary," everybody's gonna think it's a Tina Turner song.' And I looked at him, and by God, I played 'Proud Mary.'" 

Clearly, he had fun. After the song finished, you can hear him say, "Eat your heart out, Tina!" 

Fogerty had just done a concert tour in 1986 for the first time since 1972. He wouldn't do another full tour until 1997. But later in 1987, he would take part in "Welcome Home," a benefit concert, and he would play more CCR songs for it. And he would keep playing them from that point on. So this Taj Mahal concert was a turning point for him, breaking his stubbornness about not wanting to give any royalties to his record company for the CCR songs. And while Dylan didn't do much singing on stage, his involvement may have been the key factor that got Fogerty singing his old songs again.

Now, let's get to sound quality. From what I understand, the owner of the Palomino Club saw something special was likely to happen, and began videotaping the concert. (He probably missed some Taj Mahal songs before the first one that shows up here.) So it has been recorded for posterity due to the video tape. That video later got converted to audio, and made into a popular bootleg under the name the "Silver Wilburys." However, that only included about half of the songs here, generally the later ones starring the famous guests. So I found a YouTube video to get the audio for the entire thing.

The sound quality was pretty good, but there was a lot of hiss, and some other issues. I ran all of it through the MVSEP program, using the "Denoise" filter to get rid of most of the hiss. Then I ran it through another filter to get rid of even more hiss. I also made some other adjustments, like boosting the lead vocals relative to the instruments. I think it sounds a lot better now. 

Additionally, there was a lot of dead air between songs. The musicians on stage were winging it, so it took time for them to decide what song to play next, then determine what key to play it in, and things like that. Most of that discussion couldn't be heard at all. Plus, there was a lot of guitar tuning. So I cut out some of that, when it started to really drag between songs. But still, I kept most it, especially whenever any talking on stage could be heard. I also turned down the volume of the guitar noodling between songs, so one could better hear what else was going on.

I made an additional edit on the song "Proud Mary," enough to add "[Edit]" to the song title. Taj Mahal was helping with the singing. On the other songs, this was fine. But this song was Fogerty's moment, singing a CCR song for the first time in 15 years, and Mahal's vocal ad-libs were a distraction for the most part. I read a comment on the YouTube video of this concert that likened his singing on that song to the way Yoko Ono sometimes ruined a John Lennon song. I had to agree. So, using MVSEP again, I cut out just the parts of his vocals that annoyed me. For instance, at one point, Mahal began singing one part of the song when Fogerty sang another part of the song. Needless to say, Fogerty sang the correct part. 

When listening to this, please keep in mind the spirit of this performance. After the first few songs, which Taj Mahal and his band knew well, it's safe to assume that the rest involved everyone winging it. So you have some mistakes that even an average bar band wouldn't make, like how Taj Mahal forgot half the lyrics to "Johnny B. Goode." But that wasn't point. Some legendary musical figures were just having fun on stage (including both Harrison and Fogerty playing some guitar solos). This is pretty much the only and only time in rock music history these people did anything like this. 

This album is an hour and 48 minutes long. 













Here's another photo from the concert. 

01 Leaving Trunk (Taj Mahal)
02 talk (Taj Mahal)
03 Checkin' Up on My Baby (Taj Mahal)
04 She Caught the Katy and Left Me a Mule to Ride (Taj Mahal)
05 Farther on Down the Road [You Will Accompany Me] (Jesse Ed Davis with Taj Mahal)
06 You're Gonna Need Somebody on Your Bond (Taj Mahal)
07 talk (Taj Mahal)
08 Matchbox - Gone, Gone, Gone (George Harrison & Taj Mahal)
09 talk (Everyone)
10 Lucille (Taj Mahal)
11 Crosscut Saw (Taj Mahal)
12 talk (Everyone)
13 Bacon Fat (Taj Mahal)
14 talk (Everyone)
15 Knock on Wood (John Fogerty with Taj Mahal)
16 talk (Everyone)
17 In the Midnight Hour (John Fogerty with Taj Mahal)
18 talk (Everyone)
19 Honey Don't (George Harrison)
20 talk (Everyone)
21 Blue Suede Shoes (John Fogerty & George Harrison)
22 talk (Everyone)
23 Watching the River Flow (George Harrison with Bob Dylan)
24 talk (Everyone)
25 Proud Mary [Edit] (John Fogerty with Taj Mahal)
26 talk (John Fogerty)
27 Johnny B. Goode (Taj Mahal)
28 talk (Everyone)
29 Willie and the Hand Jive (Taj Mahal)
30 Peggy Sue (George Harrison with Bob Dylan)
31 talk (Everyone)
32 Dizzy Miss Lizzy (George Harrison)
33 talk (Everyone)
34 Twist and Shout (John Fogerty & Taj Mahal)
35 talk (Taj Mahal)

I was only about to find two photos of this concert that looked even halfway decent. I posted the best one as the cover, even though it only shows Dylan, Harrison, and a member of the backing band standing between them. I posted the other one up above the song list. It sounds the overall club environment, but you can barely make out who is on stage.

There also are a couple of photos of all the band members together back stage, which must have been taken after the concert, since Fogerty said he wasn't sure the likes of Dylan and Harrison were there when the concert began. The Native American musician John Trudell is in the picture as well. He was probably there to see Jesse Ed Davis, another Native American, who played on Trudell's albums. Unfortunately, Davis had a lot of problems with drug addiction. He died of a drug overdose a year after this concert took place

Lyle Lovett - Record Lady [I Love Everybody ] | HERBERG DE KELDER

Record Lady

“Record Lady” . Lyle Lovett . I Love Everybody


“Record Lady”, Lyle Lovett’s tune from 1994’s I Love Everybody was recorded during that two-year period when Lovett was married to Julia Roberts (the album is dedicated to her). I recall thinking that people seemed to fall into one of two camps when the marriage was announced: 1) there is hope for homely men everywhere, or 2) shouldn’t he be with someone like a younger Sissy Spacek? But I digress. I like the way he name checks fellow Texan Robert Earl Keen, Jr. in the first line, the wonderful backup vocals in the chorus, and the couplet “She was five-foot-one-and-three-quarters/Lord, she claimed she was five-foot-two”.

Note H found it here: hdhyht-blog: 

HERBERG DE KELDER

Robert Plant - Capitol Theatre, Port Chester, NY, 9-17-2015 | Albums That Should Exist

 

Robert Plant - Capitol Theatre, Port Chester, NY, 9-17-2015

Paul says: Slowly but surely, I'm determined to post all the best stuff from the leak of concert bootlegs from Port Chester, New York. Here's a 2015 Robert Plant concert.

Musical associate Lil Panda did some work on the files here and then set them to me. He's very good at audio adjustments, better than me, so this sounds excellent.

At the time of this concert, Plant was promoting his 2014 album "Lullaby and the Ceaseless Roar." It was the first of two albums he did with his back up band the Sensational Space Shifters. Only two songs performed were from that album though, maybe because it had been about a year since it had been released. He also mostly ignored his earlier solo albums. Instead, he leaned on cover songs and Led Zeppelin songs.

The music is unreleased. The sound quality is excellent. 

This album is an hour and 22 minutes long

01 Poor Howard 
02 Tin Pan Valley 
03 Trampled Under Foot 
04 talk 
05 Turn It Up
06 Black Dog 
07 talk 
08 Let the Four Winds Blow 
09 talk 
10 Rain Song 
11 No Place to Go - Dazed and Confused 
12 talk 
13 The Lemon Song 
14 talk 
15 Little Maggie
16 Win My Train Fare Home
17 I Just Want to Make Love to You 
18 talk
19 Satan Your Kingdom Must Come Down - In My Time of Dying 
20 Rock and Roll 
21 talk 

(all tracks Robert Plant) 

Emmylou Harris & Steve Earle - City Winery, Nashville, TN, 4-3-2021 | Albums That Should Exist

Emmylou Harris & Steve Earle - City Winery, Nashville, TN, 4-3-2021

Paul says : I recently discovered that Emmylou Harris performed about six concerts at the City Winery in Nashville in 2021, as people were just starting to attend concerts again due to the Covid pandemic. The concerts were done to benefit local charities helping with animal welfare, and each was different than typical Harris concerts in some way. I was able to find two of them on YouTube. This one is special because it was a joint acoustic concert with Steve Earle. The two of them took turns singing songs and telling stories in front of a very small audience, with excellent sound quality.

If you want, you can find the video of this on YouTube and watch the concert instead of just listening to it. I converted the video to audio, then chopped it into mp3 files.

The sound quality is excellent because the concert was a webcast. I missed it at the time, but better late than never. I plan on posting the other concert I found soon. 

This album is an hour and 36 minutes long. 

01 talk 
02 Raise the Dead 
03 talk 
04 Copperhead Road 
05 talk
06 Big Black Dog 
07 talk
08 Devil Put the Coal in the Ground 
09 talk 
10 My Antonia 
11 talk 
12 Hometown Blues 
13 talk 
14 All I Left Behind
15 talk 
16 You're the Best Lover that I Ever Had
17 talk 
18 My Name Is Emmett Till 
19 talk
20 Goodbye
21 talk 
22 Blackhawk 
23 talk 
24 Harlem River Blues 
25 talk
26 If I Needed You 
27 talk
28 City of Immigrants 
29 talk 
30 Pilgrim 

(all tracks Emmylou Harris & Steve Earle) 

POET of the Day: REBECCA DUPAS : How To Slay a Dragon

 An avid fan of (some) poetry and I don’t post much here but this one really got to me it is a work of genius!


(https://www.facebook.com/rebeccadupas)
For booking, merch, and more: REBECCA DUPAS

Video courtesy of
Rebecca Dupas
and Pure Poetry Live
Shared with deep gratitude 
and love for poetry.
No copyright infringement intended.

Mo’ Bonnie - with I’m With Her “Angel From Montgomery" (John Prine)

 It was wonderful to spend some time with the women of I'm With Her (Sara Watkins, Sarah Jarosz and Aoife O'Donovan) at MerleFest last weekend. Here we are sharing a sweet moment in honor of our dear John Prine on “Angel From Montgomery.” Hope you enjoy and huge thanks to the festival for hosting us.

—Bonnie

Bonnie Raitt - Need You Tonight

 Bonnie Raitt Rocks the Slide Guitar in "Need You Tonight”[maybe she could give Derek some lessons !? Wot?]



ART: ONE OF THE GREATEST ARTISTS WHO EVER LIVED : GEORGIA O'KEEFE

 GEORGIA O’KEEFE

SPEAKS



Molly Tuttle welcomes our very Ringo to The Grand Ole Opry!

 What better way to welcome our Ringo first time to the Grand Ole Opry than with Molly Tuttle 

Octopuses Garden - Molly Tuttle