I Can See You - by Paddy Summerfield c. 1986

Tuesday, February 10, 2026

The Black Keys - Terminal 5 - New York, NY SPIN's 25th Anniversary 2010 | FLOPPY BOOT STOMP

 The Black Keys - Live Terminal 5, NY. 2010

The Boss at FBS Reboot from February 23, 2012

The Black Keys - Terminal 5
New York, NY
SPIN's 25th Anniversary 
July 28, 2010

A SILENT WAY SPECIAL RE-UP!

Full Audience Recording at NYC Taper


Track List:
1-The Black Keys - Stack Shot Billy (Live)
2-The Black Keys - Everywhere I Go + Strange Times (Live)
3-The Black Keys - Same Old Thing (Live)
4-The Black Keys - Everlasting Light (Live)
5-The Black Keys - Next Girl (Live)
6-The Black Keys - Chop and Change (Live)
7-The Black Keys - Howlin_ for You (Live)
8-The Black Keys - Tighten Up (Live)
9-The Black Keys - She's Long Gone + Ten Cent Pistol (Live)
10-The Black Keys - Your Touch (Live)
11-The Black Keys - I'll Be Your Man (Live)
12-The Black Keys - I Got Mine (Live)
13-The Black Keys - Too Afraid to Love You (Live)
14-The Black Keys - Sinister Kid (Live)
15-The Black Keys - Till I Get My Way (Live)

The Animals - Mid Hudson Civic Centre, Poughkeepsie NY USA RE-UNION 1983 | FLOPPY BOOT STOMP

 The Animals - Mid Hudson Civic Center, Poughkeepsie NY 9-7-1983

The Animals - Bring it on home to me (Live, 1983, NY - Reunion)

The Animals Bring It On Home To Me Live at Mid-Hudson Civic Center in Poughkeepsie, New York 07 September 1983 Eric Burdon - vocals Alan Price - organ, piano, keyboards Hilton Valentine - guitar Chas Chandler - bass guitar John Steel - drums Steve Gregory - Saxophone Steve Grant - lead guitar Zoot Money - synthesizer, keyboards Nippy Noya - percussion, bongo, conga



The Animals - Mid Hudson Civic Center, Poughkeepsie NY 9-7-1983

Personnel: 

Eric Burdon - vocals Alan Price - keyboards Hilton Valentine - guitar Chas Chandler - bass John Steel - drums

"The CD cover credits Eric Burdon & The Animals, however these are live tracks by The Original Animals (Burdon, Price, Chandler, Valentine and Steel) recording during their first official re-eunion tour in 1983. Nice soundboard or FM recording. Liberated boot from the Swingin' Pig label.” XRay

The Animals - The House of The Rising Sun 1983 UK

Leonard Cohen - Tel Aviv Israel 1972 | Albums That Should Exist

 Leonard Cohen - Sports Hall, Tel Aviv, Israel, 4-19-1972

Paul says: Here's a really interesting concert that it a "must have" for any Leonard Cohen fan. It's a professionally recorded yet unreleased concert from very early in his career. It also was an extremely unusual and memorable concert, for reasons I'll explain below.

Before I describe the events of this concert, let me explain this recording. In 1972, Cohen did a concert tour of Europe. It was only his second concert tour, after he did one in 1970. Most of the shows were professionally recorded at the time, in order to create a live album. That album, "Live Songs," was released in 1973. In 2022, the all recorded concerts were released, but only in a "blink and you miss it" kind of way. In many European countries, there's a law that if a recording isn't released within 50 years of it being created, the copyright rights are lost. So these concerts probably released for an hour or less in the middle of the night on some obscure platform, as was the case with other similar releases. These releases are so rare that very, very few people have them to this day. I was lucky that I was eventually able to trade for them.

There's one annoying problem with these concerts, however. All that the record company had to post to keep the copyrights was the music, and they did the bare minimum. So the audience quickly fades out a second or two after the songs stop, and there's no banter between songs whatsoever. Luckily, though, this concert is kind of an exception, for two reasons. One is that a soundboard bootleg of about 43 minutes of this concert has existed for many years, and that includes all the applause and banter. 

The other reason is that a documentary movie was made of Cohen's 1972 tour, called "Bird on a Wire." That movie featured a lot of footage from this concert, as well as one he performed in Jerusalem a day later. That's because with Cohen being Jewish, having him perform concerts in Israel was a big deal for the public and for him personally. So I was able to use audio from the movie to fill in more of the banter. I still am missing the banter before many songs, but we have to make do with what we've got.

Because this was a pivotal concert in Cohen's music career, we luckily have a good account of it in a biography of him, "I'm Your Man: The Life of Leonard Cohen," written by Sylvie Simmons. I'm going to quote it extensively here:

"He was looking forward to playing Israel. He was terrified of playing Israel. ... The first show, at the Yad Eliyahu Arena, was on the same day that Leonard and the band flew into Tel Aviv. Airport security was slow and grim, guns everywhere, but they arrived at the venue in good time. When they came out onstage though, the floor was completely empty. The audience was packed into the stands around the edges, like they were there to see an invisible basketball game. Security had been told to keep everyone off the floor, which had been newly varnished. When Leonard, disturbed by the distance between them, invited the audience to come down, they were set upon by armed guards in orange boiler suits. 'They freaked out and started clubbing everybody, beating kids up,' [tour manager Bill] Donovan remembers. 'Leonard jumped off the stage into the crowd and a guy ran onstage and grabbed [band member] Ron's guitar. I knocked the guy offstage and then somebody hit me from behind and knocked me out. It ended up as sort of a riot.'" [Band member] Peter Marshall says, 'I was hiding behind my string bass and there was some guy raising a chair, like it was a movie, and he's going to hit me in the face, but somebody grabbed the chair from behind.

"The band reconvened backstage. [Backing vocalist] Jennifer Warnes said she was scared. Leonard wondered aloud, 'Maybe I pushed too hard.' Then he led everyone back onstage. 'I know you're trying to do your job, but you don't have to do it with your fists,' he told the guards, then dedicated a song to them. He urged the audience to sit down and enjoy the concert. 'Eventually,' says Marshall, 'he got everybody to calm down, and he completed that show.' As soon as it was done, they dashed out of the hall and into the tour bus."

Only two shows in Israel were planned, to end the tour. The second and last one, in Jerusalem the next night, was even stranger. At first, the concert started okay. According to the biography quoted above, "The songs sounded beautiful as he sang, and the band seemed to be wired into his nervous system. But Leonard felt that it was not good enough, that we was letting down this precious audience and these precious songs. He tried to explain this to them, but his explanation kept getting more and more complex.'" 

Eventually, he gave up, and told the audience, "We're going to leave the stage now and try to profoundly mediate in the dressing room to try to get ourselves back into shape and if we can manage. We'll be back." But backstage, Cohen was having an emotional meltdown. He felt he couldn't go back on stage. However, the audience refused to leave, and sang songs to encourage him to come back. Apparently, Cohen took some L.S.D., and did some rituals to help calm down, such as shaving his face, and eventually managed to return to the stage and finish the concert.

You don't just have to read about this, because both concerts are shown quite extensively in the documentary movie I mentioned above, "Bird on a Wire." When it was finished in 1974, Cohen didn't like it, and the BBC, which had paid for it, didn't like it either. So it got only a very limited viewing in a few places, and then was pretty much forgotten. However, the footage was rediscovered decades later, and painstakingly restored. The movie was rereleased in 2012, and shown it some theaters. You can now watch it on DVD. It shows the battles with security guards in the Tel Aviv concert, the troubles in the Jerusalem concert, and much more. Here's a Wikipedia entry about it:

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Leonard_Cohen:_Bird_on_a_Wire 

A few years ago, I posted a Cohen album here I called "Live 1972." It compiled songs from different concerts during the 1972 tour, the relatively few that were available with soundboard level quality. More than half of it was that 43 minute long section from this concert. I have removed that link now, in favor of this album. 

In 2024, an album was released called "The Bird on the Wire Concerts." It contains songs from the 1972 tour, apparently from the concerts in Stockholm, Paris, Tel Aviv, and London. But it's very rare and I haven't been able to find a copy. (It seems to only be available as part of a box set with the DVD of the movie.) I also don't know which songs on it are from which venue. But it contains "We Shall Not Be Moved," which I would guess is from this concert. If anyone has it and knows more about it, please let us know. I'd be especially curious to find out if it contains any more banter that I don't have here.

This album is an hour and 30 minutes long.

01 Passing Through [Edit] 
02 So Long, Marianne
03 Bird on the Wire 
04 Independence Day [Improvised Song]
05 Lady Midnight 
06 The Stranger Song
07 I Need Ya to Sing My Song [Improvised Song]
08 You Know Who I Am
09 Famous Blue Raincoat
10 Instrumental
11 Hey, That's No Way to Say Goodbye 
12 talk 
13 Song for the Machines [Improvised Song] 
14 talk 
15 Sisters of Mercy 
16 Chelsea Hotel No. 1 
17 Avalanche 
18 talk
19 Suzanne 
20 talk 
21 We Shall Not Be Moved 
22 talk 

DANGEROUS MINDS ‘Jailhouse Rock’: how Elvis Presley inspired a teenage serial killer | WILL HOWARD explores

 DANGEROUS MINDS

‘Jailhouse Rock’: how Elvis Presley inspired teenage serial killer Charles Schmid

 Jailhouse Rock'- how Elvis Presley inspired a teenage serial killer

(Credits: Dangerous Minds / Library of Congress / The Arizona Republic)

Three-quarters of a century later, we still might not have seen a pop star match the level of cultural ubiquity and worship that Elvis Presley had. 

Sure, artists have come close. The Beatles, Michael Jackson, Eminem, and Taylor Swift, all decent shouts, but what The King had over all of them is that he appeared first. . . . . . 

Convicted triple murderer Charles Howard Schmid - 1965. 

(Credits: Dangerous Minds / The Arizona Republic)

Reason on here . . . . .

The Pied Piper of Tucson - Charles Schmid



Charley Patton – Screamin’ and Hollerin’ the Blues + Charley Patton by John Fahey Book | Butterboy

Charley Patton – Screamin’ and Hollerin’ the Blues 

[2001] (7 x CDs) 

+ Charley Patton by John Fahey Book (PDF)

CHARLEY PATTON

Before Charley Patton was recognised as the bedrock of Delta blues, 

Paramount tried turning him into a mystery. In 1929 they issued one of his 

78s under the name “The Masked Marvel,” inviting buyers to guess the 

performer for a chance to win free records. Anyone familiar with the 

Delta scene would have known that voice instantly, but the stunt became 

part of Patton’s early mythology. Revenant Records leaned into that history 

when they created Screamin’ and Hollerin’ the Blues, weaving the 

“Masked Marvel” imagery into the artwork as a nod to the era’s eccentric 

marketing and the folklore surrounding Patton’s recordings. It’s a small detail, 

but it captures exactly what this set does so well, restoring the music, 

the context, and the stories that shaped one of America’s most important artists.


Screamin’ and Hollerin’ the Blues isn’t just a box set; it’s one of the most ambitious 

archival projects ever devoted to an American musician. Released in 2001 by Revenant 

Records, the label co‑founded by John Fahey, it gathers Patton’s complete recorded 

legacy and presents it with a level of care that feels almost devotional. His 78s were 

scattered, fragile, and often worn beyond comfort, yet this set pulls them together 

with a clarity and depth earlier transfers rarely achieved.

The music remains astonishing. Patton’s voice — raw, percussive, and full of lived 

experience, cuts through the surface noise with a force that still feels modern. 

His guitar work, all snap and drive, anchors everything from spirituals to breakdowns

 to the narrative blues that shaped the Delta tradition. What emerges is the full range 

of his world: dance tunes, laments, sermons, sly humour, and the sheer physicality of 

his playing. Patton wasn’t just a bluesman; he was a complete entertainer and a 

community figure.


Revenant’s presentation is legendary. Oversized packaging, deep essays, label scans,

 photographs, and meticulous discographical notes turn the set into a museum piece 

you can hold. 

The remastering, sourced from the best surviving 78s, brings out detail that earlier 

editions buried. You hear the room, the breath, the scrape of strings, the urgency 

of a man performing for real people in real time.

Taken together, Screamin’ and Hollerin’ the Blues restores Patton’s work to its rightful 

scale. I

t treats these recordings not as relics, but as living documents, vital, rhythmic, 

and foundational. 

This is the Delta blues at its source, presented with the respect and depth

 it has always deserved. (Butterboy)

Butterboy looks at Charley Patton from Revenant Records Box Set

and shares John Fahey’s ebook on Patton (PDF)

Mississippi Delta Blues (Charley Patton & Blind Lemon Jefferson)


Robyn Hitchcock - THE BEATLES Covered @ Three Kings, Clerkenwell, London, U.K. 2009 (Abbey Road)

 Robyn Hitchcock - Three Kings, Clerkenwell, London, Britain, 11-1-2009 (Abbey Road)

Paul says: From 2003 to 2011, Robyn Hitchcock held yearly benefit concerts at a small venue in London called the Three Kings, with the funds going to various causes opposing the U.S. war in Iraq. Each year, he performed one of his favorite albums by the musical acts that most influenced him. In 2009, he tackled "Abbey Road" by the Beatles. Here it is.

Hitchcock is a massive Beatles fan. I've already posted his versions of "Revolver," "Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band," and "The White Album," done in this series of benefit concerts. I waited on posting this one due to sound quality concerns. Namely, there was a fair amount of echo on the recording, which I find annoying. But, thanks to improving audio editing technology, I could finally fix that problem, so I did. First, I used the MVSEP program to split the vocals from the instruments. Then I used that program's "denoise" function on the vocals. Then I put the vocals and instruments back together again. I think it sounds much better now.

Hitchcock was backed by a full band, as he typically was in this series of concerts. He has a singing voice with lots of character, but he doesn't have an exceptionally high range. So, for a few of the songs that were more difficult to sing, he had other band members take the lead vocals. 

After playing the album straight though, in the correct album order, he played four more songs done by the Beatles in 1969. 

This music here is unreleased.

With this post, I believe I have posted all of the known recordings from these Three Kings benefit shows. However, there have been other occasions when Hitchcock has performed entire albums by other musical acts. So I'll keep working on posting those.

This album is an hour and 17 minutes long. 

01 talk by James Orbinski 
02 Come Together 
03 talk 
04 Something 
05 talk
06 Maxwell's Silver Hammer 
07 talk 
08 Oh, Darling 
09 talk
10 Octopus's Garden 
11 talk 
12 I Want You [She's So Heavy] 
13 talk 
14 Here Comes the Sun 
15 Because 
16 talk 
17 Because - Take 2 
18 You Never Give Me Your Money 
19 Sun King
20 Mean Mr. Mustard 
21 Polythene Pam 
22 She Came in through the Bathroom Window 
23 Golden Slumbers 
24 Carry That Weight 
25 The End 
26 Her Majesty 
27 talk 
28 I've Got a Feeling 
29 The Ballad of John and Yoko 
30 Old Brown Shoe 
31 talk
32 Don't Let Me Down 

Kelly Boesch - For The Brave

 Read what Kelly says about this beauty!


"I really love this prompt and surreal style. I have used this before but it’s really so much fun to play with I wanted to make some new ones. VEO3 animates these images so wonderfully. It always makes the people face off or appear brave in the face of what is happening around them. The song is called ‘For The Brave’. It is a tribute to all of the brave people standing up to injustice and using their voices and protecting their neighbors. There are many of you standing strong and standing together. It’s so powerful. Thank you. You give me strength when I feel I can’t stand it anymore and feel like I am giving up hope. "

For The Brave – Jan 31 2026

(Verse 1)
The truth is a weight that we carry alone,
A hunger for justice that’s carved in the bone.
While others are seeking a path on one side,
We face down the rising and thundering tide.
It’s not easy to run when the mountain is steep,
And bury the promises people should keep.
But you plant your heels in the sliding red clay,
And look at the terror and bid it to stay.

(Chorus)
For the brave are the ones with the grit in their teeth,
With the fire above and the bedrock beneath.
When the world is a canyon of cold, biting air,
They build us a ladder from nothing but prayer.

(Verse 2)
The ink on the page has been washed by the rain,
Leaving us nothing but logic and pain.
Yet look at the hands that are steady and scarred,
Pushing the weight when the moving is hard.
It isn’t a flash or a light in the dark,
It’s the slow, steady burn of a singular mark.
It’s the person who stands where the bridge used to be,
And offers their hand out to you and to me.
(Bridge)
The salt in the wound is a sign of the fight,
A sting that reminds us we’re doing what’s right.
Let the gears grind down, let the iron turn black,
We’ve traveled too far to be turning it back.

(Chorus)
For the brave are the ones with the grit in their teeth,
With the fire above and the bedrock beneath.
When the world is a canyon of cold, biting air,
They build us a ladder from nothing but prayer.

(Outro)
No silver, no gold,
Just the will to take hold.
The current is strong,
But the stubborn belong.

Stand.

Hold.

Kelly on YouTube

Kelly Boesch 

Birthdays: Roberta Flack [10/02/1937 - 24/02/2025]

 Roberta Flack was born in Black Mountain, North Carolina on this day in 1937.

Roberta Flack - First Time Ever I Saw Your Face 1972

"The First Time Ever I Saw Your Face" is a 1957 folk song written by British political singer/songwriter Ewan MacColl (Jimmy Miller) for Peggy Seeger, who later became his wife. At the time, the couple were lovers, although MacColl was still married to theatre director Joan Littlewood. It is said however apocryphal that he was asked for a filler song for a scenery change for a theatre production of Littlewood's and Miller/MacColl came up with this in minutes to cover.

Seeger sang the song when the duo performed in folk clubs around Britain. During the 1960s, it was recorded by various folk singers and became a major international hit for Roberta Flack in 1972, winning Grammy Awards for Record of the Year and Song of the Year. Billboard ranked it as the no. 1 Hot 100 single of the year for 1972

N.B Folks legend Seeger now lives just up the river (Thames) from me in my little village in an even prettier one right on the banks

Route

Jeff Beck reflects pre Yardbirds and approach to music! . . . . | Don’s Tunes

Billy n Jeff

 Jeff Beck:  When you are taken with any music with inner gusto, you don’t think too much about it—you just have to have it!


For example, I was playing in a blues band before I joined the Yardbirds, and I was really into Bo Diddley, who made the best use imaginable out of playing one chord. His outrageous jungle rhythms were so powerful and hypnotic, he didn’t have to change keys. We basically took his idea of the one-chord vamp, and while the band played, I would just slack all my strings and then really pull on them to make the most ridiculous and surreal sounds with slap echo so that people would just look up. It wasn’t premeditated.


I just wanted the audience to look at me and listen! I did all kinds of outrageous things like that at the time, like taking two guitars and have them feedback against each other, and it was that kind of attitude that eventually got me the job with the Yardbirds. They didn’t want someone to play a beautiful slide guitar solo, or someone that sounded like Earl Hooker.


They wanted someone that would hold an audience. I had something no one else had, and however crude or outrageous it was at the time, it worked. It wasn’t all that calculated. It was just my way of saying, Here I am. Ultimately, I had to tone some of it down when I joined the Yardbirds, because we were going on television playing pop singles.


Photo: Ros Halfin


Don's Tunes


Monday, February 09, 2026

MORDILLO - Urbanaspirines profile of Argentinian Cartoonist Guillermo Mordillo 1932 -2019

 I struggle to keep up with Kostas’ Urbanaspirines and frequently the running gag is he posts bands I have never heard of (even if they're British!) - [the depths of what you don’t know swappers is oceanic! - ED - R-U-D-E-! I call it!] but he excels today with posting a classic modern cartoonist the exquisite Argentinian MORDILLO!

A profile of whom is well deserved I reckon!

Kostas says:

Guillermo Mordillo (4 August 1932 – 29 June 2019), known simply as Mordillo, was an Argentine creator of cartoons and animations and was one of the most widely published cartoonists of the 1970s . . . . . . read on (link below)



here . . . . .