I get it, even R.E.M post clips of their appearances and I assume it is so we can visit the full track but the coda or ending of Everybody Hurts seemed somehow sacrilegious! And we have to look to YouTube so . . . meh?!
So anyway here's the whole track to end our day with . . . . .
SONGS FROM THE WATCH - A Compilation of 25 Original Guitar Fingerpicking Pieces in Open Tunings, Taken from 7 Albums, Written over the last 6 years by James Rigby
one of the last known shots of Jim [with Pam on the left[ at the doorway of their holiday apartment Paris 1971
Join us today in remembering Jim.
“Jim Morrison was one of our great poets and unique performers. His body of work will always endure.” - Patti Smith
“It was the way to stand at the mic – the stance and the grab. He hung on the stand. Nobody else did that.” - Iggy Pop
“It is hard to believe that there was a better poet than Jim, at his age.” - Michael McClure
“The guy was a genius, and I don’t throw that word around very often… He was a risk taker, fearless.” - Alice Cooper
More than five decades later, Jim’s work has continued to live on. The records he made with The Doors are still finding new ears, and his poetry has been passed to the new generation. He brought a poet’s perspective to rock and roll and shattered notions of what it meant to be a rock star.
Rest in peace, Jim.
The Doors - Moonlight Drive (Jonathan Winters Show)
Sixty years ago, Bob Dylan released Blonde on Blonde, a paradigm-shifting intimate blend of folk, rock, blues, and country music, and Dylan’s vivid, surreal lyricism.
It remains one of Dylan’s most celebrated works, making history as rock music’s first double LP, and featuring iconic songs such as “Visions of Johanna,” “I Want You,” “Just Like a Woman,” and “Sad-Eyed Lady of the Lowlands". Blonde on Blondecaptures Dylan yet again pushing the boundaries of songwriting and helping redefine what a rock album could be.
“Hank Williams wrote it, Hank Williams sang it but Jerry Lee got a gold record for it!”
I think I may have said before that it was teacher and then Education Officer at MOMAOxford Ian Cole, leader of The Jet Rink Band no less! (ahem!?) who introduced me to the fact that our Jerry Lee sang country classics and have tapes made by him somehwere in the vaults at Swappers Mansion enlightening me of the fact I love them . . .so I LOVE this version of a Hank Williams stone classic!
a favourite song (of course)
His Facebook page says: Lighting up Austin City Limits back in 1983
Watch the Killer deliver a passionate performance of Hank Williams’ “You Win Again.”
The Goodtime Washboard Three play "Sailing Down the Chesapeake Bay," 1963.
From left to right: Wayne Pope (percussion), Bruce Bratton (washtub bass), and Dick Fagerstrom (banjo). Pope plays a homemade instrument including two washboards, temple blocks, cowbells, bicycle horns, and taxicab horns.
From “50 Sterne in Musik: Hillbilly,” 1963. Directed by Dietrich Wawzyn. Full documentary on