I Can See You - by Paddy Summerfield c. 1986

Monday, March 23, 2026

QUIZ ANSWER in under 12 hours! BRIAN MAY of QUEEN : WINNER REGULAR VISITOR - DELL!!!

 and DELL for the win!

It IS BRIAN MAY lead guitarist of the mega band Queen at his very beginning and yes his first guitar was made by both Brian and largely under his dear Dad’s tutelage! He still used it through the Queens time at the top I gather and amongst others I am sure he still has it! Supposedly it played like an absolute dream

Brian May

 

Here is Dell’s prize and whilst it seems somewhat measly after such a fast response it IS a FRENCH poster from The Beatles Film YELLOW SUBMARINE and rarely seen



Brian May on building the Red Special!

AFK QUIZ No.137 | So WHO IS THIS?

 I am going to be AFK for a while maybe able to check in later I hope meanwhile here’s another quiz for ya . . . . .(same rules apply no reverse engineering and no google!)


So who is this youngster and budding guitarist?
Clue No.1 the guitar he is playing here is “homemade” (well mostly by his Dad!)




A Gentle Journey Through Memory and Heartache: Across The Great Divide [Kate Wolf] | Oldies But Goodies

A Gentle Journey Through Memory and Heartache: Across The Great Divide

"For those who cherish the quiet grace of folk and country music, “Across The Great Divide” (written by Kate Wolf) sung here by Nanci Griffith, with the luminous harmony of Emmylou Harris, remains a deeply affecting recording. The song appears on Griffith’s 1993 album Other Voices, Other Rooms, a heartfelt tribute to the writers who shaped her musical soul. Although not released as a charting single, the album itself reached No. 5 on the Billboard Top Country Albums chart, reflecting its warm reception.

One of its most memorable performances came during Griffith’s live appearances in the early 1990s, particularly at the Austin City Limits stage, where the blend of her delicate phrasing and Harris’s angelic harmonies truly shone. This version is worth hearing for its sincerity and reverence—two voices, rich with experience, honouring a song with quiet dignity."

Nanci Griffith and Emmylou Harris Across The Great Divide

πŸŽΆπ„π§π£π¨π² 𝐒𝐨𝐧𝐠

When Nanci Griffith first recorded Across The Great Divide for her 1986 album The Last of the True Believers, it arrived as a quiet yet profoundly stirring testament to the bridges we build and the distances we endure in life and love. Though it never soared to the very top of the mainstream charts, peaking modestly on the folk and country listings, its resonance was immediate among those who cherished songs that whispered rather than shouted. The collaboration with Emmylou Harris, whose ethereal harmonies float like a soft wind through the verses, gave the song a luminous warmth, a gentle glow that lingered long after the needle left the groove.

 

Nanci Griffith and Emmylou Harris - Across the Great Divide read on

Nanci Griffith & Emmylou Harris - Across The Great Divide



Captain Beefheart and The Magic Band [Ice Cream For Crow] Evening Bell 2006 remaster | Gary Lucas Facebook

 Gary Lucas posted this today and said: You guitarists better listen good


Captain Beefheart and The Magic Band [Ice Cream For Crow] Evening Bell 
(2006 Digital Remaster)


It features Gary straining at the very limits as to what can be done on a guitar 

Sunday, March 22, 2026

Foy Vance - You and I (live from Belfast with the Ulster Orchestra )

 Foy Vance - Sketches of The Wake

Sketches of the Wake

Foy Vance - You and I (live from Belfast with the Ulster Orchestra )


Lyrics: 
Well tomorrow may not be like any other day It's so hard to know now What with the collective they See lately they've been swinging high the wrecking ball Tipping dirt on the foundations I spent so long upon Making sure they would be strong But you and I We are hard as stone You and I We are hard as stone I may empty out my pockets in their hat one day Then I'll turn my back And I will simply walk away They may think it over and reach out their hand But I'll have long since disappeared by then Like water in the sand You see gold was all that they had planned But you and I We are hard as stone You and I We are hard as stone They're like pawns on attack And I am back here castling Trying to find my feet Find my Joi de Vie again But I can't make it on my own I may need something strong That I can build new hope upon Well you and I We are hard as stone You and I We are hard as stone You and I


Birthdays : Vivian Stanshall

 

He was best known as the lead singer with the Bonzo Dog Doo-Dah Band. The jazz/comedy/eccentric English band (whose members also included Neil Innes and ‘Legs’ Larry Smith) are known to most for their appearance onstage during the strip club scene in Magical Mystery Tour (“Death Cab For Cutie”). Seen and heard here: The Bonzos’ highest-charting single, 1968’s “I Am The Urban Spaceman,” produced by one Apollo C. Vermouth (Macca to you).


Stanshall died in a fire at 51 in 1995.

I’m The Urban Spaceman

Through The Canyons of your Mind

Death Cab For Cutie

Jollity Farm

Tom Waits : Everything You Can Think Is True | Herberg De Kelder

 

Everything you can think of is true

Album: Alice - Original Demo Versions 1992, by Tom Waits


HERBERG DE KELDER

Bukka White (with Memphis Minnie)| I Am In The Heavenly Way | Herberg De Kelder

 Speaking of religious song Bukka here in the Heavenly Way . . . bless’ im! and Memphis Minnie too!

I Am In the Heavenly Way


I Am In The Heavenly Way | Bukka White (with Memphis Minnie)


HERBERG DE KELDER

The Hilliard Ensemble : Thomas Tallis - Absterge Domine |jt1674

I think more than any other perhaps the Hilliard Ensemble did more to spread the word for choral music like Tallis than any other. I first came across then and the composer as an art student largely thanks to fellow art students . . . . .  again I don’t need here to explain about my beliefs (or lack of them?) but heck the love of religious buildings and religious music came from my dear Mum and Dad but from an entirely secular standpoint  . . . . . . . . 

https://www.tumblr.com/jt1674/811729647373058048/thomas-tallis-absterge-domine

Bob Dylan - Tell Me Mama! Live in France | Route

Imagine you're at a Bob Dylan concert in 1966, you've been transfixed by the first half acoustic performance, new songs like Visions of Johanna, 4th Time Around and Just Like a Woman have blown your mind. You sit in the intermission wondering what's going to happen next, then this lot walk out and do this at a volume louder than you've ever heard before.

* the only proviso being that his first single [Mixed Up Confusion] was ELECTRIC! Even Corrinna Corinna the B-side!