I Can See You - by Paddy Summerfield c. 1986

Sunday, October 19, 2025

The Band - Chestnut Hill Road, Woodstock NY : THE BIG PINK

 

The Band, outside of Rick Danko’s 1949 Hudson Super Six in the yard of his Chestnut Hill Road home, Woodstock, NY, 1969.


In 1965-66, the group got to work backing Bob Dylan on his world tour; afterwards, they (and Dylan) found refuge in the basement of a home in West Saugerties, New York. The house, with its salmon-pink siding, became known as "Big Pink."


When Bob Dylan wasn't around Big Pink, The Band began to flesh out its own sound and, in 1968, went to a studio in New York City — and later, studios around Los Angeles — to record their first album, Music from Big Pink.


Robbie Robertson: It was very unimpressive visually. It was like a cellar — any cellar was a big dream of mine, to have a place like this; to have a workshop, a clubhouse, a creative space. We got this basement and we set up the equipment — and I thought: "Wow, my dream has come true."


“Everybody was in this circle of creativity and experimenting was going on,” says Robertson. “Garth Hudson, our amazing keyboard player, was building musical instruments and Richard Manuel was writing ideas, and he wrote ‘Tears Of Rage’ with Bob.”


Meanwhile, Robertson was polishing his own songwriting abilities, penning future classics like ‘Chest Fever’ and the band’s career-defining single, ‘The Weight’.


“I wanted to be a storyteller”, explains Robertson. “I didn’t want to be a writer that says, ‘I got up this morning and I had a cup of coffee and then I went outside.’ Some people could do that quite well. It felt like if I could write fiction that you couldn’t tell if that wasn’t real, that would be interesting to me.”


"We took a left turn away from the psychedelia movement," Levon Helm said, explaining the Band's unique sound. "Those long jams — we didn't really like that. We liked short, kind of precise songs with a little bit of story to it. And we always tried to put a good chorus in that could be sung along with."


In 1970, the Band appeared on the cover of Time magazine.The accompanying piece hailed them as "the one group whose sheer fascination and musical skill may match the excellence of the Beatles." But various members of the group began to succumb to drug and alcohol abuse. As Rick Danko would later recall, "Suddenly we had all the money we needed and people were falling over themselves to make us happy. Which meant giving us all the dope we could stand."


The feeling of brotherly love was further dissipated by Helm's growing belief that Robertson was claiming more songwriting credits than were rightfully his. "The Band was doomed from the start," he told me. "We actually taught ourselves how to grab songs out of the air and get them recorded and figure out how to sing them and play them. And by the time we learned how to do that, it was over. By the time we'd done that and learned how, then we found out the songs didn't belong to us anyway." 


Photo: the legendary Elliott Landy


Don's Tunes


Filmed in 1970 at Robbie Robertsons studio in Woodstock, 
King Harvest is a song written by Robbie Robertson and is from the album "The Band"

You know it . . . . message of the day to all y'all





 

Saturday, October 18, 2025

VA - Rock 'n' Roll JukeBox [2008] (16 x CDs) | Butterboy - A Ziggy Special collection

 Now I am not a big fan of those best of Rock n Roll compilations as such and I have said not the biggest Elvis fan either come to that, who of course is central here, but THIS is the exception that proves the rule as Butterboy mentions it is as collections go peerless work by Ziggy here and essential that it is the emotional range of the song selection that makes this so listenable and if you wanted just one compilation of Rock and Rock THIS IS IT!

VA - Rock 'n' Roll JukeBox [2008] 


ROCK 'N' ROLL

VA - Rock 'n' Roll JukeBox [2008] (16 x CDs)

Rock ’n’ Roll Jukebox is a sprawling 16CD box set that plays like a jukebox come to life, one stocked not with filler, but with the foundational sounds of rock ’n’ roll’s golden era. Across 400 tracks, the set delivers a dizzying array of hits, deep cuts, and genre-defining moments from the 1950s and early ’60s, all performed by the original artists. It’s not just a nostalgia trip, it’s a full-blown archive of pop culture’s most explosive birth.

The scope is staggering with 300 Top Ten hits, 100 Number Ones, and a lineup that reads like a roll call of rock royalty. Elvis Presley, Little Richard, Chuck Berry, Buddy Holly, The Everly Brothers, Fats Domino, Carl Perkins, Ruth Brown, and The Platters all make appearances, alongside doo-wop classics, country crossovers, and rhythm & blues staples. From “Rock Around the Clock” to “Lucille,” “Blue Suede Shoes” to “Mr. Sandman,” the set captures the energy, innocence, and swagger of a generation discovering its voice.

Each disc is sequenced with care, balancing chart-toppers with lesser-known gems. You’ll find jukebox staples like “Shake, Rattle and Roll,” “Be-Bop-A-Lula,” and “Tears on My Pillow” nestled beside regional hits and early crossover experiments. The mastering is clean and punchy, preserving the analog warmth while giving the tracks a fresh shine. Packaging is minimal, paper sleeves and a compact box, but the content more than compensates.

What makes Rock ’n’ Roll Jukebox essential isn’t just its breadth, it’s the emotional punch. These songs aren’t just catchy; they’re cultural artifacts. They speak to teenage rebellion, heartbreak, dancehall joy, and the raw thrill of electric sound. For archivists, DJs, and collectors, the set offers a ready-made library of foundational rock. For casual listeners, it’s a gateway to the roots of modern pop.

Issued in Europe on the Prism Leisure label and now increasingly rare, this box set remains one of the most comprehensive and accessible anthologies of early rock ’n’ roll ever assembled. This set is a time machine. (Butterboy)

Thanks to Ziggy for sharing this set with me... (Thanks Ziggy)


that’s 300 top ten hits and over 2 gb of pure music!

Silver Jews | “We Could Be Looking For the Same Thing,” from Lookout Mountain, Lookout Sea | O My Soul

 



O My Soul

Silver Jews | “We Could Be Looking For the Same Thing,” from Lookout Mountain, Lookout Sea.

Robyn Hitchcock & The Egyptians "Globe Of Frogs” 1988 | Twilightzone

Robyn Hitchcock & The Egyptians "Globe Of Frogs" 1988

Twilightzone continues with RYP's exploration of the work of Robyn Hitchcock
Just another great collection of should have been smash hits.
He stole the show when he opened for R.E.M., and I've been a fan ever since. This album epitomizes Robyn Hitchcock's style: jangly, funny, refreshing, and clever. This album has a sort of mystical air to it, broken only by visualizations of fat men, floating and and then exploding, leaving debris of skin and lunch leftovers on your sleeve. For me, highlights include the fun 'Tropical Flesh Mandala', 'Balloon Man' of course, and the nice little perfect pop number, 'Flesh Number One (Beatle Dennis)' which illustrates that when Robyn sets out to write something meaningful and a tad bit commercial, he can still do it without compromising. Reviewer: Christian Buckley (Washington State, United States)
Robyn Hitchcock & The Egyptians:
Robyn Hitchcock (Guitar, Harmonica, Piano, Vocals), Peter Buck (12 String Guitar), Andy Metcalfe (Bass, Accordion, Keyboards, Vocals), Glenn Tilbrook (Harmony Vocals), Morris Windsor (Drums, Harmony Vocals), Chris Cox (Mandolin)


Emmylou Harris - Red Dirt Girl (with Mark Knopfler)

 Emmylou Harris - Red Dirt Girl (Real Live Roadrunning | Official Live Video)

Ronnie Lane and Slim Chance. How Come

 Ronnie Lane and Slim Chance 'How Come' on The Basil Brush Show 1973