I Can See You - by Paddy Summerfield c. 1986

Friday, April 24, 2026

Dave Alvin - Sweetwater Music Hall, WV. 2013 | Voodoo Wagon

 Dave Alvin - Sweetwater Music Hall, WV. 2013

Dave Alvin - Sweetwater Music Hall
Mill Valley, CA.
June 27, 2013
Excellent Soundboard @ flac 

A Voodoo Wagon Re-Post from Silent Way

Dave Alvin with Chris Miller & Christy McWilson
 
Set List: 
01 Harlan County Line
02 Boss of the Blues
03 banter
04 The Black Rose of Texas
05 banter/Christy intro
06 King of California
07 banter
08 Manzanita
09 banter
10 Long White Cadillac
11 banter
12 Frank's Tavern
13 Abilene
14 Out of Control
15 banter
16 Dry River
17 banter
18 Potters Field
19 Who's Been Here
20 Fourth of July
21 encore break/banter
22 intro to ->
23 Johnny Ace Is Dead
24 Here in California
25 banter
26 Marie Marie


Dave Alvin - Marie Marie Fitzgerald's, Chicago - 40th Annual American Music Festival

Chris Hillman - Ebbets Field, Denver, CO, 5-8-1975 | Albums That Should Exist

 Chris Hillman - Ebbets Field, Denver, CO, 5-8-1975

Here's another concert from the radio broadcasts out of the tiny Ebbets Field venue in Denver, Colorado. This one stars Chris Hillman.

This concert found Hillman at an interesting point in his career, just starting a true solo career. Up until then, he had been in a surprising number of bands. He was a founding member of the Byrds in the 1960s. Then he was one of the leaders of the Flying Burrito Bros. from 1969 to 1972. After that, he joined Manassas, led by Stephen Stills, from 1972 to 1973. In 1973, he took part in a Byrds reunion that resulted in one album. Then in 1974, he became part of the Souther-Hillman-Furay Band, a trio consisting of J.D. Souther, himself, and Richie Furay. They put out two albums, but broke up in 1975. 

I checked, and it looks like the Souther-Hillman-Furay Band didn't break up until 1976. However, it also looks like they barely toured at all in 1975 and 1976. I only saw evidence of two concerts. Their second album, released in 1975, was badly received. So it looks like the members were already going their own way. Hillman would release his first true solo album, "Slippin' Away," in 1976. I checked setlist.com, a concert database. It says he performed 16 concerts in 1975, and this one was the very first. If that's true, this concert may have been the very start of his solo career. 

However, that meant he hadn't much time to write songs for his own album. Only two songs here, "Down in the Churchyard" and "Blue Morning," would appear on the "Slippin' Away" album. The rest are from his time with the Byrds (tracks 7 and 24), the Flying Burrito Bros. (tracks 4, 5, 7, and 21), Manassas (track 13), and the Souther-Hillman-Furay Band (tracks 1, 8, and 11). It seems there actually were one or more songs at the end that didn't make the recording. There was a little bit of banter and tuning up right before the recording cut off. I got rid of that little bit. Having audience cheering fade out is a more satisfying way to end an album, in my opinion.

As I've mentioned elsewhere, I love these Ebbets Field bootleg radio broadcasts due to the sound quality. A local company called Tuning Up recorded all of them, and did a better job than typical radio broadcasts from that era. But unfortunately, this concert doesn't sound good as most of them. Probably it's a copy of a copy, and so on, or something like that. However, I ran all the songs through a UVR5 program denoise filter, so at least the sound is better than it was before. I'm not saying this sounds bad; it's just it doesn't sound as good as most of the others I'm posting from this venue.  

This album is 45 minutes long. 

01 talk by emcee 
02 talk 
03 Safe at Home 
04 talk 
05 Down in the Churchyard 
06 talk
07 Time Between 
08 talk 
09 High Fashion Queen 
10 talk 
11 Colorado 
12 talk 
13 Fallen Eagle 
14 talk 
15 Christine's Tune 
16 talk 
17 Follow Me Through
18 talk
19 Blue Morning 
20 talk 
21 Six Days on the Road 
22 Move Me Real Slow 
23 talk 
24 So You Want to Be a Rock 'N' Roll Star 

(all tracks Chris Hillman) 

Visitors BC and Joan and The Sealyman hisself were talking a while ago now about how Chris Hillman was often overshadowed by others (Stephen Still and Manassas?) and how much they enjoyed his work and here is a solo set that warns it isn’t as good quality as others from the same series from Ebbet’s Field FM recordings but heck I didn’t notice - Hillman fans will love this!

 


 

 

Ringo Starr - I Don’t See Me In Your Eyes Anymore [ADVERT BREAK]

 Ringo was on the radio this morning being interviewed . . . . . . still love that man!

Ringo Starr - I Don’t See Me In Your Eyes Anymore

second album with T-Bone Burnett

Long Long Road (CD)

The Beatles - Nowhere Man | O MY SOUL

 Nowhere Man

The BeatlesRubber Soulimage
  • The Beatles - Nowhere Man


O My Soul


we have met a few haven’t we?

Red Sparowes - Our Happiest Days Slowly Began to Turn Into Dust [At The Soundless Dawn] | jt1674

  . . . . and then of course Tripping Mantras does it too and comes up with an interesting sounding piece from a band I have never heard of . . . . . . . let me know what you think in the comments

https://www.tumblr.com/jt1674/814713669474811904/red-sparowes-our-happiest-days-slowly-began-to

Marquee Nights, Guitar Swagger & Tension (A Butterboy Compilation)

 


VA - Marquee Nights, Guitar Swagger & Tension (A Butterboy Compilation) (4 x CDs)

Now this is an interesting thesis as guitar based music is concerned . . . . . . .check the track list!
Butterboy says?

SWAGGER & TENSION
VA - Marquee Nights, Guitar Swagger & Tension (A Butterboy Compilation) (4 x CDs)
In 1977 Marquee Moon revealed a new kind of guitar language. 
The recordings gathered here follow the path that language opened. 
When “Marquee Moon” appeared in 1977 it quietly redrew the map for guitar-driven rock. 
At a time when virtuosity often meant speed, density, and technical display, 
the track by Television introduced another possibility. Its power comes from patience, 
clarity, and the slow accumulation of tension.

Across more than ten minutes of Marquee Moon the music unfolds with unusual control. 
Two guitars move around one another in long, deliberate phrases, sometimes mirroring a 
melodic idea, sometimes drifting apart into counter lines that reshape the rhythm beneath them.
 The playing is intricate, yet it never announces itself as technical showmanship. Instead, 
it feels exploratory, like a conversation unfolding in real time.

What makes the performance distinctive is its sense of space. 
Notes ring out cleanly, rhythms remain steady and restrained, and repetition becomes 
a structural tool rather than a limitation. Small variations gather momentum until the
 music reaches a quiet intensity. The effect is hypnotic without becoming indulgent, 
precise without feeling rigid.
This balance between restraint and complexity forms the guiding idea behind this compilation. 

The selections across its four discs trace artists who share the same musical instinct revealed
 in “Marquee Moon”, guitars used as dialogue rather than spectacle, tension built through 
repetition and interplay, and songs shaped by clarity rather than excess. 
Some tracks anticipate this language, others emerge from the late-seventies moment 
that surrounded it, while later recordings show how the approach continued to echo 
through independent rock.
Across the box set the sequencing reinforces an aesthetic of restraint. 
Each track presents a variation on the same language, clean tone, patient rhythm, 
and guitars that converse rather than compete. The challenge lies not in playing more notes, 
but in choosing fewer and letting them resonate. 
Every phrase carries weight because nothing is wasted.
The collection reveals how a single recording suggested a different kind of guitar virtuosity. 
Not louder, faster, or more elaborate, 
but sharper, leaner, and driven by the charged space between two players.
 (Butterboy)


Track lists

CD1

01 Television - Marquee Moon 10:38 1977

02 Fall - Totally Wired 3:29 1980

03 Richard Hell & The Voidoids - Blank Generation 2:45 1977

04 Talking Heads - Uh-Oh, Love Comes to Town 2:49 1977

05 Wire - Three Girl Rhumba 1:23 1977

06 Gang of Four - Love Like Anthrax 3:19 1979

07 Magazine - Shot By Both Sides 4:06 1978

08 Suicide - Cheree 3:42 1977

09 Pere Ubu - Final Solution 4:59 1976

10 Feelies - Crazy Rhythms 6:10 1980

11 Joy Division - Candidate 3:05 1979

12 Public Image Ltd. - Careering 4:35 1979

13 Mission of Burma - Fight Academy Song 3:07 1982

14 Lines - Nerve Pylon 3:45 1979

15 Blondie - Fade Away and Radiate 4:02 1978

16 Only Ones - Another Girl Another Planet 3:01 1978

17 Saints - Know Your Product 3:14 1978

18 Modern Lovers - Roadrunner 4:06 1976

19 Dictators - The Next Big Thing 4:22 1975

20 Patti Smith - Radio Ethiopia 10:03 1976


CD2

01 Roxy Music - Editions of You 3:47 1973

02 Brian Eno - Baby's on Fire 5:19 1973

03 Velvet Underground - What Goes On 8:58 1969

04 Neu! - Hallogallo 10:06 1972

05 Can - Moonshake 3:01 1973

06 Magazine - The Light Pours Out of Me 4:38 1978

07 Raincoats - Fairytale in The Supermarket 2:59 1979

08 Mekons - Where Were You? 2:44 1979

09 David Bowie - Beauty and The Beast 3:36 1977

10 Lou Reed - Kill Your Sons 3:39 1974

11 Iggy Pop - Nightclubbing 4:15 1977

12 Bauhaus - Bela Lugosi's Dead 9:33 1979

13 Pop Group - She is Beyond Good and Evil 3:25 1979

14 Ultravox! - The Man Who Dies Every Day 4:11 1978

15 Simple Minds - Changeling 3:31 1979

16 Echo & the Bunnymen - Villiers Terrace 2:46 1980

17 Sound - Winning 4:18 1981

18 Cure - A Forest (Album Version) 5:55 1980

19 Teardrop Explodes - Treason 2:58 1980

20 Luna - Slide 4:19 1993


CD3

01 R.E.M. - Pilgrimage 4:30 1983

02 Smiths - Still Ill 3:32 1984

03 Church - Almost with You 4:14 1982

04 Gun Club - Sex Beat 2:48 1981

05 Wake - Favour 4:20 1982

06 Psychedelic Furs - Imitation of Christ 5:29 1981

07 Replacements - Unsatisfied 4:01 1984

08 Hüsker Dü - Celebrated Summer 4:02 1984

09 Dream Syndicate - Then She Remembers 4:07 1985

10 Clean - Anything Could Happen 2:37 1981

11 Go-Betweens - Cattle and Cane 4:22 1983

12 Rain Parade - I Look Around 3:06 1983

13 Cocteau Twins - Blind Dumb Deaf 3:41 1999

14 Triffids - Wide Open Road 4:09 1986

15 Chameleons - Up the Down Escalator 3:57 1983

16 This Heat - Horizontal hold 8:28 1981

17 Residents - Constantinople 2:24 1980

18 Chrome - Static Gravity 3:22 1979

19 dB's - Black and White 3:07 1981

20 Orange Juice - Rip it Up 3:45 1982


CD4

01 Interpol - Leif Erikson 4:00 2002

02 Strokes - Trying Your Luck 3:27 2001

03 Franz Ferdinand - Take Me Out 3:57 2004

04 Editors - Munich 3:49 2005

05 Iceage - Ecstasy 2:28 2011

06 Savages - Husbands 2:50 2013

07 Preoccupations - Continental Shelf 3:18 2015

08 Protomartyr - Pontiac 87 4:31 2014

09 DIIV - Doused 3:43 2012

10 War on Drugs - Red Eyes 4:58 2014

11 Real Estate - Green Aisles 5:01 2009

12 Beach Fossils - Youth 2:36 2011

13 Walkmen - The Rat 4:27 2004

14 Parquet Courts - Borrowed Time 2:32 2013

15 Ought - Beautiful Blue Sky 7:43 2014

16 Women - Eyesore 6:25 2008

17 Soft Boys - I Wanna Destroy You 2:53 1980

18 Yo La Tengo - Tom Courtenay 3:25 1997

19 Drones - Jezebel 7:51 2005

20 Rolling Blackouts Coastal Fever - French Press 5:27 2017


Pete Townshend - I Can See For Miles (demo) | jt1674

 

https://www.tumblr.com/jt1674/814712601203326976/pete-townshend-i-can-see-for-miles-demo

Bruce Springsteen - Because The Night | Herberg De Kelder

Because The Night

I think I am right that Patti Smith is now co-credited with Bruce as the author of this great song . . . . . . 

HERBERG DE KELDER

Do Look Back! | The LIVERPOOL HISTORY SOCIETY | BOB DYLAN CELEBRATION

 


The Kids Are Alright... In May 1966, Bob Dylan was in Liverpool, during his world tour, performing his incendiary electric guitar set at the city’s Odeon Theatre. On Saturday 14 May 1966 with some time to kill before the performance, he was exploring the streets with Barry Feinstein, the official photographer on the European leg of the tour. Dylan, as lean as a string bean, and resplendent in corduroy jacket and diamond patterned shirt, looked every inch the pied piper. So when Bob and Barry came across a bunch of kids playing on the street, it made complete sense to get a picture. The resulting photograph of Bob on the steps with the children is an enduring classic, and one of Barry’s most important and best loved photographs.

.

#bobdylan #Liverpool #odeonliverpool #barryfeinstein

Liverpool History Society
“It reflects the enthusiasm of our members and our shared commitment to uncovering and sharing Liverpool’s remarkable history.”
To mark the occasion, the Society will host a special anniversary event, “Do Look Back!”, on 16 June 2026 at the Adelphi Hotel. The event will celebrate both the Society’s history and key moments from 1966, exploring Liverpool’s cultural, sporting, and media heritage.
Highlights include talks on Bob Dylan’s 1966 Liverpool visit, Everton’s FA Cup victory and
World Cup connections, the pioneering female band The Liverbirds, and Liverpool’s
presence on 1960s television. Speakers include historians, writers, broadcasters, and special guests with first-hand connections to the period.

Jeff Beck visits Jimi's ‘Little Wing’ . . . .

 Jeff plays a clipped Little Wing!