I Can See You - by Paddy Summerfield c. 1986

Monday, April 13, 2026

Dave Mason - Mississippi Riverbank Club, Minneapolis, MN, 7-25-1986 | Albums That Should Exist

 Dave Mason - Mississippi Riverbank Club, Minneapolis, MN, 7-25-1986

Paul says: Recently, a commenter named nytvf pointed out a Dave Mason concert on YouTube, and suggested I post that on my blog. I checked out the link, and I was impressed by the concert. It's an acoustic concert with great sound quality, but somehow it seems to only exist as that one YouTube. Well, until now, that is. Here it is converted by me into mp3s. Thanks to nytvf for the suggestion. (I'm always open to suggestions.)

Mason had commercial and critical success, highlighted by two big hits, "Only You Know and I Know" in 1970, and "We Just Disagree" in 1977. But his commercial fortunes went way down in the 1980s. He didn't even release a new studio album between 1980 and 1987. This concert happened near the end of that time. Pretty much all the songs he performed were songs he wrote in the 1960s or 1970s, or covers of classic songs. But while he didn't seem to be very creative with new songs during this time period, his performing skills were still a good as ever.

Mason played guitar, and was backed up by only one other person, Jim Krueger, also on guitar (and backing vocals). That's worth noting because Kreuger also wrote a couple of the songs performed here, "The Word" and "We Just Disagree." Kreuger was a member of Mason's band since the mid-1970s.

The one thing that surprises me here is that it seems Mason didn't play "Only You Know and I Know," which I would guess is the second best known song he's written, behind "Feelin' Alright." (Perhaps there was more to this concert that what's on the recording, I don't know.) 

Anyway, this previously obscure recording is one of the best live recordings of his music, in my opinion. The music is unreleased. The sound quality is excellent. I would guess it either has to be a soundboard or an FM radio broadcast.  

This album is an hour and 17 minutes long.

01 Feelin' Alright
02 World in Changes 
03 talk
04 Every Woman 
05 talk
06 Sad and Deep as You
07 That's Alright Mama [Instrumental Version] 
08 talk 
09 The Words 
10 Not Fade Away 
11 talk
12 Let It Go, Let It Flow 
13 talk
14 Shouldn't Have Took More than You Gave - Dear Prudence
15 talk
16 Bird on the Wind 
17 talk
18 We Just Disagree
19 talk
20 Maybe
21 talk 
22 Dust My Blues
23 talk 
24 All Shook Up
25 Bring It on Home to Me 
26 Dear Mr. Fantasy 
27 talk
28 All Along the Watchtower 
29 talk 
30 Take It to the Limit 

(all tracks Dave Mason) 

The Brother’s Comatose takes their SHOES OFF! ‘Too Many Places'

 The Brothers say: Well…you all asked for it, so here’s the shoeless full length vid of “Too Many Places”


The Brothers Comatose - Too Many Places




Art of The Day - Don Van Vliet | Gary Lucas

a personal favourite

May be art


Don Van Vliet

 "Provided You Go Outside

1984
oil on wood



Gary Lucas

Billy Gibbons on 'La Grange’ | Don's Tunes

Photo: Jay Dickman

 

Billy Gibbons: “The “La Grange” riff is another interpretation of one of the cornerstone staples of that splendid American art form, the blues. There are many ways to chop it, we just got really lucky and landed something with resonance that lasts and lasts.” 


As Gibbons recalls, “Growing up in Texas, there were two requirements toward manhood: You had to visit La Grange, and you had to go to the Mexican border. We somehow captured both in one single trip.” 

The guitarist points to Buddy Holly’s “Peggy Sue Got Married,” the rock pioneer’s sequel to “Peggy Sue,” as compositional inspiration. “That song showed us you didn’t have to rhyme every single stanza or verse,” Gibbons says. 

“Plus, Holly left things open to interpretation: ‘I heard it’s a rumor from a friend.’ Did she get married or not? So with ‘La Grange,’ we tagged the closing with lines like, ‘I hear it’s fine… but I might be mistaken.’ The invitation stood at that moment.”

Regarding a failed lawsuit by the copyright holder of John Lee Hooker’s “Boogie Chillen’,” which resulted in a court ruling that the rhythm was in the public domain, Gibbons says, “It seemed to be a somewhat egregious and curious accusation. At the end of the day, we were kind of flattered to know that our music had taken a very important position in the history of rock and roll.” 

Don's Tunes







any excuse to revisit Peanuts covering their favourite boogie! Charlie and Snoopy can really rock!





Hunter Thompson - When the Beatniks Were Social Lions | National Observer, April 20, 1964

 

"What ever happened to the Beat Generation? The question wouldn't mean much in Detroit or Salt Lake City, perhaps, but here it brings back a lot of memories. As recently as 1960, San Francisco was the capital of the Beat Generation, and the corner of Grant and Columbus in the section known as North Beach was the crossroads of the "beat" world.


It was a good time to be in San Francisco. Anybody with half a talent could wander around North Beach and pass himself off as a "comer" in the new era. I know, because I was doing it, and so was a fellow we'll have to call Willard, the hulking, bearded son of a New Jersey minister. It was a time for breaking loose from the old codes, for digging new sounds and new ideas, and for doing everything possible to unnerve the Establishment.


Since then, things have died down. The "beatnik" is no longer a social lion in San Francisco, but a social leper; as a matter of fact, it looked for a while as if they had all left. But the city was recently startled by a "rent strike" in North Beach and as it turned out, lo and behold, the strikers were "beatniks." The local papers, which once played Beat Generation stories as if the foundations of The System were crumbling before their very eyes, seized on the rent strike with strange affection-- like a man encountering an old friend who owes him money, but whom he is glad to see anyway.


The rent strike lasted only about two days, but it got people talking again about the Beat Generation and its sudden demise from the American scene -- or at least from the San Francisco scene, because it is still very extant in New York. But in New York it goes by a different name, and all the humor has gone out of it.


One of the most surprising things about the rent strike was the fact that so few people in San Francisco had any idea what the Beat Generation was. An interviewer from a radio station went into the streets seeking controversy on "the return of the beatniks," but drew a blank. People remembered the term, and not much more.


But the Beat Generation was very real in its day, and it has a definite place in our history. There is a mountain of material explaining the sociological aspects of the thing, but most of it is dated and irrelevant. What remains are the people who were involved; most of them are still around, looking back with humor and affection on the uproar they caused, and drifting by a variety of routes toward debt, parenthood, and middle age.


My involvement was tangential at best. But Willard was in there at the axis of things, and in retrospect he stands out as one of the great "beatniks" of his time. Certainly San Francisco has good cause to remember him; his one and only encounter with the forces of law and order provided one of the wildest Beat Generation stories of the era.


Before San Francisco he had been in Germany, teaching English and cultivating an oriental-type beard. On his way out to the coast he stopped in New York and picked up a mistress with a new Ford. It was de rigueur, in those days, to avoid marriage at all costs. He came to me through the recommendation of a friend then working in Europe for a British newspaper. "Willard is a great man," said the letter. "He is an artist and a man of taste."


As it turned out, he also was a prodigious drinker in the tradition of Brendan Behan, who was said to have had "a thirst so great it would throw a shadow." I was making my own beer at the time and Willard put a great strain on the aging process; I had to lock the stuff up to keep him from getting at it before the appointed moment. Sadly enough, my beer and Willard's impact on San Francisco were firmly linked. The story is a classic, and if you travel in the right circles out here you will still hear it told, although not always accurately. The truth, however, goes like this:


Willard arrived shortly before I packed up and left for the East; we had a convivial few weeks, and, as a parting gesture, I left him a five-gallon jug of beer that I did not feel qualified to transport across the nation. It still had a week or so to go in the jug, then another few weeks of aging in quart bottles, after which it would have had a flavor to rival the nectar of the gods. Willard's only task was to bottle it and leave it alone until it was ready to drink.


Unfortunately, his thirst threw a heavy shadow on the schedule. He was living on a hill overlooking the southern section of the city, and among his neighbors were several others of the breed, mad drinkers and men of strange arts. Shortly after my departure he entertained one of these gentlemen, who, like my man Willard, was long on art and energy, but very short of funds.


The question of drink arose, as it will in the world of art, but the presence of poverty cast a bleak light on the scene. There was, however, this five-gallon jug of raw, unaged home brew in the kitchen. Of course, it was a crude drink and might produce beastly and undesired effects, but. . .well. . .


The rest is history. After drinking half the jug, the two artists laid hands on several gallons of blue paint and proceeded to refinish the front of the house Willard was living in. The landlord, who lived across the street, witnessed this horror and called the police. They arrived to find the front of the house looking like a Jackson Pollack canvas, and the sidewalk rapidly disappearing under a layer of sensual crimson. At this point, something of an argument ensued, but Willard is 6 feet 4, and 230 pounds, and he prevailed. For a while.


Some moments later the police came back with reinforcements, but by this time Willard and his helper had drunk off the rest of the jug and were eager for any kind of action, be it painting or friendly violence. The intrusion of the police had caused several mottos to be painted on the front of the house, and they were not without antisocial connotations. The landlord was weeping and gnashing his teeth, loud music emanated from the ulterior of the desecrated house, and the atmosphere in general was one of hypertension.


The scene that followed can only be likened to the rounding up of wild beasts escaped from a zoo. Willard says he attempted to flee, but floundered on a picket fence, which collapsed with his weight and that of a pursuing officer. His friend climbed to a roof and rained curses and shingles on the unfriendly world below. But the police worked methodically, and by the time the sun set over the Pacific the two artists were sealed in jail.


At this point the gentlemen of the press showed up for the usual photos. They tried to coax Willard up to the front of his cell to pose, but the other artist had undertaken to tip the toilet bowl out of the floor and smash it into small pieces. For the next hour, the press was held at bay with chunks of porcelain, hurled by the two men in the cell. "We used up the toilet," Willard recalls, "then we got the sink. I don't remember much of it, but I can't understand why the cops didn't shoot us. We were out of our heads."


The papers had a field day with the case. Nearly all the photos of the "animal men" were taken with what is known among press photographers as "the Frankenstein flash." This technique produces somewhat the same impression of the subject as a flashlight held under his chin, but instead of a flashlight, the photographer simply holds his flash unit low, so that sinister shadows appear on the face of a subject, and a huge shadow looms on the wall behind him. It is a technique that could make Casper Milquetoast look like the Phantom of the Opera, but the effect, with Willard, was nothing short of devastating; he looked like King Kong.


Despite all the violence, the story has a happy ending. Willard and his friends were sentenced to six months in jail, but were quickly released for good behavior, and neither lost any time in fleeing to New York. Willard now lives in Brooklyn, where he moves from one apartment to another as walls fill up with paintings. His artistic method is to affix tin cans to a wall with tenpenny nails, then cover the wall with lumpy plaster and paint. Some say he has a great talent, but so far he goes unrecognized -- except by the long-suffering San Francisco police, who were called upon to judge

what was perhaps his most majestic effort.


Willard was as hard to define then as he is now; probably it is most accurate to say he had artistic inclinations and a superabundance of excess energy. At one point in his life he got the message that others of his type were gathering in San Francisco, and he came all the way from Germany to join the party.


Since then, things have never been the same. Life is more peaceful in San Francisco, but infinitely duller. That was pretty obvious when the rent strike cropped up; for a day or so it looked like the action was back in town, but it was no dice. One of the "strikers," an unemployed cartoonist with a wife and a child and a rundown apartment for which he refuses to pay rent, summed up the situation. His landlady had declined to make repairs on the apartment, and instead got an eviction order. In the old days, the fellow would have stayed in the place and gotten tough. But the cartoonist is taking the path of least resistance. "It takes a long time to get people evicted," he says with a shrug, "and we're thinking of splitting to New York on a freight train anyway."


That's the way it is these days in the erstwhile capital of the Beat Generation. The action has gone East, and the only people who really seem to mourn it are the reporters, who never lacked a good story, and a small handful of those who lived with it and had a few good laughs for a while. If Willard returned to San Francisco today, he probably would have to settle for a job as a house painter.


 - Hunter Thompson 


When the Beatniks Were Social Lions

National Observer, April 20, 1964


When I first went to San Francisco for work as a picture researcher and European editor for art publisher Pomegranate Inc based there, I was keen to go down to the Haight and see the City Lights Bookstore and was advised not to! 'You won’t like it, it ain’t the same and it isn’t the world it was back in the late sixties, it’s full of heroin dealers and panhandlers and basically isn’t safe anymore' . . . . . I was soul destroyed but the place continues to fascinate me and felt a strong sense of deja vu when arriving in the city as if I had been there before and in some curious way like I had gone home. I was totally safe and secure there. It may have been the company but I loved the city (the centre! I guess) 


 

Josephine Nivison artist [wife of Edward Hopper]

Josephine Nivison was a successful artist at the time of her relationship with Edward Hopper in 1923. Her works hung in exhibitions next to paintings by Picasso, Modigliani and Man Ray in prestigious New York galleries. Shortly before their fateful encounter, the Brooklyn Museum invited Jo to participate in another exhibition with her watercolors — along with works by Georgia O'Keefe and John Singer Sargent. Hopper, meanwhile, worked in advertising magazines for a living and slowly sank into depression due to lack of recognition and inability to sell a single painting in a decade. 


Josephine was the first to see Edward the future genius of American painting. Wanting to help him, Nivison persuaded the curators of the Brooklyn Museum exhibition to include Hopper's work in the exhibition.


This exhibition, you can say, changed the course of history. It was from this moment that the growth of Edward Hopper's career began. 


Unfortunately, this very moment was the beginning of the end of Josephine Nivison's career.

Edward and Jo at the beginning of their life together: 


self portrait





OLD FOLK’S BOOGIE - CAPTAIN BEEFHEART & THE MAGIC BAND 1967

DO THE FLOPPY BOOT STOMP TO THIS CLASS ACT! 


Old Folks Boogie - (Live, 1967) - CAPTAIN BEEFHEART & THE MAGIC BAND 



Captain Beefheart - Topic

So where did Madness get their name from? From a Prince! BY ROYAL BEQUEST! NO LESS . . . .

PRINCE BUSTER AND MADNESS 

‘MADNESS!’ + 'ENJOY YOURSELF'

 JOOLS HOLLAND ‘SPRING' HOOTENANNY 2003

start the week as we mean to go  . . . .with relevant songs that sum up the times we find ourselves living in!?


Back in 2003, Prince Buster and Suggs performed "Madness" and "Enjoy Yourself" on Jools Holland’s ’SPRING’ "Hootenanny" show. They were also joined by Rico and Georgie Fame, and if you look carefully you'll even see Damon Albarn dancing away!








Sunday, April 12, 2026

Dylan of The Day: Bob Dylan - Tomorrow Night (with Trisha Yearwood) Rhythm, Country & Blues Concert 1994

 


32 years ago today, Dylan performed “Tomorrow Night” - a song he had recorded for his album Good as I Been to You - at the Rhythm, Country & Blues Concert in Los Angeles on March 23, 1994. He shared vocals with Trisha Yearwood and was backed by a superb band featuring Benmont Tench, Don Was, and Mickey Raphael.
.


Kelly Boesch - Exhibition and latest song - Fairytale

KELLY BOESCH

"Open now. W1 Curates, London. Come find me on the walls. "



Latest - FAIRYTALE

Kelly says: 

I love making videos about fairytales. Must be the child that is still inside me living her best life. This one was made using a fun style ref code, hence all of the purple. The song was made after I made the video and I just wanted to use some fairytale ideas in the lyrics. This is the title song of my album that was released today. Some songs on the album have been released and some songs haven’t been released and this one is brand new. Additional production by Marshall Altman. Marshall really added a lot to this song. I wanted to extend the chorus and he figured out a beautiful way to extend it. Working with a producer has been amazing. I feel really lucky.
Fairytale
[Verse]
What if life was a fairytale?
We'd be riding on the backs of whales
Gazing at the ocean from the shore
It's hard to tell, what would happen next
The story's in the hands of fate
I guess
Everything's a mystery for sure
[Post Verse]
We could go anywhere we want to
But the evil stepmothers come too
What if life was a fairytale?
Oh
What if life was a fairytale?
[Verse 2]
The princess in the castle's stuck
'Cause her knight is only half as tough
As he said he was before he rode away
The dragon's getting restless now
Wants to break free but she doesn't know how
The king said she can't fly
She has to stay
[Chorus]
What if I could be your Cinderella?
Would you ride up on a white umbrella?
What if life was a fairytale?
Oh
What if life was a fairytale?​
The slipper is tight and the window is wide
Counting the teeth of the giant inside
What if life was a fairytale?
[Bridge]
It wouldn't be that hard to pretend
We can just play make-believe
In the end
We could be
Lying on a bed of clovers
Our fantasy is never over
You'd always be my four-leaf lover
So please tell me
[Chorus]
What if I could be your Cinderella?
Would you ride up on a white umbrella?
What if life was a fairytale?
Oh
What if life was a fairytale?
The slipper is tight and the window is wide
Counting the teeth of the giant inside
What if life was a fairytale?
(Outro)
So please tell me.
What if I could be your Cinderella?
Would you ride up on a white umbrella?
What if life was a fairytale?


Tell you what let’s all go see it!