WHAT ARE YOU LISTENING TO NOW?

Started by pace, April 16, 2014, 10:15:10 PM

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rv_bass

Barenberg Douglas and Meyer played the Boulder Theater when this album came out, a buddy of mine and I taped it from our table close to the stage.  I'll have to dig up that tape.  And Edgar is amazing! :)

elwoodblue


edwardofhuncote

I really dig that guitar of his. (saw/heard it up close a couple years ago)  8)

elwoodblue

Hey jazzyvee,
this popped up on my feed...Joan looks good! :)




hankster

I'd come across Susan Alcorn through my brother, who is a pedal steel player. I saw today that the New York Times rates her brief album "Pedernal" among the best jazz albums of 2020. This is pedal steel for the not faint of heart.

https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=OLAK5uy_mhAwflra5iSHSSeSsRcz_hEHxEE7Gir-U


Live each day like your hair is on fire.

edwardofhuncote

I had a buncha' windshield time today, and reconnected with Hawktail. This is one of Brit's originals, and I can't help but wonder if she didn't gender-adjust Hartford's "Boatman" for a title, if not a snippet of melody.





(technically, Boatman, Boatmen, or Boatman's Dance, all derivatives of the same tune. Fiddlers... gotta' love 'em.   ::)  )

cozmik_cowboy

"Is not Hypnocracy no other than the aspiration to discover the meaning of Hypnocracy?  Have you heard the one about the yellow dog yet?"
St. Dilbert

"If I could explain it in prose, I wouldn't have had to write the song."
Robt. Hunter

cozmik_cowboy

E-mailing back & forth with my youngest about the loss of Charlie Pride (he's a major fan), he hipped me to this kid; this is the second song I've listened to - but I think I need to go deep.  Nice to hear a youngster doing country music!


Peter
"Is not Hypnocracy no other than the aspiration to discover the meaning of Hypnocracy?  Have you heard the one about the yellow dog yet?"
St. Dilbert

"If I could explain it in prose, I wouldn't have had to write the song."
Robt. Hunter

rv_bass


lbpesq

That one sure brings back the memories!   That's the Tower of Power horn section.  I think this may have been my last NYE show.

Bill, tgo

rv_bass

I liked it when Etta told Jerry to talk to the hand :)

bigredbass

DEAR PRUDENCE.


It wasn't bad enough seeing them on Ed Sullivan, but it was Paul's bass lines that utterly and completely drew me in.  The loopy, sliding, and walking he does under this one was an eye-opener, and what I really had in mind:  It ought to be 'too busy', but between what he played and how they fit it into the chart, this was just magical to my teenage self, and still a milestone for me all these many, many years later.


edwardofhuncote

I wish McVie would write a book. Just some thoughts from a self-taught player with a gift for hearing the space between notes, for us hard-headed guys that need reassurance it can be done.

I've been trying (unsuccessfully, thus far) to figure out Station Man. Part of what he plays dubs the guitars, an octave down, the pedalled ones groove a really odd pattern with Mick, and at times seem to counter the guitars. I'm imagining they argued about several bars of it.

This live cut from May '75 is interesting. It's L. Buck on guitar by that time... but who's on the second guitar? Would that have been Ray Lindsey that far back? Did Waddy ever tour with them...? I know he played in the Buckingham/Nicks roadshow.

Anyway, safe bet this is McVies Alembic here too-


rv_bass

Mickey Hart...Let there be light...words by Robert Hunter



edwardofhuncote

Quote from: edwardofhuncote on December 16, 2020, 11:48:05 AM
I've been trying (unsuccessfully, thus far) to figure out Station Man...

By golly, I think I've finally got it! Had to use "phone-a-friend" of sorts for some help. That tune was driving me to distraction.  :P