yes 5 or 6 times. He is great. Mixes it up with setlists on each tour. Very nice guitar and vocals live too.
"I'm staying. I'm finishing my coffee. Enjoying my coffee" Dig the The Beatles "Love" out in the sun with a big cup of java. Turn off your mind, relax and float down stream
From HD tracks. The tracks included here were recorded over a ten -month period, from December, 1951 to October, 1952.
Lots of angst, but I would hardly call anything Nirvana did emo. An incredible amount of old home movie footage and cool animations of drawings from his teenage notebooks.
7/19/74 Royals Stadium: KC,MO. CSNY/ Beach Boys/ Jesse Collin Young Damn how could this have been 40+ years ago... I have seen Robert Cray a few times my wife really likes him. My favorite was him opening for Ray Charles. A bit to slick for me but he can bend the strings.
Giving the new My Morning Jacket a first listen. It may grow on me, but so far t is the first one of theirs that hasn't really been exciting right away. Kind of nondescript, and not breaking much new ground so far. Reminds me of my first impressions of Wilco (the Album), the first Wilco album I wasn't that excited about (although they rebounded with their next one). Couple of tracks have a nice 70s AM radio vibe and first impressions often change.
Closing out the weekend with some Coltrane: Kulu Se Mama. Picked this one up less than a year ago and this is maybe the third listen, recommended by an older friend who is a huge music fanatic and always a good source of info as well as a fun and always interesting hang. This one is pretty new to me and I am liking it, although probably one I will revisit more sporadically than most other Coltrane albums that I have (and there are a lot of gaps in his discography that I need to eventually fill especially in the latter years). If any of you have not heard Africa/brass you need to check that one out soon (and it is a higher priority than Kulu Se Mama by a good bit). A favorite of Phil's and I remember hearing the version of Greensleeves from it soundtracking (from the PA) the exit from many a Dead show back in the day. But some of you on this thread have much wider and deeper knowledge of Trane than I do... Earlier today listened to Hot Tuna self titled, Meat Puppets Up On The Sun (my favorite of theirs although II would probably be most people's pick and it's a close call for me) and CCR Cosmo's Factory. Was just recently in the neighborhood and parked next to the old Factory Studios building in Berkeley where Creedence, Merle and Garcia all laid down some pretty fantastic tracks some 40-plus years ago.
About the bolded part - very cool, man. I love that debut Tuna LP. Meat Puppets II is the only album of theirs I have. It's great, though. Oh, and I need to listen to Africa/Brass again soon - what a classic. I love the self-titled Coltrane LP from '62. It might be my favorite of his early Impulse albums. Do you have that one Rob?
Disc 6 from the Immersion version of The Wall "Is There Anybody Out There?" - Roger Waters Original Demo "Vera" - Roger Waters Original Demo "Bring the Boys Back Home" - Roger Waters Original Demo "Hey You" - Band Demo "The Doctor (Comfortably Numb)" - Band Demo "In the Flesh" - Band Demo "Run Like Hell" - Band Demo - 3:06 "Waiting for the Worms" - Band Demo "The Trial" - Band Demo "The Show Must Go On" - Band Demo "Outside the Wall" - Band Demo "The Thin Ice Reprise" - Band Demo Programme 2, Band Demos "Outside the Wall" - Band Demo "It's Never Too Late" - Band Demo "The Doctor (Comfortably Numb)" - Band Demo - 3:15 Programme 3, Band Demos "One of My Turns" - Band Demo - 2:29 "Don't Leave Me Now" - Band Demo - 4:04 "Empty Spaces" - Band Demo - 0:51 "Backs to the Wall" - Band Demo - 1:33 "Another Brick In The Wall, Part 3" - Band Demo - 1:22 "Goodbye Cruel World" - Band Demo - 1:05 Programme 4, David Gilmour Original Demos "Comfortably Numb" - David Gilmour Original Demo "Run Like Hell" - David Gilmour Original Demo
The only Meat Puppets albums I have are II and Up On the Sun. Highly recommend the latter, but II is great as well. I don't have the self-titled Coltrane album, and haven't seen it mentioned much anywhere. I will look into this one - thanks for pointing it out.
Coltrane has two self-titled albums, one from 1957, recorded for Prestige, which is nice, and this one from 1962, recorded for Impulse!, which is a masterpiece. It's the first studio album released by his classic quartet. In 2002, a deluxe edition of the album was released on CD with several outtakes.
Deluxe version is ordered. Looking forward to this one. Don't know how this one flew under my radar for so long, but better late than never. Thanks folks!
re: Meat Puppets, I forgot that I also have No Joke, one of the later albums that isn't nearly as good as the other two, but isn't bad either. I want to pick up at least one or two more (Huevos first) one of these days.
Peter Gabriel - (the albums frequently referred to as) Car and Security. Plays Live was a big acquisition for me in college. I liked that set so much it only took me 25+ years to circle back around to its studio-album uncles.
I have a deep love for this album (with bonus tracks, please, I need that mesmerizing version of "Feeling Good").
I've never heard of her before even though she's swedish. Sofia, her husband and their band drove all over the US for 16 months in a RV and played everywhere. This is the result. You can find it on spotify