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re: Non-Phish Show Of The Day Thread

Posted on 4/1/20 at 5:55 am to
Posted by Kafka
I am the moral conscience of TD
Member since Jul 2007
141864 posts
Posted on 4/1/20 at 5:55 am to
quote:

bisceaux
I'm not one to throw my status as a war veteran in somebody's face, but I don't expect a youngster like you to understand what we went through during the Phish-American War.

The vicious sniping, the unbearable torture... Not to mention outside agitators infiltrating and causing dissension, these dirty America-hating hippies calling us horrible names.

I'm not asking for any thanks for my service. Only understanding for what I and my comrades went though.
Posted by bisceaux
Baton Rouge
Member since Nov 2009
606 posts
Posted on 4/1/20 at 7:02 am to
quote:

I'm not one to throw my status as a war veteran in somebody's face, but I don't expect a youngster like you to understand what we went through during the Phish-American War.

Sorry I missed this? :)

In all seriousness, thank you for your service. A few bad hippies ruined it for the rest of us hippies.

Should I ask who won? I still see phish a few times a year under normal circumstances and apparently you don't? Was it a truce?
Posted by Kafka
I am the moral conscience of TD
Member since Jul 2007
141864 posts
Posted on 4/26/20 at 9:05 pm to


The Blues Project on Steve Paul's The Scene TV Show (Sept 4 1967)
quote:

The Blues Project is a band from the Greenwich Village neighborhood of New York City that was formed in 1965 and originally split up in 1967. Their songs drew from a wide array of musical styles. They are most remembered as one of the most artful practitioners of pop music, influenced as it was by folk, blues, rhythm & blues, jazz and the pop music of the day.
Danny Kalb is a sort of cult guitarist. According to legend he had a "play-off" w/Eric Clapton, and won.

Setlist:

01-Steve's Song.
02-Flute Thing.
03-Wake Me, Shake Me.

Line-Up:

Danny Kalb - Guitar/Vocals.
Steve Katz - Guitar/Vocals.
John Duffy - keyboards/Vocals.
Andy Kulberg - Bass Guitar/Flute.
Roy Blumenfeld - Drums.



Posted by Kafka
I am the moral conscience of TD
Member since Jul 2007
141864 posts
Posted on 5/17/20 at 3:26 pm to
The Yardbirds at Tour Cesar, Provins France (1966)

Aside from the film Blow-Up and a clip of lip-synching on The Milton Berle Show, this is the only footage of Jeff Beck and Jimmy Page together in The Yardbirds. Don't get too excited -- Page is on bass here. He played relatively few shows on bass, and switched to co-lead guitar shortly after this concert.

1. "Train Kept A-Rollin'"
2. "Shapes Of Things"
3. "Over Under Sideways Down"







Posted by Kafka
I am the moral conscience of TD
Member since Jul 2007
141864 posts
Posted on 6/7/20 at 12:45 pm to
Last Days of the Fillmore (1971)



quote:

Fillmore — also known as Fillmore: The Last Days, and as Last Days of the Fillmore — is a music documentary film, primarily shot at the Fillmore West auditorium in San Francisco, California, from June 29 through July 4, 1971. It was released on June 14, 1972.

Fillmore documents the final run of concerts at the Fillmore West, which closed after these shows. It features performances by a number of rock bands that emerged from the San Francisco music scene of the late 1960s and early 1970s, including Santana, the Grateful Dead, Jefferson Airplane, Hot Tuna, and Quicksilver Messenger Service. The film also contains extensive footage of concert promoter Bill Graham, who organized the concerts and ran the Fillmore West. Additionally, the film includes documentary footage shot several years earlier in and around San Francisco, showing the emergence of the music scene there amid the counterculture of the 1960s and the hippie movement.
Song list:

Lamb – "Hello Friends", "Isn't It Just a Beautiful Day"
Cold Blood – "You Got Me Hummin'", "Wish I Knew How It Would Feel to Be Free"
Hot Tuna – "Candy Man", "Uncle Sam Blues"
The Rowan Brothers – rehearsal jam
Quicksilver Messenger Service – "Fresh Air", "Mojo"
Jefferson Airplane – "Volunteers", "We Can Be Together"*
New Riders of the Purple Sage – rehearsal jam
Grateful Dead – "Casey Jones", "Johnny B. Goode"
It's a Beautiful Day – "White Bird"
The Elvin Bishop Group – "The Sky Is Crying"
Santana – "Incident at Neshabur", "In a Silent Way"

*Jefferson Airplane did not perform at the final series of concerts at the Fillmore West. The band's footage in the film is from another show.

It's A Beautiful Day

Posted by Kafka
I am the moral conscience of TD
Member since Jul 2007
141864 posts
Posted on 6/28/20 at 10:48 am to
Blood, Sweat & Tears at the Psychedelic Supermarket, Boston (February 23, 1968)



I'm not terribly crazy about the BS&T that had all the hits (singer David Clayton-Thomas is very much an acquired taste), but the first iteration led by Al Kooper was an excellent band, bringing the power of jazz/R&B horns into rock.

Setlist:

More & More
You’ve Made Me So Very Happy - cover of Motown's Brenda Holloway; would be a huge hit for BS&T Mark II
I Love You More Than You'll Ever Know
Morning Glory - written by Tim Buckley
Camille
Smiling Phases - Traffic cover
Somethin’ Goin’ On
Jim Fielder interview



Posted by Havoc
Member since Nov 2015
28326 posts
Posted on 6/29/20 at 11:50 pm to
This is extraordinary work. Could we do another similar one except for music that doesn’t suck or is inherently “meh”?
Posted by Kafka
I am the moral conscience of TD
Member since Jul 2007
141864 posts
Posted on 8/2/20 at 1:45 pm to
Posted by Kafka
I am the moral conscience of TD
Member since Jul 2007
141864 posts
Posted on 8/16/20 at 2:37 pm to
Steel Mill on the 7th floor of a parking garage, Richmond Virginia (August 14, 1970)



Fairly conventional hard rock of the time, noteworthy now for the fact that one of the members of Steel Mill was a young fellow named Bruce Springsteen.

Set list:

1. Dancing In The Street
2. Come On (8:43)
3. KT88 13:09
4. The War Is Over (17:02)
5. Why'd You Do That? (31:58)
6. Sherlock Goes Holmes (38:17)
7. Going Back To Georgia (48:16)
8. He's Guilty (The Judge Song) (53.35)
9. Resurrection (1:01:14)
10. All Man The Guns (1:14:51)
11. Run, Shaker Life (1:25:01)
12 Twenty More Miles (1:30:20)
Bonus:
13. The Wind And The Rain (recorded in NJ - 1970)
with the documentary (1:39:46)








Story behind the show
Posted by Kafka
I am the moral conscience of TD
Member since Jul 2007
141864 posts
Posted on 2/7/21 at 2:33 pm to
The New York Dolls at The Matrix, San Francisco (1973)



Primitively shot but priceless video of one of the greatest American bands of the '70s. The Dolls were the missing link between the Velvet Underground/Stooges/MC5 of the '60s and The Ramones/Sex Pistols/Clash yet to come -- but with lots of eclectic influences thrown in, from the Sticky Fingers/Exile-era Stones to girl groups from the Brill Building era. Hard rock fans should definitely check them out.







Posted by Kafka
I am the moral conscience of TD
Member since Jul 2007
141864 posts
Posted on 2/28/21 at 11:48 am to
Lou Reed at Ultrasonic Recording Studio, WLIR FM, Hempstead New York (December 26, 1972)





quote:

After Reed left the Velvet Underground in mid-1970, he didn't do any recording or touring for over a year. In fact, for a time there, he worked as a typist in his father's accounting firm! But he put out an album in early 1972, simply called Lou Reed, and another one in late 1972, Transformer, and resumed touring around the middle of the year. All the other bootlegs of him from 1972 that I've heard sound fairly poor to awful. (If you know of any really good ones, please let me know.) But this one stands out because it was recorded for the radio.
quote:

The good news is the sound quality is fantastic, due to it being professionally recorded for the radio. The bad news is the show is on the short side, probably due to that radio station giving Reed a limited amount of time. This is just shy of one hour long. Reed seems to have opted for playing his best known songs at that point in his career, so it's almost like a greatest hits. His Transformer album had been released the month before, and "Walk on the Wild Side" became an unlikely hit. He played four songs from that album, two songs from his first solo album, and five songs from his Velvet Underground days.

If you're a fan of the Velvet Underground, you should love this. The band was tight and rocking. Most of the songs are from his Velvet Underground days, since many of the songs on Reed's first two solo albums actually were written back then. Plus, the sound quality is far superior to virtually all known Velvet Underground live recordings.
Set list

1] White Light White Heat
2] Vicious
3] I'm Waiting For The Man
4] Walk It Talk It
5] Sweet Jane
6] Heroin
7] Satellite of Love
8] Walk On the Wild Side
9] I'm So Free
10] Berlin
11] Rock & Roll
Posted by JumpingTheShark
America
Member since Nov 2012
22898 posts
Posted on 2/28/21 at 12:26 pm to
Kafka I must again bring up that you liking David Johansen but detesting Geddy Lee is an enigma.
Posted by Kafka
I am the moral conscience of TD
Member since Jul 2007
141864 posts
Posted on 2/28/21 at 12:34 pm to
quote:

Geddy Lee
LINK
Posted by JumpingTheShark
America
Member since Nov 2012
22898 posts
Posted on 2/28/21 at 3:38 pm to


I must also ask if you have seen Johansens performance in Mr Nanny, he also did the music for it, it be bad
Posted by TFTC
Chicago, Il
Member since May 2010
22278 posts
Posted on 3/8/21 at 6:38 am to
Dead Boys - CBGB's 1977

Set List:

Sonic Reducer
All This and More
Not Anymore
I Won't Look Back
Flame Thrower Love
I Need Lunch
Ain't Nothin' to Do
What Love Is
High Tension Wire
Search & Destroy
Posted by Kafka
I am the moral conscience of TD
Member since Jul 2007
141864 posts
Posted on 4/11/21 at 5:54 pm to
The New York Dolls at Long Beach (CA) Auditorium (July 24, 1974)



Setlist:

01. (There's Gonna Be A) Showdown
02. Don Kirshner talk break
03. Stranded In The Jungle
04. Trash
05. Chatterbox
06. Don't Start Me Talkin'
07. Personality Crisis
Posted by Kafka
I am the moral conscience of TD
Member since Jul 2007
141864 posts
Posted on 7/4/21 at 1:19 pm to
The Doors - Backstage and Dangerous: The Private Rehearsal In Hollywood; Highlights From The Aquarius Theatre (July 22, 1969)

quote:

Backstage and Dangerous: The Private Rehearsal is a live album by the American rock band the Doors. It was recorded during a private rehearsal at the Aquarius Theatre in Hollywood on July 22, 1969, except "Jazzy Maggie M'Gill" (Disc 2 tracks 10 & 11) that was recorded during the concert soundcheck on July 21, 1969. Indeed, the band had played two concerts at the venue the previous day.
Posted by McGregor
Member since Feb 2011
6313 posts
Posted on 7/6/21 at 2:47 pm to
23 days
Posted by Kafka
I am the moral conscience of TD
Member since Jul 2007
141864 posts
Posted on 7/6/21 at 7:31 pm to
quote:

23 days
Posted by Kafka
I am the moral conscience of TD
Member since Jul 2007
141864 posts
Posted on 2/27/22 at 5:53 pm to
(no message)
This post was edited on 2/27/22 at 5:54 pm
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