Checking out more of his music. His early recordings are haunting and at the same time, full of beauty. How did I overlook this music for all this time?
If you happen to find yourself led to purchase his music, look for the recent remasters that are plentiful in bonus tracks.
All Music Guide
From starting out listening to my parents records to staying up late at night listening to the radio to being introduced to album collecting as a teenager to making mix-tapes and into the present, it seems that I've always been searching for and listening to music of widely varied genres. Here's an idea of what I've been hearing along the way ....
Wednesday, June 27, 2018
Tuesday, June 26, 2018
Vic Chesnutt
Singer/Songwriter from Georgia. His third album from 1993 with additional tracks added when remastered last year on New West Records. Unique voice and style. Haunting in spots, funny in other moments.
My introduction to his music was several years ago on the "Sweet Relief II: Gravity of the Situation" benefit recording of various musicians covering his songs.
One of the bonus tracks on this record is a cover of Bob Dylan's, "I Dreamed I Saw St. Augustine."
Highly recommended!!!
My introduction to his music was several years ago on the "Sweet Relief II: Gravity of the Situation" benefit recording of various musicians covering his songs.
One of the bonus tracks on this record is a cover of Bob Dylan's, "I Dreamed I Saw St. Augustine."
Highly recommended!!!
Thursday, June 21, 2018
Lost and Found Gene Clark
I love these old, lost recordings from 1967. Re-discovered and released for the first time, just a few days ago. For myself …. the evolution of the Singer/Songwriter, Folk/Rock style of music. And such a great, plaintive voice carrying these songs. It would have been a sin for these recordings to remain lost.
It's fascinating to read about the musicians from this time, who were exploring new territory opened up by The Beatles and Bob Dylan. Now days these names are considered as greats but most were just starting out back then. How they joined up with, worked with and split from each other and then reforming with other musicians in various working arrangements and creating even more new music. And then the even newer names coming up behind them, continuing on. Just reading about it all you get the sense that it was a process played out over a decade when it was actually just a few years.
Is there anything or anyone comparable to that now? Or was that era something unique that could have only happened when it did, with it's surrounding events and circumstances?
It's fascinating to read about the musicians from this time, who were exploring new territory opened up by The Beatles and Bob Dylan. Now days these names are considered as greats but most were just starting out back then. How they joined up with, worked with and split from each other and then reforming with other musicians in various working arrangements and creating even more new music. And then the even newer names coming up behind them, continuing on. Just reading about it all you get the sense that it was a process played out over a decade when it was actually just a few years.
Is there anything or anyone comparable to that now? Or was that era something unique that could have only happened when it did, with it's surrounding events and circumstances?
Monday, June 18, 2018
Country Joe & The Fish
Found this past weekend while rummaging through the used vinyl bins, "new arrivals," of my local record store. Psychedelic-Country-Folk sounds from the 1960's. (That's a style?) A genre/era that I'd like to expand in my collection.
People actually give this kind of classic and historic stuff up? There should be a voice in their head that tells them not to let it go.
Maybe it has special meaning to me because I lived through those years? Listening mostly though to the top-40 hits on AM-radio. Now at age 62 I find myself catching up with sounds I missed out on back then.
I did have a record collecting mentor in the early 70's that introduced me to Country Joe McDonald and specifically "The Fish Cheer" through the Woodstock Records. Rod Robinson, the older brother of one of my friends. I wonder what he used to think of me, this naive and goofy looking kid who he had three or four years of life and music listening experience on. I was like an attentive student eager to take in whatever he was willing to play for me. Eric Burden and The Animals, The Guess Who, Neil Young, Iron Butterfly, The Beatles and their later albums, Creedence, CSNY and much more. New sounds for me. A new type of education. Those memories have always stayed close. He also introduced me to FM-radio.
People actually give this kind of classic and historic stuff up? There should be a voice in their head that tells them not to let it go.
Maybe it has special meaning to me because I lived through those years? Listening mostly though to the top-40 hits on AM-radio. Now at age 62 I find myself catching up with sounds I missed out on back then.
I did have a record collecting mentor in the early 70's that introduced me to Country Joe McDonald and specifically "The Fish Cheer" through the Woodstock Records. Rod Robinson, the older brother of one of my friends. I wonder what he used to think of me, this naive and goofy looking kid who he had three or four years of life and music listening experience on. I was like an attentive student eager to take in whatever he was willing to play for me. Eric Burden and The Animals, The Guess Who, Neil Young, Iron Butterfly, The Beatles and their later albums, Creedence, CSNY and much more. New sounds for me. A new type of education. Those memories have always stayed close. He also introduced me to FM-radio.
Monday, June 4, 2018
Short Playlist
Sunday evening playlist …..
- Son Volt - Driving The View
- The Sadies - It's Easy (Like Walking)
- Richard Buckner - Town
- Hiss Golden Messenger - John The Gun
- Colin Linden - George Chuvalo
- The War On Drugs - Pain
Starting when I was a teenager in the early 1970's, I've tended to have a ever changing list of musicians that I overdose on for a period of time. Richard Buckner and Hiss Golden Messenger seem to be those choices for the last year or two. Taking the places of Colin Linden, Joseph Arthur and Son Volt/Jay Farrar.
Others who have spent time with that status ….. Jackson Browne, Neil Young, Warren Zevon, Peter Gabriel, U2, a return of Jackson Browne in the 1990's, The Subdudes, Yo La Tengo ….. Just a few that come to mind.
Friday, June 1, 2018
First Day Of June Morning Sounds
Sometimes it takes most of a lifetime to appreciate some things. In this case Jazz/Blues vocals from a 1961 recording sounding like the songs are actually from a decade or two earlier. I suppose I could go read the album's liner notes but I'd rather just stay in my chair and enjoy the sounds.
While during my teenage years it might not have been seen as cool among my friends this music is actually the definition of "cool."
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Evening of Jazz
A different kind of Jazz playlist. Not a lot of household names here. No jazz standards here. That doesn't mean it can't be enjoyabl...
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Gary Clark Jr. - This Land. A few months ago (bought it on my birthday), upon first and second listens, other than the opening song, ...
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Culture on display in Salem, Oregon!!! In the middle of an empty lot in town. One story that I've heard is that there once was a used ...
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Leo Kottke - 12 String Blues: Live at the Scholar Coffeehouse. On the Oblivion Recording Company label. From 1969. Found today at my old rec...