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Posts Tagged ‘David Lindley’

Sat Eye Candy: Terry Reid

SUPER LUNGS INDEED!

Terry Reid was the man Jimmy Page originally wanted to sing in Led Zeppelin. Reid turned him down, preferring to helm his own solo career, and this footnote has long defined this musical lifer to many. However, if one listens in to the music Reid made in the years that followed his choice one discovers a vibrant, unique vocalist, a fierce, tough guitarist and a songwriter of enduring might. His self-titled 1969 album and 1973′s River are too bonafide classic rock treasures, the latter featuring some of the most eloquent, gorgeous playing ever from David Lindley. While not nearly as prolific in recent years, Reid continues to play clubs worldwide, often with high-powered musician pals stopping by to jam with the master. Serious record geeks have long been hip to Reid’s catalog, and JamBase is happy to provide a nudge towards the unconverted today in honor of the man’s 61st birthday today. Reid really is all that and the proverbial bag o’ chips, and the curious should begin their explorations with Water Records’ reissue of River and the boffo 2-CD anthology Super Lungs The Complete Studio Recordings 1966-1969. Hey, if he’s good enough for Cheap Trick to tackle on their debut (“Speak Now Or Forever Hold Your Peace”) or for The Raconteurs to cover (“Rich Kid Blues”) he’s certainly good enough for you! (Dennis Cook)

We begin with one of the best numbers in Reid’s early arsenal.

Here’s Reid in 2006 performing one of his most meditative, moving songs at Dingwalls in London.

This clip features a portion of Reid’s performance at the very first Glastonbury festival, a real workout where he’s joined late in the tune by another unsung 70s great Linda Lewis.

Not hard to understand why Jack White and his pals wanted to dig into this one.

And here’s The Raconteurs tackling the tune at Glastonbury a few years ago.

Here’s Terry getting funky on a Michael Jackson cover with guitar whiz Waddy Wachtel.

A more laidback version than the fire-breather that appears on Terry Reid, this is still a sweet take on Bob Dylan’s classic.

Here’s Cheap Trick covering Reid’s “Speak Now,” which always proves a great springboard for this band.

Back to Dingwalls for one of Reid’s songs that’s been covered by The Hollies, CSNY and John Mellancamp, amongst others.

Two of Reid’s thoughtful best. It’s impossible to pin down in words how lovely and real and necessary this music is. Many thanks to GoodGigsVids for posting these clips on YouTube.

River is one amazing track after another, but this is the best boogie in the bunch, particularly on this live version. You’re cheating yourself if you don’t explore Terry’s music. That’s just a fact.

Terry Reid Tour Dates :: Terry Reid News :: Terry Reid Concert Reviews


Buffalo Springfield Reunion Videos

FIRST PERFORMANCE IN 42 YEARS

Over the weekend, the surviving members of
Buffalo Springfield reunited
for the first time in 42 years, performing two sets in support of Neil Young‘s Bridge School Benefit Concerts. Joining Young,
Stephen Stills and Richie Furay were drummer Joe Vitale (CSN) replacing the late
Dewey Martin, and Rick Rosas playing in place of the late bassist Bruce Palmer.

Check out videos for “For What It’s Worth,” “Mr. Soul,” and a finale of “Rockin’ in the Free World” that includes
Pearl Jam, Elvis Costello, Emmylou Harris, Kris Kristofferson, Lucinda Williams, Jackson Browne, David Lindley,
Billy Idol, Modest Mouse
, and Grizzly Bear.


Buffalo Springfield to Headline Bridge School Benefit

TICKETS ON SALE SUNDAY SEPTEMBER 19 AT 10 AM


Buffalo Springfield

Buffalo Springfield will
headline Neil
Young
‘s 24th Annual Bridge School Benefit Concerts. The rest of the daily lineup, which
includes Pearl Jam, Elvis Costello, and others, is available below.

Tickets for both shows are on sale Sunday, September 19 at 10am at Livenation.com. Reserved seats are $150.00 and $75.00 and general
admission is $35.00 plus applicable fees. A limited number of 4 packs of general admission tickets are available for
$99.00 plus applicable fees. There is a 4 ticket limit for reserved seats and an 8 ticket total limit for purchases.

Proceeds from these two concerts benefit The Bridge School.

On Sale Sunday at 10am.

The 24th Annual Bridge School Benefit Concerts
Saturday, October 23rd at 5pm
Sunday, October 24th at 2pm
Shoreline Amphitheatre at Mountain View

Saturday, October 23rd Lineup:

Buffalo Springfield
Pearl Jam
Elvis Costello
Merle Haggard and Kris Kristofferson
Lucinda Williams
Jackson Browne and David Lindley
Billy Idol
Modest Mouse
Grizzly Bear

Sunday, October 24th Lineup:

Buffalo Springfield
Pearl Jam
T-Bone Burnett’s Speaking Clock Revue featuring Elton John & Leon Russell, Elvis Costello, Ralph Stanley, Neko Case
and Jeff Bridges
Merle Haggard and Kris Kristofferson
Modest Mouse
Grizzly Bear


Jackson Browne & David Lindley Album & International Tour

JACKSON BROWNE & DAVID LINDLEY COME TOGETHER FOR INTERNATIONAL TOUR

THE DUO RELEASE LOVE IS STRANGE, A 2-CD LIVE SET ON MAY 11

Jackson Browne

Singer-songwriter Jackson Browne will take to the road this summer with his band and longtime friend and musical co-conspirator David Lindley. Comprising dates in the U.S. and Europe, the Jackson Browne with David Lindley Tour follows the May 11 release of Love Is Strange (Inside Recordings), a 2-CD live set capturing a tour of Spain that Browne and Lindley did in 2006.

The Jackson Browne with David Lindley Tour begins with a month-long European leg kicking off in Bristol, UK on June 3. Other highlights include shows at the Stadpark in Hamburg, Germany (6/15), Casino de Paris in Paris, France (6/18), and Hampton Court Palace and Royal Albert Hall in London (6/8 and 6/29, respectively). More European dates will be announced shortly.

Stateside, the Jackson Browne with David Lindley Tour gets underway July 20 at The Joint at the Hard Rock Hotel and Casino in Las Vegas, NV. U.S. summer dates run through the end of September; the first U.S. leg concludes at Chastain Park Amphitheater in Atlanta on August 15. Highlights along the way include the Greek Theatre in Los Angeles (7/23), the Greek Theatre in Berkeley, CA (7/24), Red Rocks Amphitheatre in Morrison, CO (8/5), and the Nokia Theatre in Grand Prairie, TX (8/13).

Accompanying Jackson Browne and David Lindley on tour will be Browne’s band of almost 20 years: Kevin McCormick (bass), Mark Goldenberg (guitars), Mauricio Lewak (drums) and Jeff Young (keyboards, backing vocals). They’re joined by members (since 2008) Chavonne Stewart and Alethea Mills, vocalists Browne (as a mentor) met in 2001 when they were attending Washington Preparatory High School in South Los Angeles, singing in the school choir.


On record and in performance, Jackson Browne and David Lindley have a musical association reaching back almost 40 years. Regarded as a legendary stringed-instrument virtuoso, Lindley has played on many of Browne’s albums, beginning with 1973′s For Everyman, and on classics including Late For The Sky and The Pretender (the latter two both on Rolling Stone‘s list of the 500 Greatest Albums of All Time). Browne also produced Lindley’s best-known LP, 1983′s acclaimed El Rayo-X.

Prior to 2010′s Jackson Browne with David Lindley Tour, the last time the two musicians played live dates together was a 2006 run of concerts in Spain-in grand concert halls, rock venues, and intimate clubs alike. That tour resulted in the forthcoming 2-CD album Love Is Strange, “En Vivo Con Tino” – featuring Browne and Lindley live with celebrated Spanish percussionist Tino di Geraldo. Set for worldwide release May 11 on Browne’s independent label Inside Recordings, Love Is Strange was produced by Jackson Browne and Paul Dieter.

In liner notes Browne wrote for Love Is Strange, he considers Lindley’s reputation for elusiveness, nearly as mythic as his string-playing prowess. “Why had I not thought of this before? Take him where he doesn’t speak the language and he will HAVE TO leave the gig and come with you to the restaurant, or to the club,” says Browne. “This was an unexpected strategy breakthrough in a pursuit that for a legion of friends, disciples and admirers has become known as ‘stalking the wild Lindley.’”

Jackson Browne & David Lindley Tour Dates

06/03/10 Thu Colston Hall Bristol, GB

06/04/10 Fri Sheffield City Hall Sheffield, GB

06/06/10 Sun The Sage Gateshead, GB

06/09/10 Wed Heineken Music Hall Amsterdam, NL

06/11/10 Fri Cirkus Stockholm, SE

06/14/10 Mon Tradgardsforeningen Gothenburg, SE

06/15/10 Tue Stadtpark Hamburg, GER

06/17/10 Thu Palais Des Beaux-Arts Brussels, BEL

06/18/10 Fri Casino de Paris Paris, FRA

06/20/10 Sun Royal Concert Hall Glasgow, GB

06/21/10 Mon Usher Hall Edinburgh, GB

06/23/10 Wed The Marquee Cork, IR

06/29/10 Tue Royal Albert Hall London, GB

07/01/10 Thu Royal Concert Hall Nottingham, GB

07/02/10 Fri Liverpool Echo Arena Liverpool, GB

07/20/10 Tue The Joint @ Hard Rock Hotel Las Vegas, NV

07/21/10 Wed Humphrey’s Concerts By The Bay San Diego, CA

07/23/10 Fri Greek Theatre Los Angeles, CA

07/24/10 Sat Greek Theatre Berkeley, CA

07/27/10 Tue Cuthbert Amphitheatre Eugene, OR

07/30/10 Fri Chateau Ste. Michelle Concerts on the Green Woodinville, WA

07/31/10 Sat Maryhill Winery Goldendale, WA

08/02/10 Mon Idaho Botanical Garden Boise, ID

08/03/10 Tue Theatre at The Brick Bozeman, MT

08/05/10 Thu Red Rocks Amphitheatre Morrison, CO

08/07/10 Sat Orpheum Theatre Sioux City, IA

08/08/10 Sun Starlight Theatre Kansas City, MO

08/10/10 Tue Fabulous Fox Theatre St. Louis, MO

08/11/10 Wed Brady Theater Tulsa, OK

08/13/10 Fri Nokia Theatre Grand Prairie, TX

08/15/10 Sun Chastain Park Amphitheater Atlanta, GA

Jackson Browne is currently on tour with Sheryl Crow in Japan.

Jackson Browne Tour Dates :: Jackson Browne News :: Jackson Browne Concert Reviews


Jemimah Puddleduck: No Molo, Nuccio & Ingram Sub

Jemimah Puddleduck Announces Replacement Drummers To Fill In For John Molo

Mark Karan and Jemimah Puddleduck must regretfully announce that, due to scheduling problems, John Molo will not be participating during the band’s August shows.

Fortunately, adequate replacements have been found: for August 6-7-8 on the East Coast, Puddleduck will welcome the amazing Carlo Nuccio, and for August 14-15 in Denver, the glorious Wally Ingram.

Carlo Nuccio has recorded with Tori Amos, Emmylou Harris and Buckwheat Zydeco, as well as just about every band that ever called New Orleans home. You get rhythm with your birth certificate in NOLA, but Carlo got several extra helpings.

Wally Ingram is the ubiquitous percussion accomplice to Sheryl Crow, Eric Burdon, Bonnie Raitt, Jackson Browne, David Lindley, Crosby, Stills & Nash – and that’s just the beginning of the list.

These guys are simply superb, and Jemimah Puddleduck is looking forward to their August shows.

Tour Dates:

08/06/09 Thu The State Theatre Falls Church, VA

08/07/09 Fri The 8X10 Baltimore, MD

08/08/09 Sat Le Poisson Rouge New York, NY

08/14/09 Fri Cervantes’ Masterpiece Ballroom Denver, CO

08/15/09 Sat Cervantes’ Masterpiece Ballroom Denver, CO


Sun Spin: Jackson Browne

CLASSIC ALBUM SPOTLIGHT RETURNS WITH A TOOL FOR LIVING THROUGH TOUGH TIMES

Now there’s a world of illusion and fantasy
In the place where the real world belongs
Still I look for the beauty in songs
To fill my head and lead me on

Some albums slip past our defenses, touching places we might rather have left alone, tender spots that never quite scab over. While perhaps not always consciously welcome, it is these albums that become the bedrock of our listening, informing our lives and offering cold comfort and understanding when both are in short supply in the “real world.” Jackson Browne‘s third album, Late For The Sky (1974) is such a marvel of unvarnished honesty flecked with romantic understanding, true empathy and poignant awareness of human frailty. The intervening 35 years have done nothing to diminish the instantaneous emotional zap this record produces when the needle hits the groove. All its quietude and wise-beyond-its-years resonance (he was just 25 when he recorded it) is preserved in music crafted with extraordinary attention to detail in every respect.

With angels sleeping beside him along hitchhiked roadsides, Browne wrestles with torn and empty dreams and how one goes on when their tank is empty. It’s a place all of us reach from time to time but few of us possess the acumen and insight to turn our own low tides into something that reaches other’s shores. Where it’s easy to lash out in such moments, blame someone else for our circumstance, Browne spreads it around, never sparing himself a healthy measure:

Now the things that I remember seem so distant and so small
Though it hasn’t really been that long a time
What I was seeing wasn’t what was happening at all
Although for a while, our path did seem to climb

Late For The Sky is one of the templates for the so-called California Country sound, where Nashville’s slick slide meets the sativa vibe of oceans, forests and dirty blue jean, long-haired thinking. The album is a direct descendent of what Gram Parsons was moving towards and a mighty influence on future generations, a less acknowledged but just as crucial instigator as Neil Young’s Harvest. In some ways, Browne is even more successful in marrying musical sophistication and grand scale to hyper-personal themes than Young’s early attempts on say his debut. The way the words, ideas and music intertwine here is breathtaking and never seems forced. Like the best sets, there’s an internal logic that ties everything into intricate knots, where each element is as it should be. Rock is generally a touch messier (and perhaps happily so) but artistry of this level brings to mind John Barth’s line, “In art as in lovemaking, heartfelt ineptitude has its appeal and so does heartless skill, but what you want is passionate virtuosity.”

Passion lies at the center of Late For The Sky, which examines relationships with clear eyes (“when you see through loves illusions, there lies the danger/ And your perfect lover just looks like a perfect fool”) and the individual’s place in the universe (“dreaming I can make it right/ if I closed my eyes and tried with all my might”). Track after track explicates some heart truth or thought stirred staring at night skies, alone and wondering. It is an exposed place for any writer and yet Browne sings in a sharp, strong voice of things usually held close to the chest, sharing of himself in a way that aids our own self-examination, his bravery perhaps, if we’re lucky, becoming our own. And always without undue sentimentality:

Everyone I’ve ever known has wished me well
Anyway that’s how it seems, it’s hard to tell
Maybe people only ask you how you’re doing
‘Cause that’s easier than letting on how little they could care

Frequently it is David Lindley‘s exquisite guitar work that speaks directly to these deep places in us, bypassing language to vibrate our soul with pure, emotion soaked sound. And he’s equally gorgeous and effective on violin (dig his soaring through closer “Before The Deluge”), but it’s most often his unbelievably powerful slide work that takes one’s breath away. The cry he unleashes at the beginning of “Farther On” is every bit the equal of Lightnin’ Hopkins or any other celebrated bluesman, but Lindley never falls back on blues cliches, forging a new language inside rock with his slicing poetry.

The whole core band – Doug Haywood (bass), Jai Winding (keys), Larry Zack (drums), Lindley (acoustic guitar, electric guitar, steel guitar and fiddle) and Browne’s own guitar and keys – is pretty damn together, playing with intuitive grace further amplified by tremendous backing vocals from Don Henley, Terry Reid, J.D. Souther and Dan Fogelberg. Long before he was cutting his own albums, Browne was a respected Los Angeles songwriter whose tunes had been cut by a host of late ’60s/early ’70s luminaries. Even at his young age, he was already a respected man about town, and the pros gathered around him here reflect that.

It would probably be enough to score a spot on Rolling Stone‘s 2003 list of the Top 500 Albums of All Time if it were just a king size bummer fest, but Late For The Sky turns on its heels midway. The second side positively skips, finding fortitude and black tinged jubilation that feels real, sustainable, genuine:

Walking slow down the avenue
Through my old neighborhood
Don’t know why I’m happy
I’ve got no reason to feel this good
Maybe it’s because I’m all alone
And I’ve got no place to go
And everywhere I look I see
Another person I’ll never know

I got a thing or two to say
Before I walk on by
I’m feeling good today
But if die a little farther along
I’m trusting everyone to carry on

What the last half seems to say is, “There’s life after the flood.” No matter what the world throws at you, no matter the hurt or confusion we currently feel, we heal, rebuild and move on. Browne’s subsequent career has continued to reflect these themes but they’ve never been more beautifully articulated than Late For The Sky, a bonafide classic to be sure.

Track Listing

Side One:
1. Late for the Sky
2. Fountain of Sorrow
3. Farther On
4. The Late Show

Side Two:
1. The Road and the Sky
2. For a Dancer
3. Walking Slow
4. Before the Deluge