Whats playing on your system today?


Today I decided to listen to two of my favorite rock guitar heros and one great vocalist. Guitarist' Robin Trower, Ronnie Montrose and vocalist Davey Pattison.

I listened to Trower songs:
Bridge of sighs, Stitch in time, The fool and me, my personal favorite- Too rolling stoned and others.....

Then I pulled out "Gamma". 
I listened to: Razor King, Wish I was and Skin and bone and others.....

Davey Pattison hooked has also up with Michael Shenker also. I really enjoyed my day so far. Anybody else heard anything good?

N

 




nutty
radfrad,
Took your advice and ordered the S/T Bluestravelers. Great stuff. Thanks for the recommendation.

I also took a listen to the refrence above regarding Kevin Gordon. Very nice. Ordered it. Cannot wait to hear it through the system properly. Thanks again.

Today:
Triumph, Rock & Roll machine.
Neil Young and Crazy Horse, "Live Rust". Been a while since I spun that one.
Billy Joel, 52nd Street. Love Billy. Saw him live in Louisville with Sir Elton John.

N


Oh, I also.dropped in 9ne cut from Zappa, "The ocean is the ultimate solution". 

N
Cake,
Comfort Eagle, "short skirt/ Long Jacket.
Fashion Nugget, "The distance".
Very interesting band.

N
facten-
Amazing... Indigenous is a great CD. I listened to it a few weeks ago. I didn't think anyone else knew about them or would like their sound. Nice choice. 

N
Throughout the day, various early Daryl Hall & John Oates recordings...
Whole Oats (1972)
Abandoned Luncheonette (1973)
War Babies (1974) [This one not really happening for me.  More like a Todd Rundgren LP (he produced it) - though I do like some tracks from Todd's uneven discography.]
Self-titled [aka "The Silver Album"] (1975)

Looking forward to getting into:
Beauty on a Back Street (1977)
Along the Red Ledge (1978)



Nice! ghosthouse.
those early albums give us a glimpse of things to come from Hall & Oates.  I have always wanted "Beauty on a back Street" and "Along the red Ledge" on CD.
Nutty
Glad you like Blues Travler. I only have the Live CD but just ordered some BT LP
 Also, took your advise and got some Black Country Communion  LP In route
 My quest for. More Glenn Hughes

Right now Im listening to.    "Johnny Winter Live and"
"Great Balls of Fire"  Easily one of my all time guitar jams. Not to mention
the entire album is good. And a well  sonic recording
Search the song on YouTube for a preview ,you won't be disappointed

I am getting some new "Guitar" and "Bass" heroes and l want to thank all who
contribute .  Seems a lot of similar taste here
Happy Listening

R


jafant...if you are still looking and want them, Red Ledge and Back Street are available on Amazon.  
Had some friends over last night and sipped on some Belle Meade bourbon and listened to;
Real Estate- Atlas
War on Drugs- Lost in a Dream
Futurebirds- Hotel Parties
The Horrors- Luminous
Suede- Night Thoughts 
The new Suede is great and sounds fantastic. Futurebirds is kind of a Wilco/My Morning Jacket hybrid with nice harmonies, lots of reverb, and twangy pedal steel guitar. Check out "Rodeo" on youtube.
really good picks, maxnewid--i like all of them except (unheard) suede, which isn't on spotify. real estate in particular reminds me of the feelies and is one of the few new bands of the past five years that stick to your ribs.
Post removed 
Loomis,

You said the magic word..."Feelies".  Just fired up Atlas on AppleMusic and instantly hear what you're talking about.  So far, so good.  Thanks for the tip.
Hey, Nutty...hope it is nothing serious and you are back to full health soon.  

Good thread Nutty,

Always been a Trower fan, recently I've been listening to Chris Rea, road to hell. As well as Super Tramp's crime of the century.

Fatboy

Currently Rawhide by Link Wray.  Awesome!    Sounds like a Sota audiophile recording.  

Now Apache. Jeff Beck version.  Also awesome.    I have favorites queued up.  It's Twangy surf guitar day here today.  

🎸🎸🎸
Devo - What we Do Is What We Do.   Should be their theme song.  👷🏻

YAW :-) jafant.

Mapman - "Ain’t Got No Home"...I take it you are talking Moondog Matinee? Don’t know the version you are familiar with but the re-issue (black cover) includes a great Chuck Berry tune as a bonus track, "Back to Memphis". I really enjoy the lyrics. "You can walk down Beale Street, honey, wearing' your pajamas."

Ain't Got No Home is a good 'un too.  In fact thanks to you, listening to the whole thing right now.  

The Band’s Moondog Matinee was their reaction and response to the 50’s revival that was going on in the early 70’s. As The Hawks (both backing Ronnie Hawkins and on their own) from 1960 until Dylan hired them as his (heh) band for his 1966 European tour (Bob hired them away from their then-current employer, John Hammond Jr.), they were a working band playing in Canada, up and down the Eastern Seaboard, the Midwest and South in bars, lounges, dancehalls (including the one in Dallas owned by the man who shot JFK assassin Lee Harvey Oswald, Jack Ruby!)---dives of all types, performing hits and misses from the 50’s and first half of the 60’s. It’s the same material that what are now referred to by Rock ’n’ Roll historians as Frat Bands were playing on the West Coast (I was in one named The Squyres. Classic Frat Band name!). Chuck Berry, Jerry Lee Lewis, and other original Southern R & R, Rhythm & Blues, Country & Western, Pop classics, Brill Building Soul, instrumentals from movie soundtracks, novelty songs---you name it.

What The Band heard coming from Sha Na Na and the other nostalgia acts of the early 70’s was such an insult to the music they decided to do it themselves, correctly. Moondog Matinee is comprised of songs they actually performed on stage as The Hawks in their bar band days. Damn would I like to have seen them then! I have two friends who saw them live with Dylan in ’66, at The San Jose Civic Auditorium. I had yet to "get" Dylan, and passed :-(.

Thanks for the history lesson, bdp.  Whatever their motivation for making it, MDM is an enjoyable recording.  The Band on track after track in this recording and others displays excellent "musicality"...wonderful arrangements, soulful vocals, technical execution that illuminates the composition and, with the exception of the occasional "over the top" quirkiness of Garth's keyboards/organ registrations, restraint and good taste.  No wonder that going on 50 years now, their music still communicates.  
You are so right, ghosthouse. The Band imo (and I'm not alone) are the finest self-contained (writing the songs, playing the music, singing the lyrics) Rock 'n' Roll ensemble the genre has produced. Three great singers (especially Richard Manuel), world-class musicianship (playing in a manner so as to benefit the song itself, a concept in advance of most R & R bands. To play thusly requires maturity and taste, a rarity in the field ;-), and excellent material. I've said it before and I'll say it again---The Band revolutionized Rock 'n' Roll when Music From Big Pink was released in early 1968, and that album and it's follow-up (S/T, aka the brown album) set the bar so high that it has yet to be equaled. Those two albums are a Master Class in how to play the music, and how to be a band. 
@bdp24 - I did not know you held The Band in that high regard.  I think we are on the same page as far as what makes them "special"...e.g., 
"technical execution that illuminates the composition" = "playing in a manner so as to benefit the song itself".  Exactly.

Not taking anything away from their individual talents but as with a certain other highly regarded group from England, I think a lot must be credited to the producer of their first two albums, John Simon. Based on the Wikipedia entry for him, he is very impressive.  If you happen to know of a good read about the recording sessions for "Pink"and "Brown", do please advise - I'd be very interested.  

By the way, it is post-Robertson but still great music (sound quality is a little uneven):  The Band - Live in Tokyo 1983.  Talk about three great singers, check out Rick Danko's performance of "It Makes No Difference".  One of my favorites.  
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uSHzODm-Ik8

In addition to Richard Manuel's talent as a vocalist, he was capable of writing magical songs that were precious (in a good way) and ephemeral.  Whispering Pines and In A Station are two fine examples of this.  I wish he had lived longer and written more.

The Band deserves its own thread, I suppose.



  


Robin Trower, Someday Blues.
I remember driving in my first car, some 40 years ago, and rocking out to Bridge of Sighs.   Friday night's concert will seem like stepping into a time capsule.  I am glad some of these guys are still at it 40 years later.
Hi Mitch...I saw Robin a couple weeks back.  Wrote about it 4/22 in this thread.  Did seem like he still enjoyed playing.  His sound was spot on to the records.  He did quite a few songs from Bridge of Sighs.  Hope you enjoy the show.  
I agree ,    RT   Guitar Sound Jumps Right Out at You , live and in his recording.  Unique to him.  Very enjoyable.
Hope you enjoy the show

R
Oleschool & all
I listen to Madonna on occasion just because her recordings sound
so good ,just as I listen to Michael Jackson for the same reason . Both artists recordings  are seriously good sounding.


R
In the never ending pursuit of off the radar new music, here are a couple of fun additions to recommend:
Britta Phillips- "Luck or Magic" Britta was bass player for one of my favorite 90's bands- Luna. She is also married to the frontman Dean Wareham. She has a sultry voice and this solo effort sounds like the soundtrack to a James Bond movie. I actually like the originals better than the covers. She also has a solo album with her husband called Dean & Britta- "L'Avventura" that is tasty.
The Record Company- "Give it Back to You" Kind of a blues/rock vibe with the bass player using a slide like Mark Sandman from Morphine. This is one of the most enjoyable debuts I have heard in a long time. 
Thanks Nutty.  Looks interesting.  Now I gotta go track down that Jerry Lee Lewis recording (though I really don’t care that much for him).

Hope you are back to feeling 100%.
A buddy of mine gave me a CD of an album called Re-Inventions: Best of the Vanguard Years by Sandy Bull. My friend said it was he was one of the first 'World Music' artists. Just amazing music. I listened to the first track, "Blend" and immediately thought of The Doors "The End."

There was a track on it called Carmina Burana Fantasy that had a familiar melody. That led to a whole afternoon listening to Carl Orff's Carmine Burana by the LSO, among others. 

So Sandy Bull stays on the rotation for awhile. 
" Testament: Complete Sonatas & Partitas for Solo Violin by J. S. Bach" by Rachel Barton Pine (violinist)
Forty Duce- Nothing to lose. Featuring Ritchie Kotzen. I particularly like the song, "Stand up".

Sick Puppies, the song, "My world".

Ronnie James Dio- Lock up the wolves. Song, "Between two hearts". 

Las but not least, California Breed, S/T. Featuring Glenn Hughes, Jason Bonham and Andrew Watt. Entire CD however " Sweet tea " rocks!

N



Todd Rungren is playing a club just down the road from me tonight, so I've been streaming a bunch of his stuff over the last few days in anticipation of the show.  It would be hard to find as many beautifully crafted songs from one artist as I've enjoyed during this run.  It might also be hard to find as many bad recordings.
Todd is great. I have admired his originality, humor, and craftmanship for a long time. Although sometimes I( don't know what to)feel (had to say that) that he could use a good editor, he plays what he wants, how he wants- and that is probably his strongest attribute. I also think that he is often overlooked as a guitar player. Enjoy the show.  
Zappa-hotrats
funkadelic/free your mind ...
jackie mittoo-keep on dancing
art Blakey-free for all
calexico/irons&wine- in the reins