@bdp24 - Yeah, Rockpile were always awesome. Here's a link to some photos I took of them when they opened for Elvis Costello at Winterland in June of '78...
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- 239 posts total
- 239 posts total
@bdp24 - Yeah, Rockpile were always awesome. Here's a link to some photos I took of them when they opened for Elvis Costello at Winterland in June of '78... |
My very first one: Olympia Stadium, Detroit, 196?, 7th row center, Alice Cooper and Steppenwolf. Was it the best music or performance I've ever heard live? Probably not. But it was life changing. I walked into that concert a stupid, pimply-faced teen, and walked out a Rock/Blues lover with an insatiable appetite for more, though still stupid and pimply-faced. |
Two more I just have to mention:
- Steve Earle and The Del McCoury Band at The House Of Blues on Sunset Blvd. in 1999. Lots of harmony singing and 100% acoustic instruments, all the guys standing around a single big ol’ large capsule (ribbon?) microphone. They sounded FANTASTIC!
- Throughout the 1980’s my girlfriend and I saw Dave Edmunds live quite a few times, and he was always great (his show at The Ritz in NYC in 1983 being her favorite show of all time). I liked him and his band even more than Rockpile, Dave’s 1950’s-based Rock ’n’ Roll undiluted by Nick Lowe’s 1960’s-based Power Pop. Dave always had a great band, sidemen including guitarists Billy Bremmer (from Rockpile) and Mickey Gee (an excellent Telecaster player), pianist/singer Geraint Watkins, bassist John David, and drummer Dave Charles. Dave alone kept Rock ’n’ Roll alive in the 1970’s and 80’s. John Lennon cited Dave’s first single---a blistering reworking of the Smiley Lewis Blues song "I Hear You Knocking"---as a favorite of his at the time of it’s release (1970).
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