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PURPLE DOSE

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01  green slice - flock
02  injection - q65
03  mama papa - gene parsons
04  sanctuary - camel
05  b'boom - king crimson
06  open book - happy the man
07  moon city - absolute elsewhere
08  union city waltz - mccoys
09  original colossal drag rag - even dozen jug band
10  red rice and beans - booker t & the mg's
11  phil's love theme - lovin' spoonful
12  vicksburg stomp - hot tuna
13  fill up your heart - paladin
14  wood's bolero - chris wood
15  twang - rhythm rockers
16  nicky's tune - terry & the pirates
17  hide yourself - vejtables
18  mind destruction - oxford circle
19  the electric tomorrow - electric tomorrow
20  pregnant pig - electras
21  voyage of the treiste - chocolate watchband
22  night owl blues - lovin spoonful
23  third stone from the sun - jimi hendrix experience
24  dance me this - frank zappa




MIDNIGHT ALLEY BLUES

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01 jointhouse blues - after tea
02 red eye blues - redeye
03 dachau blues - captain beefheart
04 special rider blues - insect trust
05 jaguar blues - tiffany shade
06 waimanalo blues - david lindley
07 young girl blues - mill valley bunch
08 just like tom thumb's blues - bob dylan
09 future blues - canned heat
10 waller street blues - ace of cups
11 lazy river blues - peacepipe
12 night owl blues - flamin' groovies
13 walking blues - conqueroo
14 70th street blues - humble pie
15 blues deluxe - jeff beck
16 l.a. blues - arthur lee & the ventilators
17 phonograph blues - mike wilhelm
18 bobby's blues - doug sahm
19 schoolboy blues - rolling stones
20 amazonian wombat blues - gary duncan 
21 tennessee blues - kingfish
22 car lights on in the daytime blues - love
23 california blues - spirit
24 the blues - babe ruth


BUZZ

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The group was founded in 1972 in London, Barry Richardson, who started as a jazz pianist in pubs. The basis of its former members have made Dublin the group «Bluesville». The name «Bees Make Honey» was created by Jackie - his wife and keyboardist / saxophonist Ruan O'Lochlainn. In 1973 the band signed with EMI, and two months later, released their debut album with a completely autobiographical called «Music Every Night». After that, the group toured a lot, reformed, and then broke up. 


Tracks
01. Caldonia - 3:23
02. Music Every Night - 3:05
03. Knee Trembler - 2:46
04. Kentucky Chicken Fry - 4:18
05. Booterstown - 3:12
06. Chinee's Dead - 3:30
07. Bloodshot Eyes - 3:28
08. Blood Brother - 3:09
09. Highway Song - 3:40
10. My Rockin 'Days - 3:33

Personnel:
Barry Richardson - bass, vocals
Mick Molloy - guitar, vocals
Deke O'Brien - guitar, vocals
Ruan O'Lochlainn - piano, guitar, saxophone
Bob Cee - drums





IF A SIX TURNED OUT TO BE NINE

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On February 18, 1969, the Jimi Hendrix Experience played the first of two shows at London’s Royal Albert Hall. The band had played the venue previously, on November 14, 1967, on a bill with Pink Floyd, the Nice, the Move and other sonically adventurous bands of the time. This time, however, the Experience would be the headliner, playing first on the 18th and again on the 24th to a sold-out house.
Jimi’s great talent had grown in the 15 months since the 1967 show. Regular touring had honed his free-form playing, while his extensive studio work had seen him develop into a brilliant composer and visionary producer. Unfortunately, escalating tensions between Hendrix and his band—bassist Noel Redding and drummer Mitch Mitchell—had begun to take a toll on the group’s performances. A European tour from January 8 to 23 had been a mess. The band performed lethargically, and Hendrix was uneasy with the audiences’ requests for them to play their recent hit, “All Along the Watchtower.”
He was also unhappy that his manager, Mike Jeffrey, had sent a film crew along to record the event for a television special. Jeffrey had never asked for Jimi’s creative input on the project, and Hendrix was concerned about production matters. He was especially adamant that he be allowed to choose his own engineer for the upcoming Royal Albert Hall performance, going so far as to send a memo to his manager on the subject.
In fact, Jeffrey did have an ulterior motive. Beyond the television special, he was hoping the Europe shows would provide enough recorded material for a live album, which he hoped to release that June. Once the live album was out of the way, Jeffrey planned to get another studio album out of the Experience in time for the lucrative Christmas season.
The live album was paramount to Jeffrey’s plans, but the uneven performances on the European tour had made him concerned that he would have nothing satisfactory to release. Originally, the Royal Albert Hall performance was a one-night stand, on February 18. As a safeguard, Jeffrey booked the band for the second performance, on February 24.

Following the European tour, Jimi flew to New York City to oversee the construction of his studio, Electric Lady. While the trip gave him a reprieve from his problems with the Experience, the time away only served to exacerbate the tensions between them. There were further problems awaiting him when he returned to London. On February 17, while rehearsing at the Albert Hall, Hendrix became aggravated by the constant feedback created between his guitar and the PA system. The mobile recording unit hired for the event was also experiencing electronic interference that would make the recordings unusable.
Hendrix placed a call to Chas Chandler, his former manager, and asked him to come for assistance. “It was a shambles,” Chandler told John McDermott in his book, Hendrix: Setting the Record Straight. “I ended up running both shows for him, trying to get everything right. I hadn’t been ‘hired,’ I was there to help out a friend.”
Although the recording equipment problems with were worked out, no one could guarantee that Jimi’s guitar wouldn’t suffer from feedback. To minimize the possibility, two separate sound systems were used: one for the venue and another for the mobile recording unit. This is why Jimi can be seen singing into three microphones in footage from the concerts.
Despite the preparations, the February 18 show was a disaster. Jimi played brilliantly, but Redding and Mitchell were lifeless. Chandler was irate with them. “It truly was one of the worst shows I had ever seen,” he told McDermott. “Up until that point I had been a supportive of the group, because I thought that they made for a good unit. Now I felt it was time they got thrown out.”

Under the circumstances, the show gave Jeffrey little that he could use for a live album. Rehearsals were scheduled for the days before the February 24 show to try to salvage what little opportunity remained. As it turned out, the second show was much better. Although the band lacked the fire and energy they’d displayed at earlier shows like 1967’s Monterey Pop Festival, they played brilliantly. Hendrix threw out his usual set list and instead performed three of his own blues songs: “Hear My Train a Comin’,” “Red House” and “Bleeding Heart.” The group turned in solid versions of “Little Wing,” Voodoo Chile” and “Foxey Lady,” as well.
And while Hendrix didn’t believe in giving encores, he gave one to the Albert Hall crowd, bringing out Traffic’s Dave Mason and Chris Wood and percussionist Rocki Dzidzornu to perform a stirring version of “Room Full of Mirrors.”
Oddly, for all the fireworks happening onstage, the audience was exceptionally polite. They remained seated and quiet, clapping politely, as if at the symphony. Perhaps it was down to the house lights: the film crew had asked to have them left on to provide enough light for the film stock. Under the circumstances, the audience might have felt more self-conscious than usual.
Not surprisingly, the shows were the last European performances by the Jimi Hendrix Experience. On March 30, the band began a lengthy U.S. tour that would see Hendrix make his celebrated stand at Woodstock, on August 18, with a new band, Gypsy, Sun and Rainbows. The Experience had already imploded two months before, on June 29 at the Denver Pop Festival.
Performing that night in Denver, Jimi didn’t hold back the news. “This is the last gig we’ll be playing together,” he said. The original Jimi Hendrix Experience was finished

Christopher Scapelliti, guitarplayer.com


THE JIMI HENDRIX EXPERIENCE
London 1969 
Live at Royal Albert Hall, London, UK; February 18, 1969. Very good stereo soundboard.

Disc 1
Track 101. Introduction 2:04
Track 102. Tax Free 9:01 
Track 103. Fire 4:29
Track 104. Hear My Train A Comin’ 
Track 105. Foxy Lady 7:02 
Track 106. Red House 12:09 
48 mins

Disc 2
Track 201. Sunshine Of Your Love 9:30 
Track 202. Spanish Castle Magic/Message To Love 13:23
Track 203. Star Spangled Banner 3:58 
Track 204. Purple Haze 5:02 
Track 205. Final Speak 1:29
Track 206. Voodoo Chile (Slight Return) 9:55 
44 mins

Lineup:
Jimi Hendrix – lead vocals, guitar
Mitch Mitchell – drums
Noel Redding – bass guitar, backing vocals


MITICO MUSICA

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With Coke Escovedo, David Brown, Michael Carabello, Neal Schon and Greg Rolie gone, Santana were a new band in 1972 when they toured the West Coast of America and Canada. Carlos was reportedly sick at heart and depressed. It was during this time that he was turned on to Sri Chinmoy and became a devotee.

His music however remained positive as evidenced by the classic Caravanserai and the collaboration with John McLaughlin on Love, Devotion And Surrender. Santana kept himself busy with new projects but never lost touch with the band and his classic tunes.

By 1972, Carlos Santana was showing signs he didn't want to be just a Latin rocker. His Caravanserai album was still cooking in the studio [finally released Nov 11, 1972]. This would be his most experimental work from the period. The live album with Buddy Miles was released in August and on the horizon was work with John McLaughlin on the underrated Love, Devotion And Surrender album. But the best album of this period remains his lovely Caravanserai with its multiple personalities to be admired with every fresh listen.


Lineup:
Carlos Santana - guitar
Tom Coster - keyboards
Doug Rauch - bass
Michael Shrieve - drums
James Mingo Lewis - congas, percussion
Jose Chepito Areas - timbales, percussion
Richard Kermode - keyboards
Armando Peraza - congas, percussion

Santana
Live in Seattle 1972 [no label, 2CD]
Live at Edmundson Pavilion, University of Washington, Seattle, October 15, 1972.

Track 101 A-1 Funk/ Every Step Of The Way
Track 102       Samba Pa Ti 
Track 103 Look Up [To See What's Coming Down 
Track 104 Just In Time To See The Sun 
Track 105 Incident At Neshabur 
Track 106 Bambele/ All The Love Of The Universe Theme 
Track 107 Stone Flower 
Track 108 Waiting 
Track 109 Castillos De Arena Pt 1
Track 110 Free Angela 
Track 111 Mantra 
Track 112 Drums 
Track 113 Castillos De Arena Pt 2/ crowd 
Track 114 Earth 
Track 115 Se A Cabo 
 
Disc II  
         First Encore
Track 201 Savor 
Track 202 Toussaint L'Overture 
  Second Encore
Track 203 Welcome [Let Us Go Into The House Of The Lord
Track 204 La Fuente Del Ritmo



MOUNTAIN MEN

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This was most likely Mountain's very last show with the "original" lineup, recorded on New Year's Eve 1974 at the NYC Felt Forum within the Madison Square Garden complex.

Though formed in 1969, Mountain first disbanded in February 1972 after a tour of the UK. After West, Bruce & Laing and Leslie West's Wild West Show in June and July 1973, Felix Pappalardi and Leslie West reunited and hired Bob Mann and Alan Schwartzberg for a Japanese tour in August 1973.

At the beginning, this might have been regarded as a one-off undertaking. However, this tour yielded the Twin Peaks double album that was originally planned as a Japanese-only release but was released worldwide in 1974. Alas, the Japanese shows and this resulting album did not represent Mountain adequately by any means.

After the tour, West insisted that Corky Laing be part of the band if they were to continue. Pappalardi agreed but demanded in return - much to West's dismay - that the band took on David Perry as an additional guitarist (to avoid the Mountain look and not sound too much like Cream [he had produced three albums for the group]). It seemed the band's original organ player, Steve Knight, was not considered.

In a nutshell, this four-piece toured from late 1973 to September 1974, and recorded the band's last album, Avalanche, in January 1974. The few existing recordings from this period showed a revitalized band with some refreshing new and up-to-the-mark material.

After their September 1974 tour, it seemed West finally succeeded in convincing Pappalardi to condense the band to his favourite trio format. Pappalardi obviously gave in and it was left to West to phone Perry to give him the bad news. Perhaps it was already decided at this point that their autumn/winter 1974 tour would be the band's farewell which may have made it easier for Pappalardi to actually concede.

The band kicked off their last tour on October 3, 1974 with a phenomenal show at NYC's Radio City Music Hall. Fortunately there is a decent audience recording of this in circulation and it's worth getting hold of. On this tour, Mountain were the main act when they played mid-sized venues and, for larger venues, they were the support act, for instance, they supported new stars the J Geils Band.

One can only hope that West was indeed happy on this tour - at least, this recording demonstrates a still extra-tight band. They even came up with an otherwise not-to-be-found rendition of Ten Years After's I'm Going Home, perhaps a nod to their colleagues (both bands often appeared in festivals together) who were also, at that time, on the verge of splitting.

The sound quality for this recording is superb, it's a first generation off-the-master copy, and it's a complete recording of the show. Close listening reveals that it must be an audience recording but it is indeed so well recorded that one may mistake it for a soundboard tape. 




Mountain 
New York 1974 
Live at the Felt Forum, New York, December 31, 1974

Lineup:
Leslie West - guitar, vocals
Felix Pappalardi - bass, vocals
Corky Laing - drums

Track 01Whole Lotta Shakin' Goin' On 
Track 02   Theme For An Imaginary Western 
Track 03Thumbsucker 
Track 04You Better Believe It 
Track 05Nantucket Sleighride I 
Track 06Nantucket Sleighride II 
Track 07Medley: Leslie West's Solo / Roll Over Beethoven / Drum Solo / Going Home Jam 
Track 08Mississippi Queen 


ON WITH THE SHOW

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01 circus theme - ringling brothers & barnum bailey circus band
02 the circus will be in town in time - golden earring
03 the american metaphysical circus - united states of america
04 the circus song - knowbody else
05 the circus song - jim kweskin& his jug band
06 circus song - don mcclean
07 circus -cathy young
08 clown - odin
09 uranian sircus - flock
10 sideshow - family tree
11 nelly the elephant - nektar
12 human cannonball - loudon wainwight III
13 freakshow(circus song) - tiger lilies
14 fire eater - three dog night
15 the clown died in marvin gardens - beacon street union
16 clown - flock
17 being for the benefit of mr kite - beatles
18 the animal trainer and the toad - mountain
19 circus farm - mind garage
20 merry go round - fred neil
21 tight rope - leon russell
22 circus - string driven thing
23 clown on a rope - fresh blueberry pancake
24 circus - king crimson 



ALL OF THEM...SOME OF THEM....OR NO THEM AT ALL ?

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Them were a Northern Irish band formed in Belfast in April 1964, most prominently known for the garage rock standard "Gloria" and launching singer Van Morrison's musical career.
] The original five member band consisted of Morrison, Alan Henderson, Ronnie Millings, Billy Harrison and Eric Wrixon. The group was marketed in the United States as part of the British Invasion.
Them scored two UK hits in 1965 with "Baby, Please Don't Go" (UK No.10) and "Here Comes the Night" (UK No.2; Ireland No.2). The latter song and "Mystic Eyes" were Top 40 hits in the US.

Morrison quit the band in 1966 and went on to a successful career as a solo artist. Although Them had a short-lived existence, the Belfast group had considerable influence on other bands, such as the Doors.

In late August 1965, Billy Harrison and Pat McAuley formed a rival Them, competing with the Morrison/Henderson line-up and leading to legal action. In March 1966, the latter won the rights to the name while the former, now without Harrison but with Pat's brother Jackie McAuley (born John McAuley, 14 December 1946, in Coleraine, County Londonderry, Northern Ireland; ex-Them, ex-Kult), were only allowed to call themselves 'Other Them' in the U.K. The McAuley brothers became, unofficially, the Belfast Gypsies (or Gipsies), though they were never actually billed as such, and recorded two singles on Island Records (one released under the name Freaks of Nature) and one Swedish-only album, all produced by Kim Fowley. They toured Europe billed as Them and released a French EP under that name but broke up in November 1966 Not long after that the Morrison line-up also reached the end of the road. In March 1967 Morrison did a short tour of the Netherlands backed by Cuby & the Blizzards and then left for New York to start his highly successful solo career. The rest regrouped in Belfast, recruited Kenny McDowell (born Kenneth McDowell, 21 December 1944, in Belfast, County Antrim, Northern Ireland) (ex-Mad Lads) as lead singer and continued touring and recording steadily after relocating to the USA in early 1967 at the invitation of producer Ray Ruff. Two albums, Now and Them and Time Out! Time In for Them, found the band experimenting with psychedelia. Then Jim Armstrong and Kenny McDowell returned to Belfast to perform as Sk'boo (Armstrong, McDowell and Ray Elliot reunited in Chicago in 1969 as "Truth" and recorded a number of demos and soundtrack songs later released as Of Them And Other Tales). Henderson hired session musicians for two more records for Ray Ruff's Happy Tiger Records, in a hard rock vein with country and folk elements; Them (1970) featured Jerry Cole as guitarist while Them In Reality (1971) featured lead guitarist Jim Parker and drummer John Stark (both ex-Kitchen Cinq). Henderson also co-wrote a rock opera, Truth Of Truths, produced by Ray Ruff in 1971.] These efforts were met with consumer indifference and in 1972 Them dissolved. Alan Henderson, Billy Harrison and Eric Wrixon reunited in 1979, without Morrison, recording another album, Shut Your Mouth and undertaking a tour of Germany using Billy Bell on guitar and Mel Austin as vocalist. Since the 1990s, Wrixon had toured under the moniker of "Them the Belfast Blues Band", at one point comprising ex-Them guitarists, Jim Armstrong and Billy Harrison.


This post does not focus on the Morrison led band but looks at music from the 6 lp's the band somehow managed to make before they finally faded out.

Tracks 1-5 from the "In Reality" Lp

Tracks 6-10 from the "Now And Them" LP

Tracks 11 -15 from the "Them" Lp on Happy Tiger

Tracks 16-20 from the "Time Out" Lp

Tracks 21-23 From the "Belfast Gypsies-Them" Lp

Track24 from the "Shut Your Mouth" Reunion Lp



20 SMALL MELODIES

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Here is volume 20 in this set of instrumentals  Please forgive me for any duplicated songs  Its seems that my research and filing skills are a little lame  Too late to change the past but will work on the final four volumes and their content.  

01 slow down - sandy nelson
02 supertwister - camel
03 jorma's bangas = jorma kaoukonen
04 changa - flock
05 unconscious minuet - lovin' spoonful
06 john's other - hot tuna
07 ribump ba bap dum dum - jefferson airplane
08 pig's boogie - nicky hopkins
09 twenty small cigars - frank zappa
10 guitars in space - billy mure
11 moonchild vulcan - chris wood
12 lost guitar - marksmen
13 expo in sound - animsted egg
14 bad times - paladin
15 carousel - happy the man
16 the gorilla - them
17 cleopatra's needle - ahab & the wailers
18 kenny clarke - charlie watts/jim keltner project
19 the good.the bad and the ugly - hugo montenegro
20 pressure points -camel
21 pigtails - saints
22 mirage - hiroshi tsutsumi & the all star wagons
23 mandolin king rag - even dozen jug band
24 coda-marine 475 - king crimson   


HANG 24

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01 fiberglass jungle - crossfires
02 spaghetti strap - telstars
03 mr moto - belairs
04 teen beat - sandy nelson
05 danger island - atomic mosquitos
06 maple leaf rag - les jaquars
07 malibu babylon - blue stingrays
08 petite flouer - spotnicks
09 pipeline - chantays
10 rebel rouser - duane eddy
11 marilou - dick dale
12 stringer - bobby fuller
13 panic button - edgar alan & the po'boys
14 penetration- pyramids
15 rumble - link wray
16 secret agent man - king's road
17 baja - astronaunts
18 dawn patrol - eliminators
19 the lonely surfer - jack nitzche
20 apache - shadows
21 pintor - pharos
22 kolme kitaraa (three guitars) - strangers
23 beach boy instrumental - vertical limits
24 theme from hawaii five o - ventures




CROZ....35 YEARS BACK

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David's planned second solo album, Might as Well Have a Good Time, was rejected by Capitol in 1980.

01- Melody
02- Drive My Car
03- Delta
04- Kids And Dogs
05- Flying Man
06- Might As Well Have A Good Time
07- Distances
08- King Of The Mountain (Live)
09- Samurai


PLAYING IN THE SAND

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Re post as requested by Edward Burlison (Obey_Gravity)

A very interesting and unlikely billing. And how fitting to play "Okie From Muskogee"
This one has been around for awhile but thought it would be fun fun fun to post.

4/27/71 Grateful Dead The Fillmore East

01 Deal
02 Me & My Uncle
03 Bird Song
04 Playing In The Band
05 Dire Wolf
06 Searchin'*
07 Riot In Cell Block #9*
08 Good Vibrations**
09 I Get Around**
10 Okie From Muskogee*
11 Johnny B. Goode*
12 Sing Me Back Home
13 Uncle Johns Band

* with the Beach Boys
** Beach Boys only                                                                                                          






 

BLACK BOX

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So why are they Red?

 1.   And I Like It                      Studio Outtake 66
               2   J.P.P. McStep B Blues            Nov 25-66 Fillmore S.F.
              3   Jorma's Bangas                    Nov  27-66   Fillmore S.F.
                     4   If You Feel                      Sept  10-68 Musikhalle, Hamburg
                   5   In Time                          Sept 15 -68  Amsterdam, Holland
                                   6   Wild Thyme                       June  13-69  Famiy Dog Great Highway 
                                  7   The House At Pooneil Corners     Aug  17-69   Woodstock Festival
                      8   Uncle Sam's Blues                Oct  25-69    Winterland Arena
                      9   You Wear Your Dresses Too Short  Oct-31-69  L.A. Forum
           10  Mexico                           Apr 2-70  KQED Rehearsals
                       11  Have You Seen The Saucers        Sept  14-70  Fillmore West
                     12  Long John Silver                 Sept  22-72  Winterland Arena  

Tracks taken from various bootleg sources













CRUMB'S BLUES

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01 some of shelly's blues - nitty gritty dirt band
02 southhampton blues - iguana
03 hesitation blues - kaleidoscope
04 hot foot blues - bill wyman
05 summertime blues - gants
06 minglewood ues - ph jug factor
07 jackass blues - great metropolitan steam band
08 nothin' but the blues - doug sahm
09 light bulb blues - peanut butter conspiracy
10 leavin' blues - jack london & the sparrows
11 lonesome desert blues - maria muldaur
12 have you ever had the blues - blues project
13 crystal blues - country joe & the fish
14 dippernouth blues - dr john
15 dupree's diamond blues - grateful dead
16 young girl sunday blues - jefferson airplane
17 mecca flat blues - spanky & our gang
18 mr. blues - moby grape
19 10;09 blues - mount rushmore
20 bad talking blues - nick gravenites
21 louisiana lues - savoy brown
22 indian girl blues - spirit
23 bootlegin' blues - velvet underground
24 depression blues - neil young


NO CARLOS NO NEED

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"Abraxas Pool" features the unmistakable blend of Latin percussion, soaring guitar, hard driving keyboards and powerful vocals, reuniting original members of the Santana band. Manning overdriven, sustained guitar is Neal Schon who trades off with keyboardist/organist Gregg Rolie on a number of tracks. Instrumental cuts such as "Szabo" and "Cruzin'" throb with heavy percussion and burning fretwork. Carlos himself hasn't put out as heavy material such as this in a number of years. "Abraxas Pool" is a must for Santana and early Journey fans, and others who can't get enough of the combination of Latin rhythms with blazing guitar.


Neal Schon - Guitar, Production
Greg Rolie - Keyboards, Vocals, Production
Michael Shrieve - Drums, Production
Michael Carabello - Congas, Production
Jose "Chepito" Areas - Timbales, Production
Alphonso Johnson - Bass, Production
Carlos E. Franco - Vocals on "Ya Llego"
Necia Dallas - Vocals on "Ya Llego"
Davona Bundy - Vocals on "Ya Llego"
Wole Alade - Additional Drumming on "Jingo"
Ronald Marshall - Additional Drumming on "Ji



SOUNDWAVES

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01 hootenany 1984 - vanguard voyagers
02 slow fizz - mitch ryder & the detroit wheels
03 007-a fantasy bond theme - barry adamson
04 we can't go home again - william tyler
05 stranger in a strange land - byrds
06 inna-gadda-da-vida - shawn lee
07 meet the flintstones - dirty dozen brass band 
08 katmandu - gary duncan & quicksilver
09 pipeline sequence - honk
10 turnpike u.s.a.- link wray
11 a maiden's prayer - roy clark
12 uranis take 2 - brunning sunflower blues band
13 alley cat - bent fabric
14 bandalero - neal schon
15 aces high - hugo montenegro
16 sodoma e gomorra - il rovescio della medaglia
17 steaming pipes - happy the man
18 an odd little place - jerry garcia
19 fields of sun - iron butterfly
20 crystal ship - ray manzarek
21 sweet little angel - rolling stones
22 great gig in the sky - pink floyd
23 i'll stand by you - pretenders
24 summertime - doors


PUMPKINS

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It's Fall....Finally!!  I thought it would never get here. Georgia has some pretty hot summers and the autumn season is always welcome. Now It's time to revisit some great Halloween themed postings

01   Halloween - John Carpenter
02   Godzilla - Blue oyster Cult
03   Ghostbusters - Ray Parker Jr.
04   Supernatural Mind - Mystic Siva
05   Frankenstein - Edgar Winter
06   Evil Woman - Crow
07   Black magic Woman - Santana
08   The day The Earth Stood Still - Bernard Hermann
09   EXP - Jimi Hendrix
10   Voodoo Child - Jimi Hendrix
11   The Martian Boogie - Brownsville Station
12   Welcome To My Nightmare - Alice Cooper
13   D.O.A. - Bloodrock
14   Dante's Inferno - Blues Magoos
15   Tubular Bells - Micheal Oldfield
16   Black Sabbath - Black Sabbath
17   Creepin' About - Seeds
18   Boris The Spider - The Who
19   The Twilight Zone - Grateful Dead
20   Jack O Lantern - Babe Ruth
21   Freakin' At The Freakers Ball - Shel Silverstein
22   The Little Black Egg - Nightcrawlers
23   Clap For The Wolfman - Guess Who
24   Time Warp - Rocky Horror Picture Show





SUNLIGHT

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The raucous sound of Sky Saxon's band the Seeds made them a local phenomenon in Los Angeles in the mid-1960s, but few could have predicted that Saxon would go on to become his own one-man cult. After disappearing into a religious commune during the 70s

He was born Richard Marsh in Salt Lake City, Utah, in a year he variously gave as 1937, 1945 and 1946, and moved to Los Angeles when he was (probably) 18 to pursue a musical career. He later claimed to have been a classical music fan and to have studied piano briefly at UCLA, but he first appeared on disc as an R&B singer, releasing several singles in 1963-64 and billing himself as Little Richie Marsh.

He changed his name to Sky Saxon because, as he would explain: "Sky Saxon to me was like my hero, Errol Flynn. The name sounded great and he was great and made great movies." After stints with the Soul Rockers and the Electra Fires, he answered an advertisement for a frontman placed by guitarist Jan Savage, drummer Rick Andridge and organist Daryl Hooper. They gave him the job. The Seeds were formed and they secured a deal with the GNP Crescendo label. Their first single, Can't Seem to Make You Mine (1965), provoked minor interest and was reissued to greater acclaim in 1967.

Their debut album, The Seeds, epitomised the garage band ethos of short, punchy songs powered by fuzzy guitars, clattering drums and crude organ, with Saxon's Jagger-like yowl on top. Its highlight was Pushin' Too Hard, a deliciously dim classic that never rose higher than 37 on the charts but is renowned as a benchmark of its genre. It became a local favourite along with the efforts of other LA luminaries such as the Doors, the Byrds and Love. The second album, A Web of Sound, followed in short order, and the band could be heard picking up elements of psychedelia and flower power. The trance-like single Mr Farmer was another local hit, even though many radio stations banned it because of its druggy allusions.

The Seeds greeted the summer of 1967 with Future, an album of full-on psychedelia bristling with exotic instruments and wrapped in a plush gatefold sleeve. It became the band's biggest seller, though it charted no higher than 87, and the group were vogueish enough to land a cameo in Roger Corman's teen movie Psych Out (1968), starring Jack Nicholson. However, drugs and fast living were eroding the Seeds, and by 1968 Andridge and Savage had quit, the latter later joining the LAPD. Saxon and Hooper then formed the Sky Saxon Blues Band and recorded A Full Spoon of Seedy Blues, with sleeve notes by Muddy Waters, but a subsequent effort to revive The Seeds failed.

Saxon now retreated into the Source Family, a religious sect formed by beatnik Jim Baker, alias Father Yod. Saxon became Sky Sunlight Saxon and recorded with a cult-related band that went by names such as Source, Yodship and YaHoWha 13 and featured the musicians Djin, Octavious and Sunflower Aquarian. Saxon also made recordings of his own, usually limited to mail-order release, but his former fans had moved on.

This changed in the 1980s, when the Seeds experienced a revival of interest (LA girl band the Bangles often played Pushin' Too Hard). The UK-based Psycho label recruited Saxon to record the Starry Ride album, assisted by Mars Bonfire from Steppenwolf and members of Iron Butterfly and Fraternity of Man. Saxon and Bonfire then formed Firewall, who recorded a couple of neo-psychedelic albums, and, in 1989, Saxon resurrected the Seeds to headline the Summer of Love tour, which featured such fellow California veterans as Arthur Lee and Love, and the Strawberry Alarm Clock.

Saxon spent part of the 1990s ensconced in domestic bliss with his then wife Marianna DaPello, and put together a wooden box of discs called God and Hair, comprising music by Sky Sunlight Saxon as well as YaHoWha recordings. He took The Seeds back on the road in 2003, and they continued to perform, albeit with shifting personnel, up to Saxon's death, releasing the albums Red Planet and Back to the Garden. In June 2007, he married Sabrina Smith, who also became his business partner.

In 2008 he released The King of Garage Rock, a collection of his old hits and some cover versions, and worked on new recordings with Billy Corgan of Smashing Pumpkins. His death was first announced on Facebook by Sabrina, who has also revealed that Saxon's birthday was August 20 while not specifying which year. He had been admitted to St David's hospital, in Austin, with an infection and died of kidney and heart failure.

• Sky Saxon (Richard Elvern Marsh), musician, born 20 August 1946; died 25 June 2009

Here is a selection of some of Sky's works( both with the Seeds and solo) Some good . some not so but all a reflection of one of psychedelia s cherished champions

01 the wind blows your hair
02 faded picture
03 painted doll
04 fallin' in love
05 wish me up
06 barbie doll looks
07 the singer not the song
08 sons of the light
09 music is a vanishing world
10 paradise
11 burning down the walls
12 sha lalala (It's a groovy thing)
13 go with the flow
14 food for the hungry
15 bad part of town
16 born to be wild
17 trouble
18 no matter what you do
19 starry ride
20 i'm in love with life
21 drums.stars and guitars
22 star setter
23 gloria
24 have love will travel


TRICK OR TREAT

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01  The Outer Limits - Dominic Frontiere
02  Haunted House - Lee Oskar
03  Blood Beat - Fire Escape
04  Fortune Teller - Plant& Krauss
05  Halloween Mary - P F Sloan
06  Gris Gris Gumbo Ya Ya - Dr. John The Night Tripper
07  Season Of The Witch - Donovan
08  Vampire Blues - Neil Young
09  I Put A Spell On You - Creedance Clearwater Revival
10  Werewolves Of London - Warren Zevon
11  Hollywood Halloween - Peter Lewis & The Electric Prunes
12  Superstition - Widespread Panic & The Dirty Dozen Brass band
13  Mystic Eyes - Them
14  Bobbing For Apples - Automatic Pilot & Gary Duncan
15  Ghost Riders In The Sky - Big Brother & The Holding Company
16  Devil With The Blue Dress On - Mitch Ryder & the Detroit Wheels
17  The X- Files - Mark Snow
18  Hour For Magic - The Doors
19  Pressed Rat And Warthog - Cream
20  The Witch Queen Of New Orleans - Redbone
21  The Four Horsemen - Aphrodite's Child (Vangelis)
22  Witchy Woman - The Eagles
23  Goblin Girl - Frank Zappa
24  Outro - Elvira





WIRED

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The Electric Prunes are an American psychedelic rock band, formed in Los Angeles, California, in 1965. Much of the band's music was, as music historian Richie Unterberger described it, possessed of "an eerie and sometimes anguished ambiance" Combining elements of psychedelia and electronic rock, the band's sound was marked by innovative recording techniques with fuzz-toned guitars and oscillating sound effects. In addition, guitarist Ken Williams' and singer James Lowe's concept of "free-form garage music" provided the band with a richer sonic palette and exploratory lyrical structure than many of their contemporaries.

The band was signed to Reprise Records in 1966 and released their first single, "Ain't It Hard", in the latter part of the year. Their first album, The Electric Prunes, included the band's two nationally charting songs, "I Had Too Much to Dream (Last Night)" and "Get Me to the World on Time". With the appearance of their second album, Underground, the band was more free to create their own material.

Though they got considerable input from talented L.A. songwriters and producers, with their two big hits penned by outside sources, the Electric Prunes did by and large play the music on their records, their first lineup writing some respectable material of their own. On their initial group of recordings, they produced a few great psychedelic garage songs, especially the scintillating "I Had Too Much to Dream Last Night," which mixed distorted guitars and pop hooks with inventive, oscillating reverb. Songwriters Annette Tucker and Nancie Mantz wrote most of the Prunes' material, much of which in turn was crafted in the studio by Dave Hassinger, who had engineered some classic Rolling Stones sessions in the mid-'60s. "Too Much to Dream" was a big hit in 1967, and the psychedelized Bo Diddley follow-up, "Get Me to the World on Time," was just as good, and also a hit. Nothing else by the group made it big, and their initial pair of albums was quite erratic, although a few scattered tracks were nearly as good as those singles. Although they began to write more of their own material on their second album, their subsequent releases were apparently the products of personnel who had little to do with the original lineup. 





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