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ORPHANS THANKSGIVING

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The Grateful Dead had a gig at Palmer Auditorium the night before Thanksgiving and they worked up a deal with the nearby Armadillo to cater the pre-show meal for band and crew. As Jerry Garcia looked around the 1,500-capacity hall, which had re-opened after months of renovations just six weeks earlier, he said, “I’d love to play this place.” In earshot was owner Eddie Wilson, who said to tell him when. “Well, we’re not doing anything tomorrow,” said Garcia. The Dead had a day off, but only Garcia and bassist Phil Lesh were gonna be in Austin, as the rest of the band was headed to Corpus after the show with Frances Carr, who owned Manor Downs. Garcia’s good friend Doug Sahm said, “let’s have a jam session, man, and let everyone in for free!” Later that night, Leon Russell was backstage at the Grateful Dead show when Garcia asked if he wanted to stop by the ‘Dillo and play some piano. It would be an “Orphans Thanksgiving” to beat ‘em all.

The next morning, Eddie Wilson called up radio station KRMH (“Good Karma Radio”) and said that the ‘Dillo, which was scheduled to be closed on Thanksgiving, would be open after all for a free show. “A bunch of friends got nowhere else to go today, so they’re gonna be jamming,” Wilson said. Since the Dead had played the night before, it didn’t take most folks long to figure out they’d be involved. The special surprise was Leon Russell, who had the number two album in the country in ‘72 with Carney. Wilson was tight-lipped about his appearance because they didn’t want a bunch of people showing up and yelling out requests for “Tight Rope.”

Garcia, Lesh and Russell got there early, at about 3 p.m., but wouldn’t start until Sahm arrived about half an hour later. “Doug knows a thousand songs,” Jerry told Leon, who admitted later to Wilson that he was not much of a jam guy so “it was one of the worst days of my musical life.” Leon was on hand a month earlier when the Armadillo re-opened with a Freddie King show, after renovations doubled capacity from 750 to 1,500 and moved the stage from the south end of the building to the north end. “Freddie always called the Armadillo ‘The House That Freddie Built’ because that reopening show really got things going for us,” says Wilson.

Soon after the jam started, a torrential downpour bore down, so one of the first songs they played was “Stormy Monday” by T-Bone Walker. “It was my first realization of what a leader- an instigator- Doug Sahm was,” says Lissa Hattersley of Greezy Wheels. “They all played great, of course, but Doug was clearly the band leader of the night.” Garcia played pedal steel all night, with Sweet May Egan from Greezy Wheels a standout on fiddle on the first set, which concentrated on country songs, while the second set was more blues and rock. Russell played both guitar and piano and several local drummers sat in, including Jerry Barnett of Shiva’s Head Band. Hank Alrich, who would co-own the venue late in its run, had loaned his Stratocaster to various jammers and during a lull a cohort said, “Why don’t you go up and play your guitar? Everybody else has.” Alrich recalled his first number onstage: “As Leon kicked in to ‘A Hard Rain’s a Gonna Fall,’ rain began to fall on that old, big metal roof. This was before we’d gotten the underside insulated with spray-on paper foam, and the sound of the rain was the perfect touch to the intro.”

Twas a magical day and night, ending with an all-hands-on-deck medley of Chuck Berry’s “Roll Over Beethoven and Little Richard’s “Good Golly Miss Molly.” About 1,000 lucky fans had reason to be thankful that night.

Article by Micheal Corcoran



Armadillo World Headquarters 
Austin, TX  
11/23/72 


Set One:  (10 songs)
Disc 1 
Hi-Heel Sneakers 
Honky Tonk Angel 
Closin' Time 
Me & Bobby McGee 
Stormy Monday 
That's All Right, Mama 
Come On Into My Kitchen 
T for Texas 
Mr. Tamborine Man 
San Antone ; 

 Set Two:  (7 songs) 
Sugar Foot Rag 
I'm So Lonesome I Could Cry 
Jambalaya 
Today I Started Loving You Again 
Columbus Stockade > 
Honky Tonkin'

Disc 2 
Orange Blossom Special 
Kentucky Waltz

Set Three:  (13 songs) 
Searchin' 
Lonely Lonely Nights > 
Shake A Hand 
Hey Bo Diddley 
It Takes A Lot To Laugh, It Takes A Train To Cry 
Hard Rain 
Wild Horses 
Slippin' Into Christmas 
Money Honey 
Chug A Lug 
Roll Over Beethoven > 
Good Golly Miss Molly > 
Roll Over Beethoven 



 PT 1
PT 2


THANKFULNESS

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Just a quick Hello and to wish all who celebrate Thanksgiving a wonderful day
Eat, Drink, and be Merry and spend time with your family. If you do not celebrate this holiday have a great weekend in whatever you do. Keep the music on and be thankful for what you got!

Bill @24hrdejavu  

EVOLUTION TO EXTINCTION

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Rhinoceros was a well-planned but poorly executed supergroup whose roots were based in a set of musicians collected by Elektra Records and called Project Supergroup. The record company wanted to mold the highly talented lineup of artists into the next big recording coup of the late '60s. Despite the fact that the band could not live up to the expectations that were raised by Elektra Records' publicity machine, Rhinoceros' contributions to rock still deserve more credit than subsequent rock histories give it. It didn't help matters any that the band's manager declined an invitation for Rhinoceros to appear at Woodstock several years after the group formed. The band's self-titled debut was impressive, thanks in part to the producer at the helm, Paul Rothchild, who also worked with the Doors. The band was the brainchild of Rothchild and Frazier Mohawk, a producer who helped craft supergroup Buffalo Springfield. Rothchild and Mohawk first auditioned about a dozen musicians in the autumn of 1967, including pianist Alan Gerber and former Daily Flash and Buffalo Springfield guitarist Doug Hastings. Two months later, an audition of almost two-dozen musicians brought into the lineup vocalist John Finley, who had worked previously with Jon & Lee & the Checkmates, and former Iron Butterfly guitarist Danny Weis. Before the year rolled to a close, the producers rounded out the band with the additions of keyboard player Michael Fonfara, who had been a bandmate of Finley's in Jon & Lee & the Checkmates, and bassist Jerry "the Bear" Penrod, who was one of Weis' buddies from Iron Butterfly. Several members of the group contributed to David Ackles' first solo release, entering the studio early in 1968. The band, by now calling itself Rhinoceros, went to work on its own debut album about four months later. By this time, the band had added former Mothers of Invention drummer Billy Mundi. That June, the group played live for the first time on the stage of the West Hollywood nightspot Whiskey A Go-Go. Rhinoceros played New York City's Café Au-Go-Go three months later. In between the band's East and West Coast debuts, Rhinoceros also toured with several different acts, including Taj Mahal and Love. While in New York, the band also performed during a free Central Park concert that drew an audience numbering approximately 12,000 and featured Wind in the Willows, Traffic, and Spooky Tooth. Remaining in the city for several months, Rhinoceros had the opportunity to share the stage at different venues with Muddy Waters, John Mayall & the Bluesbreakers, and the Moody Blues. Penrod dropped out in 1969 and Steve Weis, the brother of Rhinoceros' guitarist, joined the band. Not long after, Peter Hodgson took Steve Weis' place. Hodgson, who formerly performed with Jon & Lee & the Checkmates, was vocalist Finley's cousin. Tours followed with the Grateful Dead, Blood, Sweat & Tears, Tommy James & the Shondells, and Johnny Winter, among others. Hastings dropped out that summer and the band brought aboard Larry Leishman, whose career also included a stint with Jon & Lee & the Checkmates. At this time, the band was being managed by Sid Bernstein and Billy Fields. Fields made a disastrous decision for the band when he declined an invitation to appear at Woodstock in favor of sending Rhinoceros to play the Boston Tea Party. Unhappy with the Woodstock decision, Gerber left the band. Mundi left not long after, and the band brought in Eddie "Duke" Edwards. Rhinoceros headed to New York to perform and record in 1970. While in the city, the band played the Fillmore East, as it did on other visits to town, and shared a bill with Seals & Crofts and Procol Harum. Not long after the Fillmore East show, Richard Crooks of Dr. John stepped in to take over for Edwards. By the end of the year, Malcolm Tomlinson took over on drums for the departing Crooks. Performances followed in Canada, but before 1971 was halfway over, the band called it quits. Hodgson, Weis, Finley, Leishman, and Fonfara reunited early in 1972 as Blackstone Rangers, a band that evolved into simply Blackstone and disbanded in 1973.


Rhinoceros on Stage (1968)

Left to right: Michael Fonfara(organ), Danny Weis(gtr), John Finley(vcl), 
Alan Gerber(vcl), Billy Mundi (drms), Jerry Penrod(bass), Doug Hastings (gtr). 

In 1972, John Finley joined four ex-Rhinoceros members to launch the new band Blackstone Rangers (which was later shortened to Blackstone after a dispute with a motorcycle gang of the same name). Finley invited his old friend Paul Rothchild to Toronto to produce the album, which ultimately resulted in GRT Records album On The Line. Shortly after, the group disbanded.


Blackstone....

John Finley (vocals)
Michael Fonfara (keyboards)
Peter Hodgson (bass)
Larry Leishman (vocals,guitar,harp)
Frank "Zeke" Sheppard (vocals,harp)
Richard Steinberg (drums)
Danny Weis (guitar)



Tracks 1-8   from the Rhinoceros LP 

Tracks 9-12  from the Satin Chickens LP

Tracks 13-19 from the Better Times Are Coming LP

Tracks 20-24 from theBlackstone LP


SANTA CRUZ RECIPE

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Track 01. You Gotta Reap What You Sow 
Track 02. Only Time Will Tell Me 
Track 03. Laugh, Don’t Laugh 
Track 04. Jam/Don’t the Moon Look Fat and Lonesome 
Track 05. I Wanna Love You )
Track 06. Beginning Tomorrow
Track 07. Will the Circle Be Unbroken 


Line-up (unconfirmed):
Terry Garthwaite - electric guitar, vocals
Toni Brown - piano, vocals
Jeff Neighbor - electric bass, backing vocals
Ron Wilson - congas
Fritz Kasten - drums
Ron Wilson - tambourine, harmonica, backing vocals

JOY OF COOKING
Santa Cruz 1973 
Live at Kresge College Town Hall, University of California, Santa Cruz, CA; April 24, 1973.
 Very good FM or Pre-FM.




HAVE YOU HEARD THE SAUCERS?

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01 space oddity - david bowie
02 space child - spirit
03 man from mars - ferrante & teicher
04 on the dark side of the moon - frank comstock
05 22.09 - kluster
06 frozen neptune - russ garcia 
07 space refex - dick hyman
08 not of this earth - neil norman
09 cowboys & aliens theme - harry gregson-williams
10 mominous - ron geesin
11 apropos cluster - cluster
12 deranged (zero gravity) - kraftwelt
13 past zero time - dark matter
14 nova = russ garcia
15 moon gas - dick hyman
16 12-24-2011 - anubian lights
17 electronics - flying guitars
18 vortex in my cortex - the brain
19 spacewalker - timezone 
20 interferon - zero gravity
21 sprach zarathustra - neil norman
22 scorpious (deep space)  steve perigrine took
23 gamma days - surface 10
24 captain jack's theme - foster & gold 
    


NUGGETS REVISITED

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I was reading an article the other day about Lenny Kaye's original Nuggets LP.In the United Kingdom the LP was supposedly  released (originally) with some extra or different  songs. I do not know if this is indeed true but it did get me to thinking about compiling another "lost" version of the classic LP  Let me know what you think!  Same musicians> different tunes. Once again it was fun trying to track down some of these selections


01 get me to the world on time - electric prunes
02 why pick on me - standells
03 cara-lin - strangeloves
04 one track mind - knickerbockers
05 i can't make a friend - vagrants
06 maid of sugar,maid of spice - mouse & the traps
07 i can't keep from crying - blues project
08 i'm gonna make you mine - shadows of knight
09 out of the question - seeds
10 are you a boy or are you a girl - barbarians
11 heart - remains
12 lady fingers - magicians
13 goodbye babe - castaways
14 everbody needs somebody to love - 13th floor elevators
15 they're gonna get you - count five
16 flashback( that rhythm thing) - leaves
17 in the midnight hour - micheal & the messengers
18 ben franklin's almanac - cryan' shames
19 migration - amboy dukes
20 gloria - blues magoos
21 i ain't no miracle worker - chocolate watchband
22 me about you - mojo men
23 the shape of things to come - third rail
24 another time - sagittarius
25 under the ice - nazz
26 get on this plane - premiers
27 let the rain be me - magic mushrooms



COSMIC SPINACH

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Ultimate Spinach was one of the most well-known, and perhaps the most notorious, of the groups to be hyped as part of the "Bosstown Sound" in 1968. The name itself guaranteed attention, as one of the most ludicrous and heavy-handed "far out" monikers of the psychedelic era, even outdoing formidable competition such as the Peanut Butter Conspiracy. Although the group were competent musicians with streaks of imagination, their albums were generally poor third cousins to the West Coast psychedelic groups that served as their obvious inspirations.

On the first two of their three albums, Ultimate Spinach was utterly dominated by leader Ian Bruce-Douglas, who wrote all of the material, sang the majority of the lead vocals, and played a wide variety of instruments, most frequently electric keyboards. Their self-titled debut, released in 1967, was a seriously intended psychedelic stew, with inadvertent comically awkward results. Bruce-Douglas' songs tended to be either dippily, humorlessly cosmic, or colored by equally too-serious fingerpointing at mainstream society. The music aped the songwriting forms and guitar/keyboard textures of West Coast psychedelic stars the Doors, the Jefferson Airplane, and Country Joe & the Fish, but sounded like ham-handed pastiches. Bruce-Douglas created some sleek, weedy electric keyboard lines on tracks like "Sacrifice of the Moon," but was sometimes so imitative of Country Joe & the Fish's first album that he crossed the line into plagiarism, as on "Baroque #1," with its close similarities to Country Joe's "The Masked Marauder." There were more graceful touches in the occasional vocals by guitarist Barbara Hudson and a Baroque-classical tinge to some of the arrangements, and the album did actually sell fairly well.

Behold and See, also released in 1968, was similar to the debut album but a little more even-keeled. That wasn't all good news: there weren't any keyboard-dominated instrumentals to rival "Sacrifice of the Moon," Barbara Hudson didn't have any lead vocals (although guest vocalist Carol Lee Britt took some), and Bruce-Douglas' songwriting was still embarrassingly high-minded and pretentious. The mysterious Bruce-Douglas disbanded Ultimate Spinach after the second LP was recorded, leaving Lorber holding the bag, as a third Ultimate Spinach album had already been scheduled for release. An entirely different lineup was assembled for their third and last album, with only Barbara Hudson remaining from the one heard on the first LP. Also including Ted Myers (ex-Lost and Chamaeleon Church) and guitarist Jeff Baxter (later to play with Steely Dan and the Doobie Brothers), this version of Ultimate Spinach recorded III. The record was an undistinguished jumble of psychedelic, hard rock, and pop styles that sounded like the work of several different bands.

And as real spinach you must have an acquired taste to appreciate this one


Tracks 1-7  from the debut "Ultimate Spinach" LP

Tracks 8-14  from the "Behold And See" LP

Tracks 15-20  from the "Ultimate Spinach III" LP

Tracks 21-24  from the "Live At The Unicorn" LP






C OR K....IT'S STILL RED

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 As I was putting this post together it dawned on me that I  had just posted a selection by one of rock music and the 60's most "eccentric" musicians in regards to Ian Bruce-Douglas ,the leader and founder of Ultimate Spinach. Here is another post by another of those people that fall into the same
category. Texas' own freeform-psychedelic group The Red Crayola was led by Mayo Thompsom. 
As with the previous posting one will need that extra effort to digest this one.

 One of the longest-lived underground rock groups (if not the longest-lived), the Red Krayola lasted through the birth pangs of psychedelia past the death throes of post-punk. The one constant in their ever-shifting lineup has been principal singer/songwriter/visionary Mayo Thompson, who has seemed as concerned with deconstructing the language of "rock" music as with actually expressing himself within it. That has made the Red Krayola's catalog challenging, often difficult listening. The saving grace is the quirky charm of Thompson's songs and vocals, with a whimsical humor and open-mindedness rather atypical of avant rock.
  The Red Krayola, initially spelled Red Crayola, were formed in Houston as a trio in 1966. The International Artists label, which was building a roster of Texas psychedelic bands, signed the group after watching one of its performances in a shopping mall, of all places. The company was convinced that if the musicians could entertain a crowd without anything in the way of conventional command of their instruments, they must be onto something. Early demos  indicated a spacy folk-rock bent. But although some of the material was reprised on its debut, The Parable of Arable Land, by this time the group was taking a more confrontational, experimental approach in the studio. With "war sucks!" chants and layers of "free-form freak-out" noise threatening to smother the songs underneath, the Red Krayola have been hailed as a precursor to the assault of industrial rock and made their International Artists labelmates the 13th Floor Elevators sound almost normal. Although the Krayola, like the Elevators, were able to attract a small cult following, that following consisted of a very small group of hardcore devotees, centered around hip metropolises like San Francisco and New York.
   An even more avant-garde follow-up, Coconut Hotel, was rejected for release by International Artists. A gentler, more song-based effort appeared in its place (God Bless the Red Krayola and All Who Sail on Her). But by the late '60s the Krayola had disbanded, partially due to disputes with their label. Thompson released a solo album in 1970 that was the very definition of "quirky," with an eclectic folk-rock base that bore some rough similarities to Syd Barrett's work. the Red Krayola, however, were put in deep freeze as Thompson concentrated on non-musical media.


the Krayola were unexpectedly resurrected in the late '70s, however. Thompson had moved to England, where he found that the old Red Krayola recordings enjoyed a cult among hip listeners. Thompson was never a champion of hippie ideals, and he was able to make the transition into the punk era effectively by forming new incarnations of the Red Krayola with such musicians as Gina Birch (the Raincoats), Epic Soundtracks (Swell Maps), and Lora Logic (X-Ray Spex). the Red Krayola's releases on underground European labels like Rough Trade and Recommended presented an ensemble that dove into the heart of post-punk, with skronky guitars and horns and disjointed, arty song structures.
Thompson joined Pere Ubu for a while in the early '80s. He always kept the Red Krayola going, however, although most of their releases went all but unheard in the U.S., as they were only available as obscure European indie imports. The situation changed to some degree in the mid-'90s, when the Krayola landed a U.S. deal with Drag City and Thompson returned to the States after a long residency in Europe


Tracks 1-23  from the LPs Parable of Arable Land and God Bless The Red Crayola and All Who Sail With Her

Track 24( and all unnumbered tracks thereafter) is the complete 3rd Lp  Coconut Hotel in all it's glory ( I guess that is the only way to describe it)



LUMPY'S VEGETABLE GRAVY

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Hugh Brannum (January 5, 1910 – April 19, 1987) was an American vocalist, arranger, composer and actor best known for his role as "Mr. Green Jeans" on the children's television show Captain Kangaroo. During his days with Fred Waring and his Pennsylvanians, he used his childhood nickname "Lumpy".

Mr. Green Jeans earned his moniker from his distinctive apparel, a pair of farmer's overalls (later, jeans and a denim jacket) in his signature green (although, since the show was broadcast in black-and-white for much of its run, this was lost on viewers). He was a talented and inquisitive handyman who provided assistance at the Treasure House. He frequently visited the Captain with the latest addition to his menagerie of zoo animals.

Aside from Mr. Green Jeans, Brannum played a number of characters on Captain Kangaroo from 1955 to 1984, including The Professor, Greeno The Clown, The New Old Folk Singer, and Mr. Bainter the Painter. His role as Mr. Green Jeans was partly based on stories about a farm kid named "Little Orley" that he told with the Fred Waring orchestra, on the radio and on 78-rpm records under the pseudonym "Uncle Lumpy". According to Bob Keeshan, Mr. Green Jeans was an extension of Brannum's real personality. The shows were performed before a live audience. During one episode of Captain Kangaroo, a lion cub bit Brannum's finger and drew blood. Brannum stuck his bleeding hand into his pocket and never broke character for the remainder of the episode.

A long-running but incorrect rumor claims Brannum was the father of musician Frank Zappa, apparently because of a Zappa composition titled "Son of Mr. Green Genes" on his 1969 album, Hot Rats.


01 mr green genes - frank zappa & the mothers of invention
02 mr farmer - seeds
03 call any vegetable - frank zappa & the mothers of invention
04 jolly green giant - kingsmen
05 a little bit of cucumber - harry champion
06 vegetable man - pink floyd
07 jenny artichoke - kaleidoscope (uk)
08 why is a carrot oranger than an orange - amboy dukes
09 horseradish - horses
10 vega-tables - beach boys
11 cabbage and kings - charlie applewhite
12 lonely in potatoland - spirit
13 sweet potato - ming garage
14 pass the peas - jb's
15 mr farmer - strawberry alarm clock
16 butterbean - b52's
17 green plant - majic ship
18 green peppers - herb alpert & the tijuana brass
19 carrots on a string - mystery trend
20 hot potatoes - kinks
21 beans in my ears - pete seeger
22 green onions - booker t & the mg's
23 the eggplant that ate chicago - dr west's medicine show & junk band
24 glass onion - beatles



INSTRA-MENTAL OMEGA

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Here you have it! The final volume of the Instra-Mentals presentation.  By now I think everyone knows my favorite number is 24. Omega is the 24th and last letter in the Greek alphabet I think?
Maybe down the road I will fire it up for a few more sets.... who knows ? Maybe your feedback will help with the motivational process. I  will be putting a little extra effort in some theme based instros like the "surf-mentals"' and "space-mentals" posts  Give me your ideas!
I do hope that I was able to touch on some of your favorite instrumentals..and gave you a chance to listen to some you may never have heard before... 

01 fasten seat belt - space
02 pachuco gavotte - frank zappa
03 wheels - string-a-longs
04 funk butt - rhinoceros
05 falcon lake (ash on the floor)- buffalo springfield
06 czardas - nero & the gladiators
07 iron horse - john barry seven
08 cause we've ended as lovers - jeff beck
09 consuelate - blues image
10 gimme three steps - steel guitars
11 cosmo's theme - majic ship
12 the millionaire - billy j kramer & the dakotas 
13 le fire - electric prunes
14 home on the strange - big brother & the holding compant
15 plum nellie (soul dressing) - bookrt t & the mg's
16 perfida - ventures
17 and then there were drums - sandy nelson
18 foot platter - fireballs
19 fifth horseman of the apocalypse - ultimate spinach
20 buffalo stomp (raga )   - buffalo springfield
21 high voltage - johnny & the hurricanes
22 theme from a few dollars more - babe ruth
23 likacowpi - blackstone
24 edward. the mad shirt grinder = quicksilver messenger service



AND SOMETIMES Y

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Crosby, Stills And Nash (and sometimes Young)

Four Way Harmonies
Outtakes and unreleased tracks from the early years, plus a few live recordings.


Track 01. Our Mouse (Crosby-Nash dialogue) 
Track 02. Wooden Ships (embryonic first demo - no lyrics yet)
Track 03. Laughing (1968 Crosby demo)
Track 04. Wooden Ships (first studio take by Crosby and Stills, 1968) 
Track 05. Suite: Judy Blue Eyes (instrumental with bass and drums)
Track 06. Marrakesh Express (early rough mix; overdubs missing) 
Track 07. Guinnevere (alternate mix with full band - electric guitars, drums and bass) 
Track 08. Guinnevere (early acoustic version) 
Track 09. Lady of the Island (rough mix with discarded Crosby duet vocals) 
Track 10. Pre-Road Downs (rough mix with missing chorus vocal ) 
Track 11. Helplessly Hoping (with full band - guitars drums and bass) 
Track 12. Cinnamon Girl (1969 instrumental studio take of Neil Young's song)
Track 13. I've Loved Her So Long (CSNY live, Aug. 26, 1969, Los Angeles, Neil's song) 
Track 14. And So Begins the Task (CSNY live, Dec. 13, 1969, Chicago, Stephen Stills' song) 
Track 15. Little Miss Bright Eyes (unreleased Stills song, late 1969 studio outtake)
Track 16. Long Time Gone (Tom Jones with CSNY, Sept. 6, 1969, "This Is Tom Jones" TV show 
Track 17. Come On in My Kitchen (Stills coaxing Crosby into singing the blues song)


RADIO FREE JERRY

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JERRY GARCIA
with John Kahn, Bill Kruetzman and Merl Saunders

Live at Pacific High Studio, San Francisco, CA; February 6, 1972. Very good FM broadcast.



The February 6, 1972 performance was the first official broadcast in the Bay Area of Jerry Garcia performing his own music, separate from the Grateful Dead. For many, it was the first chance that  non-club goers - including teenagers who made up much of the Grateful Dead’s audience - had to hear the Garcia/Saunders ensemble. Since KSAN continued to play tracks from it on the air for years, it also served as de facto publicity for Garcia/Saunders, since they would not release the Live At Keystone album until January 1974, almost two years later. And finally, the set was recorded at the very same studio where the Dead had recorded Workingman’s Dead just two years prior. - 



Disc 1
Track 101. It Takes A Train To Cry * 7:49 
Track 102. Expressway 13:32 
Track 103. That’s The Touch 8:04
Track 104. Save Mother Earth ** 9:30
Track 105. Imagine 8:34 
48 mins

Disc 2
Track 201. That’s All Right Mama 10:19
Track 202. Who’s Loving You Tonight? 9:46 
Track 203. When I Paint My Masterpiece 6:48
Track 204. I Was Made To Love Her ** 9:26
Track 205. Lonely Avenue 9:54 
Track 206. How Sweet It Is 8:04 
55 mins


Lineup:
Jerry Garcia - guitar, vocals
Merl Saunders - keyboards, vocals
John Kahn - bass
Bill Kruetzman - drums


MISSING HARMONY TRACKS

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For those  who are missing tracks 4 and 12 from the CSNY Harmonies post they can br found here.
Sorry for the problem and I still do not know what happened so meanwhile here is a fix

Thanks to the folks that reported the error


FLYIN' AT THE DILLO

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THE BYRDS
McGuinn, Clark and Hillman

Live at Armadillo World Headquarters, Austin, TX;
 March 22, 1979. Very good FM broadcast.

Track 01. Sad Boy 4:41
Track 02. Long Long Time 2:51 
Track 03. Little Mama 4:16
Track 04. Don’t You Write Her Off 3:11
Track 05. Release Me Girl 3:41
Track 06. Turn Turn Turn 3:17
Track 07. Surrender To Me 3:15 
Track 08. Chestnut Mare 6:00 
Track 09. It Doesn’t Matter 2:50
Track 10. Feelin’ Higher 3:49
Track 11. You Ain’t Goin’ Nowhere 5:14
Track 12. Backstage Pass 4:39 
Track 13. Stopping Traffic 3:55 
Track 14. So You Wanna Be A Rock And Roll Star/encore call 4:11 
Track 15. Mr Tambourine Man 2:17 
Track 16. Eight Miles High 4:43
Track 17. I’ll Feel A Whole Lot Better 2:55 
Track 18. Bye Bye, Baby 4:09
70 mins


Lineup:
Roger McGuinn - guitar, vocals
Gene Clark - vocals. guitar
Chris Hillman - bass, vocals
John Sambataro - guitars, background vocals
Greg Thomas - drums


STILL DOORS

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Manzarek–Krieger was an American rock band formed by two former members of The Doors, Ray Manzarek and Robby Krieger, in 2002. They were also known as The Doors of the 21st Century, D21C, and Riders on the Storm. They settled on using Manzarek–Krieger or Ray Manzarek and Robby Krieger of The Doors for legal reasons, with acrimonious debates between the two musicians and Doors co-songwriter / drummer John Densmore. They performed Doors material exclusively until the death of Manzarek in 2013.

Track 101. Intro 
Track 102. Roadhouse Blues 
Track 103. Break On Through
Track 104. Love Me Two Times
Track 105. When The Music’s Over
Track 106. The Alabama Song
Track 107. Back Door Man 
Track 108. Five To One 
Track 109. Robbie Krieger Flamenco Solo )
Track 110. Spanish Caravan 

Disc 2
Track 201. band introduction 
Track 202. Peace Frog 
Track 203. Wild Child 
Track 204. Eagle In A Whirlpool 
Track 205. Not To Touch The Earth 
Track 206. Touch Me
Track 207. L.A. Woman 
Track 208. audience 
Track 209. Riders On The Storm 
Track 210. audience 
Track 211. Light My Fire (false keyboard sound
Track 212. Light My Fire 

Lineup:
Ray Manzarek - keyboards, vocals
Robbie Krieger - guitars
Ian Astbury - vocals
Philip Chen - bass
Ty Dennis - drums




KANTNER AND FRIENDS

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 Perro, or Planet Earth Rock and Roll Orchestra, was the name given to the group of musicians who played, recorded and jammed together in the early 70′s. They were, essentially, members of Jefferson Airplane, Grateful Dead, Quicksilver Messenger Service, and Crosby, Stills and Nash. Their first album together, Blows Against The Empire, was released, not as the Planet Earth Rock and Roll Orchestra, but as Jefferson Starship (a name later used for Grace Slick and Paul Kantner’s band formed in 1974). They then officially became Planet Earth Rock and Roll Orchestra on David Crosby’s If I Could Only Remember My Name.

In 1971, these musicians got together for rehearsals at Wally Heider Studios and, luckily for us, these sessions were recorded (see below) yielding some truly remarkable music and interactions between this collective group of inspired and supremely talented artists. They were as follows:

    David Crosby – guitar, vocals
    Graham Nash – guitar, vocals
    Paul Kantner – guitar, banjo, vocals
    Grace Slick – piano, vocals
    Jorma Kaukonen – lead guitar
    Jack Casady – bass
    Jerry Garcia – guitar, vocals
    Phil Lesh – bass
    Bill Kreutzmann – drums
    Mickey Hart – percussion
    David Freiberg – viola, vocals
     and others

 The following LP's were recorded as PERRO and each was released as solo works by the main artist......

1970  Blows Against The Empire - Paul Kantner and Jefferson Starship
1970  If I Could Only Remember My Name - David Crosby
1971  Songs For Beginners - Graham Nash
1971  Sunfighter - Paul Kantner and Grace Slick
1972  Graham Nash and David Crosby - Nash and Crosby
1972  Rolling Thunder - Mickey Hart
1973  Baron Von Tollbooth And The Chrome Nun - Kantner, Slick and David Freiberg

A return to the title Planet Earth Rock and Roll Orchestra was used for a 1983 Lp by Kantner and others

Planet Earth Rock N' Roll Orchestra
Wally Heider Recording Studios
San Francisco, CA
1970-1971
Recorded By Stephen Barncard

Disk 1

01: Jorma And Jerry's Jam 1
02: Dope Rap With Piano
03: Solo Piano
04: Jam Slide
05: Wooden Ships Jam
06: Walking IN The Mountains
07: Is It Really Monday
08: Mountain Song #1
09: Loser #1, #2
10: Under Anesthesia(False Start),aka"You Sit There"
11: Under Anesthesia, aka "You Sit There"
12: Mountain Song #3

Disk 2

01: Wall Song #1
02: Over Jordan, aka "Wayfaring Stranger"
03: Wild Turkey, aka "Leather Winged Bat"
04: Loser #3,#4
05: Epp Hour, aka "Rounds"
06: Wall Song #2
07: Mountain Song #4
08: Tamalphais High(At About 3),aka "Kids And Dogs"
09: Kids And Dogs
10: NO Song
11: Violin Jam
12: Guitar Solo 1





CATCH THE LIGHT

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Freelight was a San Francisco based jazz fusion band - formed 1977 - who completed demos early in 1978 and went label hunting. Although they recorded several tracks, they never made it past a solid demo stage. Eventually litigation over the tapes resulted in their demise. The band broke up after a final and triumphant performance at the Troubador in Los Angeles

The band was actually the creation of Pam Tillis (Mel's daughter) John Cipollina was a key member during the band's existence. This was a much different look into John's participation in one of his many band memberships in that his was a supporting player for the group leader Tillis. Still, there are quite a few fine moments where Cipollina was given some freedom to do what he did best.


 Included in the share are both the tracks from the Freelight demo sessions and the live performance from the Troubador 

Track 3 - If the Dream Came True 3:37
Track 9 -9. Freelight 9:50
All other demo recordings are untitled
If you know these titles the info is welcome

The live recording is as follows
Instrumental, Drunken Irish setter, Ruthless thing, Freelight, Band introductions -> Angel in love, Raining in LA, If the dream came true, The truth

Line-up : John Cipollina, Pam Tillis, Jarrett Washington, Curt Olsen, Tim Timmermans, Gary Schwantes




SONGBIRD

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I recently had a request for a comp about flying and more specificaly high flyin bird. Originally recorded by Judy Henske around 64 it began to take root as a highly recorded tune by very many artists. The song's original writer Billy Edd Wheeler recorded his own version in 67. Jefferson Airplane played the song as one of it's staples and it brought even more awareness to the music scene and it's artists Here are a few versions .

There's a high flying bird up in the sky
And I wonder if that bird looks down as he flies by
Riding on the air so easy in the sky

Sun comes along, lights up the sky
And when he gets tired he slides on over the way
East to the west he gets gone every day

But lord, look at me here
Rooted like a tree here
I got the sit down, can't cry
Oh lord, I'm gonna die blues

I used to have an old man, he worked in the mines
He never saw the sunlight by, oh lord he kept on a-trying
Then one day my daddy he up and died


My old man up and died
My daddy up and died
He had to fly away
And the only way to fly was to die

There's a high flying bird up in the sky
And I wonder if that bird looks down as he flies by
Riding on the air so easy in the sky

But lord, look at me here
Rooted like a tree here
I got the sit down, can't cry
Oh lord, I'm gonna die blues

01 judy henske
02 billy edd wheeler
03 catchin 'grapes
04 h p lovecraft
05 ritchie havens
06 rejoice
07 simone dina
08 carolyn hester
09 au go go singers
10 alta delacruz
11 good time singers
12 jefferson airplane
13 gram parsons
14 balladeers
15 zephyr
16 boss & the conch shells
17 ill wind
18 wizards from kansas
19 shaw,allen and shaw
20 rookies
21 plague
22 doghouse friday
23 possum river
24 neil young & crazy horse

ERMA AND THE FLAG

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ELECTRIC FLAG
Featuring Erma Franklin
San Francisco 1968
Live at the Carousel Ballroom, San Francisco, CA; April 21, 1968. 
Very good to excellent stereo soundboard.

The Electric Flag was an American blues rock soul group, led by guitarist Mike Bloomfield, keyboardist Barry Goldberg and drummer Buddy Miles, and featuring other musicians such as vocalist Nick Gravenites and bassist Harvey Brooks. Bloomfield formed the Electric Flag in 1967, following his stint with the Butterfield Blues Band. The band reached its peak with the 1968 release, A Long Time Comin', a fusion of rock, jazz, and R&B styles that charted well in the Billboard Pop Albums chart. 
Erma Franklin is sister to the well-known Aretha. Erma’s career for Shout! Records resulted in several single releases in 1967 including Big Boss Man and her take of Piece Of My Heart, which Janis Joplin defined as her stomping ground. This recording was made when Erma took the stage at the Carousel Ballroom in San Francisco for three nights in April from 19 to 21, 1968. Backing her was Mike Bloomfield’s Electric Flag, a blues rock group


Track 01. Uptight (Everything’s Alright) 3:49 
Track 02. Day Tripper 3:13 
Track 03. Driving Wheel 7:45 
Track 04. The Theme 16:12 
Track 05. Goin’ Down Slow 2:24
Track 06. Instrumental Jam 8:36 
(Erma is introduced)
Track 07. Big Boss Man 3:07 )
Track 08. Dr Feelgood (Love is a Serious Business) 5:34
Track 09. Medley 4:04 
Track 10. Piece of My Heart 3:28 
Track 11. Hold On, I’m Comin 7:35 
Track 12. Everyday I Have The Blues 7:09 
Track 13. Killing Floor (cuts out) 5:39  


WHOOKEEPER

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One of the "classic" early bootlegs, this double-LP did collectors a tremendous favor by assembling almost all of the Who's rare studio recordings -- from non-LP B-sides and U.K.-only singles and EPs -- into one convenient place, in excellent sound, although most or all of it was probably dubbed from vinyl. And it's not extraneous stuff -- much of it, like "Daddy Rolling Stone,""Shout and Shimmy,""The Last Time,""Dogs," and "Heaven and Hell," is great. Just about everything has subsequently appeared on official reissues (although the 1966 instrumental B-side "Waltz for a Pig," which is actually Graham Bond and not the Who, has not). Although MCA would not appreciate the observation, the fact remains that this is the best and most well-sequenced Who rarity compilation, with sound that is not significantly different from legitimate releases. And there's the significant bonus of side four, which has incendiary live performances (in fair-to-good quality) from various mid-'60s TV programs .AllMusic Review by Richie Unterberger    

Artwork for the LP done by William Stout. A great takeoff of the Nabisco Co.'s Animal Cookie box

William Stout is a famously diverse artist of international renown in many fields: themed entertainment and motion picture design (specializing in science fiction/fantasy/horror films), comic book art, book illustration, poster design, CD covers, public murals, and dynamic yet accurate reconstructions of prehistoric life. His endeavors in the fields of movies and comics have gained him a loyal following, making him a popular guest at comic book, science fiction and horror movie conventions around the world


The original bootleg was a double LP upon it's release. I have compiled 24 tracks from the first 3 sides of the LP." In LP sequence" I omitted side 4 which was touched on above I chose to bring you this with my standard 24 track selection. Early Who material was of more interest to me than later arena style music. I myself would prefer " Pictures of Lily" over "Won't Get Fooled Again" and such later material. maybe I am weird but I lost my interest in the Who somewhere around "Tommy"


A1I'm The Face  ( High Numbers)
A2Zoot Suit ( High Numbers)
A3Bald-Headed Woman
A4Daddy Rolling Stone
A5Anytime You Want Me
A6Shout And Shimmy
A7I'm A Man
A8Waltz For A Pig
B1Batman
B2Bucket "T"
B3Barbara Ann
B4Disguises
B5Circles
B6I'm A Boy
B7In The City
B8I've Been Away
B9Heat Wave
C1The Last Time
C2Under My Thumb
C3Mary Anne With The Shaky Hand
C4Dogs
C5Dogs Part Two
C6Here For More
C7Heaven And Hell 
C8When I Was A Boy




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