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Tippaporn

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Everything posted by Tippaporn

  1. Yup, I was definitely on the wrong continent, LOL. I was stateside during most of the 60's, other than a two year stint in Germany from '66~'67. Rawhide I'm familiar with as I used to watch it. The rest were Belgian and Dutch, other than Ivanhoe, which was British. Whilst in Germany I didn't watch any TV, other than football. Only listened to music on the BBC.
  2. Bonnie Raitt performing Love Me Like A Man live at Henry J. Kaiser Auditorium, Oakland, CA on Nov. 26, '89. Time to turn the reigns over to Mutt Daeng.
  3. Some nice historic footage of Sister Rosetta Tharpe live in Machester in '64. This video needs an upward volume adjustment as at normal volume it's muted.
  4. Memphis Minnie with Me And My Chauffeur Blues recorded on May 21, 41.
  5. Elizabeth Cotten with an instructional movie clip of Freight Train illustrating the two-finger, or rather thumb and index finger "cotton pickin" style.
  6. British blues lady Jo-Ann Kelly from Streatham, South London, England with Louisiana Blues off of her '69 self-titled album. I would imagine many hearing this without any knowledge of who the artist is would easily mistake it for a classic American black female blues artist. Top shelf blues.
  7. Bessie Smith, with chorus, in a '29 movie clip performing St. Louis Blues.
  8. Koko Taylor with I'm A Woman off of her '73 The Earthshaker album.
  9. Big Mama Thorton live in '71 performing Rock Me Baby. Dustin Hoffman makes a guest audience appearance at the start.
  10. Let's not forget the ladies. Etta James performing I'd Rather Go Blind live at Montreux in '75.
  11. John Lee Hooker, Carlos Santana and Etta James performing Blues Boogie Jam live at the Fillmore Auditorium, San Fran, on 18 July '86.
  12. Lightnin' Hopkins performing Going To Louisiana, That Woman Can't Carry No Heavy Load and other numbers live at Austin City Limits in '79.
  13. I didn't see you post McDowell's version of Baby Please Don't Go before I posted Them's version. I must have unwittingly gotten on your wavelength, Mutt Daeng. So to bring this full circle here's Big Joe Williams recording of Baby Please Don't Go from '35.
  14. Albert King showing some raw guitar power with Blues Power off of his '68 Live Wire/Blues Power album.
  15. And who can forget their '68 title track Journey To The Center Of The Mind?
  16. Lots of artists covered Baby Please Don't Go over the years but for shear energy I go with the version found on the Amboy Dukes self-title 37 debut album. Ted Nugent rocks on this number, both on vocals and on guitar.
  17. A true classic. Them with their '64 A-side single cover of the delta blues standard first recorded by Big Joe Williams in '35, Baby Please Don't Go.
  18. For the sake of comparison, the Led Zeppelin version of Dazed And Confused. A much more polished version. Especially John Bonham's drumming.
  19. This album was released for a week around 1999 and then pulled, apparently by Jimmy Page, In 1968 The Yardbirds went into the studio to record a second album (after Little Games) with Jimmy Page, only 6 tracks were completed. This was one of them.
  20. Awesome guitar solo, MJCM. My body thanks you for that. No more stiffness. I'm all loosened up now.
  21. I missed it. I must of been on the wrong continent at the time.
  22. Smiling Phases off of their self-titled Blood, Sweat & Tears second album released in '69. I never owned the album. I didn't have to. My neighbor always played it loud enough for me to hear.
  23. Another progressive late 60's rock band that successfully incorporated brass and horns was Blood, Sweat & Tears. I Love You More Than You'll Ever Know off of their '68 debut Child Is Father To The Man album.

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