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Tippaporn

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Everything posted by Tippaporn

  1. Poor Boy Blues from King Curtis & Champion Jack Dupree off of the album Blues At Montreux. Recorded June 17th '71 at the Montreux Jazz Festival, Switzerland, with Cornell Dupree on guitar, Jerry Jemmott on bass and Oliver Jackson on drums. Filmed two months before King Curtis' tragic death.
  2. Paul Butterfield Blues Band performing Work Song at the Unicorn Coffee House, Boston, MA in the spring of '66.
  3. Tom Waits with Ice Cream Man off of his '73 Closing Time LP.
  4. Big Mama Thornton with the classic Let's Go Get Stoned off of her '69 Stronger Than Dirt LP.
  5. Lightnin' Hopkins with Woke up This Morning off of his '71 Lightnin' Strikes, Vol. 1 album.
  6. Sister Rosetta Tharpe performing the gospel classic This Train off of the The Authorized Sister Rosetta Tharpe Collection released in 2011.
  7. Manic Depression outtake from Are U Experienced? recorded on 23th Feb. '67 at the UK De Lane Lea Studios.
  8. The Flying Burrito Brothers performing Lazy Days live at the Fillmore East in '70.
  9. A mesmerising performance of the premier jazz classic, Take Five, with Paul Desmond (alto sax), Joe Morello (drums), Eugene Wright (bass) and Dave Brubeck (piano) performed live in Belgium in '64. I don't care much for jazz but this is exceptional music. Being able to watch them play up close just adds to the experience.
  10. Chuck Berry doing The Blues live from the BBC in '72.
  11. John Lennon & Yoko Ono with Song For John recorded in '69 and found on the Unfinished Music No. 2: Life With The Lions release.
  12. Chicken Shack with Christine Perfect (McVie) on vocals on When The Train Comes Back off of their '68 Forty Blue Fingers, Freshly Packed And Ready To Serve album.
  13. Wrong thread. It's a great tune and there are no coincidences so I'll let it stand. There must be a reason for this gaffe . . .
  14. Chicken Shack with Christine Perfect (McVie) on vocals on When The Train Comes Back off of their '68 Forty Blue Fingers, Freshly Packed And Ready To Serve album.
  15. Mahoney's Last Stand is an album by Faces bandmates Ronnie Wood and Ronnie Lane, recorded in '72 and released in '76. Here's 'Mona' The Blues.
  16. David Lynch with his '92 The Pink Room single.
  17. Someone recently suggested I play some esoteric rock music. Again, not naming names. George Harrison and the London Hare Krishna devotees recorded the Hare Krishna mantra in '69 and released it as a single.
  18. The Rolling Stones with Dead Flowers off of their '71 Sticky Fingers LP.
  19. Neil Young with Are You Ready For The Country off of his '74 Harvest album.
  20. The Byrds performing One Hundred Years From Now off of their '68 Sweetheart Of The Rodeo LP.
  21. Theirs was an unlikely union, but bluegrass fiddle player/vocalist Alison Krauss loved Led Zeppelin and Robert Plant loved country. This single from their 2008 hit album Raising Sand was originally on Plant and Jimmy Page’s reunion studio LP Walking Into Clarksdale. But Krauss’s charming voice breathed new life into a song that built to an almost Zeppelin-style climax, with Plant oohing and aahing like a randy old hillbilly goat.
  22. Metallica's James Hetfield bared his soul on Mama Said from their '96 Load LP.
  23. A squirt of ketchup on the rained-out picnic of '79’s Led Zeppelin In Through The Out Door, Hot Dog was pure joy, and pure rockabilly country circa 1957.
  24. Steve Earle with the title track off of his '88 Copperhead Road LP.
  25. Pete Townshend & Ronnie Lane with Annie off of their collaborative '77 Rough Mix LP.
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