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Blast from the Past - 60's, 70's, 80's,90's Music (2023)


CharlieH

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The guitarist of the Beatles may not be a prodigy of technique but his originality and innovation on the six strings are available to very few, making George Harrison the most identifiable slide guitarist in history. Just listen to the first notes of his slide on this song and you will already find all the essentials you need, an extension of his personality, spiritual, happy and sad at the same time, like a breath of life made music. It is a piece of sublime music and, possibly, the one that best reflects his peculiar and unique sound on the slide, a sound that seems like a reflection of his own soul.

 

Give Me Love (Give Me Peace On Earth) off of his '73 Living In The Material World LP.
 

 

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Mick Taylor is another of the greats of the slide of all time, and he has left masterful examples throughout his career, whether with John Mayall or Bob Dylan, but the most important are in his four years as a member of "the greatest rock and roll band of all time ", the Rolling Stones. There are many examples, like his incredible Love In Vain on Get Yer Ya-Ya's Out or on several songs from Exile On Main Street, but I prefer the two incredible solos with his Les Paul (the first one with slide and the second one my favourite of his whole career) of the wonderful Sway, one of the best songs off the '71 Sticky Fingers album.

 

 

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You cannot write an article about slide and not talk about Duane Allman, it's like talking about Coca and not about Cola, about Lennon without naming McCartney ... I could have done this special with 10 Duane solos perfectly but I decided to choose only one by each artist. It could have been one of the Allman Brothers like Statesboro Blues, Mountain Song or anything from the Fillmore but in the end I decided on this one, much less representative but totally unique. Duane is pushed by Clapton (just like Clapton for him) and returns some of the most incredible notes in history with his slide. Nobody, not even Duane, returned to the intensity of his first solo, still in the electric part, or the melancholy that displays his strange solo in the coda, a perfect example of what Beethoven said: "to play a wrong note it's insignificant... to play without passion is inexcusable. " If Tom Dowd, the producer of the album, spoke of telepathy to explain the relationship between Duane and Clapton, here it is as if the eldest Allman was able to read the mind of the former Cream member, feeling all the passion, pain and rejection of his relationship with Pattie Harrison and transforming them into musical notes.

 

 Duane Allman with Derek & The Dominos on Layla off of the '70 Layla And Other Assorted Love Songs album.
 

 

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Another slide giant, Johnny Winter. If Duane used a bottle of Corcidin to play it, Winter opted for a piece of pipe, which would become one of his hallmarks. In April of 1969 he released Johnny Winter, his first album for Columbia, which opened with one of his best songs, I'm Yours & I'm Hers, which highlighted his playing and a much more rock sound than usual, although on this album was not yet using his iconic Firebird but a Fender XII 66 with six strings. The song has two guitar tracks, Winter’s two, one with slide and one without, which sound at the same time - and the result is magnificent and became one of the favorite songs of Brian Jones (another one that could appear on that list). After his tragic death the Stones gave a free concert in Hyde Park and they opened it by interpreting this song.

 

 

Edited by Tippaporn
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Mike Bloomfield was one of the first white guitarists to use the slide. In his work there are a number of examples but I am left with this excellent single from the '69 album I Got Dem Ol 'Kozmic Blues Again Mama! from his friend Janis Joplin, who he helped, along with Nick Gravenites, to form a band after leaving Big Brother & The Holding Company. It is a great example of his mastery with the slide, which he had been playing since the time of Dylan's Highway 61 and, once again, his telepathy with the singers is proved again, perfectly accompanying Janis' blues lament.

 

 

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Krieger is one of the most original guitarists in history, and so it is normal that his slide sounds totally his own; something that was one of the first things that caught the attention of Jim Morrison. In 1965 the first song they played together was a composition by Morrison entitled Moonlight Drive. On it Krieger began to improvise several things with the slide, with a style so unique and far from the blues masters that the singer asked him to play on all the songs. When finally they recorded it, on their second '67 Strange Days album, Krieger returned to recover the magic of those first sessions.
 

 

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Elmore James is the most important electric slide guitarist of all time. On August 5, 1951, he decided to play in a recording session Dust My Broom, one of the songs from Robert Johnson's repertoire. The owner of the company decided to record it and the blues was changed forever. To the fierceness of his voice he added his aggressive use of the slide with the famous riff that would give him a place in posterity. It was recorded live through a single microphone and there were no more takes or songs. It did not matter, the rural blues had turned into an electric thunderstorm and the direction of popular music had changed forever. If you want to make the parallelism, this is the Johnny B. Goode of the slide guitar. There is a 99.9% chance that if you put a slide on one of your fingers you will play this riff ...

One of my personal all time favourite blues numbers.

 

 

Edited by Tippaporn
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It is impossible to separate the figure of Robert Johnson from his legend; we do not really know much about one of the most legendary 'bluesmen' in history but we could say that it is unlikely that he sold his soul to the devil, at some crossroads, to be the best blues guitarist. What does seem clear is that his technique seems supernatural for the time. Listening to his incredible slide on the hypnotic Come On In My Kitchen, one understands that people would start crying in their concerts when he played it. The devil himself may never have appeared to him, but Robert Johnson fought against his own inner demons to give us some of the most visceral and heartfelt music of the twentieth century.

 

 

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From the moment that Sylvester Weaver recorded for the first time with a slide in 1923, the technique of using a metallic object to press the strings of a guitar has gradually been perfected.

 

The house of Blind Willie Johnson burned down in 1945, and that same night he returned to experience what he had masterfully left engraved almost 20 years previously, Dark Was the Night, Cold Was the Ground. Johnson slept on the ashes of one of the few roofs he had known in his life, poor, and with nowhere else to go he decided to stay in what was the ruins of his house until his death, a few months later. He was buried in a tomb without a name, without the world crying for one of the greatest talents that popular music of the first half of the 20th century has given. 32 years after that, Dark Was the Night, Cold Was the Ground left Earth aboard the Voyager Gold Disk, the spacecraft that Carl Sagan launched into space with the purpose that if there is intelligent life elsewhere in the galaxy they will have an idea of what humans were like. Along with works by Bach, Beethoven and Chuck Berry, Johnson will make us proud when some being listens to the languid notes of his slide on his Stella. Ry Cooder has no doubt that it is "the most moving and transcendent piece of all American music."

 

 

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22 hours ago, Mutt Daeng said:

Pride and Joy Stevie Ray Vaughan

 

You've put up some classic old blues numbers from the great blues musicians lately, Mutt Daeng.  All of them should have rated as 'popular posts.'  I'd up vote you more if I could.  :jap:

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On 8/10/2023 at 5:52 AM, bannork said:

Goodbye Robbie. One of your best songs imo. 

 

Should I be reviving my "Bring out your dead" themed series, bannork?  Or is it too depressing?  :biggrin:

Robbie Robertson, d. August 9, 2023.  I don't know how this tune ranks on the greatest songs of all time list but I would bet it's definitely way up there.  The Weight off of their '68 Music From Big Pink album.  Thanks for all the wonderful music.
 

 

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1 hour ago, Tippaporn said:

You've put up some classic old blues numbers from the great blues musicians lately, Mutt Daeng.  All of them should have rated as 'popular posts.'  I'd up vote you more if I could.  :jap:

I must apologise to posters for not giving more likes, the problem is on my phone so often the videos don't appear and I get that scowling face apparition. 

Tippers, please don't revive the dead in this thread, it was just too much of a downer!

But of course when the greats and not so greats head up into the blue sky yonder we must acknowledge their contribution to our and the world's happiness 

Here's Johnny in his inimitable style playing high octane boogie.

 

 

Edited by bannork
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 A nice channel on youtube is "later with Jool Holland"

A BBC program, all kinds of performers Iggy Pop, Paul McCartney, Amy Winehouse (RIP) , Johny Cash (RIP) and way more known and unknown.

Live audience, but good recorded. Love that program though miss it every time, forgetting it, checked, BBC 2 on 10 o'clock Saturday. Ok tomorrow it is Saturday, must not forget.

Picked this one, amazing bass loops.

 

 

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Just solo with his guitar, good voice, nice song.

 

 

 

Hahahaha, you remember this one? Well still going, though this is already 5 years ago

Great to see, he can bring the whole studio in party mood !

 

Wow this is such a beautiful song, incredible. maybe known on spotify but came upon this right now. Wow.

 Well there is a long list of performers, if you have a spare moment, see for your self

Great channel, great BBC program.

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21 hours ago, Tippaporn said:

Should I be reviving my "Bring out your dead" themed series, bannork?  Or is it too depressing?  :biggrin:

Robbie Robertson, d. August 9, 2023.  I don't know how this tune ranks on the greatest songs of all time list but I would bet it's definitely way up there.  The Weight off of their '68 Music From Big Pink album.  Thanks for all the wonderful music.
 

I never get tired of listening to The Weight.

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That tune immediately reminded by of Waylon Jennings' wife Jessi Colter's cover on her '78 That's The Way A Cowboy Rocks And Rolls.  I had bought that LP back then and listened to it many times, which is why it kindled my memory.  J.J. Cale was one of the guitarists on the album.

 

 

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