U2 on “The Tonight Show,” playing “Invisible,” Monday February 17, 2014.
Plus acoustic version:
-– A Days of the Crazy-Wild blog post: sounds, visuals and/or news –-
U2 on “The Tonight Show,” playing “Invisible,” Monday February 17, 2014.
Plus acoustic version:
-– A Days of the Crazy-Wild blog post: sounds, visuals and/or news –-
New Silversun Pickups’ song, “Cannibal.”
I like this one.
Live on “Jimmy Kimmel Live”:
-– A Days of the Crazy-Wild blog post: sounds, visuals and/or news –-
On January 17, 1965, Bob Dylan appeared on “The Les Crane Show” at WABC studios in New York.
He was interviewed at length by Les Crane, and he performed two songs: “It’s All Over Now, Baby Blue” and “It’s Alright Ma (I’m Only Bleedin’)”
Here’s a bit of the interview. The entire interview is reprinted below the audio.
Dylan: Well, I’m gonna try to make a movie this summer. Which Allen Ginsberg is writing. I’m rewriting …
Crane: Allen Ginsberg, the poet?
Dylan: Yeah, yeah.
Crane: He was on this program you know.
Dylan: Yeah.
Crane: Extolling the virtues of marijuana one night.
Dylan: Really? Allen?? (audience laughter). Sounds like a lie to me (audience laughter).
Crane: That’s really … You think I’m lying?
Dylan: No, I didn’t mean that.
Crane: Allen Ginsberg was sitting in that chair where Caterina Valente is sitting right now and he said that he thought that we ought to legalize pot.
Dylan: He said that?
Crane: Right on the television.
Dylan: Pheeeww!
Crane: Can you imagine that?
Dylan: Nah. Allen is a little funny sometimes (audience roars with laughter).
Crane: Allen’s funny sometimes, huh? Yes … what is this movie going to be about?
Dylan: Oh it’s a, sort of a horror cowboy movie (audience laughter). Takes place on the New York Thruway.
Crane: A horror cowboy movie that takes place .. I don’t think that’s exactly what Tommy Sands had in mind.
Dylan: No, well, its, that’s the kind of movie it’s gonna be though. You know.
Crane: It’s gonna be one of those underground pictures, right?
Dylan: No. It’s gonna be all straight. On the up and up.
Crane: Yeah? Are you gonna star in it?
Dylan: Yeah, yeah, I’m a hero.
I’ve included the songs, audio of Les and Bob’s conversation, and a transcript of the interview.
“It’s All Over Now, Baby Blue”:
Les Crane interviews Bob Dylan, February 17, 1965:
“It’s Alright Ma (I’m Only Bleedin'”:
Here’s the interview in full:
Crane: Mr Bob Dylan, Ladies and Gentlemen! (applause) (shouts) Hello Bobby!
Dylan: I’m alright!
Crane: Are you plugged in? All right.
Dylan: [sings It’s All Over Now Baby Blue]
Crane: Thank you Bob and I’ll be right back.
—-< break >—-
Crane: How’d it feel?
Dylan: Fine.
Crane: Did it feel good?
Dylan: Felt good.
Crane: Yeah, you were groovy. What’cha doin’ with that?
Dylan: Oh, I’m just trying to get it down so it doesn’t fall in the way of my voice you know.
Crane: We had … looking at that harmonica, have you ever met Jesse Fuller?
Dylan: Sure.
Crane: Jessie was on the show a couple of weeks ago. We didn’t get a chance to talk much but next time he comes back, I want to because he looks like an amazing gentleman. Talking about amazing gentlemen, how old are you?
Dylan: 23!
Crane: 23 years old!
Dylan: Yeah, I’ll be 24 in May!
Crane: Yeah. A lot’s happened to you in just 23 years hasn’t it?
Dylan: Yeah, yeah, fantastic!
Crane: Are you happy about it?
Dylan: Oh, yeah, yeah.
Crane: You oughta be. Because you’re successful at doing, I think, what you want to do more than anything else.
Dylan: Yeah, yeah, I don’t have much to think about.
Crane: You don’t have much to think about? I think you must be thinking about an awful lot of things to write the kind of things you do.
Dylan: Yeah, yeah.
Crane: Tell ’em!
Dylan: Yeah.
Crane: Tell ’em, just for those out there in the audience that might not know all of the songs that you’ve written. Just name a few of the big ones!
Dylan: Oh.
Crane: This is the composer of …
Dylan: SUBTERRANEAN HOMESICK BLUES!
Crane: No! That ain’t one of the big ones! (audience laughter)
Dylan: No?
Crane: No.
Dylan: Let’s see, One Too Many Mornings.
Crane: How about Blowin’ In The Wind?
Dylan: Yeah? (applause)
Crane: Do you folks. maybe you remember the night that Judy Collins…, and I kept saying “You gotta sing this song, you gotta sing this song” and Judy Collins came out and and sang the full original version of Hard Rain’s Gonna Fall? Well, Bob wrote that!
Dylan: Yeah, I wrote that (applause).
Crane: Who are you waving at?
Dylan: Odetta!
Crane: Odetta! (To audience) Do you know who Odetta is? (lots of applause). Put a light on that lady!! How are you darling? … Talk about great artists! That’s one of them! (To Odetta) You are going to be on show in a while aren’t you?
Odetta: Next month.
Crane: Next month. Yeah, Odetta is all booked …
Crane: When did you first start pickin’ and singin’, Bob?
Dylan: Oh… When I was about ten, eleven.
— continued —
Use this link or the one below below to get to the rest of this post.
-– A Days of the Crazy-Wild blog post: sounds, visuals and/or news –-
Here’s a roundup of good stuff that mostly broke today:
New video from The Notwist for “Kong,” drected by Yu Sato.
Listen: Animal Collective’s live Bonnaroo EP – Consequence of Sound
Bob Dylan, Tom Petty, Roger McGuinn, Neil Young perform Bob Dylan’s “My Back Pages” at Bob Dylan’s 1992 30th anniversary concert. Check out the video at The Guardian.
Karen O Sings “The Moon Song” & “Maps” At Oscar Nominees Night:
Beatles’ ‘Help!’ Jackets Going Up for AUction – Rolling Stone
Nw Shocking Pinks’ track, “Not Gambling”:
Papercuts’ “Still Knocking At the Door”:
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Paul McCartney sings “Sgt. Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band” and then is joined by Ringo for “With a Little Help from My Friends” on CBS’s “The Night That Changed America: A Grammy Salute to The Beatles.”
-– A Days of the Crazy-Wild blog post: sounds, visuals and/or news –-
Yesterday CBS aired “The Night That Changed America: A Grammy Salute to the Beatles” and among the performers was Dave Grohl of the Foo Fighters who performed “Hey Bulldog” from Yellow Submarine with a band that included Peter Frampton, Don Was and The Wallflowers’ Rami Jaffe.
Dave Grohl – Hey Bulldog – Grammy Salute (The… by IdolxMuzic
Plus here’sThe Eurythmics doing “Fool on the Hill.”
Eurythmics – Fool On The Hill – Grammy Salute… by IdolxMuzic
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Last night on “Late Show with David Letterman” Lauryn Hill sang the George Harrison-penned Beatles’ song “Something.”
Tomorrow, by the way, marks 50 years since The Beatles first performed in the CBS studio that has since been renamed the “Ed Sullivan Theater” — the same theater where Lauryn Hill performed last night.
-– A Days of the Crazy-Wild blog post: sounds, visuals and/or news –-
Last night the Flaming Lips and Sean Lennon (looking like a version of his father with shaggy beard and moustache) delivered a devastating version of “Lucy In The Sky With Diamonds” on “Late Show with David Letterman.’
Dig this!!
-– A Days of the Crazy-Wild blog post: sounds, visuals and/or news –-
Last night on “Late Show with David Letterman” Lenny Kravitz fronted a band that did pretty much a note-for-note cover of The Beatles “Get Back.”
Not so cool as Broken Bells revamp of “And I Love Her.”
-– A Days of the Crazy-Wild blog post: sounds, visuals and/or news –-
Pussy Riot’s Masha Alyokhina and Nadya Tolokonnikova interviewed by Stephen Colbert last night.
Part One:
Part Two:
Sign off:
-– A Days of the Crazy-Wild blog post: sounds, visuals and/or news –-