The other day I posted a huge chunk of Bob Dylan and his Rolling Thunder Review.
Today I’ve got some more clips.
Some of these are from Colorado State University, Fort Collins, Colorado, May 23, 1976.
Others are from other dates on the Rolling Thunder Review tour.
“Mozambique”:
“The Times They Are A-Changing”:
“Knocking On Heaven’s Door”:
“Mr. Tambourine Man”:
[I just published my rock ‘n’ roll novel, True Love Scars.” Rolling Stone has a great review of my book in the new issue. Read it here. There’s info about True Love Scars here.]
I believe these first three clips are from the Rolling Thunder Review show at Colorado State University, Fort Collins, Colorado, May 23, 1976.
This is a moving and beautiful version of “Just Like A Woman” with Scarlet Rivera on violin.
“Just Like A Woman”:
“Isis”:
“Blowin’ In The Wind”:
“I Don’t Believe You,” War Memorial Auditorium, Plymouth, MA, USA, October 31, 1975:
Here are a bunch of songs recorded during the tour including “Maggie’s Farm,” “One Too Many Mornings,” “You’re A Big Girl Now” and plenty more.
And here’s 50+ minutes from the April 22, 1976 show at the Starlight Ballroom in Clearwater Florida:
[I just published my rock ‘n’ roll novel, True Love Scars.” Rolling Stone has a great review of my book in the new issue. Read it here. There’s info about True Love Scars here.]
This is a great set from The Band at Casino Arena, Asbury Park, NJ, July 20, 1976.
The video is pretty faded but the audio is terrific and The Band sound great.
Robbie Robertson – Lead Guitar
Rick Danko – Bass & Vocals
Levon Helm – Drums & Vocals
Richard Manuel – Piano & Vocals
Garth Hudson – Organ & Keyboards
1. Introduction 0:00
2. Don’t Do It 1:09
3. The Shape I’m In 6:01
4. It Makes No Difference 10:13
5. The Weight 17:16
6. King Harvest (Has Surely Come) 22:00
7. Twilight 25:36
8. Ophelia 29:22
9. Tears of Rage 33:03
10. Forbidden Fruit 38:45
11. This Wheels On Fire 45:00
12. The Night They Drove OI’ Dixie Down 48:53
13. Genetic Method 52:53
14. Chest Fever 57:12
15. Stage Fright 1:01:54
16. Up On Cripple Creek 1:06:30
17. The W.S. Walcott Medicine Show 1:12:07
18. Life Is A Carnival 1:15:44
Here Patti Smith performing at the Masonic Temple in Detroit, Michigan, December 12, 1976.
Set list:
1. We’re Gonna Have A Real Good Time Together – 00:50
2. Kimberly – 03:37
3. Redondo Beach – 08:07
4. Free Money – 13:31
5. Poppies – 17:50
6. Ask The Angels – 25:20
7. Pissing In A River – 29:00
8. Pumping (My Heart) – 35:02
9. Ain’t It Strange – 39:02
10. Band Of Gold – 48:26
11. Radio Ethiopia – 51:46
12. Rock ‘n’ Roll Nigger – 59:55
13. Gloria – 01:09:42
14. My Generation (special guest: Rob Tyner)- 01:16:17
-– A Days of the Crazy-Wild blog post: sounds, visuals and/or news –
I’ve been going through old interviews recently, putting together a collection of my music journalism, and I came across an interview that Jaan Uhelszki and I did with Patti Smith.
In August of 1996, two months after the release of her first album in eight years, Patti Smith sat down for an interview with us for my online magazine, Addicted To Noise.
Patti had a history with both myself and Jaan. She’d known Jaan when Jaan worked at Creem, and I’d interviewed Patti in 1975, before the release of her debut album, Horses.
We had a long conversation with Patti. I’ve pulled out the part where she talks about Bob Dylan. She had gone out on the road with Dylan at the end of 1995. At one point during the interview she said that she felt Bob Dylan was a big reason for why she became an artist.
Patti Smith: I’ve always felt that if there wasn’t a Bob Dylan I don’t know if… I think you have to give back what you’re given. I’ve been inspired and influenced by a lot of great people and I think it’s important, if you have any gifts at all, you have–if you’re given a gift, you have to give of it. One can’t hoard it. I think that is one thing Fred [‘Sonic’ Smith] and I were really talking about after being pretty reclusive for so long, that we did have a certain responsibility and I often, I deeply encouraged Fred, who was one of the most gifted people I ever knew to share his gifts with others and it’s regrettable it didn’t happen.
Some people are very comfortable with their gifts, somebody like Robert Mapplethorpe was very comfortable with them and used them daily. Worked daily. Other people are plagued by their gifts and I feel myself I have a little more of a better balance of comfortable plagued-ness, I have a little bit of plagued, I often feel dogged yet most of the time I feel blessed.
Jaan Uhelszki: The Dylan tour. How did it come about and did you stay in touch with him after you first met him at the Bottom Line in the seventies?
Patti Smith: No I hadn’t talked to him in some time. Really as I gleaned from Bob himself, he really felt that it would be good for me to come back out. He thought that I should come back out, and he said really nice things from onstage. I think that he feels I was a strong influence on things, and he thinks I should be out here–out in the front. He was very encouraging to me. I wasn’t really ready to work then, I really didn’t have a band. We’d been recording but I wasn’t really prepared to do anything. But I was so happy that he asked, that we decided to do it and you know we were a little rusty and rag tag but the people seemed happy and he was happy. My main mission on that small tour–it was only ten dates–was to crack all the energy, to crack all the atmosphere and get the stage ready for him. So we had our time before him and that was my prime directive was to get the night as magic as possible, so when he hit the stage, ’cause he hits a lot of them, that maybe it would feel a little more special than normal. And I think we did a pretty good job and I know that he was happy.
— 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 –-
Another day, another song from Bob Dylan’s 1976 S.I.R rehearsals with the Rolling Thunder Revue. Today a partial run-through of “Lay Lady Lay,” and then a full run-through of the same song were uploaded. And so here they are.
The full run-through lasts over five minutes.
You can check out my two previous S.I.R. rehearsal posts: Post one and post two.
“Lay Lady Lay”(Take 1):
“Lay Lady Lay” (Take 2):
-– A Days of the Crazy-Wild blog post: sounds, visuals and/or news –-
The Boarding House was a club in downtown San Francisco that held about 500 people. The sound was great. It was probably the best club I’ve been in to see live music.
Patti Smith and her band were there on February 15, 1976, less than two months after Horses was released.
It’s an amazing show, and lucky for you and me, it got recorded. Patti Smith is still amazing, but this show (and others from ’75 and ’76, are exceptional.
-– A Days of the Crazy-Wild blog post: sounds, visuals and/or news –-
This is a raw but exciting recording from 1976 and 1978 posted at YouTube by “Sir Eddie Graf.”
The following info is direct from the YouTube post:
John Cale & Friends – Ocean Club, NY 1976
Friends: Lou Reed, Patti Smith, Mick Ronson, David Byrne, Alan Lanier, and Chris Spedding.
First 11 tracks live at The Ocean Club in New York, July 21, 1976.
Last 6 tracks are recorded at Max’s Kansas City, New York, October 3, 1978 with Chris Spedding on guitar.
01. 00:00 Ghost Story 2:38
02. 02:37 Buffalo Ballet 2:56
03. 05:33 You Know More Than I Know 2:53
04. 08:26 Guts 3:39
05. 12:05 I’m Waiting For The Man 5:53
06. 17:58 Close Watch 2:03
07. 20:01 The Jeweller 11:51
08. 31:52 Gun 4:10
09. 36:01 Pablo Picasso 3:53
10. 39:54 Cable Hogue 5:50
11. 45:43 Baby, What You Want Me To Do 4:43
12. 50:26 Pablo Picasso 2:01
13. 52:26 Mary Lou 2:38
14. 55:05 Nasty Gasses 8:52
15. 1.03.56 Unknown 2:24
16. 1.06.19 Solo Instrumental / Fear 3:19
17. 1:09:38 Thoughtless Kind 3:03
Thanks “Sir Eddie Graf.”
-– A Days of the Crazy-Wild blog post: sounds, visuals and/or news –-
A live recording of the Talking Heads performing a previously unreleased instrumental has surfaced.
The song, “Theme,” was played during the first of Talking Head’s two sets opening for Television at CBGB’s, July 30, 1976, according to the fan site Talking-Heads.nl.