October 18, 2012

NEW RIDERS OF THE PURPLE SAGE "WHERE I COME FROM: RADIO MIXES & LIVE BONUS" 2009


 NEW RIDERS OF THE PURPLE SAGE
"WHERE I COME FROM: RADIO MIXES & LIVE BONUS"
2009
WOODSTOCK
COMPILATION
REVIEW
by William Ruhlmann
Originally intended by Woodstock Records only to be a promotional release for radio stations, but then sold commercially on a limited basis, this disc is an addendum to the New Riders of the Purple Sage's 2009 studio album Where I Come From. It contains "radio mixes" of three songs from that album, the title song, "Barracuda Moon," and "Higher." The chief difference is that each is presented in a shorter edit. There are two previously unreleased live performances: the group-composed instrumental "Pour House Jelly" and "Let It Grow" (the latter an original by group member Michael Falzarano). Woodstock Records labelmate Professor Louie has overdubbed a Hammond organ track onto both of these recordings. The CD concludes with four old favorites — "Louisiana Lady," "Peggy O," "Truck Driving Man," and "Dirty Business" — that were featured on the home video Live at Turkey Trot Acres, but were left off of the bonus CD that was packaged with the DVD for space reasons. Taken together, this material gives a good sense of the latter day New Riders, live and in the studio, in the mid- to late 2000s, revealing an excellent country-rock jam band with some effective new material.
1. Where I Come From (Nelson, Hunter) – 4:20 – radio mix
2. Barracuda Moon (Nelson, Hunter) – 4:09 – radio mix
3. Higher (Markowski, Driscoll) – 4:16 – radio mix
4. Pour House Jelly (with Professor Louie) (New Riders of the Purple Sage) – 4:30 – sound check at The Pour House, 9/18/07
5. Let It Grow (with Professor Louie) (Falzarano) – 12:33 – sound check at Shawnee Cave, 9/30/06
6. Louisiana Lady (John Dawson) – 5:04 – recorded live at Turkey Trot, 7/30/06
7. Peggy-O (traditional, arranged by Nelson) – 6:12 – recorded live at Turkey Trot, 7/30/06
8. Truck Driving Man (Buck Owens) – 6:23 – recorded live at Turkey Trot, 7/30/06
9. Dirty Business (Dawson) – 18:08 – recorded live at Turkey Trot, 7/30/0
David Nelson – Guitar, Vocals
Buddy Cage – Pedal Steel Guitar
Michael Falzarano – Guitar, Vocals
Ronnie Penque – Bass, Vocals
Johnny Markowski – Drums, Vocals
Additional Musicians
Christian Cassan – Percussion on Tracks 2, 4, 5, 7, 9
Professor Louie - Keyboards on Tracks 4, 5


     http://fp.io/5675d8f2/

NEW RIDERS OF THE PURPLE SAGE - WHERE I COME FROM







NEW RIDERS OF THE PURPLE SAGE
"WHERE I COME FROM"
JUN 2, 2009
WOODSTOCK
REVIEW
by William Ruhlmann
For what they describe as their first studio album in 20 years, the New Riders of the Purple Sage, as "revived" in 2005, consist of founding member David Nelson (vocals, guitar); Buddy Cage, who took over from Jerry Garcia on pedal steel guitar after the first album in 1971; and three newbies, guitarist Michael Falzarano, bassist Ronnie Penque, and drummer Johnny Markowski. (Conspicuous by his absence is co-founder John Dawson, who is said to be retired.) Falzarano, who has made a career out of supporting musicians of the '60s San Francisco Sound (he was also a latter day member of Hot Tuna), produced the album. He gets two compositions, both of which he sings, and Penque and Markowski get one each, also displaying their lead vocal abilities. But the heart of the album — seven songs out of 12 — is the work of the new songwriting team of Nelson and Robert Hunter. The teaming itself is not new at all. Nelson and Hunter played together, along with Garcia, in folk and country bands in Palo Alto in the early '60s, prior to the formation of the Grateful Dead, for which Hunter served as primary lyricist. But as songwriters, this is a new association, and a happy one, as Hunter comes up with his typically aphoristic, imagistic, and vernacular words (particularly on the title song) and Nelson matches them with catchy, country-tinged melodies that the band plays in frisky country-rock roadhouse arrangements. This may be San Francisco music, but Bakersfield doesn't seem far away as the guitars go twangy and Cage plays down the weepy side of the pedal steel in favor of something more stinging. These New Riders jam a bit more than the original ensemble, and they also rock a bit more. Put it this way: the final track, "Rockin' with Nona" could segue into "Six Days on the Road" without missing a beat or, nearly, changing the chord pattern. It wouldn't be surprising if, in concert, it does.
1  Where I Come From  (Hunter, Nelson)  7:41
2  Big Six  (Hunter, Nelson)  4:19
3  Barracuda Moon  (Hunter, Nelson)  7:58
4  Higher  (Driscoll, Markowski)  6:04
5  Down the Middle  (Hunter, Nelson)  5:36
6  Them Old Minglewood Blues  (Traditional)  5:05
7  Something in the Air Tonight  (Falzarano)  4:00
8  Olivia Rose  (Penque)  5:25
9  Blues Barrel  (Hunter, Nelson)  5:59
10  Ghost Train Blues  (Hunter, Nelson)  10:37
11  Carl Perkins Wears the Crown  (Falzarano)  4:34
12  Rockin' with Nona  (Hunter, Nelson)  5:58
 Buddy Cage - Pedal Steel
 Christian Cassan - Percussion
 Michael Falzarano - Guitar, Vocals
 David Nelson - Guitar, Arranger, Vocals
 Mookie Siegel - Keyboards
FORMED: 1969 in San Francisco, CA
DISBANDED: 1982
BIOGRAPHY
by Bruce Eder
For most of the early '70s, the New Riders of the Purple Sage™ (yes, the name is trademark-protected) were the successful offshoots of the Grateful Dead. Although they never remotely approached the success or longevity of the Dead, they attracted a considerable audience through their association with Jerry Garcia, Phil Lesh, and Mickey Hart, whose fans couldn't be satisfied with only the Dead's releases — the New Riders never reached much beyond that audience, but the Deadheads loved them as substitutes (along with Garcia's periodic solo projects) for the real article. Their initial sound was a kind of country-acid rock, somewhat twangier than the Dead's usual work and without the Dead's successful forays into experimental jams, but they later acquitted themselves as straight country-rockers.

Essentially, the New Riders of the Purple Sage (their name derives from an old country outfit, Foy Willing and the Riders of the Purple Sage, who in turn took the name from an old Western novel) were initially formed as a vehicle for Garcia, Lesh, and Hart to indulge their tastes for country music beyond the albums Workingman's Dead and American Beauty. Their original lineup at early performances consisted of Garcia on pedal steel, Lesh on bass, John Dawson (born 1945) on rhythm guitars and vocals, sometime Dead contributor-member David Nelson on lead guitars, mandolin, and vocals, and Mickey Hart on drums. The New Riders quickly evolved into more of a free-standing unit, with Dave Torbert succeeding Lesh, and ex-Jefferson Airplane member Spencer Dryden on the drums, succeeding Hart. They also developed an identity of their own through Dawson's songwriting, which had an appealing command of melody and beat.

The group was a little shaky as a country-rock outfit, without the strengths of soulfulness or strong in-house songwriting of, say, Poco or the Burrito Brothers, but their association with Garcia and the Dead (Lesh co-produced one album) gave them a significant leg up in terms of publicity and finding an audience. High school and college kids who'd scarcely heard of Gram Parsons or Jim Messina but owned more than one Dead album, were likely in those days to own, or have a friend who owned, at least one New Riders album. That translated into many thousands of sales of the self-titled first album, which proved an apt and pleasing companion to Workingman's Dead and American Beauty with its mix of country and psychedelic sounds. By the second album, Buddy Cage had come in on pedal steel, replacing Garcia, and their sound had firmed up, helped by the fact that Dawson and Torbert were good songwriters.

Powerglide, their second album, proved that they had what it took to stand separate from the Dead, even though Garcia and Bill Kreutzmann played on a handful of cuts. The group continued to attract a following through the early and mid-'70s, mixing country-rock and folk sounds (Buffy St. Marie was a guest vocalist on the 1974 hit album The Adventures of Panama Red) and attracting the mellower component of recreational drug users. By the end of the decade, following a label change from Columbia to MCA, it seemed as though they were running out of steam and originality, however, and the growth in popularity of punk, disco, and power pop made them seem like an anachronism, along with most other country-rock outfits of the era. Ex-Byrd Skip Battin joined in 1975, replacing Torbert; Dryden gave up playing in 1978 to assume management of the band, and by 1981, Nelson was gone.

The New Riders essentially disbanded in 1982, although the name was later picked up by a new lineup built around Gary Vogenson (guitar) and Rusty Gautier (bass). Nelson subsequently played with the Jerry Garcia Acoustic Band and assumed the de facto role of group archivist, supervising the release of unissued tapes by the band through the Relix label.
 
         http://fp.io/5m2d9m79/

KINGFISH - Venue Ranch Rock, Pyramid Lake, Nevada, - September 7th 1986


Kingfish - Venue Ranch Rock, Pyramid Lake, Nevada, September 7th 1986

CD One.

1. Intro
2. Juke
3. Jump For Joy
4. I Know You Rider
5. Don't You Lie To Me
6. Goodbye Your Honor
7. Down In Misery
8. Band Intros > One Night Stand
9. Burnin' Love
10. Sea Cruise
11. Tell Mama
12. Hypnotize
13. Tuning
14. Poion Ivy*>
15. Festival*
16. Young Blood*

CD Two.

1. Big Iron*
2. Bag Of Tools
3. I Hear You Knockin'
4. City Girls
5. Easy To Slip
6. Willie & the Jive
7. Drums+
8. Outro

Jimmy Sanchez - drums
Steve Heavens - bass
Steve Kimock - guitar
Matthew Kelly - guitar
Barry Flast - keyboards
Anna Rizzo - vocals
Martin Fierro - sax
*w/ Bob Weir & John Cipollina
+w/ David Perper

Complete soundboard. Almost never circulated
in this complete form.

Master stereo reel to reel > beheringer pro e. > tascam cd b. >
cd > eac > wav > flac


BOB WEIR - Capitol Theatre, Port Chester, NY - 09/07/2012


Bob Weir
2012-09-07
Capitol Theatre, Port Chester, NY

Gnomes & Hobbits Topspin Media Download > FLAC > TLH Fixed SBEs (level 8) > Dbpoweramp > MP3(v0)

Disc One
Set One
01. Music Never Stopped >
02. Me And My Uncle >
03. Friend of the Devil
04. Loose Lucy
05. Lost Sailor >
06. Saint of Circumstance

Disc Two
Set Two
07. Peggy-O
08. Easy to Slip
09. Dear Prudence
10. Bird Song *#%
11. Jack Straw *#
12. Jailhouse Rock *#%

Notes:
* w/ Warren Haynes
# w/ Grace Potter
% w/ Bobby Keys

http://fp.io/c1b1m4b4/

NEW RIDERS OF THE PURPLE SAGE - Gypsy Cowboy


New Riders of the Purple Sage - Gypsy Cowboy (1972)


With the New Riders desiring to become more of a self-sufficient group and Garcia needing to focus on his other responsibilities, the musician parted ways with the group in November 1971. Buddy Cage, a seasoned pedal steel player replaced Garcia. The Dawson/Nelson/Cage/Torbert/Dryden line-up is generally considered to be the finest of the group. Thanks to rampant touring and the coattails of the Grateful Dead, with whom they still gigged periodically (both bands shared the same management in this epoch), the New Riders managed to nearly eclipse the parent band in popularity. This was not necessarily a surprise, considering that their sound was far more accessible than was the Dead's.

Gypsy Cowboy is such a great album, in some ways it is the epitome of the whole cowboy rock or country rock which began with the Byrds Sweetheart of the Rodeo and which later blossomed and reinvigorated much of the two genres.

This album is consistently good throughout beginning with the soulful Gypsy Cowboy which no-one could imagine to be the first choice of DJs to play on the radio but which sets the tone and standard for the rest of the album to follow.

This band had finally escaped from the shadow of the Grateful Dead although my strongest feeling about this is that it is very close in feel to Garcia's first album and highlights his own skill with the pedal steel guitar. It is clear too that the songwriting talents of Dawson and Torbet werein some competition with each other producing some very high quality songs indeed.

The standard themes are clearly in evidence, illegal whiskey running and trying to escape the taxman and the finding of gold during the goldrush days testify to the attractions of the cowboy image of individuality and finding your own way in life while the conflicting images of women portrayed in Groupie and Linda as well as She's No Angel are clearly articulating the contentious dichotomy which they play in men's lives.

Line-up :
- John Dawson - guitar, vocals
- David Nelson - guitar, dobronis, mandolin, bagpipes, vocals
- Spencer Dryden - drums, percussion, vocals
- Dave Torbert - bass guitar, acoustic guitar, vocals
- Buddy Cage - steel guitar
with
- Richard Greene - violin
- Mark Naftalin - piano
- Jack Schroer - horns

Track List :
01. Gypsy Cowboy (Dave Torbert) – 4:17
02. Whiskey (John Dawson) – 3:33
03. Groupie (Dave Torbert) – 2:40
04. Sutter's Mill (John Dawson) – 1:52
05. Death and Destruction (John Dawson) – 8:39
06. Linda (John Dawson) – 3:04
07. On My Way Back Home (Dave Torbert) – 3:29
08. Superman (John Dawson) – 3:09
09. She's No Angel (Wanda Ballman) – 2:51
10. Long Black Veil (Danny Dill/Marijohn Wilkin) – 3:56
11. Sailin' (John Dawson) – 2:49

http://fp.io/7fbab431/

NEW RIDERS OF THE PURPLE SAGE - Oh, What a Mighty Time


•Oh, What a Mighty Time (1975)
01- Mighty Time
02- I Heard You Been Layin' My Old Lady
03- Strangers On A Train
04- Up Against The Wall Redneck
05- Take A Letter Maria
06- Little Oldl Ady
07- On Top Of Old Smoky
08- Over And Over
09- La Bamba
10- Going Round The Horn
11- Farewell Angelina

NEW RIDERS OF THE PURPLE SAGE - MIDNIGHT MOONLIGHT


•Midnight Moonlight (1992 )

01- Midnight Moonlight
02- Sutter's Mill
03- Charlie's Garden
04- All I Remember
05- Louisiana Lady
06- Ballad Of The Deportees
07- Taking It Hard
08- Glendale Train
09- Change In The Weather
10- Diesel On My Tail
11- Lonesome L.A. Cowboy
http://fp.io/26e6753d/

NEW RIDERS OF THE PURPLE SAGE - ADVENTURES OF PANAMA RED




http://fp.io/3f73fme8/

NEW RIDERS OF THE PURPLE SAGE - BEFORE TIME BEGAN





http://fp.io/22e4d4d7/
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