August 20, 2013

RICKY SKAGGS AND BRUCE HORNSBY ''LIVE CLUCK OL' HEN''

RICKY SKAGGS AND BRUCE HORNSBY
''LIVE CLUCK OL' HEN''
AUGUST 20 2013
74:11

1 - How Mountain Girls Can Love (Commentary)/0:41
2 - How Mountain Girls Can Love/2:38
3 - Toy Heart (Commentary)/0:18
4 - Toy Heart/4:32
5 - Bluegrass Breakdown (Commentary)/0:28
6 - Bluegrass Breakdown/3:33
7 - Darling Corey (Commentary)/0:47
8 - Darling Corey/7:55
9 - The Way It Is/10:24
10 - The Dreaded Spoon (Commentary)/1:29
11 - The Dreaded Spoon/3:11
12 - Gulf Of Mexico Fishing Boat Blues/5:07
13 - Sally Jo (Commentary)/0:36
14 - Sally Jo/6:11
15 - Little Maggie/2:53
16 - White Wheeled Limousine (Commentary)/0:30
17 - White Wheeled Limousine/14:20
18 - Cluck Ol' Hen (Commentary)/0:50
19 - Cluck Ol' Hen/3:34
20 - Uncle Pen (Commentary)/0:44
21 - Uncle Pen/2:38

BIOGRAPHY (RICKY SKAGGS)
by David Vinopal
By the time he was in his mid-thirties, Kentuckian Ricky Skaggs had already produced a career's worth of music. At age seven he appeared on TV with Flatt & Scruggs; at 15 he was a member of legendary Ralph Stanley's bluegrass band (with fellow teenager Keith Whitley). None of his '80s peers, male or female, had better musical credentials than Skaggs. The term "multi-talented" lacks the power to characterize this extraordinary singer and instrumentalist. Not only can he sing and pick with the best in progressive country, his broad and deep experience in traditional music separates him from the crowd. In the estimation of many, he is without peer as a combination vocalist and instrumentalist (guitar, mandolin, fiddle, banjo). After playing with Ralph Stanley for three years, Skaggs moved on to progressive bluegrass bands the Country Gentlemen and J.D. Crowe & the New South. With his own band, Boone Creek, he mixed the old and the new, even referencing the swinging Gypsy jazz of Django Reinhardt. Skaggs took Rodney Crowell's place in Emmylou Harris' Hot Band in 1977, and the band's excellent Roses in the Snow album showcased Skaggs' versatility. Two number one hits came out of his 1981 album Waitin' for the Sun to Shine, and the awards started arriving. Skaggs is largely responsible for a back-to-basics movement in country music. He showed many that a bluegrass tenor with impeccable taste and enormous talent could sell traditional country in the '80s, a time when pop music had invaded the land of rural rhythm.
Skaggs began playing music at a very early age, being given a mandolin from his father at the age of five. Before his father had the time to teach Ricky how to play, the child had learned the instrument himself, and by the end of 1959 he had performed on-stage during a Bill Monroe concert, playing "Ruby Are You Mad at Your Man" to great acclaim. Two years later, when Skaggs was seven, he appeared on Flatt & Scruggs' television show, again to a positive response. Shortly afterward, he learned how to play both fiddle and guitar and began playing with his parents in a group called the Skaggs Family. In addition to traditional bluegrass, Skaggs began absorbing the honky tonk of George Jones and Ray Price and the British Invasion rock & roll of the Beatles and the Rolling Stones. In his adolescence, he briefly played in rock & roll bands, but he never truly abandoned traditional and roots music.
During a talent concert in his midteens, he met Keith Whitley, a fellow fiddler. The two adolescents became friends and began playing together, with Whitley's brother Dwight on banjo, at various radio shows. By 1970, they earned a spot opening for Ralph Stanley. Following their performance, Stanley invited the duo to join his supporting band, the Clinch Mountain Boys, and they accepted. Over the next two years they played many concerts with the bluegrass legend and appeared on his record Cry From the Cross. Skaggs also appeared on Whitley's solo album Second Generation Bluegrass in 1972.
Though he had made his way into the bluegrass circuit and was actively recording, Skaggs had grown tired of the hard work and low pay in the Clinch Mountain Boys and left the group at the end of 1972. For a short while, he abandoned music and worked in a boiler room for the Virginia Electric Power Company in Washington, D.C., but he returned to performing when the Country Gentlemen invited him to join in 1973. Skaggs spent the next two years with the group, primarily playing fiddle, before joining the progressive bluegrass band J.D. Crowe & the New South in 1974. The following year, he recorded another duet album with Whitley, That's It, and then formed his own newgrass band, Boone Creek, in 1976. In addition to bluegrass, the outfit played honky tonk and Western swing. Boone Creek earned the attention of Emmylou Harris, who invited Skaggs to join her supporting band. After declining her several times, he finally became a member of her Hot Band once Rodney Crowell left in 1977.
Between 1977 and 1980, Skaggs helped push Harris toward traditional country and bluegrass, often to great acclaim. Skaggs also pursued a number of other musical avenues while he was with Harris, recording a final album with Boone Creek (1978's One Way Track), two duet albums with Tony Rice (1978's Take Me Home Tonight in a Song, 1980's Skaggs & Rice), and finally, his first solo album, Sweet Temptation, which was released on Sugar Hill. Sweet Temptation was a major bluegrass hit, earning the attention of the major label Epic Records. The label offered him a contract in 1981, releasing Waitin' for the Sun to Shine later that year. The album was a big hit, earning acclaim not only in country circles, but also in rock & roll publications. By the end of the year Skaggs had become a star and, in the process, brought rootsy traditional country back into the consciousness of the country audience.
During 1982 and early 1983 he had five straight number one singles -- "Crying My Heart Out Over You," "I Don't Care," "Heartbroke," "I Wouldn't Change You If I Could," "Highway 40 Blues" -- as well as earning numerous awards. Later in 1982 he was made the youngest member of the Grand Ole Opry. For the next four years, he was a major artistic and commercial force within country music, raking up a string of Top Ten hits and Grammy Award-winning albums. His success helped spark the entire new traditionalist movement, opening the doors for performers like George Strait and Randy Travis. Toward the end of the decade, Skaggs wasn't charting as frequently as he had in the past, but he had established himself as an icon. Each of his records sold well, and he collaborated with a number of musicians, including Rodney Crowell, the Bellamy Brothers, Johnny Cash, Jesse Winchester, and Dolly Parton.
During the early '90s, Skaggs and his traditional music were hit hard by the slick sounds of contemporary country, and consequently, his records ceased to sell as consistently as they had ten years earlier. Columbia Records dropped the musician in 1992 due to poor sales. However, Skaggs continued to perform concerts and festivals frequently, as well as host his own syndicated radio program, The Simple Life, which hit the airwaves in 1994. The following year, Skaggs returned to recording with Solid Ground, his first album for Atlantic Records. Life Is a Journey followed in 1997, and two years later he released Soldier of the Cross. Big Mon: The Songs of Bill Monroe followed in 2000 and was re-released in 2002 on the Lyric Street label as Ricky Skaggs and Friends Sing the Songs of Bill Monroe. In 2003 Skaggs released Live at the Charleston Music Hall on his own Skaggs Family label, followed by Brand New Strings in 2004, A Skaggs Family Christmas in 2005 and Instrumentals in 2006. He joined forces with the Whites for 2007's Salt of the Earth.
Released in 2008, Honoring the Fathers of Bluegrass paid homage to Bill Monroe's classic mid-'40s lineup of the Bluegrass Boys and featured the only surviving member of that band, Earl Scruggs, as a guest player. For 2009's Solo: Songs My Dad Loved, dedicated to his father, Hobert Skaggs, he played all the instruments and sang all the vocals himself, while 2010’s Mosaic, co-produced by Skaggs and Gordon Kennedy, found him singing gospel-inflected country songs with more of a pop and rock feel. Released in 2011, Country Hits: Bluegrass Style saw Skaggs returning to some of his country hits and reshaping them as bluegrass pieces. 2011 also saw the release of a second holiday album, A Skaggs Family Christmas, Vol. 2, a ten-song CD that featured both studio and live recordings and came packaged with a bonus DVD, A Skaggs Family Christmas Live, presenting the family’s holiday concert filmed at the Ryman Auditorium in Nashville. A live set with Bruce Hornsby, Cluck Ol' Hen, appeared at the end of the summer in 2013.

BIOGRAPHY (BRUCE HORNSBY)
by William Ruhlmann Possessed of a breezy, nonchalant style that belies his technical gifts, pianist Bruce Hornsby writes powerful songs from the heart that touch on several distinctly American traditions: pop, jazz, bluegrass, and '60s soul. He worked for a while as a studio player and songwriter, and had his first hit in 1986 with the stirring and philosophical "The Way It Is." After that, he continued to release albums that honored his own muse rather than the marketplace, and put together various backing bands to suit the mood and style of the genres he works in. Hornsby has also maintained a close musical relationship with the remaining members of the Grateful Dead, having toured as a temporary member in the early '90s and collaborated on off-shoot recordings and live shows.
Bruce Hornsby was born in Williamsburg, Virginia, and grew up in that combination college town and tourist center, later attending the University of Miami and the Berklee School of Music. He then spent years playing in bars and sending demo tapes to record companies. In 1980, he and his brother (and songwriting partner) John Hornsby moved to Los Angeles, where they spent three years writing for 20th Century Fox. There Bruce Hornsby met Huey Lewis, who would eventually produce him and record his material. Hornsby finally signed his band, the Range, to RCA in 1985. Their debut album, The Way It Is, was released in April 1986. It eventually produced three Top 20 hits, the biggest of which was the socially conscious "The Way It Is," which featured Hornsby's characteristically melodic right-hand piano runs. The album stayed in the charts for almost a year-and-a-half and sold two million copies. Hornsby & the Range won the Best New Artist Grammy Award for 1986.
Hornsby's second album, Scenes from the Southside, was not as successful as his debut, though it sold a million copies and produced the Top Ten single "The Valley Road." Hornsby also began to make his mark as a songwriter for others: Huey Lewis had a hit with his "Jacob's Ladder," as did Don Henley with "The End of the Innocence." Hornsby's third album, A Night on the Town (1990), found him trying to break out of his signature sound into other areas. It was less successful than its predecessors but, along with the pianist's extensive session work, it signaled his determination to tackle new musical challenges. Hornsby worked extensively as a producer and sideman in the early '90s, notably doing temporary duty in the Grateful Dead after their keyboardist, Brent Mydland, died in July 1990, and producing a comeback album for Leon Russell, an idol of Hornsby's. He also became the father of twin sons.
He finally turned in his fourth album, Harbor Lights, for release in 1993. This solo album, which did not feature his backup band, the Range, went gold, and Hornsby toured the U.S. and Canada through the end of the year. He followed it with a similar effort, Hot House, in July 1995, returning three years later with the double album Spirit Trail. Here Come the Noise Makers was issued in fall 2000. Since that time, Hornsby has released a handful of albums including Big Swing Face in 2002, Halcyon Days in 2004, the jazz-oriented Camp Meeting in 2007, and Levitate in 2009. Hornsby's most impressive playing has arguably been in live settings, though, as the two-disc set Bride of the Noisemakers -- released in 2011 and featuring concert performances from Hornsby and his band the Noisemakers, recorded between 2007 and 2009, illustrates -- putting the band’s impressive ability to jam in styles ranging from rock to jazz and bluegrass on full display. A live set with Ricky Skaggs, Cluck Ol' Hen, appeared at the end of the summer in 2013.
http://fp.io/3628a824/

KANSAS - 40th Anniversary Fan Appreciation Night Benedum Theater Pittsburgh, PA - 08/17/2013



Kansas
August 17, 2013
40th Anniversary Fan Appreciation Night
Benedum Theater
Pittsburgh, PA

GREAT SOUND!!

Set 1
with the Three Rivers Orchestra, conducted by Larry Baird

101. Introduction - Excerpt of Hopelessly Human
102. Belexes
103. Point of Know Return
104. Song For America
105. On The Other Side
106. Nobody's Home
107. Hold On *
108. Dust in the Wind
109. Ghosts (including Rainmaker chorus)
110. Musicatto
111. Cheyenne Anthem
112. The Wall **

Set 2

201. I Can Fly - (Excerpt) > Paradox
202. Can I Tell You
203. Journey from Mariabronn
204. Icarus II
205. Icarus - Borne on Wings of Steel
206. Down the Road
207. Magnum Opus
208. Miracles Out of Nowhere
209. Lonely Wind ***
210. Portrait (He Knew)
211. Fight Fire with Fire
212. Carry On Wayward Son ****
213. Incomudro - Hymn to the Atman (ending excerpt)

Line-up:

Steve Walsh      Keyboards, Vocals
Rich Williams    Guitar
David Ragsdale   Violin, Guitar, Vocals
Phil Ehart       Drums
Billy Greer      Bass, Vocals

with:
*    Kerry Livgren - Guitar
**   Dave Hope - Bass, Kerry Livgren - Keyboards
***  Dave Hope - Bass
**** Dave Hope - Bass, Kerry Livgren - Guitar

http://fp.io/7df775m2/

QUICKSILVER MESSENGER SERVICE – Live at the Old Mill Tavern, March 29 1970

Quicksilver Messenger Service – Live at the Old Mill Tavern, March 29 1970 (2013)

Quicksilver Messenger ServicePurple Pyramid Records release on CD a vintage concert recording of legendary San Francisco psychedelic jam band Quicksilver Messenger Service titled Live at the Old Mill Tavern, March 29, 1970 on August 27, 2013.
The CD features a rare performance by the newly formed 6-piece line-up, playing several new songs and old favorites. By early 1970, Dino Valenti, a veteran of Quicksilver’s earliest incarnations, had returned to the frontline of the group. Touring constantly, the band were riding high from the success of their third album ‘Shady Grove’, released just a few months previously. Says Gary Duncan, “Live shows were our bread and butter. We didn’t sell a lot of records like some of the other groups… But we played a lot of shows – constantly.”
From the CD liner notes by famed writer Dave Thompson:
“The six-piece band – Dino Valenti, Gary Duncan, John Cippolina, David Freiberg, and Greg Elmore – had only been playing together a few months, since New Year at the Fillmore rang in this new decade, and they are blazing tonight. Fiery and more fiery still…waiting in the wings for encore time was harmonica legend Jimmy Cotton, whose eponymous Blues Band was kicking the crap out of more or less every band it came up against in concert. Apart from Quicksilver… There’s a lot of live Quicksilver material out there, and that is how it should be. The records are great but, as all the members have said, it was live that the Messenger Service really smoked, and the live tapes that truly mark the life and times that they lived so well. This recording punches all of those buttons, and a whole bunch more besides!”
Subway
The Truth
Mona
Baby Baby
Rain
Mojo
Blues Jam #1 feat. James Cotton
Blues Jam #2 feat. James Cotton
http://fp.io/81am8e24/

GOV'T MULE - Fox Theater - Boulder, CO - 03/16/1998

Gov't Mule
Fox Theater - Boulder, CO
3/16/98

Source: SBD/AUD Matrix > DAT > CDR > EAC > Soundforge (cleanup and fades) > CD Wave (Retracking) > mkwACT > .shn

Conversion, Mastering and Seed by Jason Brantley (jason@spreadwidepanic.com)
Thanks to John Hilf for the CDR's!

Set 1: (67:20.05)
Disc 1: 67:20.05

01.  Grinnin' In Your Face > 02:12:47
02.  Pygmy Twylyte > 05:14.26
03.  Blind Man In The Dark 06:58.24
04.  Thorazine Shuffle 08:28.70
05.  Birth Of The Mule 07:46.00
06.  No Need To Suffer 09:29.55
07.  Game Face 09:29.55
08.  I Shall Return > 05:37.15
09.  She Said She Said > 04:14.60
10.  Tomorrow Never Knows jam 08:10.53


Set 2: (85:38.15)
Disc 2: 50:06.18

01.  Dolphineus *> 01:00.36
02.  Raven Black Night * 05:42.07
03.  Soulshine * 05:41.48
04.  Afro Blue *+ 14:30.59
05.  Trane > 06:18.32
06.  Truckin' jam > 03:10.34
07.  Drums > 06:48.03
08.  Doing It To Death 06:54.24

Disc 3: 35:31.73

01.  Larger Than Life > 05:34.53
02.  Towering Fool > 06:24.54
03.  Thelonius Beck > 03:54.13
04.  Mule > 07:37.16
05.  I've Been Workin' > 04:47.15
06.  Mule 01:37.51
07.  Crowd (Part was cut on CDR's) 00:39.70

Encore:

08.  Sad And Deep As You 07:13.72

* acoustic

Soundcheck: Lively Up Yourself, Thorazine Shuffle, Born Under A Bad Sign, Raven Black Night, Afro Blue

Lineup:

Warren Haynes (guitar and vocals)
Alan Woody (bass)
Matt Abts (drums)
+ w/ Tim Reynolds (guitar)

Setlist compliments of our friends at Mulebase
http://www.mulebase.com/98a.asp


Mastering Notes:

-Tracking arrangement corrected
-Fades added at start and finish of sets
-Pop in d1t01 removed
-Seek tables appended

http://fp.io/e9b795e4/

STS9 - FIRSTMERIT BANK PAVILION AT NORTHERLY ISLAND :: CHICAGO, IL - 08/17/2013


2013.08.17 :: FIRSTMERIT BANK PAVILION AT NORTHERLY ISLAND :: CHICAGO, IL
STS9

FirstMerit Bank Pavilion - Chicago, IL - This Us, Squares & Cubes, Golden Gate, One A Day, Abcees*, Vibyl*, Simulator*, Kabuki, Circus, Vapors, Be Nice*, King Pharoah's Tomb*, Moon Socket, Scheme *w/ the Liquid Horns
TRACKS
1.
This, Us (4:31)
2.
Squares & Cubes (6:14)
3.
Golden Gate (6:51)
4.
One A Day (6:10)
5.
Abcees (4:33)
6.
Vibyl (5:32)
7.
Simulator (7:03)
8.
Kabuki (5:53)
9.
Circus (9:25)
10.
Vapors (5:35)
11.
Be Nice (5:49)
12.
King Pharoah's Tomb (7:54)
13.
Moon Socket (8:00)
14.
Scheme (7:36)

STS9 - LAWN AT WHITE RIVER :: INDIANAPOLIS, IN - 08/16/2013

2013.08.16 :: LAWN AT WHITE RIVER :: INDIANAPOLIS, IN

Lawn at White River - Indianapolis, IN - SET: Grizzly, Equinox, EHM, Inspire Strikes Back, From Now On, Metameme, Kaya, Grow, What Is Love?, Hidden Hand Hidden Fist, Really What?, Rent, F Word, 20-12
TRACKS
1.
Grizzly (6:44)
2.
Equinox (9:56)
3.
EHM (8:36)
4.
Inspire Strikes Back (9:41)
5.
From Now On (7:28)
6.
Metameme (5:54)
7.
Kaya (7:36)
8.
Grow (6:56)
9.
What Is Love? (8:50)
10.
Hidden Hand, Hidden Fist (7:26)
11.
Really What? (8:43)
12.
Rent (11:15)
13.
F Word (7:04)
14.
20-12 (0:14)
 http://fp.io/ef641eb8/

STS9 - PALACE THEATER LOUISVILLE, KY - 08/15/2013

2013.08.15 :: PALACE THEATER :: LOUISVILLE, KY
STS9

Palace Theater - Louisville, KY - SET: Intro, Ramone & Emiglio, Moon Socket, Bigs > One Two Three, And Some Are Angels…, Blu Mood, March, Kamuy, Simulator, Arigato, Kabuki E: Sympathy for the Devil*, When the Dust Settles *w/ Jake from Umphrey's McGee
TRACKS
1.
Intro (0:54)
2.
Ramone & Emiglio (8:30)
3.
Moon Socket (7:39)
$0.99
4.
Bigs (4:26)
5.
One, Two, Three (3:43)
6.
And Some Are Angels... (7:15)
7.
Blu Mood (7:19)
8.
March (7:16)
9.
Kamuy (10:57)
10.
Simulator (6:43)
11.
Arigato (7:43)
12.
Kabuki (7:43)
13.
Sympathy for the Devil (5:07)
14.
When the Dust Settles (7:46)
http://fp.io/8afmc479/

YES - Every little thing - Cologne, Germany - 04/03/1970

http://fp.io/caa15b16/

HOT TUNA - Medicine Ball Caravan Show L`Enfant Plaza Washington, DC - 08/25/1970


http://fp.io/5bmd98am/

HOT TUNA - Live At Chateau Liberte Santa Cruz - 03/03/1971



Hot Tuna
1971-03-03
Live At Chateau Liberte
Santa Cruz


01 Come Back Baby 8:37
02 Never Happen No More 7:53
03 Candy Man 7:28
04 New Song (For The Morning) 6:53
05 Keep Your Lamps Trimmed and Burning 8:02
06 Feel So Good (cut) 9:14

 Jack Casady (bass)
Jorma Kaukonen (guitar, vocals)
Papa John Creach (violin)
Sammy Piazza (drums)


Soundboard Recording!

Thanks to the original source!

http://fp.io/784db64d/
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