Friday, May 31, 2024

13 Featuring Lester Butler - Live Amsterdam 1997

Rebooted...Originally posted March 9, 2008
at the original Floppy Boot Stomp!! and here November 26, 2016 & December 17, 2021


13 Featuring Lester Butler
VPRO Studios 
Amstel, Amsterdam 1997
FM Source @320

 
Set List:
01 Mr. Highway Man
02 No Time To Cry
03 Goin' Down To Lousianna
04 I'm Ready
05 Devil's Daughter
06 Pray For Me
07 Black Hearted Woman
08 She's Lowdown
09 Automatic
10 My Little Woman
11 Taildrager
12 Cut It Out

 
 
Lester Butler - Vocals/Harp
Alex Schultz - Guitar
Eddie Clark - Drums
Mike Hightower - Bass



"People, here I am again, now. I'm drinkin' with my friends. I drink wine like water, I might not live tomorrow." ~Devils Daughter 

 

 Lester is in fine form and feelin' good from first to last. A scorching version of "Devil's Daughter" opens with LB blowing his face off, as they say. And if you don't get the chills listening to "Black Hearted Woman" then there's no blood in your veins.

"Walked through the fire,
Back from the dead.
Black hearted woman,
went and stole him back again.
Man, you know that ain't right."

A very prophetic song as Lester Butler died of a drug overdose on May 9, 1998


 

pass - fbsvw
 



* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *




Wednesday, May 29, 2024

The Albion (Country) Band LIVE in Roskilde Denmark 1983


 The Albion (Country) Band

Roskilde Festival
Roskilde Denmark
1983-10-07 
Soundboard @320


01. The Albions Are In Town Again---Simple Melody
02. Green Mist
03. Five Dance Tunes Through Five Centuries 
04. Tomorrow And Tomorrow And Tomorrow 
05. Pall Mall---Kensington---Doing The Aldwych 
06. Light Shining
07. Love Is Like A Railway Station
08. 3 Dance Tunes 
09. Time To Ring Some Changes
10. Beware Of Blue - Halek Brawl
11. Heart---Encore Break
12. More Dance Tunes---MC


Ashley Hutchings - Bass, Vocals
Cathy le Surf - Vocals
Alan Prosser - Guitar
Dave Whetstone - Squeezebox, Guitar, Vocals
Jean-Pierre Rasle - Bagpipes, Various Blown Instruments
Trevor Foster - Drums


Monday, May 27, 2024

The Rolling Stones - BBC Broadcast Collection 1963-1965

Rebooted...New, New updated link!

The Rolling Stones - BBC Broadcasts
Various dates 1963-1965
FM Broadcasts @flac


CD1:

Sep. 23 or Oct. 5, 1963; broadcast Oct. 26
1.01. Come On
1.02. Memphis, Tennessee
1.03. Roll Over Beethoven
All songs from "Get Satisfaction... If You Want!" CD.

Feb. 3, 1964; broadcast Feb. 8
1.04. Don't Lie to Me
1.05. Mona (I Need You Baby)
1.06. Walking the Dog*
1.07. Bye Bye Johnny
1.08. You Better Move On ***has a short gap of missing music***
1.09. I Wanna Be Your Man**
All songs from "The Lost Treasure" except *end is from "Don't Lie to Me" LP and **entirely from "Don't Lie to Me" LP; LP material is sped up 3%.  ***First version had all songs from "Don't Lie to Me" LP without speed correction, and different song order.

March 8, 1964 (broadcast date, recorded Feb. 8-March 7 on UK tour)
1.10. Roll Over Beethoven from "Don't Lie to Me" LP.
1.11. Beautiful Delilah from "I Can't Judge the Music by Looking at the Cover" EP, sped up 3%.  EP lists the wrong date; thanks to Chris M. for listing the correct date.  ***First version was without speed correction.

March 18, 1964, or October 8, 1964; major discrepancy on date and source here
1.12. Ain't That Loving You Baby
From "The Lost Treasure" CD.  VGP probably got it from the "Rape of the Vaults" LP, which I don't have.  ***First version was from "How Britain Got the Blues," remastered by Remasters Workshop.

March 19, 1964; broadcast May 9
1.13. Route 66 (live)
1.14. Cops and Robbers (live)
1.15. You Better Move On (live)
1.16. Mona (I Need You Baby) (live)
All songs from "Get Satisfaction... If You Want!" CD.  These songs are recorded in stereo but there were no stereo radios in 1964, so the BBC broadcast one channel over the radio and the other over TV.

April 10, 1964
1.17. Hi-Heel Sneakers (live)
1.18. Little By Little (live)
1.19. I Just Want To Make Love To You (live)
1.20. I'm Moving On (live)
All songs from "Got Live if You Want It" bootleg from trade CDR.  This was apparently made by VGP but no company is listed; perhaps they were nervous about releasing official material (not included here) and using official artwork.  Major improvement over "Beat Beat Beat at the Beeb" source.  I have toned down VGP's aggressive mastering so these songs better match the others.

April 13, 1964; broadcast April 18
1.21. I Just Want to Make Love to You
1.22. Walking the Dog
1.23. Not Fade Away
1.24. Beautiful Delilah
1.25. Hi-Heel Sneakers
1.26. Carol
Beautiful Delilah is from "Don't Lie to Me" LP.  Not Fade Away is from "Get Satisfaction... If You Want!" CD. Remaining four are from "Crackin' Up" LP, slowed down 3%.  There is overlap between the LPs here; "Beat Beat Beat at the Beeb" chose to go with "Don't Lie to Me" wherever possible and I chose "Crackin' Up" wherever possible.  Each has its advantages.


 

CD2:

May 25, 1964; broadcast June 6
2.01. Down In The Bottom
2.02. You Can Make It If You Try
2.03. Route 66
2.04. Confessin' The Blues
2.05. Down The Road Apiece
All songs from "The Lost Treasure" CD.  ***First version had all songs from "Don't Lie to Me" LP.

July 17, 1964
2.06. It's All Over Now (live)
2.07. If You Need Me (live)
2.08. Confessin' the Blues (live)
2.09. Carol (live)
2.10. Mona (I Need You Baby) (live)
All songs from "Crackin' Up" LP.

July 17, 1964 (studio); broadcast July 23
2.11. Around and Around
2.12. If You Need Me
2.13. I Can't Be Satisfied
2.14. Crackin' Up
All songs from "Crackin' Up" LP.

Oct. 8, 1964; broadcast Oct. 31
2.15. 2120 South Michigan Avenue
From "Get Satisfaction... If You Want!" CD.

March 1, 1965; broadcast March 6
2.16. Everybody Needs Somebody to Love
2.17. Down the Road Apiece
2.18. The Last Time
2.19. Interview with Mick Jagger & Brian Jones
All songs from "Get Satisfaction... If You Want!" CD.

Aug. 20, 1965; broadcast Aug. 30 and Sep. 18
2.20. Mercy, Mercy
2.21. Oh Baby (We Got a Good Thing Going)
2.22. Interview with Mick Jagger
2.23. (I Can't Get No) Satisfaction
2.24. The Spider and the Fly
2.25. Interview with Mick Jagger
2.26. Cry to Me
2.27. Fanny Mae
All songs from "Get Satisfaction... If You Want!" CD.


total time: 2 hours 9 minutes 59 seconds

************************

Additional notes:
There were plenty of clicks and pops that were missed during the click repair process.
This torrent has had some additional editing individually repairing many of the remaining clicks and pops missed by "watchit" who did all of this nice work.

Additional lineage: Torrent > Audacity (repairs) > TLH (flac Level 8) > Stamp ID3 tag editor
Sector boundaries were re-aligned with TLH during the flac conversion.
New fingerprints and checksums were created for this.


All thanks should go to the archivist "watchit" that originally put this great collection together.
First uploaded to Dime by watchit, March 2012.  Revised version uploaded to HungerCity by watchit, May 2012.

This version based on watchit's second upload and with my minor repairs was done between Aug-Nov 2013 for my own archives.
I just polished up a very nice torrent and added artwork derived from the "Beet Beet Beet at the BEEB" silvers.

As noted below this is a great improvement over that Beet Beet Beet at the BEEB bootleg title.
-M- (Nov 2013)


*************************************************************** 

Original Notes:

Between September/October of 1963 and August of 1965, the Rolling Stones recorded numerous radio sessions for the British Broadcasting Corporation (BBC).
Most of these sessions were recorded off the air at the time, and the BBC preserved some recordings themselves.
There have been numerous bootleg releases of this material over the years.
For an overview, see Chris M.'s great site:  http://www.rollingstonesnet.com/BBCStones.htm.
As Chris notes, all available songs were compiled by Invasion Unlimited on their "Beat Beat Beat at the Beeb" set.

I do not like the sound of the Invasion Unlimited release.
Every mono track, which means 47 out of 51, has been electronically reprocessed for fake stereo, and IU has smothered any hiss with heavy noise reduction.

This set is my remastering of the same songs, plus two short interviews omitted on "Beat Beat Beat at the Beeb," without fake stereo or extreme noise reduction.
This is not a remaster of "Beat Beat Beat at the Beeb."

Contrary to popular belief, "Beat Beat Beat at the Beeb" was not made from tapes.
It was mostly made from three bootlegs, all of which I have also used extensively:

1) The Swingin' Pig's "Get Satisfaction... If You Want!" CD.
Released legally in 1988 but later made illegal after the laws were changed, this CD is made entirely from 1985 BBC rebroadcasts.
Sound quality is excellent.
Some tracks were taken from BBC transcription discs (records) and had slight surface noise, which I have attempted to remove.
Mono tracks were also converted to true mono; on the CD the left and right channels were slightly different.

2) "Don't Lie to Me," a German bootleg LP released in 1985, made entirely of old tapes recorded off the air at the time.

3) "Crackin' Up," probably a German bootleg LP, released in 1986 and also made entirely of old tapes recorded off the air at the time.

I also used a few other sources as noted below.
 
Some of the records don't run at the correct pitch but I'm not enough of an expert to get them exactly right.
Where things sounded wrong, I limited pitch changes to a maximum of + or -3%.
For the LP/EP sources, I did everything I could to improve the sound (removing hiss, hum, re-EQ'ing) without harming the music.

Four years after the release of "Beat Beat Beat at the Beeb," VGP released "The Lost Treasure," which is made entirely of old tapes recorded off the air at the time.
In some cases, these versions are superior to those used on the 1980s LPs.
I have attempted to use the best version of each song.

CDs/CDRs were ripped using Exact Audio Copy and/or CueTools to ensure accuracy.
LPs were transferred using a Music Hall turntable, Ortofon cartridge, Adcom preamp, and Cakewalk UA-1G A/D converter.
LP noise was removed with ClickRepair; all other editing and enhancements were performed using Adobe Audition.
Tracks were split using CD Wave, and tagged and converted to FLAC with foobar2000.

For several sessions, there are differences of opinion on line as to when the sessions were recorded or the song order.
See http://rocksoff.org/radio.htm and http://www.nzentgraf.de/books/tcw/works1.htm.
"Beat Beat Beat at the Beeb" has similar information but not exactly, so my song order is not quite the same either.
All tracks here are ordered by recording date not broadcast date; "Beat Beat Beat at the Beeb" uses them interchangeably.

***This is the second version of this compilation.
It has been revised after comparison with VGP's "The Lost Treasure," which was not available for the first version of this compilation.
Changes are indicated by ***

watchit, May 2012 

 

Thanks to the original sources and ALL INVOLVED!!

 

pass-fbsvw

 

**!!**

 

Saturday, May 25, 2024

ABC In Concert - Odds and Ends 1972, 1973, 1974 - Allman Brothers, Bee Gees, Steely Dan, Todd Rungren, Chuck Berry, Johnny Rivers, Bo Diddley, Ingrid Gibson, Sparks

The last "In Concert" folder...

ABC "In Concert" - 2, 3, 27, 32, 46


   In Concert #2 the Allman Brothers Band Dec. 8, 1972
1: one way out 3:52
2: ramblin man 5:38 (cuts in, monoized from :46-:51)
3: whipping post 11:31

   In Concert #3 the Bee Gees April 13, 1973
4: I just gotta get a message to you 2:28 (cuts in)
5: words 3:33
6: I started a joke 2:53
7: new morning 4:19
8: lonely days 5:01

   In Concert #3 Steely Dan April 13, 1973
9: do it again 5:50
10: reeling in the years 3:16 (cuts in and out)

    In Concert #27 Todd Rundgren and Utopia Feb. 1, 1974
11: my dream 2:40
12: just one victory 5:13
13: hello, it's me 4:22

    In Concert #32 Chuck Berry April 12, 1974
14: no particular place to go 3:15
15: sweet little sixteen 1:57
16: audience question period 2:16
17: my ding a ling 4:19
 
    In Concert #32 Johnny Rivers April 12, 1974
18: Memphis, Tennessee 3:03

    In Concert #32 Chuck Berry April 12, 1974
19: roll over Beethoven 4:27
20: Johnny B. Goode 6:55

    In Concert #32 Johnny Rivers, Chuck Berry, Bo Diddley and ingrid Gibson April 12, 1974
21: reelin and rockin 5:17
22: jam 4:09

    In Concert #46 Nov. 8, 1974  Sparks
23: something for the girl with everything 3:24 (introduced by Keith Moon)
24: talent is an asset 4:44
25: D.C. 3:55
26: amateur hour 3:50


total time: 112:10 (minutes/ seconds)

Thanks to the original source!

>##<


Friday, May 24, 2024

Lou Reed - Live At The Orpheum 1976

 *THANKS TO THE ORIGINAL POSTER



                                                                SEE SCANS

          I SAID IF I EVER SEE SHARON AGAIN I'M GONNA PUNCH HER FACE IN

Tuesday, May 21, 2024

Lou Reed - Sessions At West 54th 1998 - BBC Sessions 2000

*THANKS TO THE ORIGINAL POSTER


                       *FOR ANDY OVER AT THE BLOG NOBODY READS

 


A couple Lou Reed radio shows here. By my calculations and from checking all of the other music blogs in the world there are only 64 more bootlegs left to post. So soon every song you've ever loved will have been posted. See scans

              I WAS GETTING SO SICK OF THIS RIGHT WING REPUBLICAN SHIT


Saturday, May 18, 2024

The Faces - BBC Sessions 1972

The Faces - BBC Radio 1 Sessions - 1972
FM source @flac

 

Track List:
01 Flying - 03:57
02 Three Button Hand Me Down - 03:58
03 Wicked Messenger - 02:57
04 Had Me A Real Good Time - 04:53
05 Around The Plynth-Gasoline Alley - 07:41
06 Country Comfort - 06:04
07 You're My Girl - 06:17
08 Wicked Messenger - 04:19
09 Devotion - 06:28
10 It's All Over Now - 08:19
11 I Feel So Good - 08:40




Rod Stewart & The Faces on BBC Radio 1 in 1970. This set includes performances from 3 different venues in London that year, see below & .png file. Faces had released their 1st album with Rod Stewart in 1970, First Step. Faces band members also appeared on Rod Stewart's 1970 album, Gasoline Alley. Songs from both albums are included here. Tracks 1-3 from Camden Theatre, 3/10/1970; Tracks 4-6 from Maida Vale Studio, 9/15/1970; Tracks 7-11 from Paris Theatre, 11/19/1970.


Faces 1970: Rod Stewart – vocals, acoustic guitar; Ron Wood – electric guitar, acoustic guitar, slide guitar, pedal steel guitar; Ronnie Lane – bass guitar; Ian McLagan – Hammond organ, piano; Kenney Jones – drums.  



pass-fbsvw

)!!(

 

% % % % % % % % % % % % % % % % % % % % % % % % % %

 

Playboy Playmate - Miss March 1970 Chris Koren


Tuesday, May 14, 2024

ABC-TV In Concert - Sly and the Family Stone, Rush, Donovan, Linda Ronstadt, Dan Fogelberg and Joe Walsh, Gentle Giant, Triumvirat, Fleetwood Mac (1974-1975)


"ABC In Concert" #48, #49, #50, #51

    In Concert #48 Sly and the Family Stone Dec. 7, 1974
1: show intro and talk 2:28
2: stand 4:45

    Rush - Dec. 7, 1974
3: finding my way 5:05
4: best I can 2:22
 
    Donovan - Dec. 7, 1974
5: mellow yellow 3:44
6: ride a mile 4:40
7: Lalena 2:17
8: rock and roll soldier 4:01

    In Concert #49 Linda Ronstadt - Dec. 20, 1974
9: show intro, when will I be loved 3:17
10: St. Louis 3:54 (w/ J.D. Souther)

    Dan Fogelberg and Joe Walsh - Dec. 20, 1974
11: Joe Walsh introduces Fogelberg :57
12: something on your mind 2:40
13: take care 3:14
14: anyway I love you 3:50

    Linda Ronstadt - Dec. 20, 1974
15: you're no good 3:05
16: heart like a wheel 3:21

    In Concert #50 - Gentle Giant - Dec. 27, 1974
17: knots 6:29 (begin. applause splice)
18: the advent of panurge 6:30

    In Concert #51 - Triumvirat - Jan. 17, 1975
19: schooldays 4:21
20: triangle 6:48

    In Concert #52 - Fleetwood Mac - Jan. 31, 1975
21: angel 5:27
22: interviews 1:38
23: Bermuda Triangle 9:17 (end applause splice)
24: I'm not to blame 4:43
25: hypnotized 5:58 (short gap at 2:56)

  total runtime: 104:52 (minutes/ seconds)
  recorded with maxell C-120 low noise cassette

 

**@**


Saturday, May 11, 2024

Son Seals Blues Band LIVE in Tucson AZ 1985


 Son Seals Blues Band

Terry & Zeke's
Tucson AZ
1985-02-25 
Soundboard @320


01. Chicken Shack
02. Bird Nest On The Ground
03. Introduction of Son Seals---San-Ho-Zay
04. Don't Lie To Me
05. The Woman I Love
06. I Can't Hold Out
07. Help Me To Spend This Dough
08. Trouble, Trouble
09. I'll Play The Blues For You
 

Son Seals - Guitar, Vocals
Larry Burton - Guitar
Carl Snyder, Jr. - Keyboards, Vocals
Charles Taylor - Bass
Rick Howard - Drums


Friday, May 10, 2024

Tom Waits - Franks Wild Demos

Rebooted...
Originally posted February 7, 2019

Tom Waits - Frank's Wild Demos
Zipperman Demo Series Vol. 5
Studio Demos and outtakes @flac

SOURCE: Silver CD > EAC > Soundforge 8 (removed some crackle) > 
FLAC Level 8 Align on Sector Boundaries

 Track List:
01. Frank's Theme (Open)
02. Innocent When You Dream
03. Blow Wind Blow
04. Hang On St. Christopher
05. Please Wake Me Up
06. Temptation
07. Vocals Tune
08. More Than Rain
09. I'll Take New York
10. Yesterday Is Here
11. Piano Tune
12. Train Song
13. Frank's Theme (Close)



 


Sunday, May 5, 2024

Santana - Live Dortmund, Germany 1980

Rebooted by request...
Originally posted May 12, 2014






















Santana - Live Westfalenhalle 
Dortmund, Germany
June 12, 1980
Soundboard/FM Source @192



Set List:
01 Hannibal
02 All I Ever Wanted
03 Tales of Kilimanjaro
04 Black Magic Woman/ Gipsy Queen
05 Oye Como Va
06 Just In Time To See The Sun
07 Incident At Neshabur
08 Lightning In The Sky
09 Chant
10 Aqua Marine
11 Savor/ Jingo
12 You Just Don't Care
13 Europa
14 Well All Right
15 Runnin'
16 Soul Sacrifice
17 Open Invitation
18 Shake Your Moneymaker
19 Samba Pa Ti
20 She's Not There
21 Transcendance
22 Evil Ways

 

pass-fbsvw


Dortmund '80

Friday, May 3, 2024

13th Floor Elevators - Live! In California

13th Floor Elevators - Live! In California
KSAN-FM Source @320
Various Dates, Various Venues

Artwork Included

 

While much of the 13th Floor Elevators’ popularity today rests upon their studio albums and 45s, this wasn’t always the case. Especially not in Texas, where the Elevators first became famous as an outstanding live act, with a combination of ferocious drive and dark mystique that was unlike anything seen before. When the Psychedelic Sounds LP was released in late ‘66, some fans in their hometown Austin felt it was missing a bit of the captivating energy they associated with the band. Even Tommy Hall, the band’s lyricist and intellectual nexus, stated in a 1989 interview that “our real show was live”.

Before getting on to the true live recordings, a word about the infamous, fake Live LP on International Artists. This odd concoction was put together by I A producer Fred Carroll in the Summer of ’68, after months of studio sessions with the band had failed to produce anything release-worthy. Pulled together from old outtakes, the Live album is decidedly non-live, despite Carroll’s attempts to create a concert atmosphere via dubbed-in crowd noise. Much venom has been thrown upon this record over the decades, but fake live LPs were common in the ‘60s – much more so than real live recordings – and as far as the actual music goes, it’s a very good album, including a couple of songs unavailable elsewhere. Any fan of the band needs it. ‘Nuff said.

Except for the three core members of vocalist Roky Erickson, guitarist Stacy Sutherland and jug player/lyricist Tommy Hall, the Elevators underwent several line-up changes during their 2.5-year life span. A commonly held opinion back then was that as a live act, none of the later configurations could match the earliest line-up, with bassist Benny Thurman. Thurman, who was a formally schooled violinist but not a “real” bass player, contributed to the strange and exciting aura around the group during the first half of 1966. According to Bill Miller of Cold Sun, who saw the early Elevators several times, “Benny was just as important as Roky” to the band.

At that time, the Elevators’ official recordings were limited to the “You’re Gonna Miss Me” 45 (released January ‘66), and except for some demo tracks, this first line-up was not preserved on any other studio reels. The three live tapes that exist from the Spring ‘66 are thus important documents of the band’s early days, and better yet, they confirm the praise heard from the original fans. The energy level is breath-taking, yet the band finds room to spread their psychedelic message via complex drug songs like “Roller Coaster” and “Fire Engine”.

The earliest known live recording of the 13th Floor Elevators is the KAZZ-FM Tape. This was a live, 30-minute broadcast from a concert at the New Orleans club in Austin, Texas, March ’66. The Elevators had been the house band at the club during recent weeks, and this was to be their final performance before embarking on a tour of the Dallas/Fort Worth area. KAZZ-FM was one of Austin’s two radio stations, and unlike KNOW (who banned the Elevators) they had given “You’re Gonna Miss Me” plenty of air play. The KAZZ father and son team of Bill Josey Sr & Jr would continue to support local Austin rock music via their Sonobeat label in coming years. The KAZZ-FM tape features Bill Josey Jr, under his DJ alias “Rim Kelly”, giving enthustiastic intros to the songs, and occasionally ad libbing small talk while the band took their time tuning. Josey’s on-air description of the show as a “farewell performance” later caused confusion, as poorly informed writers and bootleggers assumed it meant the band was headed for the westcoast – which didn’t happen until five months later.

At least one hardcore Elevators fan I know rates the KAZZ-FM tape as the best live recording of the band in existence, and it’s easy to see why. The band is absolutely frantic, the crowd (possibly fuelled by the free LSD handed out by the group) is ecstatic and loud, and the compressed, somewhat overloaded nature of the recording becomes an advantage. Songs include “Roller Coaster”, “Monkey Island”, covers of two early Beatles numbers, and an absolutely blazing 7-minute version of “Gloria”. An edited version of the tape can be found on the Original Sounds and Demos Everywhere vinyl bootlegs from the late 80s, and the complete 30-minute version has gone around in tape trading circles. There are indications of two more KAZZ-FM broadcasts from the same era preserved on tape, but nothing has surfaced so far.

Although the subsequent sojourn to Dallas/Fort Worth was generally unsuccessful for the band, they got to appear live twice on the local Sump’N Else TV Show. The audio portions of their appearances were preserved, and have been officially released on Fire In My Bones (LP) and Psychedelic Microdots, vol 2 (CD). Although the TV studio setting removes a bit of the live atmosphere, the Elevators blow through their shortened set lists with tight, high-energy performances. The March ’66 show includes a brief interview with Tommy Hall, who also delivers a long jug solo on “You Really Got Me”. The May ’66 appearance is even more interesting, featuring not less than six songs, among them unique items like Don Covay’s “Mercy Mercy” and a manic “Roller Coaster”, which has Sump N Else’s host exclaim “wow!”. Unfortunately, the transfer from original tapes, done in the mid-‘80s, caused several tracks to appear at too fast speed; some are off by as much as 10%. As good as the Elevators were, they weren’t quite capable of the shrill, inhuman tempo heard on “Fire Engine”, as an example.

The Elevators returned to Austin, and in the late Spring they hooked up with the Houston-based International Artists label. “You’re Gonna Miss Me” began to make waves outside Texas, which led to I A bringing in Lelan Rogers to help with national promotion. Only one live recording exists from the Summer ’66, and that is the La Maison Tape. Sourced from a live broadcast from the La Maison club in Houston, this 20-minute stereo tape first appeared on the Elevator Tracks album from 1987. Although it was an exciting period for the band, the show isn’t among their finest moments. The predominance of covers is disappointing, but the “Roller Coaster” version is one of the best. It was also around this time that the first line-up change occurred. Partly due to his wild, unpredictable lifestyle, Benny Thurman was replaced by the more placid Ronnie Leatherman, who was also considered a better bass player.

The new line-up toured California during the second half of ’66 and, at the height of their success, appeared twice on Dick Clark’s national TV shows. Evidence suggests that as a musical engine, the Elevators may never have been better than in the early days of their west coast stay. In his fanzine Mojo Navigator, a teenage Greg Shaw reported on seeing the band live at the Avalon Ballroom in San Francisco, obviously impressed: “The most interesting group musically was the 13th Floor Elevators. They are a really freaky group. They look strange, they sound strange, and they are all good musicians, doing all original material. The lead singer, whose voice is truly odd, also plays lead guitar pretty well. The drummer is excellent. They have one guy who does nothing but boop-boop-boop with a jug. The songs they do are new and different.”

The Elevators never felt entirely at home in San Francisco, although fellow Texan Chet Helms offered them many chances to play at the Avalon. Compiled from those gigs, the Avalon ’66 Tape gives terrific proof of the band’s prowess. Ronnie Leatherman’s bass adds a steady, almost majestic power to newly added numbers like “Before You Accuse Me” and (arguably the high-point) “You Don’t Know”. Compared with the fire-breathing r’n’b drive of the Spring ’66 recordings, updated covers of “The Word” and “You Really Got Me” show the band moving towards a more mature, acid-rock sound. The tape shows, quite simply, a great 60s rock band at the peak of their powers.

All copies of the Avalon ’66 Tape seem to derive from the same source, a broadcast on the SF Bay Area KSAN radio station in late 1977. Listeners would record KSAN’s shows of archival 60s live music, and those tapes made their way to vinyl bootleggers. The first Avalon ’66 boot came out in Italy 1978, and many have followed since. Unfortunately, the most well-known of these, Live SF ’66 on Lysergic Records, has the worst sound quality of all. It was produced by well-known LA collector Dave Gibson, whose Moxie reissue label was infamous for its shifting audio quality. Later Avalon releases such as Flivver and Rocky’s Horror Show are superior to Lysergic’s weak, muffled sound. The best-sounding version may yet be to come, as the Elevators box-set currently in production will utilize a great-sounding tape copy of the old KSAN broadcast that surfaced recently. Incidentally, “Roller Coaster” was aired separately from the rest of the Avalon tape, and is missing from some of the bootlegs. A live recording of “Reverberation” from (probably) the same source tapes is also known to exist, but has never been released.

As a footnote to the Avalon ’66 Tape, there is known to exist another live tape from the west coast tour, from Fresno in inland California. The people in possession of this tape like to keep it to themselves, and are unwilling to divulge even track list info. Perhaps it will see the light of day some time.

Despite their commercial success, it was in California that problems began developing around the Elevators in general, and Roky Erickson in particular. After returning to Texas around Christmas, the band played a large number of gigs during early ‘67, but their performances were getting uneven and unpredictable.
Nothing illustrates this better than the notorious Houston Mustic Theatre Tape, from February ‘67. Through a twist of fate, this is the best documented concert in the entire Elevators annals. Apart from the professional live recording, there exists a poster, old ticket stubs, detailed comments from band members, and personal reminiscences from audience members. How unfortunate then, that the Elevators decided to drop more LSD than usual before the concert, and went on stage zonked out of their skulls. While the crowd was yelling and IA:s tape deck was rolling, lead guitarist Stacy Sutherland entered a profound hallucinatory stage, which he described years later as: “...Everybody turned into wolves, and I thought that our band was evil, because of some of the things we had advocated. And I was tryin' to escape the room, I didn't know what I was gonna do, but I was gonna get out of there. I didn't want anything to do with it, because everybody was turning into animals...”. While on stage, Sutherland entered a dissociated spiritual space wherein an angel gave him three “prophecies”, all of a negative nature. This vision would continue to haunt the guitarist, and informed some of the lyrics he later wrote for the band’s final LP, Bull Of The Woods.

On top of these heavy acid vibes, the revolving stage of the venue contributed to the musicians’ confusion. On the live tape, you can hear drummer John Ike Walton desperately trying to hold the gig together, while Roky forgets his lines or his vocal mic, Stacy’s guitar leads abruptly come and go, and the whole thing is pretty much out to lunch. As a freak document of a very freaky night, it has its moments, but for the Elevators legacy we would have been better off without it. To add insult to injury, when the recording was made available in the late ‘80s, the clueless people involved simply put it out with zero corrections of the raw mix, which means that it sounds even more bizarre than it had to. Furthermore, it was incorrectly listed as coming from La Maison, which didn’t even exist by early ’67. For the bold or curious, the concert can be found on Big Beat’s I’ve Seen Your Face Before – Live LP/CD, as well as the Magic Of The Pyramids bootleg CD. A chaotic post-concert jam with the Conqueroo from the same night has also been released.

Problems mounted within in the band, and in mid-‘67 the rhythm section was entirely overhauled – for a brief period, the Elevators didn’t even exist anymore – and “the two Dannys”, Galindo and Thomas, took over on bass and drums, respectively. The main project for this line-up was the Easter Everywhere album, which was successfully completed by October ‘67. The new line-up played a few stray gigs early on, before getting into a steady flow of work around the time of the album release in November.

The fragmentation of the band continued, and the concerts were getting increasingly erratic, as were the antics of both Roky and Tommy. Of the many dozens of gigs performed during ‘68 (Galindo having moved on), no recordings have surfaced. Rumors of an Easter Everywhere-era live tape with “Slip Inside This House” have circulated, but appear to be untrue. Although the final year of the 13th Floor Elevators was perhaps the most unusual of all, their days as an awe-inspiring live act were no more.

This disc is comprised of live recordings which are believed to be culled from San Francisco radio station KSAN, October/November 1966. The performances included on this disc show The Elevators were insanely powerful live.  They may have even been among the best live bands America had to offer at the time.  Unfortunately, when the boys returned home to Texas at the end of the year, things began to unravel.  Fortunately, these recordings are sonically excellent and succeed in capturing the bands’ true energy; a feat that escaped their official studio output.


Recorded between Sept. and Nov. 1966 somewhere in the Bay area, California. Re-broadcast on KSAN radio circa 1978

BAND:
• Roky Erickson - Vocals, Rhythm Guitar
• Stacy Sutherland - Lead Guitar
• Tommy Hall - Amplified Jug
• Benny Thurman - Bass
• Ronnie Leatherman - Bass
• John Ike Walton - Drums, Percussion

Track List:
01. Everybody Need Somebody To Love 05:46
02. Before You Accuse Me (Take A Good Look At Yourself)    02:42
03. You Don't Know (How Young You Are) 02:56
04. I'm Gonna Love You Too 03:41
05. You Really Got Me 02:10
06. Splash 1 (Now I'm Home) 06:36
07. Fire Engine 03:11
08. Roll Over Beethoven 02:54
09. The Ward 02:55
10. Monkey Island 02:52
11. Roller Coaster 05:42


Bonus:
12. Before You Accuse Me [B-side, IA#113, mono 45 rpm] 02.37
13. She Lives (In A Time Of Her Own) [A-side, IA#121, mono 45 rpm] 02.56
14. Baby Blue [B-side, IA#121, mono 45 rpm] 05.12
15. I've Got Levitation [A-side, IA#113, mono 45rpm] 02.36
16. Slip Inside This House [A-side, IA#122, mono 45 rpm] 04.06
17. You're Gonna Miss Me [Single Version] 02.30

 

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Wednesday, May 1, 2024

Jefferson Airplane 1968-1970 Outtakes, Rough Mixes, Live, Demos, Studio Sessions


 Jefferson Airplane
1968-1970
Outtakes, Rough Mixes, Live, Demos, Studio Sessions
Various Locations



01. Share A Little Joke 
02. Greasy Heart
03. Ice Cream Phoenix Jam
04. Good Shepherd
05. Lather
06. Chushingura
07. Triad
08. Star Track
09. Ice Cream Phoenix 1
10. Ice Cream Phoenix 2
11. Frozen Noses (Grace Slick Demo)
12. Mexico (Grace Slick Demo)
13. Mexico (Full Band Version)
14. Been So Long (with Overdubing)
15. A Song For All Seasons
16. We Can Be Together (Paul Kantner Demo)
17. Last Wall Of The Castle (Jorma Kaukonen Demo)


Tracks 1-2,4-10 - Crown Of Creation Outtakes & Rough Mixes, 1968
Track 3 - Hot Tuna Live
Tracks 11-14 - Demos & Outtakes, 1970
Tracks 15-16 - Demos & Studio Sessions, 1969
Track 17 - Demo, 1968