Playlist of the Week(music)

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I do get a kick out of facebook. Tonight while looking through my friend, Mick Martin's FB friend list, I noticed the name of an old High School classmate, sorta friend from those days. A name like, Brian Brazil isn't too common He had become a professional musician...
Check him out...

"Treat Her Right" ~ Brian Brazil
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VrIc6SBc3ok&fb_source=message
 
More of the appearance of Rory Gallagher on the German television program, "The Beat Club", in the 1970s...just absolutely awesome as to the audio and video quality...[as T.V. recorded music, most often, is due to the capabilities of the 'tape' used for recording...the BBC recordings are a fine example. The only drawback is that usually most all of them, from this far back in the past, is that they are monaural.] These are most likely from 1971 or 72...possibly a little earlier...as the program switched to color broadcasting [a return, actually] at the start of 1970. Rory would be about 23 years old in these. [1948 - 1995...he died too young, In my opinion...]

Enjoy....!

all cuts: ~ Rory Gallagher "Live on "The Beat Club"
"Toredown"
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lw8gB2K8coU&feature=related

"I Don't Know Where I'm Going"
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FPXJMKit2lw&feature=related

"McAvoy Boogie"
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0G8PDXtX49I&feature=related

"Hoodoo Man"
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RvH5JlkFxw4&feature=related

"Hands Up"
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tQCnmRFSqS8&feature=related
 
I only heard this song a moment ago and I just had to share it...

Iris DeMent - Let the Mystery Be
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nlaoR5m4L80

Right on...thanks Earth Sign for sharing, Iris is a fav. of mine.
Great tune. Iris has another song used in a movie [the above was in the flick 'Seven Years In Tibet" {1997}] called 'Wasteland of the Free'

...her voice can get a bit 'tiresome' for more than a couple of a songs...still she's quite a talented woman.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=86VHcV5Pa5c

and a guitar version [The album is best, but I can't find it available for free online]
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hhgb9hYjX3g
 
Next to my mother one of the greatest persons to ever have been born and raised in Oklahoma is Hoyt Axton.
[Hoyt died in 1999, too young at age 61, having had a severe stroke four years earlier. Let his life be a warning to anyone that is tempted to try cocaine...it severely damages the heart muscle...I've heard more than one doctor claim that he can tell in an autopsy if a person has used cocaine even just once from the condition of the heart muscle.]

Here's a playlist I've chosen from favs. that also are high quality uploads....enjoy.

...one that he wrote...
Hoyt Axton - "Wild Bull Rider"
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=p3kxMS1gPP8&feature=share

...another that he wrote...
Hoyt Axton - "Della And The Dealer"
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_BQZ3gt7hUI&feature=related

...and another He wrote...a beautiful tune, one of my very favs...
Hoyt Axton - "Evangelina" [The Rose in the Desert of Old Mexico]
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fRTcZJtxPzk

..and still another that he wrote...
"Flash of Fire" - Hoyt Axton
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=o2ipTabxaZo

"Good Lookin' Child" - Hoyt Axton
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dYfb-D38qQs&feature=related

Hoyt Wayne Axton ~ "The Pusher"
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=y2yeMaDpcos

...and for those of you on drugs...the 'Druggie Version'...toke up!
Hoyt "Whereinthehe77amI?" Axton ~ "The Pusher"
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uXQt6OksZTg&feature=related

You can roll your own
and you can own a Rolls
but don't roll your own Rolls...
"Roll Your Own" - Hoyt Axton
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LP1_ZkpYAPk&feature=related

I've written the following about Hoyt.
Hoyt Axton was born on March 25, 1938, in Duncan, Oklahoma. His mother, Mae Boren Axton, co-wrote Elvis's smash hit, Heartbreak Hotel, with Tommy Durden, giving Elvis his first major hit record. His mother Mae is a Nashville legend and was also a school teacher,mother of two sons and wife to their father, John T. Axton, also a teacher and high school athletics coach. Hoyt once said about his childhood: "Every weekend at our house we either won, lost or got rained out."

Under his father's encouragement and training Hoyt became a "Full Sixty Minute...", a "Full Hour..."...Football Player" at Robert E. Lee High in Jacksonville, Florida, playing both offense and defense. He was big and He was d@mn good and he made All State and won a football scholarship to Oklahoma State University.
His mother, Mae made sure that he was also instructed in the arts by making Hoyt take classical piano lessons until his preference for the guitar surfaced. Interestingly, Hoyt credited his music career to his father much as he did to Mae: Hoyt said about his father: "He was a singer and he loved to sing, although never professionally, probably never performed on a stage in his life, but he had this wonderful baritone voice, and he sang all the time. So I learned to love singing from my father and to love songwriting from my mother..."

In the late-fifties, Hoyt left college to join the Navy, where he served about an aircraft carrier. He became set on pursuing a musical career during his service, for when he got out but also he kept athletically fit while in the Navy by boxing. He recounted once about another sailor who had broken his nose with a sucker punch one day while they were standing in the chow line. "I didn't even spill my applesauce," Hoyt said at onetime and professed, "That to this day I don't have a 'flight' mechanism." Hoyt went after the other man on the spot. They were quickly broken up, however a "Grudge Match" was arranged by his Commanding Officer, in the "Ring".

Hoyt once said about the 'Match": "I knocked him down three times in 56 seconds of the first round. He finally took off his gloves, climbed out of the ring, picked up a folding chair and struck a threatening pose. I motioned for him to come on back in the ring with it, but he didn't." Hoyt went on to become the Heavyweight Champion of a task force of 35 ships.

As he had decided and planned he got out of the Navy in 1961, and he went straight into the music business, writing and performing folk tunes in keeping with those times. He wasn't all 'Folk' music oriented though. He would always have some rhythm and blues, blues and rock numbers in his repetoire. After a short stint in Nashville, Hoyt headed for California> He caught his break the following year in 1962 while playing the San Francisco coffee-house circuit. His attention demanding style, and rich voice, set him apart from the sort of college boy/girl looking...stiff clean cut style of all the other 'Folk Singers' of the early 60s were affecting. Hoyt didn't affect any 'style', he just was. He was a folk singer for ten years and then bust out of that mold.
He probably would have become a much larger success had he not made a few unwise choices in contractual affairs as to his recording label [which was a Jazz label] and his various management difficulties.
He also became quite popular as an actor and narrative voice over in a films and television.
I believe he was part Native American and did hear so as to that fact years ago when I was a young man but I can't find confirmation of that. I assume he probably was. Everybody in my moms family tree in Oklahoma is to some degree, actor James Garner was, Will Rogers was...I imagine even Mickey Mantel was to a small degree.
ptv
 
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As Davey Jones of the Monkees has just passed I had to find something to play...
Michael Nesmith's "RiO" ...came to mind...
[no, not Reno...Rio...Rio Day Gen-AIR-0hhhhh...RIO....!]
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3GM9Xvsr-9s

"My Dad"- David Jones
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bW3JBh4iqKY&feature=related

MICHAEL NESMITH - "Navajo Trail"
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XJIx4CmS4PI&feature=related

...and if you can find a cut of Michael's, "Hollywood", be sure to give it a listen.
Michael did as much to bring Rock -n- Roll and Nashville together as did Graham Parsons.
 
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piercethevale said:
Right on...thanks Earth Sign for sharing, Iris is a fav. of mine.
Great tune. Iris has another song used in a movie [the above was in the flick 'Seven Years In Tibet" {1997}] called 'Wasteland of the Free'

...her voice can get a bit 'tiresome' for more than a couple of a songs...still she's quite a talented woman.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=86VHcV5Pa5c

and a guitar version [The album is best, but I can't find it available for free online]
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hhgb9hYjX3g

Wow, I hadn't heard this song before, thank you so much for posting it! I only recently discovered her with the album "My Life," which I really like a lot. Actually, I like her voice as well. And songs such as these are truly moving!

This album came out way back in 96, apparently? That's a little disheartening, but the song is still very refreshing, nonetheless. I'm very happy to run across such a talent!

I'm going to change the subject for a sec and post a more indulgent song... :happy:

Terry Callier - You Goin' Miss Your Candyman
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HY2VfzBWKXM
 
Was going to put some Ronnie Montrose here...I think I'll save it for later...

This goes out to the new law in the USA HR 347

...I'm heading to the conventions this summer regardless of what the law says...if 100,000 will follow me ...they will have to back off...
THEY WILL HAVE TO BACK DOWN...!!!!

....remember what the great Mohandas Gandhi and Martin Luther King taught us...

...Keep it peaceful and non violent...watch for instigators esp. watch for infil-gators...

Crosby, Stills, Nash And Young - "Chicago"
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=e7oidHuSWjE
 
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