BILLED as 'Steve Earle & The Dukes' // Originally on the Jerry Jeff Walker album '¡Viva Terlingua!', 1973 / Click the Link above, left to view an article on this.
BILLED as 'Steve Earle & The Dukes' / * - BUT popularized by The Nitty Gritty Dirt Band, Sept 1970 // Click the Link above, left to view an article on this.
From Chicago, Illinois / The front cover of his third album was born from a logo on a decades-old ashtray he found in a corner nook at "Nashville’s Sound Emporium", while tracking his previous record. // Click the Link above, left to view that cover
From Athens, Georgia - the album title comes from a venue where founding members Patterson Hood and Mike Cooley performed at the start of their careers: “There were no cool bars in town and Club XIII was the best we had - it wasn’t all that good, and our band [Adam’s House Cat] wasn’t particularly liked there....". // Click the Link above, left to view the article that I lifted that quote from.
FORMER WMBR DJ Joan Hathaway: "More stellar playing from the master of the telecaster (and other axes), Duke Levine. Never disappoints." // BUT best remembered by Freddie Fender, who had his biggest hit with it in early 1975.
This Scottish/ Irish folk song is also known as 'Purple Heather', or 'Will Ye Go, Lassie, Go?'. There have been many versions since 1958, but probably best known by Judy Collins (1961) and The Byrds (July 1966, the 'Fifth Dimension' LP)
Pioneering female Country singer: '... a hard-living, feisty and opinionated woman - musically and physically aggressive onstage and off. She wore men's slacks and cowboy shirts. She leapt from stage amplifiers. She sang while lying down. ..." // Click the Link above, left to view the original single
Pioneering female Country singer: '... a hard-living, feisty and opinionated woman - musically and physically aggressive onstage and off. She wore men's slacks and cowboy shirts. She leapt from stage amplifiers. She sang while lying down. ..." // Click the Link above, left to view the original single
Pioneering female Country singer: '... a hard-living, feisty and opinionated woman - musically and physically aggressive onstage and off. She wore men's slacks and cowboy shirts. She leapt from stage amplifiers. She sang while lying down. ..." // Click the Link above, left to view the original single
* - This was first released, in a different version than the familiar one on the 'Let It Be' album, on the English comp 'No One's Gonna Change Our World', Jan 1969 // FORMER WMBR DJ Joan Hathaway: "More stellar playing from the master of the telecaster (and other axes), Duke Levine. Never disappoints."
Despite the billing, drummer Mick Fleetwood did not take part in the recording, as it was agreed beforehand that Spann's friend and longtime associate S.P. Leary would play drums.
Time:
6:10
Artist:
Otis Spann [Billed as 'Otis Spann With Fleetwood Mac']
Despite the billing, drummer Mick Fleetwood did not take part in the recording, as it was agreed beforehand that Spann's friend and longtime associate S.P. Leary would play drums.
Mead moved to Nashville in the mid 1990s and fronted the popular group BR549. / Pig Hargus {piano} , Bob Moore {bass} played on this // Click on the Link above, left, to view the CD.
FORMER WMBR DJ Joan Hathaway: "More stellar playing from the master of the telecaster (and other axes), Duke Levine. Never disappoints." // BUT best remembered by Freddie Fender, who had his biggest hit with it in early 1975.
This Scottish/ Irish folk song is also known as 'Purple Heather', or 'Will Ye Go, Lassie, Go?'. There have been many versions since 1958, but probably best known by Judy Collins (1961) and The Byrds (July 1966, the 'Fifth Dimension' LP)