Category Archives: concert

Video: Patti Smith Sings John Lennon’s ‘Beautiful Boy’

Last night Patti Smith sang “Beautiful Boy” at the Capitol Offenbach in Offenbach, Germany.

-– A Days of the Crazy-Wild blog post: sounds, visuals and/or news –-

Video: Bob Dylan Performs for President Obama at the White House — Feb. 9, 2010

Dylan and band at the White House.

Four years ago, Bob Dylan and his band performed “The Times They Are A-Changin'” at the White House as part of “In Performance at the White House, A Celebration of Music from the Civil Rights Movement” held in recognition of Black History Month.

Jon Pareles in the New York Times, February 10, 2010:

WASHINGTON — Half a dozen legislators sat a few feet away, under the crystal chandeliers of the East Room of the White House, as Bob Dylan sang “The Times They Are A-Changin’,” poker-faced.

“Come senators, congressman, please heed the call,” he rasped. “Don’t stand in the doorway, don’t block up the hall.” His tone was rough but almost wistful; he had turned his old exhortation into an autumnal waltz. Afterward, he stepped offstage and shook President Obama’s hand.

It was part of “In Performance at the White House: A Celebration of Music from the Civil Rights Movement.” The program was the Black History Month event in Michelle Obama’s continuing music series at the White House, and will be broadcast Thursday night on PBS.

It was not lost on anyone that Mr. Obama is America’s first African-American president. “The civil rights movement was a movement sustained by music,” Mr. Obama said in opening remarks. The music, he said, “was inspired by the movement and gave strength in return.”

Mr. Dylan shared the bill, though not the stage, with fellow musicians who regularly sang at civil-rights rallies in the early 1960s — Joan Baez, and Bernice Johnson Reagon with the Freedom Singers — and a cross-generational gathering of performers: Smokey Robinson, Jennifer Hudson, John Mellencamp, Yolanda Adams, Natalie Cole, the Blind Boys of Alabama and the Howard University Choir.

Read the rest of the story here.

Check Bob Dylan’s performance of “The Times They Are A-Changin'”:

-– A Days of the Crazy-Wild blog post: sounds, visuals and/or news –-

Video: Bruce Springsteen Does AC/DC’s ‘Highway To Hell’ in Perth, Australia

Bruce Springsteen and the E Street Band rock Perth, Australia.

Bruce Springsteen began his final (third) show in Perth, Australia Friday night (February 8, 2014) with a tribute to AC/DC in the form of a rousing “Highway To Hell.”

And more:

“The Promise” Feb. 8, 2014:

“Terry’s Song” – Feb. 8, 2014:

“Thunder Road” – Feb. 5, 2014:

“For You” – Feb. 2, 1014:

“I’ll Work For Your Love” – Feb. 7, 2014:

-– A Days of the Crazy-Wild blog post: sounds, visuals and/or news –-

Video: Stream The National’s Full Set at the Sydney Opera House – Feb. 8, 2014

Today The National’s performance at the Sydney Opera House was streamed live and you can watch the whole thing.

Setlist:

Don’t Swallow The Cap
I Should Live In Salt
Mistaken For Strangers
Bloodbuzz Ohio
Demons
Sea Of Love
Hard To Find
Afraid Of Everyone
Conversation 16″
Squalor Victoria
I Need My Girl
This Is The Last Time
Lean
Abel
Slow Show
Apartment Story
Pink Rabbits
England
Graceless
About Today
Fake Empire
Learning (Perfume Genius cover)
Humiliation
Mr. November
Terrible Love
Vanderlyle Crybaby Geeks (acoustic)

-– A Days of the Crazy-Wild blog post: sounds, visuals and/or news –-

Video: Pixies Play Semi-Acoustic Version of ‘Monkey Gone To Heaven’ + More

For NPR’s Tiny Deck Concert the Pixies performed “Greens and Blues” off EP-2, the unreleased “Silver Snails” and the “Monkey Gone to Heaven.”

-– A Days of the Crazy-Wild blog post: sounds, visuals and/or news –-

Video: Arcade Fire’s Win Butler, Pearl Jam ‘Rockin’ in the Free World’ Down Under

Arcade Fire’s Win Butler joined Pearl Jam in Perth, Australia yesterday for a blistering version of “Rockin’ in the Free World.”

-– A Days of the Crazy-Wild blog post: sounds, visuals and/or news –-

Audio: Bob Dylan Kicks Off Landmark 1966 Electric Rock ‘n’ Roll Tour – Feb. 4, 1966

Forty-eight years ago, on February 4, 1966, Bob Dylan and the Hawks kicked off their unprecedented 1966 world tour.

Unprecedented because never before had a popular artist so radically altered their art.

Less than a year earlier, in May of 1965, Dylan had completed a tour of England at the Royal Albert Hall. That tour was documented in “Don’t Look Back,” and during it Dylan remained the folk singer — playing harp and an acoustic guitar.

Dylan was known throughout the world in early 1965 as a folksinger. His first four albums found him playing guitar, harp and piano.

But 17 days after 1965 English tour tour ended, on May 27, 1965, Dylan released Bringing It All Back Home, an album whose first half was a new kind of rock ‘n’ roll, one that mixed caustic poetry with bluesy rock and Dylan’s unique vocals.

Two months later the single “Like a Rolling Stone” was released, and Dylan was a full-fledged rock star.

“Like A Rolling Stone” was a hit, reaching #2 in the U.S. and charting in the Top 10 in a number of other countries including England.

Dylan blew minds when he performed electric rock ‘n’ roll at Newport on July 24, 1965. Dylan and the Hawks played Forest Hills Tennis Stadium in New York on August 28, and then Highway 61 Revisited, Dylan’s first total rock ‘n’ roll album, was released on August 30.

October, November and December found Dylan and the Hawks barnstorming through America.

The 1966 World Tour began in the U.S., but eventually hit Australia and then England, and it was in England, where fans had last seen Dylan with an acoustic guitar, that fans reacted with fury to Dylan going electric.

“They absolutely hated us,” Robbie Robertson said of a tour in which audiences didn’t comprehend some of the greatest rock ‘n’ roll every played.

As Greil Marcus wrote in his book “Invisible Republic – Bob Dylan’s Basement Tapes”: “In America, this music was, in a way, prophetic. At the very least the sound and its reception prefigured an America that, soon enough, for everyone, would be all too familiar: a country split in half over race and war, with battles in the streets, guns fired on college campuses, ghastly riots in cities across the nation, leaders falling to assassins as if on a schedule set by public fantasy, screamers driven from meeting halls with clubs, common citizens driven from their streets with gas and bullets.

“But in the United Kingdom, where after eight months on the road the ensemble had likely reached the limits of their capacities, and reveled at the fact, the hatred for Dylan’s new music and for what he had become was somehow more abstract than in the United States, and more impersonal — uglier.

“It was as if he had betrayed not simply the Freedom Sinfgers, or Woody Guthrie, or the fan who was now shouting, but the Folk immemorial, the mystic chords of memory. The very instinct that history contained identity and one could claim it. In any case the response now made the controversies of the past seasons fade into their own abstraction. In the music Dylan and the Hawks sent off stages in May of 1966, absurdity wars with terror, terror with exultation, exultation with loathing. It was all too much, it couldn’t last and it didn’t.”

Below are live performances from the 1966 World Tour.

“Just Like Tom Thumb’s Blues,” April 13 1966, Sydney:

“I Don’t Believe You (She Acts Like We Have Never Met),” APril 13, 1966:

“Positively 4th Street,” April 13 1966, Sydney:

“Tell Me, Momma,” May 14, 1966, Liverpool:

“Like A Rolling Stone,” May 14, 1966, Liverpool:

“One Too Many Mornings,” May 16, 1966, Sheffield:

“Leopard-Skin Pill-Box Hat,” May 26, 1966, Royal Albert Hall, London:

“Ballad Of A Thin Man,” May 26, 1966, Royal Albert Hall, London:

-– A Days of the Crazy-Wild blog post: sounds, visuals and/or news –-

Video: The Beatles Final Concert Was on Apple’s Rooftop

The Beatles on the roof rooftop of Apple, their label, on Savile Row, January 30th, 1969:


The Beatles – Rooftop Concert (London Original… by STARDUST72

Setlist:

1. Get Back
2. Don’t Let Me Down
3. I’ve Got A Feeling
4. One After 909
5. Dig A Pony
6. Get Back

-– A Days of the Crazy-Wild blog post: sounds, visuals and/or news –-

Video: Dream Syndicate + Peter Buck + Led Zeppelin’s John Paul Jones Jam on ‘John Coltrane Stereo Blues’

Photo via Steve Wynn’s Facebook page.

This is crazy cool.

Peter Bucks hosts the Todos Santos Music Festival in the southern Baja region of Mexico each year (this was the third fest).

This year there was a major jam session on January 24, 2014 with The Dream Syndicate, Buck and Led Zeppelin’s John Paul Jones.

The Dream Syndicate’s Steve Wynn writes on Facebook:

Ah, I had a feeling something would show up–and there it is. The Dream Syndicate playing “John Coltrane Stereo Blues” in Todos Santos last Saturday with John Paul Jones and Peter Buck (with Linda Pitmon and Josh Kantor) And check out JPJ’s solo around the 7 minute mark. Amazing–I was flashing back to seeing Led Zep at the Forum back in 1976.

Here’s The Dream Syndicate doing the Velvet’s “Rock ‘n’ Roll” at the festival:

-– A Days of the Crazy-Wild blog post: sounds, visuals and/or news –-

Audio: Bob Dylan Delivers Epic ‘Desolation Row’ at Royal Albert Hall, May 27,1966

This is a very cool version of “Desolation Row” from Dylan’s 1966 World Tour.

This recording really is from Dylan’s May 27, 1966 show at the Royal Albert Hall in London. At 13 and a half minutes in length, it’s slightly longer than the 11 and a half minute version played at Free Trade Hall in Manchester 10 days earlier, and the sound quality is good.

Plus a good one from the previous year:

Hollywood Bowl,L.A., Sept. 3, 1965 (excellent recording):

Desolation Row by Bob Dylan on Grooveshark

-– A Days of the Crazy-Wild blog post: sounds, visuals and/or news –-