Last night at the El Rey Theater in Los Angeles, Scott Kannberg, a.k.a. Spiral Stairs joined Stephen Malkmus and the Jicks to perform Pavement’s “Stereo.”
Check it out:
-– A Days of the Crazy-Wild blog post: sounds, visuals and/or news –
Last night at the El Rey Theater in Los Angeles, Scott Kannberg, a.k.a. Spiral Stairs joined Stephen Malkmus and the Jicks to perform Pavement’s “Stereo.”
Check it out:
-– A Days of the Crazy-Wild blog post: sounds, visuals and/or news –
On May 16, 1976 the Rolling Thunder Revue played the Tarrant County Convention Center Arena in Fort Worth, Texas.
Here they perform “You’re Gonna Make Me Lonesome When You Go”:
Plus here’s Dylan and Joan Baez singing “I Shall Be Released” at the Maple Leaf Gardens, Toronto, on Dec. 1, 1975:
“Wild Mountain Thyme” with Joan Baez from the Dec. 2, 1875 show at the Maple Leaf Gardens:
-– A Days of the Crazy-Wild blog post: sounds, visuals and/or news –
On March 18, 2014 at at Harpa in Reykjavík, Iceland, a benefit concert, Let’s Protect the Park, was held featuring Bjork, Patti Smith, Lykke Li and others.
Over $300,000 was raised for Icelandic environmental organizations.
Darren Aronofsky’s “Noah,” which was filmed in Iceland, was screened that night.
Listen to over an hour of the concert, including a beautiful set by Patti Smith.
Plus a fan-shot video of all the artists performing the Beastie Boys’ “Sabotage.”
– A Days of the Crazy-Wild blog post –
I’ve been going through old interviews recently, putting together a collection of my music journalism, and I came across an interview that Jaan Uhelszki and I did with Patti Smith.
In August of 1996, two months after the release of her first album in eight years, Patti Smith sat down for an interview with us for my online magazine, Addicted To Noise.
Patti had a history with both myself and Jaan. She’d known Jaan when Jaan worked at Creem, and I’d interviewed Patti in 1975, before the release of her debut album, Horses.
We had a long conversation with Patti. I’ve pulled out the part where she talks about Bob Dylan. She had gone out on the road with Dylan at the end of 1995. At one point during the interview she said that she felt Bob Dylan was a big reason for why she became an artist.
Patti Smith: I’ve always felt that if there wasn’t a Bob Dylan I don’t know if… I think you have to give back what you’re given. I’ve been inspired and influenced by a lot of great people and I think it’s important, if you have any gifts at all, you have–if you’re given a gift, you have to give of it. One can’t hoard it. I think that is one thing Fred [‘Sonic’ Smith] and I were really talking about after being pretty reclusive for so long, that we did have a certain responsibility and I often, I deeply encouraged Fred, who was one of the most gifted people I ever knew to share his gifts with others and it’s regrettable it didn’t happen.
Some people are very comfortable with their gifts, somebody like Robert Mapplethorpe was very comfortable with them and used them daily. Worked daily. Other people are plagued by their gifts and I feel myself I have a little more of a better balance of comfortable plagued-ness, I have a little bit of plagued, I often feel dogged yet most of the time I feel blessed.
Jaan Uhelszki: The Dylan tour. How did it come about and did you stay in touch with him after you first met him at the Bottom Line in the seventies?
Patti Smith: No I hadn’t talked to him in some time. Really as I gleaned from Bob himself, he really felt that it would be good for me to come back out. He thought that I should come back out, and he said really nice things from onstage. I think that he feels I was a strong influence on things, and he thinks I should be out here–out in the front. He was very encouraging to me. I wasn’t really ready to work then, I really didn’t have a band. We’d been recording but I wasn’t really prepared to do anything. But I was so happy that he asked, that we decided to do it and you know we were a little rusty and rag tag but the people seemed happy and he was happy. My main mission on that small tour–it was only ten dates–was to crack all the energy, to crack all the atmosphere and get the stage ready for him. So we had our time before him and that was my prime directive was to get the night as magic as possible, so when he hit the stage, ’cause he hits a lot of them, that maybe it would feel a little more special than normal. And I think we did a pretty good job and I know that he was happy.
— continued —
Use this link or the one below below to get to the rest of this post.
-– A Days of the Crazy-Wild blog post: sounds, visuals and/or news –-
Beautiful version of “Girl From the North Country,” the song Rosanne Cash’s father sang with Bob Dylan on Nashville Skyline.
Cash was at Town Hall in New York city, a venue that Bob Dylan played back in 1963 — 50 years ago.
Plus listen to more Rosanne Cash live at the World Cafe.
– A Days of the Crazy-Wild blog post –
Angel Olsen, whose new album is Burn Your Fire for No Witness, performed with her band at the KEXP studio in Seattle on March 7, 2014.
This is awesome.
Songs:
“Forgiven/Forgotten”
“Hi-Five”
“Lights Out”
“Sweet Dreams”
– A Days of the Crazy-Wild blog post –
This duo is tremendous. I know this is an oldie but if you haven’t seen it yet, now’s the time.
The xx live in the KEXP studio in Seattle, July 25, 2012.
Songs:
“Fiction”
“Reunion”
“Sunset”
“Angels”
– A Days of the Crazy-Wild blog post –
Here’s a full show from Bruce Springsteen, live at the Bellville Velodrome in Cape Town, South Africa, January 29, 2014.
Setlist
1. We Take Care Of Our Own
2. Night
3. Rosalita (Come Out Tonight)
4. High Hopes
5. Adam Raised A Cain
6. Something In The Night
7. Wrecking Ball
8. Death To My Hometown
9. Hungry Heart
10. Tougher Than The Rest
11. Jack Of All trades
12. Heaven´s Wall
13. This Is Your Sword (World Premiére)
14. Because The Night
15. She’s The One
16. Working On The Highway
17. Shackled & Drawn
18. Waitin’ On A Suny Day
19. The Rising
20. The Ghost Of Tom Joad
21. Badlands
22. Sun City (World Premiére)
23. Rocky Ground
24. BTR
25. Glory Days
26. Seven NIghts To Rock
27. Dancing In The Dark
28. Tenth Avenue Freeze-Out
29. Twist & Shout
30. Thunder Road (solo acoustic)
– A Days of the Crazy-Wild blog post –
More from Bob Dylan’s concert at Zeltfestival, Konstanz, Germany, July 3, 1996.
If you missed my previous post with songs from this show and another one, head here.
“The Times They Are A-Changin'”:
“Everything Is Broken”:
“I’ll Remember You”:
Plus one from Dylan’s show at The Palace, Louisville, KY, May 07, 1996.
“Never Gonna Be The Same Again”:
– A Days of the Crazy-Wild blog post –
On March 11, Real Estate played the Fonda Theater in L.A. and covered Neil Young’s “Only Love Can Break Your Heart.”
“It’s pretty ramshackle, as it should be,” Real Estate Tweeted.
– A Days of the Crazy-Wild blog post –