Monday, May 28, 2012

ELVIN BISHOP


Elvin Bishop was born in Glendale, California, and grew up on a farm near Elliott, Iowa. His family moved to Tulsa, Oklahoma, when he was ten years old. There he attended Will Rogers High School, winning a full scholarship to the University of Chicago as a National Merit Scholar finalist. Upon graduation, he moved to Chicago in 1960 to attend school, where he majored in physics. In 1963, he met harmonica player Paul Butterfield in the neighborhood of Hyde Park and joined Butterfield's blues band, with whom he remained for five years. Their third album, The Resurrection of Pigboy Crabshaw, takes its name from Bishop's nickname.[1] In 1968 he went solo and formed the Elvin Bishop Group, also performing with Bloomfield and Al Kooper on their album titled The Live Adventures of Mike Bloomfield and Al Kooper. The group signed with Fillmore Records, which was owned by Bill Graham, who also owned the music venues of the same name.[2]

Photo of the group in 1975.
In March 1971, The Elvin Bishop Group and The Allman Brothers Band co-billed a series of concerts at the Fillmore East. Bishop joined The Allman Brothers Band onstage for a rendition of his own song, "Drunken Hearted Boy".
from Wikipedia read more

Rock My Soul Live at The Winterland 1973 Click link for video!


                                                                        Elvin Bishop
                                                                       Fillmore West
                                                                San Francisco,Ca_USA
                                                                        July 1, 1971
                                                Elvin with B.B. King and Eric Clapton
Elvin Bishop 07/08/73
                                                     The Record Plant, Sausalito, CA
Listen HERE
to an awesome recording of Elvin LIVE!

Elvin Bishop
                                                                      Ivanhoe Theater
                                                                       Chicago,IL
                                                               1977-Aug.-08 ( 2nd set )
Listen HERE




Elvin with Dickey Betts,Bonnie Bramlet and Charlie Daniels



Listen to more Elvin Bishop Group at Wolfgang's Vault. This fourth and final night at Keystone Korner on 03-20-1971 is the most interesting show of the run and features the core band in full jam mode throughout the night. Like the previous two nights, the show begins with Bishop welcoming the audience and promising that a few guest musicians will be dropping by later in the evening. The first and second sets feature much of the rare material they had resurrected on the previous two nights, but the X factor has increased on this night, bringing out many spectacular performances.Listen using link
above.



Friday, December 23, 2011

James Brown


When anyone mentions "The Godfather of Soul" or "The Hardest Working Man in Show Business", there is no doubt who they are referring to. One of the most influential artists of 20th century, James Brown has definitely worked to earn these titles of high esteem. By going from shining shoes to becoming a major entertainer and groundbreaking musician, James Brown achieved the American dream.
Growing up in poverty in Georgia, Brown scraped for money from various odd jobs. He was inspired to become a performer, and formed his band, the Flames, in 1956 with his reform school friend Bobby Bird. This group was the start of a highly successful career packed with R&B and funk hits. Their very first single, "Please Please Me," sold over a million copies.READ MORE


Listen to more James Brown at Wolfgang's Vault.



April 5, 1968, Boston Gardens Listen


Listen to more James Brown at Wolfgang's Vault.

















James Brown and the Famous Flames
L'Olympia, Paris, France
November 25, 1967
Click HERE to listen.

Sunday, December 11, 2011

James Taylor


Biography

by William Ruhlmann
When people use the term "singer/songwriter" (often modified by the word "sensitive") in praise or in criticism, they're thinking of James Taylor. In the early '70s, when he appeared with his introspective songs, acoustic guitar, and calm, understated singing style, he mirrored a generation's emotional exhaustion after tumultuous times. Just as Bing Crosby's reassuring voice brought the country out of the Depression and through World War II, Taylor's eased the transition from '60s activism and its attendant frustrations into the less political, more inward-looking '70s. He was rewarded with a series of hit albums and singles (surprisingly, many of the latter were covers of old songs rather than his own compositions), and he managed to survive his initial fame to achieve lasting popularity. He continued to tour successfully for decades, and, starting with his 1970 breakthrough Sweet Baby James, all but one of his regular album releases for the rest of the century went gold or platinum, while his 1976 Greatest Hits album achieved a diamond certification reflecting sales of more than ten million copies. read more 



James Taylor
The Jabberwocky
Syracuse New York
6 February 1970 Listen
James Taylor
Live At The Jabberwocky
Syracuse, NY 2/7/70 Listen



James Taylor 04/25/70
Sanders Theatre at Harvard University Listen



Listen to more James Taylor at Wolfgang's Vault.

Tuesday, December 6, 2011

Rockpile

British pop songwriter, bassist, and producer Nick Lowe had an interesting arrangement with his fellow Brit musician and longtime collaborator, Dave Edmunds. The two decided to produce tracks for and play on each other's solo albums, as well as be members in a band that would support each one when they toured as solo artists. Hence the birth of Rockpile, probably the best known and best loved of all U.K. pub bands.
For about five years in the late '70s and early '80s, the UK-based supergroup, Rockpile, captivated audiences around the world. Driven by their infectious energy and the imagination of the group's principle songwriter, Nick Lowe, the quartet churned out many rollicking performances, including this one, captured at the world-famous Palladium in New York City.
After leading and playing bass for the classic Brit pub band, Brinsley Schwartz, Lowe moved into producing by the mid-1970s. In 1976, he signed on with Stiff Records, the punk label started by Elvis Costello's manager, Jake Riviera. Lowe saw his initial success with Stiff, producing many of its artists at the same time he was an act on the label as well. Between 1979 and 1981, Lowe and Edmunds worked under the name Rockpile with Bremner and Williams. Vocally, Lowe and Edmunds borrowed heavily from the Everly Brothers. The band's one LP on Columbia did moderately well, but by 1981 the group was kaput



Listen to more Dave Edmunds & Rockpile at Wolfgang's Vault.




Listen to more Dave Edmunds & Rockpile at Wolfgang's Vault.




Carlene Carter was married to Nick Lowe

Dave Edmunds and Nick Lowe




Click here to hear full concert from 10/24/78

Or click  HERE to hear one from  August 20,1979
Band Members
Dave Edmunds - guitars, vocals
Nick Lowe - bass, vocals
Billy Bremner - guitars, vocals
Terry Williams - drums

The Stray Cats



Listen toThe Stray Cats LIVE from 4/28/1981

Listen to The Stray Cats in Tokyo also in 81






The Stray Cats caused a rockabilly revival in the early 1980s. Adrift in a market for Duran Duran and Eddie Money types, the Stray Cats made their mark on MTV with a rowdy 1950s resurgence. Stray Cat singles "Rock this Town," "Stray Cat Strut" and "Runaway Boys" were huge hits both in Europe and in the U.S., and the American-released album Built for Speed occupied the number-two spot on the Billboard Album Chart for 26 weeks. Throughout the 1980s, the Stray Cats not only made their mark with fans but also with fellow cool-cat musicians. Taken from Wolfgangs Vault.


Listen to more Stray Cats at Wolfgang's Vault.

Monday, December 5, 2011

FREE


Biography

by Jason Ankeny
 Free formed in London in 1968 when guitarist Paul Kossoff, then a member of the blues unit Black Cat Bones, was taken to see vocalist Paul Rodgers' group Brown Sugar by a friend, drummer Tom Mautner. After deciding to form their own band, Kossoff and Rodgers recruited drummer Simon Kirke (since Mautner was at university) and 16-year-old bass phenom Andy Fraser from the ranks of John Mayall's Bluesbreakers; with the aid of Alexis Korner, who also suggested the name Free, the fledgling band signed to the Island label, issuing their bluesy debut Tons of Sobs in 1968.

Free's eponymous 1969 follow-up expanded on their roots-based sound, incorporating rockers like Albert King's "The Hunter" as well as muscular ballads like "Lying in the Sunshine" into the mix. Although both of the first two albums fared poorly on the charts, 1970's Fire and Water became a tremendous hit on the strength of the primal "All Right Now," a Top Five smash powered by Rodgers' gritty, visceral vocals. After headlining 1970's Isle of Wight festival, the group appeared destined for superstardom, but the LP Highway did not fare nearly as well as anticipated, and after a grueling tour which yielded 1971's Free Live, the band dissolved amidst ego clashes and recriminations. Read more.

Listen to some of the earliest known FREE recordings live on The BBC. These songs were recorded before they recorded their first album "Tons of Sobs" Click HERE to Listen.
Paul Rodgers and Simon Kirke were 18, Paul Kossoff 17 and Andy Fraiser was only 15.


Free .... December 12, 1970 (Broadcast January 2, 1971)
"Midnight Hour", Radiohuset, Stockholm, Sweden
(EX FM - from Liberated Bootleg "Radio Free" (Remastered Edition))
Listen

Paul Kossoff



Free
The Metallized Blues
Tampa Stadium, Tampa, Florida
April 30, 1972
Listen to a great soundboard
One of the last of original band




Edinburgh, Empire Theatre
September 14, 1972
- Paul Kossoff’s 22nd Birthday -
Lineup: Paul Rodgers, Paul Kossoff, Simon Kirke, Rabbit Bundrick, Tetsu
LIVE

Monday, November 28, 2011

Wet Willie

Next to the Allman Brothers and Lynyrd Skynyrd, Wet Willie was unquestionably one of the best bands to come out from below the Mason-Dixon line during the dawn of the Southern Rock movement. The band had a country feel to many of their songs, but paid equal respect to the classic Stax-styled soul recordings of the '60s and early '70s. The group, under the skillful guidance of rock impresario Phil Walden and his Capricorn Records label, rode the coattails of the Allman Brothers Band and found a solid home on American FM radio with memorable tracks such "Keep On Smiling."
But it was vocalist Jimmy Hall's passionate blue-eyed soul vocals that made Wet Willie such a great band. His performances during the heyday of Capricorn in 1973 and 1974 are the things legends are made of, with the band getting glowing reviews night after night. But by 1975, it was apparent that Hall and company were tired of being the second banana to acts like the Allmans and upstart Elvin Bishop at the label. In late 1975, he negotiated a move to the more powerful Epic Records, a division of Sony. With that move, he also chose to revamp the band lineup.
Sadly, the move to Epic did little for the success of the band. Their first release for the label,Manorisms, got good reviews, but failed to break though with a major hit single. The band carried on for a few years and then broke up. Hall reunited with some of the original members for a new version of the band in the '90s, and continues to work as a solo singer. Today, the band works in two configurations: as Wet Willie, with Hall as the lead vocalist, and as the Wet Willie Band that has various band members doing lead vocals.
from Wolfgang's Vault


Click HERE to listen to

Bottom Line (New York, NY) Dec 18, 1977 Early Show

Then click HERE to listen to

Bottom Line (New York, NY) Dec 18, 1977 Late Show



 Click HERE for All Music Guide page



Skydog's Elysium: Wet Willie - Country Side Of Life: ☺ Sit back and enjoy this video of Wet Willie...