Whats on your turntable tonight?


For me its the first or very early LP's of:
Allman Brothers - "Allman Joys" "Idyllwild South"
Santana - "Santana" 200 g reissue
Emerson Lake and Palmer - "Emerson Lake and Palmer"
and,
Beethoven - "Piano Concerto No. 4 in G Major" Rudolph Serkin/Ozawa/BSO
slipknot1
@tomic601

It’s all wonderful! I felt I needed to get younses’ attention.
Yes and thank you - I would have missed... I make a lousy Jesse fan boy...

Dang @tomic601, yer swell. Both Charlie and Butterfield were living in San Francisco in the late-60’s/early-70’s, and showing us white boys how to play Blues. Robben Ford came to town in ’71, with his family band, The Charles Ford Band (named after the dad), with brothers Pattrick (drums) and Mark (harp, vocals). The guy in my senior year of high school band joined them on bass, which he has never let any of us forget ;-) .

Musselwhite heard Robben play, and offered him a job in his band. That was the end of The Charles Ford Band! Next thing we knew, Robben was in L.A., working with Joni Mitchell, then Miles Davis and George Harrison. I used to see him play in little bars around town, just as I did Lucinda Williams around L.A. before she broke big with her Car Wheels album (once in a pizza parlor with about a half-dozen people in the room). I still prefer to hear live music in small venues.

Mike Bloomfield left the Butterfield band after their East-West, album, starting The Electric Flag with Buddy Miles, Barry Goldberg, and Harvey Brooks. One of the best bands I ever saw! the doors had to follow them on stage at that show (the Santa Clara Folk/Rock Festival in the Summer of '68), and paled miserably in comparison.

I just gave a listen to the new Immediate Family single, and hey, it’s pretty good. A nice Blues shuffle, pretty cool. The guitarists play too much like Englishmen for my liking (Les Pauls’ with too much sustain and distortion), but I’m picky that way.

Actually, when I first heard this record, the song "Dolphins" was stuck in my head and happened to check into the original artist version. So happened Fred Neil sung it on the Soundtrack of Midnight Cowboy. I then had an original copy of that come out of nowhere. Now I own it. Quite enjoyable!
BTW, my copy of Butterfield Blues Band’s complete set at Woodstock on ROG is scheduled for release in Aug. I hope it exceeds my low expectations for SQ.