Once a year Music Millennium in Portland (featured in one of Michael Fremer’s Analog Planet YouTube videos) has a sidewalk sale: boxes and boxes of used LP’s, priced to sell. I guess it’s done partly to make some room in their LP racks (which fill half the ground floor of the store, and almost the entire mezzanine), which are really full. It’s a 4-day event, but of course I was there at 10:00 on the first day (this past Friday). Here’s what I nabbed:
- Stephane Grappelli/David Grisman: Live (Warner Brothers Records). With Mike Marshall, Mark O’Connor, Rob Wasserman, Tiny Moore. $3.00.
- Jerry Lee Lewis: s/t (Elektra Records). Produced by Bones Howe, with Hal Blaine and James Burton. $2.99.
- Jerry Lee Lewis: Southern Roots (Mercury Records). Produced by Huey Meaux, with Al Jackson, Duck Dunn, Steve Cropper, Augie Meyer, Carl Perkins, Tony Joe White. $3.99
- The Whites: Old familiar Feeling (Curb Records). Produced by Ricky Skaggs, husband of one of the White sisters. $2.00.
- Asylum Choir (Leon Russell and Marc Benno): II (Shelter Records). $2.00.
- Tracy Nelson: Homemade Songs (Flying Fish Records). $2.00.
- Nicolette Larson: s/t (Warner Brothers Records). $2.00.
- Art Garfunkel: Angel Clare (Columbia Records). With J.J. Cale, Fred Carter Jr., Tommy Tedesco, Jerry Garcia, Carl Radle. $1.00.
- Jesse Winchester: Let The Rough Ride Drag (Bearsville Records). $1.00.
- Henry Mancini: Mr. Lucky Goes Latin (RCA Living Stereo, black label). $1.00.
- Wanda Landowska: J.S. Bach The Well Tempered Clavier Book 1 (RCA Victor Red Seal Records, mono). $1.00.
- Nikolaus Harnoncourt w/Concentus Musicus Wien: Handel’s Water Music (Telefunken Records). $1.00.
MM also had cartons of over-stock new LP’s on the sidewalk, so I picked up Joachim Cooder (Ry’s son): Over That Road I’m Bound (Nonesuch Records). Marked down from $20.99 to $10.99; and Sturgill Simpson: Cuttin’ Grass Vol. 2 (Hightop Mountain Records/Thirty Tigers, Indie Retail exclusive on opaque blue and white swirl vinyl, glow-in-the-dark jacket). Marked down from $21.99 to $13.99.
I put all the LP’s in the car, and headed inside the store. There I found and bought:
- John Stewart: Willard (Capitol Records). With Carole King, Russ Kunkel, James Taylor, Doug Kershaw, Peter Asher, Fred Carter Jr., Norman Putman. $6.00.
- V/A: The Roots Of Rock ’n’ Roll (Savoy Records). With The Ravens, Little Esther, Johnny Otis, Big Maybelle, many others. $7.00.
- The Byrds: s/t reunion (Asylum Records). $6.00.
- Emmylou Harris: 13 (Warner Brothers Records). Only copy I’ve ever seen. $5.00.
- Pearl Harbour: Don’t Follow Me, I’m Lost Too (Warner Brothers Records). This album is from long before I joined her band, only copy I’ve ever seen. $5.00.
- The Dillards: Roots And Branches (Anthem Records). $4.00.
- Peter Rowan: The First Whippoorwill (Sugar Hill Records). With Sam Bush, Bill Keith, Richard Greene (like Rowan, a member of Seatrain), Buddy Spicher, Roy Huskey Jr. $3.00.
- Delaney & Bonnie: D & B Together (Columbia Records). With Bobby Womack, Jim Gordon, Billy Preston, Duane Allman. $5.00
- Delaney & Bonnie: Accept No Substitute (Elektra Records). With Bobby Whitlock, Carl Radle, Jim Keltner, Leon Russell, Rita Coolidge. $5.00.
- Steve Earle And The Del McCoury Band: The Mountain (New West Records, 2-LP’s). $18.99.
Then I finally broke down and bought the 4-LP set that has been sitting in Music Millennium for quite a while now, calling my name every time I’m there: The Byrds: Sweetheart Of The Rodeo, RSD/50th Anniversary Legacy Edition (Columbia Records). $69.99 (ouch ;-) .
Heading back home to Vancouver, I stopped in my little LRS to have a look see. There I found an LP I have been looking for:
- J.J. Cale: Naturally (Shelter Records). The album which provided Eric Clapton his musical blueprint. Often copied (Mark Knopfler, anyone? ;-), never equaled! $25.00.
I also found a couple LP’s by a guy I am currently collecting:
- Tony Rice: Still Inside (Rounder Records). $20.00.
- " " : s/t (Rounder Records). $15.00
Both feature the bass playing of a guy who was in the same San Jose cover band as I in ’71, he leaving as I was entering: Todd Phillips. Todd was heading up to Mill Valley to study mandolin with David Grisman, but David advised him to learn to play upright bass, as there were plenty of great mandolin players but a shortage of bassists. Todd wisely took Grisman’s advice, and carved-out a nice little career for himself.