Two new books on great musicians.


1- Levon Helm: From Down In The Delta To The Birth Of The Band And Beyond, by Sandra Tooze. Levon's autobiography was good, but didn't read like he spoke (it was co-written with Stephen Davis). As I have already recounted here, Ringo Starr showed up at Levon's 1993 book release signing event at Book Soup on Sunset Blvd. to have his copy signed. He took cuts in line ;-) .

2- Time Between: My Life As A Byrd, Burrito Brother, And Beyond, by Chris Hillman. Though Roger McGuinn is given credit for The Byrds, and Gram Parsons for The Flying Burrito Brothers, Chris was very instrumental (damn puns ;-) in both groups. McGuinn (along with fellow Byrds David Crosby and Gene Clark) and Parsons came to Rock 'n' Roll from Folk, not Country, music backgrounds. Chris came from Bluegrass, and returned to it (his solo albums on Sugar Hill are fantastic).

Funny how both book titles end with the same expression.

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@rpeluso, Marty hasn't played the Northwest in the time I've been here. He used to have a great TV show, a couple of them actually. When he did the Letterman Show, at the end of the song Dave literally lept out of his chair in excitement.

Damn good band. I first time I heard his guitarist Kenny Vaughan he was playing in Lucinda Williams band. Harry Stinson is not only a fantastic drummer (for years a 1st-call Nashville studio player), but is a session harmony singer as well. His bass player Chris Scaggs is also a 1st-call Nashville steel guitar player. As I said above, I consider them the best working band in the world. And then there's Marty!

Their 2017 album was produced by Heartbreaker Mike Campbell. @slaw, it's available on LP. -)
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There is a new book on Levon and The Band (published in 2021 by Bearsville), entitled Levon's Man: Woodstock, The Death Of Richard Manuel, And My Decade Managing The Band. Joe Forno Jr. is the author, and the book is available through Amazon. I just received my copy, should be interesting.