It can't be me Guest DJ week without one Kinks song.
(edited because video was pulled)
It can't be me Guest DJ week without one Kinks song.
(edited because video was pulled)
Ed Roland has still got a great voice
Norah has uploaded about a song a day during this stay-at-home time. Just her and her piano and her voice. Most of the songs charming. Here is a Willie Nelson cover (A rollicking version of this song can be found on her side band The Little Willies first album)
What a blistering cover of this Fleetwood Mac classic
Live, loud, and beautifully shot. I highly suggest you watch the whole "Live at The Paramount" set on Nirvana official YT page.
Rick Nielsen developed the 5 neck guitar, but did you know that bassist Tom Petterson came up with the idea of the 12 string bass guitar? It really helps give the band a thunderous sound. Add in the machine gun drumming of Bun E Carlos and the great rock vocals of Robin Zander you get one hell of a band
https://youtu.be/KDhRD108BlM
Bonus: Rick shredding to open up a great great of "Aint That a Shame"
[Ed: CH queued got this one ready for his week but looks like it didn't make the cut. I'm digging it out of the Draft bin, dusting it off, and putting it out there.]
A song for when the end is not in sight.
https://youtu.be/pbkSFk94M0c
I got the feeling that's something ain’t going right
and I'm worried 'bout the human soul...
Originally recorded as the title track of Attica Blues (1972).
Max Roach, drums; Abbey Lincoln, vocals; Eddie Kahn, bass; Clifford Jordan, tenor sax, Coleridge Perkinson, piano.
Live on Belgian television, possibly circa 1964. Roach’s We Insist! Freedom Now Suite is a landmark jazz album and an artistic jewel of the Civil Right Movement.
We get two pieces of ”Tiptych: Prayer/Protest/Peace” here. I’m not sure why the third was not included on the video, but it’s worth a listen to complete Roach’s thought. (Follow the link above.) He doesn’t simply “Peace” as a nirvana state. It’s jagged, weary, even incomplete.
”Tears for Johannesburg” was Roach’s artistic reckoning with the Sharpsville massacre, which I’d encourage you to read about — particularly right now.
Juneteenth marks the last arrival of the news of an emancipation formally proclaimed two and a half years earlier. By the time of its arrival in Galveston, the proclamation’s author had been reelected & assassinated. We should not forget that slavery continued in a couple Union states until the 6 December 1865, when the Thirteenth Amendment was ratified and finally abolished the practice. Nor should we forget that last Union state to ratify that amendment was Kentucky — on 18 March 1976.
Johnson’s amnesty, Reconstruction’s failure, Jim Crow, the mass perpetuation Lost Cause myth, federal anti-immigrant laws, segregation, and redlining thwarted a national reckoning with the political, social, and moral devastation of slavery & racism for generations.
Juneteenth’s rightly a day of celebration. It’s also a reminder of how far we yet have to go as a country, how fragile progress can be. It is a call seeking a response, because the work of emancipation remains incomplete.