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Nick Lentz
Приєднався 25 бер 2008
Відео
The Donegal Pilgrim - Dave Evans - fingerstyle guitar cover
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From the album - 'Irish Reels, Jigs, Hornpipes and Airs'. As played by the great Dave Evans. CGDGAD Tuning.
George Winston - Piano
Переглядів 79610 років тому
Blues and Ballads 1972 - Variations on Song for Kurt
Dave Evans - Shebeg An Shemor
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From:: Irish Reels, Jigs, Hornpipes & Airs
Dave Evans - Steppenwolf
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One of my favorites from the Sad Pig Dance LP.
John Fahey- When the Springtime Comes Again
Переглядів 206 тис.13 років тому
John Fahey- When the Springtime Comes Again
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How did they get the guitar to sound like that? It sounds too clear to be a 12 string but too natural to be a sampler.
Just want to let folks know that Takoma Records co-founder with John Fahey, ED Denson, has passed away. He is being remembered by his countless friends.
At 5:44 b begins the most hauntingly beautiful chords ever strummed.
Luck bastards at this show ! I saw them in 74 & the Summer of Love reunion 2007
Thank you for putting up this classic ! I've been playing this tune for decades ! on the record it's inG - but they're doing it in D - my better singing key
Man, Moby Grape were brilliant !
Heyohhh ❤
Theres no one ive ever heard play guitar that can so effortlessly create this magic. The swells the bends the screams he gets out of that 53' Telecaster its just beyond anyone else ability . Jeff Beck copied Roy's techniques and brought out his own interpretation making magic like Roy. But Roy seemed almost asleep at times his playing was just magical like he wasnt even trying. Just a little thing his hands could do.
Cantinho de paz
very good
6:54
John tu vas péter une corde
CC Rider is the slow blues here. Every Detroit band played it in NW Ohio and along the Shores and islands of Lake Erie during the summer, the regulars: Bob Segar, the MC 5, Glenn Frey, Alice Cooper w/o make-up!, Iggy Pop, Ted Nugent, Grand Funk Railroad, Brownsville Station, Commander Cody, and of course Mitch Ryder. Fun days while I was home for the summer plus every Saturday for 2 1/2 or 3 years North of Findlay and South of Bowling Green and Toledo waa an outdoor site on the crossroads of every record company touring act. Saw the original Allman Brothers Band there 3 times in the summer, and then went to DC for college and had the ABB do 4 sets in our intramural gym. Whoever left San Francisco or LA stopped in Chicago, came to NW Ohio played a set broke down, and went to Cleveland or Erie or Buffalo and played twice a day. But when I attended summer school for a fast-track MBA at the University of Georgia I ran into the early Capricorn bands just surfing in the dives. In Athens and Atlanta were many Capricorn acts that were regionally successful but never broke out with hit songs. I loved it but Roy Buchanan, Charlie Daniels pre- CDB, Bonnie Raitt, Delbert McClinton, Emmy Lou Harris and even her backup band was successful with John Denver then later as The Starland Vocal Band singing Afternoon Delight.
How did I miss listening to this all these years? Even without the 3rd guitar of Spence, they were still great. Jerry Miller was kind of unknown except in the Bay Area and Santa Cruz for those years, and Mosley knew how to put down great bass lines. My favorite SF band - I still play their first album and LOVE it so much. P.S. I saw them in the summer of 1967 and they blew me away.
This is totally braw version but I like the KEEFCHAP version more because although it's almost identical it flows far more smoothly. It's pure lovely though.
Speechless. Have mercy. Wait…. Get the fuck outta here.
How the Grapes dd not become one of the major supergroups of the '60s and '70s is a colossal tragedy. Well, we have what they recorded and must be satisfied with that. But still...
So painful
so where does this live track come from exactly?
I discovered Moby Grape in 1972 only ( I was fifteen ) through " 20 Granite creek ". Far better than Status Quo , loved by my school mates ! Afterwards, I back tracked and tried to discover all their LPS ( not very easy to find them in France at that time ). Decades after, I am still amazed by this wonderful group and so sad because of the curse which prevents them to " make it ". But the music remains and it is unforgettable.
nobody i know thought they were underrated at the time - at least on a par w/Buffalo Springfield if not the Byrds, on the east cost anyhow. that 2d lp tho... the great tracks sold short by jokes and jams falling flat...Skip turning into not a good influence then a disaster... and still maintaining this level of vulnerable insight.
I had no idea Dave had gone. I have this LP due to Stefan Grossman recommending his playing in the 1980s. John Donne was right when he wrote that we are diminished by the passing of even someone not close to us. . I feel diminished these days when so many artists who brought me such joy have passed on.
Wonderful great band damm Mathew katz
very good..............
Peter Lewis out- Neil-Youngs Neil Young.
Top 5 song of all time.
Nice job on Dave!
I went to see John Fahey at the now defunct Syria Mosque in Pittsburgh, Pa back in "the day"' Short Version, some fella' using a hand truck wheels out a short half-refrigerator then he lays out an Arabian style rug' and then brings out a not before seen seen lamp. then a chair and a guitar stand. finally he brings out a guitar.. walks off-stage then quickly returns. Ladies and gentlemen, John Fahey
Great cover! Did you learn this by ear or is there a tab?
A heartfelt vale to the one and only Dave Evans, far too little-known nonpareil genius of the fingerstyle acoustic guitar. Thank you for your life and your music, sir, and RIP …
Thanks for the beautiful music. So relaxing during this pandemic. Better than medicine.
It's a little bit 'Buddy, can you spare a dime'
while he's not technically the fastest or whatever, theres something about the way he could hold the rhythm that is superhuman.
Dave Evans Amazing! Brought a lot of beauty to this world with your gift. Thank you!
Before you ignore this, remember that noone made it to the top without starting from the bottom. For years i wanted to be a musician but fear always made me say "My time is too late, I missed my shot" At 26 I became fed up with the day to day, moved to rural 🎎japan🇯🇵 and started putting out music. My grandfather passed away on Christmas Eve, which is why i've been really relentless. I know that it's the TIME to get moving!! So I made a very special Hiphop/jazz/love song blended song to this! Let's get moving this lifetime everyone, Time's a wastin! Tell me your story! Im LISTENING =). ua-cam.com/video/WrKu99BK4Y4/v-deo.html
Great song! I wrote in depth about it in my ebook "Greatest Misses: Deep Cuts and Forgotten Songs from the Shadows of Classic Rock, Second Edition, Expanded and Updated."
Is your book still available? where can I get a copy?
Just beautiful
<3
how Lewis sings this plaintively in a loud setting, with (I presume) Miller skronking around his vocals is great. Ive always wanted to hear a mix without the lead.
i'd like that, but the extrovert/introvert clash works for me, like young/stills
This is really one of their more remarkable performances. I've always felt put off by the lead guitar (aka the "blues riff") of the studio version. I just never got it. But here, it's so intergrated from beginning to end that it makes sense. It's almost a strange, eerie 'conversation' btween lead guitar and Lewis, who is so winsome and unadorned. It's pretty sick actually
In other Grape songs, like "Looper", "The Place & the Time", 'the 'alternate versions' seem to have that extra edge that you refer to in Jerry Miller's soulful guitar and Lewis's vocal here.
I love the bottleneck (?) guitar line that connects lines on the recorded version.
all the memories that were washed away.
for those interested, most of this song is incorporated into his piece "Mark 1:15" from the 1971 album "America". He stated he worked on that piece for years, so it is not surprising, in his deeply blues-rooted nature, that he tried out and improvised some of the sections beforehand, as paragraphs to some intricate folk tale in writing...
Thanks for that tidbit! I'm sure a lot of this was improvised but the song form resembles a Classical piece of work, even if it is rooted in Roots music. I would love to transcribe this but I don't think I have the patience to do so. :)
I heard an apochraphal story that Fahey saw a poster for Douglas Fairbanks Thief of Bagdad and was compelled to play music....but chose the guitar as the most immediate entree to composing...I had that poster on my wall...pre 1976
One of the greatest to ever do it.
the greatest imo
The Goat
Well done sir
This makes me weep of joy
I remember I heard this song the first time from Planxty played with Uèlian pipes - this is a very nice arrangement of a real master on fingerstyle acoustic guitar! I know him since the 80ies and played quite a few his songs, but I didn't know this one - really like it! Thanx for the upload! ;) Greetings from Germany, the silverfox, David
do the other ones!
Great Peter Lewis vocal.