Music

At the Grateful Dead meet-up

Featured image Taking a break from the news last night, I attended the 11th annual Grateful Dead Meet-Up At the Movies at the AMC multiplex in Edina, Minnesota. It featured the Dead’s first appearance at Chicago’s Soldier Field (June 22, 1991). The band played to a packed stadium on what must have been a somewhat cool evening. Most of the band were wearing sweatshirts and looked, almost unbelievably, well-groomed. With a running »

Sunday morning coming down

Featured image John’s post about “Both Sides Now,” “Hermits’s Hermits,” and the New York Times has had me thinking. I have been thinking of other British Invasion groups (other than Herman’s Hermits, that is) such as The Zombies. How long before the Times attributes “The Rhyme of the Reason” to Harry and the Racefakers? I actually went to see Herman’s Hermits at the old Minneapolis Auditorium in July 1966. They headlined a »

How Soon They Forget

Featured image Scott does as much as anyone to promote knowledge of the history of popular music, and yet memories fade as the years go by. I found this correction in today’s New York Times depressing: An obituary on Saturday about the former Securities and Exchange Commission chairman Harvey Pitt misstated the name of a pop group that had many hits in the 1960s. They are Herman’s Hermits, not Hermit’s Hermits. The »

Sunday morning coming down

Featured image I extracted this from our archives to post as one of my favorites this past Memorial Day weekend and changed my mind at the last minute. I thought a few readers might enjoy a dose of beauty and joy courtesy of Ann Hampton Callaway this morning. This is from December 2018. * * * * * I had not heard of Ann Hampton Callaway before her audacious 1999 release To »

Sunday morning coming down

Featured image Power Line observes its twenty-first anniversary this Memorial Day weekend. I am taking the liberty of looking back by pulling out three of my favorite posts of the past twenty-one years. This is the second. Since I wrote it in August 2020, Chris Hillman has published the memoir Time Between: My Life As a Byrd, Burrito Brother, and Beyond and I have taken in hours of Chris Hillman’s Burrito Stand »

Not dark yet, cont’d

Featured image Bob Dylan celebrates his 82nd birthday on Wednesday. When he snagged the Nobel Prize for Literature a few years ago, I pulled out all the stops by posting a big set of my favorite covers of his songs. I don’t have any stops left to pull, but I’m adding a few more covers (again) this year in honor of his birthday this week. In my estimation Dylan is first and »

Not dark yet

Featured image This coming Wednesday is the birthday of Minnesota native son Bob Dylan; he turns the ripe old age of 82. It’s not dark yet, but it’s getting there. I want to celebrate him as long we’re both still around to enjoy the occasion. He is a remarkable artist, self-invented, deep in the American grain. A few years back I visited Dylan’s old home at 2425 7th Avenue East in Hibbing. »

Sunday morning coming down

Featured image We went to see Richard Thompson performing at the Dakota this past Monday and Wednesday evenings. Thompson is a giant of British folk and folk-rock — a founding member of Fairport Convention and singer/songwriter of awesome gifts. In Fairport and in his own career after leaving the band he has drawn on the British folk tradition to write classic songs that sound like part of it. He titled one of »

Gordon Lightfoot dies at 84

Featured image While we were out at the Dakota last night taking in British folk giant Richard Thompson came the news that the singer/songwriter Gordon Lightfoot had died at the age of 84. He was a proud Canadian, but one wouldn’t call him a Canadian folk giant. He was a folk giant simply — a brilliant songwriter, an old-fashioned carouser who was also an incurable romantic, and a pensive kind of man’s »

American Pie, Korean Style

Featured image South Korean President Yoon Suk Yeol is in Washington, meeting with Joe Biden. So far, the most newsworthy aspect of Yoon’s visit has been Joe Biden’s collaboration with the sycophant press to impersonate a mentally competent president. But let’s take two minutes out of our fight to preserve civilization to enjoy a moment of fun, courtesy of President Yoon. During the state dinner at the White House last night, Yoon »

Sunday morning coming down

Featured image Out of the blue yesterday my wife asked me, “Do you like Elton John?” Well, I like pop music. I like well-written pop songs of every genre, from folk to blues to soul to country and rock. I thought I would program an hour’s worth of music, I think mostly lesser known, of a few favorites that take me out of myself and send me off looking for more of »

Thoughts from the ammo line

Featured image Ammo Grrrll reflects on Alan Jackson’s THE OLDER I GET. She writes: I know that Scott covers the music beat. I’m not trying to poach on his territory, especially since he does a darn fine job with it. But every once in awhile a piece of music just seems to fit perfectly as a theme song for what’s going on in your life. This has happened to me a few »

Sunday morning coming down

Featured image We went to see singer/songwriter Karla Bonoff perform at the Dakota in downtown Minneapolis this past Thursday evening. Her site is here. Her upcoming tour dates are here. When the Dakota announced the show we jumped on the tickets and snagged seats at Table 150, directly in front of Bonoff. I took the photo below from our table during her first number. Bonoff performed with Nina Gerber supporting her on »

Sunday morning coming down

Featured image Aretha Franklin — the Queen of Soul, as Steely Dan reminded the “sweet young thing” in “Hey Nineteen” — died in August 2018. Jon Pareles recounted her life and work in his excellent New York Times obituary. Dominic Green paid tribute to her as “simply the finest popular singer of her generation.” Dominic also wrote a brilliant review of the Amazing Grace documentary for the Spectator. Yesterday was the anniversary »

Spring Can Really Hang You Up the Most

Featured image I’m taking the liberty of reposting this tribute to a great song with an unusual story behind it as a break from the news of the day. Since I first wrote this 17 years ago, YouTube has become a rich musical resource that allows me to fill out the story. Stretching from Ella Fitzgerald to Fran Landesman to T.S. Eliot and Geoffrey Chaucer, this is the bare-bones version of the »

Sunday morning coming down

Featured image Singer/songwriter John Sebastian celebrated his 79th birthday on Friday. Sebastian grew up in Greenwich Village in a musical family. He is saturated in American music — a multi instrumentalist whose best instrument may well be harmonica. I can pick out his distinctive harmonica sound as an uncredited session player on tracks by Tim Hardin, Tom Rush, and other mainstays of the ’60’s folk scene. Sebastian was the front man and »

Sunday morning coming down

Featured image The instrumental virtuoso David Lindley died March 3 at the age of 78. He played just about every stringed instrument I know of as well as a few I don’t. His New York Times obituary by Alex Williams seems just right to me. He subordinated his talent to enhance the music of the great artists with whom he worked, Jackson Browne foremost among them. I don’t know Lindley’s work sufficiently »