Friday, October 24, 2008

October 24, 2008 Playlist w/ Host Bob Dubrow

Thanks to Alex McNeil for letting me switch days with him so this special show could happen.

Background music provided by Dedalus - Materiali Per Tre Escutori e Nastro Megnetico (1974)

Set 01:
1. Starry Eyed and Laughing - "Going Down" (Starry Eyed and Laughing 1974)
2. Creepy John Thomas - "Moon and Eyes Song" (Creepy John Thomas 1969)
3. Shocking Blue - "The Butterfly and I" (At Home 1969) SONGWRITER/GUITARIST ROBBY VAN LEEUWEN BORN THIS DAY IN 1946
4. The Moody Blues - "Have You Heard (original take)" (1969 bonus track on 2006 CD re-release of 1969's On the Threshold of a Dream)

Set 02: ALL LEO KOTTKE (APPEARING AT SANDERS THEATER THIS SUNDAY, OCT 26)
1. "Vaseline Machine Gun" (6 and 12 String Guitar 1969)
2. "Disco" (Sixty Six Steps w/ Mike Gordon 2005)
3. "Power Failure" (Chewing Pine 1975)
4. "Oddball" (Live 1995)
5. "Everybody Lies" (Burnt Lips 1978)

THE LEO KOTTKE INTERVIEW - Live from a hotel in Greensborough, North Carolina

Set 03: MORE LEO KOTTKE
1. "Living in the Country" (Clone w/ Mike Gordon 2002)
2. "Tell Me Why" (Balance 1979)
3. "Mona Ray" (Dreams and All That Stuff 1974)
4. "Wonderland By Night" (Peculiaroso 1991)
5. "Jack Gets Up" (My Father's Face 1989)
6. "June Bug" (My Feet Are Smiling 1971)
7. "Oh Well" (Sixty Six Steps w/ Mike Gordon 2005)

Set 04: MORE BIRTHDAY BOYS
1. Rolling Stones - "You Gotta Move" (recorded Dec '69 at Muscle Shoals, Alabama from Time Trip 1969-1973 Vol. 1 bootleg) BASSIST BILL WYMAN BORN ON THIS DAY IN 1936
2. Mott the Hoople - "Death may Be Your Santa Claus" (Brain Capers 1972) DRUMMER DALE GRIFFIN BORN THIS DAY IN 1948
3. Edgar Broughton Band - "Don't Even Know Which Day It Is" (Edgar Broughton Band 1971) SINGER/GUITARIST ROB "EDGAR" BROUGHTON BORN THIS DAY IN 1947
4. Harpers Bizarre - "Poly High" (1972 from Feelin' Groovy: The Best of Harpers Bizarre compilation 1997) VOCALIST/DRUMMER/GUITARIST TED TEMPLETON BORN THIS DAY IN 1944

OUTRO: Owen Hand - "One Day Old" (Something New 1965) This is a devastating piece about racial discrimination. The words are from a book called "American Songs of Protest," the tune is by by Archie Fisher. It's worthwhile listening to the four plus decades old lyrics, especially the reference to a black man becoming President, as we wait to see whether frontrunner Barack Obama will be denied his rightful place as our 44th (stranger things have happened). See you after the election!

No comments:

Post a Comment