The Music Thread

A couple of guys were hanging in a studio when Hosford was recording and asked if they could join in. Nice slide work right off the bat.

 
Would that be you on the stand-up?
I wish… no that’s Todd Phillips

This was a recording at a house concert from back in 1996/97/98 or somewhere along there. I was fortunate enough to attend.

Darol Anger on fiddle, Mike Marshall on mandolin and of course the late, great Tony Rice on guitar. Tony was playing Clarence White’s old Martin D28. Clarence of course was a member of the Byrds back in the 1960’s. He played on the classic Byrds album “Sweetheart of the Rodeo” among others.

Clarence died in a tragic accident in 1973. He was unloading gear from the trunk of a car and was struck by another vehicle in California. His signature acoustic guitar was bequeathed to a young up and comer: hot-shit guitarist named Tony Rice.
 
Album of the summer, maybe the year. This kid is already big on the other side of the pond. Let's see how he does here. Big music, brutal heartfelt lyrics. The Geordie Springsteen. Just a great, great album.

 
I wish I could remember this story exactly but read it in a biogrphy of the Louvin Brothers. For those who don't know they were gospel/bluegrass gods 40s and 50s GOOpera, etc. Interesting guys to say the least.

One day they pulled up to a church where they had a gig. They noticed a kid, barefoot, torn jeans, hanging around outside. They began playing and saw the kid peeking through a window. One of them went out and told the kid to come in, behave himself and no need tp pay the 25 cents. That kid was Johnny Cash.

Now Ira Louvin was a big hell raiser. Always in trouble. Down the line, some years later, Johnny heard he needed a car bad and hence gave him a brand new cadillac. Ira always vowed to pay him back. Never did. Johnny said don't worry...

 
Last edited:
been away from this thread for a bit, but I've been listening to my Orianthi's live CD which justifies Carlos Santana proclaiming her as the next great guitarist

I "discovered" her watching the amazing documentary "This is it" which any music fan should watch 😊

This song doesn't fully capture her guitar talent, but I love the song

 
I like him a lot. I'm not sure where it rates but there's a lot of things on The Houston Kid that resonates for me so that's probably mine.

And then there's this group effort.

 
been away from this thread for a bit, but I've been listening to my Orianthi's live CD which justifies Carlos Santana proclaiming her as the next great guitarist

I "discovered" her watching the amazing documentary "This is it" which any music fan should watch 😊

This song doesn't fully capture her guitar talent, but I love the song


Interesting. I haven't heard of her. Sounds like Avril Laviagne meets Poison. Cool to see a shreddy female guitar player in a popish setting. Hard to tell from that song if she has a point of view with her playing or if its more chops than feel.

I'm a big John Mayer fan, but have always felt like he struggles to have a point of view on guitar in a way that meshes with his songwriting. He can so easily engage SRV mode, but it never really fits the song. His most recent album has some really tasty, but simple solos that feel more naturally woven into the song.
 
I've been listening to more John Moreland lately. Fantastic songwriter.
<iframe width="560" height="315" src="" title="YouTube video player" frameborder="0" allow="accelerometer; autoplay; clipboard-write; encrypted-media; gyroscope; picture-in-picture; web-share" referrerpolicy="strict-origin-when-cross-origin" allowfullscreen></iframe>
 
I wish I could remember this story exactly but read it in a biogrphy of the Louvin Brothers. For those who don't know they were gospel/bluegrass gods 40s and 50s GOOpera, etc. Interesting guys to say the least.

One day they pulled up to a church where they had a gig. They noticed a kid, barefoot, torn jeans, hanging around outside. They began playing and saw the kid peeking through a window. One of them went out and told the kid to come in, behave himself and no need tp pay the 25 cents. That kid was Johnny Cash.

Now Ira Louvin was a big hell raiser. Always in trouble. Down the line, some years later, Johnny heard he needed a car bad and hence gave him a brand new cadillac. Ira always vowed to pay him back. Never did. Johnny said don't worry...


Cool story. Gotta love the Louvin Brothers.
3 chords. And the truth.
The Louvin Brothers were also a big influence on the Everly Brothers. That “brother boy” harmony has been a thing ever since. It also influenced the Beatles and countless others.
 
Back
Top