The Who – Live At Woodstock (1969)

FrontCover1.jpgLadies and gentlemen … The Who … live at the legendary Woodstock Festival in 1969;

The Who were scheduled as the second to last act (before Jefferson Airplane) to play on Saturday, August 16th. When they actually started playing it was already Sunday morning around 5:00. They played their exceptional Tommy album, a Rock Opera dealing with the struggle of a deaf, dumb and blind boy who later finds a cure and gains stardom with his messianic movement. The finale of this performance took place during sunrise which occured at 6:05 AM

The Who were touring in support of their Rock Opera album Tommy which was released the same year. The Woodstock performance is not as long as others during this period but powerful and insane given the time The Who were performing. Songs not played from the album are: “Overture”, “Cousin Kevin”, “Underture”, “Tommy, Can You Hear Me?”, “Miracle Cure”, “Sensation”, “Sally Simpson”, “Welcome”.

The setlist is a pretty standard example of their 1969 tour program, just a little shortened at times. For instance they didn’t play “A Quick One While He’s Away”, “Magic Bus” or a longer medley around “My Generation” which sometimes reached a length of 15 minutes. Nevertheless the presentation of the chosen songs was impressive and the magic and spirit of the music grew as Tommy reached its grande final with “See Me, Feel Me”. The dawn was coming up and the first daylight hit the stage. The Who closed with “My Generation”, an old hit dating back to the year 1965, and “Naked Eye”. There were only a few sleepless people in the audience left who finally witnessed the ritual guitar smashing of Pete Townshend pointing out that the gig has really come to an end.

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The Abbie Hoffman Incident  was an incident that happened during The Who’s set right after the song “Pinball Wizard”. Abbie Hoffman was able to get on stage and grab a microphone while Pete Townshend tuned his guitar. He said: “I think this is a pile of shit! While John Sinclair rots in prison…”. Hoffman was protesting against the imprisonment of John Sinclair (leader of the White Panther Party and manager of the left-wing hard-rock band MC5) who had been convicted and sentenced to nine years of prison because of marijuana possession. Townshend, angry that someone took the stage, yelled: “Fuck off! Fuck off my fucking stage!”, hit him with his guitar and sending him off stage again. Townshend then added: “I can dig it!”; And after the song “Do You Think It’s Alright?”: “The next fuckin’ person that walks across this stage is gonna get fuckin’ killed! [crowd cheers] You can laugh, I mean it!. A 16 second sound bite of the incident can be heard on The Who compilation set entitled Thirty Years of Maximum R&B (Disc 2, Track 20, “Abbie Hoffman Incident”).

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At the end of their set, Pete Townshend tossed his banged-up Gibson SG guitar into the crowd, but according to The Kids Are Alright DVD liner notes the guitar was promptly retrieved by one of the band’s roadies. Close inspection of film from both the Woodstock movie and the bonus DVD from the 40th anniversary issue confirms this (by woodstock.wikia.com)

What a night, what a concert …. Ladies and gentlemenThe Who … live at the legendary Woodstock Festival in 1969  … hot & nasty, loud & proud !

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Personnel:
Roger Daltrey (vocals)
John Entwistle (bass, vocals)
Keith Moon (drums)
Pete Townshend (guitar, vocals)

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Tracklist:
01. Heaven And Hell (Entwistle) 3.48
02. I Can’t Explain (Townshend) 2.26
03. It’s A Boy (Townshend) 0.37
04. 1921 (Townshend) 2.31
05. Amazing Journey (Townshend) 3.18
06. Sparks (Townshend) 5.27
07. Eyesight To The Blind (The Hawker) (Williamson) 2.05
08. Christmas (Townshend) 3.15
09. Acid Queen (Townshend) 3.32
10. Pinball Wizard (Townshend) 2.44
11. The Abbie Hoffman Incident 0.41
12. Do You Think It’s Alright? (Townshend) 0.46
13. Fiddle About (Entwistle) 1.14
14. There’s A Doctor (Townshend) 0.22
15. Go To The Mirror (Townshend) 3.20
16. Smash The Mirror (Townshend) 1.05
17. I´m Free (Townshend) 2.23
18. Tommy’s Holiday Camp (Townshend) 0.59
19. We’re Not Gonna Take It (Townshend) 3.32
20. See Me, Feel Me (Townshend) 5.12
21. Summertime Blues (Cochran/Capehart) 3.47
22. Shakin’ All Over (Kidd/Robinson) 4.41
23. My Generation/Naked Eye (Townshend) 7.21

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ZZ Top – One Foot In The Blues (1994)

FrontCover1One Foot in the Blues is a compilation album by the American blues rock band ZZ Top, released in 1994 (see 1994 in music). The album contains a selection of the band’s songs which fall into the blues genre. With the exception of the songs taken from the Degüello, El Loco, Eliminator and Recycler albums, the 1987 digital remixes were used. (by wikipedia)

Before they sweated their image down to beards, babes and hot rods, ZZ Top were a down ‘n’ dirty blues-rock trio with a bonafide hot guitar player in Billy Gibbons. On this 14-track offering, Warner goes back through the back ZZ catalog and cobbles together an interesting collection of the Texas trio’s bluesier sides that originally appeared on their earliest albums. Highlights include “Brown Sugar,” “A Fool for Your Stockings,” “My Head’s in Mississippi,” “Apologies to Pearly” and Gibbons’ storming stringwork on “Bar-B-Q.” (by Cub Koda)

Wow, where do I start with this compilation of Texas’s greatest Little Ole Band from Texas ! I love this album. Alot of these songs didnt get alot of airplay , but they are some of my favorite ZZTOP song’s of all time .These songs are the reason I love ZZTOP , Oldman, Hot,Blue and Righteous,Sure got cold after the rain fell, Bron Sugar,I need you tonight, 2000 blues ! All these songs on one album. ya gotta get it. (by Judy Kopeck)

And “Hot, Blue and Righteous” and “Sure Got Cold After The Rain Fell” are one of the finest rock ballads ever written.

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Personnel:
Frank Beard (drums, percussion)
Billy Gibbons (guitar, vocals)
Dusty Hill (bass, keyboards, background vocals, lead vocal on 06.)

Booklet

Tracklist:
01. Brown Sugar (Gibbons) 5.20 Originally from ZZ Top’s First Album (1971)
02. Just Got Back From Baby’s (Gibbons/Ham) 4.09 Originally from ZZ Top’s First Album (1971)
03. A Fool for Your Stockings (Gibbons/Hill/Beard) 4.16 Originally from Degüello (1979)
04. I Need You Tonight (Gibbons/Hill/Beard) 6.15 Originally from Eliminator (1983)
05. She Loves My Automobile (Gibbons/Hill/Beard) 2.23 Originally from Degüello (1979)
06. Hi Fi Mama (Gibbons/Hill/Beard) 2,24 Originally from Degüello (1979)
07. Hot, Blue and Righteous (Gibbons) 3.17 Originally from Tres Hombres (1973)
08. My Head’s In Mississippi (Gibbons/Hill/Beard) 4.20 Originally from Recycler (1990)
09. Lowdown In The Street (Gibbons/Hill/Beard) 2.49 Originally from Degüello (1979)
10. If I Could Only Flag Her Down (Gibbons/Hill/Beard) 3.39 Originally from Eliminator (1983)
11. Apologies To Pearly (Gibbons/Hill/Beard/Ham) 2.44 Originally from Rio Grande Mud (1972)
12. Sure Got Cold After The Rain Fell (Gibbons) 6.47 Originally from Rio Grande Mud (1972)
13. Bar-B-Q (Gibbons/Ham) 3.21 Originally from Rio Grande Mud (1972)
14. Old Man (Gibbons/Hill/Beard) 3.32 Originally from ZZ Top’s First Album (1971)
15. Certified Blues (Gibbons/Beard/Ham) 3.25 Originally from ZZ Top’s First Album (1971)
16. 2000 Blues (Gibbons/Hill/Beard) 4.42 Originally from Recycler (1990)
17. Heaven, Hell Or Houston (Gibbons/Hill/Beard) 2.32 Originally from El Loco (1981)

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Still alive and well … ZZ TOP in 2017