Thursday, August 14, 2025

Kid Creole & the Coconuts - Le Zenith, Paris, France, 9-10-1985

Sometimes, there are musical acts I really love but I just don't have anything I consider worthy of posting from them. That's been the case for Kid Creole and the Coconuts. I think they're great, and very underrated. And now, I've finally found something worthy to post from them. This is a full concert from 1985, which was when they were in their prime.

Normally, I'm not that into dance music just as something to listen to, because it's designed for dancing. But Kid Creole and the Coconuts did something unusual, creating dance music for thinking people, with interesting lyrics and musical creativity while still making you want to get up and shake your ass. In a better world, they would have been massive.

Their failure to become as popular as they should have been must have been due to a lack of promotion or bad luck or some other factors not related to the music, because they were very popular for a little while. In 1982, their third album "Tropical Gangsters" reached Number Three in Britain, going Platinum there. It put three songs in the Top Ten there. And while that was one of their better albums, all of their early albums were about equally as good. If you look at the crowd-sourced ratings at rateyourmusic.com, for instance, their first five albums (from 1980 to 1985) got roughly similar scores. So why did just that one do well, and only in Britain? In the U.S., they never got close to having a Top Forty single or album, despite appearances on Saturday Night Live, the Johnny Carson Show, and other appearances in movies and TV. 

If you haven't heard of them before, I strongly suggest you give this a listen. It's ideal music for partying and dancing, and yet the lyrics are often surprisingly deep and about unusual topics. If anyone knows of other musical acts that managed that combination successfully, I'd love to hear about them.

Anyway, this is an officially released album called "Live in Paris." But I'm posting it here for two reasons. For one, it seems to be very obscure. For instance, it's not mentioned in the band's Wikipedia page, or at their rateyourmusic.com page. That makes me wonder if it might be some kind of grey market release. The second is that I noticed the lead vocals were low in the mix, so I used the UVR5 program to fix that. So this now sounds noticeably better than the soundboard source. 

This album is an hour and 21 minutes long. 

01 Don't Take My Coconuts (Kid Creole & the Coconuts)
02 My Male Curiosity (Kid Creole & the Coconuts)
03 Table Manners (Kid Creole & the Coconuts)
04 Mr. Softie (Kid Creole & the Coconuts)
05 Annie, I'm Not Your Daddy (Kid Creole & the Coconuts)
06 I'm a Wonderful Thing, Baby (Kid Creole & the Coconuts)
07 No Fish Today (Kid Creole & the Coconuts)
08 Dear Addy (Kid Creole & the Coconuts)
09 Stool Pigeon (Kid Creole & the Coconuts)
10 Say Hey (Kid Creole & the Coconuts)
11 Laughing with Our Backs Against the Wall (Kid Creole & the Coconuts)
12 Mona (Kid Creole & the Coconuts)
13 The Lifeboat Party (Kid Creole & the Coconuts)
14 Endicott (Kid Creole & the Coconuts)
15 Indiscreet (Kid Creole & the Coconuts)
16 Caroline Was a Dropout (Kid Creole & the Coconuts)

https://pixeldrain.com/u/f3VHw5wT

alternate: 

https://bestfile.io/2xbfeiDvJyEp4gq/file

The cover photo shows the August Darnell, Casino, Oostende, Belgium, 21st July 1985

Wednesday, August 13, 2025

Olivia Newton-John - Olivia in Concert, Weber State University, Ogden, UT, 10-13-1982

Over the past week or two, I've posted all the Olivia Newton-John albums I have worthy posting. This if the fifth album I'm posting from her, and the last. (Unless I find things I'd previously missed, of course.) In my opinion, this is the ideal live album of her in her musical prime. So if you had to get just one of the five albums from her I've posted, I'd suggest this one.

Newton-John became a superstar in 1978, thanks to her lead role in the movie "Grease." But in 1981 she took her superstardom to an even higher level, mostly thanks to the title song of her 1981 album, "Physical." That song spent 10 weeks at Number One in the U.S., tying the record for the longest, and was the best-selling song of the 1980s. 

However, it turned out that her early 1980s peak didn't last that long. She had a few more big hits through 1983 (like "Make a Move on Me," "Heart Attack," and "Twist of Fate"), but only minor hits after that. I suspect some of that commercial decline was that she essentially stopped touring for many years. She did a big tour in 1982 to promote the "Physical" album. But after that, she didn't tour again until 1998! (She started a tour in 1992, but quickly canceled it after she was diagnosed with cancer, and had to seek treatment.) She has put out four live albums, but all of them date from after her resumption of touring in 1998, long after her commercial peak. 

She did document her 1982, but only on video format. This concert was released as the video "Olivia in Concert." I simply took that video and converted it to audio, then chopped it into mp3s. I also cut out a video presentation of the highlights of her career at the start of the video, since one has to see that to appreciate it. The sound quality is excellent, with no problems. 

In this concert, Newton-John played just about all her biggest hits, from the early 1970s until "Heart Attack," which had been released earlier in 1982. So this also doubles as an effective "best of" collection.  

This album is an hour and 13 minutes long. 

01 Deeper than the Night (Olivia Newton-John)
02 talk (Olivia Newton-John)
03 Let Me Be There (Olivia Newton-John)
04 Please Mr. Please (Olivia Newton-John)
05 If You Love Me [Let Me Know] (Olivia Newton-John)
06 talk (Olivia Newton-John)
07 Jolene (Olivia Newton-John)
08 Sam (Olivia Newton-John)
09 Xanadu (Olivia Newton-John)
10 Magic (Olivia Newton-John)
11 Suddenly (Olivia Newton-John)
12 A Little More Love (Olivia Newton-John)
13 Silvery Rain (Olivia Newton-John)
14 Falling (Olivia Newton-John)
15 Heart Attack (Olivia Newton-John)
16 Make a Move on Me (Olivia Newton-John)
17 talk (Olivia Newton-John)
18 Hopelessly Devoted to You (Olivia Newton-John)
19 You're the One that I Want (Olivia Newton-John)
20 Physical (Olivia Newton-John)
21 I Honestly Love You (Olivia Newton-John)

https://pixeldrain.com/u/STrbk7mg

alternate: 

https://bestfile.io/en/gkavzBxQvQk6spu/file

The cover photo is from this exact concert, I think. It's from promotional material for the DVD of it, at least.

Franz Ferdinand - BBC In Concert, Glastonbury Festival, Worthy Farm, Pilton, Britain, 6-27-2025

Here's another album I'm posting due to my 2025 Glastonbury Festival poll. Franz Ferdinand tied for the third most votes, so here's their set.

Prior to listening to this, I wasn't really familiar with the band's music, other than their biggest hit, "Take Me Out." I ended up liking them more than most of the musical acts from this festival that I didn't know well already.

If you want to know more, here's their Wikipedia entry: 

Franz Ferdinand (band) - Wikipedia

All the music here is unreleased, but the sound quality is excellent. Like most of the sets from this festival, I found a high-quality video file of the set, converted it to audio format, and broke it into mp3s.

This album is an hour long. 

01 The Dark of the Matinee (Franz Ferdinand)
02 talk (Franz Ferdinand)
03 Night or Day (Franz Ferdinand)
04 talk (Franz Ferdinand)
05 Do You Want To (Franz Ferdinand)
06 Walk Away (Franz Ferdinand)
07 Build It Up (Franz Ferdinand)
08 talk (Franz Ferdinand)
09 No You Girls (Franz Ferdinand)
10 Audacious (Franz Ferdinand)
11 Michael (Franz Ferdinand)
12 Black Eyelashes (Franz Ferdinand)
13 talk (Franz Ferdinand)
14 Jaqueline (Franz Ferdinand)
15 Love Illumination (Franz Ferdinand)
16 talk (Franz Ferdinand)
17 Take Me Out (Franz Ferdinand with Peter Capaldi)
18 talk (Franz Ferdinand)
19 Hooked (Franz Ferdinand with Master Peace)
20 talk (Franz Ferdinand)
21 This Fire (Franz Ferdinand)

https://pixeldrain.com/u/uXJKbiN1

alternate:

https://bestfile.io/3WiqxUystgQIo70/file

The cover photo of the band's lead singer Alex Kapranos is from this exact concert.

Tuesday, August 12, 2025

Paul Weller - BBC Sessions, Volume 21: Quay Sessions, Alhambra Theatre, Dunfermline, Britain, 4-15-2024

A-ha! The last Paul Weller BBC concert I had posted dates to 2021. I figured it was just a matter of time until he did another one. This one took place over a year ago (as I write this in August 2025), but while I knew about it, I couldn't find a recording of it. Happily, a few days ago, an anonymous musical friend sent me the recording which he taped off the radio. 

This concert took place a month prior to the release of his studio album "66." He played three songs from it. Also, he played four songs from his previous album, 2021's "Fat Pop." Other than that, it's the expected mix of songs from his time in the Jam, the Style Council, and his solo career, performed with a full band.

The sound quality is excellent, even though this remains unreleased. Two songs have "[Edit]" in their titles. That's because during the applause at the end of the songs, a BBC DJ gave a station ID mention. So I used the UVR5 audio editing program to wipe out that DJ talk.

Paul Weller keeps going strong, seemingly unaffected by age. The only disappointment with this concert is that even though it has the length of a full concert, an additional seven songs were edited out of it. In case you're curious, here are the missing songs:

Nova
All the Pictures on the Wall
Glad Times
More
Headstart for Happiness
Broken Stones
My Ever Changing Moods 

If anyone has them, please let me know so I can add them in.  

This album is an hour and 17 minutes long.

01 Rip the Pages Up (Paul Weller)
02 Cosmic Fringes (Paul Weller)
03 talk (Paul Weller)
04 Soul Wandering (Paul Weller)
05 talk (Paul Weller)
06 A Man of Great Promise (Paul Weller)
07 That Pleasure (Paul Weller)
08 talk (Paul Weller)
09 Stanley Road [Edit] (Paul Weller)
10 talk (Paul Weller)
11 Above the Clouds (Paul Weller)
12 Village (Paul Weller)
13 talk (Paul Weller)
14 Fat Pop (Paul Weller)
15 talk (Paul Weller)
16 Hung Up (Paul Weller)
17 Shout to the Top (Paul Weller)
18 talk (Paul Weller)
19 Jumble Queen [Edit] (Paul Weller)
20 Nothing (Paul Weller)
21 talk (Paul Weller)
22 You Do Something to Me (Paul Weller)
23 talk (Paul Weller)
24 That's Entertainment (Paul Weller)
25 Start (Paul Weller)
26 Peacock Suit (Paul Weller)
27 talk (Paul Weller)
28 Wild Wood (Paul Weller)
29 Rockets (Paul Weller)
30 talk (Paul Weller)
31 Town Called Malice (Paul Weller)

https://pixeldrain.com/u/F3rSkkm9

alternate: 

https://bestfile.io/en/narmguNR7lh45rO/file

The cover photo is from this exact concert. 

Some Updates

Here's just a notice about a few updates I did in recent days, so you won't miss them.

The main one I want to mention is the album "BBC Sessions, Volume 5," by Richard Thompson. I posted this one only a few days ago. But after I posted that, I had a musical friend contact me, and told me they had better versions of the songs from one of the radio sessions that made up that album, as well as some other relevant stuff. So I ended up removing a few songs, adding a few others, and upgrading a few more. In the end, the cover and title changed slightly, because it's now dealing with the years 1988 to 1991, instead of going to 1992. The 1992 songs will be on the next volume in the series.

Here's the updated link: 

https://albumsthatshouldexist.blogspot.com/2025/08/richard-thompson-bbc-sessions-volume-5.html

Also, while I was on vacation, a commenter noted that I'd missed three songs on one of my Joan Osborne non-album tracks collections. Thanks for the tip. I've added them in. Here's the update: 

https://albumsthatshouldexist.blogspot.com/2023/03/joan-osborne-real-love-various-songs.html

I ran across three Carole King demos I'd previously missed. I put one on this album:

https://albumsthatshouldexist.blogspot.com/2019/08/carole-king-it-might-as-well-rain-until.html 

And two more on this one:

https://albumsthatshouldexist.blogspot.com/2019/09/carole-king-so-goes-love-more-legendary.html

I found two more songs for Paul Weller's "BBC Sessions, Volume 18." Here's the link:

https://albumsthatshouldexist.blogspot.com/2025/04/paul-weller-bbc-sessions-volume-18-2018.html

Finally, I found two songs that belong on this Bobbie Gentry album. It helps fill out that album, since it had been rather short.

https://albumsthatshouldexist.blogspot.com/2019/04/bobbie-gentry-thunder-in-afternoon.html

Various Artists - Bill McClintock Mash-Ups, Volume 6: 2024-2025

I first discovered the mash-ups created by Bill McClintock on YouTube in 2023. I posted four albums of his creations that year. Then, in 2024, he made enough new ones for me to post a fifth album. Here it is a year later in 2025, and I've found enough songs for a sixth volume.

I'm going to repeat what I posted in my write-up for "Volume 5," because this is more of the exact same thing:

If you heard and liked any of the earlier volumes, you should definitely like this. For those who don't know what I'm talking about, there are a lot of people who have made mash-ups, combining the recordings of two songs to hopefully create something new and interesting. But in my opinion, McClintock is the master of this technique, and his soaring YouTube views are evidence of that.

I've mentioned in the past that McClintock has pretty much single-handedly created a new genre of music, "soul metal," by combining soul songs with heavy metal songs. The resulting mash-ups are fascinating. In my opinion, many of them could be big hits in some bizarro alternate universe. I'm not even much of a heavy metal fan, but I don't think you have to be to enjoy these.

---

There's only a couple of things I want to add to that. One is that it's very hard to give adequate song titles and artist names for each track, and it's getting harder all the time. That's because, generally speaking, he mashes two songs together. But more and more, he's drawing on other songs as well as adding them into his edits. So often these credits are oversimplifications. Check out his YouTube and look at each song for more detailed and accurate information. In some cases, he's really gone wild, using many source songs. The last track is an example of that, drawing from 12 songs! 

The other thing I want to mention is that at the same time I'm posting this, I'm reposting the five earlier volumes. The music is the same for those, but I upgraded the cover art. Thanks to improving AI technology, I was able to improve the clarity and detail. I also changed the main color of the first two volumes, to better create a rainbow effect if you look at all the covers together.

If McClintock keeps posting new material at the same rate of the past couple of years, I hope to have a Volume 7 to post some time in 2026.    

This album is an hour and eight minutes long. 

01 Somebody's Snowblind [Somebody's Watching Me vs. Snowblind] (Rockwell vs. Black Sabbath)
02 Let the Bodies Get Off [Get Off vs. Bodies] (Foxy vs. Drowning Pool)
03 Fire in the Abyss [Fire vs. Seasons in the Abyss] (Jimi Hendrix vs. Slayer)
04 You Make Me Feel like Stayin' a Rocket Queen [Rocket Queen vs. Stayin' Alive vs. You Make Me Feel like Dancing] (Guns N' Roses vs. Bee Gees vs. Leo Sayer)
05 Best Unsainted Day of My Life [Best Day of My Life vs. Unsainted] (American Authors vs. Slipknot)
06 Sleigh Bitch [Sleigh Ride vs. Crazy Bitch] (Carpenters vs. Buckcherry)
07 Sabbath Toxic Sabbath [Toxic vs. Sabbath Bloody Sabbath] (Britney Spears vs. Black Sabbath)
08 Whip My Lonely, Dark Heart [Owner of a Lonely Heart vs. Let It Whip] (Yes vs. Dazz Band)
09 Motor City Woman [I'll Be Around vs. Jet City Woman] (Spinners vs. Queensryche)
10 Come as the Cat [Year of the Cat vs. Come as You Are] (Al Stewart vs. Nirvana)
11 Twist of Freak [Le Freak vs. Twist of Cain] (Chic vs. Danzig)
12 Hit the Bottoms, Jack [Bottoms Up vs. Hit the Road, Jack] (Van Halen vs. Ray Charles)
13 Hotter than a Highway to Hell with the Devil [To Hell With the Devil vs. Highway to Hell] (Stryper vs. AC-DC)
14 I'll Be a Disciple for You [I'll Be There for You vs. Disciple] (Rembrandts vs. Slayer)
15 Killing in the Name of a Terrible Holy Lie [Killing in the Name vs. Terrible Lie] (Rage Against the Machine vs. Nine Inch Nails vs. Various Artists) 

pixeldrain.com/u/UnHfYRqZ

alternate:

https://bestfile.io/en/ereZQHYCbJBtZhw/file 

The cover is basically the exact same as the previous ones in this series, with only a bit of the text and the background color changing. That's a photo of McClintock in the center. 

St. Vincent - BBC In Concert, Glastonbury Festival, Worthy Farm, Pilton, Britain, 6-29-2025

Here's a set by singer-songwriter St. Vincent from the 2025 Glastonbury Festival.

I've got over twenty albums to post from this festival, due to a poll I made.  St. Vincent tied Rod Stewart for the second most votes in that poll, so I'm posting her album here next.

I've decided I'm going to try to keep my write-ups about most of these Glastonbury performances short, so I can be faster in posting them all. I'll just say I've heard a lot of critical acclaim about her, but I thought this set was just okay.

Here's the Wikipedia article if you want to know more about St. Vincent (whose real name is Anne Clark):

St. Vincent (musician) - Wikipedia 

Like virtually all performances from this festival, I found a high-quality video file, then converted it into audio format and broke it up into mp3s. Everything here remains unreleased. 

This album is 55 minutes long. 

01 Broken Man (St. Vincent)
02 Fear the Future (St. Vincent)
03 Los Ageless (St. Vincent)
04 Birth in Reverse (St. Vincent)
05 Pay Your Way in Pain (St. Vincent)
06 Flea (St. Vincent)
07 Cheerleader (St. Vincent)
08 Big Time Nothing (St. Vincent)
09 Marrow (St. Vincent)
10 talk (St. Vincent)
11 New York (St. Vincent)
12 Sugarboy (St. Vincent)
13 All Born Screaming (St. Vincent)

https://pixeldrain.com/u/DTDfZkEJ

alternate:

https://bestfile.io/en/e9QKHInrsTQ73Hs/file

The cover photo is from this exact concert. 

Monday, August 11, 2025

Olivia Newton-John - Hollywood Nights (1980)

Here's a really interesting, entirely unreleased album by Olivia Newton-John. It's an American TV special she did in 1980 called "Hollywood Nights." It features some songs she never recorded on any album, as well as duets with an impressive bunch of guest stars: Cliff Richard, Elton John, Andy Gibb, Gene Kelly, Tina Turner, Peaches (of Peaches and Herb), Toni Tennille (of Captain and Tennille) & Karen Carpenter.

By 1980, Newton-John had become a worldwide superstar, mainly thanks due to her starring role in the 1978 movie "Grease." In 1980, she was due to have her second big starring movie role, in the movie "Xanadu." That movie would get released in August 1980, and it would turn out to be a flop, although the soundtrack by Newton-John and E.L.O. would be a big hit. This hour-long TV special was broadcast in April 1980, and seems to have served as kind of a warm-up for the movie. It featured one song that would be in the movie, "Suddenly," and also featured Newton-John duetting with Gene Kelly, as would happen in the movie, but with a different song. (Kelly, a star from a much earlier era, was 68 years old at the time.) They sang the classic song "Makin' Whoopee," but with totally different lyrics, an update called "Makin' Movies," which was all about the movie business.

But while there were those teasers about the upcoming movie, mostly the special was just a showcase for Newton-John's talent, and especially to sing duets with many musicians she liked. Probably the highlight is a version of Elton John's classic song "Candle in the Wind," mostly sung by Newton-John but with Elton playing piano and singing some towards the end. He also got to promote his new single at the time, "Little Jeannie," the only song here without Newton-John's involvement.

There were some even more unexpected songs. She started the show with a cover of "Hollywood Nights" by Bob Seger, which is a song she otherwise never performed or recorded. She also did "Heartache Tonight" by the Eagles probably for the only time ever, with Tina Turner, Peaches, Toni Tennille and Karen Carpenter all taking lead vocals at various point as well. And "Oh Boy" by Buddy Holly was another song she otherwise never did, done here with Cliff Richard, Elton John and Andy Gibb also taking turns with the lead vocals.

I cut out about five minutes from the special. That was all non-musical stuff, mostly jokey segments with actors Dick Clark and/or Ted Knight. Trust me, that's not the kind of thing with high replay value. But if you feel you're missing out, you can find the entire video of this special on YouTube. 

The special was a mixture of songs performed in front of an audience and songs done earlier in some studio without any audience. I have no idea when or where each part of it was recorded, only that it was broadcast in April 1980. I found out that tidbit from this nice fan website, which includes lots of screenshots from the special, as well as a link to the YouTube video of the whole thing:

Hollywood Nights Special 

This special is unreleased and it is very likely to stay that way, due to the difficulty of getting the legal rights to all the guest performances. But now, here, at least it's available as an audio album for the first time. 

This album is 42 minutes long 

01 Hollywood Nights (Olivia Newton-John)
02 Deeper than the Night (Olivia Newton-John)
03 Hopelessly Devoted to You (Olivia Newton-John)
04 A Little More Love (Olivia Newton-John)
05 talk (Olivia Newton-John)
06 I Can't Help It (Olivia Newton-John & Andy Gibb)
07 talk (Olivia Newton-John)
08 Oh Boy (Olivia Newton-John, Cliff Richard, Elton John & Andy Gibb)
09 Suddenly (Olivia Newton-John & Cliff Richard)
10 talk (Olivia Newton-John & Gene Kelly)
11 Makin' Movies [Makin' Whoopee] (Olivia Newton-John & Gene Kelly)
12 Gimme Some Lovin' (Olivia Newton-John)
13 Candle in the Wind (Olivia Newton-John & Elton John)
14 Little Jeannie (Elton John)
15 talk (Olivia Newton-John)
16 Heartache Tonight (Olivia Newton-John, Tina Turner, Peaches, Toni Tennille & Karen Carpenter)
17 I Honestly Love You (Olivia Newton-John)
18 Hollywood Nights [Reprise] [Instrumental] (Olivia Newton-John)

https://pixeldrain.com/u/7Mv22RSn

alternate:

https://bestfile.io/en/fdqwk48Vi5S9n15/file 

I made the cover art out of two screenshots from this TV special. I took one screenshot for the words at the top, which were apparently neon signs in front of the building. But at the point in time, Newton-John was relatively small in the overall image, standing on the street. So I went to slightly earlier in the same scene, when her head took up most of the screen, and imposed that on top, using Photoshop. 

Covered: Tommy Boyce & Bobby Hart: 1959-1987

Next up for my Covered series highlighting the careers of great songwriters is the duo of Tommy Boyce and Bobby Hart, usually just known as Boyce and Hart. These guys definitely knew how to write catchy songs. They were sometimes successful performing their own music, including having one big hit, but mostly they wrote songs for others.

Boyce was the first to have songwriting success. In 1959, when he was about 20 years old, he wrote the song "Be My Guest," and wanted rock star Fats Domino to sing it. He waited hours outside of Domino's hotel room, and got him to promise to listen to a demo of the song, which Domino actually did. It was a big hit later that year, selling over a million copies. 

Boyce and Hart first met later in 1959. Hart was the same age and was trying to make it as a singer, without much success. Not much happened for a few years, except for Boyce writing another big hit, "Pretty Little Angel Eyes" by Curtis Lee, in 1961. Gradually, Boyce and Hart started writing songs together. Their first big success as a duo was "Come a Little Bit Closer" by Jay & the Americans, which may or may not have reached Number One in the U.S. in 1964, depending on the chart. 

In late 1965, things really got cooking for Boyce and Hart when they got involved with the very start of the Monkees TV show. In fact, at first the duo practically was the Monkees! For the first season of the TV show, and the band's first album, they produced and recorded nearly all of the songs, using their own backing band, and wrote many of the songs as well. The actual Monkees starring in the show only replaced the guide vocals sung by the duo with their own for the final product. However, after the debut album came out, the band's musical supervisor Don Kirshner fired the duo, after claiming they were secretly using studio time for their own projects. That may well have been true. But they continued to write songs for the Monkees, despite no longer being involved with the production and recording. Every Monkees album released in the 1960s had at least one song by them, except for "Head."

Their success with the Monkees, including writing many of their biggest hits, gave them the prominence to have success as a recording duo. Their biggest hit on their own was "I Wonder What She's Doing Tonight," which was released at the end of 1967. It didn't have a big chart peak, only reaching Number Eight in the U.S., but it sold a million copies, which was typical of songs at or near the very top. They also had two more songs make the U.S. Top Forty, "Out and About" and "Alice Long [You're Still My Favorite Girlfriend]." I've included all three of those, as well as one more song they performed together that I like, "We're All Going to the Same Place."

Commercially, the duo peaked in the late 1960s, when they were writing hit after hit for the Monkees, themselves, and other musical acts. But musical trends were changing fast, and their style didn't fit in so well with the 1970s and after. They still did have occasional successes - the last five songs here are from after 1970 - but not so many. And some of those songs I chose at the end were actually written much earlier but not hits until later. "Hurt So Bad," written by Teddy Randazzo, Bobby Weinstein, and Bobby Hart, was a hit for Little Anthony and the Imperials in 1965. But I chose a 1980 version that was a hit for Linda Ronstadt in 1980. Similarly, "Under the Moon of Love," written by Tommy Boyce and Curtis Lee, was a minor hit for Curtis Lee in 1961. But in 1976, the band Showaddywaddy had a Number One hit with it in Britain.

In the mid-1970s, Boyce and Hart joined Davy Jones and Micky Dolenz for a reunion of the Monkees, essentially replacing the two missing original Monkees members. They put out a new album in 1975, but for legal reasons they weren't allowed to call themselves the Monkees, so they went by the name "Dolenz, Jones, Boyce and Hart." But the earlier magic was gone, and their album didn't have much success. I chose not to include any songs from that album. In the 1970s, both Boyce and Hart tried releasing their own solo albums, but to even less success.

Hart is still alive as I write this in 2025. However, Boyce died in 1994. He was suffering from depression, and then had a brain aneurysm, which put him in a lot of pain. So he shot himself with a gun.

Here's a Wikipedia entry about the duo, if you want to know more: 

Boyce and Hart - Wikipedia 

Strangely, Boyce has his own Wikipedia entry, here, but Hart does not:

Tommy Boyce - Wikipedia 

This album is an hour and one minute long. 

01 Be My Guest (Fats Domino)
02 Pretty Little Angel Eyes (Curtis Lee)
03 Come a Little Bit Closer (Jay & the Americans)
04 Peaches 'N' Cream (Ikettes)
05 [Theme From] The Monkees (Monkees)
06 Action, Action, Action (Keith Allison)
07 [I'm Not Your] Stepping Stone (Paul Revere & the Raiders)
08 The Last Train to Clarksville (Monkees)
09 I Wonder What She's Doing Tonight (Tommy Boyce & Bobby Hart)
10 She (Del Shannon)
11 Out and About (Tommy Boyce & Bobby Hart)
12 Words (Monkees)
13 I Wanna Be Free (Keith Allison)
14 Alice Long [You're Still My Favorite Girlfriend] (Tommy Boyce & Bobby Hart)
15 Valleri (Monkees)
16 We're All Going to the Same Place (Tommy Boyce & Bobby Hart)
17 Tear Drop City (Monkees)
18 Something's Wrong with Me (Austin Roberts)
19 Keep On Singing (Helen Reddy)
20 Under the Moon of Love (Showaddywaddy)
21 Hurt So Bad (Linda Ronstadt)
22 Dominoes (Robbie Nevil)

https://pixeldrain.com/u/YWEcVX4i

alternate:

https://bestfile.io/en/q01I8u3QJF4SfvS/file

I don't know the details of the cover photo, but based on the clothes, I'd guess it's from around 1967. That's Boyce on the left and Hart on the right (with the red jacket).

Sunday, August 10, 2025

Ron Sexsmith - Reasons to Believe, Volume 7: 2013-2016

Man, I've been really painfully slow posting the rest of this series of non-album tracks by Ron Sexsmith. But I finish everything eventually. This is the seventh and second to last album in this series.

All but two of the songs here have been officially released. Tracks 1, 2, 3, and 5 are bonus tracks from the "Forever Endeavor" album, with track 5 appearing only on deluxe edition versions. The other songs are from a bunch of different sources, like various artists compilation albums, soundtracks, and appearances on other musical acts' albums. As usual, check out the mp3 tags for more details.

The two unreleased songs are "Sisters of Mercy," from a Leonard Cohen tribute concert in 2013, and "Wait until the Sun Comes Up," from a concert in 2014. 

As with past volumes, I want to mention that this series was the idea of Pete the Greek, and I wouldn't have done it without his instigation and continual help. 

This album is 47 minutes long.

01 Real Pandora (Ron Sexsmith)
02 Least of My Worries (Ron Sexsmith)
03 Wee Small Hours (Ron Sexsmith)
04 Pennies from Heaven (Ron Sexsmith)
05 Life After a Broken Heart (Ron Sexsmith)
06 Any Day Now (Breithaupt Brothers & Ron Sexsmith)
07 Don't You (Marike Jager with Ron Sexsmith)
08 Sisters of Mercy (Ron Sexsmith)
09 Wait until the Sun Comes Up (Ron Sexsmith & Oh Susanna)
10 Circling Round the Drain (Ron Sexsmith)
11 Half a Chance (Alex Cuba with Ron Sexsmith)
12 Don't Wait (Mel Parsons with Ron Sexsmith)
13 Off Somewhere (Lori Cullen & Ron Sexsmith)
14 Rain (Flypaper Orchestra with Ron Sexsmith)

https://pixeldrain.com/u/5yK5zB9N

alternate: 

https://bestfile.io/en/YqT1PVLGkrlXSWO/file

All I know about the cover photo is that it's from 2015.

Rod Stewart - BBC Sessions, Volume 7: In Concert, Glastonbury Festival, Worthy Farm, Pilton, Britain, 6-29-2025

It can't be denied that Rod Stewart is an old man. At the time I'm writing this, over a month after the 2025 Glastonbury Festival, Stewart is 80 years old. And yet he was one of the big names of the festival because he keeps entertaining crowds like someone much younger. I was rather wary about hearing this concert, but it turns out he sounds just like he did decades ago. 

In terms of the set list, there are no big surprises here. It consists mostly of his big hits from the 1970s and 80s. He did three unexpected covers of classic songs, though: "Love Train," "Lady Marmalade" and "If You Don't Know Me by Now." The second one was done by his backing singers while he took a "tea break," and the last one was a duet with Mick Hucknall, lead singer of Simply Red.

Speaking of guests, near the end of the concert, he was joined on stage for two songs by Ronnie Wood, currently a member of the Rolling Stones but also a former band mate of Stewart's in the Faces. And for one song, both of them were joined by 1960s female singer Lulu. 

This album is an hour and 29 minutes long. 

01 Tonight I'm Yours [Don't Hurt Me] (Rod Stewart)
02 Having a Party (Rod Stewart)
03 Some Guys Have All the Luck (Rod Stewart)
04 talk (Rod Stewart)
05 Love Train (Rod Stewart)
06 The First Cut Is the Deepest (Rod Stewart)
07 Tonight's the Night [Gonna Be Alright] (Rod Stewart)
08 Forever Young (Rod Stewart)
09 Riverdance [Instrumental] (Rod Stewart)
10 Forever Young [Reprise] (Rod Stewart)
11 talk (Rod Stewart)
12 You Wear It Well (Rod Stewart)
13 Maggie May (Rod Stewart)
14 talk (Rod Stewart)
15 Young Turks (Rod Stewart)
16 talk (Rod Stewart)
17 I'd Rather Go Blind (Rod Stewart)
18 talk (Rod Stewart)
19 Da Ya Think I'm Sexy (Rod Stewart)
20 talk (Rod Stewart)
21 Lady Marmalade (Rod Stewart)
22 talk (Rod Stewart)
23 I Don't Want to Talk about It (Rod Stewart)
24 If You Don't Know Me by Now (Rod Stewart with Mick Hucknall)
25 Baby Jane (Rod Stewart)
26 talk (Rod Stewart)
27 Stay with Me (Rod Stewart with Ronnie Wood)
28 Hot Legs (Rod Stewart with Lulu & Ronnie Wood)
29 talk (Rod Stewart)
30 Sailing (Rod Stewart)

https://pixeldrain.com/u/zFLyHF3D

alternate: 

https://bestfile.io/en/1W66vKXqkwAL1qL/file

The cover photo is from this exact concert, showing Stewart with Ronnie Wood. 

Saturday, August 9, 2025

Tom P*tty & the Heartbreakers with Stevie Nicks - PBS Soundstage, Stephan C. O'Connell Center, Gainesville, FL, 9-21-2006

Sometimes, no news is good news. That's definitely been the case for my music blog in 2025, because for nearly all of this year so far, I haven't had any copyright issues to deal with. I guess I like to flirt with disaster, because I'm posting an album from the musical act I've had the most trouble with up until now. Look at the name of this album to see whom I'm referring to. I want to post all the good episodes of "PBS Soundstage" I can find, so I have to at least try to post this one. But get it quickly, while you still can.

I think the reason I've had a better time with copyright issues is because I've gotten even more cryptic with the names of the download zip files. That times well with the sudden lack of copyright notices. That said, I figure the fewer times I mention the name of the musical act, the better. So I won't say much here. I'm not even going to include the track list, because it includes the name of the musical artist many times. But it's included in the zip file if you want it.

I will say a little bit, however. The star of the show was born and raised in Gainesville, Florida, and in fact most of his band was from there as well. So this concert was a rare homecoming, giving it extra emotional appeal. For the band's entire 2006 summer tour, they were assisted by Stevie Nicks, despite the fact that she was a big star in her own right. She has publicly stated more than once that she wishes she could have been a member of the Heartbreakers, so this tour was probably the closest she came to fulfilling that wish. She didn't sing any of her own songs, but sang back up on some of songs by the main act (including duet in which she sang on the original). 

This album is a lot longer than the typical hour-long episode of this TV show. That's because this is the full concert, from the DVD. It hasn't been released in any audio format, however. 

Note that this musical act did another episode of "PBS Soundstage," back in 2003. I don't plan on posting that one though, because it's nearly identical to another concert that I have, which was recorded in the same city only a couple of days apart. 

If this post manages to stay up for a while, I may try to experiment with reposting some of the other disappeared posts by this musical act. I may also try to post the 2003 concert I just mentioned above. Whereas if this disappears, you can guess what happened. 

This album is an hour and 54 minutes long.

https://pixeldrain.com/u/SrVC27H8

alternate:

https://bestfile.io/wtiqNcLva2nDKFG/file

The cover is from this exact concert.

Richard Thompson - BBC Sessions, Volume 5: 1988-1991

I had a weird dream last night. In the dream, I heard the song "Al Bowlly's in Heaven" by Richard Thompson, but I noticed a famous Queen song was basically the same song, just with different words and very different production. I don't think it's true that any Queen song resembles that one, but it was a fun was to be reminded what a fantastic song "Al Bowlly's in Heaven" is. And it also reminded me that it's time to post another Richard Thompson album. So here's the next BBC album from him. This one is a collection of BBC studio sessions, all solo acoustic.

Everything here remains unreleased. The first five songs are from an appearance on the Andy Kershaw Show in 1988. Tracks 6 through 9 are from another 1988 radio show, the Richard Skinner Show. "She Moved through the Fair" is a live cut from the "Folk on Two" radio show. The remaining songs, tracks 11 through 16 are from a 1992 radio show called "Kaleidoscope."

Unfortunately, "Al Bowlly's in Heaven" isn't on here, but it is on the "BBC Sessions, Volume 1" album I've posted here. That's probably the greatest song about war-related PTSD ever written. Most of the songs here are from his albums at the time, like 1988's "Amnesia" and 1991's "Rumour and Sigh." But there are a few rarities and older ones as well.

This album is 48 minutes long. 

01 Killerman Gold Posse (Richard Thompson)
02 Waltzing's for Dreamers (Richard Thompson)
03 Pharoah (Richard Thompson)
04 Push and Shove (Richard Thompson)
05 Killing Jar (Richard Thompson)
06 Turning of the Tide (Richard Thompson)
07 talk (Richard Thompson)
08 Two Left Feet (Richard Thompson)
09 Valerie (Richard Thompson)
10 She Moved through the Fair (Richard Thompson)
11 I Feel So Good (Richard Thompson)
12 1952 Vincent Black Lightning (Richard Thompson)
13 The Choice Wife [Instrumental] (Richard Thompson)
14 I Misunderstood (Richard Thompson)
15 Don't Let a Thief Steal into Your Heart (Richard Thompson)
16 God Loves a Drunk (Richard Thompson)

https://pixeldrain.com/u/78arpQje 

alternate: 

https://bestfile.io/en/tvgkYBCdHvoUuro/file

The cover photo is from 1992. That's all I know about it. 

Olivia Newton-John - BBC Sessions, Volume 3: Only Olivia, BBC TV Theatre, London, Britain, 6-8-1977

Here's another BBC album by Olivia Newton-John. It's the third and last one I could find. This one makes up a single short concert, taken from a 1977 BBC TV special called "Only Olivia."

At the time of the concert, Newton-John wasn't nearly as popular in Britain as one might have suspected. She'd had some hits there in the early 1970s. But from 1974 to 1977, she only had two Top 40 hits in Britain, while she'd had 10 in the U.S. Some songs that were big in the U.S, such as "Have You Never Been Mellow," which reached Number Three, didn't chart in Britain at all. The one recent hit she'd had in Britain at the time of this special was "Sam," which made the Top Ten there in early 1977. So it's understandable why she would have wanted to do this BBC special to increase her profile there.

It seems not to have made much of a difference though, because the single she was promoting at the time, "Making a Good Thing Better," was another one that completely failed to even make the charts in Britain. But ultimately it didn't matter, because in 1978 she became a superstar worldwide with the release of the movie "Grease." Her next three singles in Britain, all from that movie, would be two Number Ones and one Number Two!

In the 1970s, there were lots of musical specials of TV, typically variety shows or one with a main star and lots of guest stars. But as the title says, this one was "only Olivia." Generally speaking, she sung her biggest hits until that time. However, one song, "Love Is Alive," is a cover of the 1976 hit single by Gary Wright, and she didn't put it on any of her studio albums. "Slow Dancing" was a song that she put on the album she was just releasing at the time ("Making a Good Thing Better"), but a version by Johnny Rivers also was becoming a big hit in the U.S. around the same time.

By the way, although I'm done posting BBC material by Newton-John, I found two more interesting unreleased albums from her in the course of finding these. I plan on posting them soon. 

This album is 46 minutes long. 

01 Let Me Be There - If You Love Me [Let Me Know] (Olivia Newton-John)
02 talk (Olivia Newton-John)
03 Have You Never Been Mellow (Olivia Newton-John)
04 Take Me Home, Country Roads (Olivia Newton-John)
05 Pony Ride (Olivia Newton-John)
06 Let It Shine (Olivia Newton-John)
07 Slow Dancing (Olivia Newton-John)
08 Love Is Alive (Olivia Newton-John)
09 Please Mr. Please (Olivia Newton-John)
10 Nevertheless - As Time Goes By (Olivia Newton-John)
11 Sam (Olivia Newton-John)
12 Making a Good Thing Better (Olivia Newton-John)
13 talk (Olivia Newton-John)
14 I Honestly Love You (Olivia Newton-John) 

https://pixeldrain.com/u/WB7bydAp

alternate: 

https://bestfile.io/en/r3InxPp8BnTPH9j/file

The cover image is a screenshot taken from this exact concert. The font also was the one used for title of the TV show. 

Friday, August 8, 2025

Dr. Hook with Shel Silverstein - PBS Soundstage, WTTW Studios, Chicago, IL, 1-14-1979

Here's another episode of the "PBS Soundstage" TV show. This one primarily features the American band Dr. Hook. But it also has a significant solo spot for singer-songwriter Shel Silverstein.

From 1972 until 1980, Dr. Hook had quite a few hits in the U.S. So this was a good time for this episode, coming near the end of their hit-making era. Few bands are as closely tied to an outside songwriter as this band was with Shel Silverstein, so it's fitting that he was a part of this concert. In fact, all the songs for their first two albums consisted of songs written by Silverstein, and they covered many more of his songs from the rest of the 1970s.

Silverstein had an extremely varied and fascinating career as a writer, poet, songwriter, and author of children's books. But with so many interests, it seems he almost never performed his songs in concerts, although he put out many albums. So his appearance in this concert is probably the most prominent public performance that's available.

This concert is split into four parts. At the start and the end are sections featuring Dr. Hook. In the middle are two sections featuring Silverstein. Silverstein wrote many different types of songs, but he was particularly well known for both lewd songs and children's songs. Those two styles aren't meant to go together, for obvious reasons. So Silverstein did one of his lewd songs, "Show It at the Beach" about nude beaches, to an adult audience. But the rest of his songs here consisted of children's songs and were performed for a small audience made up entirely of little children, with some audience interaction. 

By the way, I already have two albums of Silverstein's songs ready for my Covered series. It's just a matter of getting around to posting them, since there's a big backlog of those albums. 

The last song, "Happy Trails," originally ended without any applause at the end, just silence. I thought that was strange. So I copied and pasted in some applause from earlier in the concert, to give it a satisfying ending. That's why that song has "[Edit]" in its title. 

This album is 52 minutes long. 

01 Walk Right In (Dr. Hook)
02 talk (Dr. Hook)
03 Ray's Yodel (Dr. Hook)
04 Only Sixteen (Dr. Hook)
05 What a Way to Go (Dr. Hook)
06 talk (Dr. Hook & Shel Silverstein)
07 Show It at the Beach (Shel Silverstein)
08 Boa Constrictor (Shel Silverstein)
09 talk (Shel Silverstein)
10 Sarah Cynthia Sylvia Stout Would Not Take the Garbage Out (Shel Silverstein)
11 talk (Shel Silverstein)
12 Unicorn (Shel Silverstein)
13 A Little Bit More (Dr. Hook)
14 Red Winged Blackbird (Dr. Hook)
15 Everybody's Making It Big but Me (Dr. Hook)
16 Sharing the Night Together (Dr. Hook)
17 The Cover of 'Rolling Stone' (Dr. Hook)
18 Rolling in My Sweet Baby's Arms (Dr. Hook)
19 Happy Trails [Edit] (Dr. Hook)

https://pixeldrain.com/u/6pc2daJ2

alternate:

https://bestfile.io/en/JOrXX0CzKJ0VMpN/file

The cover photo of Ray Sawyer, one of the band's two lead singers, is a screenshot from this exact concert. The video the screenshot came from was pretty low-res, so I used the Krea AI program to improve the image quality.

Thursday, August 7, 2025

Neil Young - BBC Sessions, Volume 4: In Concert, Glastonbury Festival, Worthy Farm, Pilton, Britain, 6-28-2025

It's time for me to finally start posting the most wanted performances from the 2025 Glastonbury Festival. Since everything I'll be posting is available with great sound quality because it was broadcast by the BBC, I'll be posting these as BBC albums. In my poll about this festival, the number one most wanted performance was by Neil Young. So here it is.

At the time of this concert, Young was 79 years old. I heard one of his concert recordings from a couple of years prior to this, and that made he concerned that his voice was starting to go. But I'm glad to say he still sings and plays lead guitar like a younger version of himself.

Young, with his latest band, the Chrome Hearts, played no songs from his most recent albums. However, his set wasn't a "best of" either, despite performing for a huge crowd that didn't buy tickets just to see him. He did play some favorites, but he also played some relative obscurities, for instance "Be the Rain" and "Sun Green" from his 2003 album "Greendale." And stylistically, he went from solo acoustic at times to long, jammy full-band songs at other times. All in all, it was a solid show.

This album is an hour and 49 minutes long. 

01 talk (Neil Young)
02 Sugar Mountain (Neil Young)
03 Be the Rain (Neil Young)
04 When You Dance, I Can Really Love (Neil Young)
05 Cinnamon Girl (Neil Young)
06 Fuckin' Up (Neil Young)
07 talk (Neil Young)
08 Hey Hey, My My [Into the Black] (Neil Young)
09 The Needle and the Damage Done (Neil Young)
10 Harvest Moon (Neil Young)
11 talk (Neil Young)
12 Looking Forward (Neil Young)
13 talk (Neil Young)
14 Sun Green (Neil Young)
15 talk (Neil Young)
16 Love and Only Love (Neil Young)
17 Like a Hurricane (Neil Young)
18 Name of Love (Neil Young)
19 Old Man (Neil Young)
20 talk (Neil Young)
21 Rockin' in the Free World (Neil Young)
22 talk (Neil Young)
23 Throw Your Hatred Down (Neil Young)

https://pixeldrain.com/u/bdi3M4vH

alternate:

https://bestfile.io/en/yrbxyXlVIXDgR8q/file

The cover photo is from this exact concert. 

Wednesday, August 6, 2025

Olivia Newton-John - BBC Sessions, Volume 2: 1974-1981

Here's the second album of singer Olivia Newton-John performing for the BBC. Like the first one, it consists of various sessions, although this one happens to be entirely made of TV show appearances, not radio shows.

Newton-John's fame grew bigger and bigger as the 1970s went on. However, most of the music here comes before 1978, when she became a superstar due to her leading role in the hit movie "Grease." 

The first ten songs all come from 1974. It seems she spent most of the year in Britain, staying there long enough to have her own short-lived BBC TV show called "Moods of Love." It only consisted of four half-hour episodes, but each one was chockablock with songs she sang that she never put on record. Unfortunately, it seems the BBC wiped the recordings (as they so often did back then). Only a few songs from it could still be found on YouTube, and I couldn't use all of those due to sound quality issues. Tracks 5, 6, and 7 here come from her show, which include duets with Cliff Richard and Neil Sedaka.

Here's a link to a fan's webpage about the show, if you want to get frustrated seeing the names of all the song performances that apparently got lost:

Moods Of Love - UK show 

The first two songs are from a show called "Clunk Click." The next two are from "Presenting Nana Mouskouri." One of those, "Sing," features a duet of Newton-John with Mouskouri. Furthermore, she made some appearances on Cliff Richard's BBC TV show that year, "It's Cliff Richard." Those are tracks 8 through 10, and include two more duets with Richard.

Tracks 11 and 12 are from a 1977 appearance on "The Val Doonican Show." If You Love Me (Let Me Know)" was a hit for Newton-John with her being the only one singing lead. But she did a duet version of it with Val Doonican here. Track 13 is from another 1977 show. Track 14 is from the "Top of the Pops" TV show (not to be confused with the radio show of the same name). Normally, performances on this show were lip-synced. However, in this case, Newton-John sang live lead vocals over a prerecorded backing track, so I included it. 

The last song is "Physical" from 1981. By this time, she was such a big star that she probably didn't feel the need to appear on BBC TV or radio much anymore. So we don't get versions of many of her big hits from the late 1970s and 1980s. But luckily we do get this one, which was the biggest hit of her career, thanks to an appearance on the TV show "Stars."

Note that some of the songs here were never recorded for any of her albums or singles, especially most of the duets.

There is one more BBC album coming from her, a 1977 concert. It comes third since this one chronologically starts earlier.

There are two bonus tracks. There's nothing wrong with them, except there already are other versions of those songs. ("Sam" from this volume and "Take Me Home, Country Roads" from Volume 1.)

This album is 46 minutes long. 

01 Someday (Olivia Newton-John)
02 Hands Across the Sea (Olivia Newton-John)
03 Amoureuse (Olivia Newton-John)
04 Sing (Olivia Newton-John & Nana Mouskori)
05 Tea Cosy (Olivia Newton-John & Cliff Richard)
06 Sing Me (Olivia Newton-John & Neil Sedaka)
07 Nevertheless (Olivia Newton-John)
08 I Honestly Love You (Olivia Newton-John)
09 I’m Leaving It All Up to You (Olivia Newton-John & Cliff Richard)
10 All I Have to Do Is Dream (Olivia Newton-John & Cliff Richard)
11 Sam (Olivia Newton-John)
12 If You Love Me [Let Me Know] (Olivia Newton-John & Val Doonican)
13 Let It Shine (Olivia Newton-John)
14 A Little More Love [Live Lead Vocals Only] (Olivia Newton-John)
15 Physical (Olivia Newton-John)

Sam (Olivia Newton-John)
Take Me Home, Country Roads (Olivia Newton-John)

https://pixeldrain.com/u/BxmDJZwW

alternate: 

https://bestfile.io/en/Y0O1cVwP00MbQ6x/file

The cover image is a screenshot taken from a video of her 1978 performance of "A Little More Love" on the "Top of the Pops" TV show.

Love Affair - BBC Sessions, Volume 2: 1970-1973

Here is the second and last BBC album from the British band Love Affair. 

In 1968 and 1969, the time period dealt with in Volume 1, Love Affair had a handful of hits in Britain, with the biggest being the Number One hit "Everlasting Love." 

The band had an excellent lead vocalist in Steve Ellis. However, he grew dissatisfied with the direction the band was taking. They had tried to move away from their pop style to more of a rocking style, but their next single bombed. So he left for a solo career right at the start of 1970. He was replaced by August Eadon. I assume that's Eagon singing on the cover art and singing on most of these songs.

Unfortunately, after the change of singers, none of the band's singles made the charts in Britain. The only partial exception was "Lincoln County." While it didn't chart in Britain, at least it nearly reached the Top Ten in New Zealand. 

Still, the band was so popular from before that they kept getting sessions on the "Top of the Pops" radio show. Virtually everything here comes from that show, with the exception of "Gypsy," which is from an appearance on the "Disco 2" BBC TV show. (That was an early version of "The Old Grey Whistle Test.") The bonus track is from that show as well.

Also, most everything here is unreleased. The only exceptions are the songs "Bad Girl" and "She's Not There." Those appeared on the obscure various artists compilation album "British Beat Collection, Volume Four: Rare British Broadcasts The Beat Era, 1966-1970." As for the rest, that's all due once again to my awesome secret source, a musical friend who keeps sending me Top of the Pops material.

As with most Top of the Pops broadcasts from this time, the BBC DJs had a habit of talking over the music. So I did my usual thing, using the UVR5 audio editing program to keep the music but get rid of the DJ chatter. Those are all the songs with "[Edit]" in their titles. 

Note that not everything here is technically from Love Affair. As I mentioned above, the band's former lead vocalist Steve Ellis left for a solo career at the start of 1970. Although he released music in 1970 and 1971, it seems he wasn't invited to the Top of the Pops radio show those years. But he did a session for it in 1972 and another in 1973. So I've included those here as well, chronologically interspersed with more Love Affair sessions.

The bonus track "Bad Girl" is a bonus track mainly because this album already includes a different version of that same song. And that one has slightly better sound quality.

This album is 55 minutes long, not including the bonus track. 

01 Lincoln County [Edit] (Love Affair)
02 Bad Girl [Edit] (Love Affair)
03 She's Not There [Edit] (Love Affair)
04 Long Way Home [Edit] (Love Affair)
05 That's My Home [Edit] (Love Affair)
06 Gypsy [Edit] (Love Affair)
07 I Put a Spell on You (Love Affair)
08 Fool on the Hill [Edit] (Love Affair)
09 Help [Get Me Some Help] [Edit] (Love Affair)
10 Morning Paper (Ellis)
11 El Doomo (Ellis)
12 Good to Be Alive (Ellis)
13 Let Me Dance (Love Affair)
14 Liar (Love Affair)
15 Goodbye Boredom (Ellis)
16 Open Road (Ellis)

Bad Girl [Edit] (Love Affair) 

https://pixeldrain.com/u/BfZ35J1m

alternate:

https://bestfile.io/en/c3ZFe0I8cwu2EDm/file

The cover photo was taken at the Revolution Club in London at some point in 1970.

Heart - PBS Soundstage, WTTW Studios, Chicago, IL, 7-28-2005

Here's an unusually long episode of the "PBS Soundstage" TV show, featuring the band Heart, from 2005.

The actual TV show edited down performances to fit an hour long time slow. But this is sourced from a DVD, so it includes the entire concert. It includes all of Heart's best known songs, as well as some that were relatively new at the time. Just a year prior to this concert, the band released their first studio album in over ten years, "Jupiters Darling." It was well received by critics, perhaps because they skipped their 1980s "adult contemporary" sound, and went back to more of their 1970s classic rock sound. The following songs come from that album: "Oldest Story in the World," "The Perfect Goodbye," "Lost Angel," "Fallen Ones," "Make Me," "Things," and "Enough."

Ever since Heart was formed in the 1970s, they've had a strong fondness for the band Led Zeppelin, and often covered their songs. I've even put together an entire album of Heart covers of Led Zeppelin songs, which I've posted at this blog. This continues on this concert, with no less than three Led Zeppelin covers: "The Battle of Evermore," "Black Dog," and "Misty Mountain Hop."

This album is an hour and 48 minutes long. 

01 talk (Heart)
02 Sand (Heart)
03 talk (Heart)
04 Kick It Out (Heart)
05 Straight On (Heart)
06 talk (Heart)
07 Oldest Story in the World (Heart)
08 The Perfect Goodbye (Heart)
09 These Dreams (Heart)
10 The Battle of Evermore (Heart)
11 talk (Heart)
12 Love Song (Heart)
13 talk (Heart)
14 Lost Angel (Heart)
15 talk (Heart)
16 Magic Man (Heart)
17 Crazy on You (Heart)
18 Bebe le Strange (Heart)
19 talk (Heart)
20 Fallen Ones (Heart)
21 Make Me (Heart)
22 talk (Heart)
23 Even It Up (Heart)
24 talk (Heart)
25 Dog and Butterfly (Heart)
26 talk (Heart)
27 Alone (Heart)
28 Things (Heart)
29 Love Alive (Heart)
30 talk (Heart)
31 Enough (Heart)
32 Barracuda (Heart)
33 Black Dog (Heart)
34 Misty Mountain Hop (Heart)

https://pixeldrain.com/u/4utbM8H8

alternate:

https://bestfile.io/en/xzKLSfZEOTSMXzv/file

The cover photo is a screenshot taken from a video of this exact concert.

Glastonbury 2025 Poll Results

I can be a lazy bum sometimes, and dealing my Glastonbury Festival 2025 from a few weeks back has been one of those times. But I finally got off my butt to tally the poll results. As I said in the poll, I plan on posting the concerts for those musical acts that got a decent number of votes.

Here are the results: 

Neil Young               XXXXXXXXXXXXXX
Rod Stewart              XXXXXXXX
St. Vincent              XXXXXXXX
Franz Ferdinand          XXXXXX
John Fogerty             XXXXXX
Pulp                     XXXXXX
Wet Leg                  XXXXXX
Alanis Morissette        XXXXX
Father John Misty        XXXXX
Brian Jonestown Massacre XXXX
Beth Gibbons             XXXX
Libertines               XXXX
Prodigy                  XXXX
Weezer                   XXXX
The 1975                 XXX
Amyl & the Sniffers      XXX
Black Uhuru              XXX
Brandi Carlile           XXX
Cymande                  XXX
Olivia Rodrigo           XXX
Nile Rodgers & Chic      XXX
Supergrass               XXX
Inhaler                  XX
Four Tet                 XX
English Teacher          XX
Lola Young               XX
Lorde                    XX
Osees                    XX
Raye                     XX
Anohni & the Johnsons    X
Biffy Clyro              X
Blossoms                 X
Caribou                  X
Faye Webster             X
Glass Beams              X
Gracie Abrams            X    
Japanese Breakfast       X
Kneecap                  X
Lucy Dakus               X
Maccabees                X
Noah Kahan               X
Nova Twins               X
Script                   X
Shed Seven               X
Sprints                  X
Wunderhorse              X

And here's what I plan to do. I hope to post the sets of all those musical acts that got at least three votes. That's assuming I listen to their music and find I don't dislike it though. As for the ones that got one or two votes, sorry, but that's not enough. 22 got three or more votes, so that's a lot of albums to post! I'll add this task to some other projects I'm working on, like posting albums from the winners of the previous BBC poll, PBS Soundstage episodes, rare Top of the Pops BBC sessions, Covered series, and so on. Thanks for taking part in this poll, and I hope you're satisfied with the results.

Tuesday, August 5, 2025

Covered: Henry Mancini: 1959-1998

I have so much material for Covered series albums that I'm going to try to make another concerted effort to post a lot more of them. So here's another, focusing on the songwriting of Henry Mancini.

Mancini is a bit of a left field choice for the Covered series, since he mostly composed instrumental music for movies, and is far removed from rock and roll. But he was responsible for so many classic songs that I feel I can't leave him out. The intro to his Wikipedia article sums him up well, stating that Mancini "was an American composer, conductor, arranger, pianist and flutist. Often cited as one of the greatest composers in the history of film, he won four Academy Awards, a Golden Globe, and twenty Grammy Awards, plus a posthumous Grammy Lifetime Achievement Award in 1995."

Mancini was born in 1924 and grew up in rural Pennsylvania. After graduating from high school, he studied at the prestigious Julliard School of Music in New York City for two years. But then he was drafted in the U.S. Army and fought in World War II from 1943 to 1945. After the war, he became a pianist and arranger for the Glenn Miller Orchestra (which continued despite the fact Miller died in World War II). In 1952, he got a job writing music for movies for Universal Pictures, a major movie studio in Hollywood. 

However, he didn't really become famous until after he left that company in 1958 to become an independent composer and arranger. One of his first jobs was writing the theme for a new TV show called "Peter Gunn." His song, the "Peter Gunn Theme," was a big hit for Duane Eddy, and has since become an often covered classic. It won an Emmy award and two Grammys, and put Mancini in high demand writing for more TV and movie projects.

Mancini typically only wrote music, usually instrumentals. But sometimes he would work with another songwriter who would write the lyrics. His next major hit, "Moon River," was such a case, with the lyrics written by famed songwriter Johnny Mercer. The version sung by actress Audrey Hepburn in the movie of the same name in 1961 went on to win the Academy Award for Best Original Song, as well as Grammys for Song of the Year and Record of the Year.

After that, Mancini kept steadily releasing music for decades, including scores for dozens of movies. He recorded over 90 albums on his own, from big band to jazz to light classical. He became, and remains, one of the biggest names in the "easy listening" genre. 

For this album, I tried to boil the selections down to just his very best known songs, so that even people who aren't typically into can easy listening style can enjoy this. For instance, I find it hard to believe there's anyone out there who doesn't enjoy hearing the highly creative "Pink Panther Theme." Like that song, the vast majority of songs here are instrumentals. "Love Theme from Romeo and Juliet" wasn't actually written by him, but his arrangement changed the song so drastically that I've included it here anyway.

Most of Mancini's best known songs date from the 1960s. After that decade, he switched more to arranging songs written by other people, though he did sometimes write his own material. Some of the songs near the end of this album are covers of songs from much earlier in his career. I generally tried to avoid Mancini's own versions, as I usually do with these Covered albums. But I have two songs by him here since I couldn't find good versions of those ones otherwise.

He was still composing and arranging, though less prolifically, when he died of pancreatic cancer in 1994 at the age of 70 years old. His music made such a cultural impact that in 2004 he was the subject of a U.S. postage stamp. 

This album is 42 minutes long.

01 Peter Gunn Theme (Ray Anthony & His Orchestra)
02 Moon River (Audrey Hepburn)
03 Baby Elephant Walk (Lawrence Welk & His Orchestra)
04 Theme from Hatari (Henry Mancini & His Orchestra)
05 A Shot in the Dark (Shirley Scott)
06 The Shadows of Paris (Elsie Bianchi)
07 Pink Panther Theme (Those Fantabulous Strings)
08 Slow Hot Wind (Sergio Mendes & Brasil 66)
09 Two for the Road (Peggy Lee)
10 Love Theme from Romeo and Juliet [A Time for Us] (Johnny Mathis)
11 Send a Little Love My Way (Anne Murray)
12 Newhart (Henry Mancini)
13 Days of Wine and Roses (Ella Fitzgerald & Joe Pass)
14 Dreamsville (Dave Grusin with Diana Krall)
15 Charade (Monica Mancini)

https://pixeldrain.com/u/YcfTBdHW

alternate: 

https://bestfile.io/en/nDvHfXT0X64bFSQ/file

The cover photo dates from 1985. I don't know any other details.

Pinkerton's (Assorted) Colours - BBC Sessions (1966-1967)

Once again, I'm prioritizing posting BBC material that apparently hasn't even been bootlegged before. This is more material from the "Top of the Pops" BBC radio show that a musical associate has given me. In this case, it's sessions by the British pop group Pinkerton's Colours. 

First off, I have to address the band's often changing name. They were first formed in 1964 under the name "the Liberators." Then in 1965, they renamed themselves "Pinkerton's Assorted Colours." In early 1966, their first single under that name, "Mirror, Mirror," reached the Top Ten in Britain. That was their only big chart success however. After their second single, they shortened their name to just "Pinkerton's Colours." In 1968, they shortened their name yet again to simply "Pinkertons." But they still weren't done. In 1969, after some personnel changes, they changed their name to "Flying Machine." Under this name, they had a classic hit (only in the U.S.) with the song "Smile a Little Smile for Me." But that was their only success, and a year later they broke up for good.

Phew! Pick a name and stick with it! Sheesh. I'm calling them "Pinkerton's Colours" because that was their name for the vast majority of the time period dealt with here. 

Everything here is from Top of the Pops BBC sessions, which sound excellent, as they almost always do. Five of the songs here - tracks 4, 5, 9, 10, and 11 - were officially released on an obscure various artists collection ("British Beat Collection: The Beat Era Vol. 3"). The rest all come from my music friend's unreleased Top of the Pops collection. As is usually the case with Top of the Pops sessions from this era, BBC DJs spoke over the beginnings and ends of many of their songs. So I used the UVR5 audio editing program to get rid of that talking. In this case, seven out of the 11 songs here had that problem, all the ones with "[Edit]" in their titles.

I would have dearly loved to have ended this with a performance of "Smile a Little Smile for Me," since I think that's an excellent song. Unfortunately, I couldn't find any BBC performance of it. Perhaps that's because although it reached Number 5 in the charts in the U.S., it didn't make the charts in Britain at all. Unlike "Mirror, Mirror," which was written by a band member, "Smile" was written by professional songwriters Geoff Stephens and Tony Macaulay. I've already included it in my "Covered" album for Macaulay, and I'll also include a different version when I post a Covered album for Stephens.

I don't know much about this band. Here's their Wikipedia page, though it doesn't say a lot:

Pinkerton's Assorted Colours - Wikipedia 

Here also is the page for their rebirth as the Flying Machine:

The Flying Machine (band) - Wikipedia 

Their popularity didn't last long because musical trends were changing fast in 1967, and their pop style rapidly fell out of favor. They never were popular enough to release a full album. So some of the songs here were never recorded for a proper studio release, especially their cover versions of well known songs like "Summer in the City," "Richard Cory," and "You Keep Me Hangin' On."

This album is 27 minutes long. That's pretty short, but that's all the relevant material I could find.

01 The Power of Love [Edit] (Pinkerton's Colours)
02 Mirror, Mirror (Pinkerton's Colours)
03 Don't Stop Loving Me Baby (Pinkerton's Colours)
04 Magic Rocking Horse (Pinkerton's Colours)
05 Summer in the City [Edit] (Pinkerton's Colours)
06 Chains of Love (Pinkerton's Colours)
07 Richard Cory [Edit] (Pinkerton's Colours)
08 You Keep Me Hangin' On [Edit] (Pinkerton's Colours)
09 Mum and Dad [Edit] (Pinkerton's Colours)
10 I'll Always Love You [Edit] (Pinkerton's Colours)
11 On a Street Car [Edit] (Pinkerton's Colours)

https://pixeldrain.com/u/WRW61iyJ

alternate: 

https://bestfile.io/en/F8xIIuQQci9KviI/file 

I don't know much about this photo, except that it's from January 1966, right as their one big hit was rising in the charts.

Love Affair - BBC Sessions, Volume 1: 1968-1969

Up until recently, the only thing I knew about the band Love Affair was that they had a big hit in 1968 with the classic song "Everlasting Love." But it turns out I underestimated them because I'm an American and they were a British band that had much more success in Britain. They didn't even have a single hit in the U.S. Instead, soul singer Carl Carlton had the U.S. hit with "Everlasting Love" around the same time Love Affair took their version all the way to Number One in Britain. Furthermore, they have four more songs in or near the Top Ten in Britain in 1968 or 1969.

It seems that Love Affair is mostly forgotten today, but they were a big deal in Britain for those two years. They were considered pop idols, with screaming fans drowning them out during concerts, similar to what had happened to the Beatles. As a result of their popularity, they performed at a lot of BBC studio sessions, enough for two volumes.

The main reason I'm posting these albums is due to the same musical friend who has been sharing "Top of the Pops" BBC radio show sessions with me. It seems the vast majority of sessions he sent to me by this band not only haven't been officially released, they hadn't even been bootlegged until now. 

As usual for the time period, BBC DJ Brian Matthew talked over the beginnings and endings of many of the songs. So, like I usually do, I used the UVR5 audio editing program to wipe out his talking. That's why ten out of the 15 songs here have "[Edit]" in their titles.

Only five of the performances here have been officially released. Tracks 3, 4, and 15 come from the compilation album "Time Hasn't Changed Us - The Complete CBS Recordings." Tracks 2 and 14 come from different obscure various artists collection albums. 

Released or not, most everything here comes from the Top of the Pops BBC radio show. The only exceptions are tracks 3 and 4, from the BBC TV show "Colour Me Pop," and the last three songs, which are from a BBC studio session hosted by DJ Dave Lee Travis.

The band's biggest hit, "Everlasting Love," actually was released at the end of 1967. The band had two other big Top Ten hits in Britain in 1968: "Rainbow Valley" and "A Day without Love." But for whatever reason, only the first two songs here were performed in 1968. Everything else comes from 1969. I would guess that the band probably did some other BBC sessions in 1968 that have been lost. Unfortunately, I couldn't find a version of "Rainbow Valley" to include, although this album includes versions of all their other hits. Also note that I've included two versions of "Everlasting Love."

The band had a very good soulful sounding lead singer, Steve Ellis. However, he got frustrated with the way the band was pigeonholed as a pop group mostly covering songs written by professional songwriters, and wanted to expand into different styles. So he left the band for a solo career in early 1970. The band continued with a new lead singer, which will be the subject of Volume Two.

This album is 47 minutes long.

01 Everlasting Love (Love Affair)
02 I've Been Trying [Edit] (Love Affair)
03 All Along the Watchtower (Love Affair)
04 A Day in the Life [Instrumental] (Love Affair)
05 One Road [Edit] (Love Affair)
06 Everlasting Love [Edit] (Love Affair)
07 A Day without Love [Edit] (Love Affair)
08 Gone Are the Songs of Yesterday [Edit] (Love Affair)
09 Tinker Tailor [Edit] (Love Affair)
10 Bringing Back the Good Times [Edit] (Love Affair)
11 Rock Me Baby (Love Affair)
12 Something's Gotten Hold of My Heart (Love Affair)
13 Tale of Two Bitters [Edit] (Love Affair)
14 Baby I Know [Edit] (Love Affair)
15 Walk on Gilded Splinters [Edit] (Love Affair)

https://pixeldrain.com/u/2W1EcTmA

alternate:

https://bestfile.io/en/pbSrRLoxOUXdK2p/file

The cover photo shows the band performing on a TV show in 1968.

Various Artists - Lowell George Tribute Concert, The Forum, Los Angeles, CA, 8-4-1979

Lowell George was the lead guitarist and a key songwriter for the band Little Feat throughout the 1970s. In 1979, the band split up due to creative differences, and George released a solo album. He announced plans to restart the band with a slightly different line-up. But on June 29, 1979, while on tour to support his solo album, he died of a heart attack related to an accidental heroin overdose. He was only 34 years old. Only a couple of months after his death, a tribute concert was held in Los Angeles to celebrate his life and his music. Here is what remains available from that concert.

I'm posting this album almost entirely due to the efforts of musical friend Lil Panda. A couple of days ago (as I write this in August 2025), he sent me this concert out of the blue. He'd found a video from the concert on YouTube. The sound quality was fundamentally good, but had issues. I asked him what he did to fix it, and this was his reply: "Phase correction, azimuth adjustment, de-clicking, music rebalance (different for almost every song... trial and error), the repair assistant (vocal work), and spectral repair." So, thanks to his work, this should sound much better than ever before.

Furthermore, I made some additional changes, since I'm more willing to make changes to bootlegs if I think it improves the overall recording. I noticed some minor drop-outs here and there, usually only a second or less of silence. I patched those up when I found them. That's why three of the songs have "[Edit]" in their titles. 

In addition, the video did something strange with the songs "Running on Empty" and "All That You Dream." If you watch the video, they're edited to seem complete, but in fact both of them were edited way down, to less than two minutes long each. By sheer luck, the only officially released performance from this concert is "All That You Dream," from the Little Feat album "Hoy Hoy," and it's the entire song. So I used that instead. For "Running on Empty," most of the song except for the first verse and some of the end was missing. I used a different live version of this song, from the 1979 No Nukes concerts that I've posted elsewhere on this blog, to fill in the missing part of the song. But there are some differences between the versions, so you might notice the edits. Still, I prefer that over having a weirdly short version. That's why that song has "[Edit]" in its title too.

In addition, I made another edit to all the songs. That's because the video usually cut the cheering at the ends of the songs short, to just a couple of seconds. It didn't sound right to me. So I did some copying and pasting of cheering from one song to another until all the songs had a decent amount of applause. 

I found a 1979 New York Times article about the concert, so I know a little bit about it. Here's the article link (though it may not work for you if you don't have a subscription):

https://www.nytimes.com/1979/08/06/archives/pop-coast-tribute-to-lowell-george.html 

According to the concert, the proceeds from the concert were given to George's family. The concert lasted almost three hours. In addition to the big names included in this album, some others also took part, like Michael McDonald of the Doobie Brothers, Eric Kaz, Craig Fuller, J. D. Souther, Ted Tempelman, and the Tower of Power. But the video here is less than an hour long, and a lot got cut out. Either their roles were cut entirely or they only had minor roles. For instance, Michael McDonald sang back up on one song here, and the Tower of Power horns played on a few of the songs. Generally speaking, Little Feat was the backing band. But I didn't include them in most of the song credits because that would have made the song names longer and I didn't know for sure who played on which song.

The article states that some big musical stars, like Bob Dylan and the Eagles, wanted to perform at the concert as well. However, the surviving Little Feat band members who organized the concert decided to keep it to just the other musicians who knew George well. There also was pressure to have more than one concert, since interest was extremely high, but they decided not to go that route either.

The concert was filmed and recorded with the idea of later releasing an album or film of it. But so far, only that one song mentioned above has been officially released, on a Little Feat album. I've read on social media that it is believed the rest of the film footage has been lost. So this is probably all we're ever going to get. I couldn't even find any information about what other songs were performed, though there must have been many since this is only about one-third of the entire concert.

Thanks again to Lil Panda for digging this up, improving it, and sending it to me. 

This album is 53 minutes long.

01 Tears, Tears and More Tears (Nicolette Larson)
02 Rhumba Girl (Nicolette Larson & Linda Ronstadt)
03 Oh Atlanta [Edit] (Little Feat with Bonnie Raitt, Linda Ronstadt & Nicolette Larson)
04 Runaway [Edit] (Bonnie Raitt with Michael McDonald)
05 Here, There and Everywhere (Emmylou Harris)
06 For a Dancer [Edit] (Jackson Browne)
07 Running on Empty [Edit] (Jackson Browne)
08 talk (Jackson Browne)
09 Your Bright Baby Blues (Jackson Browne)
10 Poor, Poor Pitiful Me (Linda Ronstadt with Nicolette Larson)
11 Blowin' Away (Linda Ronstadt & Bonnie Raitt)
12 All That You Dream (Linda Ronstadt with Nicolette Larson & Rosemary Butler)
13 Willin' (Linda Ronstadt with Emmylou Harris, Rosemary Butler & Nicolette Larson)
14 Dixie Chicken (Little Feat & Everyone)

https://pixeldrain.com/u/bLDhuADx

alternate: 

https://bestfile.io/dwuvGZGMKED7Jiy/file

I had difficulty finding any decent photographs from this concert. There's an entire video of it on YouTube, as mentioned above, but the image quality is very low-res. I eventually found one image I was okay with, which I used as the cover. From right to left, it shows Nicolette Larson, Jackson Browne, J.D. Souther, and Linda Ronstadt. Souther's prominent role is a bit ironic, since he doesn't feature in the actual music here, due to whatever songs he was in not making it to the video. It kind of looks like I edited the photo to squish everyone close together, but in fact that's how it was in the original.

The image was still in pretty poor shape, so I tried to use the Krea AI program to improve it. But I could only do so much, so it's still rough. I also couldn't change the lighting that turned most everything orange, though I tried to make it more colorful.