Showing posts with label Lovin' Spoonful. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Lovin' Spoonful. Show all posts

Sunday, February 22, 2026

Various Artists - The Big TNT Show, Moulin Rouge, Los Angeles, CA, 11-30-1965

A few days ago (writing this in February 2026), I posted the audio to the "TAMI Show" concert. As I mentioned in my write-up, that's one of the all time great 1960s concerts, which was made into a movie in 1964. The people who made that movie basically repeated the formula in 1965 with this one, "The Big T.N.T. Show." Although this concert isn't as famous as the TAMI Show, I'd argue the star power and performances here are even better.

Just like the TAMI Show, what sets this apart from other musical shows on TV and the like is that there was no lip-syncing. Everything was done live in front of an audience. Actually, each act performed their set three times, and then the film footage from the best versions were used for the movie. 

By the way, technically "T.N.T." was an acronym for "Tune n' Talent," but clearly they just wanted to call it "T.N.T." for the "explosive" connotation, and then made up an acronym for it.

The idea was to use the most popular music acts popular with kids at the time. Musical trends had changed a lot in the year since the TAMI Show. One big change was that folk-rock was suddenly all the rage. So this concert had some folk music acts that had been lacking in the TAMI Show. In addition to folk rock like the Lovin' Spoonful and the Byrds, Joan Baez and Donovan performed in solo acoustic mode. One curiosity is that Baez sang "You Lost that Lovin' Feeling," which didn't seem like her type of song at all. But the music in the show was directed by legendary producer Phil Spector, and that's a song he actually co-wrote, so my guess is he got her to sing it.

Additional, some classic soul acts were included, like Ray Charles, Bo Diddley, Ike and Tina Turner. Country was represented by Roger Miller, and pop by Petula Clark. It was a very diverse line-up, with no repeats from the TAMI Show. 

It seems like this movie was commercially successful, as was the TAMI Show. So it's a shame no similar film was made in 1966 or after. However, I read one mention that the movie wasn't as successful as the TAMI Show. This was blamed on the fact that it was edited and released so quickly that there wasn't time for proper production. Remarkably, the movie was in the theaters by the end of 1965, less than a month after the concert!

Also, perhaps, with musical trends changing so fast, it grew too difficult to bring these many big stars together for one concert. These sorts of variety concerts with lots of acts performing short sets were rapidly fading away at the time, replaced by having just a couple of acts performing much longer sets.

Just as I did with the TAMI Show, I converted the video to audio format, then chopped it into mp3s. The sound quality was a little bit better with this one, so I didn't have to make any adjustments. 

Here's the Wikipedia article:

The Big T.N.T. Show - Wikipedia 

Here's an interesting article that discusses both this movie and the TAMI Show:

https://cavehollywood.com/the-t-a-m-i-show-and-the-big-t-n-t-show-out-on-blu-ray-dvd/

This album is an hour and 30 minutes long. 

01 [I Can't Get No] Satisfaction [Instrumental Version] (David McCallum)
02 What'd I Say (Ray Charles)
03 Downtown (Petula Clark)
04 Do You Believe in Magic (Lovin' Spoonful)
05 You Didn't Have to Be So Nice (Lovin' Spoonful)
06 Hey Bo Diddley (Bo Diddley)
07 Bo Diddley (Bo Diddley)
08 500 Miles (Joan Baez)
09 There but for Fortune (Joan Baez)
10 Georgia on My Mind (Ray Charles)
11 Let the Good Times Roll (Ray Charles)
12 talk (Donovan)
13 You've Lost that Lovin' Feeling (Joan Baez)
14 Be My Baby (Ronettes)
15 Shout (Ronettes)
16 Dang Me (Roger Miller)
17 talk (Roger Miller)
18 Engine Engine No. 9 (Roger Miller)
19 King of the Road (Roger Miller)
20 talk (Roger Miller)
21 England Swings (Roger Miller)
22 talk (David McCallum)
23 Turn, Turn, Turn [To Everything There Is a Season] (Byrds)
24 The Bells of Rhymney (Byrds)
25 Mr. Tambourine Man (Byrds)
26 You're the One (Petula Clark)
27 My Love (Petula Clark)
28 talk (David McCallum)
29 Universal Soldier (Donovan)
30 Summer Day Reflection Song (Donovan)
31 Bert's Blues (Donovan)
32 Sweet Joy (Donovan)
33 Shake (Ike & Tina Turner)
34 A Fool in Love (Ike & Tina Turner)
35 It's Gonna Work Out Fine (Ike & Tina Turner)
36 Please, Please, Please (Ike & Tina Turner)
37 Goodbye, So Long (Ike & Tina Turner)
38 Tell the Truth (Ike & Tina Turner)
39 1-2-3 [Instrumental Version] (David McCallum)

https://pixeldrain.com/u/dTkPhgcn

alternate:

https://bestfile.io/en/Kjs0z43hqpeffYb/file

The main picture in the cover art shows Tina Turner in this exact concert. The original was in black and white, but I colorized it with the help of the Kolorize program. The text and design at the top and sides are taken from a concert poster. I did some repositioning and cleaning up for those areas.

Wednesday, November 8, 2023

Isle of Wight Festival, Afton Down, Isle of Wight, Britain, 8-27-1970 to 8-30-1970 - 8-29-1970: Part 1: John Sebastian

I'm very delighted to be posting this. Back in August 2023, I posted most of the music from the big name acts who played the Isle of Wight Festival in 1970. However, there were a few that I'd missed. What was frustrating was that I found four more sets, of John Sebastian, Donovan, Joan Baez, and Richie Havens, but they were from audience bootlegs and the sound quality was so poor that I decided they weren't worthy of posting.

Recently though (November 2023), my musical associate Lil Panda was telling me about the great features of the audio editing program he's using, called Izotope. (I don't have that one, since it's fairly pricey.) One feature it has is to "de-wind" - to get rid of the sound distortions caused by wind blowing on microphones. That was the exact problem with the audience bootlegs of those four Isle of Wight sets that I didn't post - lots and lots of wind noises. So I asked if he could try out the de-wind function of them, and he agreed. Boy, what a difference! It's like day and night. The wind rustling noises are pretty much totally gone. Thanks to that change, I feel I can finally post those four sets, starting with this one.

Keep in mind though that this is still based on an audience bootleg. So while it's definitely listenable, in my opinion, it's not as good as a soundboard recording, which is what most of the other Isle of Wight sets are. Luckily, this is a solo acoustic set, which means the sound flaws are less noticeable than if it had been a full band set. But things are variable. For instance, the first song "Mobile Line" sounds rough, but a few songs later, "She's a Lady" sounds pretty much like a soundboard. So if you're very picky when it comes to sound quality, listen to the whole thing. At least a good chunk should be acceptable to even those with high standards.

When I first posted all the Isle of Wight albums in August 2023, I was only able to find three songs from John Sebastian's set with worthy sound quality. "Red Eye Express" was included in the documentary movie "Message to Love." "Daydream" also sounded particularly good, although I don't know why. Those three had been included as part of the Joni Mitchell set, which I'd called Part 1 for the August 29, 1970 sets. But now I've removed those from her set, and given it a new title (Part 2), new cover art to fix the title, and new song numbering (since the numbering continues from after Sebastian's set). Then all the other sets from August 29, 1970 are changed, with Part 2 becoming Part 3, and Part 3 becoming Part 4, and so on. Thus, I recommend you re-download all of those. Furthermore, I've added two songs to the Ten Years After set, so you'll especially want to get that one.

It'll probably be a couple of weeks before I can add the Donovan, Joan Baez, and Richie Havens sets, because Lil Panda is traveling and won't be able to get to them until then. All three of those sets are from the last day of the festival, August 30, 1970, so there will be lots of renumbering of all the sets from that day.

One nice surprise about this album is that, midway through Sebastian's set, he had an impromptu reunion with Zal Yanovsky, who co-founded the Lovin' Spoonful with Sebastian. They played four Lovin' Spoonful songs together that Sebastian usually didn't play as a solo artist. Here's what Sebastian later had to say about it: "I hadn’t played with Zal since the group broke up, except in hotel rooms and living rooms. He’s been touring with Kris Kristofferson, you know, and a message was passed up to me on stage twice before I understood it, asking me why I didn’t ask Zal to come up. It was really weird doing those old Spoonful numbers."

There's a fair amount of talking between songs. In addition to what Lil Panda did with getting rid of the wind sounds, I ran all the talking tracks through another editing filter. This one is called "Enhance Speech," by Adobe. Unfortunately, it's only good for talking, not singing. For these tracks, it did add some clarity to his somewhat muffled voice.

This album is an hour and nine minutes long.

001 Mobile Line (John Sebastian)
002 Lovin' You (John Sebastian)
003 You're a Big Boy Now (John Sebastian)
004 talk (John Sebastian)
005 She's a Lady (John Sebastian)
006 How Have You Been (John Sebastian)
007 talk (John Sebastian)
008 Jug Band Music (John Sebastian)
009 talk (John Sebastian)
010 I Had a Dream (John Sebastian)
011 In the Still of the Night (John Sebastian)
012 talk (John Sebastian)
013 4 Eyes (John Sebastian)
014 talk (John Sebastian)
015 Rainbows All Over Your Blues (John Sebastian)
016 talk (John Sebastian)
017 Blues in the Bottle (John Sebastian with Zal Yanovsky)
018 Do You Believe in Magic (John Sebastian with Zal Yanovsky)
019 talk (John Sebastian with Zal Yanovsky)
020 Boredom (John Sebastian with Zal Yanovsky)
021 talk (John Sebastian with Zal Yanovsky)
022 Bald Headed Lena (John Sebastian with Zal Yanovsky)
023 talk (John Sebastian)
024 Darlin' Be Home Soon (John Sebastian)
025 Harmonica Solo [Instrumental] (John Sebastian)
026 Younger Generation (John Sebastian)
027 talk (John Sebastian)
028 Daydream (John Sebastian)
029 Red Eye Express (John Sebastian)
030 talk (John Sebastian)
031 Younger Girl (John Sebastian)
032 talk (John Sebastian) 

https://www.upload.ee/files/15912364/IsleofWghtFestivlAftnDwnIsleofWghtBrtain__8-29-1970_Pt1_JhnSebstian.zip.html

The cover photo is from this exact concert.

Saturday, May 13, 2023

The Lovin' Spoonful - Night Owl Cafe, New York City, 2-1965

I must say, I'm tickled pink to post this, because I was sure no worthy live recordings of the Lovin' Spoonful in their prime existed. But, low and behold, there is this one.

Some musical acts from way back when got lucky with having good live recordings that survived and others did not. For instance, the Byrds with their five original members from 1964 to 1967 were extremely popular, with two Number One hits, yet there doesn't seem to be any surviving live recordings of them other than some TV appearances here and there. I thought that was the case with the Lovin' Spoonful too. I'd looked high and low, and didn't find anything, except for some TV appearances just like the Byrds.

However, the other day, I came across this. It's a soundboard recording from the band's early days, right around the time they signed a record contract. They played lots of concerts at the Night Owl Cafe in Greenwich Village in New York City, and for some reason just this one set was recorded and has survived. Only the first ten tracks here are from that show. That includes a couple of their well known songs, "Good Time Music" and "Didn't Want to Have to Do It," but no hits per se. Most of these songs are cover versions that they never put on record.

Since that recording is rather short, only 25 minutes in total, I decided to fill out the album with some other live recordings. I decided to include all the songs they played for the Ed Sullivan Show. They often just lip-synced to their TV appearances, but for the Ed Sullivan Show they actually played live. Plus, the Ed Sullivan Show has a YouTube page where they've uploaded excellent sound quality versions of all of these. I edited these so the applause from one track leads into the next, making all three appearances sound like one continuous performance.

It so happens that the Lovin' Spoonful made three appearances on the Ed Sullivan, all in 1967. That's a nice complement to the Night Owl Cafe performance, because it mostly contains hits from a bit later in their career. I considered including more performances from other TV shows, but there isn't much that sounds really good. For instance, the only versions of the band's 1966 Number One hit "Summer in the City" I could find were lip-synced.

I did a little research on the Night Owl Cafe. It turns out that this was almost officially released in 1999. But all the band members approved the release except for their main singer and songwriter John Sebastian. So the release was nixed, but it was leaked out as a bootleg. Apparently, this is the only good live recording from the 1960s that the band members know of.

This album is 43 minutes long.

01 talk (Lovin' Spoonful)
02 [Get Your Kicks On] Route 66 (Lovin' Spoonful)
03 Good Time Music (Lovin' Spoonful)
04 My Gal (Lovin' Spoonful)
05 Didn't Want to Have to Do It (Lovin' Spoonful)
06 Almost Grown (Lovin' Spoonful)
07 Bring It with You When You Come (Lovin' Spoonful)
08 talk (Lovin' Spoonful)
09 Alley Oop (Lovin' Spoonful)
10 My Baby's Gone (Lovin' Spoonful)
11 Nashville Cats (Lovin' Spoonful)
12 Darlin' Be Home Soon (Lovin' Spoonful)
13 Bald Headed Lena (Lovin' Spoonful)
14 Daydream (Lovin' Spoonful)
15 Do You Believe in Magic (Lovin' Spoonful)
16 Only Pretty, What a Pity (Lovin' Spoonful)
17 She Is Still a Mystery (Lovin' Spoonful)

https://www.upload.ee/files/15229202/TLovnSpnful_1965_NghtOwlCfeNYC__2-1965_atse.zip.html

The cover photo is from an appearance on the British TV show "Ready Steady Go" in 1966. I removed a big sign behind the band with the TV show name on it. 

Sunday, February 19, 2023

The Wild Honey Orchestra - Tribute to the Lovin' Spoonful, Alex Theatre, Glendale, CA, 2-29-2020

I've had a request to post more from the Wild Honey Orchestra (WHO), as well as a specific request to post the Lovin' Spoonful tribute show. So here it is.

I've posted two WHO concerts already. You can read more about this group in the write-ups to those. But, in short, it's a group of mostly Los Angeles based professional musicians who put on a concert once a year to benefit a charity. Generally, these musicians are members of bands that are successful enough for a career, but typically not really big name acts. Many of them tend to play these WHO concerts every year. If you compare the artist names for this concert with the other two WHO concerts I've posted, you'll see the vast majority played in all of them.

But this concert was a bit unusual, due to the presence of members of the Lovin' Spoonful, the band that was the focus on the tribute this year. There were four members of the band in the 1960s: John Sebastian, who was the lead singer and main songwriter, and Joe Butler, Steve Boone, and Zal Yanovsky (who was replaced by Jerry Yester before the end of the 1960s). This concert was as good of a reunion of the original band as one could hope for, with Sebastian, Butler and Boone participating. Both Yanovsky and Yester died in the years prior to the concert.

The Lovin' Spoonful did reform in the 1990s, and has played concerts ever since then. However, crucially, John Sebastian didn't take part, and he was the heart of the band. He did play with the others for one concert in 1979, for the Paul Simon movie "One Trick Pony," then again in 2000 for the band's induction in the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame. But that's been it, with this exception of this concert.

Even better, the original band didn't just play a song or two. They had a big role in the concert, with Sebastian singing lots of songs. There are no concert recordings of the original band with Sebastian that I know of, other than a song here or there on TV shows, so we're very lucky a bootleg recording of this concert has survived. And the sound quality is excellent all the way through. The one downside is that this is generally only the songs, with very little of the banter between songs. There's only a few bits of banter, mostly comments by Sebastian.

The band had a fairly small recorded output, with just five albums, from 1965 to 1969. So a large portion of their songs were played here, including some rather obscure songs. Also, some songs from Sebastian's solo career were included, such as "Stories We Could Tell," "How Have You Been," and his Number One hit "Welcome Back."

There are a few performers here not seen on the two previous WHO concerts I've posted. For instance, Marshall Crenshaw, the duo of Marti Jones & Don Dixon, Dave Alvin, Peter Lewis from Moby Grape, and Peter Case. 

This concert is two hours and six minutes long.

01 Coffee Blues (John Sebastian with the Wild Honey Orchestra)
02 talk (John Sebastian)
03 Lovin' You (John Sebastian, Steve Boone & Joe Butler with the Wild Honey Orchestra)
04 talk (John Sebastian)
05 Full Measure (Joe Butler with John Sebastian & Steve Boone with the Wild Honey Orchestra)
06 Butchie's Tune (Dennis Diken & John Sebastian with the Wild Honey Orchestra)
07 It's Not Time Now (Iain Matthews & John Sebastian with the Wild Honey Orchestra)
08 Fishin' Blues (Eleni Mandell, John Sebastian & Elliot Easton with the Wild Honey Orchestra)
09 Nashville Cats (Bill Lloyd & John Sebastian with the Wild Honey Orchestra)
10 There She Is (Nick Guzman with the Wild Honey Orchestra)
11 Pow (John Easdale & John Sebastian with the Wild Honey Orchestra)
12 Darlin' Companion (Bill Mumy & John Sebastian with the Wild Honey Orchestra)
13 Money (Cindy Lee Berryhill with the Wild Honey Orchestra)
14 Rain on the Roof (Marshall Crenshaw with the Wild Honey Orchestra)
15 Coconut Grove (Thomas Walsh with the Wild Honey Orchestra)
16 Didn't Want Have to Do It (Mark Eitzel with the Wild Honey Orchestra)
17 You're a Big Boy Now (Skylar Gudasz, John Sebastian & Elliot Easton with the Wild Honey Orchestra)
18 Respoken (Marti Jones & Don Dixon with the Wild Honey Orchestra)
19 Warm Baby (David Goodstein with the Wild Honey Orchestra)
20 Other Side to This (Peter Lewis with the Wild Honey Orchestra)
21 Summer in the City (Joe Butler, John Sebastian, Steve Boone & Mark Sebastian with the Wild Honey Orchestra)
22 Welcome Back (John Sebastian with the Wild Honey Orchestra)
23 Lonely (John Sebastian with the Wild Honey Orchestra)
24 She's Still a Mystery (Darian Sahanaja & the Three O'Clock with the Wild Honey Orchestra)
25 Darlin' Be Home Soon (Rob Laufer with the Wild Honey Orchestra)
26 Six O'Clock (Wednesday Week with the Wild Honey Orchestra)
27 Never Goin' Back (Joe Butler with the Wild Honey Orchestra)
28 talk (John Sebastian)
29 You Baby (Claudia Lennear & John Sebastian with the Wild Honey Orchestra)
30 Younger Girl (Steve Stanley with the Wild Honey Orchestra)
31 Stories We Could Tell (Carla Olson & John Sebastian with the Wild Honey Orchestra)
32 Younger Generation (Kathy McCarty with the Wild Honey Orchestra)
33 How Have You Been (Dead Rock West with the Wild Honey Orchestra)
34 Daydream (Micky Dolenz with the Wild Honey Orchestra)
35 Night Owl Blues (John Sebastian & Dave Alvin with the Wild Honey Orchestra)
36 talk (Peter Case)
37 Blues in the Bottle (Peter Case with the Wild Honey Orchestra)
38 Four Eyes (Peter Case & Carla Olson with the Wild Honey Orchestra)
39 Did You Ever Have to Make Up Your Mind (Carnie Wilson & Rob Bonfiglio with the Wild Honey Orchestra)
40 You Didn't Have to Be So Nice (Susan Cowsill with the Wild Honey Orchestra)
41 Jug Band Music (John Sebastian with the Wild Honey Orchestra)
42 Do You Believe in Magic (John Sebastian, Steve Boone & Joe Butler with the Wild Honey Orchestra)
43 Daydream [Reprise] (John Sebastian, Joe Butler & Steve Boone with the Wild Honey Orchestra)

https://pixeldrain.com/u/biZSzH1G

alternate:

https://bestfile.io/en/E83U4jHEtdjvzKw/file

alternate:

https://www.imagenetz.de/i3sa6

The cover is exactly from a promotional poster for the concert. All I did was crop out some parts at the top and the bottom that didn't contain much useful information.

Tuesday, December 14, 2021

John Sebastian - Rockefeller's, Houston, TX, 7-24-1983

Here's something new to me, so it goes straight to the top of the pile of music I post here. I think John Sebastian is a very talented musician, especially due to the many hit songs he wrote for his band the Lovin' Spoonful in the 1960s. However, I wasn't looking for any bootleg concert by him until I stumbled across this one the other day.

The first thing to note is that it's an acoustic show. I'm always a big fan of acoustic music, and it's great to hear his songs in a stripped back format. (He used a drum machine to create a basic beat on one song, "Tar Beach," but it's tastefully done.) 

The second thing to note is that the sound quality is fantastic. It seems a stash of soundboard recordings from this venue, Rockefeller's, in Houston, Texas, has come to light recently. I'm writing this in December 2021, and this particular concert was first posted on-line in June 2021. Some other concerts by other artists at this venue have been posted also with similar sound quality, and I hope many more will follow.

This concert is actually a compilation of an early show and a late show that he did on the same night. Apparently, the audience was rather small, even for the venue, with about 100 people there. But it seems the vast majority stayed for both shows, so the vast majority of the songs he did were different. The only songs I haven't included from the late show because they also were played in the early show are: "Welcome Back," "Red-Eye Express," "Darlin' Be Home Soon," and "Daydream."

I made a few audio adjustments. Sometimes, soundboard recordings capture what's happening on stage to the exclusion of almost all crowd noise, and that's the case here. It's strange to have the songs generally end with silence, so I greatly boosted what little audience applause there was. The audience is still on the quiet side, but at least there's a decent amount now. I also boosted the volume of the comments he made between songs, which were much quieter than his singing during songs.

There were problems with two songs. The beginning of "Younger Girl" was missing. The version here because with the last ten seconds of the first verse. I cut that, to give it a less jarring beginning, starting with the song's chorus. A similar thing happened to "Stories We Could Tell." I gather the first verse was missing, since it's short and already begins with the chorus. I didn't make any changes there, but I'm noting that missing section. Happily, everything else is fine and nothing else seems to be missing, unless there was some banter before either or both of those two songs.

Sebastian had a strange roller coaster of a music career. He wrote and sang some big hits with the Lovin' Spoonful in the 1960s, including "Summer in the City," which was a number one hit in the US in 1966. Then his solo career started well in the late 1960s and early 1970s, most noted by his appearance at the 1969 Woodstock Festival, where he made an impression in both the movie and album versions. But then he didn't release albums all that often, or tour much, and his career declined. So it was a big surprise when he had another number one hit in 1976 with "Welcome Back," the theme song to the "Welcome Back, Kotter" TV show. However, incredibly, the year after that huge hit, his record contract ended, and he was unable to get another one!

As a result of that, by the time this concert happened in 1983, he hadn't put out a new studio album or single for seven years. Furthermore, he wouldn't put out another album for another ten years. That said, although he did a lot of songs from his Lovin' Spoonful days, as well as his early solo career, he played a number of new songs. For instance, the songs "Tar Beach" and "Smokey Don't Go" would appear on his 1993 album, and the song "Where Ever You Are" would appear on his 2001 album. He also did a bunch of covers, including songs by Little Feat and Lightnin' Hopkins.

Unfortunately, two songs you won't find here are "Summer in the City" and "Do You Believe in Magic." They're the most famous Lovin' Spoonful songs, but he commented at one point during the concert that he didn't think they sounded good done in the solo acoustic format.

This concert is an hour and 43 minutes long.

01 talk (John Sebastian)
02 Mobile Line [Gonna Carry Me Away from the Bull Frog Blues] (John Sebastian)
03 talk (John Sebastian)
04 talk (John Sebastian)
05 Welcome Back [Theme from 'Welcome Back, Kotter'] (John Sebastian)
06 talk (John Sebastian)
07 Nashville Cats (John Sebastian)
08 talk (John Sebastian)
09 Smokey Don't Go (John Sebastian)
10 talk (John Sebastian)
11 She's a Lady (John Sebastian)
12 talk (John Sebastian)
13 Where Ever You Are (John Sebastian)
14 talk (John Sebastian)
15 The Junk Monster Song (John Sebastian)
16 talk (John Sebastian)
17 The Easter Bunny Song (John Sebastian)
18 talk (John Sebastian)
19 Tar Beach (John Sebastian)
20 talk (John Sebastian)
21 You're a Big Boy Now (John Sebastian)
22 Jug Band Music (John Sebastian)
23 Dixie Chicken (John Sebastian)
24 Younger Girl (John Sebastian)
25 Did You Ever Have to Make Up Your Mind (John Sebastian)
26 talk (John Sebastian)
27 Milk Cow Blues (John Sebastian)
28 talk (John Sebastian)
29 Red-Eye Express (John Sebastian)
30 Daydream (John Sebastian)
31 talk (John Sebastian)
32 Woodstock Toot [Instrumental] (John Sebastian)
33 Darlin' Be Home Soon (John Sebastian)
34 My Gal (John Sebastian)
35 Lovin' You (John Sebastian)
36 talk (John Sebastian)
37 Rainbows All Over Your Blues (John Sebastian)
38 talk (John Sebastian)
39 My Baby's Walkin' with Someone New (John Sebastian)
40 talk (John Sebastian)
41 Younger Generation (John Sebastian)
42 talk (John Sebastian)
43 Looking for Something Better (John Sebastian)
44 talk (John Sebastian)
45 How Have You Been (John Sebastian)
46 talk (John Sebastian)
47 4 Eyes (John Sebastian)
48 talk (John Sebastian)
49 Wild about My Lovin' (John Sebastian)
50 Stories We Could Tell (John Sebastian)
51 I Had a Dream (John Sebastian)

https://pixeldrain.com/u/ADKe5xki

alternate:

https://bestfile.io/en/r2K5RWM3oYYkqO8/file 

I couldn't find any good photos of Sebastian in concert in 1983. However, I did find one of him from 1984, so that's what I've used here.