Showing posts with label Neville Brothers. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Neville Brothers. Show all posts

Monday, July 15, 2024

Woodstock '94, Winston Farm, Saugerties, NY, 8-12-1994 to 8-14-1994 - Day 3, Part 7: The Neville Brothers

The next album from Day Three of the Woodstock ‘94 Festival is a set by the Neville Brothers.

(Note that I just realized I posted the last two albums out of order. Green Day came before Paul Rodgers, not after.)

The Neville Brothers were a soul and funk group in existence from 1976 until 2015. However, the five brothers that made up the core of the group, had their own solo careers and careers with other bands, so the intensity of this band’s activity went up and down a lot. They were especially active in the early 1990s, which was their commercial and critical peak. Prior to this festival, their most recent album was a live album, “Live on Planet Earth,” released in April 1994.

This album is an hour and nine minutes long.

01 Hey Pocky Way - Walk on Gilded Splinters (Neville Brothers)
02 Yellow Moon (Neville Brothers)
03 Voodoo (Neville Brothers)
04 Fever (Neville Brothers)
05 Don't Take Away My Heaven (Neville Brothers)
06 Wildflower Song (Neville Brothers)
07 Brother John - Aiko Aiko - Jambalaya [On the Bayou] (Neville Brothers)
08 Sands of Time (Neville Brothers)
09 Ayiti (Neville Brothers)
10 talk (Neville Brothers)
11 Come Together (Neville Brothers)
12 talk (Neville Brothers)
13 Let My People Go (Neville Brothers)
14 Amazing Grace (Neville Brothers)
15 One Love (Neville Brothers)

https://www.upload.ee/files/16770756/VA-WODSTCK94_8-14-1994_07NvillBrthrs_atse.zip.html

Alternate link:

https://pixeldrain.com/u/B2CVaFJQ

The cover photo is from this exact concert.

Wednesday, September 13, 2023

A Conspiracy of Hope, Giants Stadium, East Rutherford, NJ, 6-15-1986, Part 3 - Ruben Blades, Yoko Ono, Howard Jones, Miles Davis, Neville Brothers & Joan Baez

This is the third of out five albums of the final concert from the 1986 "A Conspiracy of Hope" tour. If you want to know more about the concert in general, check out the write-up for the first part.

This part has an even more eclectic group of artists than the other parts, in my opinion. There also was an emphasis on world music. That's especially true because of two famous musicians who took part, but didn't have sets of their own. Fela Kuti, from Nigeria, played two songs with the Neville Brothers. Carlos Santana, the main force behind the band Santana, played guitar on songs by Ruben Blades, Miles Davis, and the Neville Brothers.

Ruben Blades, from Panama, is one of the most famous musicians from Latin America. He hasn't had a lot of commercial success in the U.S., probably because he's generally stuck to singing in Spanish, as he did for his set here. But he's had dozens of hits in Spanish speaking countries. He's also won eleven Grammy Awards in the U.S., and has acted in many movies. Plus, he's been a politician in Panama.

Yoko Ono is best known for being the wife of John Lennon of the Beatles. She's been criticized for her avant garde singing style. However, she had a conventional hit in the U.S. and Britain in 1981 with the song "Walking on Thin Ice," which she played here.

British singer Howard Jones had a bunch of new wave hits in the 1980s, but he was only allowed to sing one for this concert, "No One Is to Blame."

Miles Davis is one of the most famous jazz musicians of all time. Unfortunately, his peak years were in the 1950s, 60s, and early 70s. He retired from music in the late 1970s, letting sex and drugs take over his life. He resumed his music career in the early 1980s and found his greatest commerical success with a more poppy style, but many jazz fans aren't fond of this phase of his career.

Today, the Neville Brothers are one of the most famous bands out of New Orleans, if not the most famous. But in 1986, they weren't that well known, having only released one album under that name, back in 1978. But some of the brothers in the band had had more success, especially Aaron Neville, who had a big hit way back in 1966 with "Tell It like It Is." Folk singer Joan Baez also had lots of success back in the 1960s. For this concert, she sang the Bob Dylan song "The Times They Are A-Changin'" in acappella style. But for the other songs, she was backed by the Neville Brothers. I think it was a successful, though unexpected, collaboration.

This album is an hour and 44 minutes long.

044 Cuentas del Alma (Ruben Blades)
045 talk (Ruben Blades)
046 Tierra Dura (Ruben Blades)
047 talk (Ruben Blades)
048 Todos Vuelven (Ruben Blades)
049 Muevete (Ruben Blades with Carlos Santana)
050 talk (Ruben Blades)
051 Walking on Thin Ice (Yoko Ono)
052 talk (Yoko Ono)
053 Imagine (Yoko Ono)
054 No One Is to Blame (Howard Jones)
055 One Phone Call - Street Scenes - Speak - That's What Happened [Instrumental] (Miles Davis)
056 Tutu [Instrumental] (Miles Davis)
057 Splatch [Instrumental] (Miles Davis)
058 Burn [Instrumental] (Miles Davis with Carlos Santana)
059 Big Chief (Neville Brothers)
060 Goodbye Forever (Neville Brothers)
061 Everybody Better Wake Up (Neville Brothers with Fela Kuti)
062 Midnight Key (Neville Brothers with Carlos Santana & Fela Kuti)
063 The Times They Are A-Changin' (Joan Baez)
064 Shout (Joan Baez & the Neville Brothers)
065 No Woman, No Cry (Joan Baez & the Neville Brothers)
066 Let It Be (Joan Baez & the Neville Brothers)
067 Amazing Grace (Joan Baez & Aaron Neville) 

https://pixeldrain.com/u/c753n41S

alternate:

https://bestfile.io/en/G4UcLFfuso6gUuv/file

The cover photo is of Joan Baez and the Neville Brothers, and it comes from this exact concert.

Saturday, December 10, 2022

The Neville Brothers - Municipal Auditorium, New Orleans, LA, 10-31-1991

I'm a fan of the Neville Brothers. Since I'm focusing on posting BBC material lately, I wanted to see if they did anything for the BBC. They did. There's an hour-long concert from 1989. However, the ideal year for a concert, in my opinion, would be 1991, because my favorite album of theirs is "My Brother's Keeper" released in 1991. I didn't find any great bootlegs from that year. However, I found an excellent video of a 1991 concert on YouTube. So I've converted it to mp3 tracks and I'm sharing it here.

This concert has a lot of advantages over the 1989 BBC concert. For one thing, it's significantly longer. I also prefer the song selection. Plus, Dr. John shows up and sings one of his best songs, "Right Place, Wrong Time."

The band released a live album in 1994 called "Live on Planet Earth." That's a good one, but I think this concert is at least its equal. Despite coming from a YouTube video, the sound quality is excellent.

This album is an hour and 30 minutes long.

01 Hey Pocky Way - Walk on Gilded Splinters (Neville Brothers)
02 talk (Neville Brothers)
03 Voodoo (Neville Brothers)
04 Mojo Hannah (Neville Brothers)
05 talk (Neville Brothers)
06 My Brother's Keeper (Neville Brothers)
07 talk (Neville Brothers)
08 Sitting in Limbo (Neville Brothers)
09 My Blood (Neville Brothers)
10 It Feels like Rain (Neville Brothers)
11 Everybody Plays the Fool (Neville Brothers)
12 talk (Neville Brothers)
13 Love the One You're With - You Can't Always Get What You Want (Neville Brothers)
14 talk (Neville Brothers)
15 Ju Ju Sax [Instrumental] (Neville Brothers)
16 Sister Rosa (Neville Brothers)
17 talk (Neville Brothers)
18 Yellow Moon (Neville Brothers)
19 talk (Neville Brothers)
20 Brother Jake (Neville Brothers)
21 When You Go to New Orleans (Neville Brothers)
22 Right Place, Wrong Time (Neville Brothers & Dr. John)
23 Amazing Grace (Neville Brothers)
24 talk (Neville Brothers)
25 Rivers of Babylon (Neville Brothers)
26 Down by the Riverside (Neville Brothers)

https://www.upload.ee/files/15598570/TNevilleB_1991_MuniciplAditoriumNwOrleans__LA__10-31-1991_atse.zip.html

The cover is a screenshot I took from the YouTube video of this exact concert.