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viewing 1 To 25 of 84 items
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2CD
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KH 9091CD
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Buddy Guy, live from the House of Blues, West Hollywood, CA March 23rd, 1995. Buddy Guy finally achieved the recognition he deserved in the early '90s, winning Grammys for Damn Right, I've Got the Blues (1991) and Feels Like Rain (1992). This blistering set at the House of Blues, West Hollywood was performed and broadcast by National Public Radio, soon after the release of his classic Slippin' In album (1994), and finds him on superb form on a variety of his trademark numbers, as well as some sly impersonations of other players. Backed by Scott Holt (guitar), Greg Rzab (bass) and Ray "Killer" Allison (drums) and featuring introductions from superfans Dan Aykroyd and John Goodman, it's an absolute blast for all fans of true Chicago blues. The entire National Public Radio broadcast is presented here together with background notes and images.
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KH 9090LP
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Frank Zappa and the Mothers of Invention, live from the Theatre De L'Olympia, Paris, France October 26th, 1968. This was the final night of the Mothers' 1968 European tour and finds the band pulling out all the stops to deliver an outstanding show. Broadcast on Radio France, its highlights include one of the best renditions of "King Kong" they ever gave and a superb "Hungry Freaks, Daddy", as well as some typically acidic repartee from Zappa. The entire Radio France broadcast is presented here, digitally remastered, with background notes and images.
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KH 9089LP
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2021 repress. Frank Zappa and the Mothers of Invention, live at BBC Studios, London on October 23rd, 1968. Performed on BBC TV's Late Night Line-Up on October 23rd, 1968 (towards the close of the Mothers' rapturously received second European tour), this superb set finds the band -- Frank Zappa, Roy Estrada, Jimmy Carl Black, Art Tripp, Ian Underwood, Don Preston, Bunk Gardner, and Ian Sherwood -- on typically adventurous, iconoclastic form. The entire BBC-TV broadcast is presented here, digitally remastered, together with background notes and images.
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KH 9092CD
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Captain Beefheart, live from the Commodore Ballroom, Vancouver on January 17th, 1981. Captain Beefheart and his Magic Band toured Europe and North America to promote their critically acclaimed album, Doc At The Radar Station (1980). This would be their final tour together. A year later, Don Van Vliet, aka Captain Beefheart, turned his back on the music business to focus on painting. Broadcast live by CBC at the Commodore Ballroom, Vancouver, on January 17, 1981, this gig featured a stunning set that showcased Captain Beefheart's blues-based aural art served with a twist of brilliant madness. As the Captain said, "If you got ears, you gotta listen." The entire CBC FM radio broadcast is presented here, digitally remastered, with background liners.
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KH 9088LP
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Compiled by Frank Zappa for broadcast on WLIR-FM in Garden City, New York on New Year's Eve 1973, this remarkable set offers a cross-section of his recent live performances with the Mothers Of Invention, and finds him at his wittiest and most inventive. A treat for serious fans, the entire WLIR-FM set is presented here, digitally remastered, together with background notes and images.
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KH 9088CD
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Compiled by Frank Zappa for broadcast on WLIR-FM in Garden City, New York on New Year's Eve 1973, this remarkable set offers a cross-section of his recent live performances with the Mothers Of Invention, and finds him at his wittiest and most inventive. A treat for serious fans, the entire WLIR-FM set is presented here, digitally remastered, together with background notes and images.
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KH 9086LP
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2020 repress. Frank Zappa, live at the Konserthuset, Stockholm, Sweden on September 30th, 1967. In the last week of September 1967, Frank Zappa and the Mothers played a week of shows in Europe. This remarkable performance, broadcast from the Konserthuset in Stockholm, Sweden on national FM radio, features favorites such as "It Can't Happen Here" from Freak Out! (1966), "Big Leg Emma" (which had recently appeared as a 45 in Sweden), and an epic rendition of "King Kong" (in its first known live recording), as well as a couple of Elvis classics. The entire broadcast is presented here, digitally remastered, together with background notes and images.
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KH 9086CD
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Frank Zappa, live at the Konserthuset, Stockholm, Sweden on September 30th, 1967. In the last week of September 1967, Frank Zappa and the Mothers played a week of shows in Europe. This remarkable performance, broadcast from the Konserthuset in Stockholm, Sweden on national FM radio, features favorites such as "It Can't Happen Here" from Freak Out! (1966), "Big Leg Emma" (which had recently appeared as a 45 in Sweden), and an epic rendition of "King Kong" (in its first known live recording), as well as a couple of Elvis classics. The entire broadcast is presented here, digitally remastered, together with background notes and images.
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2CD
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KH 9084CD
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Captain Beefheart & His Magic Band, live at My Father's Place, Roslyn on November 18th, 1978. After a period of relative inactivity, in 1978 Captain Beefheart reemerged with a new Magic Band and a superb album, Shiny Beast (Bat Chain Puller) (1978). To promote it, they undertook a club tour of the US, to the delight of his devoted fans. The wonderfully energetic show, featured here, was performed in a 200-seat supper club in Long Island on November 18th, 1978 and broadcast on WLIR-FM, and finds the band tackling material from the breadth of his career to date. The entire WLIR-FM broadcast is presented here with background notes and images.
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KH 9085CD
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Frank Zappa & The Mothers Of Invention, live at the Rockpile, Toronto, February 23rd, 1969. The Rockpile was Toronto's hippest club, and 4,000 of the city's hippest heads flocked there on February 23rd, 1969 to see the great Frank Zappa and his Mothers Of Invention. They did not disappoint, playing a remarkable set that combined their uniquely skewed take on rock n' roll with virtuoso solos and improvisations, as well as their trademark humorous interludes. Originally broadcast on CBC-FM, the entire broadcast is presented here, digitally remastered, with background notes and images.
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KH 9077CD
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Guy Clark, live at the Great American Music Hall, San Francisco on October 15th, 1988. Although he was never a prolific recording artist, the legendary Guy Clark was one of the most esteemed singer-songwriters of his generation. Originally broadcast on KSAN-FM, this superb live set includes material that spans the length of his career, including several songs from his most recent album at the time, Old Friends (1988). The entire broadcast is presented here, digitally remastered, with background notes and images.
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2CD
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KH 9083CD
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Frank Zappa performing Nasty Rats, live at the Palladium, New York on October 31st, 1981. 1981 was a typically busy year for Frank Zappa, with the establishment of his UMRK studio, as well as the release of Tinsel Town Rebellion, You Are What You Is, and three Shut Up 'n Play Yer Guitar albums. In September, he embarked on a US tour, adding Steve Vai to his tight new band. On Halloween night, they performed at the Palladium in New York, the show being simulcast on WNEW-FM radio and MTV. Featuring several songs he rarely played in concert, it's a must for all serious fans. The entire WNEW-FM broadcast is presented here with background notes and images.
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KH 9082CD
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Moby Grape live at Ebbets Field, Denver, Colorado on May 8th, 1974. In 1973, Peter Lewis, Jerry Miller, and Bob Mosley reformed the legendary Moby Grape for some live shows, with guitarist Jeff Blackburn and drummer Johnny Craviotto taking Skip Spence and Jerry Stevenson's places. This superb set from the following May finds them on fiery form, as they tackle a range of Grape classics. Originally broadcast on KLMF-FM, the entire broadcast is presented here with background notes and rare images.
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KH 9079LP
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By October 1977, Frank Zappa was firmly established as an iconic and iconoclastic rock star. He had recently been preparing Läther (1977), a proposed four-LP set, due for release on Halloween. However, his label declined to proceed, leading to protracted legal hassles. This show, at The Palladium, New York was broadcast on the King Biscuit Flower Hour, was on the album's release date, and finds the great man in superb form, as he tackles a range of material, much of it from Läther. The entire broadcast is presented here with background notes and images.
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KH 9079CD
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By October 1977, Frank Zappa was firmly established as an iconic and iconoclastic rock star. He had recently been preparing Läther (1977), a proposed four-LP set, due for release on Halloween. However, his label declined to proceed, leading to protracted legal hassles. This show, at The Palladium, New York was broadcast on the King Biscuit Flower Hour, was on the album's release date, and finds the great man in superb form, as he tackles a range of material, much of it from Läther. The entire broadcast is presented here with background notes and images.
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2CD
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KH 9072CD
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Leo Kottke live at the Warner Theater, Washington on 29th September 1978. By the late 1970s, Leo Kottke was rightly regarded as a master of the acoustic six and twelve-string guitar, with a distinctive finger-picking style that effortlessly synthesized the folk, jazz and blues traditions. This superb performance on 29th September 1978, was broadcast on WHFS-FM radio, and finds him performing a cross-section of material from the breadth of his career to date. It's presented here with background notes and images.
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KH 9070LP
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180-gram LP. Includes insert. Following the collapse of the original Magic Band in early 1974, Captain Beefheart swiftly assembled an all-new line-up to promote his controversial 1974 Unconditionally Guaranteed LP. Comprising Fuzzy Fuscaldo and Dean Smith (guitar), Del Simmons (sax, flute), Michael Smotherman (keyboards), Paul Uhrig (bass), and Ty Grimes (drums), they played in a markedly more straightforward style, in keeping with Beefheart's stated ambition to "hug the world." This fine gig, live from the Cowtown Ballroom, Kansas City, MO, was taped for broadcast on KUDL-FM radio on April 22, 1974, and is presented here in its entirety together with contemporaneous notes and rare photos.
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KH 9059LP
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Pavlov's Dog are one of the most revered prog outfits to have emerged from 1970s America. This WABX-FM radio broadcast of their performance at the Ford Auditorium, Detroit, on May 14th, 1976, is an extremely rare document of the original band, boasting the unique vocals of David Surkamp, as well as Steve Scorfina (lead guitar), Doug Rayburn (Mellotron, guitar), Tom Nickeson (keyboards), Richard Stockton (bass), and Kirk Sarkisian (drums). The material is culled from their classic albums Pampered Menial (1975) and At the Sound of the Bell (1976). Includes insert with background notes and rare images.
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KH 9067CD
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Having departed folk-rock pioneers The Beau Brummels, in 1969 Sal Valentino joined this remarkable collective, managed by legendary San Francisco DJ Tom Donahue. Recorded as part of a benefit for the Haight-Ashbury Free Clinic in March 1971 (just as their classic debut album was about to hit stores), this superb set was originally broadcast on KSAN-FM. Capturing the band at the height of their powers, it's presented here together with background notes and images. A quintessential artifact of the Californian hippie scene.
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2LP
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KH 9048LP
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Having risen to fame as a core member of Bob Marley's Wailers, for whom he wrote a number of famous songs, the late Peter Tosh found considerable acclaim as a solo artist, recording a number of classic reggae albums that reflected his strong Rastafari faith and political convictions. This superb live set was taped in Atlanta, Georgia, for FM radio broadcast as he promoted his 1978 Bush Doctor LP (released through Rolling Stones Records, because Mick Jagger and Keith Richards were huge fans), and is presented here together with background notes and images. On 180 gram vinyl with insert.
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KH 9060CD
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Live at Islip Speedway, New York, July 7th 1974. The Byrds split for good in 1973, following which Roger McGuinn embarked on a fascinating solo career. Recorded in the summer of 1974 for broadcast by WLIR-FM, this superb live set finds him tackling material from his debut solo album and forthcoming Peace On You set, as well as classics by the Byrds, Bob Dylan and others. It's presented here with background notes and images.
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KH 9070CD
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Following the collapse of the original Magic Band in early 1974, Captain Beefheart swiftly assembled an all-new line-up to promote his controversial 1974 Unconditionally Guaranteed LP. Comprising Fuzzy Fuscaldo and Dean Smith (guitar), Del Simmons (sax, flute), Michael Smotherman (keyboards), Paul Uhrig (bass), and Ty Grimes (drums), they played in a markedly more straightforward style, in keeping with Beefheart's stated ambition to "hug the world." This fine gig, live from the Cowtown Ballroom, Kansas City, MI, was taped for broadcast on KUDL-FM radio on April 22, 1974, and is presented here in its entirety together with contemporaneous notes and rare photos.
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KH 9054LP
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Repressed. With the success of his Apostrophe and Roxy & Elsewhere albums, 1974 saw Frank Zappa at his commercial peak. Evidently feeling a surfeit of goodwill towards his fans, at the close of the year he prepared a personally mixed reel of live performances from the previous year for broadcast on WLIR-FM in Garden City, New York, on New Year's Eve. Not to be confused with a show he was playing the same night in Long Beach, California, this is a typically adventurous and humorous compilation, and is presented here with background notes and images. 180-gram vinyl; includes insert.
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KH 9049LP
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Invigorated by having shaken up the personnel of The Mothers, in 1971 Frank Zappa was enjoying himself more than ever. Having played a gig earlier in the evening, the band taped this largely acoustic set in Montreal on July 5, 1971, for broadcast on the local CKGM-FM radio station. It finds Zappa backed by ex-Turtles Mark Volman and Howard Kaylan (aka The Phlorescent Leech & Eddie), as well as Jim Pons, Ian Underwood, Bob Harris, and Aynsley Dunbar, and is presented here complete with background notes and images. 180-gram vinyl; includes insert.
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KH 9058CD
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The reclusive, enigmatic JJ Cale did not enjoy touring, but was in fine form when playing this superb set in his hometown of Tulsa, Oklahoma, on New Year's Eve, 1975. Taped for FM broadcast, it features his signature classics "Call Me the Breeze," "Cocaine," and "After Midnight," as well as a selection of other laid-back gems, and is presented here complete with background notes and images.
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