The Triumph Of Enthusiasm

Enjoying in gratitude the minutes of someone’s creative talent is to embrace a triumph of enthusiasm that lifts mind body and soul. 

Little Richard – “Jenny, Jenny” (1957)
Kasenetz Katz Singing Orchestral Circus –  Quick Joey Small (1968)
Jackson Browne – The Birds Of St Marks (1967 & 2014) Standing In The Breach
Olivia Trummer – Sharing My Heart (2014) www.oliviatrummer.de Fly Now
Leo Sayer – The Show Must Go On (1973)
Brewer & Shipley – Seems Like A Long Time  (1970) Tarkio Album
Flamin Groovies – Walking The Dog ( 1970 & 1995) Flamingo  Album
The Who – I Don’t Even Know Myself (1971) B Side Won’t Get Fooled Again
John Coltrane – A Love Supreme Pt 4 Psalm (1965) A Love Supreme Album
Spirit – Dark Eyed Woman (1969) Clear Album
B.B. King – Roll, Roll, Roll (1991) There Is Always One More Time
Dan Fogleberg – Sutter’s Mill (1985) High Country Snows
The Harvest Ministers – I Got To Lie Down (1993) You Can See Everything From Here
Frank Sinatra – In The Wee Small Hours Of The Morning (1955)
Bobby Bloom – Montego Bay (1970)
Bill Evans –  You Must Believe In Spring (1977)
Leonard Cohen – Hey,That’s No Way To Say Goodbye (1967 & 2009) Live In London
Tyrone Davis – If I Could Turn Back The Hands Of Time (1970)
James Wheeler – Who Loves Ya Baby (feat Billy Flynn on Slide 1999) Can’t Take It CD
Joe Lacky Gallagher – Musical Priest / Jenny’s Chickens / O Rourke’s Reels (1948)
The Untouchables – Tighten Up (1968) boss reggae Vol. 6 classics
The Trammps – Hold Back The Night (1975) Single
The Bee Gee’s – Lonely Days (1970) 2 Years On Album
The Small Faces – Afterglow Of Your Love (1969)
The Everly Brothers – When Will I Be Loved (1960)
Chuck Prophet – The Left Hand And The Right Hand (2012) Temple Beautiful Album
Lucky Peterson – What Have I Done Wrong (2014) feat Tamara 
AC/DC
– Rock The Blues Away (2014) Rock Or Bust

Romance Classic Rock Theme

LONG MAY THE ROMANCE OF MUSIC OPEN A WINDOW TO OUR HEARTS AS WE PURSUE THE PEAK EXPERIENCES OF LIFE 

The Love Affair – Everlasting Love 
Thin Lizzy – Freedom  
Rod Stewart – Los Paraguayos  
Toots And The Maytals – Funky Kingston 
Van Morrison – Wild Night 
Van Morrison – Like A Cannonball Straight To You
Sam Cooke – Bring It On Home 
AC/DC – School Days 
David Bowie – The Jean Genie 
Ozzy Osbourne  – Goodbye To Romance 
Pete Townshend – North Country Girl 
Supertramp – Summer Romance 
Robert Wyatt – Shipbuilding 
John Lee Hooker – Tupelo 
Van Morrison – Tupelo Honey
Kris McKay – A Good Heart (Road House Soundtrack)
Vinegar Joe – Angel (Elkie Brooks)
Grainne Brookfield – Jump Jive / Caledonia
Marmalade – Radancer 
Arctic Monkeys –  A Certain Romance 

The Poetical Love Of Music Like Romance  Is Understanding That The Unnecessary Pleasure It Confers Never Ends

Friends Classic Rock Theme

 

We need old friends to help us grow old and new friends to help us stay young

Dixie Dregs – Take It Off The Top
The Cars – My Best Friends Girl
Queen – Your My Best Friend
Free – Be My Friend
James Taylor – You Got A Friend
Journey – Don’t Stop Believin’
Journey – Keep On Running 
The Rolling Stones – Waiting On A Friend
The Kinks – See My Friends 
The Who – How Many Friends Have I Really Got
The Rembrandts – I’ll Be There For You (Friends Theme)
Journey – Escape
Slade – My Friend Stan
T Bone Burnett – Diamonds Are A Girls Best Friend
Joe Cocker & The Grease Band – With A Little Help From My Friends (Woodstock)
Van Der Graff Generator – Theme 1 

 

 

 

Nature To Love Something

It Is A Beautiful Necessity Of Our Nature To Love Something

Bachman Turner Overdrive – Away From Home
13th Floor Elevators – Your Gonna Miss Me
AC/DC – Can I Sit Next To You Girl
Velvet Underground – Rock N Roll
Bread – Down On My Knees
Earth Wind & Fire – Power
Thin Lizzy – Cowboy Song (John Peel Session)
Huey Lewis & The News – Heart Of Rock N Roll
The Weeks – Brother In The Night
Declan O Rourke – No Brakes (www.declanorourke.com)
The Ramones – Substitute (feat Pete Townshend)

Emily

Music inspired by Emily.
Emily I gaze on you  all other things are forgotten
In dreams the things of earth pass by but awake she heeds them not
Her soft breath comes and goes a breath so lately given
I watch those precious eyes whose light is pure from heaven  
Thomas The T E- Emily 
Pink Floyd – See Emily Play 
Linda Lewis – May You Never 
Randy Crawford – You Bring The Sun Out  
Jimi Hendrix – Little Wing 
John Cale – Emily 
Paul Simon – Beautiful 
Andy Williams – Emily 
Reg Meuross – Tony Benn’s Tribute To Emily Davison
Andrew Mann – Emily  
Kate Bush – Wow
Charlie Simpson – Emily 
Reg Meuross – Emily’s Pages  
The Beatles – Goodnight  
Joni Mitchell – Little Green
Billy Holiday – Miss Brown To You
Stevie Wonder – Isn’t She Lovely
David Bowie – See Emily Play
Neil Young – Little Wing
Simon & Garfunkel – For Emily Whenever I May Find Her

Don Williams & Emmylou Harris – If I Needed You
The Avener – La Tourer

 

 

 

The Who Live In Dublin @ 3 Arena, June 23rd 2015

This was my entire family’s first opportunity to see The Who play live after years of curiosity having grown up with The Who as the soundtrack to their lives. Our home is a celebration of The Who with framed posters, LP’s, Box Sets, DVD’s and tons of T Shirts all subliminally proclaiming The Who as more than just a band but a force of nature regarded as one of the most important and greatest contributors to modern contemporary music in the world.

I set off Tuesday evening with my three precious daughters Jessika, Stephanie and Olivia, son in law Lee and good lady Irene to take up residence in the 3 Arena, where the River Liffey meets the sea in the docklands of Dublin’s fair city.

I had a camera with me to let some pictures nourish the memory cells and tell a story in years to come, to share with fellow Who fans on social media, but I passed on trying to get up close to the stage on this occasion tonight being a family celebration in reasonably good seats in the centre of the massive arena.

This was my family in the middle of a bigger Who family all here to pay homage to iconic names within the story of modern music on their golden jubilee their 50th anniversary hits tour. The beautiful aspect of a Who concert audience is the mix of musical cultures who have connected with The Who’s music and staked their claim to its importance from 60’s Mod’s, Woodstock Generation, 70’s Rockers, New Wave, Punk, Mod Revival and a whole new generation attracted by their music introducing their favorite TV shows.

The Who were the ultimate live rock harmony of guitar, bass and drums on stage when I first saw them live in the 70’s with a mike swinging lead singer leading the charge from the front. Now the two remaining pillars Pete Townshend and Roger Daltrey have assembled a band of top musicians to do their back catalogue justice and present a live performance that is tight and match fit with a superb visual backdrop complementing each song and reflecting the proud heritage of The Who with Keith Moon and John Entwisle embroidered into the visuals never to be forgotten in the great beyond as their drum and bass contributions are cherished and celebrated by Zak Starkey and Pino Paladino in their own capable ways.
Roger arrives on stage grabs the mike and says “It seem like yesterday since we were here”

It was 2013 actually but two years is about 24 hours in rock time.
I Can’t Explain chords explode from Pete’s guitar to signal the start of the show. Pete grabbing everyone’s attention as he moves around the stage jumping from power chords to single note runs up the fretboard and bouncing back to the mike for his vocals.
The Seeker’s power chords fill the speakers immediately. Roger sings “I asked Bobby Dylan, I asked The Beatles, I asked Timothy Leary but he couldn’t tell me either, they call me the The Seeker I won’t get to get what I’m after till the day I die. The Seeker came out after Tommy and before Live at Leeds one of the many great singles that randomly appeared in the late 60’s early 70’s.

Pete say’s “It’s good to be back” before the band launches into Who Are You a familiar favorite these days for young and old ears because of its CSI theme usage. A song that is tinged with sadness for me as I always associate its release with the sudden death of Keith Moon shortly after in the late 70’s. I was soaking every paper clipping and radio interview around the album’s release when suddenly the narrative changed to bereavement with the film of the studio recording being a fun memory of prankster Keith right up to the very end.

The 60’s pop classic The Kid’s Are Alright was next with Roger explaining that he had to get married at 19 because he had got a girl pregnant and it was the right to do back in those days. Pete say’s “Wasn’t she Irish?” Roger replies jokingly she was a lovely girl but Irish from Glasgow. Roger explained how he soon found the comfort of the groups van better than the cramped one bedroom flat so he quit, had to leave her behind but The Kids Are Alright,

I Can See For Miles followed with Pete’s drone chords never sounding better, huge slabs of electric power reverberating around the rafters of the 3 Arena. The cohesion of the larger group of musicians filtered into a sharp powerful tonic filled sound is commendable with Simon Townshend ghosting brother Pete’s guitar playing with empathetic seamless fretwork.
Alan Rogan Pete’s tech is at the ready at the end of each song to offer Pete a fresh new guitar for the feast. Pete straps on says “I’m ready” and Zak counts in the beats for The Who to launch into My Generation a song that means so much in the history of rock. The power and energy on stage is now in the fast lane, this is no juke box recital of days gone by, this is great live music being created and arranged by musicians determined to add value and meaning to their job and give the fans a performance that justifies every word of praise and expectation uttered over the years.

Roger say’s “You never know in some parts of the world where you are but you never not know when you’re in Dublin. Roger had a great drinking session on the previous night, a night off between the Belfast and Dublin gigs, up the coast in a fishing village called Skerries which is further on up the road from where I grew up in Donabate. Skerries are a good spot for a bit of Traditional Irish music and Craic and Pete was amused that only the Irish would have a village exclusively for drinking.

My family’s favorite Behind Blue Eyes had them singing along. Roger may have had challenges with his voice on this tour but he sings this perfectly with beautiful harmonies from Pete and Simon.
Pete gets into a preamble about religion and faith next saying he thinks this new Pope is a good guy. Bargain off Who’s Next, my favorite Who album follows and it is a powerhouse performance from the harmony acoustic intro into a full blown reincarnation of the original studio arrangement with extra finesse.

I knew the band was going to try out some gems from the back catalogue on this tour and Bargain was my treat of the night. I went into a music store shortly after the album came out in the early 70’s to transition from suitcase compact record player at the time to a stereo with two speakers for the two corners of my bedroom. Who’s Next was playing on this beautiful black and chrome Philips record player and when I walked out of McHugh’s Bicycle and Music Shop on Talbot Street that evening I had both the record player and Who’s Next under my arms struggling to get it all onto the train back out to the quiet North County Dublin village of Donabate which has never been the same since that amazing Glyn John’s produced masterpiece started blasting out the bedroom windows around the peninsula. Shortly after I added a set of disco lights which flashed in sync with the bass and drum notes red green and blue bulbs randomly flashing until someone walking along the beach in the dark one night called the Fire Brigade thinking my bedroom rock lights was our house on fire.

Join Together cost me a fortune in a juke box in the summer of 72 with its cacophony of harmonica, Jews harp and drum beats introducing The Who’s call to arms to Join Together with the band. Loren Gold had the Jew’s harp between his teeth sounding the notes with his finger with John Corey playing a large harmonica. No short cuts tonight everything is included in the mix.
Someone raises a placard up front with You Better You Bet as Pete is setting himself up for the next song and say’s “That’s a good guess” before playing the opening chords of The Who’s early 80’s hit which seen Kenny Jones on the drum stool. Zak stays faithfully to the original mix but loosens it up with his own Zak / Moonie fluidity.

Pete was overheating and paused for a fan to be installed to cool down while Roger performed an a cappella version of Water.
“We need water, cool water”
Pete steps up to the mike and shouts
“Or maybe some fucking air conditioning”

Pete’s beautiful finger picking flamenco style acoustic style guitar playing was demonstrated next along with his infectious nasal vocal on I’m The One from Quadrophenia.

John Corey played a lovely Keith Jarret style elongated intro in Love Reign O’er Me before it unfolded into all its epic glory with Rogers vocals echoing like a fog horn wafting off the high cliffs of Brighton drifting out to Beachy Head lighthouse.

Pete tells us Eminence Front was one of the first songs he sold to television being used for Miami Vice at the time and nowadays used to sell cars in a soaped up rap variation but we were going to get the definitive version. The thunderous rhythms and chainsaw buzz chords of Eminence Front is strikingly impactful. Pete’s early 80’s ode to cocaine with hard edged vocal soars, with equally superb harmonies coming in from Simon Townshend and the back line Frank Simes, John Corey and Loren Gold.

Pete introduced us to the origins of The Who’s first mini opera A Quick One While He’s Away inspired by the many creative conversations in the mid 60’s period he had with Kit Lambert which seen Pete remove any demarcation lines and create music that stepped outside the box and paved the way for rock, concept and classical ideas to flourish for a whole new audience. All the segments and visuals are wonderful with Pete admonishing the arrangement at the “ cello, cello, cello, cello ”refrain with one of his grumpy git exclamations: “enough of the cellos”. Great to sit in a Who concert after all these years and have the privilege of hearing this work modernized and performed live by this great group of musicians, just one of the many values and benefits of going to see The Who on this tour.

Tommy was celebrated next with Amazing Journey, Sparks, Pinball Wizard and See Me Feel Me all dished up in glorious splendour. Pete’s guitar work is on fire building up the chords and notes on his fretboard into a climax that see’s him soaring like an eagle on stage both arms stretched out to signal another magnificent victory by the birdman of rock who has stood on thousands of stages for 50 years and more and left each audience in a suspension of belief, hypnotised, wide eyed and overwhelmed. Nobody does it better nobody ever will, because within all the aggression and frenzy the wood and wire is interfacing with a personality that is uniquely gifted and driven by a beat Who fans understand, larger than life, articulate often socially awkward, comes across grumpy and impatient from a distance yes but in my book a pure genius of the man and he is entitled to be whatever he wants to be. He is my hero and I am proud of him and I don’t want anything from him other than to enjoy the fruits of his creativity from many more years to come.
“Listening to you I get the music”

It was back to my favorite Who’s Next LP then with Baba O‘Riley really getting a unified buzz going in the standing session in front of us. Before long we were out of our seats and performing the famous Baba O’Riley Who salute in tune with those majestic power chords. For me it’s like bi locating at moments like this and I am back in the Vetch Field in Swansea in 1976, Wembley Stadium 1979, Birmingham 1982 and travelling back in time to all those indelible live experience when the exhalation and energy creates an almost out of body experience.

Pete say’s “Let me introduce the band” name checking brother Simon, musical director Frank Simes, keyboard and vocal talents in the backline John Corey and Loren Gold, Pino Paladino on Bass with the mention of Zak Starkey resulting in rapturous applause who had been self evidently playing out of his skin all night.

The audience was now on its feet in the packed 3 Arena as the The Who closed the show with Won’t Get Fooled Again with the sound of thousands of voices singing those immortal words “We Won’t Get Fooled Again”.

The original Won’t Get Fooled Again single version is my desert island disc and has been ever since walking into a work mates house whose family has afforded a TV aerial that enabled them to watch English channels in Ireland and in time to witness The Who perform their 3 minute rocket fuel version on Top Of The Pops shortly after its release. The Earth stopped turning that night and it has been on a Who revolution ever since.

Then it was time to say goodbye, thank you time and time to go home then as Roger again thanked the band members and Roger invited us to applaud the man without whom we wouldn’t have this wonderful music to sing one of the greatest popular composers of the century Pete Townshend. Pete thanked Roger and acknowledged how grateful he was to have worked with him. Pete went on to tell us that we have probably one of the most beautiful fecking counties in the world.

Roger says “ Who would have thought that 50 years later the band that had the potential to not even make it to the weekend would still be here but he wanted to also make the point that the reason for that was down to a very dedicated and supportive audience for which they were very grateful.
“This is a community”
“Be healthy be happy and if your Irish be lucky”

And so I brought my family home after stocking up with a new supply of T Shirts and paraphernalia and meeting Who mates and friends most of all feeling very proud that they were with me to share and witness such a perfect live music performance from the most powerful and important bands that ever stepped onto a stage.
The Who.
Mik The Who Kenny
www.mikthewho.com

 

The Who & Friends @ Vetch Field, Swansea, Wales 1976
The Who Roar In @ Wembley Stadium in 1979 supported by ACDC, The Stranglers and Nils Lofgren.
The Who @ NEC Birmingham 1982 supported by The Steve Gibbons Band
The Who @ Wembley Stadium 1985 for the Live Aid Concert
The Who @ Hyde Park 1996 supported by Alanis Morisette, Bob Dylan, Eric Clapton
The Who @ London Arena 2000 supported by Joe Strummer and The Mescalaros
The Who @ Wembley Arena 2000 supported by Joe Strummer and The Mescalaros.
The Who @ Valley Amphitheatre, Marysville Sacramento California 2002 supported by Counting Crows.
The Who @ Oxygen Punchestown, Naas Co Kildare Ireland 2006
The Who @ Marley Park, Dublin 2007
The Who @ The Marquee, Cork 2007
The Who @ O2 London 2009
The Who @ Hammersmith Odeon 2011
Roger Daltrey/Tommy @ Marley Park 2011
The Who @ O2 Dublin 2013 supported by Vintage Trouble
The Who @ New Orleans Jazz & Heritage Festival 2015
The Who @ 3 Arena Dublin 2015 support by The Last Internationale

 

 

Songs Light Your Life

Good songs keep a light on in your life where the darkness cannot reach

The Ozark Mountain Daredevils – Jackie Blue
Marvin Gaye – Baby Don’t You Do It Now
Seals & Crofts – Cotton Mouth
Boris Gardiner – I Want To Wake Up With You
Dwight Yoakam – Heartaches By The Number
Steve Miller Band – When Things Go Wrong (It Hurts Me Too)
Birds Of Chicago – Cannonball
The Monkees – Look Out (Here Comes Tomorrow)
Styx – Lorelei
Ralph McTell – Penny Lane
Keith Jarret – Vibe from The Koln Concert
George Michael – First Time Ever I Saw Your Face  
Delbert McClinton – Giving It Up For Your Love 
Cannonball Adderley – Mercy, Mercy, Mercy (Live 66)
Marmalade – Radancer
The Doobie Brothers – South Bay Strut
Paul Rishell & Annie Raines – Must Have Been The Devil (Ronnie Earl)
Barry White – What Am I Gonna Do With You
Bob Marley & Lee Scratch Perry – Sun Is Shining
Rick Wakeman – Orpheus Song Vibe from Lisztomania LP
The Who – Won’t Get Fooled Again 7″
Blackberry Smoke – Six Ways To Sunday
Albert King & Rory Gallagher – Matchbox Holds My Clothes (Montreaux  Jazz Festival 1975)

Beggars can’t be choosers

I felt like asking her where she buried her dead
She was dressed in a black bin liner that suited every word she said
Getting wreaked all night long on her homemade weed, wine and takeaways
Because beggars can’t be choosers on a wintery night in February

My partner in crime had disappeared with her flatmate
She said “come over here and put that guitar away”
Raining cats n dogs outside and stranded in a strange city
She said beggars can’t be choosers on a wintery night in February 

I played her a song or two but she didn’t give a damn
She liked music up tomidnightand after that a man
I told her I was a virgin waiting on the right girl to come my way
She said beggars can’t be choosers on a wintery night in February 

I tried wasting some time paying my respects
She just wanted to get as close as you can get
So I screwed her to the floor and not one bit sorry
Because beggars can’t be choosers on a wintery night in February 

I use to use it to stir my tea
Until that wintery night in February
I met up with inner city Josephine
The body snatcher of Bridgefort Street

By MTW

 

Mental Torture

The light is painfully bright
The bedroom is full of draughts
The match just barely works
And when it does, the cigarette

Just makes me cough
The night reflects in the mirror
A wind swept gale of hail and rain
I’d like to crack my head in two

Leave it lying on the window sill
To wash away
Gate half open swings
Against a wall of rock

Voices seep into my consciousness
Saddest I have ever heard
Blades swaying backwards and forwards in my mind
Meaner than cold sunlight

On a clean switchblade
Images of the past project
As my eyelids shut
Underneath the blankets

I cradle my head
My headache moves into the slow lane
As a black iced cloud of depression
Takes over instead

By MTW

Great Guitar Moments! Eric Clapton – Duane Allman.

Great Guitar Moments! Eric Clapton – Duane Allman

That Saturday afternoon Eric and the Band fumbled around in the studio until about seven, and then drove over to the Allman Brothers concert. They snuck up front and they crawled on their hands and knees so that they wouldn’t obscure the stage.

Duane was in the middle of a solo; he opened his eyes and looked down, did a dead stare, and stopped playing.

Dickie (Betts) was chugging along, saw Duane had stopped playing and figured he’d better cover, that Duane had broken a string or something. Then Dickey looked down, saw Eric and turned his back. That was how they first saw each other. 

If the concert was the start of a mutual love affair for each other’s music, the Layla album was certainly the consummation. As the out-takes from the sessions show, prior to Duane’s involvement with the album the band lacked the sparkle and bite that would later be evidenced on tracks like Key to the Highway. 

Sam the Sham (Woolly Bully) was in the studio and they heard him doing it in an adjacent room. They thought it was a great tune, Eric or Duane picked up on it, Carl Radle jumped in, Bobby Whitlock – who knew all these tunes – jumped on it and before you knew it everybody was trailing along. 

Producer Tom Dowd turned around and said “hit that goddamn machine!” 

From the moment the track kicks off it burns with the intensity of a Mississippi religious revival meeting. 

Had Eric not met up with Duane that fateful night, Layla and Other Assorted Love Songs (1971) would have undoubtedly been one of Clapton’s finest hours. As things turned out, it was Duane’s incisive slide playing that was to prove the mystery element, the catalyst that turned a potentially fine album into a great one, an album regarded as one of the finest in rocks tortured history. 

I got the key

Key to the highway

Darlin’ about to go

Gonna leave here running

Walking’s much to slow.  

The sound that filtered through the control room door of that air conditioned Miami Studio was the sound of a raw bleeding 12 bar blues imbued with an almost painful intensity.

The sweat marks under Eric’s arms bore witness to the energy the band were pushing out. Across the room next to Eric’s small Fender Champ amp balanced precariously on a canvass chair, stood a skinny ginger-haired kid with mutton chop whiskers, cradling a Les Paul. 

Grinning, he slid a small glass slide up the neck as though his life depended on it. It brought the blues crackling into life and whoops of delight from Eric Clapton. 

Tragedy has always stalked greatness throughout the post office and rock and roll’s history and Duane was soon to go to that great stage in the sky following a motorcycle accident 

Just an unlucky 13 months later Key to the Highway would be played at his funeral inMaconto a shell shocked congregation. Duane Allman’s slide guitar skills and soulful phrasing made him one of the most venerated white bluesmen ever. He was a complete guitar player who could give you whatever you needed, rhythm, lead, blues, slide, bossa nova with a jazz feeling, beautiful light acoustic  and on the slide he had the magic touch. To get clear intonation with the right overtones that’s the mark of a genius. He was one of the few who could hold his own with the best of the black blues players, and there are very few.

You can count them on the fingers of one hand if you’ve got three fingers missing