It was one of the Blue Jam series, Jim. I can't tell you more than that, but I thought it was painfully hilarious.
20th Century Boy by T Rex is a freaking GREAT song
Very true, that.
There's a lady plays her fav'rite records/On the jukebox ev'ry day/All day long she plays the same old songs/And she believes the things that they say/She sings along with all the saddest songs/And she believes the stories are real/She lets the music dictate the way that she feels.
It was one of the Blue Jam series, Jim. I can't tell you more than that, but I thought it was painfully hilarious.
20th Century Boy by T Rex is a freaking GREAT song
Very true, that.
The whole archive is here : [link] and well worth the ime to download.
20th Century Boy by T Rex is a freaking GREAT song,
It sure is. That's a massive riff to get you grooving. I think the first time I heard it was in Boston, '84ish when the True Believers covered it live with Steve Berlin from Los Lobos sitting in on sax.
Boston, '84ish when the True Believers covered it live
Where was that, David? I wonder if I was there?
Gracias, Jim.
David's post reminds me that The Austin Music Network (our hometown video network, y'know) is about to go off the air and has been playing clips of live Roky Erickson performances, including a scaldingly great one from 20 years ago with the True Believers.
Where was that, David? I wonder if I was there?
The Channel. It was a Los Lobos show with True Believers opening. I saw Hoodoo Gurus and The Replacements (separate shows) at the Channel that year too. Also The Bangles at The Paradise.
including a scaldingly great one from 20 years ago with the True Believers.
Speaking of which, how's Alejandro Escovedo doing?
20th Century Boy by T Rex is a freaking GREAT song
It may be the freaking GREATEST song.
how's Alejandro Escovedo doing?
Last I heard, he was doing pretty well, but that was a few months back.
So, I just listened to The Mars Volta's Frances the Mute, and I'm sorta ambivalent about it. There's aspects to the music I really like (the space-rock/free-jazz wackiness), and aspects that push all the wrong buttons with me (the Yes-ishness), and I'm not sure which will ultimately sway my take on the album.
It was a Los Lobos show with True Believers opening. I saw Hoodoo Gurus and The Replacements (separate shows) at the Channel that year too. Also The Bangles at The Paradise.
I definitely was at that Hoodoo Gurus show (Big hair! Ahhhh!). And I saw the Bangles at the Paradise the second time they came around. I know I saw the True Believers somewhere around that time, but can't remember if it was that Channel show. I really wish I'd kept a diary.