Robert Plant & Alison Krauss – Roskilde, Denmark (06/30/22)

Robert Plant & Alison Krauss
Roskilde Festival Arena Stage, DK
2022-06-30

Source: ca14->ca9100->sony pcm-m10 -> wav (48 khz/24 bit)
Transfer: sony pcm-m10->hd->cep->cdwav (44,1 khz/16 bit)->flac

  1. Intro
  2. Rich Woman (Li’l Millet and His Creoles)
  3. Quattro (World Drifts In) (Calexico)
  4. Fortune Teller (Benny Spellman)
  5. The Price of Love (The Everly Brothers)
  6. Rock and Roll (Led Zeppelin)
  7. Please Read the Letter (Jimmy Page & Robert Plant)
  8. Trouble With My Lover (Allen Toussaint and Leo Nocentelli)
  9. Gone Gone Gone (The Everly Brothers cover)
  10. High and Lonesome
  11. It Don’t Bother Me (Bert Jansch)
  12. The Battle of Evermore (Led Zeppelin)
  13. -Band presentation –
  14. When the Levee Breaks (Memphis Minnie & Kansas Joe McCoy)
  15. Can’t Let Go (Lucinda Williams)

Robert Plant & Alison Krauss – London, England (06/26/22)

Robert Plant & Alison Krauss
British Summer Time
Hyde Park
London, U.K.
June 26, 2022

Source: DPA 4060 => Tascam DR-2d
Conversion: WAV => Audio Cleaning Lab => FLAC (16-bit)

Track listing (66:11):
(1) Rich Woman (4:46)
(2) Can’t Let Go (3:47)
(3) Fortune Teller (4:21)
(4) Trouble With My Lover (3:40)
(5) Rock and Roll (4:21)
(6) The Price of Love (4:30)
(7) Please Read The Letter (6:34)
(8) High and Lonesome (4:22)
(9) It Don’t Bother Me (4:43)
(10) Band introductions (1:00)
(11) Quattro (World Drifts In) (4:24)
(12) Gone Gone Gone (3:24)
(13) The Battle of Evermore (6:28)
(14) When The Levee Breaks (9:44)

Comments: This recording captures Percy’s headlining set at the “British Summer Time” festival on June 26, 2022. Powerful performance, though unfortunately shortened for the festival. The taper clearly found a sweet spot — the dynamics are excellent, and the crowd around him is eerily silent. Very unusual for a general admission festival for crowd noise to be absent.

Many thanks to TallTaper for taping and sharing. I was just the helper who EQ’d and tracked it.

Robert Plant & Alison Krauss – Indianapolis, IN (06/09/22)

Robert Plant & Alison Krauss
June 9, 2022
TCU Amphitheater at White River State Park
Indianapolis, Indiana

Source: Sound Professionals CMC-08s (AT943s)->SP-SB10->Roland R05->
Audacity->CDWave->TLH
Taper: ironchef

Total time: 101:43 / 1:41:43

  1. Rich Woman
  2. Quattro (World Drifts In)
  3. Fortune Teller
  4. The Price of Love
  5. Rock and Roll
  6. Please Read the Letter
  7. Let Your Loss Be Your Lesson
  8. High and Lonesome
  9. Last Kind Words Blues
  10. You Led Me to The Wrong
  11. Trouble With My Lover
  12. Go Your Way
  13. It Don’t Bother Me
  14. Leave My Woman Alone
  15. The Battle of Evermore
  16. When the Levee Breaks (with elements of “Friends”)
  17. Gone Gone Gone
  18. encore break
  19. Stick With Me Baby
  20. Can’t Let Go
  21. Somebody Was Watching Over Me

Notes: Recorded from section 102 in the lower pavilion about ten rows back from the
stage right/audience left stack. What a great show. Their voices are soooo good together.
I was surprised Indy was included in the first leg of the tour since there weren’t very
many dates announced at that time. The sound was great, and most of the crowd noise
was behind me. Catch them on tour if you can. Enjoy!

The Friday Night Horror Movie: An American Werewolf In London (1981)

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There are certain movies that evoke a particular time and place in your memories. An American Werewolf in London is one such movie for me. I don’t remember the first time I ever watched it. I know I owned a copy of the VHS tape in college. My collection was pretty small back then, so the movies I owned made it into rotation regularly.

I’d pop this film on during a lazy Sunday afternoon, or after school on a Tuesday night. Me and my roommates would sit and watch it and laugh. We’d marvel at the special effects or how every song in it contained lyrics about the moon. I’m pretty sure its placement of “Moondance” began my journey into Van Morrison super fandom.

It became background noise in a sense. We’d put it on casually, not really paying much attention to it. This was before smartphones so we didn’t have social media or whatever to distract us so movies like this became something to do.

But at some point, I kind of turned on it. Sure the special effects were great and the needle drops, while super obvious, were on point, but it also felt very shallow. There wasn’t any depth to it.

That opinion stayed with me for decades. I don’t think I’ve watched the film since I left college, certainly, I haven’t seen it in a couple of decades. But for some reason, it crept into my thoughts this past week. Probably someone mentioned it on social media and I decided to give it another show.

My opinion didn’t change that much with this viewing. It is a shallow film. There isn’t much to it. But, also, I find I don’t care. Not every film needs to be deep. Not every movie has to carry with it layers of meaning and symbolism.

This movie is such fun to watch. And at 90 minutes it gets in, gets out, and leaves you satisfied.

The plot is quite simple. Two Americans, David Kessler (David Naughton) and Jack Goodman (Griffin Dunne), are backpacking across Europe. While Jack would really prefer to be in sun-soaked Italy they begin their travels in the North of England. We are introduced to them riding in the back of a sheep-filled truck.

They walk along the moors for a bit then stop at a pub for a hot beverage and a bite to eat. They are greeted like a stranger in one of those old Western movies. The entire pub stares at them quietly. But then one of them mentions Texas and one of the punters tells a joke about the Alamao and everybody laughs. Then David mentions the pentangle on the wall and the bar goes quiet again. They are told to get out. To get lost. Oh, and be mindful of the full moon and stay on the road.

Naturally, there is a full moon out and the boys wander off the road. Jack is killed by a werewolf and David is pretty good and mangled. He awakes in London in a hospital with a pretty nurse named Alex (Jenny Agutter). David keeps having terrible dreams and one day Jack appears to him. As a corpse. His face all torn to shreds. He tells David that he will turn into a werewolf at the next full moon and that he is now forced to wander the Earth as the living dead unless David, the last in the werewolf line kills himself.

David and Alex get cozy. David turns into a werewolf and kills a bunch of people. Can Alex save him? The end.

There really is nothing to it. But writer/director John Landis fills it with a real feeling of time and place. It isn’t the real England, but rather the England of movies. That pub (wonderfully called The Slaughtered Lamb) feels like it comes straight out of one of those old Hammer Horror movies I so love. Most of the English characters are like characters Americans have of English people.

It wonderfully blends horror and comedy. The murders are gruesome and the camera lingers on the gore. There are some nice scenes of suspense from when the boys are in the moors and something keeps howling at them to a late scene when the werewolf stalks a man through the underground. There are good gags and the editing often strikes a wonderfully jarring juxtaposition between the horror and the humor.

The special effects really are the gold standard for this sort of thing. There is a long scene where we watch David turn into a werewolf and it is fantastic. An absolutely brilliant use of practical effects. Every time Jack shows up after he’s dead, his body deteriorates even more. I can’t imagine how long Griffin Dunne had to sit in makeup to get all his flesh to look like it was hanging off of him, but it was time well spent.

So maybe not the greatest movie ever made. Certainly, it doesn’t have much to say about the state of humanity, but it is a completely entertaining 90 minutes to spend at the movies.

Tom Petty – Shows by Date

xxxx.xx.xx – Nobody Sings Dylan Like Dylan, Vol. 28 – Mudcrutch
1974-1975 – Solo LP & Mudcrutch Outtakes
1976-1981 – The Bootleg Series, Vol. 1-3
1977.06.14 – Cologne, Germany
1978.xx.xx – London, England
1982-1993 – The Bootleg Series, Vol. 4-8
1987.10.08 – Brussels, Belgium – w/Roger McGuinn & Tom Petty
1988-1990 – The Complete Traveling Wiburys Collection
1991 – VH1 Storytellers
1993.11.04 – Gainesville, FL
1994.10.02 – Mountain View, CA
1999.04.23 – Hamburg, Germany
2006.06.09 – Charlotte, NC
2006.10.28 – Las Vegas, NV
2009.01.07 – Los Angeles, CA – Gillian Welch show with Benmont on keys
2019.07.18 – San Francisco, CA – Benmont Tench solo

Film Noir: The Dark Side of Cinema XVII

Edward G. Robinson is one of my favorite actors. He became famous for portraying snarling, and deadly gangsters, and he’s great in that type of role in films like Little Ceasar and Key Largo (1948). But he made all types of other films from film noirs to comedies to heartfelt dramas. One of my favorite roles of his was his very last, the bookish best friend of Charlton Heston in Soylent Green (1973).

This edition of Kino Lorber’s long-running noir series stars Robinson during a dark period of his career. He’d been blacklisted by HUAC and could only find jobs with poverty row studios in low-budget b-pictures. These are certainly not his best films, but I just love that they are getting the Blu-ray treatment. You can read my full review here.

Wilco Announce Winterlude Tour Dates

To beat the winter blues Wilco is doing a small residency tour to a few cities. Luckily they are coming to mine and I will definitely be buying tickets. I’ve seen them half a dozen times and they never disappoint.

Presales started yesterday and you can find out more on their website.

Thur. December 5 – Austin, TX @ The Moody Theater
Fri. December 6 – Austin, TX @ The Moody Theater
Sat. December 7 – Austin, TX @ The Moody Theater
Tue. December 10 – Tulsa, OK @ Cain’s Ballroom
Wed. December 11 – Tulsa, OK @ Cain’s BallroomFri.
December 13 – St. Paul, MN @ Palace Theatre
Sat. December 14 – St. Paul, MN @ Palace Theatre
Sun. December 15 – St. Paul, MN @ Palace Theatre

Bring Out the Perverts: Death Walks at Midnight (1972)

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By 1972 the Giallo was already well established and quite popular. Mario Bava had created its template and Dario Argento had perfected it, but by this stage, many others had begun to play in that particular sandbox.

Quite a few of the directors now making Giallo weren’t necessarily interested in the genre, but they made whatever types of films they could get financed. These workman-like filmmakers went where the money was. As such the films aren’t always the best, sometimes they are pretty awful, to be honest, but a good filmmaker can make something interesting out of genres he’s not necessarily interested in.

There were quite a few directors during this period who would make a couple of westerns, a couple of Gialli, and then maybe a couple of action-packed crime thrillers.

Luciano Ercoli was that kind of director. He made some comedies, a couple of drams, some gritty crime thrillers, and three pretty good Gialli.

Death Walks at Midnight was his last foray into the genre, and arguably it is his best. It still has that workman-like sensibility to it, but it has style. And one of the best weapons in all of Giallo.

Fashion model Valentina (Susan Scott) agrees to drop a bit of LSD while her boyfriend and journalist Gio Baldi (Simón Andreu) photographs her and documents her experience. The agreement is he will not use her name and she’ll wear a mask so her identity will not be known. But as soon as the drug takes effect all bets are off, Gio removes the mask and ultimately uses her name to sell more newspapers.

While in the midst of her trip, she witnesses a gruesome murder in the flat across the street. A man dressed in black and donning a metal spiked gauntlet on his hand, smashes in the face of a beautiful, young woman.

Nobody else sees the murder and because she’s high as a kite on hallucinogens no one believes her. Later she learns a woman was murdered by a similar weapon in that very flat several months prior. But they caught the killer for that incident. He was found next to the body and confessed to the crime.

Perhaps Valentina witnessed that crime at the time, but it was so brutal, so awful, she repressed the memory. And then the drug resurfaced it. Or maybe the drugs unlocked some psychic ability and she was able to see into the past.

But then why does the killer from her vision look nothing like the man who confessed? And why does a man who looks just like the killer in her vision keep following her around town? And who is that other guy who keeps showing up to tell her she’s in danger?

Naturally, she begins her own investigation which leads her down all sorts of twists and turns. For the most part, Ercoli is pretty straightforward in his direction. The mystery is front and center. Except, it isn’t really a mystery as the film shows us who the killer is from the start. There is no mask in this one. He’s not hidden in shadows, and we don’t see things from his point of view. We know what he looks like, but we don’t know who he is. Or why he killed in such an awful way.

It is a fine story, told well. Periodically Ercoli infuses it with real style. The murder is especially well-shot. We see part of it reflected in his sunglasses. In another moment the screen splashes red with blood. But mostly, and I’m sorry to keep using this word, the direction is workmanlike. It is good. It is well done. But it isn’t all that memorable.

Except for that crazy gauntlet. That thing is cool.

I previously reviewed this movie and another Ercoli Giallo, Death Walks on High Heels for Cinema Sentries.