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New Butterfield Live Recording
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The Iceman
2922 posts
Jul 11, 2016
5:49 AM
The Paul Butterfield Blues Band - Got A Mind To Give Up Living: Live 1966
Label: Real Gone Music | Tracks: 13 | Rls.date: 2016

If the Summer of 1967 was the Summer of Love, the Summer of 1966 set the stage for the musical revolution that was to come. Albums released during the season, like The Beatles’ Revolver and The Byrds’ Fifth Dimension, brilliantly blended the burgeoning influence of Eastern exoticism into the rock music format, and the term “psychedelia” entered the common lexicon to stay. But beating them all to the punch was a multi-racial blues band that cut its teeth in Chicago, far from the hippie havens of London, Los Angeles and San Francisco. Issued in July 1966, The Paul Butterfield Blues Band’s East-West took blues-rock to places only free jazz had dared to tread, offering lengthy, modal improvisational passages that sparked the West Coast rock revolution, and, in Mike Bloomfield and Elvin Bishop, fully unleashing the first great guitar tandem in rock history. Now, Real Gone Music is very proud to release, for the first time in legitimate fashion, a legendary bootleg that captures this singular sextet on the brink of the stylistic breakthrough that would shake the rock ‘n’ roll world to its core: recorded live at Boston’s Unicorn Coffee House 50 years ago in May 1966, two months before the release of East-West, Got a Mind to Give Up Living—Live 1966 reaffirms that The Paul Butterfield Blues Band was simply untouchable live, capable of turning on a dime from slow-burning blues tunes to up-tempo rave-ups. And, particularly on a pair of tunes that were soon to be released on East-West, “Work Song” and “I Got a Mind to Give Up Living,” the raga influence (check Bloomfield’s solos!) comes through loud and clear, combining with the band’s blues tropes to create a truly new style of rock and rock guitar playing. Butterfield fans will also delight in the early appearances of “One More Heartache” (from The Resurrection of Pigboy Crabshaw) and “Walking by Myself” (from Keep On Movin’), plus a pair of tunes, “Comin’ Home Baby” and “Memory Pain,” that the band never commercially recorded. Notes by Chris Morris featuring fresh quotes from Elvin Bishop, rare pictures and memorabilia, editorial input from Bloomfield aficionado and co-producer Toby Byron, and some audio spit ‘n’ polish from Mike Milchner at SonicVision make this a package indispensable for any ‘60s rock (or jazz or R&B!) fan.

TRACKLIST
1. Instrumental Intro ( 1:26)
2. Look Over Yonders Wall ( 2:08)
3. Born In Chicago ( 4:12)
4. Love Her With A Feeling ( 5:40)
5. Get Out Of My Life, Woman ( 3:24)
6. Never Say No ( 3:41)
7. One More Heartache ( 3:42)
8. Work Song (12:33)
9. Coming Home Baby ( 7:17)
10. Memory Pain ( 2:46)
11. I Got A Mind To Give Up Living ( 6:36)
12. Walking By Myself ( 4:17)
13. Got My Mojo Working ( 5:14)
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The Iceman
1847
3539 posts
Jul 11, 2016
8:46 AM

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Rgsccr
437 posts
Jul 11, 2016
11:02 AM
Here are songs off an unfamiliar Butterfield album that I ran into a while ago (it might have been posted here - can't remember). It's pretty raw, recorded, I think, in a club, but still very cool. I love the way he plays "Just to Be With You," "Mystery Train," and "Rock Me."

Martin
1034 posts
Jul 12, 2016
6:50 AM
Also another new live album out, "Live in White Lake, 1969".
Is part of the Complete album edition.
artcarny
14 posts
Jul 12, 2016
10:18 AM
I saw The PBBB in 1967. My first "Rock" concert.Talk about 60's psychedelia,Alan Ginsberg opened for them with a reading of "Howl".I think I started playing harmonica, or trying to, not long after that, Memorable.Was great to meet you in St.Simons Iceman
The Iceman
2923 posts
Jul 12, 2016
10:28 AM
Yes, artcarny.

Here is a good place to ask about anything harmonica.

Artcarny is a very talented visual artist that uses lines from songs as themes to some of his work.
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The Iceman


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