David & The Dorks — San Francisco, CA (12/15/1970)
Recorded at Marty Balin’s venue, The Matrix, the lineup consisted of David Crosby, Jerry Garcia, Phil Lesh and Mickey Hart, billed as David & The Dorks. This show features several songs from Crosby’s 1970 release If I Could Only Remember My Name.
set 1
01 Alabama Bound
02 Eight Miles High
03 Cowboy Movie
04 Wall Song
05 Bertha
06 Bird Song
set 2
01 Drop Down Mama
02 Cowboy Movie
03 Triad
04 Wall Song
05 Bertha
06 Deep Elem Blues
07 Motherless Children
08 Laughing
Widespread Panic — Aspen, CO (1/25/1996)
01/25/96 Wheeler Opera House, Aspen, CO
1: Let’s Get The Show On The Road > Hatfield, Send Your Mind, Radio Child, Mercy > Jam > Weight Of The World, Ain’t Life Grand, Can’t Get High, Postcard, Space Wrangler
2: Baby, Let Me Hold Your Hand, Walk On, Rebirtha > B of D > Makes Sense To Me, Gradle, Airplane > C. Brown, Climb To Safety*, Chilly Water*
E: Low Spark Of High Heeled Boys
* with Jerry Joseph on guitar/vocals
[First 'Baby, Let Me Hold Your Hand'; Sit & Ski Tour; 'Baby, Let Me Hold Your Hand' JoJo solo; 'Thought Sausage' rap by JB during 'Chilly Water'; Jerry Joseph opened]
Xavier Rudd — “Stargaze”
Performing “Stargaze” from his White Moth release on Jimmy Kimmel’s show. Muy caliente.!
The Band — Jersey City, NJ (8/1/1973)

Back To Memphis
Lovin’ You Is Better Than Ever
The Shape I’m In
The Weight
Stage Fright
I Shall Be Released
Don’t Do It
Endless Highway
The Night They Drove Old Dixie Down
Across The Great Divide
This Wheel’s On Fire
Life Is A Carnival
Share Your Love
Up On Cripple Creek
Chest Fever
The W.S. Walcott Medicine Show
Perpetual Groove — Atlanta, GA (1/17/2009)

Photo by Megan Case.
Set 1
01. All In*
02. Cabulo
03. Suburban Speedball
04. Three Weeks
05. Witness to the Rest
06. Level*
07. Downside*
Set 2
01. Deception Structure
02. Diggin’ in the Dirt
03. Robot Waltz
04. Two Shores
05. Sundog
06. Encore break
encore:
07. Walking in Place
08. Teakwood Beatz
We hit the Perpetual Groove show last Saturday night and wrote a review for Hidden Track. Click here to check it out.
Did You Know??
Neil Diamond was a fencing champion in high school.
Herbie Hancock & The Headhunters — Berlin, GER (11/3/1974)
Palm Grease
Sly
Butterfly
Spank-A-Lee
Bob Dylan & Johnny Cash — Nashville Skyline Outtakes

One Too Many Mornings
Good Ol’ Mountain Dew
I Still Miss Someone
Careless Love
Matchbox
That’s Alright Mama
Big River
Girl Of The North Country
I Walk The Line
You Are My Sunshine
Ring Of Fire
Guess Things Happen That Way
Just A Closer Walk With Thee
Blues Yodel
Blues Yodel #5
I Threw It All Away-Johnny Cash Show
Living The Blues-Johnny Cash Show
Girl Of The North Country-Johnny Cash Show
Nashville Skyline Rag
I Threw It All Away
Peggy Day
Country Pie
Tonight I Will Be Staying Here
RIP — Terry Kath (1946-1978)
Terry Kath, guitarist of Chicago, accidentally shot himself on this day in 1978. Here’s the last filmed performance of Chicago with Terry, from the summer of ’77. It was after Kath’s death that Chicago switched from a hard rocking jazz band to more ballad based soft rock fare. 25 or 6 to 4 with Terry just killin’ it:
Funny Friday — “We fixed the glitch”
From the timless classic Office Space.
The Curious Case of Jobriath
Aware of the monetary possibilites of launching the first openly homosexual glam rocker in the early 1970′s after the success of David Bowie and Marc Bolan, music agent Jerry Brandt went about searching for the next superstar of the genre. Brandt thought that with an overelaborate and perfectly timed marketing campaign, he would make himself, the signing record label and the unchosen star a lot of money. Brandt came across Bruce Wayne Campbell, an alum of the musical Hair and signed him to Elektra Records with a huge-for-the-time (and very publicized) contract signing bonus of $500,000.
Campbell was rechristened Jobriath and the wheels were set into motion. Elektra Records, Brandt and Jobriath were so confident of the imminent success of the collaboration that they dismissed all comparisons to David Bowie. Brandt stated, “Jobriath is as different from Bowie as a Lamborghini is to a Model A Ford.” Brandt further boasted, “They’re both cars, it’s just a matter of taste, style, elegance and beauty.” Jobriath was booked to perform on The Midnight Special television program and prime print ads were purchased in Vogue, The New York Times, Penthouse and Playboy. Concert tours with huge budgets were ordered and a 50 foot billboard was bought in Times Square announcing Jobriath’s imminent onslaught and displaying the artist shirtless.
Here’s Jobriath on The Midnight Special:
Eponymously titled Jobriath, the debut album was released in 1973 and to pretty good reviews, but sold poorly. The public just wasn’t into the dude and felt that they had been sold a bill of goods. Actually it only sold 50,000 copies and is considered one of the most disappointing and monumentally disastrous showings of all-time. On the heels of the debacle, Elektra wasn’t quite ready to throw in the towel and released the follow up album in 1974. Titled Creatures Of The Night, the follow up received terrible reviews and sounded the death knell of Jobriath.
Even though Jerry Brandt had orchestrated and plotted every move of Jobriath’s illustrous career, he refused to work with the singer again. Brandt went as far as holding Jobriath to his 10-year contract which prevented him from recording with another label until 1983. Given his situation, Jobriath auditioned for the gay lover part in Sidney Lumet’s Dog Day Afternoon (1975). The part went to Chris Sarandon and Jobriath went back to his real name, Bruce Wayne Campbell.
Luckily, Campbell held onto much of his signing bonus and purchased a giant glass pyramid home atop the famed Chelsea Hotel in NYC. Campbell installed a modest recording studio in the home and actually recorded a third Jobriath album. Unfortunately with his sales history (or lack thereof), Campbell realized there was zero interest in his music. Campbell contracted the AIDS virus and died one week after his lengthy contract expired in August 1983. He had become such a recluse that his body wasn’t discovered for nearly a week after his death.
In 2004 as Morrissey was preparing for a tour, he decided that he wanted Jobriath to open for him, unaware that he had died 21 years prior. In tribute to his early hero, Morrissey reissued Jobriath’s two albums on a compilation CD and christened it Lonely Planet Boy. Sadly, it still didn’t sell very well.
Happy Birthday — Django Reinhardt
Brief bio found on YouTube:
Jean-Baptiste “Django” Reinhardt (January 23, 1910 — May 16, 1953) was a Belgian Sinto Gypsy jazz guitarist. He was one of the first prominent jazz musicians to be born in Europe, and one of the most renowned jazz guitarists of all time. His most renowned works include “My Sweet”, “Minor Swing”, “Tears”, “Belleville”, “Djangology” and “Nuages”. Reinhardt spent most of his youth in gypsy encampments close to Paris, playing banjo, guitar and violin from an early age professionally at Bal-musette halls in Paris. He started first on the violin and eventually moved on to a banjo-guitar .At the age of 18 Reinhardt was injured in a fire that ravaged the caravan he shared with Bella, his first wife. They were very poor, and to supplement their income Bella made imitation flowers out of celluloid and paper. Consequently, their home was full of this highly flammable material. Returning from a performance late one night, Django apparently knocked over a candle on his way to bed. While his family and neighbors were quick to pull him to safety, he received first- and second-degree burns over half his body. His right leg was paralyzed and the third and fourth fingers of his left hand were badly burnt. Doctors believed that he would never play guitar again and intended to amputate one of his legs. Reinhardt refused to have the surgery and left the hospital after a short time; he was able to walk within a year with the aid of a cane. In 1934, Louis Vola formed the “Quintette du Hot Club de France” with Reinhardt, violinist Stéphane Grappelli, Reinhardt’s brother Joseph and Roger Chaput on guitar, and himself on bass.The concept of “lead guitar” (Django) and backing “rhythm guitar” (Joseph Reinhardt/Roger Chaput or Pierre Ferret) was born with that band. When World War II broke out, the original quintet was on tour in the United Kingdom. Reinhardt returned to Paris. Reinhardt survived World War II unscathed, unlike the many Gypsies who perished in the porajmos, the Nazi regime’s systematic murder of several hundred thousand European Gypsies, quite a few of whom were sent to death camps. He was especially fortunate because the Nazi regime did not allow jazz to be performed and recorded. He apparently enjoyed the protection of the Luftwaffe officer Dietrich Schulz-Köhn, nicknamed “Doktor Jazz”, who deeply admired his music. Many musicians have expressed admiration for Reinhardt , including guitarist Jimmy McCulloch, classical guitarist Julian Bream; country artist Chet Atkins, who placed Reinhardt #1 on a list of the ten most influential guitarists of the 20th century ; Carlos Santana; B.B. King; Jerry Garcia; Black Sabbath’s Tony Iommi; Jimi Hendrix; Synyster Gates; Shawn Lane; Stevie Ray Vaughan; Derek Trucks; Mark Knopfler; Les Paul; Joe Pass; Peter Frampton; Denny Laine; Jeff Beck; Jon Larsen; Trey Anastasio; Steve Howe; Charlie Christian and George Benson. Jimi Hendrix is said to have named one of his bands the Band of Gypsys because of Django’s music. The Allman Brothers Band song “Jessica” was written by Dickey Betts in tribute to Reinhardt — he wanted to write a song that could be played using only two fingers. This aspect of the artist’s work also inspired Tony Iommi, who continued playing guitar despite a factory accident cost him his two fingertips.