Saturday, August 1, 2009

Good To Go Band 2009





Ok Folks,as some of you may know i play guitar in various bands,this is one of them.
The first cd of this band was done in 2005.
In 2007 we started doing a summer show at Eddie and Jeannie's campground every year.
These campground shows are really a lot of fun,as you will see.
This performance of the Good To Go Band was on July 25th 2009 at Lake Manchaug Campground in E Douglas MA.
The Good To Go Band is a loose collaborative of musicians local to the North Attleboro MA area.
Every year musicians can make it or not and we adapt to that.
Most of these performances are NOT recorded so this is a yearly treat.
This Years Stars are as follows:
Ed Lefebvre-Guitars and Lead Vocals(this guy wrote all the original songs)
Brandon Lefebvre-Guitars(SON OF ED) and a great player
Kelly Ann Phipps-Vocals,Cigarettes and Red Hair
Jim Quinn-Drummer w/ the busted leg,Emcee,Impeccable background harmony Vocals,Inspiration and co-ordination
Dave Rancourt-Genius Bass Guitar and Vocal Absurdities
Brad Read-(most) Lead Guitar and(some) Vocals
Kevin Brewster-Drums
Curt and Whitey-Transportation and making sure things run.

Recorded on a mini disc w/ a stereo mic, the sound is not bad at all and reflects the event well.
There are 3 Different Links to this post, one is the single songs,another is a split complete show for download to CD,and still another is the Complete Show for those that want beginning to end.
So Enjoy and send any comments to the comment section.


Single Songs:

http://d01.megashares.com/?d01=a2daa90

Complete Show Cut For 2 CD's

http://d01.megashares.com/?d01=3f768a0


Complete Show-IF ANY OF YOU BROADCASTERS OUT THERE LIKE THIS SHOW,FEEL FREE TO USE IT ANYTIME.(sorry there is no nasty language)

http://d01.megashares.com/?d01=b678b01

Saturday, June 20, 2009

Father's Day 2009


Hello Valued Listeners !
Grits Radio and the Zorchman are at it again.
This Sunday, June 21 2009,Zorch will be a guest on Grits radio for a special father's day show
on WBCQ Radio's AREA 51(5110 megahertz on your shortwave radio) at 6:30-7:30pm EDT.
And a SPECIAL THANK YOU to ALL that make Area 51 possible.Please go to http://www.worldmicroscope.com/
Contribute via PAYPAL if you can,lets keep this fun going.
After that time slot, we will continue on the Grits Radio stream.
We will be taking phone calls also
The link to listen live is here,
http://www.splatterbox.us:8910/
( my regular stream ) just click on listen.
this show will be saved and offered for download.
ENJOY !
Link to Grits Fathers Day Show 2009 : http://d01.megashares.com/?d01=1348613

Link to Zorch Father's Day Show 2009 : http://d01.megashares.com/?d01=21d7333

There are also some 2 1/2 Hrs of after hours music and madness which can be had soon.
Lucky you ! You will soon be able to listen to the entire evening's "strangecast".
And here they are ! Mostly music as Grits Radio normally (?) is.
link to after hours : http://d01.megashares.com/?d01=b3a3e8c

The Firesign Theatre Presents "The Giant Rat of Sumatra"


The Tale of the Giant Rat of Sumatra is a comedy album recorded by The Firesign Theatre and released in early 1974 by Columbia Records.
This Post is for Captain Ganga !!!

Side one - London

  1. "Chapter 1 - Not Quite The Solution He Expected"
  2. "Chapter 2 - An Outrageously Disgusting Disguise"
  3. "Chapter 3 - Where There's Smoke, There's Work"

Side two - Chicago

  1. "Chapter 4 - Where Did Jonas Go When The Lights Went Out?"
  2. "Chapter 5 - Pickles Down The Rat Hole!"
  3. "Chapter 6 - The Electrician Exposes Himself!"

Following a rather disjointed string of solo projects and anthologies, this was the group's first album to consist entirely of a single cohesive narrative since I Think We're All Bozos on This Bus. This began something of a second wind that would continue with Everything You Know Is Wrong and In the Next World, You're on Your Own before the group finally ended its association with Columbia.

Philip Proctor plays detective Hemlock Stones (Sherlock Holmes) and David Ossman plays Flotsam (Watson), his "patient doctor and biographer".

The lighthearted tale is full of puns, including a running gag in which Flotsam, eager to chronicle the adventure, tries to write down everything Stones says but mishears it all as something similar-sounding; for example, "rattan-festooned" is written down as "rat-infested." Allusions also are made to Sherlock Holmes's use of cocaine (though it is referred to as cocoa) "Stones,you snowball!", his violin playing, and other familiar story elements.

The members of the group take different attitudes towards this album. In the liner notes to Shoes for Industry: The Best of the Firesign Theatre David Ossman is cheerful when discussing it and says that "I always thought it was the closest thing to the relentlessly pun-filled one-acts we did in clubs." In fact, an earlier bootleg version is not only closer to the spirit of their nightclub performances, but is strikingly reminiscent of The Goon Show, which was one of the group's main inspirations. It bears almost no resemblance to the version that was finally committed to vinyl.

Phil Austin, on the other hand, says "The Sherlock Holmes album didn't do anybody any good . . . the general public was by that point beginning to tire of psychedelia anyway, and we were unfortunately always going to be associated with that."

The review in 1983's The New Rolling Stone Record Guide tends to agree with Austin and calls this album "A halfassed comeback containing only one good joke."

Link : http://d01.megashares.com/?d01=02b8fa3

Saturday, April 11, 2009

Grits/Zorch Show No. 1












Hey Folks, Zorch and I did a radio show for
WBCQ Radio's Area 51 broadcasting on 5.110 MHz on Sunday 4/5/09 6:30pm -7:30 pm EDT (2230-2330 UTC)
WBCQ is a shortwave station out of Monitcello ME USA. Fri,Sat and Sunday nights there is some great stuff ! see the links to the right.
It was a lot of fun and realizing not many can listen to shortwave we internet cast on Grits radio.
Some listeners tried to rip the show and were unsuccessful,so here it is !!!
This is the RAW file,lumps and all.
enjoy
and thanks again to the zorchman!
special thanks to cosmikdebris, WBCQ and the bowling leauge.


Link :http://www.megaupload.com/?d=80Q5ZDRJ

Saturday, March 28, 2009

Speedy West Interview



More for ya JimE !!










I've trawled the tape archives in the tower of sound here & found for you a Speedy West interview sent to me by the girl who ran the Speedy West fan club in the 50's, she was also an old girlfriend of Gene O'Qinn & had some great stories!

I think the interview must be from 1979 or 1980 as he speaks of Jimmy Bryant being still alive but stricken with Cancer, JB died in 1980 so I think this came from this time

There were music clips that were spliced out, I've been meaning to try to edit them back together, but it's been on the back burner ever since I got this tape!

I don't think this is available anywhere but here....so enjoy!
I don't know what happened to this link but it got mixed up w/ something else.
It has been re-posted to the correct file . sorry about that .


Link : http://d01.megashares.com/?d01=2d54bdd

WOW !! A Jimmy Bryant podcast !!!!


WOOOOOOOOO HOOOOOOOOOOOO !!!!


I just found this for ya jimE !
yer gonna love it !



This Week I pay tribute to the wonderful guitar sounds of JIMMY BRYANT with a spin through his CAPITOL & IMPERIAL 45's & LP's...being to lazy to fill in Biographical info here's some cool stuff lifted from the internet:

Jimmy Bryant: faster guitar player resurfaces
By Jon Johnson, December 2003

Born in Georgia on March 5, 1925, Ivey J. Bryant, Jr. (he didn't adopt the nickname "Jimmy" until he was in his mid-20s) was the oldest of 12 children. By most contemporary accounts, Bryant's father was a sharecropper and music lover who was proficient on several instruments. He, in turn, encouraged his son's interest in music at an early age, even building a fiddle out of a cigar box for his son. Unfortunately, Bryant's father also had a bad temper and a fondness for the bottle, characteristics which would sometimes surface in the son later in life.

"My mom and dad got divorced when I was born," says Bryant's son, John. "So when I was growing up, he'd come get me on the weekends. We'd go jeeping in the valley because there was a lot of open space, but he didn't really know how to be a father because he didn't have a good role model."

During the years of the Depression, Ivey Jr. (alternately called Buddy and Junior around this time) supplemented the family's income by playing fiddle on street corners. Drafted in 1943 when he turned 18, Bryant was shipped off to Europe where he served with General Patton's Third Army, participating in the invasion of Germany.

Severely wounded by a grenade in early 1945, Bryant sat out the closing months of World War II in a hospital, spending the down time recovering and teaching himself to play guitar. When he emerged from the hospital a few months later, peace had broken out, and Bryant found himself in demand by the USO as both a guitarist and a violinist.

After being discharged, Bryant returned to the U.S., purchased an electric guitar and an amp and spent the latter half of the '40s in Georgia, Nashville and Washington D.C. before heading to Los Angeles, where he'd been told there was growing hillbilly and country music scene, thanks largely to a huge influx of southerners during the '30s and early '40s.

"He kept hearing about California," says Jimmy Bryant's sister, Lorene Bryant Epps, who is the author of the biography "Jimmy Bryant: Fastest Guitar in the Country." "He and Russell Hayden and Doug McGinnis (two other musicians with whom Bryant was playing at the time) went to California together in a '37 Ford, and they played (gigs) all the way there. And when he got there, I remember he said (he) was not disappointed. He loved it from the start. And it wasn't long after he got there that he met Speedy West."

West, about 25 when he and Bryant met when playing down the street from each other in separate bars, was already a first-call studio musician at Capitol in 1949 and was one of the first steel guitarists to make the switch to pedal steel guitar, which offered greater sonic possibilities than the earlier non-pedal models. Late in 1949, West began appearing on Cliffie Stone's weekly TV series "Hometown Jamboree," and following the departure of guitarist Charlie Aldrich the following year, Bryant soon joined him.

California-based guitarist Deke Dickerson, 35, has been a booster of the West/Bryant recordings for years, going so far as to reissue a Jimmy Bryant 45 on his Ecco-Fonic label in the mid-'90s and producing a 1999 collaboration between guitarist Dave Biller and steel guitarist Jeremy Wakefield, which clearly owed much to the West/Bryant records of the early '50s.

Dickerson played a small role in producing "Frettin' Fingers," lending Sundazed a mint copy of Bryant's rare 1962 "Ha-So"/"Tobacco Worm" 45 when the original master tapes couldn't be found. Dickerson also contributed an essay on Bryant's guitars and amps for the collection's liner notes.

Asked when he first became aware of the West/Bryant recordings, Dickerson says, "Believe it or not - and I'm not making this up - I found the 'Two Guitars Country Style' album at a garage sale for 25 cents when I was about 15 (or) 16 years old. I bought it because I remembered Ray Campi mentioning them in an interview. At the time, I was just a dumb little rockabilly kid. Never heard western swing or hot jazz in my life, but when I heard Jimmy Bryant's guitar playing it was like hearing the Eddie Van Halen of the 1950s. His speed and his phrasing...blew my mind."

Although given a great deal of creative freedom by Ken Nelson at Capitol and by Cliffie Stone on TV, Bryant chafed when given directions or suggestions. By 1955, he quit "Hometown Jamboree" and quit doing sessions for Capitol the following year.

"I've read that Jimmy could ' be difficult to get along with and that he didn't like playing 'commercial,'" says Dickerson. 'He liked playing 'outside,' which he was better at than anyone else in the world, but it doesn't get you hired for mainstream projects."

Bryant did a little of this and that during the remainder of the '50s and into the early '60s: session work (he can be heard playing fiddle on the Monkees' "Sweet Young Thing"), production, and some live performances before landing a long-desired solo contract with Imperial Records in 1965. He also wrote "Only Daddy That'll Walk the Line" done by Waylon Jennings in 1968.

The new Bryant collection compiles most of the important West/Bryant instrumentals, as well as a strong cross-section of Bryant's solo recordings made between 1962 and 1967, including 5 previously unreleased tracks.

"When that stuff was coming out, I was in grade school," says Jimmy Bryant's son, John. "When we'd have show and tell, I'd bring the albums - 'This is what my dad does.' I remember one time, I was walking through this parking lot for a grocery store, and I looked over and there was this band on a stage. And it was my dad. It just seemed like that was the norm."

Asked why he thinks Bryant's solo recordings have been out of print for so long, Dickerson says that there really isn't much of a mystery, attributing it to "lack of interest, mainly."

"There are cyclical musical styles that people get interested in," says John Bryant. "Since the mid-'90s I've been doing a lot of work to keep his name alive. I think that Bear Family (the German record label put out a set in 1997) collection helped."

John Bryant says he possesses some unreleased recordings of his father, some of which will probably see the light of day sooner rather than later.

"Audie Murphy (the U.S. war hero and actor who was also a close friend of Bryant's) bought Scotty Turner (Bryant's producer in the '60s) a brand-new multitrack recorder in the mid or late-'60s. Scotty and my dad set up this recorder, and my dad and (jazz guitarist) Herb Ellis were jamming, and they recorded all this stuff. There was a drummer and a bass player in another room, so it's got good separation. I've got the master (tape), and it is just so much more jazzy than anybody's heard. I'm going to be releasing (it) early next year."

During the '60s, Bryant had learned to read music well enough to be competitive with other Nashville pickers, but the acerbic nature of his personality seems to have been in full flower during this period, and he made at least as many enemies as friends while in Nashville, though he and Speedy West did manage to get together to record one final album in 1975 (released in 1990 on the Step One label as "For the Last Time").

During the '70s, Bryant tried his hand as a Nashville session musician, but found that his style was less in demand than it had been 20 years earlier and 2 thousand miles away.

John Bryant had less frequent contact with his father as a teen, since he remained in southern California while his father lived elsewhere.

"I was in high school, and he was living off in Nashville. I went into the Air Force, then he got sick, so I asked the Air Force to transfer me to Georgia to be near him. They said no and sent me overseas. It was kind of a drag. When he got sick, I flew over there to be with him for a while. Then when he got real bad I was there for a couple of weeks before he died."

Bryant was diagnosed with lung cancer in 1978; probably the result of a lifetime of smoking. Although surgeons removed most of Bryant's right lung, the cancer was found to have spread to his heart. Radiation therapy slowed the cancer, but did not stop it.

Bryant's final public performance was in August 1979 at the Palomino Club in L.A. Bryant was by all accounts in terrible shape (he was on furlough from the hospital that evening and was helped into the club by two friends), but turned back into the Jimmy Bryant of old when he had a guitar in his hand.

Moving back to Georgia the following year, Bryant died Sept. 22, 1980.

The year after Bryant's death Speedy West's musical career was ended by a stroke. Although he recovered to some degree and attempted to start playing again, the stroke left the right side of his body with a combination of pain and cold, and playing soon proved to be impractical. During the remainder of his life. West contented himself with a growing reputation as an honored guest at steel guitar conventions around the country.

Asked if there are any guitarists around today whose styles remind him of his father, John Bryant says, "Today? There's no one else out there who's doing Jimmy Bryant."

Asked about his own musical interests, Bryant seems uncomfortable with the thought of living up to his father's reputation as a guitarist, initially fessing up only to playing drums.

"It's funny with this business, because people introduce me - 'This is John Bryant; he's Jimmy Bryant's son, and he's a great drummer' - and they've never even heard me play. People just think that you follow in your father's footsteps, but I've never felt comfortable with a guitar in my hand."

Bryant soon admits, though, that Fender's introduction this year of a Jimmy Bryant Telecaster modeled on his father's instrument (complete with trademark leather pickguard) has prompted him to finally tackle the guitar.

"Now that this guitar is out, I've been picking it up lately," says Bryant. "And it feels pretty darn natural. I'm learning how to play it and understanding theory. Since I have a JB Tele, I've got to do something with it."

Yeah Man !!! DIG IT !!!


Link : http://www.megaupload.com/?d=806K4623

Sunday, March 15, 2009

Speedy West and Jimmy Bryant !!


Here's some more stuff that JimE asked for!
If you like hot country guitars,these guys are the real deal.

3 LP Links in this post !!!

Wesley Webb West, 25 January 1924, Springfield, Missouri, USA, d. 15 November 2003, Broken Bow, Oklahoma, USA. An outstanding exponent of steel guitar playing, West worked with many noted performers, most of them California-based. These included the equally gifted guitarist Jimmy Bryant, as well as Hank Penny, Spade Cooley and Cliffie Stone, remaining with the latter from the late 40s through the 50s. In 1951, West was signed by Capitol Records and gained kudos from an appearance at the Grand Ole Opry. After some success with singles, he collaborated on Two Guitars Country Style with Bryant. In the 60s, now freelancing, West's virtuoso playing earned him thousands of recording sessions with artists as varied, and as famous, as Bing Crosby, Tennessee Ernie Ford, Phil Harris, Jim Reeves, Dinah Shore, Frank Sinatra and Ernest Tubb. Becoming involved in the production side of recording, West worked with Loretta Lynn on her debut single. His role in Lynn's career was depicted by Billy Strange in the biopic, Coal Miner's Daughter (1980). In 1980 West was inducted into the Steel Guitar Hall of Fame but virtually simultaneously a stroke put an end to his performing career. After a very difficult period, West reappeared on the music scene in non-performing roles but by the end of the decade had opted for retirement in Oklahoma. His son, Gary West, began his own career performing as Speedy West Jr.

With steel guitar wizard Speedy West, guitarist Jimmy Bryant formed half of the hottest country guitar duo of the 1950s. With lightning speed and a jazz-fueled taste for improvisation and adventure, Bryant's boogies, polkas, and Western swing -- recorded with West and as a solo artist -- remain among the most exciting instrumental country recordings of all time. Bryant also waxed major contributions to the early recordings of singers like Tennessee Ernie Ford, Merrill Moore, Kay Starr, Billy May, and Ella Mae Morse, and has influenced country guitarists like Buck Owens, James Burton, and Albert Lee. While he enjoyed a career that spanned several decades, it was his sessions with Capitol Records in the early '50s that allowed him his fullest freedom to strut his stuff.

Bryant was a prodigy on the fiddle while growing up in Georgia and Florida. He only took up guitar when he got wounded while serving in the Army in 1945, mastering the instrument quickly during his recuperation. In the late 1940s he moved to Los Angeles, hooking up in jam sessions with West, the first pedal steel guitarist in country music. Bryant soon joined a group of musicians, also including West, that played on Cliffie Stone's Hometown Jamboree radio show, and the West connection also helped him land session work at Capitol Records (though he'd previously done a bit of work for Modern Records). It was only natural that he and West began to record under their own names for Capitol too, while continuing to back other's acts in the studio. During this time Bryant was also one of the first musicians of note to play the electric Telecaster, a model that's become legendary and hugely influential in the sound of the electric guitar throughout popular music.

Bryant became harder to work with by the mid-1950s, in part because of his heavy drinking, and he did his last Capitol recordings with West in late 1956. He'd never be as active in the studio again, and most fans regard his 1950s Capitol output as his best by far. But he did continue to play live and in the studio, doing quite a bit of obscure recordings in the 1960s in Hollywood and Nashville, mostly for the Imperial label. (A lot of his post-West material finally found wide circulation in 2003 with Sundazed's three-CD box set Frettin' Fingers: The Lightning Guitar of Jimmy Bryant, which was about evenly divided between the West and post-West eras). He only did a little recording after the 1960s, dying of cancer in September 1980 back in his native Georgia.

Link 1 :http://www.megaupload.com/?d=YCDFM9O7

Link 2 : http://www.megaupload.com/?d=RQ6EY9JA

Link 3 : http://www.megaupload.com/?d=SBAQ6KV0


ENJOY !!!