Reason To Believe is from Tim Hardin's debut album, Tim Hardin 1, recorded in 1965.
Tim Hardin died of a heroin overdose in 1980.
Reason To Believe is from Tim Hardin's debut album, Tim Hardin 1, recorded in 1965.
Tim Hardin died of a heroin overdose in 1980.
A few of the comments yesterday mentioned Kate, and I realized I miss her and hadn't played any of her music in a long while. I've remedied that.
This is from Gold In California: A Retrospective Of Recordings 1975-1985.
This is from Parables & Primes released in 2005. I find him a story teller, a poet.
This is the title song of an album originally released in 1977 and re-released in 1996.
Today is Flag Day! On May 30, 1916, President Woodrow Wilson issued a presidential proclamation establishing a national Flag Day on June 14. Many Americans celebrate Flag Day by displaying the Red, White and Blue in front of homes and businesses. The day commemorates the adoption of the Stars and Stripes as the official flag of the United States.
On June 14, 1777, John Adams spoke about the flag at a meeting of the Continental Congress in Philadelphia. He said, "Resolved, that the flag of the thirteen United States shall be thirteen stripes, alternate red and white; that the Union be thirteen stars, white on a blue field, representing a new constellation." There have been twenty-seven official versions of the flag so far; stars have been added to it as states have entered the Union. The current version dates to July 4, 1960, when Hawaii became the 50th state.
This is The 33rd Illinois Volunteer Regiment Band.
Today's music was inspired by what I heard on the radio and what I read in today's paper. It is an odd sort of inspiration, driven by Crispian St. Peter's obituary.
From the article about Salif Keita: "As anyone who has seen him knows, Keita, the great singer from Mali and a crucial figure in modern African music, is an albino. The condition, which manifests through depigmentation of the skin and eyes, can result in extreme photosensitivity, vision problems, and a heightened risk of skin cancer.
But albinos face human dangers as well: isolation, scorn, and worse. Keita knows: In his youth, it was prejudice that pushed him toward music to express himself and find a vocation, when his aristocratic lineage (his family is said to descend from medieval emperor Sundiata) ought to have precluded crossing caste lines.
In Keita’s case, the happy outcome was a distinguished career, first in the classic Malian bands of the 1970s, the Rail Band and Les Ambassadeurs du Motel, and under his own name since the 1980s. His latest album, “La Différence,’’ features top-notch Malian musicians as well as guitarist Bill Frisell, trumpeter Ibrahim Maalouf, and a Lebanese string section. It brings Keita to the Somerville Theatre on Thursday."
On the way home from breakfast, I heard an NPR interview with Jeff Beck about his new album, Emotion and Commotion; hence, Jeff Beck's roots came to mind.
Crispian St. Peters, a British pop singer of the ’60s best known for his buoyant hit Pied Piper and his soulful version of You Were on My Mind died on Tuesday at his home in Swanley, Kent, England. He was 71.
In 1966, Mr. St. Peters recorded Pied Piper,which reached No. 1 in Canada and the Top 10 in Britain and the United States.