Tag Archives: November Music et al

November 9 Music Beatles James Brown

November 9 Music Beatles James Brown

The Beatles

Cavern Club
Beatles in the Cavern Club
Beatles in the Cavern Club

On November 9, 1961 The Beatles performed at the Cavern Club at lunchtime. That night they appeared at Litherland Town Hall, Liverpool (their final performance at that venue).

This was a major day for The Beatles, although they are unaware of it at the time–in the audience at the Cavern Club show was Brian Epstein, dressed in his pin-stripe suit and seeing The Beatles for the first time.

Accompanying Epstein was his assistant Alistair Taylor. Epstein will recall his first impressions in a 1964 interview: “They were fresh and they were honest, and they had:star quality. Whatever that is, they had it, or I sensed that they had it.” Over the next few weeks, Epstein becomes more and more interested in possibly managing The Beatles and he does a lot of research into just exactly what that would entail. When he speaks with the group’s embittered ex-manager Allan Williams, he is told, “Brian, don’t touch ’em with a fucking bargepole.” Nonetheless, Epstein invited The Beatles to a meeting at his record store on December 3.

Five years later…
November 9 Music Beatles James Brown
Yoko Ono poster for show at The Indica Gallery
November 9 Music Beatles James Brown

Yoko Ono @ The Indica Gallery

November 9, 1966: John Lennon visited the Indica Gallery in London where he met Yoko Ono who was displaying her art. The Indica Gallery was in the basement of the Indica Bookshop in Mason’s Yard, just off Duke Street in Mayfair, London and co-owned by John Dunbar, Peter Asher, and Barry Miles, and was supported in its early years by Paul McCartney.

November 9 Music Beatles James Brown

James Brown

Say It Loud, I’m Black and I’m Proud
November 9 Music Beatles James Brown
James Brown

November 9, 1968: singer James Brown gave support to the civil rights movement with his song, “Say It Loud — I’m Black and I’m Proud (Part 1),” which hit number one on the R & B charts for a record sixth straight week.

From schmoop.com: …the song was also – more of a rarity for the Godfather of Soul – deeply political. “Say It Loud (I’m Black and I’m Proud)” was almost a revolutionary statement in 1968, and one laced with more than a little bit of irony. Brown said he recorded the tune as a kind of children’s song, hoping to instill pride in the younger generation. But many whites heard it only as militant and angry, costing Brown a good chunk of his interracial crossover audience. And those kids happily shouting out the chorus, “I’m black and I’m proud”? In another ironic twist, most of them were actually white or Asian schoolchildren.

November 9 Music Beatles James Brown

November 6 Music et al

November 6 Music et al

Jimmy Dean, “Big Bad John”

November 6 Music et al
Jimmy Dean

November 6 – December 10, 1961: “Big Bad John” by Jimmy Dean was #1 on the Billboard Hot 100. Dean and Roy Acuff composed song. It was released in September 1961 and won Dean the 1962 Grammy Award fir Best Country and Western Recording.

November 6 Music et al

Bill Graham

San Francisco Mime Troupe
November 6 Music et al
poster announcing the fundraiser for the San Franciso Mime Group

November 6, 1965: promoter Bill Graham put on his first show, a benefit for the radical San Francisco Mime Troupe at the Calliope Warehouse in San Francisco. He did it to raise money for a legal defense fund for a member of the troupe who been arrested a few days earlier. The troupe’s offices were in the warehouse and they figured they could hold about 400 – 500 people. The donation to get in was “at least $1.00”. About 4000 people showed up.

For entertainment, Bill hired a band who also rehearsed in the same warehouse. The band was the Jefferson Airplane. They played 3 songs. The Fugs and Lawrence Ferlinghetti were also on the bill. (see Dec 10)

November 6 Music et al

Rolling Stones, “Get Off of My Cloud”

November 6 Music et al
Get Off of My Cloud cover by the Rolling Stones

November 6 – 19, 1965, “Get Off of My Cloud” by the Rolling Stones was #1 on the Billboard Hot 100. It was written by Mick Jagger and Keith Richards and followed the successful “(I Can’t Get No) Satisfaction.”  The Rolling Stones had recorded “Get Off of My Cloud” in early September 1965 and released it that November. It remained at #1 for two weeks. The single was included on the Rolling Stone’s next album, December’s Children (And Everybody’s), released in December, 1965.

In a 1995 interview with Rolling Stone magazine, Jagger said, “That was Keith’s melody and my lyrics. … It’s a stop-bugging-me, post-teenage-alienation song. The grown-up world was a very ordered society in the early ’60s, and I was coming out of it. America was even more ordered than anywhere else. I found it was a very restrictive society in thought and behavior and dress.

November 6 Music et al

see Raccoon Creek Rock Festival for more

November 6 – 8, 1969: Livingston Gym, Denison University (Granville, OH). The Who. The Spirit and Johnny Winter. Supporting acts: Owen B, The Dust

November 6 Music et al

Grateful Dead 30 Days Dead

Grateful Dead 30 Days Dead

They’re BACK! And it’s already day 6!
Link to 30 Days

Since 2010, the Grateful Dead have given away a file a day of live music every day in November. From the Grateful Dead site:

The rumors are true! Each day in November we give away a high-quality MP3 download. That’s 30 days of unreleased Grateful Dead tracks from the vault, selected by Dead archivist and producer David Lemieux. Intrigued? We’re also going to put your knowledge to the test and give you the chance to win some sweet swag from the Dead.

If you’ve been here before, jump right in with the link below. If you need a little refresher, here’s how it all goes down:

You know your Ables from your Bakers from your C’s, but can your finely tuned ears differentiate the cosmic “comeback” tour from a spacey 70’s show? Each day we’ll post a free download from one of the Dead’s coveted shows. Will it be from that magical night at Madison Square Garden in ’93 or from way back when they were warming it up at Winterland? Is that Pigpen’s harmonica we hear? Brent on keys? Step right up and try your hand all November long and win prizes while you’re at it.

Guess the venue and date correctly and you’ll be automatically entered to win the prize of the day – a 2024 Grateful Dead Wall Calendar. Each day a winner will be selected at random, so take your time and make your best guess! Answer correctly and you will also be automatically entered to win the Grand Prize – a copy of our SOLD OUT HERE COMES SUNSHINE 1973 boxed set.

 

Grateful Dead 30 Days Dead

NOW!

2023’s first download was “Comes A Time” performed in Cleveland, OH, at the  Cleveland Public Auditorium on August 26, 1980 ]. It first appeared in 1971, was played in 1972, and then disappeared until 1976. It showed up occasionally for the next decade, but from 1987 to 1994, it was played only seven times.

If you want, you can enter the contest and guess or simply wait for the answer tomorrow.

Keep in mind that these are high quality live recordings and if you are only familiar with the song’s studio recording, live is where it’s at.   Of course, there will be the seques like a China/Rider or a Candyman/Cassidy or even a Help/Slipknot/Franklin’s Tower.

And even if you are familiar with a live version, remember how songs evolved, left a tour’s setlist for a few years, and came back renewed.

You can’ go wrong. 2022’s 30 downloads yielded  7 hours,  37 minutes  of previously unreleased Dead recordings. That’s right!

And so far (2010 – 2022), the site has given away over 3.4 days of music, or put another way, 393 files.

Open up.  The sun is shining on your back door.

Climb aboard!

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