On a Lighter Note…

Video of the Week: How Jimi Hendrix Discovered The Band Chicago

‘The soul of L.A.’: 20 years after his death, the stars are aligning for Warren Zevon

The late singer-songwriter Warren Zevon, whom Billy Joel, among others, successfully promoted for induction into the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame. (Michael Ochs Archives / Getty Images)

(via Los Angeles Times) BY MIKAEL WOOD

Shooter Jennings knew “Carmelita.” He knew “Lawyers, Guns and Money.” And of course he knew “Werewolves of London,” Warren Zevon’s 1978 rock hit about a “hairy-handed gent” on the prowl for “a big dish of beef chow mein.”

“It’s kind of the low-hanging fruit” of Zevon’s catalog, Jennings says of “Werewolves,” which after scraping the top 20 of Billboard’s Hot 100 went on to reach new audiences in the late 2000s when Kid Rock borrowed its strutting groove for his song “All Summer Long.”

But until three or four years ago, Jennings — the Los Angeles-based musician and Grammy-winning producer whose father is the late outlaw-country pioneer Waylon Jennings — had never dug deeply into Zevon’s work. That’s when a friend pushed him to check out “Desperados Under the Eaves,” the gut punch of a closer from Zevon’s self-titled 1976 LP in which the booze-soaked narrator contemplates his sorry situation from an air-conditioned room at the Hollywood Hawaiian Hotel…

Read more: https://www.latimes.com/entertainment-arts/music/story/2023-01-31/warren-zevon-rock-hall-of-fame-shooter-jennings

Video of the Week: Anglo Concertina – How Does It Work?

5 Reasons Why “My Generation” Is So Awesome

(via CultureSonar) by ADAM LEADBEATER

“My Generation” by The Who is a quintessential part of British culture and an important component in the evolution of contemporary rock music.

Although recorded nearly sixty years ago, in the midst of ‘love obsessed’ pop tunes, The Who’s debut single sounds as exciting, unique, and fabulously frenzied as the day it first struck the ears of mid-60s teens.

Penned by guitarist Pete Townshend, this classic rock hit immediately became a manifesto for youths tip-toeing through a post-war social minefield whilst desperately scrambling to forge an identity they could be proud of.

“My Generation” is still considered an underclass masterpiece in many quarters. The song defines a moment, both in terms of musical craft and its embodiment of an entire subculture’s spirit. Here are five reasons why it rules…

Read more: https://www.culturesonar.com/5-reasons-why-my-generation-is-so-awesome/?mc_cid=b38df62a86&mc_eid=b43e532c6f

Video of the Week: Guitarist Replicates the Solos of Steely Dan’s ‘The Royal Scam’

From Tom’s Facebook page:

This is the quintessential Steely Dan guitar album featuring the iconic Kid Charlemagne solo from Larry Carlton along with a bucketful of amazing solos from Elliott Randall, Denny Dias, Walter Becker and Dean Parks. Sit back and enjoy!

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My gear for this video:

Epiphone Casino

Gibson SG Standard

Logic Pro X

Steinberg CI2 Audio Interface

Fender Rosewood Telecaster

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