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Three @eltonjohn Albums That Stood The Test of Time

“Goodbye Yellow Brick Road” – 1973

When most people think of Elton John, they think of this 1973 album. It’s packed with most of John’s greatest hits, including “Bennie And The Jets,” “Candle In The Wind,” “Saturday Night’s Alright for Fighting,” and “Goodbye Yellow Brick Road.”

It’s peak Elton John when he was at his most popular and had become a household name. It’s a very commercial album, but that didn’t stop John from inserting the controversial track “All The Girls Love Alice” which follows the story of a dead teenage lesbian prostitute. Top-tier stuff.

“Madman Across The Water” – 1971

We can’t talk about Elton John’s greatest albums without mentioning that his partner in crime Bernie Taupin wrote the vast majority of his songs. A great example of Taupin’s songwriting prowess is the 1971 hit album “Madman Across The Water.”

To put it simply, it’s a very strange (but good) album. The opener has some progressive rock leanings and is narrated by a psychopath in an insane asylum. The hit single “Levon” is almost impossible to decipher lyrically. “Tiny Dancer” shines as the major hit from the album.

“Captain Fantastic And The Brown Dirt Cowboy” – 1975

Elton John was already riding the waves at the peak of his career when he released “Captain Fantastic And The Brown Dirt Cowboy.” However, he wanted to create a concept album. And he wanted the concept to be the early days of his career. 

This 1975 album was a fantastic journey for fans of John, even if it wasn’t the most radio-friendly album of his career. He made no effort to write songs that would become hits, though “Someone Saved My Life Tonight” did climb the charts. 

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On this day May 12, 1972 @therollingstones released “Exile on Main Street.”

Exile exhibited a wider range of influences in blues, rock and roll, swing, country and gospel, while the lyrics explored themes related to hedonism, sex and time.

The album contains frequently-performed concert staples and topped the charts worldwide. The album included the singles “Happy,” which featured lead vocals from Keith Richards, country music ballad “Sweet Virginia,” and worldwide top-ten hit “Tumbling Dice.”

The album’s artwork, a collage of various images, reflected the Rolling Stones’ prideful rebellion.

“Exile on Main St.” was originally met with mixed reviews before receiving strong reassessments by the end of the 1970s. It has since been recognized as a pivotal hard rock album, viewed by many critics as the Rolling Stones’ best work and as one of the greatest albums of all time.

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50 Years Ago @ledzeppelin Had a “Dream Come True” Meeting @elvis.

Fifty years ago, on May 11, 1974, the King of Rock ‘n’ Roll came face to face with three members of one of the great hard-rock bands of all time.

That night, Led Zeppelin’s Robert Plant, Jimmy Page, and John Bonham went to see Elvis Presley play a show at the Los Angeles Forum, then met the rock ‘n’ roll icon.

As Plant explained in a 2005 interview with music journalist Bill Flanagan, he idolized Presley and was thrilled to have the opportunity to meet him. At the same time, Presley was curious about this band that was “selling out tickets quicker than him.”

During the concert, Presley stopped his backing band when they flubbed the intro to his rendition of Willie Nelson’s “Funny How Time Slips Away.”

As heard in a recording of the show, Elvis said, “Wait a minute. If we could start together, fellows, because we’ve got Led Zeppelin out there. Let’s try to look like we know what we’re doing, whether we do or not.”

Plant recalled getting emotional to hear Presley acknowledge his band.
“[After] I mopped the tears away … we got the nod that we were going to meet him afterwards,” Plant told Flanagan. “And we went to the hotel. They had the entire top floor.”

The singer remembered being brought into a suite and waiting for Presley to enter the room, and how excited he was when Elvis finally did.

“The door opened and this guy came through the door and my heart jumped,” Plant said. “It was like, ‘Whoa, look at the way he moves!’ … He was so, so, so cool.”

During his conversation with Elvis, Plant shared, he told Presley that when Led Zeppelin would do a soundcheck in an arena, he’s sometimes sing Elvis’ hit ballad “Love Me.”

Later, as Plant was leaving for the elevator at the end of the night, Presley called to him and starting singing “Love Me,” and Robert began singing the tune back to him.

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Happy birthday to @officialericburdon lead vocalist of The Animals and War born on this day May 11, 1941.

Burdon is regarded as one of the British Invasion’s most distinctive singers with his deep, powerful blues-rock voice and his intense stage performances.

The Animals combined electric blues with rock; in the US they were considered one of the leading bands of the British Invasion.

Burdon’s powerful voice can be heard on the Animals’ singles “The House of the Rising Sun,” “Don’t Let Me Be Misunderstood,” “We Gotta Get Out of This Place,” “It’s My Life”, “Don’t Bring Me Down”, “See See Rider”, “Help Me Girl,”“Monterey,” “Sky Pilot” and many others.

In 1969, while living in San Francisco, Burdon joined forces with California funk rock band War.

In April 1970, the resulting studio album was titled Eric Burdon Declares “War” which produced the singles “Spill the Wine” and “Tobacco Road.”

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Happy birthday to Donovan Leitch born on this day May 10, 1946. The Scottish musician, songwriter and record producer emerged from the British folk scene in early 1965, and subsequently scored multiple international hit singles and albums during the late 1960s.

His work became emblematic of the flower power era with its blend of folk, pop, psychedelic rock, and jazz stylings.

In September 1966 Donovan’s “Sunshine Superman” topped the charts worldwide followed by the hits “Mellow Yellow,” “Hurdy Gurdy Man” and Wear Your Love Like Heaven.”

Donovan became friends with many prominent musicians including @thebeatles.

In 1968 Donovan was part of the group that traveled to the ashram of Maharishi Mahesh Yogi in Rishikesh. The visit gained worldwide attention thanks to the presence of all four Beatles as well as Beach Boys lead singer Mike Love, as well as actress Mia Farrow and her sister Prudence (who inspired Lennon to write “Dear Prudence”).

According to a 1968 Paul McCartney interview with Radio Luxembourg, it was during this time that Donovan taught Lennon and McCartney finger-picking guitar styles including the clawhammer, which he had learned from Mac MacLeod.

Lennon used this technique on songs including “Dear Prudence,” “Julia,”“Happiness is a Warm Gun” and McCartney with “Blackbird” and “Mother Nature’s Son.”

Donovan was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 2012 and the Songwriters Hall of Fame in 2014.

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Tune in to this Saturday’s “Mick Martin’s Blues Party” (10am-Noon, Pacific) on K-ZAP as Mick spins classic and new blues from Toronzo Cannon, Jack Hadley, Little Feat, Celsio Salim & Darryl Carriere, Canned Heat and MUCH MORE!
Get MMBP on the stream at k-zap.org, on the K-ZAP Apple or Android apps, or on the dial at 93.3FM in the Metro Sacramento area.
Catch up on archived MMBP at mickmartinblues.podbean.com/
Slip in to your own MMBP shirt in 3 shades of blues at k-zap.org/product/sacramentos-k-zap-mick-martin-blues-party/
Donate to MMBP at k-zap.org/blues
Join Mick and Dennis Newhall for MMBP this Saturday, 10am-Pacific. Thank you to Frank Farmer for all the tech wizardy for each weeks MMBP.
MMBP receives awesome support from Powerhouse Pub in Folsom (powerhousepub.com) and autoaccident.com.
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Carmine Appice announces new Cactus album with massive all-star lineup.

“Temple of Blues” - Influences & Friends” features contributions from Joe Bonamassa, Pat Travers, Warren Haynes, Vernon Reid and many more.

Original Cactus guitarist Jim McCarty also appears on the album, as does Appice’s Vanilla Fudge bandmate Mark Stein, who sings on a cover of Little Richard’s “Long Tall Sally.”

“The music of Cactus has always been steeped in blues tradition,” says Appice. “We kept hearing from so many of our music celebrity friends how much Cactus influenced them and how they would love to be a guest on a Cactus album.“

Cactus: “Temple of Blues - Influences & Friends” tracklist
1. Parchman Farm feat. Joe Bonamassa & Billy Sheehan (Mr. Big / David Lee Roth)
2. Bro. Bill feat. Randy Jackson (Zebra), Randy Pratt (Cactus) & Bob Daisley (Ozzy Osbourne)
3. Guiltless Glider feat. Ron “Bumblefoot” Thal (Guns N’ Roses) & Phil Soussan (Ozzy Osbourne)
4. Evil feat. Dee Snider (Twisted Sister) & Dug Pinnick (King’s X)
5. One Way...Or Another feat. Dug Pinnick (King’s X) & Ted Nugent
6. Alaska feat. Johnny A. & Tony Franklin (The Firm)
7. No Need To Worry feat. Warren Haynes (Gov’t Mule) & Jorgen Carlsson (Gov’t Mule)
8. Oleo feat. Steve Stevens (Billy Idol) & Billy Sheehan (Mr. Big / David Lee Roth)
9. Big Mama Boogie feat. Pat Travers & James Caputo (Cactus)
10. You Can’t Judge A Book By The Cover|
11. Rock N’ Roll Children feat. Britt Lightning (Vixen), Vernon Reid (Living Colour) & Rudy Sarzo (Quiet Riot)
12. Let Me Swim feat. Doug Aldrich (Whitesnake) & Marco Mendoza (Blue Murder)
13. Restrictions feat. Ty Tabor (King’s X) & Phil Soussan (Ozzy Osbourne)
14. Long Tall Sally feat. Mark Stein (Vanilla Fudge) & Fernando Perdomo 
Bonus Track
15. Guiltless Glider feat. Tim “Ripper” Owens (Judas Priest)

Catch the stream at k-zap.org, on the k-zap apps or at 93.3 FM in the metro Sacramento area.
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Who sang lead vocals on the most songs by The Beatles?

@thebeatles did not start out with an undisputed leader. As Paul McCartney and George Harrison have both attested to, John Lennon was the one the others looked to as their main man.

As such, Lennon was also arguably The Beatles’ first lead singer, a role he soon found himself sharing with songwriting partner Paul McCartney.

Nonetheless, McCartney’s songwriting and vocal abilities made him the perfect complement for Lennon, and it was actually a McCartney-led composition that became the band’s first single.

‘Love Me Do’ was released in 1962, with McCartney singing the lead vocals of the middle eight, while sharing the lead harmonies of the verses with Lennon.

It was a McCartney lead vocal that first appeared on American television as well, as The Beatles opened their historic first 1964 set on The Ed Sullivan Show with ‘All My Loving.’

Just over a month later, McCartney became the first Beatle to feature as the sole lead vocalist on a single release, with his composition ‘Can’t Buy Me Love.’

The Beatles no longer had a band leader per se. If anything, in the band’s later years, McCartney would be taking charge of things from album concepts to business decisions.

So was McCartney more of a lead singer in The Beatles than Lennon?

For argument’s sake, any song which features one of The Beatles on lead vocals, even just for a short section, will count towards their total, as will joint-lead vocals.

So ‘Love Me Do’ goes to both McCartney and Lennon, for example.

Unsurprisingly, the Beatle with the lowest total number of lead vocals is drummer Ringo Starr, with 13. George Harrison is one up on the list with lead vocal parts on 36 different songs.

Between Lennon and McCartney, the totals are much closer. Paul McCartney has 106 songs on which he sings lead or joint-lead vocals.

But it’s John Lennon who comes out on top, with a whopping 115 lead vocal parts. Not bad, for a recording period spanning just seven years.

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Happy birthday to Rock & Roll Hall of Famer and Traffic co-founder @davemasonmusic born on this day May 10, 1946.

Mason served three stints with Traffic beginning with their first two albums.

Mason has went on to play with many pop and rock musicians, including Paul McCartney, George Harrison, the Rolling Stones, Jimi Hendrix, Eric Clapton, Michael Jackson, David Crosby, Graham Nash, Steve Winwood, Fleetwood Mac, Delaney & Bonnie, Leon Russell, and Cass Elliot.

One of Mason’s best known songs “Feelin’ Alright” became a hit for Joe Cocker in 1969 and later for many others. Mason’s “Only You Know and I Know” became a signature song for Delaney and Bonnie.

Mason’s first solo album “Alone Together” is considered a classic.

Mason is a proponent of music education for children. In 2005, he signed on as an official supporter of Little Kids Rock, a non-profit organization that provides free musical instruments and lessons to children in American public schools. He sits on the organization’s board of directors as an honorary member.

Mason and his longtime friend Ted Knapp have founded Rock Our Vets, an all-volunteer charity supported by many other musicians, helping military veterans and the families of law enforcement and firefighters who lost their lives in the line of duty. The charity has focused on providing food and clothing to homeless veterans, laptop computers for veterans.

Catch the stream at k-zap.org, on the k-zap apps or at 93.3 FM in the metro Sacramento area.
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🎶 Hey there, fellow Deadheads and music lovers! 🎶

Are you ready to embark on a psychedelic journey through time and space with Sacramento`s K-ZAP? Join us tonight and every Thursday night at 9pm Pacific for The Grateful Dead Hour, where our cosmic captain David Gans shares rare and mind-blowing live recordings from his interstellar collection of Grateful Dead tunes!

This week, fasten your seatbelts and prepare to have your minds blown with Grateful Dead`s performance on 3/27/86 from the Cumberland County Civic Center in Portland, ME. Get ready for an out-of-this-world experience with these cosmic jams:

🎸 REVOLUTIONARY HAMSTRUNG BLUES 🎸
🎸 BERTHA 🎸
🎸 WANG DANG DOODLE 🎸
🎸 BIG RAILROAD BLUES 🎸
🎸 SUPPLICATION 🎸
🎸 PROMISED LAND 🎸

And as if that wasn`t enough to send you into cosmic bliss, we`ll also be grooving to the Jerry Garcia Band`s performance from the legendary album GarciaLive vol 21 (Round Records). Get ready for a musical voyage with this stellar track:

🎶 THE HARDER THEY COME 🎶

So, what are you waiting for? Get out your tie-dyed K-ZAP shirts, light some incense, turn on the lava lamp, and sink into your favorite recliner for a mind-bending hour of Grateful Dead music on K-ZAP.

Tune in online at K-ZAP.org, the K-ZAP Apple & Android apps, or catch us in the Metro Sacramento area at 93.3FM. Don`t forget to share your cosmic experiences using the hashtags #kzap, #sacramento, #gratefuldeadhour, #DavidGans, and #Filmorewest.

This Thursday night, 9 Pacific on Sacramento`s K-ZAP, prepare to have your mind blown and your soul set free! 🚀

Remember, the Grateful Dead Hour is where the music never stops, and the good vibes are always groovin`. See you there, fellow space cadets! 🌌🎶
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Happy birthday to Rock & Roll Hall of Fame member Ritchie Furay born on this day May 9, 1944.

Furay formed Buffalo Springfield with Neil Young and Stephen Stills and was one of the band’s three lead singers.

Furay sang lead for Buffalo Springfield on the Neil Young-penned songs “Nowadays Clancy Can’t Even Sing,” and “Do I Have to Come Right and Say it” and his own composition “Kind Woman.”

He later went on to form country rock band Poco with Randy Meisner, Jim Messina and Timothy B. Schmidt.

Catch the stream at k-zap.org, on the k-zap apps or at 93.3 FM in the metro Sacramento area.
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On this day May 9,1970 The Guess Who topped the charts for the first and only time with their anthem “American Woman.”

The song came about by accident when guitarist Randy Bachman was playing a heavy riff on stage after he had broken a string and the band had taken a break.

The other members joined in on the jam and lead singer Burton Cummings started singing the first thing that came into his head. A fan in the audience captured it all on tape and presented it to the group after the show. It was quickly developed into a full song in the studio and ended as the band’s biggest hit.

Catch the stream at k-zap.org, on the k-zap apps or at 93.3 FM in the metro Sacramento area.
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This week’s Rush Hour Blues gets you ready for @callmekingfish’s May 16 show at @the.centerofthearts

Join Sacramento’s K-ZAP this Friday, 5p as your host Cale Wiggins digs into the music of this defining blues’ voice of his generation. Keep a particular ear out for a rare live track from this young bluesman.

RHB is sponsored by @blackrockauto,1313 C Street, Sacramento. “They can do stuff.”

Catch the stream at k-zap.org, on the k-zap apps or at 93.3 FM in the metro Sacramento area.
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On this day May 8, 1970 @thebeatles released “Let It Be” their twelfth and final studio album.

The album’s release came a month after the group’s public break-up, in tandem with the documentary of the same name.

Concerned about recent friction within the band, Paul McCartney had conceived the project as an attempt to reinvigorate the group by returning to simpler rock ‘n’ roll configurations.

“Let It Be” contains some of The Beatles most famous songs including “Get Back,” “Let It Be” and “I’ve Got A Feeling.”

In 2003 Paul McCartney, long unhappy with the original Phil Spector produced Let It Be LP, initiated a remix of the album, titled “Let It Be... Naked.”

The album was presented as an alternative attempt to capture the original artistic vision of the project, to “get back” to the rock and roll sound of the band’s early years.

The album features alternate takes, edits, and mixes of the songs, mainly removing elements added by Spector. The album omits the group chatter, “Maggie Mae” and “Dig It,” and adds a live rooftop performance of “Don’t Let Me Down,” a song omitted from the original album and issued as the B side of the “Get Back” single in 1969.

Catch the stream at k-zap.org, on the k-zap apps or at 93.3 FM in the metro Sacramento area.
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“We shall return” - Is Chris Frantz teasing a @talkingheadsofficial reunion?

Talking Heads drummer Chris Frantz has sparked rumours of a possible reunion of the band with a social media post reading: “We shall return.”

Frantz posted an image on his Instagram page of a black and white theatre marquee with the main banner saying “TALKING HEADS,” alongside “Dec 13, 14, 15, 16, 8pm,” and “Tix at all ticketron outlets.”

The image has a lot of historic meaning for the New York new wave legends. The Pantages Theatre is famously where the band recorded their iconic live movie and album ‘Stop Making Sense’ in December 1983. Fans are speculating that this image and message might be a sign of the band returning to the stage.

This could however, simply be referring to the fact that the band will be returning to the Los Angeles venue for a Q&A and screening of the film next month.

On June 4, A Night Of Stop Making Sense will see the band talk about the iconic film alongside a performance from Blondshell.

The four musicians have had a complicated relationship since their breakup in 1991. They reunited in 1999 to promote the 15th-anniversary reissue of the film, while in 2002, they came together to perform four songs at the Rock and Roll Hall Of Fame induction ceremony – their only live performance since 1984.

Catch the stream at k-zap.org, on the k-zap apps or at 93.3 FM in the metro Sacramento area.
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@thereallerxst says he’s jamming with @geddyimages again – but they sound like a “really bad tribute band” at times.

In a new interview with Rolling Stone, Lifeson unveils what’s happening behind the scenes and why there are currently no plans to take their songs out on the road.

“It’s funny because we sound like a really bad tribute band for the first three or four run-throughs on these things,” he reveals. “It’s ‘Oh, my God, what did I play there? Why did I play that so hard?

“And then muscle memory kicks in, and we’re having a ball doing it. It’s good for the fingers. We’re together in a room like we’ve always been. That’s been really good, but there’s no chance that we’re going to get a drummer and go back on the road as the rebirth of @rush or something like that. And if we wanted to write new material, nobody cares about new material anymore. They just want to hear the old stuff from guys like us.”

Despite these recent jamming sessions and Lee publicly talking about a possible live reunion, Lifeson doubled down that he’s not convinced they should tour again, particularly because of his recent health issues. 

“No, we’ve talked about it in depth, and I was waffling between maybe considering it and not. And then my health issues came up. I know if we went on the road, it couldn’t be like we used to do it.”

In a recent interview with Guitar World, Lifeson explained how doing the book tour with Lee for the bassist’s memoir My Effin’ Life, and their reunion for 2022’s Taylor Hawkins tribute shows temporarily reignited his passion for touring.

“So for a little while I thought, you know, it’d be kind of good to get back out,” he mused. “And then I thought… nah, not really.”

However, he didn’t exclude any further song collaborations with Lee. “I mean, we toured for 40 years. I’m not interested in going back out on tour. I don’t wanna sit in a hotel room for hours and hours and hours to work for a couple of hours. 

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@thetubesgroup’ Debut Album By Flamboyant New Wave Headline-Grabbers

The 1975 debut album by the larger-than-life San Francisco band.

A significant contribution to the new wave of music that was bubbling up from the underground in 1975, in both Europe and America, came from the San Francisco sound of the larger-than-life Tubes. The band’s self-titled debut album released in June 1975.

The Tubes teamed the flamboyant group, fronted by Fee Waybill, with the production skills of widely-travelled rocker Al Kooper. The group had come together in San Francisco from origins among school friends in two bands, the Beans and the Red, White and Blues Band, back in Arizona.

Drummer Prairie Prince, born in Charlotte, North Carolina on May 7, 1950, is also an accomplished artist, typifying the band’s broad palette. As the Tubes, their colorful songs and stage delivery soon won them a live audience.

The tongue-in-cheek and deliberately over-the-top “White Punks On Dope” would go on to be one of the songs that united the British and American new wave movements.

“It’s about a bunch of rich kids we knew,” said co-writer and Tubes guitarist Bill Spooner. “You see all those ads on TV about drugs in the ghetto, and they say, it’s not their fault. They were born poor, and all they had to turn to was drugs. Well, in San Francisco, we know a whole bunch of these kids that are so rich, and they’re all strung out, and they’re total derelicts. So you don’t have to be poor to be a derelict.”

From the outset of “Up From The Deep,” it’s an endearingly oddball, episodic soundscape with myriad influences, tempo changes, big strings and much more.

“Haloes,” for example, has a melodic and edgy urgency somewhat reminiscent of Todd Rundgren, with a great drum pattern from Prairie Prince.

They typify a notable recording debut by a band who never took themselves too seriously, but had huge talent to reinforce their individuality.

Catch the stream at k-zap.org, on the k-zap apps or at 93.3 FM in the metro Sacramento area.
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@mikecampbellofficial Recruits Chris Stapleton, Graham Nash for New LP ‘Vagabonds, Virgins & Misfits’

His third record with the Dirty Knobs, out June 14, also features guest spots by @lucinda_williams and Tom Petty and the Heartbreakers keyboardist Benmont Tench.

Many of the songs on Vagabonds, Virgins & Misfits are new, but “Dare to Dream,” “Hands Are Tied,” “Angel of Mercy,” “Don’t Want Up,” and “Hell or High Water” all came from Campbell’s vast archive. “Back in the day, I would write songs and then give them to my partner Tom, and that’s all I ever did with them,” Campbell says. “I gave him so much he couldn’t possibly ever deal with it all. I stuck a lot up on the shelf for future assessment. And so here I am in the future and I pulled them out.”

Campbell and Williams swap lead vocals on the moving, country-tinged “Hell or High Water.” “Watching her sing almost brought me to tears,” says Campbell. “The song took on a whole new depth once she did her part. I was really lucky to get her.”

Campbell and the Dirty Knobs are kicking off a summer tour June 21 in Skokie, Illinois.

The set will focus on songs from the group’s three albums, but will dip into the Heartbreakers catalog: At their first show of 2024, they played “Listen to Her Heart,” “Fault Lines,” “Refugee,” “Rockin’ Around (With You),” “You Wreck Me,” and “Running Down a Dream.”

“I’m still grieving,” Campbell says. “It’s a bittersweet thing. We do an old song because I still miss my brother. But he’s still alive in those songs. I do those songs pretty close to how they should be done.“

Catch the stream at k-zap.org, on the k-zap apps or at 93.3 FM in the metro Sacramento area.
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On this evening May 7, 1967 @jeffersonairplane touring behind the recently released “Surrealistic Pillow” played UC Davis’ Freeborn Hall with the Steve Miller Blues’ Band.

The UCD concert was the band’s second show that day having played earlier at the Frost Amphitheater on the Stanford campus.

See the Sacramento setlist below:

* Somebody to Love 

* White Rabbit 

* She Has Funny Cars 

* Embryonic Journey

Catch the stream at k-zap.org, on the k-zap apps or at 93.3 FM in the metro Sacramento area.
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EVENTS

UPCOMING DATES

12 May 2024

13 May 2024

Golden 1 Center [Sacramento, CA 95814]

Pearl Jam Dark Matter World Tour 2024

15 May 2024

16 May 2024

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