Hammond's bass player (Marty Ballou) was still on a plane in Washington, D.C., when the band took the stage, so Mountain Stage bassist Steve Hill filled in, flanked by Stephen Hodges on drums and Bruce Katz on piano and organ.
Hammond performs a set of fresh pieces here.
He combines the new and the classic in "I'm Tore Down," which features a refrain by '40s and '50s bandleader Sonny Thompson with additional lyrics by Push Come to Shove producer G. Love.
Hammond tells the story of meeting Dion Dimucci (of late-'50s group Dion and the Belmonts) before covering Dimucci's 2008 song "If You Wanna Rock and Roll."
SET LIST
- "Push Comes to Shove"
- "Come On in This House"
- "I'm Tore Down"
- "If You Wanna Rock and Roll"
At 19, John Hammond hitchhiked to Los Angeles to start his career — and, in part, to remove himself from the long shadow of his father, John Henry Hammond.
A well-known A&R executive, Hammond's father brought Bessie Smith, Big Joe Turner and Bob Dylan, among many others, to the forefront of American music.
Now, 40 years and more than 4,000 gigs later, John Hammond has influenced and inspired many young blues artists, just the way he himself was inspired by greats like Sonny Boy Williamson, John Lee Hooker and Willie Dixon.
A great interpreter of classic blues, Hammond has recently begun penning his own songs.
In his long career, he's built a repertoire that spans decades and generations, and has helped to preserve and perpetuate the blues tradition while building up a legacy of his own.
He performs two of his own songs, "Heartache Blues" and "You Know That's Cold," here on Mountain Stage, and he also pays tribute to Guitar Slim in "Mean Ol' Train."
Hammond also revisits one of his most popular phases with "Get Behind the Mule," a song written by Tom Waits and Kathleen Brennan and included on the seminal Hammond record of Waits material, Wicked Grin.
To round out the set, Mountain Stage pianist Bob Thompson performs Duke Ellington's "In a Sentimental Mood."
This segment originally ran Oct. 24, 2008.
SET LIST
- "Mean Ol' Lonesome Train"
- "Heartache Blues"
- "Get Behind the Mule"
- "You Know That's Cold"
- * Performed by Bob Thompson on piano
Eric Clapton I'm Tore Down Live
Eric Clapton Someday After a While
3 commentaires:
Superbes enregistrements. J'ai particulièrement aimé la version de I'm Tore Down, chanson que j'aime beaucoup puisque appartenant au répertoire de l'un de mes artistes préférés : Freddie King. Et comme ce fut l'un des pères spirituels de Clapton, je ne résiste pas à l'envie de linker une version de cette chanson interprétée par God :
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=djRAF_ph3TQ&feature=related
Chaire de poule assurée à chaque fois que j'écoute ce solo...
" Nothing but the Blues "
Sir David!
Quel punch : voix et guitare associées;rien ne lui va mieux que le Blues;le reste n'est que bonne distraction.
Eric c'est comme le meilleur old bushes 400 ans ou plus Rocher d'Akira:du vrai du pur du dur.
Merci.
. PHILIPPE .
Oh oui ! Si tu ne l'as pas fait, mate Nothing but the Blues en entier. Scorcese qui suit Clapton dans une tournée où il se livre totalement sur scène, pour moi, y a pas beaucoup mieux dans le domaine du live. Les versions sont choisies aux petits oignons. Que du bon. Je l'ai dans mon baladeur depuis des lustres, et il me suit partout ! Avec d'autres bien entendu...
Crois moi, pour quelqu'un qui connait Clapton, les versions de ce "film" sont sans doute ses meilleures.
Pour info, c'est la tournée de "From the Craddle" un des must have d'EC, avec la version "off" de "Me and Mister Johnson" (DVD).
Rien que d'en parler...
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