R.E.M.- Maps and Legends- Santa Monica 1987
R.E.M. live acoustic “Maps and Legends” at McCabe’s Guitar Shop, Santa Monica May 1987
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R.E.M. live acoustic “Maps and Legends” at McCabe’s Guitar Shop, Santa Monica May 1987
James Taylor is my guest here In the Studio as we mark the golden anniversary of May 1975’s “Gorilla”.
“I’m probably the worst musician in the band,” admits Ray Davies of The Kinks In the Studio on the forty-fifth anniversary of The Kinks live album “One for the Road”. “They’re very good players, and this record shows them off as players as well.” Part one of my classic rock interview.
Simple Minds went to US #1 from performing the hit “Don’t You Forget About Me” in the soundtrack rolling under the end credits of the John Hughes Brat Pack movie “The Breakfast Club” in May 1985. But that’s just the beginning of the story of Simple Minds’ breakthrough album “Once Upon a Time”. We have lead singer/ lyricist Jim Kerr here In the Studio.
For Memorial Day Weekend 2025: “Echoes In the Studio”, the voices of & tributes to fallen rockers. Part three of four.
Bachman Turner Overdrive In the Studio with Randy Bachman for “Four Wheel Drive” 50th anniversary.
The Poet Laureate of Rock, Ray Davies of The Kinks, joins me In the Studio to answer many more questions here the week of May 25, framed by lively versions of “All Day and All of the Night”, “Lola”, “Celluloid Heroes”, “You Really Got Me”, “Victoria”, “Picture Book”, and others.
Was “Who Came First” a question or a declarative statement in October 1972? Pete Townshend joins me In the Studio for the answer on the golden anniversary of his first of many great solo albums, which we feature here.
For their 1975 “Fandango”, my guests Billy Gibbons, Dusty Hill, and Frank Beard in “That Little Ol’ Band from Texas” ZZ Top were tellin’ tall tales here In the Studio long before Netflix or Amazon Prime were ever invented! -Redbeard
the first time that I met legendary songwriter/ guitarist the late Teenie Hodges was at a Talking Heads record release party for “Fear of Music” in Memphis in 1979. Teenie had sought me out to introduce himself, since I had been influential in getting ROCK 103 Memphis to play the Talking Heads version of “Take Me to the River”, the soul classic originally co-written and recorded by Memphis legend Al Green.