Showing posts with label 2003. Show all posts
Showing posts with label 2003. Show all posts

Friday, May 22, 2026

Covered: Neil Young: Alternates, Volume 2: 2001-2007 (A Fabio from Rio Guest Post)

Here's the second volume out of four, of alternates for Neil Young's "Covered" series. As I explained in my write-up for Volume 1, guest poster Fabio from Rio did most of the legwork finding cover versions for the original ten volumes, but I had most of the say in picking which ones were ultimately chosen. So these four alternate volumes are kind of Fabio's "revenge," because he did the picking. There were only one or two songs I pointed out I didn't think were that strong.

There's not much else to say. As with Volume 1, about half the songs are different versions of covers chosen in the original ten volumes, and about half the songs are ones that only show up in these alternates volumes. 

This album is an hour and three minutes long. 

01 Dreamin' Man (Freebo)
02 Pressure (Ned Whattakiller)
03 This Note's for You (Royal Cat Club)
04 Pocahontas (Johnny Cash)
05 On the Beach (Radiohead)
06 Let It Shine (Ad Vanderveen)
07 Falling from Above (Jamey Darnold)
08 Hawks and Doves (Scott Miller & the Commonwealth)
09 Red Sun (Charlie Macon)
10 Without Rings (Scott Sandi)
11 The Needle and the Damage Done (Jorane)
12 Families (Gil Michaels)
13 Helpless (Elk City)
14 Cortez the Killer (Carrie Rodriguez with Tim Easton)
15 Ohio - Find the Cost of Freedom (Dalia)

https://pixeldrain.com/u/ySf9gd4c

alternate: 

https://bestfile.io/en/BLbNlIQ1jzvddqu/file

The cover image is from 1991 or thereabouts.

Thursday, April 9, 2026

Elliott Smith - The Steamboat, Austin, TX, 5-3-2003

I was listening to some Elliott Smith music yesterday, and I noticed that I'd never posted this concert from him. So I want to fix that ASAP, since it's an excellent concert. It's the best concert I've heard from 2003, the last year of his life. (He died on October 21, 2003, at the age of 34.) This is a solo acoustic concert.

What makes this concert recording stand out is the sound quality. It's an excellent soundboard bootleg. He was in good form, which wasn't always the case in 2003. He hadn't toured much since 2000, and he was playing a lot of new songs, some of which would end up on his 2004 album, "From a Basement on the Hill." It also ends with a nice cover of "Blackbird" by the Beatles. 

By the way, I've noticed there's a video of this entire concert on YouTube. This isn't sourced from that, though. The video quality isn't that good, but I thought I'd mention it for people who might want to watch it. 

This album is an hour and three minutes long.

01 Happiness (Elliott Smith)
02 Memory Lane (Elliott Smith)
03 Rose Parade (Elliott Smith)
04 Strung Out Again (Elliott Smith)
05 talk (Elliott Smith)
06 Plainclothes Man (Elliott Smith)
07 I Figured You Out (Elliott Smith)
08 St. Ides Heaven (Elliott Smith)
09 A Passing Feeling (Elliott Smith)
10 Division Day (Elliott Smith)
11 talk (Elliott Smith)
12 Between the Bars (Elliott Smith)
13 Twilight (Elliott Smith)
14 I Better Be Quiet Now (Elliott Smith)
15 talk (Elliott Smith)
16 Pretty [Ugly Before] (Elliott Smith)
17 Waltz No. 2 [XO] (Elliott Smith)
18 Satellite (Elliott Smith)
19 talk (Elliott Smith)
20 Coast to Coast (Elliott Smith)
21 Say Yes (Elliott Smith)
22 talk (Elliott Smith)
23 Blackbird (Elliott Smith)

https://pixeldrain.com/u/H56xYJ42

alternate:

https://bestfile.io/en/hRfx7N2IVC2fHqT/file

The cover image is from a concert at the University of London Union, in London, Britain, on March 30, 2003.

Thursday, March 12, 2026

Various Artists - Covered: Neil Young, Volume 4: 1999-2005

Here’s the fourth album in the Neil Young covered series. Once again, thanks to Fabio from Rio for doing most of the work. I also want to mention that I have a long list of songwriters that I want to make Covered albums for. Many of the biggest ones, like Dylan, Lennon-McCartney, Jagger-Richard’s, Ray Davies, etc… are still to come. I’m sure I wouldn’t have gotten around to Young for a couple more years. But Fabio’s involvement and energy brought this one to the front of the line.

Here are Fabio’s comments about the time period of this volume:

By the turn of the millennium, Neil Young's songwriting had become a shared reference point for several generations of musicians. Musical artists from the folk revival, alt-country movement, and indie rock scene were all revisiting different eras of his catalog - from the fragile acoustic songs of the late sixties to the electric epics recorded with Crazy Horse. During this period, Young himself remained remarkably active, releasing albums such as "Silver and Gold" and "Greendale" while continuing to tour extensively. The covers gathered here reflect that generational dialogue: younger singer-songwriters, Americana performers, and alternative rock musicians rediscovering both famous classics and some of the most obscure corners of Young's songwriting. 

--- 

Note that Fabio wrote individual paragraphs about all the songs in this volume. To see that, please look at the Word file added to the download zip file. Thanks again to Fabio for his help putting these albums together. 

This album is an hour and one minute long. 

01 Piece of Crap (Slobberbone)
02 Pushed It Over the End (South Ontario)
03 Long Walk Home (MrChuck)
04 I've Been Waiting for You (David Bowie)
05 Running Dry [Requiem for the Rockets] (Steve Von Till)
06 Albuquerque (Walkabouts)
07 Pocahontas (Gillian Welch)
08 The Old Laughing Lady (Thea Gilmore)
09 Old Man (Wilson Phillips)
10 I Believe in You (Patricia O'Callaghan)
11 Helpless (k.d. lang)
12 Barstool Blues (Maria McKee)
13 Broken Arrow (Kate Rogers)
14 Last Trip to Tulsa (Leo Koster)
15 Roll Another Number [For the Road] (Mike McClure)

https://pixeldrain.com/u/xP2bMEgi

alternate: 

https://bestfile.io/en/F0bJfmxhH1onFkG/file

The cover photo is from 1975. The original was in black and white. I colorized it with the use of the Kolorize program. I also used the Krea AI program to improve details. 

I got a complaint that the cover image was ruined by AI. I don't think so. Here's the unaltered black and white original. As I've said elsewhere, I typically only use Krea AI to make minor changes, mostly with color and contrast. If you don't like the colorization and other changes, feel free to use this version. 

Friday, February 27, 2026

Various Artists - BBC Proms: Northern Soul, Royal Albert Hall, London, Britain, 7-15-2023

Here's something I randomly discovered due to it appearing on my YouTube suggestions. At first, it didn't look too appealing, because I wasn't familiar with any of the singers or other musicians. It turns out that's because they're not well known. But this is a BBC celebration of the musical genre "Northern Soul," and I really like Northern Soul. I gave it a listen, and I enjoy it very much. So here it is. If you're into Northern Soul, or soul music in general, you should give this a try.

For those who don't know, what is Northern Soul? As far as musical genres one, it's very strange, because it was mostly defined by the geography and tastes of people who came to love a certain kind of music. 

Being an American that lives far away from where all this happened, I only have a limited understanding. But from what I gather, in the mid-1960s, the British public basically discovered Motown and other soul music after many years where that music hadn't been available. Some people really fell in love with it. And when musical tastes changed around 1967 with psychedelic music and other musical trends, they still couldn't get enough of the danceable Motown-ish sound of soul music circa 1966. So, mostly in the midlands and northern parts of England, people kept listening to that sort of music, and dancing to it in clubs. Thus the name "Northern Soul," for Northern England. 

However, they soon got tired of the really big, well-known classics, and there was very little new music of this type being created. The solution was they dug deeper into obscurities, finding many worthy gems. Well into the 1970s (until disco in the late 1970s), there was a thriving music scene where many clubs played obscure American soul songs every weekend, allowing people to dance and party to that music late into the night. The music scene continued into the 1980s and beyond, though at a lesser level, with periodic revivals.  

Here's Wikipedia's article, which explains it better, and in more length, than I can:

Northern soul - Wikipedia

Anyway, so while Northern Soul isn't that different from the big soul hits of 1966 or thereabouts, there are hundreds of songs that are big in the Northern Soul scene but totally obscure everywhere else. For this concert, six upcoming and relatively unknown British singers were chosen to perform a kind of "best of Northern Soul" song list. Each of them took turns singing lead vocals, while the remaining five would sing backing vocals. And they were backed by a large BBC orchestra. 

The popularity of this genre shows in how the Royal Albert Hall was sold out, despite all the decades passing since Northern Soul's heyday. And I'm writing this in February 2026. I understand there is going to be another BBC Northern Soul concert this summer, and then a short tour, with most or all of the same singers.

I looked up these six singers at Wikipedia and/or rateyourmusic.com. All of them are pretty obscure, with some of them not even having entries. But they were selected for their soulful vocals, and all of them did very well, in my opinion. So if you just want one album to show you the best of Northern Soul, this is a good one. Unless you're into the genre already, chances are you won't be familiar with the vast majority of the songs, with a few exceptions, like "Tainted Love." So if you're listening to this type of music for the first time, chances are you'll discover some excellent obscurities.

I took the video I found on YouTube, converted it to audio, and broke it into mp3s. According to the BBC website, about six more songs were performed in the actual concert. If anyone has any of those extra songs, please let me know. 

This album is an hour and 16 minutes long. 

01 talk (Stuart Maconie)
01 Turnin' My Heartbeat Up (Brendan Reilly)
03 talk (Brendan Reilly)
04 Out on the Floor (Brendan Reilly)
05 I Need You (Nick Shirm)
06 Gone with the Wind Is My Love (Frida Mariama Touray)
07 The Night (Darrell Smith)
08 Landslide (Brendan Reilly)
09 Hold Back the Night (Brendan Reilly)
10 The Drifter (Darrell Smith)
11 You Don't Know Where Your Interest Lies (Natalie Palmer)
12 No One Could Love You More (Vula Malinga)
13 You're Gonna Love My Baby (Frida Mariama Touray)
14 You're Gonna Make Me Love You (Frida Mariama Touray)
15 If That's What You Wanted (Darrell Smith)
16 Temptation Is Calling My Name (Darrell Smith)
17 What (Natalie Palmer)
18 I Got to Find Me Somebody (Natalie Palmer)
19 Better Use Your Head (Frida Mariama Touray)
20 You Didn't Say a Word (Vula Malinga)
21 There's a Ghost in My House (Darrell Smith)
22 talk (Stuart Maconie)
23 I'm on My Way (Nick Shirm)
24 Long After Tonight Is All Over (Nick Shirm)
25 Time Will Pass You By (Vula Malinga)
26 talk (Vula Malinga)
27 Tainted Love (Vula Malinga & Everyone)
28 talk (Vula Malinga)
29 Do I Love You [Indeed I Do] (Everyone)
30 talk (Everyone)

https://pixeldrain.com/u/D5r9rf1X

alternate:

https://bestfile.io/en/sWHXwQGFdHp2SpX/file

I wanted a cover image showing all six of the singers. But I couldn't find an instance in the video when they were all standing together. So instead I went with three of them, more or less randomly chosen. At least that's better than showing just one. From right to left: Frida Mariama Touray, Nick Shirm, and Vula Malinga. You can see part of the BBC orchestra in the background.

Thursday, February 19, 2026

Elton John - Cover Versions, Volume 5: 2002-2007

In 2023 and 2024, I posted four volumes collecting all the cover versions performed by Elton John that I could find. However, I stopped this series before finishing it because I ran into copyright issues with the fourth volume. But I've had way less of those issues in recent months, so I'd going to try to post the fifth volume. If that works out, the sixth and final volume will follow. But you might want to grab this quickly, just in case.

Tracks 1, 2, 3, 6, 7, and 8 are all unreleased, and from concerts. Out of those, tracks 2 and 3 are from a CMT Crossroads episode with Ryan Adams. Track 9 was also performed live, but it's from a tribute album to Luther Vandross. For all these live songs, I used the MVSEP program to wipe the cheering, so those songs would fit with the studio tracks.

That leaves the studio tracks, all of which are released. Those are from a mix of movie soundtracks, tribute albums, and duets done on albums by other musical acts. If you want more details, please look at the mp3 tags for the individual songs. Like always, I include the source info for each song on every album I post. 

By the way, some of the links in the previous volumes in this series weren't working, but I just replaced them with new links. 

This album is 48 minutes long.

01 Oh My Sweet Carolina (Elton John)
02 Firecracker (Elton John & Ryan Adams)
03 La Cienega Just Smiled (Elton John & Ryan Adams)
04 Makin' Whoopee (Elton John)
05 Moon River (Elton John)
06 Nighttime Is the Right Time (Elton John & Mary J. Blige)
07 Born to Lose (Elton John)
08 Rock This House (B. B. King & Elton John)
09 Anyone Who Had a Heart (Elton John & Luther Vandross)
10 Dreamland (Bruce Hornsby & Elton John)
11 Where We Both Say Goodbye (Catherine Britt & Elton John)
12 Rags to Riches (Tony Bennett & Elton John)
13 Blueberry Hill (Elton John) 

https://pixeldrain.com/u/PWY7tZVF

alternate:

https://bestfile.io/en/Tk5ynn7dYAJmOmv/file

The cover photo is from a concert at Wembley Arena, in London, on December 5, 2003. 

Monday, January 12, 2026

The Counting Crows - PBS Soundstage, WTTW Studios, Chicago, IL, 11-13-2003

Here's another episode of the "PBS Soundstage" TV show. It features the band the Counting Crows, from 2003.

The Counting Crows (technically, just "Counting Crows") burst onto the music scene with their 1993 debut album "August and Everything After." It sold ten million copies worldwide, including seven million in the U.S. Their next album was also very successful. But each succeeding album has lower sales. Their most recent album at the time of this concert, "Hard Candy" in 2002, only went Gold (meaning U.S. sales of half a million). After that album, the band would take a recording break, not releasing another studio album until 2008.

Here's their Wikipedia link, if you want to know more:

Counting Crows - Wikipedia 

I'm not much of a fan of this band. For some reason, I've never enjoyed the vocals of lead singer Adam Duritz. But they certainly are talented and have many good songs. If only I could handle that voice. 

In addition to their own songs, this concert includes a cover of the Grateful Dead song "Friend of the Devil." They didn't put that on any of their studio albums, but they did put it on a "best of" album released in 2003.

The music is unreleased, and the sound quality is excellent. 

This album is 53 minutes long. 

01 Mrs. Potter's Lullaby (Counting Crows)
02 Mr. Jones (Counting Crows)
03 talk (Counting Crows)
04 Recovering the Satellites (Counting Crows)
05 talk (Counting Crows)
06 She Don't Want Nobody Near (Counting Crows)
07 Friend of the Devil (Counting Crows)
08 talk (Counting Crows)
09 American Girls (Counting Crows)
10 Rain King (Counting Crows)
11 talk (Counting Crows)
12 Long December (Counting Crows)
13 Hangin' Around (Counting Crows)

https://pixeldrain.com/u/7if7kWvm

alternate:

https://bestfile.io/en/DG0oHIC82M2yAM8/file

The cover image is a screenshot I took from a video of this exact concert.

Wednesday, November 26, 2025

Chicago - PBS Soundstage, Park West, Chicago, IL, 6-2003

Here's another episode of the excellent "PBS Soundstage" TV show. This one stars the band Chicago.

By 2003, the band was long past their 1970s heyday, and they'd lost some key members. It's too bad the show couldn't have had them on during that decade. But still, it's a solid bunch of classic songs. And I'm posting pretty much all the Soundstage episodes I can find, so I'm posting this one too.

If I recall, this is from a DVD, so it's longer than the usual episodes for this show. And that also means the sound quality is excellent.  

This album is an hour and 22 minutes long. 

01 Make Me Smile - So Much to Say, So Much to Give (Chicago)
02 Anxiety's Moment - West Virginia Fantasies - Colour My World (Chicago)
03 To Be Free - Now More than Ever (Chicago)
04 talk (Chicago)
05 If You Leave Me Now (Chicago)
06 Dialogue (Chicago)
07 talk (Chicago)
08 Hard Habit to Break (Chicago)
09 Saturday in the Park (Chicago)
10 Beginnings (Chicago)
11 Just You 'N' Me (Chicago)
12 talk (Chicago)
13 Does Anybody Really Know What Time It Is (Chicago)
14 Feelin' Stronger Everyday (Chicago)
15 I'm a Man (Chicago)
16 Hard to Say I'm Sorry - Get Away (Chicago)
17 Free (Chicago)
18 25 or 6 to 4 (Chicago)
19 talk (Chicago)

https://pixeldrain.com/u/wLLgZpQj

alternate:

https://bestfile.io/eeX7HnPFOy1vwPM/file

The cover photo is a screenshot from a video of this exact concert.

Monday, November 24, 2025

Tori Amos - PBS Soundstage, WTTW Studios, Chicago, IL, 5-2-2003

Here's an episode of the great "PBS Soundstage" TV show, starring Tori Amos.

Amos had most of her commercial success in the 1990s and early 2000s. All five of her 1990s albums reached Platinum status (sales of a million or more) is the U.S. Her last Gold status album (sales of half a million or more) was in 2002, with "Scarlet's Walk," the album she was touring to support at the time of this concert. Also, if you look at the crowd-sourced ratings of her albums at rateyourmusic.com, her albums through "Scarlet's Walk" are her most highly rated ones. So this was a good time for a Soundstage episode from her.

The music here is unreleased. The sound quality is excellent. 

This album is 59 minutes long. 

01 A Sorta Fairytale (Tori Amos)
02 Bliss (Tori Amos)
03 Horses (Tori Amos)
04 talk (Tori Amos)
05 Black-Dove [January] (Tori Amos)
06 Wednesday (Tori Amos)
07 China (Tori Amos)
08 Jackie's Strength (Tori Amos)
09 Taxi Ride (Tori Amos)
10 Precious Things (Tori Amos)
11 Cornflake Girl (Tori Amos)
12 Tombigbee (Tori Amos)

https://pixeldrain.com/u/h6BiUcE4

alternate:

https://bestfile.io/en/hd6btu8h5c04mHk/file 

The cover image is a screenshot taken from a video of this exact concert.

Thursday, November 20, 2025

Wilco - PBS Soundstage, WTTW Studios, Chicago, IL, 5-7-2003

Here's another episode of the great "PBS Soundstage" TV show. This one features the band Wilco in 2003.

Wilco has been a very critically acclaimed band. They've been led by Jeff Tweedy, who has also done a lot as a solo artist. Their 2001 album "Yankee Hotel Foxtrot" is their most acclaimed, for instance making Rolling Stone Magazine's list of the top 500 albums of all time. It also was their best selling, selling over half a million copies in the U.S. and almost making it to the Top Ten in the U.S. album charts. This concert took place when they were still promoting that album, since they wouldn't release their next album until 2004.

There's a long and interesting story about how their record company refused to release that album and then cancelled their record contract. In fact, an  documentary has been made about it. If you want to know more about that, and the band in general, here's their Wikipedia link:

Wilco - Wikipedia 

The music here is unreleased. The sound quality is excellent. 

This album is 43 minutes long. Note that this is suspiciously short, since the show was an hour long without commercials, and most other episodes are about 58 minutes long. I don't know if there are some missing Wilco songs, or if the band shared the show with another musical act that didn't make it to the video I found, or if there's some other reason for this length. According to the setlist.fm set list, the band did perform a few more songs, but I don't know if those were televised or not.

01 Handshake Drugs (Wilco)
02 Sunken Treasure (Wilco)
03 I Am Trying to Break Your Heart (Wilco)
04 War on War (Wilco)
05 talk (Wilco)
06 When the Roses Bloom Again (Wilco)
07 Poor Places (Wilco)
08 Red-Eyed and Blue (Wilco)
09 I Got You [At the End of the Century] (Wilco)
10 talk (Wilco)
11 Kicking Television (Wilco)

https://pixeldrain.com/u/BpZtZC2u

alternate:

https://bestfile.io/en/QTRqGs0BxiGTFon/file

The cover image is a screenshot I took from a video of this exact concert. 

Wednesday, November 12, 2025

Hall & Oates - BBC Sessions, Volume 4: In Concert, Hackney Ocean, Hackney, Britain, 4-7-2003

A couple of days ago, I posted a Hall and Oates BBC concert from 1998. Here's another one, probably the last one I can find from them, from 2003.

In 2003, Hall and Oates released a new studio album, "Do It for Love." The sales were still quite low compared to the 1970s and 1980s heyday, but critical appraisal improved. They played three songs from it here: "Do It for Love," "Forever for You," and "Getaway Car." They also finished with a cover of the 1970s soul classic, "Me and Mrs. Jones," which they didn't release on any studio album.

In 2023, Hall and Oates broke up due to a financial conflict that led to a lawsuit. So this is probably the last BBC album they did, unless there are others hiding out there that I don't know about. 

This music here is unreleased. The sound quality is excellent. 

This album is 55 minutes long.

01 Adult Education (Hall & Oates)
02 talk (Hall & Oates)
03 Out of Touch (Hall & Oates)
04 talk (Hall & Oates)
05 Do It for Love (Hall & Oates)
06 talk (Hall & Oates)
07 Forever for You (Hall & Oates)
08 One on One (Hall & Oates)
09 talk (Hall & Oates)
10 Getaway Car (Hall & Oates)
11 Sara Smile (Hall & Oates)
12 I Can't Go for That [No Can Do] (Hall & Oates)
13 talk (Hall & Oates)
14 Man on a Mission (Hall & Oates)
15 Me and Mrs. Jones (Hall & Oates)

https://pixeldrain.com/u/yYpVYNYp

alternate:

https://bestfile.io/en/aX13LVZzC5DFyY7/file

The cover photo isn't from this exact concert, but it's close. It was taken at the Manchester Apollo in Manchester, Britain, three days earlier, on April 4, 2003.

Saturday, November 8, 2025

Fleetwood Mac - PBS Soundstage, FleetCenter, Boston, MA, 9-24-2003

Here's a Fleetwood Mac concert from the great "PBS Soundstage" TV show. This concert was split between two episodes, making for an extra long concert compared to most episodes.

This concert took place in 2003, shortly after the release of the band's album "Say You Will." This was a time when the band was led by two singer-songwriters, Stevie Nicks and Lindsey Buckingham, while their their singer-songwriter, Christine McVie, was pursuing a solo career. Six songs were played from their new album: "Peacekeeper," "Say You Will," "Goodbye Baby," "What's the World Coming To," and "Say Goodbye." The rest was filled with greatest hits, minus some written by McVie.

This full concert was later released on DVD. There was an audio album released as well, but it only contains ten songs out of 24, so it's very incomplete. 

This album is two hours and 24 minutes long.

01 The Chain (Fleetwood Mac)
02 Dreams (Fleetwood Mac)
03 Eyes of the World (Fleetwood Mac)
04 talk (Fleetwood Mac)
05 Peacekeeper (Fleetwood Mac)
06 Second Hand News (Fleetwood Mac)
07 talk (Fleetwood Mac)
08 Say You Will (Fleetwood Mac)
09 Never Going Back Again (Fleetwood Mac)
10 Rhiannon (Fleetwood Mac)
11 Come (Fleetwood Mac)
12 Gypsy (Fleetwood Mac)
13 Big Love (Fleetwood Mac)
14 talk (Fleetwood Mac)
15 Landslide (Fleetwood Mac)
16 talk (Fleetwood Mac)
17 Say Goodbye (Fleetwood Mac)
18 talk (Fleetwood Mac)
19 What's the World Coming To (Fleetwood Mac)
20 talk (Fleetwood Mac)
21 Beautiful Child (Fleetwood Mac)
22 Gold Dust Woman (Fleetwood Mac)
23 I'm So Afraid (Fleetwood Mac)
24 Silver Springs (Fleetwood Mac)
25 Tusk (Fleetwood Mac)
26 Stand Back (Fleetwood Mac)
27 Go Your Own Way (Fleetwood Mac)
28 World Turning (Fleetwood Mac)
29 talk (Fleetwood Mac)
30 Don't Stop (Fleetwood Mac)
31 talk (Fleetwood Mac)
32 Goodbye Baby (Fleetwood Mac)

https://pixeldrain.com/u/aoBCe4dL

alternate:

https://bestfile.io/en/V7OAfRrxR46ZrQ2/file

The cover image is a screenshot taken from this exact concert. It shows Stevie Nicks up close and Lindsey Buckingham further back.

Friday, November 7, 2025

Various Artists - Covered: Antonio Carlos Jobim, Volume 2: 1998-2011 (A Fabio from Rio Guest Post)

Here's the second out of three albums celebrating the music of songwriter Antonio Carlos Jobim. Like the others in this series, Fabio from Rio was more responsible for putting this together than I was. So a very big thanks to him. Due to the fact that he's a Brazilian with deep knowledge of Brazilian music, he knew Jobim covers way better than I did.

Jobim wrote most of his classic songs from the 1950s to the 1970s. He actually died in 1994, of heart and cancer problems at the age of 67. So all the covers here are from after his death, of songs that often were written decades earlier. That's a sign that his songs keep getting covered, long after their first appearances on records. 

Fabio and I selected these choices together. We rarely went for the big hit versions, because his songs rarely turned into big hits. But he's had dozens of songs with literally hundreds of cover versions. Typically, Fabio selected a bunch of versions of a given song, then I would listen to them and pick my favorite. If you want to hear more versions, go to the write-up for Volume 1, because Fabio has made six more albums of Jobim covers that you can find there.

Also note that I kept this to versions in English, despite the fact that Jobim wrote nearly all of the original versions of his songs in Portuguese. And I kept my selections to versions with vocals, since there are countless hundreds of instrumental versions of his songs as well. I figured English versions would have more popular appeal for people who aren't that familiar with his music. 

This album is 46 minutes long. 

01 For All of My Life [Por Toda a Minha Vida] (Eliane Elias)
02 Modinha [Broken Heart] (Paquito D'Rivera & New York Voices)
03 Ela e Carioca [She's a Carioca] (Celso Fonseca)
04 Someone to Light Up My Life [Se Todos Fossem Iguais a Voce] (Ann Hampton Callaway)
05 No More Blues [Chega de Saudade] (Idea of North)
06 Porpoise [Boto] (Beijbom Kroner Big Band)
07 Song of the Jet [Samba do Aviao] (BR6)
08 Quiet Nights of Quiet Stars [Corcovado] (Diana Krall)
09 I Was Just One More for You [Esperanca Perdida] (Dawn Clement)
10 That Look You Wear [Este Seu Olhar] (Elly Hoyt)
11 Zingaro [Retrato em Branco e Preto] [Portrait in Black and White] (Nina Ripe)

https://pixeldrain.com/u/gSWRErwx

alternate: 

https://bestfile.io/en/N9ABCsEsu77SMaL/file

I don't know the details about the cover photo. But based on his appearance and the other photos I saw of him putting this together, I'd guess the picture was taken in the 1980s. 

Friday, September 12, 2025

Sheryl Crow - PBS Soundstage, WTTW Studios, Chicago, IL, 8-5-2003

Here's another episode of the "PBS Soundstage" TV show. This one stars Sheryl Crow, in 2003.

Normally with this show, I only know the broadcast date, and not the actual performance date. But in this case, I'm pretty sure this is the performance date. The episode wasn't broadcast until June 2004. Crow didn't release a new studio album in 2003 (or 2004 either). But she did release a best of album, "The Very Best of Sheryl Crow." That contained a cover version of "The First Cut Is the Deepest" by Cat Stevens, which she performed here. Her version was a hit, and she hasn't had a bigger hit since then.

Generally speaking, the set list mostly consists of her best known songs. One surprise though is a cover of "(What's So Funny 'Bout) Peace, Love and Understanding," written by Nick Lowe. She has yet to release that on album.

These episodes are typically an hour long. This is longer though. That's because her full concert was released on DVD in 2008, so I used that. It has yet to be released in any audio format, however. 

This album is an hour and 31 minutes long.

01 My Favorite Mistake (Sheryl Crow)
02 talk (Sheryl Crow)
03 You're an Original (Sheryl Crow)
04 The First Cut Is the Deepest (Sheryl Crow)
05 talk (Sheryl Crow)
06 Leaving Las Vegas (Sheryl Crow)
07 Strong Enough (Sheryl Crow)
08 Redemption Day (Sheryl Crow)
09 talk (Sheryl Crow)
10 Sweet Rosalyn (Sheryl Crow)
11 talk (Sheryl Crow)
12 If It Makes You Happy (Sheryl Crow)
13 Home (Sheryl Crow)
14 All I Wanna Do (Sheryl Crow)
15 Soak Up the Sun (Sheryl Crow)
16 Everyday Is a Winding Road (Sheryl Crow)
17 talk (Sheryl Crow)
18 [What's So Funny 'Bout] Peace, Love and Understanding (Sheryl Crow)
19 talk (Sheryl Crow)
20 Let's Get Free (Sheryl Crow)
21 Safe and Sound (Sheryl Crow)
22 I Shall Believe (Sheryl Crow)
23 talk (Sheryl Crow)
24 Steve McQueen (Sheryl Crow)
25 talk (Sheryl Crow) 

https://pixeldrain.com/u/vGoPQRhE

alternate:

https://bestfile.io/en/4qtt9QmrJjvQKko/file

The cover image is from this exact concert.

Tuesday, August 26, 2025

Various Artists - Covered: Jackie DeShannon: 1961-2017

Here's another entry in my "Covered" series highlighting the careers of great songwriters. This time, it's Jackie DeShannon.

DeShannon is more famous as a performer than a songwriter. But she's in a rather strange position, because she had some big hits as a performer that she didn't write, especially "What the World Needs Now Is Love," and some big hits as a songwriter for other musical acts, especially "When You Walk in the Room" and "Betty Davis Eyes." The one big hit she both wrote and had the hit performance was "Put a Little Love in Your Heart."

DeShannon was born in rural Kentucky to parents who were farmers but also very musically inclined. So her music career began remarkably early. She was singing songs on local radio stations by the time she was six years old, and hosting her own radio show and making occasional local TV appearances by the time she was eleven! She signed her first record contract at the age of 16, and began putting out singles, but without much success at first. 

At the time, successful female songwriters were very few and far between. But in 1960 she had enough success to get connected to another female songwriter, Sharon Sheeley. Together, they co-wrote DeShannon's first hit song, "Dum Dum" by Brenda Lee. They also wrote some other hit songs over the next couple of years, like "Heart in Hand" and "Breakaway."

In 1963, she co-wrote the song "Needles and Pins" with Jack Nitzsche and Sonny Bono. She didn't get songwriting credit on it, but she claims she was a full participant in its creation. I believe her. It was common for aspiring musicians to get screwed out of songwriting credits in those days (and probably still today), and I'll bet that went double for women. At any rate, her version of the song was the first one released. It barely made the U.S. singles charts, but went all the way to Number One in Canada. Instead, the Searchers had a Number One hit with it some months later. That suggested there was a problem with her record company, not with her version. Later in 1963, she wrote "When You Walk in the Room" by herself. Again, her version went nowhere and the Searchers had a bit hit with it.

In 1965, she finally had a big hit as a performer, with "What the World Needs Now Is Love," written by Burt Bacharach and Hal David. From that point on, she almost had two music careers at once. She put out many albums and singles, often with her singing cover songs. At the same time though, she wrote successful songs for other musical acts that she usually never released herself. Examples would be "Come and Stay with Me," a hit she wrote for Marianne Faithfull, and "Don't Doubt Yourself, Babe," which she wrote for the Byrds. 

She wrote hundreds of songs in many musical genres, and made professional sounding demos of them to give to other musicians. Decades later, several albums of these demos have been released. I think if she would have focused on putting on these songs she wrote herself, she would have had a much more successful performing career. It seems to me though that her record company was more interested in her songwriting, so they didn't encourage that.

In 1969, she had another huge hit with "Put a Little Love in Your Heart," which she co-wrote. It reached the Top Five in the U.S. singles chart. After that, musical trends were changing. There was much more of a focus on singers writing their own songs. For instance, Carole King made the transition from writing hits for others to performing her own hit songs. DeShannon made a similar transition, putting out many albums in the 1970s which mostly consisted of her own songs. Again though, in my opinion, her record companies badly bungled her career. Archival releases decades later show dozens of really good songs she wrote and recorded that weren't released at the time. 

Her performing career slowly wound down. In 1978, she stopped putting out albums. She would only release two more much later, in 2000 and 2011. She also never really toured much. She probably didn't need to, with all the money she made from songwriting. In 1974, one of her albums contained a song she co-wrote, "Betty Davis Eyes." It didn't get any attention at the time, and wasn't released as a single. But in 1981, Kim Carnes had a massive hit with it. It went to Number One in the U.S., and was the best selling song of the year.

For this album, I've concentrated entirely on cover versions, with not even a single song performed by DeShannon. I've already posted a couple of albums by her at this blog, and I'll probably post more in the future, so this isn't the place for more of that. Most of these are the original versions, often the hit versions. But I made some exceptions, especially when I had to choose versions other than the DeShannon ones, for instance with "Put a Little Love in Your Heart." 

Here's her Wikipedia page if you want to know more:

Jackie DeShannon - Wikipedia 

An interesting fact I just saw on that page is that the Led Zeppelin song "Tangerine" was actually written by Jimmy Page about DeShannon. The two of them dated around 1965 when Page was a session guitarist. 

This album is 49 minutes long.  

01 Dum Dum (Brenda Lee)
02 Woe Is Me (Helen Shapiro)
03 Heart in Hand (Brenda Lee)
04 I Shook the World (Bob B. Soxx & the Blue Jeans)
05 Needles and Pins (Searchers)
06 Breakaway (Irma Thomas)
07 When You Walk in the Room (Searchers)
08 Come and Stay with Me (Marianne Faithfull)
09 Don't Doubt Yourself, Babe (Byrds)
10 With You in Mind (Marianne Faithfull)
11 Put a Little Love in Your Heart (Dorothy Morrison)
12 Bad Water (Doris Duke)
13 Boat to Sail (Carpenters)
14 Santa Fe (Van Morrison)
15 Bette Davis Eyes (Kim Carnes)
16 Splendor in the Grass (Ladybug Transistor)
17 He Did It (Samantha Fish)

https://pixeldrain.com/u/CbpTTMaA

alternate: 

https://bestfile.io/en/OT5RQ01dujlQPgt/file

The cover photo is from 1967. 

Tuesday, August 19, 2025

Tom P*tty & the Heartbreakers - PBS Soundstage, WTTW Studios, Chicago, IL, 4-21-2003

Tom P*tty and the Heartbreakers performed for the "PBS Soundstage" program twice, in 2003 and 2006. I recently posted the 2006 one. But I said I wasn't planning on posting the 2003 one, because it's too similar to another 2003 concert I wanted to post. However, I changed my mind, so here it is.

(Note that I'm not using the full name of this artist due to concerns about copyright issues.) 

The other concert I'd been planning to post instead took place in the same city of Chicago just two days earlier, on April 19, 2003. So not surprisingly, the set lists are very similar. But that one is half an hour longer, and the sound quality is just as great. That's why I prefer that one. But more music is better. I figure I can post both of them eventually.

Virtually this entire concert has been released on DVD, which is why the sound quality is excellent throughout. However, it turns out the DVD song order was all mixed up, almost like someone threw them together at random. Part of that was due to a bunch of "DVD extra" songs at the end, selected from all throughout the concert. But there were other changes as well. So, being a stickler for accuracy, I carefully rearranged the song order to what was actually played.

Unfortunately, three songs didn't make the DVD at all, so they're not included here. There were two versions of "Peggy Sue," and one version of "I'll Feel a Whole Lot Better," which was the last song played. 

This album is two hours and nine minutes long. 

I'm not including the track list due to copyright issues. But you can find it in the mp3 download file. 

https://pixeldrain.com/u/TdNfYrXx

alternate:

https://bestfile.io/en/FloFdLBwDbOu0Hw/file

The cover photo is a screenshot from the DVD, taken from this exact concert. 

Wednesday, May 21, 2025

Ronald Isley with Burt Bacharach - PBS Soundstage, WTTW Studios, Chicago, IL, 11-2003

Here's another episode of that great TV show, "PBS Soundstage." This time, it stars Ronald Isley, who sings exclusively from the catalog of classic songs written by Burt Bacharach and Hal David. He's assisted by Bacharach playing piano on all the songs, though Bacharach doesn't sing, or talk much.

Ronald Isley is the long-time lead singer of the American R&B group the Isley Brothers. He founded the group in 1957 with two of his brothers. The Isley Brothers had hits from the 1950s to the 2000s, and they are still going as I write this in 2025. Ronald Isley didn't release a solo album until 2003, called "Here I Am: Ron Isley Meets Burt Bacharach." No doubt he put it out as a solo album because it was so different from the usual R&B danceable, funky style of the Isley Brothers. It turns out there was an ballad crooner inside Ronald Isley waiting to get out.

Not only was this concert part of the tour to support that 2003 album mentioned above, apparently it was the very first concert of the tour, so these were all performed live by Isley for the first time. Generally speaking, all of the songs are classics from the 1960s and 1970s, most of them associated with Dionne Warwick. However, the first version of "Love's [Still] The Answer" was from just a year earlier.

I don't believe this has even been shared as an audio bootleg before. I found a video of the episode and converted it to mp3s. However, the sound quality is still excellent.

This unreleased album is 54 minutes long.

01 talk (Ronald Isley & Burt Bacharach)
02 The Look of Love (Ronald Isley & Burt Bacharach)
03 This Guy's in Love with You (Ronald Isley & Burt Bacharach)
04 Anyone Who Had a Heart (Ronald Isley & Burt Bacharach)
05 Love's [Still] The Answer (Ronald Isley & Burt Bacharach)
06 Here I Am (Ronald Isley & Burt Bacharach)
07 talk (Ronald Isley & Burt Bacharach)
08 Windows of the World (Ronald Isley & Burt Bacharach)
09 Alfie (Ronald Isley & Burt Bacharach)
10 In Between the Heartaches (Ronald Isley & Burt Bacharach)
11 [They Long to Be] Close to You (Ronald Isley & Burt Bacharach)
12 Raindrops Keep Falling on My Head (Ronald Isley & Burt Bacharach)
13 talk (Ronald Isley & Burt Bacharach)
14 A House Is Not a Home (Ronald Isley & Burt Bacharach)

https://pixeldrain.com/u/rZ1TTXsa

alternate:

https://bestfile.io/en/TknRRIFjVuk7Udj/file

The cover image is a screenshot I took from a YouTube video of this exact concert. I used the Krea AI program to improve the image quality.

Saturday, May 17, 2025

Peter Gabriel - BBC Sessions, Volume 3: Children in Need, Cyfarthfa Castle Park, Merthyr Tydfil, Britain, 11-21-2003

Here's another Peter Gabriel BBC concert, as part of my attempt to respond to the BBC poll I did a few months back. It's a relatively short concert from 2003.

This is a short concert because it was part of a benefit concert, with a bunch of different musical acts having short sets, including the Pretenders and Bryn Terfel. But Gabriel was the headliner so at least he got the longest set. It took place in Wales, and the entire thing was broadcast on BBC Wales.

The sound quality is generally excellent, despite this being unreleased. However, there were a couple of problems. It seems the levels weren't properly set for the first song, "Games without Frontiers," so the vocals were too low. I largely fixed that with the UVR5 program. That's why that song has "[Edit]" in its title. Also, there was a lot of annoying BBC DJ talk before and after the concert, plus during one of the encores. I got rid of all that.

Even though this concert took place in 2003, from the song list it almost could have taken place in 1987. Only two of the songs were more recent: "Burn You Up, Burn You Down" and "Secret World."

This album is 46 minutes long.

01 Games without Frontiers [Edit] (Peter Gabriel)
02 talk (Peter Gabriel)
03 Burn You Up, Burn You Down (Peter Gabriel)
04 talk (Peter Gabriel)
05 Mercy Street (Peter Gabriel)
06 Solsbury Hill (Peter Gabriel)
07 Sledgehammer (Peter Gabriel)
08 talk (Peter Gabriel)
09 In Your Eyes (Peter Gabriel)
10 Secret World (Peter Gabriel)

https://pixeldrain.com/u/sYBwnB2x

alternate:

https://bestfile.io/en/TV1bCvkDCTQjqro/file

The cover image is a screenshot I took from a video of this exact concert.

Thursday, May 8, 2025

Lucinda Williams with Kacey Chambers - PBS Soundstage, WTTW Studios, Chicago, IL, 7-10-2003

I'm back from my short vacation. Thanks to all of you who wished me well. I had a great time. Here's another episode of the "PBS Soundstage" show. This time, singer-songwriter Lucinda Williams is the star. However, it starts with a short set by another singer-songwriter, Kasey Chambers.

I had never heard of Kasey Chambers before putting this album together. But when I learned about her, I soon understood why this was a logical pairing. Chambers is from Australia, and has often been likened to an Australian Lucinda Williams. Her first album, "The Captain," was released in 1999. To support it, she went on tour as an opening act for Williams. Her second album, "Barricades & Brickwalls," released in 2001, featured a guest appearance by Williams. It was a huge hit in Australia, going to Number One on the album charts there and achieving platinum status seven times over. It was the best selling album of her career. However, it did much less well elsewhere, for instance not quite reaching the top 100 in the U.S. album charts. 

Here's the Wikipedia entry about her:

Kasey Chambers - Wikipedia 

The Chambers set is relatively short, only 18 minutes long. The last of the four songs she performed, "Changed the Locks," is actually a Lucinda Williams cover. However, it doesn't appear Chambers and Williams appeared on stage together during this concert. Perhaps they were recorded at different times.

I've posted a bunch of albums by Williams at the blog already, so she doesn't need much of an introduction. Not long before this concert, in April 2003, she released the studio album "World without Tears." It was very well received by critics, and sold about half a million copies. Not surprisingly, she played a few songs from it.

The first song here has "[Edit]" in its title. That's due to a voiceover near the beginning of the song. I got rid of it in the usual way, with the help of the UVR5 audio editing program. I don't know the exact date this concert actually took place. The date in the title is probably the broadcast date.

This unreleased album is 54 minutes long.

01 Barricades and Brick Walls [Edit] (Kasey Chambers)
02 If I Were You (Kasey Chambers)
03 Captain (Kasey Chambers)
04 Changed the Locks (Kasey Chambers)
05 talk (Kasey Chambers)
06 Ventura (Lucinda Williams)
07 World without Tears (Lucinda Williams)
08 Essence (Lucinda Williams)
09 talk (Lucinda Williams)
10 Real Live Bleeding Fingers and Broken Guitar Strings (Lucinda Williams)
11 Joy (Lucinda Williams)
12 Overtime (Lucinda Williams)
13 talk (Lucinda Williams)
14 Righteously (Lucinda Williams)

https://pixeldrain.com/u/r8bP8osS

alternate: 

https://bestfile.io/836bjAK6EkvZU9j/file

The cover photo is a screenshot from this exact concert. I used the Krea AI program to improve the image quality.

Tuesday, April 29, 2025

Van Morrison - BBC Sessions, Volume 9: Live and Exclusive, Forum Theatre, Malvern, Britain, 11-25-2003

Finally, here's the last BBC album from Van Morrison. It's a BBC concert from 2003.

As I mentioned in previous write-ups, I think Morrison was great in the 1960s and 70s especially, and he even had a musical renaissance in the 1990s in my opinion, but he slowly turned into a reactionary asshole who also was just musically repeating himself, to the point that some of his more recent albums (like "Latest Record Project, Volume 1" in 2021) have to be some of the most critically panned albums by any famous artist, period. So at some point I had to step away from his music, and that point is right around the time of his concert. Mind you, this concert is fine by itself. But I don't have enough interest to post even more BBC material that's out there in the years after this, sorry.

Anyway, in October 2003, Morrison released the studio album "What's Wrong with This Picture?" Many of the songs here are from that. Plus there are some classics from earlier in his career. 

This unreleased album is 57 minutes long.

01 talk (Van Morrison)
02 Whining Boy Moan (Van Morrison)
03 Once in a Blue Moon (Van Morrison)
04 What's Wrong with This Picture (Van Morrison)
05 Little Village (Van Morrison)
06 Have I Told You Lately (Van Morrison)
07 Listen to the Lion (Van Morrison)
08 Goldfish Bowl (Van Morrison)
09 Stop Drinking (Van Morrison)
10 It's All in the Game (Van Morrison)
11 Gloria (Van Morrison)
12 talk (Van Morrison)

https://pixeldrain.com/u/1sr7qVKR

alternate:

https://bestfile.io/en/WitRZpkXz5zsOK5/file

The cover photo is from Bridgewater Hall, in Manchester, Britain, in April 18, 2003.

Sunday, April 27, 2025

Michael McDonald with Ashford & Simpson & the Doobie Brothers - PBS Soundstage, WTTW Studios, Chicago, IL, 7-1-2003

Here's a PBS Soundstage concert starring Michael McDonald from 2003. 

But it has some significant guest stars too. First off, the soul duo Ashford and Simpson take the lead on two classic songs they wrote for the Motown record label back in the 1960s, and then return to sing backing vocals on a couple more songs later in the show. 

But more significantly, McDonald was joined on stage for the entire second half of the concert by Patrick Simmons and Tom Johnston of the Doobie Brothers. Simmons and Johnston were the main creative forces in the Doobie Brothers before McDonald joined the band in 1975 and basically became the main guy in the late 1970s. Johnston only overlapped with McDonald for one album in 1976 before leaving in 1977, but Patrick Simmons never left the band. The two of them were billed at the show as "the Doobie Brothers." Even though the two of them arguably don't make up the Doobie Brothers by themselves, I'm using that in the song titles and album title because when I tried using "Patrick Simmons and Tom Johnston" instead, some of the song titles got too long, causing some problems (like not being able to put them in zip files).

Generally, the songs here focus more on hits with the Doobie Brothers than McDonald's solo material. However, there's also a Motown focus, with two more Motown covers as the last two songs. That makes sense because in June 2003, right before this concert took place, McDonald released a solo album titled "Motown," consisting entirely of covers of famous Motown songs. In 2005, he did another Soundstage episode entirely consisting of Motown covers, with more guest stars. I plan on posting that one as well.

This album is an hour and 22 minutes long.

01 It Keeps You Runnin' (Michael McDonald)
02 Sweet Freedom (Michael McDonald)
03 I Keep Forgettin' (Michael McDonald)
04 Find It in Your Heart (Michael McDonald)
05 If You Wanted to Hurt Me (Michael McDonald)
06 talk (Michael McDonald & Ashford & Simpson)
07 Ain't No Mountain High Enough (Michael McDonald & Ashford & Simpson)
08 Ain't Nothing like the Real Thing (Michael McDonald & Ashford & Simpson)
09 talk (Michael McDonald & the Doobie Brothers)
10 Black Water (Michael McDonald & the Doobie Brothers)
11 talk (Michael McDonald & the Doobie Brothers)
12 Take Me in Your Arms [Rock Me a Little While] (Michael McDonald & the Doobie Brothers)
13 Minute by Minute (Michael McDonald & the Doobie Brothers)
14 I Can't Let Go (Michael McDonald & the Doobie Brothers)
15 What a Fool Believes (Michael McDonald & the Doobie Brothers)
16 Beautiful Child (Michael McDonald & the Doobie Brothers)
17 Takin' It to the Streets (Michael McDonald, the Doobie Brothers & Ashford & Simpson)
18 You Belong to Me (Michael McDonald, the Doobie Brothers & Ashford & Simpson)
19 What's Going On (Michael McDonald & the Doobie Brothers)
20 I Heard It through the Grapevine (Michael McDonald & the Doobie Brothers)

https://pixeldrain.com/u/mcF5NvT3

alternate:

https://bestfile.io/en/wi6zWL1GKeTgagN/file

The cover image is from this exact concert.