Showing posts with label Hot Tuna. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Hot Tuna. Show all posts

Thursday, December 3, 2020

Hot Tuna Blues - Live At The Belly Up (Feat. Charlie Musselwhite)

Size: 127,9 MB
Time: 54:57
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2020
Styles: Electric Blues, Harmonica Blues
Art: Front

01. Bowlegged Woman, Knock-Kneed Man (Live) (4:58)
02. If This Is Love (Live) (5:41)
03. Crying Won't Help You (Live) (5:46)
04. If I Should Have Bad Luck (Live) (5:05)
05. Where Hwy 61 Runs (Live) (5:05)
06. Christo Redemptor (Live) (7:56)
07. Come Back Baby (Live) (8:39)
08. Hit Single #1 (Live) (5:14)
09. Baby What You Want Me To Do (Live) (6:30)

Hot Tuna was formed by Jefferson Airplane members Jorma Kaukonen and Jack Casady. The name Hot Tuna invokes as many different moods and reactions as there are Hot Tuna fans. To some, Hot Tuna is a reminder of some wild and happy times. To others, that name will forever be linked to their own discovery of the power and depth of American blues and roots music. To newer fans, Hot Tuna is a tight, masterful duo that is on the cutting edge of great music. This special performance in 2011 is the only released recording from the Hot Tuna Blues Tour which featured harmonica virtuoso Charlie Musselwhite. The recording showcases the electric energy of Hot Tuna with the harmonic sounds of Musselwhite which can be heard on “Where HWY 61 Runs,” “Crying Won’t Help You,” and more. This is an all electric album featuring blues covers by Bobby Rush, Robert Nighthawk, Walter Davis and Jimmy Reed.

Live At The Belly Up MP3
Live At The Belly Up FLAC

Tuesday, September 17, 2013

Hot Tuna - 2013-03-08 Breezes Grand Resort, Negril, Jamaica & 1996-07-10 Great Woods Performing Arts Center, Mansfield, Ma: The Electric Set

Size: 273,0 MB
Time: 118:49
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2013
Styles: Acoustic Blues, Blues Rock
Art: Front

01. Serpent Of Dreams (2013-03-08) ( 7:29)
02. I'll Let You Know Before I Leave (2013-03-08) ( 2:23)
03. How Long Blues (2013-03-08) ( 6:41)
04. More Than My Old Guitar (2013-03-08) ( 6:32)
05. Deep Ellum Blues (2013-03-08) ( 7:08)
06. Things That Might Have Been (2013-03-08) ( 4:38)
07. Barbeque King (2013-03-08) ( 7:00)
08. I Know You Rider (2013-03-08) ( 9:09)
09. Preaching On The Old Campground (2013-03-08) ( 6:34)
10. Sugaree (2013-03-08) (10:26)
11. Bar Room Crystal Ball (2013-03-08) ( 7:50)
12. Walkin' Blues (1996-07-10) ( 5:07)
13. Keep Your Lamps Trimmed And Burning (1996-07-10) ( 4:16)
14. 99 Year Blues (1996-07-10) ( 6:08)
15. Ice Age (1996-07-10) ( 6:50)
16. Hit Single #1 (1996-07-10) ( 5:52)
17. Ak-47 (1996-07-10) ( 5:33)

Begun as an acoustic spinoff of the Jefferson Airplane, Hot Tuna eventually became the full-time focus of founding members Jack Casady and Jorma Kaukonen, emerging as a popular touring act of the 1970s. The two were lifelong friends, growing up together in Washington, D.C., and playing in the group the Triumphs. After high school, guitarist Kaukonen and his government-service parents relocated to the Philippines, but he returned to the U.S. in time for the advent of psychedelia, landing in San Francisco and co-founding the Airplane in 1965. Bassist Casady joined not long after, and together they helped lead the group to massive success during the late '60s.

Hot Tuna — originally dubbed Hot Sh*t, much to the chagrin of their label, RCA — first began taking shape in 1969, while both Casady and Kaukonen were still active members of the Jefferson Airplane; in fact, their first performances were sandwiched between regular Airplane gigs. As a trio rounded out by harmonica player Will Scarlet (and occasionally including Airplane members Marty Balin and Spencer Dryden), Hot Tuna debuted in 1970 with a low-key self-titled LP of traditional blues and ragtime recorded live at the New Orleans House in Berkeley; by the following year's more rock-inspired First Pull Up, Then Pull Down, their roster included violinist Papa John Creach, concurrently a full-time member of the Airplane, and drummer Sammy Piazza. Minus Scarlet, a third album, Burgers, appeared in 1972.

By the appearance of 1974's The Phosphorescent Rat, both Casady and Kaukonen had officially exited Jefferson Airplane; by this time Creach, who elected to remain with the Airplane, was no longer in the group. With 1975's America's Choice, Piazza too was gone, replaced by drummer Bob Steeler; Yellow Fever appeared that same year, with Hoppkorv following in 1976. Keyboardist Nick Buck signed on for 1978's Double Dose, but Hot Tuna subsequently announced their breakup, closing out the first phase of their career with 1979's Final Vinyl.

In the wake of the group's demise, Kaukonen released a solo LP, Jorma, and later joined the new wave unit Vital Parts; Casady also fronted a new wave group of his own, SVT. In 1984, both returned to their roots: Casady joined fellow Airplane alums Balin and Paul Kantner in the KBC Band, while Kaukonen reverted to the acoustic folk and blues of his formative years. Finally, Casady and Kaukonen played a handful of club dates under the Hot Tuna aegis, re-forming on a more concrete basis in 1986; by 1990, their ranks included singer/multi-instrumentalist Michael Falzarano, a veteran of many early reunion shows.

That year Hot Tuna released Pair a Dice Found, their first collection of new studio material in over a decade; a series of live releases followed, including 1992's Live at Sweetwater, 1997's Splashdown Two, and 1999's And Furthurmore.... In the years to follow, Hot Tuna continued to play several live shows a year in various configurations. A single-disc best-of from the RCA years, Keep on Truckin', was released in 2006. The group’s first studio album in 20 years, Steady as She Goes, recorded at Levon Helm's studio in Woodstock, New York, and produced by Larry Campbell, was released on Red House Records in 2011.

2013-03-08 Negril, Jamaica & 1996-07-10 Mansfield, Ma