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That's where it all started. Yes, the Chicago school electrified it, but it was Robert Johnson in the American context - and Django Reinhardt playing jazz in Europe (working with and being musically influenced by African diaspora musicians) - that basically invented lead guitar as we understand it today. Listening to Johnson, anything that really mattered about the blues and blues-based rock guitar since is either based on or fully developed on those old recordings. Outstanding stuff. I hope Johnson can somehow look down (or, if you believe that legend, up) on us now and see just how important he really is. He'll never get close to the same credit for it, but he's more important to modern music than the Beatles.
The Clash were unbeatable. Heroes.
Back in late 2018 / early 2019, the Museum of London had a mini-exhibition on the recording and release of London Calling. The centrepiece was the presence of that bass (now a part of the MoL's permanent collection). The wife eventually dragged me away when I'd worn a depression in the class case with my nose. I think I'd probably have eaten it if I'd gotten my hands on it.
Recently picked up a few Bob Dylan CDs. Having completed the collection of the studio albums to dated on vinyl, I've moved on to collecting the Bootleg Series and the live albums. On CD, this time... I'd love to have them all on vinyl, but I want to complete the sets in a single format (some of the vinyl LPs were doubles of what I already had on VD), and that gets prohibitively expensive with the later Bootleg series. In particular, I've just picked up Greenwich Village, Live November 1961. A very recent release of a latterly discovered recording of his first New York performance, complete with the famous "I kinda got lost, coming up here tonight..." schtick. It's lacking in his early, really well known numbers that were of course still ahead of him (his second album was to be the first one with a wholly original track listing), but there are already hints of who he was, and is, as a performer. Primarily his impish, playful side, which for me is often where he's at his best as a performer - especially with later number like Positively Fourth Street which hide some truly acidic, lyrical bile behind playful delivery and melody. Gutted that I've not been able to see him live since 2023. Post pandemic, it has become almost impossible to get tickets I can afford for his UK gigs with them all selling out within seconds of public release. I think a lot of people have discovered his value and are now rushing to see him while they still have the chance. Closing in on 85 now, I fear it won't bed than many more years before he decides to hang up his touring shoes. I feel privileged to have seen him as many times as I did.
I didn't get to see the Clash until they were on their last legs (1984). Still a good show, but heroes? I'm not much into worshipping entertainers, but they were a superb band.
Dylan, I believe, is best when he's challenged by his surrounding musicians. I've seen him twice. The first was solo and it was a toss-off. He played for about an hour and played like he was late for his other job.
But I was privileged to see the Dylan & The Dead tour at Akron's Rubber bowl in the late 80s. Tom Petty and the Heartbreakers were his backup band and that was a great show. He also sat in with Jerry and the boys for Little Red Rooster and It's All Over Now, Baby Blue. Helluva day.


