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Post by the Scribe on Jan 18, 2019 3:32:40 GMT -5
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Post by the Scribe on Jan 18, 2019 3:35:49 GMT -5
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Post by the Scribe on Jan 18, 2019 3:40:24 GMT -5
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Post by ausfan2 on Jan 20, 2019 7:47:22 GMT -5
In the studio 1967 by Ed Caraeff
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Post by the Scribe on Jan 20, 2019 7:54:07 GMT -5
Lee UnderwoodLee Underwood wiki, Lee Underwood history, Lee Underwood review, Lee Underwood facts Lee Underwood news, what is Lee Underwood Lee Underwood wikipedia Lee Underwood information, Lee Underwood definition, Lee Underwood timeline, Lee Underwood location
Language flag EN Lee Underwood wiki, Lee Underwood history, Lee Underwood news Lee Underwood is an American musician and writer notable for performing on lead guitar with Tim Buckley for most of Buckley's career. Underwood appeared on seven of the nine studio albums Buckley recorded during his brief life, and on several posthumous releases, including " Live in London. " He appears on the DVD Tim Buckley: My Fleeting House discussing Tim Buckley's impressive artistic evolutionary development through five different musical phases, from folk, to folk-rock, to jazz, to avant-garde innovations, to dance-oriented popular music in which he merged all of his previous influences and concepts into an organic whole.
Throughout the 70s and 80s Underwood became an internationally known music journalist, contributing interviews, essays, and record reviews to various notable periodicals such as Down Beat , Rolling Stone and Los Angeles Times . He served as the West Coast of the United States editor of Down Beat from 1975 to 1981.
He wrote and published Blue Melody: Tim Buckley Remembered in 2002, cited by Uncut music magazine as one of the year's 10 best biographies. In 1990, he co-authored jazz flautist Paul Horn's autobiography for which he received the Crystal Award for Music Journalism from the New Age Music network.
Underwood's first book of poems, " Timewinds ," was published by Poetic Matrix Press in 2010. His second book of poems is entitled "Diamondfire" (published by Outskirts Press, 2016). Underwood's website, , includes several essays on music and musicians, (including Tim Buckley), philosophical issues, audio readings of his poems and a full-length book of wisdom-word emails written to a host of recipients, entitled Diamonds in the Sky .
As a musician himself, Underwood has recorded three CDs: California Sigh (1988), a solo guitar work produced by synthesist Steve Roach; Phantom Light (2003), a solo acoustic piano recording; and Gathering Light , also a solo acoustic piano work, recorded in 2009.
Discography with Tim Buckley Tim Buckley (1966) Goodbye and Hello (1967) Happy Sad (1969) Blue Afternoon (1969) Lorca (1970) Starsailor (1970) Sefronia (1973)
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Post by muse on Jan 20, 2019 13:09:20 GMT -5
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Post by memac62 on Jan 20, 2019 22:47:17 GMT -5
In the studio 1967 by Ed Caraeff This looks more like it might be from 1973. It looks like it's from the Don't Cry Now period. Didn't Ed Caraeff shoot the Don't Cry Now cover?
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Post by the Scribe on Jan 20, 2019 22:59:26 GMT -5
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Post by eddiejinnj on Jan 21, 2019 7:28:17 GMT -5
That was Linda's hair length in 1973. Even the swoop (word of the morning - swoop) of hair on her face was the style on DCN. eddiejinfl
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Post by germancanadian on Jan 29, 2019 18:48:25 GMT -5
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Post by sliderocker on Jan 29, 2019 20:16:52 GMT -5
This photo of Linda wowed me. I'd put the photo around 1968-69, maybe 1970. Linda's photogenic beauty was just so startling that it's why I say she should've been in the movies. I can't imagine her being in the Los Angeles area all those years when she was younger and not once getting an offer. Maybe she did but didn't accept because she didn't like what the terms were or was too insecure and too scared about how she would do.
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Post by sliderocker on Jan 30, 2019 21:48:30 GMT -5
Photos of Linda by Henry Diltz Attachments:
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Post by sliderocker on Jan 30, 2019 22:08:36 GMT -5
Another Henry Diltz photo. The guy with Linda should be familiar. Attachments:
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Post by the Scribe on Feb 1, 2019 2:30:16 GMT -5
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Post by RobGNYC on Feb 1, 2019 10:37:36 GMT -5
That was Linda's hair length in 1973. Even the swoop (word of the morning - swoop) of hair on her face was the style on DCN. eddiejinfl Right, Ed Caraeff took the "Don't Cry Now" cover photo. The silver bracelets are also a clue--pretty sure that she didn't wear them before the early 70s (and apparently stopped wearing them after "Simple Dreams"--they're on the table in front of her in the cover photo but they're not in any photos from 1978 on--wonder if she still has them?).
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Post by Tony on Feb 1, 2019 23:27:01 GMT -5
That does not even look like Linda to me. It is used on the new CD.
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Post by the Scribe on Feb 1, 2019 23:36:56 GMT -5
That does not even look like Linda to me. It is used on the new CD. I agree. When I found it I had to use identifiers to prove to myself it was Linda and not some look a like. I can't say for sure but it looks like it may be from the Lowell George benefit. She looked noticeably stressed, unlike herself that night. That's what I concluded anyway. His loss seemed to affect her greatly.
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Post by RobGNYC on Feb 2, 2019 0:05:12 GMT -5
Agree that the photo is from the Aug. 4, 1979, Lowell George Forum benefit. Something about Linda's performance that night has always bothered me, maybe I'm reading too much into it. She was the most successful musician in the business at that moment, coming off "Living in the USA," but she seemed off kilter somehow--maybe trying too hard? Not sure if it was the loss of Lowell (more than understandable) or singing "Blowing Away" with Bonnie (also understandable--both had recorded it by then, and Linda has always said that Bonnie is the better singer) but something seems to have unsettled her. Singing with Bonnie, she seemed to be trying too hard when she didn't need to. Minor point--she looked a bit too glamorous for a benefit for Lowell. Just my opinion but the video of Linda and Bonnie should blow me away (no pun intended) but it doesn't--it just makes me a bit uncomfortable. Even with all that, I think that "All That You Dream" with Little Feat that day beats the excellent version on "Living in the USA."
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Post by the Scribe on Feb 2, 2019 0:50:41 GMT -5
I can't recall where I read it but of that night Linda confessed she did a lot of crying. They would perform a song while trying not to cry and then cry after and mostly out of sight. It was stressful for anyone tuned into Linda to watch. That may be what you were picking up on.
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Post by the Scribe on Feb 5, 2019 2:01:26 GMT -5
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Post by the Scribe on Feb 5, 2019 2:02:32 GMT -5
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Post by the Scribe on Feb 5, 2019 2:04:03 GMT -5
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Post by the Scribe on Feb 5, 2019 2:05:16 GMT -5
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Post by the Scribe on Feb 5, 2019 2:06:27 GMT -5
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Post by the Scribe on Feb 5, 2019 2:08:20 GMT -5
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Post by the Scribe on Feb 5, 2019 2:09:39 GMT -5
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Post by the Scribe on Feb 5, 2019 2:12:52 GMT -5
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Post by the Scribe on Feb 5, 2019 2:14:10 GMT -5
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Post by the Scribe on Feb 5, 2019 2:19:00 GMT -5
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Post by RobGNYC on Feb 6, 2019 17:42:52 GMT -5
Jim Shea confirms on his site that it was the Pantages. "The photograph was taken for the Linda Ronstadt "Simple Dreams" album cover on July 29th, 1977 at the Pantages Theatre in Hollywood, California. The album packaging won a Grammy Award that year for best album package." www.rockpaperphoto.com/linda-ronstadt-hollywood-1977.html
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