Jacob Whitesides, Jimmy James Hunter, Forest Miller LIVE at "Teen Hoot" An original by Jacob "I Love You"
Tag Archives: Tennessee
The Wanted- Glad You Came "LIVE" (ft. Jimmy James Hunter and Forest Miller)
Jacob Whitesides LIVE at "Hoot Fest 2012" Performing The Wanted- Glad You Came! Twitters: @JacobWhitesides @JimmyJamesHunter @ForestMiller18 Thank you for watching!
Return Of The Grievous Angel – Gram Parsons
Gram Parsons — "Return of The Grievous Angel" Recorded, 1973, not long before Parsons lost his life to a drug overdose. Gram Parsons saw an Elvis Presley concert in February, 1956 in Waycross, GA, and got an autograph after the show. He then decided to become a musician. Elvis "TCB Band," later the core of Grams friend Emmylou Harris "Hot Band," played with Gram Parsons on this song, and on two albums. "Pick it, James!" So, what is this song "about"? Some have claimed "The Grievous Angel" is actually a truck: an 18-Wheeler. Well, thats one idea. Is it biographical, or autobiographical? All biography is autobiography, as Parsons makes so clear in this song. What is a Calico Bonnet? Everyone has one, I guess, of one kind or another. Photographs: Copyright notices have been added to classic Alfred Wertheimer photographs, to assure proper credit. Original photographs, by the Uploader, of outdoor scenes in Memphis, Tenn., including The River. Copyright 1981, robinmark64@gmail.com, robinmark@yahoo.com, robinmark@earthlink.net Most other photos: kudos and credit to the great archivists and photo-experts at FECC! Please *buy the music*! Dedicated, of course, to the memory of Gram Parsons.
Nick Martellaro – 19th Nervous Breakdown (Rolling Stones Live Ed Sullivan version cover)
Hi everyone! This is my cover of the Rolling Stones song, "19th Nervous Breakdown"…more specifically, their live arrangement, which they played on the 1965 Ed Sullivan show. I personally like this arrangement better, because it has an extended intro, more interesting breaks, its more raw, and has a non-fadeout ending. Overall, I think its more dynamic than the studio version…unfortunately, YouTube has taken down all the videos of the 1965 Ed Sullivan performance, so youll have to seek it elsewhere. My goal for this one was the same as my last Stones cover ("The Last Time"), which got a good response. Basically, I think the Stones songs sound best raw and unpolished. This one has no overdubs, its just exactly what wouldve been played live – two guitars, one bass, drums, and two vocals. I tried to capture the "first take" energy of this live performance. Let me just say, this song is RIDICULOUSLY fun to play. This is a great example of the Rolling Stones signature "weaving guitars" sound. Keiths part is a great rhythm, with some cool fills along the way. Brians part is a hypnotic riff that he took directly from Bo Diddleys song, "Diddley Daddy." Bill Wymans bass part is also ridiculous in the way he played it. Instead of playing lower on the neck, this bass line goes all the way up to the 12th fret, along with some crazy divebombing during the outro. Anyways, I hope you like it! I apologize if the video is slightly out of sync. This one was a huge file on my <b>…<b>