Work Song: The Paul Butterfield Blues Band/Cannonball Adderley Quintet/The Animals

As I continue to practice on my Chapman Stick guitar, I have a list of tunes that I am currently working on and a list of tunes that I plan to work on. One of the songs that just went from the “will work on” to “working on” list is Work Song by Nat Adderley. When I first heard it on the second Paul Butterfield record “East – West”, it immediately sounded familiar. The song was already a bit of a standard by then, first appearing on a Nat Adderley record of the same name in 1960 with it subsequently being given lyrics a year later by Oscar Brown Jr. I have a vague recollection of seeing Bobby Darin perform it on T.V. as a kid (check it out: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=58Q4Q2KRVXU). The melody, with it’s call & response structure, harkens back to pre-blues while it’s harmonic structure is similar to (but not exactly) a minor blues. Given that combination, it’s not that surprising that the song would be performed by a wide range of artists.

Lets first start with the a clip of the Cannonball Adderley Quintet performing the tune live in Switzerland in 1963. With Cannonball on alto sax and the song’s composer on cornet, there’s Joe Zawinal on piano; Sam Jones on bass and Louis Hayes on drums. This was one of the great unsung bands in jazz. Cannonball Addderley, in my humble opinion, is one of the more under appreciated figures in jazz. He played on the Miles Davis records “Milestones” and “Kind Of Blue” where his bluesier style provided a nice contrast to John Coltrane’s tenor sax and Miles’s trumpet. You want more? How about having the jazz crossover hit “Mercy, Mercy, Mercy”? That tune was written by the group’s pianist Joe Zawinul. Joe went on to become a important figure in jazz-rock (or, if you insist on calling it such, fusion), making essential contributions to Miles’ “In A Silent Way” and “Bitches Brew” and going on to form the group Weather Report.
The tune is taken here at a pretty brisk tempo. Cannonball takes the first solo which starts off in a typical hard bop vein with the occasional detour into slightly more oblique harmony. Nat Adderley solos next on cornet with more mainstream bebop lines but still swings like hell. Joe Zawinal’s piano solo is also more straight bebop with some cool block chords towards the end. Special mention to Louis Hays on drums, who’s playing here is kicking butt and taking names.

Work Song – Cannonball Adderley Quintet (1963)


Instead of presenting the “East-West” version of Work Song, the clip below is the audio of the Paul Butterfield Blues Band playing the tune at the Fillmore West in San Francisco on September 20th, 1966. Jerry Garcia had mentioned in interviews how these Fillmore West shows really put the local San Francisco bands on notice. Butterfield and company came to town to play.
The awesome Michael Bloomfield solos first. Almost immediately, his lines showcase a jazzy chromaticism that you wouldn’t hear from a traditional blues guitarist. Considering that this was 1966, I would say that Bloomfield was more harmonically advanced than almost any of his peers at that time (or any other time for that matter). That being said, by the end of his solo, it sounds like he’s strangling his guitar strings and mixing serious string bends with that aforementioned chromaticism.  It’s interesting to compare Bloomfield’s solo with that of the group’s other guitarist, Elvin Bishop, later on. Elvin’s solo is great but compared to Bloomfield’s, his phrasing is more conventional and lacks Bloomfield’s across the bar line rhythmic abandon.

 Work Song – The Paul Butterfield Blues Band – Live at The Fillmore West (09/20/1966)


Finally, here is a clip of The Animals doing Work Song on some TV show in 1965. Unlike the two previous clips, this version gives us the lyrics and features impressive vocals from Eric Burdon and a niffy electric piano solo from Dave Rowberry. I must admit that I’m not familiar with The Animals other than the hits but based on this cut, I will certainty make the effort to do so.
As the song says: “I still got a long way to go”.

Work Song – The Animals (1965)

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Posted in Blues, Improvisation, Jazz, Music Appreciation and Analysis

Groove Is In The Heart: Charlie Hunter Video On The Importance of Rhythm

I’ve made no secret that I’m a big fan of Charlie Hunter. What he does is amazing and unique (please check out my previous post on Charlie Hunter here: https://roymusicusa.com/2014/08/22/bing-bing-bing-bing-the-awesome-guitar-of-charlie-hunter/). The video below is from Premier Guitar magazine during which Charlie plays a couple of tunes and discusses his approach to music.
At about the 5:25 mark he begins talking about how crucial the role of rhythm plays in his guitar conception. He’s laying down some knowledge on us when he talks about how the drum feel (whether from a actual drummer or an “imaginary” drummer) is the starting point from which everything else (melody, bassline) follows. I also found interesting his comments concerning how drummers are better suited to understand his instrument because they are more familiar with the rhythmic aspect of playing multiple parts simultaneously. As Charlie says, “guitarists never really come to terms with the fundamentals of the music which is rhythm, the groove and the time”. Other bits of serious wisdom include his comments on the benefits of practicing with a metronome (“The metronome is your friend. It tells you very nicely how much you suck”), how working on your time groove is a continuous process and the importance of paying attention to duration of the notes you’re playing. I also love his term for rhythmically weak playing: “Budweiser blues licks”. Ouch!
Add some incredible solo guitar playing and you got a really cool video. The Premier Guitar website (http://www.premierguitar.com/) is a great resource for guitar nerds and definitely worth checking out.

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Posted in Blues, Improvisation, Jam Band, Jazz

“Give Me A Ticket For An Aer-O-Plane”: Joe Cocker 1940 – 2014

For those of us who came of age in the late sixties – early seventies and for whom the music of those years made an indelible imprint on our souls, this has been a tough month. In the past several weeks we have lost Bobby Keys, the legendary saxophonist, Ian McLagen (keyboard player for the Faces) and now vocalist extraordinaire Joe Cocker.

My early music tastes benefited greatly from having an older brother who would get cool albums that I listened to and among those I was lucky to be exposed to was Joe Cocker’s first two studio albums. I had read in Rolling Stone magazine glowing reviews of the Mad Dog & Englishmen live shows and was excited when they reported that they were being recorded for a live album. When the double record set came out, I was not disappointed. I consider it one of the best live rock albums ever (my list of greatest live rock albums is a topic for a future post).

Joe Cocker had just finished a long grueling tour in March 1970 when he found out that his management had booked him for an additional seven week tour that was to start in a week. With members of his previous back up band (known as the Grease Band) having gone their separate ways, Joe was between a rock and a hard place. In comes friend and music legend Leon Russell who helps Joe put together a mammoth big band with multiple guitarists, keyboard players, drummers, a horn section and a choir of background singers. Many of the musicians Russel recruited were from Delaney & Bonnie and Friends. Among them were drummer Jim Gordon, bassist Carl Radle, trumpter Jim Price and the previously mentioned Bobby Keys. Along with Leon Russell, this group of musicians went on to play with the likes of Eric Clapton, George Harrison, John Lennon, Dave Mason and the Rolling Stones. The music was a compelling hybrid of rock, pop, southern soul music and gospel which proved flexible enough to be able to handle a diverse range of source material. The Beatles, Stones, Ray Charles, Stax, Leonard Cohen and Bob Dylan were among the artists whose songs were transformed by this band, all fronted by the amazingly soulful vocals of Cocker.

Below are videos from that tour of two of my favorite songs. First is Joe’s cover of the Box Tops’ “The Letter”. Check out Bobby Key’s “other” classic sax solo (besides his solo on “Brown Sugar”). Also of note is Russel’s superlative piano playing.

Joe Cocker “The Letter” in live 1970 (MAD DOGS & ENGLISHMEN)

Below is another classic performance, this time of “Space Captain” which was the B-side of “The Letter”. Love the piano breaks and the background vocals (“ooh….aah”) but I can’t help but be emotionally gut punched when I hear Joe Cocker pleading “Learing to live together.. til we die”.

Joe Cocker – Mad Dogs & Englishmen – Space Captain

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Posted in Classic Rock, Music Appreciation and Analysis

A Haiku For The Holidays

Lennon’s Imagine
Performed On The Chapman Stick
Happy Holidays

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Posted in Chapman Stick

Stick Theory Continued: Another Chapman Stick Guitar Video

I thought I would post a new video of me performing on the Chapman Stick Guitar. Here I’m doing a couple of choruses of the blues standard “Nobody Knows You When Your Down And Out”. It’s a fun song to play with a chord progression that a little more involved than your traditional I-IV-V form. Hope you like it.

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Posted in Blues, Chapman Stick

“Please, sir, I want some more.” . . Grant Green Part II

This is a continuation of my previous post about the great Grant Green. One of the points I made during that post is how Grant Green’s playing is an excellent source of coping lines (or if you prefer, licks), especially if you’re coming from a straight blues background and want to get some bebop into your vocabulary.
So with that in mind, let me direct your attention to the two video clips below. They are from David Hamburger’s excellent series of instructional guitar videos called 50 Jazz Blues Licks. In each video lesson, David demonstrates a guitar lick from a great hard bop jazz players. There are many reasons why I feel these video lessons stand out. First, his choice of licks is excellent. These lines are very hip, taken from great players who will be familiar to a music geek who read the liner notes of classic Blue Note recordings. His analysis of the licks is outstanding, really giving you insight into the nuts and bolts of how they are put together. As a result, they excel in using specific examples to demonstrate concepts that you can adapt to your own playing. He also gives you the context on where the riff applies such as “first 4 bars of a Bb blues” or “V-IV-I turnaround” and chooses examples that that be readily applied to a straight I-IV-V blues progression. If you are playing at your local blues jam session, there’s a good chance that your fellow players will not be familiar with the jazz version of a 12 bar blues. That cool ii-V-I lick you’ve been working may be a little hard to fit into that fast I-IV-V shuffle you’re playing. You can drop these licks into a T Bone Walker tune and have everyone take notice. They will also provide you with the tools to really take your playing into the next level.

In the first of these two Grant Green related lessons, David breaks down a cool riff that goes over the first four bars of a Bb blues. I like how, given that this was #23 in the series, he refers to this video as from the “Department of It’s About Time”. In it, David uses the lick to demonstrate such concepts as chord tone enclosure and superimposing a ii-V line over measure four of a 12 bar blues (measure four is the transition point from the I chord to the IV chord). These are key concepts to understanding how to incorporating bebop into your playing vocabulary.

50 Jazz Blues Licks – #23 Grant Green – Guitar Lesson – David Hamburger

The second video showcases another Grant Green inspired lick that goes over the first four bars of a Bb blues. This one incorporates elements of the major pentatonic scale, chromatic passing tones and using a diminished chord to create a bebop approved dominant seventh b9 chord flavor. Another winner.

50 Jazz Blues Licks – #25 Grant Green II – Guitar Lesson – David Hamburger

Please Note:
These licks are also part of the David Hamburger’s instructional DVD “50 Jazz Blues Guitar Licks You Must Know”. The DVD provides 52 video lessons, the licks notated and tabbed out, backing tracks, etc. For more information go to http://truefire.com/jazz-guitar-lessons/50-jazz-blues-licks/.

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Posted in Blues, Improvisation, Jazz, Music Appreciation and Analysis

Born To Be Blue: Grant Green (1935 – 1979)

The last couple of weeks I’ve been listening to a lot of Grant Green. There are three tunes in particular that I keep returning to. They are “Blues In Maude’s Flat”, “Cool Blues” and “It Ain’t Necessarily So”. As a musician who’s been working on the integrating his blues guitar vocabulary with jazz guitar vocabulary, I find Grant Green’s playing particularly instructive.
His playing has a soulful quality that I find lacking in many other jazz guitarists. He played with a sharp percussive attack that made his notes pop and would sometimes sound more at home at Chess Records than Blue Note, the classic jazz label he is most associated with. His lines were uncluttered and lacked the technical flash of other jazz guitarists but which I find is a good part of the appeal: the directness of his playing.
For many years (and even now), Grant Green was given a bad rap because many of his later recordings were of a more “commercial” nature. I can’t help but think that part of that is the typical jazz nerd’s aversion to anything populist. But you can argue that it’s was his later “funk” records that raised his profile which in turn led to the reevaluation and appreciation of his earlier straight ahead jazz records. Green played on more Blue Note sessions during the label’s heyday than almost anyone else, as both sideman and a leader. I doubt that musicians of the caliber of Elvin Jones, McCoy Tyner, Jimmy Smith and Art Blakey would waste their time playing with someone who wasn’t up to snuff. I am focusing on these three recordings because I love their bluesy nature while quite ably demonstrating why he’s worth serious investigation from musicians. If you’re a blues oriented guitarist looking to get inspiration (and cop some lines) from jazz players, Grant Green would be a great place to start.

With “Blues In Maude’s Flat”, you have your classic jazz organ combo of Hammond B-3 organ, tenor sax, guitar and drums. The cut has a great “after hours” vibe and the soloists (Yusef Lateef on tenor sax, Jack McDuff on organ) have plenty of space to stretch out.  There is a measured quality to everyone’s playing that sustains the mood of the whole tune for 15 minutes. Another nice touch: for each soloist, the organ and drums (the excellent Al Harewood) lay back for two choruses before kicking into a swing groove. This simple arrangement touch adds a bit of drama to the tune and gives it some dynamic variety.
Green stated that his two biggest influences were Charlie Christian (early jazz guitar pioneer) and Charlie Parker (seminal jazz figure) and you can hear both of them in this solo. There some Charlie Christian riffing early on but by the sixth chorus Green is channeling some serious Parker stuff, adapting Bird’s alto sax lines to the guitar. There are times during the solo that Green’s lines have a floating melodic quality while being rhythmically in the pocket, very reminiscent of Bird.  

Grant Green – Blues In Maude’s Flat

 

“Cool Blues” (what a great title!) is a Charlie Parker tune and like the previous tune, is a 12 bar jazz blues. It’s a great little bebop riff tune. If you check out Charlie Parker live recordings, you can hear him drop this riff into different solos often and it’s been quoted by numerable musicians ever since. The personal is Ike Quebec – tenor sax, Sonny Clark – piano, Sam Jones – bass and Louis Hayes – drums joining Green’s guitar. Here, Grant is wearing his Bird feathers proudly. As I said earlier, a great place to get some bebop into your blues guitar. To help facilitate that, you can check out a transcription of Green’s solo here (special thanks to Jason Shadrick): http://www.jasonshadrick.com/wp-content/uploads/2009/09/GrantCoolBlues.pdf

Grant Green – Cool Blues


 

With similar personal to “Cool Blues” (replace Louis Hayes with the legendary Art Blakey on drums and lose the sax), this is is Grant Green’s take on the Gershwin tune “It Ain’t Necessarily So” (from Porgy & Bess). Don’t expect a faithful rendition of the original melody and harmony, Green pretty much remakes the tune in his own image, only hinting at the original Gershwin melody. In addition, he restructures the harmony into alternating vamp like sections, one featuring a descending scale line and the other a cycle of fifths sequence.
First off, Blakey is amazing here. This thing has a groove that just won’t quit. You can actually hear Art cheering on the the other players and feel the infectious energy. I especially love it at the 3:37 mark when Green repeatably plays a six note figure of sixteenth notes over the entire chorus. By superimposing the six notes pattern over a sixteen note matrix, the beginning of the pattern shifts throughout the chorus. It also creates tension in the solo that is released when he breaks off the pattern and begins the next chorus. Things like this demonstrate the rhythmic sophistication of Green’s playing. I believe one of the reason why Green’s later jazz funk recordings hold up so well can be attributed to the advanced rhythmic sense in his playing.

Grant Green – It Ain’t Necessarily So

There is a fair amount of Grant Green that you can listen to over You Tube, both from his straight jazz and the jazz funk phases of his career.  Check him out. It will definitely be worth your attention.

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Posted in Blues, Jazz, Music Appreciation and Analysis

Statesboro Blues: The Animated Videos

On October 28th, 2014, the Allman Brothers, after 45 years, played their last show at their “home away from home”, the Beacon Theater in New York City. The Allman Brothers were one of my favorite bands and a big reasons why I play music. The event had it’s share of media coverage so I’m not going to rehash the band’s history and such. What I will present are two very cool animated videos of one of their signature tunes, Statesboro Blues (both done by the  Brooklyn based animator Brett Underhill).
The first video is a “mashup” version of Statesboro Blues through the ages. Here, the ABB classic was assembled from different versions of the tune, from different decades and different lineups of the band. The multiple versions are synced together seamlessly and as a whole, the song maintains a wonderful flow. For fans of the band, the audio version of this alone would be a great listen but the accompanying animation raises everything to a another level entirely. The animated depictions of the band are historically consistent with their underlying music segments and the animation during the second solo section (starting at the 2:45 mark) is full of visual references to the Allman Brother’s mythology. There’s a peach truck, Elizabeth Reed’s tombstone, midnight riders and a bunch of other easter eggs (see http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Easter_egg_%28media%29) for the ABB nerd. This was obviously a labor of love on the part of the animator Brett Underhill who “gets it”.  Over the closing credits of the video (with Little Martha playing underneath it), Brett states that the video was “created as a tribute to the Allman Brothers Band, past and present”. A fitting tribute indeed.

Based on the video above, the Allmans had Brett Underhill make another one for the release of The 1971 Fillmore East Recordings, a box set documenting the group’s legendary run of shows at the iconic NYC venue. Unlike the previous video, this one is based on a single performance of Stateboro Blues, in this case, the 3/13/71 Fillmore East late show (the classic version from At Fillmore East is actually from the 3/13/71 early set). This version has Pop Up Video like captions that provide tidbits of info regarding the the band’s history, background on the song itself and of the recording of At Fillmore East.
Enjoy the videos and remember the Allman Brothers Band.

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Posted in Blues, Classic Rock, Jam Band, Music Appreciation and Analysis

“I Feel Free”. . . . . . : Jack Bruce 1943 – 2014

Jack Bruce, bassist, vocalist and songwriter extraordinaire passed away on October 25, 2014 at the age of 71 from liver disease. With Cream, he was one of the handful of musicians who redefined the capabilities of his instrument and along with his fellow band mates, helped establish the concept of the virtuoso Rock musician. These guys were serious players and were not shy about letting everyone know it (they called themselves Cream for a reason). With a jazz musician’s sensibilities and a bluesman’s soul, Jack Bruce’s playing in Cream was rhythmically driving and fearless. He would go head to toe with two of the most aggressively virtuoso players in rock and give no ground. And let us not forget that he wrote the bass line of Sunshine Of Your Love, one of the Greatest Riffs of All Time.

I was lucky enough to see one of the Cream reunion shows at Madison Square Garden, N.Y.C.  in 2005. At the risk of pissing off Clapton fans (of which I am one too), I have to say that Bruce made the show. His bass playing had only become deeper over time and his singing was absolutely incredible. Just remembering now his playing on “We’re Going Wrong” gives me goosebumps.

Below is a fascinating video of Jack Bruce called The Cream of Cream. It alternates segments of Bruce performing several Cream classics “live in the studio” with the late great Gary Moore on guitar and Gary Husband on drums, with sections of Bruce discussing his bass playing and demonstrating his bass parts on these Cream tunes. The tunes performed are White Room, I Feel Free, N.S.U., Sleepy Time Time, Politician and Sunshine of Your Love. The trio playing is absolutely fantastic with Moore and Husband doing great jobs of channeling Clapton and Baker respectively. The parts that really make it for me though are the ones where it’s just Bruce playing the bass. The thing that struck me was how complete the bass parts sound when performed stand alone. Also, at the 9:27 mark, there’s a cool little story on the origins of the song title N.S.U.

Jack Bruce – The Cream of Cream

While Bruce will be rightly be remembered as an innovative bassist, he also wrote (along with lyricist Pete Brown) many of classic Cream songs. These songs have become part of the cannon of rock music. We’re talking White Room, I Feel Free, I’m So Glad and of course, Sunshine Of Your Love. Below is a clip of a personal favorite Jack Bruce song and that’s Theme For An Imaginary Western. The song originally appeared on the Jack Bruce solo album Songs For A Tailor and was subsequently “covered” by the band Mountain, the connection being Felix Papppalardi, bassist/vocalist for Mountain and producer of Cream. This is a beautiful version of the song, performed by Jack Bruce on piano.

Jack Bruce – Theme For An Imaginary Western

R.I.P. Jack. Thanks for the great music.

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Posted in Bass, Blues, Classic Rock, Music Appreciation and Analysis

“Time Is Tight. . . “: Booker T. And The MG’s

Last post, I talked about one of the highlights of my recent trip to Tennessee, The Johnny Cash Museum in Nashville. This time we’re going to Memphis. There was Graceland. There was Sun Studios. There was the Gibson Guitar factory (my wife said that I had a stupid grim on my face during the whole tour). And there was Stax.
Stax Records was, along with Detroit’s Motown Records, the source of many of the greatest soul records ever made. Sam & Dave’s “Soul Man”, Rufus Thomas’ “Walking The Dog”, Eddie Floyd’s “Knock On Wood”, Johnnie Taylor’s “Who’s Making Love”, Otis Redding’s “I Can’t Turn You Loose” and Wilson Pickett’s “In The Midnight Hour”. All recorded at Stax Studios. And when you talk about Stax, you are talking about Booker T. & The MG’s.
Their impact on popular music cannot be underestimated. As the house band for Stax Records, they played on numerous hits and as such were one of the architects of soul music. These guys were all about the groove. They were not showy players. If you listen to what they were playing individually, you will hear relatively simple parts but taken as a whole, they fit together perfectly. Because they never stepped on each other lines, there is a sense of space to their grooves that gives them a great relaxed feel that is timeless. These are musicians who epitomize the term “team players”. What they play serves the music, not their egos.

Another reason why this group is near and dear to my heart is their legacy as an instrumental group. I am particularly fond of instrumentals and the fact that Booker T & The MG’s actually had instrumental hits is especially noteworthy. Their instrumentals reflect their playing style: great relaxed groove, catchy melodies, solos that were to the point, not too fussy.

Below are clips of select songs and performances that I feel are worth your attention.

Booker T. & The MG’s – Green Onions
Where it all began. What started out as fooling around during downtime in the studio becomes one of the great instrumentals of popular music. Simple, soulfully elegant playing. When it’s this good, you don’t need anymore.
Trivia Note 1:
It’s commonly assummed that Duck Dunn is the bassist on Green Onions but it’s actually Lewie Steinberg, the band’s original bassist who Dunn replaced in 1964.
Trivai Note 2:
Jim Stewart, the president of Stax Records originally wanted Green Onions to be the B side of the single with another song, “Behave Yourself, as the A side. Guitarist Steve Cropper thought Green Onions should be the A side. I guess history proved him right.  

Booker T. & The MG’s – Time Is Tight
My personal favorite Booker T & The MG’s song. The great guitar/bass unison into riff. That organ melody (with a great little double stop organ fill). That little arpeggio guitar riff in the middle. So cool!
Trivia Note 3: Both The Clash and Squeeze have played this tune live as their opening “warmup” number.

Albert King – Born Under A Bad Sign
One of the great blues albums of all time, Born Under A Bad Sign was Albert King’s first record for Stax Records and it being Stax, he was backed up by Booker T & The MG’s. Members of the MG’s were also involved in writing a couple of tunes on the album, most notably the classic title tune. The importance and influence of this record cannot be overstated. The MG’s gave this record a modern sound that differentiated it from the blues records that came before it. Essential listening.

Stax/Volt Revue – Norway 1967
Alright! In 1967, Stax packaged a revue tour of Europe featuring Booker T & The MG’s, The Mar-Keys, Arthur Conley, Sam and Dave, Eddie Floyd and the amazing Otis Redding. There’s an extended take on Green Onions that features great biting guitar from Steve Cropper. Great horn section by the Mar-Keys. By the time Otis Redding ends his five song mini set with “Try A Little Tenderness”, the Norwegian audience is going bat shit crazy and lets face it, who can blame them.
Special Bonus Round Trivia: When this tour hit England, The Beatles, who were huge fans, sent limos to the airport to pick them up and when meeting Steve Cropper, kissed his ring. If the Beatles had such admiration for these guys, you should too. 

 

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Posted in Blues, Classic Rock, Music Appreciation and Analysis
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