š Up to 70% Off Selected ItemsShop Sale

RY COODER & DAVID LINDLEY
STUNNING POST-BOP SHOW FROM COODER & LINDLEYāS 1979 TOUR
⢠By 1979, Ry Cooder had reached something of a crossroads in his career. Following stints in the late-1960s with Captain Beefheartās Magic Band, and before that, the Rising Sons - alongside session work with The Rolling Stones, Randy Newman and Lowell George - Cooder released his first, eponymous, solo-album in 1970. Following this came several further highly acclaimed records, largely containing covers of blues, country and other roots music numbers, updated to Ryās inimitable slide guitar-based sound. ⢠Releases like Into the Purple Valley, Paradise and Lunch and Chicken Skin Music were all critically well received, but Cooder never hit it big. 1978ās Jazz was a sideways step which alienated a number of fans, while mid-79ās Bop āTil You Drop gave him his first hit single, but was somewhat too commercial for many.
⢠So, when Cooder went of on tour within days of Bopās⦠release, he took along his old mucker, David Lindley, and the pair travelled to the other side of the world, putting on shows in Australia, and more notably, Japan - where Cooder had not previously played. Performing only a solitary track from the new record, Cooder and Lindley concentrated on a set-list made up - perhaps sensibly ā of classics from Cooderās back catalogue for these concerts. Their show on 6th November 1979, in Osaka, was clearly hugely enjoyed by the Japanese audience, albeit in the traditional, polite Japanese manner that western musicians have come to expect in the land of the rising sun.
⢠A fine performance, the entire gig was recorded for live FM-Broadcast and is now released on this new CD for the first time.
⢠By 1979, Ry Cooder had reached something of a crossroads in his career. Following stints in the late-1960s with Captain Beefheartās Magic Band, and before that, the Rising Sons - alongside session work with The Rolling Stones, Randy Newman and Lowell George - Cooder released his first, eponymous, solo-album in 1970. Following this came several further highly acclaimed records, largely containing covers of blues, country and other roots music numbers, updated to Ryās inimitable slide guitar-based sound. ⢠Releases like Into the Purple Valley, Paradise and Lunch and Chicken Skin Music were all critically well received, but Cooder never hit it big. 1978ās Jazz was a sideways step which alienated a number of fans, while mid-79ās Bop āTil You Drop gave him his first hit single, but was somewhat too commercial for many.
⢠So, when Cooder went of on tour within days of Bopās⦠release, he took along his old mucker, David Lindley, and the pair travelled to the other side of the world, putting on shows in Australia, and more notably, Japan - where Cooder had not previously played. Performing only a solitary track from the new record, Cooder and Lindley concentrated on a set-list made up - perhaps sensibly ā of classics from Cooderās back catalogue for these concerts. Their show on 6th November 1979, in Osaka, was clearly hugely enjoyed by the Japanese audience, albeit in the traditional, polite Japanese manner that western musicians have come to expect in the land of the rising sun.
⢠A fine performance, the entire gig was recorded for live FM-Broadcast and is now released on this new CD for the first time.
$17.85
RY COODER & DAVID LINDLEYā
$17.85
Product Information
Product Information
Shipping & Returns
Shipping & Returns
Description
STUNNING POST-BOP SHOW FROM COODER & LINDLEYāS 1979 TOUR
⢠By 1979, Ry Cooder had reached something of a crossroads in his career. Following stints in the late-1960s with Captain Beefheartās Magic Band, and before that, the Rising Sons - alongside session work with The Rolling Stones, Randy Newman and Lowell George - Cooder released his first, eponymous, solo-album in 1970. Following this came several further highly acclaimed records, largely containing covers of blues, country and other roots music numbers, updated to Ryās inimitable slide guitar-based sound. ⢠Releases like Into the Purple Valley, Paradise and Lunch and Chicken Skin Music were all critically well received, but Cooder never hit it big. 1978ās Jazz was a sideways step which alienated a number of fans, while mid-79ās Bop āTil You Drop gave him his first hit single, but was somewhat too commercial for many.
⢠So, when Cooder went of on tour within days of Bopās⦠release, he took along his old mucker, David Lindley, and the pair travelled to the other side of the world, putting on shows in Australia, and more notably, Japan - where Cooder had not previously played. Performing only a solitary track from the new record, Cooder and Lindley concentrated on a set-list made up - perhaps sensibly ā of classics from Cooderās back catalogue for these concerts. Their show on 6th November 1979, in Osaka, was clearly hugely enjoyed by the Japanese audience, albeit in the traditional, polite Japanese manner that western musicians have come to expect in the land of the rising sun.
⢠A fine performance, the entire gig was recorded for live FM-Broadcast and is now released on this new CD for the first time.
⢠By 1979, Ry Cooder had reached something of a crossroads in his career. Following stints in the late-1960s with Captain Beefheartās Magic Band, and before that, the Rising Sons - alongside session work with The Rolling Stones, Randy Newman and Lowell George - Cooder released his first, eponymous, solo-album in 1970. Following this came several further highly acclaimed records, largely containing covers of blues, country and other roots music numbers, updated to Ryās inimitable slide guitar-based sound. ⢠Releases like Into the Purple Valley, Paradise and Lunch and Chicken Skin Music were all critically well received, but Cooder never hit it big. 1978ās Jazz was a sideways step which alienated a number of fans, while mid-79ās Bop āTil You Drop gave him his first hit single, but was somewhat too commercial for many.
⢠So, when Cooder went of on tour within days of Bopās⦠release, he took along his old mucker, David Lindley, and the pair travelled to the other side of the world, putting on shows in Australia, and more notably, Japan - where Cooder had not previously played. Performing only a solitary track from the new record, Cooder and Lindley concentrated on a set-list made up - perhaps sensibly ā of classics from Cooderās back catalogue for these concerts. Their show on 6th November 1979, in Osaka, was clearly hugely enjoyed by the Japanese audience, albeit in the traditional, polite Japanese manner that western musicians have come to expect in the land of the rising sun.
⢠A fine performance, the entire gig was recorded for live FM-Broadcast and is now released on this new CD for the first time.

















