Tulsa County/ Clarence White
Moderator: Dave Mudgett
- Dave Harmonson
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Tulsa County/ Clarence White
Tulsa County Blue from the Ballad Of Easy Rider album was always one of my favorite Clarence White tracks. Here's a live version with Jon York singing lead. Audo only.
http://youtu.be/SVoMt2UqPFU
http://youtu.be/SVoMt2UqPFU
- Joachim Kettner
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- Joachim Kettner
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- Joined: 14 Apr 2009 1:57 pm
- Location: Germany
Tulsa County by Anita Carter:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PughDzjR6po
Tulsa County by Jesse 'Ed' Davis:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BYAP9L8-gHE
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PughDzjR6po
Tulsa County by Jesse 'Ed' Davis:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BYAP9L8-gHE
Fender Kingman, Sierra Crown D-10, Evans Amplifier, Soup Cube.
- Dave Harmonson
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Joachim, cool, I hadn't heard those other versions. The Byrds Ballad Of Easy Rider Tulsa County track is one of my all time favorite Clarence tracks. On the re-issue CD of "Ballad" they have an alternate version with Jon York singing with an additional verse and no fiddle. Makes Clarences parts even more out front.
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Thanks Dave, for keeping a great song from a great band, alive, and in the world's face.
And thanks, too, Yoachim for those links. Both renditions are surely different from one another; as well as from the Byrd's version.
Really liked Anita's version. Can't believe all those Carter gals are gone. Sad.
Was surprised, too, to see the song was written by a female, Pamela Polland. Guess, cuz I first heard it by the Byrds. Pamela has quite a musical track record for herself, too.
"BOER" never got great ratings; but is right at the top of MY 'fave' list. "Oil In My Lamp", too.
OK, guys. You know me.
Just for the record:
Tulsa County - http://picosong.com/hgA
Oil In My Lamp - http://picosong.com/RYi
And thanks, too, Yoachim for those links. Both renditions are surely different from one another; as well as from the Byrd's version.
Really liked Anita's version. Can't believe all those Carter gals are gone. Sad.
Was surprised, too, to see the song was written by a female, Pamela Polland. Guess, cuz I first heard it by the Byrds. Pamela has quite a musical track record for herself, too.
"BOER" never got great ratings; but is right at the top of MY 'fave' list. "Oil In My Lamp", too.
OK, guys. You know me.
Just for the record:
Tulsa County - http://picosong.com/hgA
Oil In My Lamp - http://picosong.com/RYi
Chip
Williams U-12 8X5; Keyless; Natural Blonde Laquer.
Williams U-12 8X5; Keyless; Natural Blonde Laquer.
- Joachim Kettner
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John York doing great harmony vocals on This Wheels On Fire:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RxdMqiKI ... re=related
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RxdMqiKI ... re=related
Fender Kingman, Sierra Crown D-10, Evans Amplifier, Soup Cube.
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- Dave Harmonson
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Thanks for posting Joachim. Led me to this one from the same shoot. A little surreal having The Byrds at The Playboy Mansion for an after hours party, but maybe the best footage I've seen of Clarence on his B Bender.
http://youtu.be/Q21BF38W3Gs
http://youtu.be/Q21BF38W3Gs
- Dave Mudgett
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This one came up dredging the Music section for bender-related threads to move over to Almost a Steel Guitar.
I'm sure I've mentioned it before, but I was at one of the FBB/Byrds shows at Boston Tea Party in February of '69. They were there for a few days, not sure if that was the night I was there or not. I was in Boston from Amherst visiting family. Whatever, it was totally mind-bending for me - I was expecting more or less like this show I was at - Curry Hicks Cage at UMass Amherst in February '68 -
https://www.digitalcommonwealth.org/sea ... :ns064g52d
https://credo.library.umass.edu/view/zo ... 8-b02-i130
Gram but no Clarence. My first exposure to the Byrds. Any of you Western Mass guys at this show? Doug? I was pretty young, and I biked to and from the show from our place in North Amherst. No streetcars like in Boston.
Anyway, my memory is a little fuzzed out about the Tea Party show, but I seem to remember Clarence with his P/W Tele into a Dual Showman Reverb. Definitely no trouble hearing him, LOL.
I'm sure I've mentioned it before, but I was at one of the FBB/Byrds shows at Boston Tea Party in February of '69. They were there for a few days, not sure if that was the night I was there or not. I was in Boston from Amherst visiting family. Whatever, it was totally mind-bending for me - I was expecting more or less like this show I was at - Curry Hicks Cage at UMass Amherst in February '68 -
https://www.digitalcommonwealth.org/sea ... :ns064g52d
https://credo.library.umass.edu/view/zo ... 8-b02-i130
Gram but no Clarence. My first exposure to the Byrds. Any of you Western Mass guys at this show? Doug? I was pretty young, and I biked to and from the show from our place in North Amherst. No streetcars like in Boston.
Anyway, my memory is a little fuzzed out about the Tea Party show, but I seem to remember Clarence with his P/W Tele into a Dual Showman Reverb. Definitely no trouble hearing him, LOL.
- Bryce Van Parys
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Thanks for these posts. I came to this a little later in life, having been born in the 70s, and a bass player most of my adult career. A lot of these tracks were lost to the archives by the time I was aware. I recently added a Bender by Bjorn to a tele, and I'm frantically catching up on some classic Byrds and Eagles. Adding Peaceful Easy Feeling, You Ain't goin nowhere, and now some others. Suggestions of more Clarence White to check out would be most appreciated.
https://benderbybjorn.com/
https://benderbybjorn.com/
Bryce
Mullen Royal Precision SD10, Fender Deluxe 8 string
Double bass, G&L SB2 electric bass, Stratocaster, Telecaster, Les Paul, Martin D18GE,
Mullen Royal Precision SD10, Fender Deluxe 8 string
Double bass, G&L SB2 electric bass, Stratocaster, Telecaster, Les Paul, Martin D18GE,
Out take from the Easy Rider record with lots of B-bendy stuff. https://youtu.be/L2YjEFSB5ts
Kevin Maul: Airline, Beard, Clinesmith, Decophonic, Evans, Excel, Fender, Fluger, Gibson, Hilton, Ibanez, Justice, K+K, Live Strings, MOYO, National, Oahu, Peterson, Quilter, Rickenbacher, Sho~Bud, Supro, TC, Ultimate, VHT, Webb, X-otic, Yamaha, ZKing.
Tulsa County Blue, vocals removed. https://youtu.be/mcHZPN8WvUs
Kevin Maul: Airline, Beard, Clinesmith, Decophonic, Evans, Excel, Fender, Fluger, Gibson, Hilton, Ibanez, Justice, K+K, Live Strings, MOYO, National, Oahu, Peterson, Quilter, Rickenbacher, Sho~Bud, Supro, TC, Ultimate, VHT, Webb, X-otic, Yamaha, ZKing.
- Dave Mudgett
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I'm glad I dredged this thread up! It was deeply buried. This forum is a goldmine of information, but you gotta dig for a lot of it. Current threads do not remotely hint at the depth of stuff here. This is not facebook, where almost everything of use is recent and on the surface. That is FB's design, it serves a specific purpose, but it is very shallow in comparison to the deep, historical documentation this forum provides.
Kevin, the isolated guitars version is killer! It shows just how precise Clarence's playing truly was. This doesn't always show up so clearly in a dense mix.
Bryce - there's tons of Clarence out there. Google and the youtube search function are your friends. I suggest a breadth-first search to start - cast your net wide. Then when you start to hone in where the good stuff is, dig in deeper.
And, IMO, don't ignore Clarence's flat top playing. No, no bender, but it informed every aspect of his playing, including electric. He was an absolute MASTER of bluegrass acoustic guitar, very groundbreaking, and it was critical not only in bluegrass, but moving into country rock and, eventually, country. There are virtually no country guitar players today who don't owe a debt to Clarence. The Country Boys, Kentucky Colonels, Muleskinner (which had both acoustic and electric components), and of course, The Byrds and onward.
Nice samplers here -
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MkQcA3_33xE
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=04xd8dhx8fQ
But there's lots more out there.
Kevin, the isolated guitars version is killer! It shows just how precise Clarence's playing truly was. This doesn't always show up so clearly in a dense mix.
Bryce - there's tons of Clarence out there. Google and the youtube search function are your friends. I suggest a breadth-first search to start - cast your net wide. Then when you start to hone in where the good stuff is, dig in deeper.
And, IMO, don't ignore Clarence's flat top playing. No, no bender, but it informed every aspect of his playing, including electric. He was an absolute MASTER of bluegrass acoustic guitar, very groundbreaking, and it was critical not only in bluegrass, but moving into country rock and, eventually, country. There are virtually no country guitar players today who don't owe a debt to Clarence. The Country Boys, Kentucky Colonels, Muleskinner (which had both acoustic and electric components), and of course, The Byrds and onward.
Nice samplers here -
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MkQcA3_33xE
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=04xd8dhx8fQ
But there's lots more out there.
- Mark Eaton
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