Tom Waits - KPFK Folkscene, July 23th, 1974 (Remastered, Live On Broadcasting) (2025)

  • 19 Mar, 07:58
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Artist:
Title: KPFK Folkscene, July 23th, 1974 (Remastered, Live On Broadcasting)
Year Of Release: 2025
Label: DMG
Genre: Rock, Blues, Jazz, Experimental
Quality: FLAC (tracks)
Total Time: 54:12
Total Size: 249 MB
WebSite:

Tracklist:

1. Intro / Better Off Without a Wife (Live) (02:14)
2. It's Good to See You (Live) (03:27)
3. Foggy Night (Live) (02:27)
4. You're Working on Your Second Album (Live) (05:45)
5. The Ghost of Saturday Night (Live) (01:37)
6. (Looking For) the Heart of Saturday Night (Live) (03:12)
7. That's Such a Fine Song (Live) (02:16)
8. Semi Suite (Live) (02:45)
9. Let Me Ask You Something (Live) (01:09)
10. Drunk on the Moon (Live) (03:22)
11. I Wonder (Live) (01:00)
12. Depot Depot (Live) (02:38)
13. For Those That May Have Just Joined Us (Live) (01:43)
14. Diamonds on My Windshield (Live) (01:57)
15. That's Great (Live) (02:48)
16. San Diego Seranade (Live) (03:01)
17. What Are You Plans Now (Live) (06:41)
18. Rosie (Live) (02:47)
19. Forthose of You (Live) (00:43)
20. Fumblin'with the Blues (Live) (02:30)

In the work of American songwriter Tom Waits, swampy blues, Beat poetry, West Coast jazz, Tin Pan Alley, country, 1930s-era cabaret, and post-Civil War parlor songs meet neon-lit carnival music and wheezing, clattering, experimental rhythms (often played by makeshift musical instruments), forming a keenly individual musical universe. It has often been imitated but never replicated. Since the '70s, Waits has charted a path from playing fleabag dive bars to opera theaters and prestigious concert halls all over the world. His recordings -- from early masterpieces such as Small Change and Blue Valentine and the twisted, dramatic, and black, humorous art songs on the trilogy of Swordfishtrombones, Rain Dogs, and Frank's Wild Years, to the deconstructed experimental soundworlds erected for Bone Machine and Mule Variations -- have charted the lives and circumstances of the humble, forgotten, evil, demented, abandoned, cursed, and just plain down-on-their-luck humans to places of honor in our pantheon in a spirit akin to the photographs of Robert Frank and Diane Arbus. He has charted an iconoclastic path through Stephen Foster and George Gershwin, Howlin' Wolf, and Captain Beefheart, as well as writers from the Beat Generation, andCharles Bukowski, Nelson Algren, and Mark Twain to create a holistic body of work whose appeal crisscrosses generations and blurs pop's arbitrary boundaries. Waits has won two Grammys and is a member of the 2011 class of The Rock and Roll Hall of Fame. He is included among the 2010 list of Rolling Stone's 100 Greatest Singers, as well as its 2015 list of 100 Greatest Songwriters of All Time.