Wednesday, July 2, 2025

SPECIAL GUEST Vol. 1 - Guest Artists On Record & On Stage!


SPECIAL GUEST Vol. 1


There are lots of ways that a SPECIAL GUEST makes a track worth a listen.


Sometimes the appeal hinges on the guest’s sheer star power, as with Eddie Van Halen joining John Waite onstage back when John was the seasoned pro, and Eddie was a white-hot, fresh-faced newcomer.  


Some pairings “could have gone either way” like Jerry Lee Lewis & Rory Gallagher—which yielded a singular version of (I Can't Get No) Satisfaction.  Joe Strummer playing live with The Pogues was also a coin toss.  A rudderless Strummer had just disbanded The Clash, and Shane MacGowan & the boys were known for being shambolic on their best day.  But it worked, & left us with a totally reinvented, accordion-heavy version of Brand New Cadillac.  


Joe Ely may lean more toward being a country artist these days—but like his special guest Bruce Springsteen, he was once known for his raucous & rocking live shows.  The more I listen to Odds Of The Blues, the more I love the way their voices blend together.  When you think of Foo Fighters, you don’t necessarily think “Texas Blues” but throw Jimmie Vaughan in the mix and you’re transported to a roadhouse on the outskirts of town. 


Other times, the appeal is that the duo are strange bedfellows.  I never expected to hear Alanis Morissette & Willie Nelson sing a duet, and I certainly didn’t expect their version of On The Road Again to become one of my favorite tracks on this collection.  Same with Nothing Else Matters by Miley Cyrus & Metallica.  


I didn’t even know of Delirium when I came across Matthew Sweet guesting on their Daylight, but I feel they should definitely work together again.  Same with Soft Boy Kimberley Rew & his wife, Lee Cave-Berry, and Alejandro Escovedo & Scott McCaughey.


Then there’s the “can’t miss” collaborations like brothers Johnny & Edgar Winter joining forces on Harlem Shuffle.  Nick Lowe with Wilco & The Doors fronted by Ian Astbury?  They're no brainers—like one of my favorite rockabilly bands, Cigar Store Indians teaming up with Brian Setzer.  And I can’t express how much I love Joe Lynn Turner, Brad Gillis, Rudy Sarzo’s version of All Day & All Of The Night.


Sometimes the attraction is the meeting of two legends—as in the case of Stevie Ray Vaughan & Jeff Beck who kick the living shit out of Goin' Down.  Or, former roommates Waylon Jennings & Johnny Cash showing the kids how it’s done.  Or, in the case of Elton John & John Lennon one legend convincing another to give the bread baking a break—and come out of retirement to sing Whatever Gets You Thru The Night live at Madison Square Garden.  Which wraps things up!





 

11 comments:

  1. Please share a musical pairing that you’d like to see—that you feel would be a ““lead pipe cinch”. Artists from different eras are no problem, and mixing the living & the dead is allowed--even though it rarely works out well in movies. :)

    Here’s the link to SPECIAL GUEST Vol. 1:
    https://pixeldrain.com/u/fRk4rQtj

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  2. I guess my favorite pairing, and I do not know if th.ere are recordings available, was Hans Dulfer on Sax with Hardcore Punk Legends Pandemonium, on their one-off reunion in Venlo. Brilliant concert. Another one great pairing was ENT/KLF. Thanks Stinky for this fine selection.
    I am not familiar with 'lead pipe cinch'
    I would have paired Liszt and Paganini, if that is what you mean

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    1. Liszt & Paganini would be hard to beat, Richard. Thank you!

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  3. Elvis Presley with Siouxsie and the Banshees! I read a review in '79 or thereabouts about the factory sampler which said Joy Division was the missing link between Elvis and the Banshees.

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    1. Oh man, I wonder what Banshees song Elvis would sing? Or what Elvis song the Banshees would play? The mind reels...

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    2. I'd much rather hear Frank Sinatra delivering a round of Wild Man Fisher songs, or maybe, Elvis rendering Mark E Smith songs (with violins)

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    3. I'd like to hear Elvis trade lines with Siouxsie on my favorite Banshees song: Christine. I smile when I imagine him singing the lyric: "Now she's in purple, now she's a turtle".

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  4. The 'lead pipe cinch' idiom was new to me as well, but I think Elvis Presley & The Wailers would have been a great match. Someone already mashed up Crying in the Chapel that way and it sounds great: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=s0UsqWBuXyU&list=RDs0UsqWBuXyU&start_radio=1

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    1. That really works! Someone around here should do a compilation of the greatest mash-ups!

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  5. I have a friend with 4 pianos in 1 room who has never invited 4 pianists over at the same time
    Sun Ra & Dr. John
    Sonics & Link Wray
    lee scratch perry & sublime
    amyjanis mashup
    https://pixeldrain.com/u/535fLooj

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    1. Holy crap, Bucephalus. You win today's no-prize for The Sonics & Link Wray!

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