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BIG BILL BROONZY BENEFIT CONCERT (1958) UK program

London: H. Croft & Associates, 1958. Vintage original 8 x 6.375″ (20 x 16.5 cm.) British concert program, pictorial wrappers, stapled, 32 pp. Staples a bit rusty, just about fine.

When the great blues singer Big Bill Broonzy was in failing health, this concert was organized in London (where he had a substantial following) to raise funds for his care, and many of the top British jazz musicians of the time participated, including Al Fairweather, Mark Mulligan, Johnny Dankworth and Cleo Laine.

Not listed in OCLC.

BOB DYLAN IN CONCERT (1978) French mini-poster

Paris: RTL, [1978]. Vintage original 11 x 8.25″ (28 x 21 cm.) French mini-poster. There is a tiny pinhole in each corner, and a faint diagonal crease at bottom left corner, overall in just about fine unfolded condition.

Poster for Bob Dylan’s six consecutive concerts at the Pavillon de Paris in Paris from July 3 to July 8, 1978, presented by RTL in cooperation with Albert Koski’s KCP. Dylan was touring Europe in support of Street-Legal, his eighteenth studio album, produced by Don DeVito and released on June 15, 1978, on Columbia Records.

For the tour, Dylan assembled an eight-piece band, featuring Billy Cross (lead guitar), Alan Pasqua (keyboards), Steven Soles (rhythm guitar, backup vocals), David Mansfield (violin & mandolin), Steve Douglas (horns), Jerry Scheff (bass), Bobbye Hall (percussion) and Ian Wallace (drums). Dylan was also accompanied by backing singers Helena Springs, Jo Ann Harris and Carolyn Dennis.

The Paris concerts were a triumphant return to Europe, Dylan’s first European tour since the notorious May 1966 tour.

SUN RA AND HIS SOLAR ARKESTRA IN PERSON (1969) Concert poster

Sacramento: Maryjane Coffee House, [1969]. Vintage original 11 x 8.5″ (28 x 22 cm.) concert poster, unfolded, fine.

“We invite you to participate in a bizarre and unique multi-dimensional projection. Black is beautiful & beautiful is Sun-Ra.” This poster features Afrofuturist imagery by Dana Reemes. We traced examples of this piece only at University of Chicago and Northwestern University, though it is not separately listed at all in OCLC.

LEONARD COHEN (1977) German concert poster

Mainz, Mama Concerts, [1977]. Vintage original 32.75 x 23″ (84 x 59 cm.) German concert poster. Unfolded, fine.

Poster for concert at the Rheingoldhalle in Mainz on Tuesday, 6th December, 1977. The concert in Mainz was part of an extensive German tour scheduled during November and December in support of Death of a Ladies’ Man, Cohen’s fifth studio album, notoriously produced and co-written by Phil Spector, and released on 13th November, 1977, to coincide with the European tour.

Although posters and tickets were printed, it appears that the tour never happened.

NEIL YOUNG IN EUROPE ’76 WITH CRAZY HORSE (1976) West German concert poster

Np [West Germany], 1976. Vintage original 23 x 30.25″ (58.5 x 77 cm.) German concert poster. Folded (as issued), near fine.

Scarce and highly collectible original first printing concert poster advertising legendary Neil Young and Crazy Horse’s 4-date German tour during March 1976. Coming immediately on the heels of his March 1976 Japanese tour, the German shows were part of Young’s March/April European tour, commencing in Oslo, Norway on 15th March and ending at the Glasgow Apollo on 2nd April, 1976.

Save for a few concerts in the UK, this was Neil Young’s first full European tour as a solo artist and was primarily set up to promote the release of the Zuma album. Recorded at Broken Arrow Ranch in Redwood City under the guidance of producer David Briggs, Zuma (named after Zuma Beach in Malibu, where Young owned a house), was released on 10th November, 1975, on Reprise Records.

With the backing of a reunited Crazy Horse, Frank Sampedro replacing the late Danny Whitten, Zuma was the first album after the famed “Ditch Trilogy”, comprising the albums Time Fades Away (1973), On the Beach (1974) and Tonight’s the Night (1975), and had an overall more upbeat atmosphere, with a combination of country-tinged rock acoustics and lumbering hard-rock pieces similar in style to songs on the Everybody Knows This Is Nowhere album from 1969.

MEMPHIS SLIM IN CONCERT (1976) West German concert poster

Stuttgart: Anakonda Music, [1976]. Vintage original 31 x 21.25″ (80 x 54 cm.) German concert poster. Unfolded, fine.

Scarce poster for a concert by blues legend Memphis Slim in what was then West Germany.

 “John Len Chatman (September 3, 1915 – February 24, 1988), known professionally as Memphis Slim, was an American blues pianist, singer, and composer. He led a series of bands that, reflecting the popular appeal of jump blues, included saxophones, bass, drums, and piano. A song he first cut in 1947, ‘Every Day I Have the Blues’, has become a blues standard, recorded by many other artists. He made over 500 recordings.

“He spent most of the 1930s performing in honky-tonks, dance halls, and gambling joints in West Memphis, Arkansas, and southeast Missouri. In 1940 and 1941, he recorded two songs for Bluebird Records that became part of his repertoire for decades, ‘Beer Drinking Woman’ and ‘Grinder Man Blues’. These were released under the name ‘Memphis Slim,’ given to him by Bluebird’s producer, Lester Melrose.

“After World War II, Slim began leading bands that generally included saxophones, bass, drums, and piano, reflecting the popular appeal of jump blues. Starting in late 1945, he recorded with trios for the small Chicago-based Hy-Tone Records. With a lineup of alto saxophone, tenor sax, piano, and string bass (Willie Dixon played the instrument on the first session), he signed with the Miracle label in the fall of 1946. One of the songs recorded at the first session was the ebullient boogie ‘Rockin’ the House,’ from which his band would take its name. In 1947, the day after producing a concert by Slim, Broonzy, and Williamson at New York City’s Town Hall, the folklorist Alan Lomax brought the three musicians to the Decca Records studios and recorded with Slim on vocal and piano. Lomax presented sections of this recording on BBC Radio in the early 1950s as a documentary, The Art of the Negro, and later released an expanded version as the LP Blues in the Mississippi Night.

“After 1954, Slim did not have a steady relationship with a record company until 1958, when he signed with Vee-Jay Records. In 1959 his band, still featuring Murphy, recorded the album Memphis Slim at the Gate of the Horn, which featured a lineup of his best-known songs, including ‘Mother Earth’, ‘Gotta Find My Baby’, ‘Rockin’ the Blues’, ‘Steppin’ Out’, and ‘Slim’s Blues’. 

“Slim first appeared outside the United States in 1960, touring with Willie Dixon, with whom he returned to Europe in 1962 as a featured artist in the first of the series of American Folk Festival concerts organized by Dixon, which brought many notable blues artists to Europe in the 1960s and 1970s. The duo released several albums together on Folkways Records, including Memphis Slim and Willie Dixon at the Village Gate with Pete Seeger (1962).

“In 1962, Slim moved permanently to Paris, and his engaging personality and well-honed presentation of playing, singing, and storytelling about the blues secured his position as one of the most prominent blues artists for nearly three decades. He appeared on television in numerous European countries, acted in several French films and wrote the score for À nous deux France (1970), and performed regularly in Paris, throughout Europe, and on return visits to the United States. In the last years of his life, he teamed up with the respected jazz drummer George Collier. The two toured Europe together and became friends. After Collier died in August 1987, Slim rarely appeared in public, although he reunited with Matt ‘Guitar’ Murphy for a gig at Antone’s in Austin, Texas, in 1987.

“Two years before his death, Slim was named a Commander in the Ordre des Arts et des Lettres by the Ministry of Culture of the Republic of France. In addition, the U.S. Senate honored Slim with the title of Ambassador-at-Large of Good Will.

“Memphis Slim died of renal failure on February 24, 1988, in Paris, at the age of 72. He is buried at Galilee Memorial Gardens in Memphis, Tennessee.

“He was posthumously inducted into the Blues Hall of Fame in 1989. He was inducted into the Memphis Music Hall of Fame in 2015.” (Wikipedia)

SONNY ROLLINS (1975) Japanese concert poster

[Tokyo: Victor Records/Prestige], 1975. Vintage original 24.75 x 20.25″ (63 x 51 cm.) Japanese record store poster. Unfolded, slight marginal creasing, just about fine.

Promotional poster issued in Japan. Scarce and highly collectible original first printing Sonny Rollins promotional poster issued in Japan in 1975 by Victor Records/Prestige. Rollins recorded for Prestige from 1953-56. Albums recorded during this period include Moving Out (1954), Work Time (1955), Saxophone Colossus (1956), Rollins Plays for Bird (1956), and Tour de Force (1956). The poster features artwork by K. Abe, with the artist’s imprint to the bottom right corner. 

“Born Theodore Walter Rollins, the New York saxophonist recorded as a teenager with Bud Powell and J.J. Johnson, later with Miles Davis and Thelonious Monk, before working in Max Rauch’s group for two years. Since 1957, he has been his own leader. Recording associations have been with Prestige, Blue Note, RCA, Impulse! And, since 1972, Milestone. Two famous sabbaticals from public appearances (1959-61 and 1968-71) have been the only interruptions in a prolific and inspirational career in concert and on record. Although famously inscrutable at times, Rollins’ music has been – in its virtuoso command of the horn and in the calibre of his improvising – enormously influential.” (Cook & Morton, p. 1264)

SARAH VAUGHAN “THE SINGER OF THE CENTURY” (1978) Swedish concert poster

[Uppsala, Sweden], 1978. Vintage original 25 x 17 ¼” (64 x 44 cm.) Swedish concert poster. Unfolded, there is a very slight stain in the black area under her chin, just about fine or better.

Concert by the magnificent vocal stylist Sarah Vaughan (1924-1990) at the University Aula in Uppsala on October 25, 1978.

“Studied piano as a child, then joined the Earl Hines band in 1943 as vocalist. Left with Billy Eckstine to sing in his new band and went solo in the late ’40s, usually working live with a trio or small group; sang on record mostly with orchestras, especially from the mid-’50s. Had many crossover hits during that decade but was always seen as a jazz vocalist, one of the most gifted, with a big range and variety of tone, a bopper’s way with scat – though she rarely used it – and the stage presence of a forbidding diva. Never as popular as Holiday or Fitzgerald, and – some would say – better than either.” (Cook & Morton, p. 1491)

EURYTHMICS – TOUCH (1983) Belgian concert poster

Deinze, [1983]. Vintage original 39 x 27.5″ (99 x 70 cm.) Belgian concert poster. Unfolded, very minor creasing in blank corners, just about fine.

The Eurythmics’ second album, Sweet Dreams (Are Made of This), was released in January, 1983, and it was a great success. This concert, at the Brielpoort in Deinze, Belgium on February 25, 1983, followed very shortly afterwards.