Garth Hudson Returns to Big Pink in 2014

Big Pink

Rolling Stone magazine recently visited the legendary Big Pink with The Band’s Garth Hudson, returning to the house for the first time since he moved out. In the video, Hudson talks about his experiences at Big Pink with The Band and with Bob Dylan, explaining more about the recording of the famous Basement Tapes.

The video coincides with Bob Dylan’s recent release of The Basement Tapes Complete: The Bootleg Series Vol. 11. Check out the video of Garth Hudson visiting Big Pink once again, concluding with him playing the piano in the basement.

For more on Big Pink, you may head over to Mashable to check out a short video showing the trip from New York City to Big Pink, narrated by Jeff Bridges.

Leave your two cents in the comments.

  • One Degree of Separation Between Bob Dylan & Twilight Zone: Bonnie Beecher & “Come Wander With Me”
  • Sheila Atim Peforming “Tight Connection to My Heart” (Great Bob Dylan Covers)
  • Bonnie “Prince” Billy’s Cover of Bob Dylan’s “Brownsville Girl”
  • Vampire Weekend Saluting a Font By Covering Bob Dylan’s “Jokerman”
  • Clarence Ashley: “The Cuckoo” & “Little Sadie”
  • Dylan Releases “Murder Most Foul”
  • (Some related Chimesfreedom posts.)

    Buy from Amazon

    Springsteen and Martin Front U2 for World Aids Day

    With Bono recovering from a bicycle accident, Bruce Springsteen and Coldplay’s Chris Martin filled in for the U2 lead singer at a performance for World AIDS Day on December 1. The performance, in Times Square in New York City, included Springsteen singing “Where the Streets Have No Name” and “I Still Haven’t Found What I’m Looking For.”

    Coldplay is often compared to U2 for various reasons, so another natural choice for a Bono fill-in was Chris Martin. Check out Martin sang “Beautiful Day” and “With or Without You.” [Update: Unfortunately, videos of these performances are no longer available as of 2024.]

    Nobody can match Bono on these songs, but Springsteen and Martin do a great job, with Springsteen adding a rough edge while Martin most closely matches Bono’s voice. We wish Bono a quick recovery and are thankful that these superstars filled in for a good cause.

    Leave your two cents in the comments.

  • “There’s No End to Grief, That’s How We Know There’s No End to Love”: The Story of U2’s “One Tree Hill”
  • Springsteen and Bono Sing “Because the Night” in Dublin
  • Bono and Glen Hansard: The Auld Triangle
  • MLK Shot This Morning, er. . . Evening
  • Springsteen Joins U2 at Madison Square Garden
  • The Heroic Death of Folksinger Victor Jara
  • (Some related Chimesfreedom posts.)

    Wes Anderson’s “Bottle Rocket”: The Short Film Version

    Wes Anderson short
    In 1994, writer-director Wes Anderson and Owen Wilson produced their first short film together. The black and white short, Bottle Rocket, would later provide the basis for the 1996 feature film of the same name, which also starred Owen and his brother Luke Wilson.

    As The Playlist recently noted, it is interesting to watch the entertaining short film and recognize the absence of many of the trademark techniques that would later populate Anderson’s films. For now, you may watch the entire short film Bottle Rocket below.

    What do you think of Bottle Rocket? Leave your two cents in the comments.

  • What if Wes Anderson Made a Horror Movie?
  • “Horizon: An American Saga” Trailer
  • The Killers Lament Another “Christmas in L.A.”
  • Wiig and Galifianakis Star in Loomis Fargo Bank Robbery Film
  • Rocket Science (Missed Movies)
  • Missed Movies Roundup: Contrasting East vs. West Edition
  • (Some related Chimesfreedom posts.)

    How a Checkout Line Inspired Marty Brown’s “Love Comes Easy”

    Back in the early 1990s, country singer-songwriter Marty Brown stood in line at Wyndall’s Foodland on U.S. 60 East in Owensboro, Kentucky. In front of Brown, a guy stood watching the cashier scan his groceries. The man watched each price on the cash register until the cashier told him his total. The man responded, “Here, honey. It comes easy, but it goes away hard.”

    When Marty Brown heard the man’s comment, he not only recognized a good line but he also knew they would make good lyrics for a song. Brown later explained to the Owensboro Messenger Inquirer that he never knew who the man was, but he took the words as inspiration for his song, “Love Comes Easy,” which appeared on Here’s to the Honky Tonks (1996).

    Love comes easy,
    But it goes down hard;
    Just when you think you’ve got the right hand,
    You’re holding all the wrong cards.

    And that’s the Story Behind the Song.

    Leave your two cents in the comments.

  • How Marty Brown Wrote “Whatever Makes You Smile”
  • Marty Brown’s Son Christian Brown Auditions on “American Idol”
  • Marty Brown Sings His Song “To the Moon” (Originally Recorded by George Strait)
  • “There’s No End to Grief, That’s How We Know There’s No End to Love”: The Story of U2’s “One Tree Hill”
  • George Strait Sings a Marty Brown Song: “To the Moon” (Song of the Day)
  • Marty Brown Sings “There’s a Honky Tonk in Heaven”
  • (Some related Chimesfreedom posts.)

    “I Thought Turkeys Could Fly”

    WKRP in Cincinnati featured one of the great Thanksgiving specials of all time, “Turkeys Away,” which was the seventh episode of the series. The episode begins as a typical Thanksgiving episode with the radio station planning a Thanksgiving promotion of distributing free turkeys.

    At the end, though, everything goes so terribly wrong. It features hilarious reporting by Les Nessman (Richard Sanders) and leads up the classic line by radio station manager Arthur Carlson (Gordon Jump), “With God as my witness, I thought turkeys could fly.”

    For more on the story behind the episode, check out The Classic TV History Blog. Happy Thanksgiving.

    Leave your two cents in the comments.

  • Mary Gauthier’s Thanksgiving at the Prison
  • Billy on the Street Thanksgiving Parade
  • “We’ve Got Another Holiday to Worry About”
  • Happy Holidays
  • New Holiday Music From Sufjan Stevens: “Silver & Gold”
  • When Is My Favorite Holiday Special or Film on TV?
  • (Some related Chimesfreedom posts.)