John Cipollina cipollina1976-08-13.aau-3.flac16
1976-08-13 Long Branch Club

Title
John Cipollina Live at Long Branch Club on 1976-08-13

description
Sound Hole Long Branch Club Berkeley, CA 1976-08-13 3rd gen analog audience recording transfer from RF's Reel ca. 1982 Early Show - 30:58 01. All Worth The Price > chat, tuning 8:47 02. Prayers > chat, tuning, 5:24 03. Times > chat 5:08 04. Fever Dream > chat, tuning 5:49 05. Night After Night 5:48 Late Show - 42:11 06. chat > Chinatown > chat 7:49 07. The Way I See You > chat 7:40 08. All Worth The Price > chat 9:40 09. Rock 'n' Roll Nurse > chat 5:39 10. Prayers > chat 4:53 11. Night After Night 6:26 Total 73:10 Band: John Cipollina - Vocals, Guitars Mario Cipollina - Bass, Vocals Gregg Douglass - Guitars, Vocals ? Brian Marnell - Lead Guitar ? Bill Gibson - Drums ? Brian Hogan - Saxophone ? John Farey - Keyboards Notes: -  opening for Greg Kihn -  band members is best guess (besides John & Mario)  -  Greg is likely as they play All Worth The Price, and Prayers From bay-aea-bands.com: First called Wide Hole the band began when Mario Cipollina, Bill Gibson and John Farey were all in high school. Sound Hole, named for the hole in a guitar, really pulled together when Dan Shallack, the band's first leader, was murdered with his parents by a psychotic in Mill Valley. They picked up gifted guitarist Brian Marnell and success on the local club scene was theirs. Besides, John Farey's father, Everett Farey, once played with the Bay City Jazz Band which recorded a couple of albums in 1956-1957. John Colla joined the band when he moved to Cotati and saw Sound Hole open for the Sons Of Champlin. As a matter of fact Mario was on a holiday with his family in Italy that day and the line-up consisted of John Farey (rhodes), Bill Gibson (drums), Dan Shallack (guitar), Brian Hogan (tenor sax), Bruce Gapinski (bass), Gregg Gavin (rhodes) and a trumpet player that didn't really hit the right notes. John, who didn't like that kind of playing at all, went up to the band and basically said, "What you guys need is me." In the early 70s Sound Hole became Van Morrison's back-up band. A friend of John Farey who had been painting some covers for Van Morrison introduced the band to Van. Months later Van called the band and Sound Hole went on the road with him, backing him up for several months. One of Sound Hole's concerts with Van Morrison - July 29, 1974 at The Orphanage, San Francisco, CA, was even televised on PBS. To listen to the whole concert at Wolfgang's vault follow the link at the bottom of this page. A video tape of this show was used in 1995 to produce and release the bootleg CD "Live at the Orphanage". After those S.F. shows they toured the midwest with Greg Douglass on guitar - as a replacement for Sound Hole's original guitarist.The same year (1974) Sound Hole played the Winterland on a local talent night and luckily the show was recorded and released by Wolfgang's Vault in 2008. Please follow the link at the bottom of this page and also read more about this concert. Enjoy!!! Sometime later John Colla and John Farey got fired from Sound Hole. Farey who got a call from Sly & The Family Stone two weeks later, convinced Sly that he needed an alto sax too and Colla got the gig. The result can be heard on Sly's album 'Heard Ya Missed Me, Well I Am Back' (1976). Sound Hole carried on working into 1977 using this name, before changing it to Airplay. Under that name they continued into 1978 when Cipollina (and Colla) joined The Fools and Marnell and Gibson joined Jack Casady in SVT, though Gibson also played in The Fools. It was that latter band which included Sean Hopper and Huey Lewis from Clover that became Huey Lewis and The News.

Files (download all files)
Soundhole 1976-08-13 info.txt (download)
Soundhole 1976-08-13. aau-03. Longbranch, Berkeley.md5 (download)
Soundhole 1976-08-13. aau-03. Longbranch, SF.ffp (download)