Posted on 09/30/2025 9:52:10 PM PDT by SunkenCiv
[snip] From the widely-circulated 45 minute tape often known as the "Pre-Physical Graffiti" outtakes. No one knows for sure when this tape is from, although it is likely from around 1973, but it could be from as early as 1971. Also, who is playing the piano? [/snip]Songs from Jimmy Page's Home Studio | 7:35
Led Zeppelin Rarities | 82.5K subscribers | 386,669 views | January 29, 20170:00 Untitled song on guitar
1:34 Untitled song on piano
4:37 Short keyboard piece
4:59 Second untitled song
(Hayward and Thomas wrote it, but John Lodge performed it plenty of times)Visions Of Paradise (2018 Mix) | 4:12
The Moody Blues | 195K subscribers | 3,888 views | November 1, 2018
Dan Fogelberg - As the Raven Flies (Official Audio) | 4:30
Dan Fogelberg | 108K subscribers | 8,855 views | April 8, 2025
A Hard Way to Go - Tim Weisberg | 4:19
Psiconauta Flute Music | 6.01K subscribers | 8,190 views | November 21, 2013Flute - Tim Weisberg
Piano, Hammond - David Benoit
Bass - Ken Wild
Drums - John Ferraro
Percussion - Brad Dutz
J Geils Band - Ain't nothin' but a Party | 6:13
Rock on Thessaloniki | 6.29K subscribers | 42,119 views | May 18, 2012
J. Geils Band - Blow Your Face Out Full Live Album | 2:05:25
Banys Attwell | 8.92K subscribers | 29,658 views | December 19, 2017
And I DID have to do this all day... | 1:37
Henry Cho Comedy | 222K subscribers | 5,008,608 views | September 15, 2025
Booth Shot Lincoln / Haning's Farewell | 3:18
Malcolm Dalglish & Grey Larsen - Topic
95 subscribers | 1,723 views | February 14, 2019Brave AI search results: [snip] "Booth Shot Lincoln" is a traditional American fiddle tune and ballad commemorating the assassination of President Abraham Lincoln by John Wilkes Booth on April 14, 1865, at Ford's Theater in Washington, D.C. The tune, rooted in the folk traditions of western North Carolina, particularly the Black Mountain region, was part of the repertoire of fiddlers such as Marcus Martin, Osey Helton, and Tommy Magness. It was collected and popularized by folklorist Bascom Lamar Lunsford, who learned it from his father and recorded it multiple times, including a 1949 Library of Congress session. The melody is also considered by some, such as Scott DeLancey, to be a breakdown setting of the Irish jig "The Market Town". [/snip]
hard to dislike him, even though he is an unreconstrucuted leftwinger.Naked Truth (Rerecorded Version) | 4:39
Joel Mabus - Topic | 204 subscribers | 164 views | September 20, 2023
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