Andrew, it`s just lovely to hear Leo playing in the 70`s. The tempo. the sound of his guitars, his singing. Thank`s for sharing. Greetings from Germany. Matze
I worked that show. Thanks for posting. I especially remember when we were at the airport getting ready to board the plane, a search was done on my backpack. I carried Leo's mics, money from the shows, and a few tools. A very large State Trooper (with his Smokey the Bear hat!) stood nearby and immediately grabbed a small screwdriver and said "You can't take this on the plane!" Like a dumbshit, I responded with, "What am I gonna say, 'Take me to Cuba or I'll disassemble the plane?'" Then he said I could be arrested for saying that. I apologized. So...I had to check the screwdriver since our luggage was already on the plane. When we reached our destination, I watched as the screwdriver came down the conveyor belt and almost got stuck as it entered the carousel.
One of the best ones you've shared. It's a shame Airproofing didn't make it in. I know it was released the following year, but I thought he might have had it in the hopper by this time
@@andrewjurman3256 Very funny. I heard Leo, by the way, in the mid-70's, live in Dayton, OH, at The Palace Theater and the Victoria Opera House. He absolutely killed it. He has a huge fan base here to this day; later played here at a small (200 seat) local venue, Canal Street Tavern. All his shows were fantastic. On one occasion, he happened to park next to me. I left him a Johnny Winter cassette tape, tucked under his windshield wiper. Ha! EVERYONE can use a little Johnny Winter!
@@Stone2home I wish that I had seen him in the mid-70's, but it was in the early 80's when I first got turned onto his music. I've been a huge fan ever since then!
Andrew, it`s just lovely to hear Leo playing in the 70`s. The tempo. the sound of his guitars, his singing. Thank`s for sharing. Greetings from Germany. Matze
Leo live at Penn State, circa 1981, with Al DiMeola; a night beyond magical…
Kottke at his superb best. His early rhythm was fast. He seemed to slow down a bit in later years. Thanks for posting this concert.
I'm not sure where or when I got this show, but knew that it had to be shared.
I love "Can't Quite Put It Into Words" at the 28 minute mark.
Leo, Renbourne, Jansch and John Fahey were all pretty well listened to in the early 1970’s when I discovered them.
🎉The Best 🎸
No question.
Thanks for posting this.👍👍
Leo is one of the overlooked Acoustic players, Amazing
Ahh...nice again to see one of my cover designs! That must be over twenty years ago...
And a beautiful cover design it is! (I hope there aren't any copyright infringements here).
The one and only Leo! Thanks Andrew!
I worked that show. Thanks for posting. I especially remember when we were at the airport getting ready to board the plane, a search was done on my backpack. I carried Leo's mics, money from the shows, and a few tools. A very large State Trooper (with his Smokey the Bear hat!) stood nearby and immediately grabbed a small screwdriver and said "You can't take this on the plane!" Like a dumbshit, I responded with, "What am I gonna say, 'Take me to Cuba or I'll disassemble the plane?'" Then he said I could be arrested for saying that. I apologized. So...I had to check the screwdriver since our luggage was already on the plane. When we reached our destination, I watched as the screwdriver came down the conveyor belt and almost got stuck as it entered the carousel.
One of the best ones you've shared. It's a shame Airproofing didn't make it in. I know it was released the following year, but I thought he might have had it in the hopper by this time
Great job uploading and sharing this pretty good sounding concert.
Love it! Thanks for sharing!
Hm. Bit noisy.
How do you mean?
@@andrewjurman3256 He's overplaying, it obscures the detail.
@@Stone2home OK ... I'll let Leo know that he screwed up. Thanks for your comment.
@@andrewjurman3256 Very funny. I heard Leo, by the way, in the mid-70's, live in Dayton, OH, at The Palace Theater and the Victoria Opera House. He absolutely killed it. He has a huge fan base here to this day; later played here at a small (200 seat) local venue, Canal Street Tavern. All his shows were fantastic. On one occasion, he happened to park next to me. I left him a Johnny Winter cassette tape, tucked under his windshield wiper. Ha! EVERYONE can use a little Johnny Winter!
@@Stone2home I wish that I had seen him in the mid-70's, but it was in the early 80's when I first got turned onto his music.
I've been a huge fan ever since then!