"Woman or a Man" was included on the 1982 live record "Small Town Romance", recorded at the Bottom Line and Folk City in NYC. Richard was unhappy with some of the performances and later asked that the record be pulled from the market. It does include several songs that I've never heard anywhere else, such as the title track, Time To Ring Some Changes, Love Is Bad For Business, and How Many Times Do You Have To Fail? It also includes a cover of the Hank Williams song Honky Tonk Blues. (BTW, having seen Richard play several dozen times in the 80's and 90's, I've heard him cover Buddy Holly's Not Fade Away and "Ca Plan Pour Moi" by Plastique Bertrand! Also, "Hard Living Here Without You" by the Byrds, at a full band show with Clive Gregson and Christine Collister at the Bottom Line).
The 3rd song is "Bogie's Bonny Belle" and NOT "the sun never shines on the poor". I'm guessing AI did the titling? Anyway, it always struck me how this song treats an out-of-wedlock pregnancy as a sort of wasting disease brought on by mixing the bloodline of upper and lower classes: "the lassie lost her bloom/the rose fell from her bonny cheeks, and her eye began to swoon...." the classic traditional "She Moved Through the Fair" treads a parallel path, though it's not clear if the upper-class girl is killed by her commoner lover, or by her parents, or by a resulting pregnancy.
@derekjensen4680 , at the bottom of the "more" descriptions, individual pictures of Richard with song titles, but perhaps those are links to "official" recordings ? ( they all say "Live in London").
@@goodun2974 and yeah those link to the official audio of the show. I was happy he played my request The Sun Never Shines On The Poor, RT is my #1 artist, or maybe a tie with Bob Dylan
@@derekjensen4680, you've been very busy posting videos! I skimmed through the list of the most recent ones you posted, and subscribed. Some of my favorites are Thompson, Ry Cooder, David Lindley, Steve Morse, John Hiatt, Martin Simpson, and Tab Benoit.
The 4th song is "Bathsheba Smiles". Followed by "Sunset Song", and "Salford Sunday".
"Woman or a Man" was included on the 1982 live record "Small Town Romance", recorded at the Bottom Line and Folk City in NYC. Richard was unhappy with some of the performances and later asked that the record be pulled from the market. It does include several songs that I've never heard anywhere else, such as the title track, Time To Ring Some Changes, Love Is Bad For Business, and How Many Times Do You Have To Fail? It also includes a cover of the Hank Williams song Honky Tonk Blues. (BTW, having seen Richard play several dozen times in the 80's and 90's, I've heard him cover Buddy Holly's Not Fade Away and "Ca Plan Pour Moi" by Plastique Bertrand! Also, "Hard Living Here Without You" by the Byrds, at a full band show with Clive Gregson and Christine Collister at the Bottom Line).
The 3rd song is "Bogie's Bonny Belle" and NOT "the sun never shines on the poor". I'm guessing AI did the titling? Anyway, it always struck me how this song treats an out-of-wedlock pregnancy as a sort of wasting disease brought on by mixing the bloodline of upper and lower classes: "the lassie lost her bloom/the rose fell from her bonny cheeks, and her eye began to swoon...." the classic traditional "She Moved Through the Fair" treads a parallel path, though it's not clear if the upper-class girl is killed by her commoner lover, or by her parents, or by a resulting pregnancy.
I haven't posted a sellistt, not sure where your seeing song titles
@derekjensen4680 , at the bottom of the "more" descriptions, individual pictures of Richard with song titles, but perhaps those are links to "official" recordings ? ( they all say "Live in London").
@@goodun2974 Oh yeah, some automated thing, nothing I did. Must see if I can remove that and make it not do it on any other posts
@@goodun2974 and yeah those link to the official audio of the show. I was happy he played my request The Sun Never Shines On The Poor, RT is my #1 artist, or maybe a tie with Bob Dylan
@@derekjensen4680, you've been very busy posting videos! I skimmed through the list of the most recent ones you posted, and subscribed. Some of my favorites are Thompson, Ry Cooder, David Lindley, Steve Morse, John Hiatt, Martin Simpson, and Tab Benoit.