Tuesday, April 14, 2026

Rock And Roll Hall Of Fame News ... And A Flashback to April 14th, 1966: 60 YEARS AGO TODAY

FINALLY!!!

Ed Sullivan is FINALLY being inducted into The Rock And Roll Hall Of Fame.

This has been a GROSS oversite for decades now … SO happy to see this finally righted.  (Forgotten Hits Readers know that we have long been campaigning for his induction for over twenty years now.)

Also going in this year as part of The Rock And Roll Hall Of Fame Class of 2026:

As Performers:  Phil Collins, Billy Idol, Iron Maiden, Joy Division / New Order, Oasis, Sade, Luther Vandross and Wu-Tang Clan.

Sorry, but not much excitement here.  The only one of these that I can personally justify as worthy would be Phil Collins … and he’s already in as a member of Genesis.

New Edition, who won the Fan Vote, did not make the cut ... proving once again just how important the fans' opinion really matter to The Rock Hall.  (No tears will be shed by me ... I never thought they deserved the nomination in the FIRST place!) 

Early Influence: Celia Cruz, Fela Kuti, Queen Latifah, McLyte and Gram Parsons

The Rock Hall's been trying to induct Fela Kuti for years now ... maybe there's hope for Shakira to get in fifty years from now if Celia Cruz finally made it.  I do tip my hat to Queen Latifah and Gram Parsons, however. 

Musical Excellence:  Linda Creed, Arif Mardin, Jimmy Miller and Rick Rubin

I can immediately justify those last three … ALL deserving of such an honor ... but Linda Creed?  I’ll need some convincing here.  I know her more as a background singer than anything else!  Is Merry Clayton in??? No???  Then how on earth do you induct Linda Creed before Merry Clayton?!?!?

Sullivan is being honored with The Annual Ahmet Ertegun Award … and fittingly so.  Ed did more to advance rock and roll than anybody back in the day when America was being told this was all just juvenile delinquent rock and roll rebelry … only to learn some 65+ years later that the kids were right … and it was rock and roll REVELRY.  His promotion of Black acts and every new artist to hit the market with a new sound is unparalleled.  A list of artists who appeared on "The Ed Sullivan Show" is a better representation of the TRUE Rock And Roll Hall Of Fame than the organization so named and responsible for keeping things honest.  (kk)  

Ed Sullivan To Receive The Rock & Roll Hall of Fame Ahmet Ertegun Award

By Harvey Kubernik   

I’ve championed the legacy of Ed Sullivan for over half a century in print, books and online platforms.  

Ed Sullivan was my Sunday School teacher.

In my book Screen Gems: Pop Music Documentaries & Rock and Roll TV Scenes, published in 2026 by Bear ManorMedia, I devoted an entire chapter to Ed Sullivan.   

The Ed Sullivan library remained in the Sullivan family’s possession for almost two decades after The Ed Sullivan Show wrapped. In 1990, documentary filmmaker-producer Andrew Solt formed SOFA Entertainment Inc. and acquired the library from Sullivan’s daughter and son-in-law for an undisclosed sum. The Los Angeles-based production company became the copyright holder of the original programs and, eventually, more than 150 hours of newly created programming.

Solt is one of those American kids who grew up watching Sullivan on Sunday nights. Along with his aforementioned theatrical documentaries, his filmography includes the longform TV special Heroes of Rock ’n’ Roll (1979), an early collaboration with Malcolm Leo; and the miniseries The History of Rock ’n’ Roll (1995). SOFA Entertainment has produced approximately 400 programs for television and home video, including Elvis: The Ed Sullivan Shows (2006).

“Sullivan knew how to give a show that was for every generation that might be watching,” Andrew Solt explained during a September 2011 interview.

“The show was such a launching pad for such great, important, iconic moments, whether it’s Elvis or Bo Diddley. When the Beatles stepped onto Ed Sullivan’s New York stage on Sunday, February 9, 1964, to make their American TV debut, 86 percent of all TVs on at that hour — 73 million Americans — were tuned in.  It was the most-watched program in history to that point and remains one of the most-watched programs of all time. To some, it will always be remembered by his introduction: ‘Here they are — The Beatles!’”

Solt commented about the pre-1965 black and white film that captured the monumental, televised appearances of the Beatles in America.

“I think because the footage is black and white it takes you back even more into an era in which to today’s generation, nobody understands why anything was ever in black and white. I think what really comes across is [the Beatles’] excitement, their charisma, their talent, and when you start to think those haircuts were considered revolutionary, weird, and long hair, that those Beatles boots they wore were different, so unusual. And in retrospect, it’s humorous, but that is Day One of the evolution of rock and roll post-Elvis.

“That era of the 1960s starts February 9, 1964, in America. And it is the first time rock and roll ever comes to us. Before that, it was an exported item, never imported. They reinvent it and bring it back, and it changes the face of American pop music completely. That happened [in New York] and the city goes mad, the country goes wild, the whole place is affected. The beauty is watching the faces of these four young guys, knowing they’ve waited for this moment. They came to America with a number one record. They had it all lined up. They told that to Brian [Epstein, their manager], and it happened.

“For those of us who remember the music arriving around September, 1963, by the time they get to February, it’s after the John F. Kennedy assassination and we had been through the doldrums of a very horrific time where everything was questioned. Bomb shelters. I never thought I would see grown-ups running around, crying like the world had ended. I didn’t know what was going on, it was so severe.

“Ten weeks later or less, these guys land on our shores, and euphoria reigns. And [February 9] is the moment, and this can now be enjoyed by people around the world in a way that matters.”

Along with millions of other teens, I felt the emotional and musical impact of the Beatles’ Sullivan debut. Two other Sullivan guests transformative for me were Little Anthony & the Imperials on March 28, 1965, with Anthony’s mesmerizing lead vocal on “Hurt So Bad,” and soul singer/dancer James Brown singing a medley of his hits on May 1, 1966. 

“The relationship between Berry Gordy’s Motown label and The Ed Sullivan Show also made music and television history,” Solt noted.  

“Soon after the Supremes’ debut on Sullivan (December, 1964), it was clear that showcasing the latest Motown releases on CBS on Sunday nights (thirty-five million viewers was average) until 1971 was a way to expose the record company’s newest hits and boost the show’s ratings.”

Solt and I discussed Sullivan’s influence on the world of African-American entertainment.

“Ed had a fascination with African-American culture. He loved talent. He stood up for Harry Belafonte and Marian Anderson. Mahalia Jackson sang on the show, and one of the very first shows W.C. Handy sang was on The Ed Sullivan Show. He is considered the father of the blues.  

“For one, a Harlem DJ, Dr. Jive, introduced R&B artists to America in late 1955. “Rock Around the Clock” was blasting out of every transistor radio and the main titles of Blackboard Jungle. Ed loved introducing African Americans on his stage, and most of all he enjoyed giving people big breaks and the most desired gift, national TV airtime. Ed liked his role as showbiz kingpin, and he knew he was very fortunate to be such a powerful arbiter of American taste. He took pleasure in influencing our culture and [presenting] acts that would make us gasp and swoon. He was an unlikely hero.” 

“For us, being on The Ed Sullivan Show was so much more than record sales,” Mary Wilson of the Supremes emphasized when we spoke in 2016.

“It wasn’t about promoting us. It was about that we had grown up watching The Ed Sullivan Show. We had grown up watching shows where you didn’t see a lot of Black people starring on those shows. We were like every other family in America who spent hours watching Ed Sullivan. So, for us, being on the show was such a great honor, because we were there to see the world changing. To see America changing. We were excited! We’re on The Ed Sullivan Show. 

“We came from a time when a whole family of all different colors didn’t sit around watching Black people on television. The Dick Clark Caravan of Stars tours were before us and there were segregated hotels.

“For us, that is what it was all about. We were part of that change. We were part of helping America to see Black people, Black women, being proud, beautiful, and successful. It wasn’t just us. Many people before us. But they didn’t have the television to expose them to that wide range of people as we did. We were lucky. We stood on a lot of shoulders. But we were there when the doors opened.  

“The other thing was that we were seen in color after our initial appearances were in black and white. Recently, my granddaughter was watching a DVD collection of the Supremes. And she said to me, ‘Grandma! What happened to the color?’ Because she has never seen a black and white TV!”

The Temptations were among the most popular and influential Motown vocal groups to perform on The Ed Sullivan Show, four young Black men singing so fine, dressed to the nines, making smooth moves in unison. David Ruffin, a former member of the group, spoke with me for a story in the February 21, 1976, issue of Melody Maker.  

“The Temptations were individuals who happened to sing together,” Ruffin emphasized. “To this day, I always meet people and musicians who tell me how much the Temptations influenced them. It makes me feel good that others learned from us and a lot of the younger groups always acknowledge the Tempts in interviews.

“I never regretted any of the songs we did, and even the choreography on stage has been widely copied. I liked the dancin’ part of that group. Then you couldn’t just stand there and sing. The audience was moving, and you just reflected what was goin’ on. I’d like my association with the Temptations to be remembered as that we gave something. We helped young artists get in a position.”

While the Temptations were topping the pop charts with “My Girl” in 1965, they were also subjected to racial discrimination and harassment during tours.

“Some cats had to buy us food ’cause restaurants wouldn’t serve us, mostly in the South,” Ruffin lamented. “Things are much better today, but I can think of the times when I was driving independently of the group in my Cadillac, and the police, who didn’t like Black people with money or any fame, made me get out of town. They wouldn’t even let me stay overnight. I was visiting my mother, parked the car outside, and the cop said, ‘You can’t park it here.’

“Yet we always had respect from the musicians, and later, all kinds of kids went to our shows. We would rap and sing on the bus ride between concerts, and it was a lot of fun.”

In November, 1974, for Melody Maker, I interviewed Bobby Rogers, a member of the Miracles and a Motown fixture since their inception in 1958, when Bobby joined up with his sister Claudette, Ronnie White, Warren “Pete” Moore, and Smokey Robinson.

“We used to tour with the Rolling Stones and people like Georgie Fame,” Bobby recalled. “During the breaks from touring, a lot of the groups would ask questions about certain songs on our albums. I remember when we filmed the T.A.M.I. Show in ’64. Mick Jagger asked me about what I’d thought of the album James Brown Live at The Apollo, which was his favorite LP.

“Man, those early tours were a trip. Endless hours of bus rides and all these skinny English dudes asking us about the Tamla-Motown sound. I never realized how important or influential we were on groups like the Beatles and Stones.” 

The Beatles appeared on The Ed Sullivan Show nine times (three live, six pre-taped or on video), and the Rolling Stones on six occasions (the last pre-taped).

“Ed Sullivan was a true American phenomenon,” observed Andrew Loog Oldham, the Rolling Stones’ producer-manager from 1963-1967. “Every country has one: a seemingly untalented nebbish with strictly local/national appeal. But say what you will, and we did, his musical booking decisions opened the eyes and ears of America and created a legacy/library for all future generations. And he’s the only dude I know who made the Rolling Stones change their lyrics.

“When the Beatles played The Ed Sullivan Show, [it was] that moment when American youth [were] feeling the subtext, feeling the great unspoken hurt of a nation still traumatized by the assassination of its president just a few months before. It’s an incredible moment: Suddenly, American youth had its own music, a reason to be alive.

“Barney Ales — the jewel in the crown. His efforts on behalf of Mr. Gordy and the artists were the primary reason the ‘Sound of Young America’ graduated all over the world.”

Ales was Berry Gordy’s right-hand man and Motown’s ultimate insider, whose job was to get the records played and the company paid. He rose to become executive vice president and general manager but remained in Detroit in 1972 when Gordy moved Motown to California. Ales became its president in Los Angeles during his return to the firm from 1975 to 1978.

“It was as really a battle in those days to get Black artists on network television in prime time,” Ales emailed me in 2016.

“Sammy Davis Jr. and Nat Cole were about the only ones — anyone else, they just weren’t accepted. But when the Supremes broke through, we knew we had an opportunity. They looked so great, as well as sounding great. And Harvey Fuqua and Maxine Powell did a wonderful job, grooming the girls, getting them ready for prime time.

The Ed Sullivan Show was the real breakthrough: Sunday nights, millions of people watching. Once Sullivan took to the Supremes, we knew we were on the right track. And album sales picked up like crazy whenever they were on, so we always made sure to tell the distributors they needed to check their inventory.

“After the Supremes, we got everyone on Sullivan’s show: Stevie, Gladys, the Temptations. We had a good relationship with the producer, Bob Precht. He liked Motown, and Esther, Berry’s sister, used to take the dressing room keys afterward as souvenirs. They’re probably somewhere in the Motown Museum to this day.”

60 YEARS AGO TODAY:

4/14/66 – The Beatles record “Paperback Writer”

 


Also on 4/14, Hall Of Fame Pitcher Greg Maddux is born


Monday, April 13, 2026

A Monday Morning Quickie

Boy, did we have it wrong regarding the new Rolling Stones album and announcement.  (That’s what happens when you report speculation rendered by other sources!)

A brand new white vinyl only single has been released by The Cockroaches, apparently a pseudonym The Stones are using for this new release … which may or may not be from the forthcoming “Foreign Tongues” album previously reported.  (I hope this much is true as, in light of their infamous logo, this WOULD make for a pretty cool LP title … even if it’s only used later for a new compilation album!)  Latest word is that the album itself won’t be released until July.

It sounds like the white vinyl single is already available at select locations (surprisingly, perhaps, a week BEFORE Record Store Day, as right now it only appears to be available on vinyl.)  Coordinates for British, US and Japanese locations carrying the album were also released on Saturday.

A clever (if somewhat limited) release tactic … as of Saturday morning, the lead single, “Rough And Twisted,” was NOT available to download on iTunes or Amazon … so for right now the only way to get a copy is to pick up the physical 12” single.  (Or just watch all the YouTube videos posted by folks who did so!)  kk

https://twitter.com/i/status/2043085244715168198 

If you’re like us (and most of the rest of America), you’re probably TOTALLY hooked on the HBO Max show “The Pitt.”

So we were quite pleased to see Dr. Santos (Isa Briones) singing her ass off on Broadway in the role of Connie Francis in “Just In Time,” the musical launched by Jonathan Groff celebrating the life and music of Bobby Darin.  (Jonathan’s old “Glee” school teacher and musical director Matthew Morrison has taken over the role of Darin thru the end of this week.)

Give a listen to her belting out Connie’s big #2 hit “Who’s Sorry Now.”  Absolutely amazing!  (Nice way to spend your off season, eh???)  My take: Get a Connie Francis biopic into the works STAT!!!  And sign this girl up!  (kk)

Paul McCartney’s new single “Days We Left Behind” premiered at #22 on Billboard’s Adult Contemporary Chart this week.  It marks his 51st appearance on this chart, including seven chart hits with The Beatles dating back to 1969 – 1995.

According to Billboard, McCartney last appeared on the Adult Contemporary chart with “Come On to Me,” which hit No. 10 in October of 2018, his 19th Top 10 hit as a soloist.  These include five No. 1's, three as part of Wings — “My Love” (three weeks, 1973), “Silly Love Songs” (one week, 1976) and “Let ‘Em In” (one week, 1976) — along with “Ebony and Ivory” with Stevie Wonder (five weeks, 1982), and “The Girl Is Mine” with Michael Jackson (four weeks, 1982-83). He first reached the chart on his own in 1971 with the No. 4-peaking “Another Day.”

McCartney initially made the chart in the 1960s via The Beatles (“Something,” #17, 1969), who then earned two Top 10 hits in 1970, led by the No. 1 “Let It Be” (four weeks, 1970) and “The Long And Winding Road,” which peaked at #2 later that same year.  (Incredibly, Beatles and McCartney classics like “And I Love Her,” “Here, There And Everywhere,” “Yesterday,” “Eleanor Rigby” and “Michelle” failed to make this chart.)   Post-break-up, The Beatles made The Adult Contemporary Chart four times: “Got To Get You Into My Life” (#9, 1976), “Ob-La-Di, Ob-La-Da” (#39, 1976), “The Beatles’ Movie Medley (#15, 1982) and “Free As A Bird” (#19, 1995).

Other notable McCartney solo Adult Contemporary Chart Hits include “Uncle Albert / Admiral Halsey” (#9, 1971), “Live And Let Die” (#8 1973), “Listen To What The Man Said” (#8, 1975), “With A Little Luck” (#5, 1978), “Say, Say, Say” (with Michael Jackson, #3, 1983), “So Bad” (#3, 1983), “No More Lonely Nights” (#2, 1984) and “My Brave Face” (#4, 1989).  One of my favorites, “This Never Happened Before,” failed to make Billboard’s Hot 100 Pop Singles Chart but peaked at #27 on their Adult Contemporary Chart in 2006.  It comes from the film “The Lake House” and shows McCartney at his millennial best. 

Very special thanks to Paul Haney of Record Research for providing Billboard’s Adult Contemporary Singles Chart information post 2006 (2007 – 2026) since Joel Whitburn’s last book update.

And, speaking of Paul Haney …

>>>The secret’s out … the new, updated Record Research Book will be their Hot Country Singles edition, last updated in 2017 and now being given a full make-over thru 2025.  This is Record Research’s first updated volume since 2022’s Pop Singles Edition covering the years 1990 – 2022.  Expected ship date is June of 2026 ... but preorders are being accepted now (kk)

Hi Kent, 

Thanks for the plug in your blog this morning.  It's always appreciated!

I have just one little correction - this will be our first new book since our Pop Annual 1950-2023, which came out nearly two years ago and is almost sold out.

Thanks again!

Paul

Thanks for the update, Paul.  Anybody out there who HASN’T already got a copy of the Pop Annual book would do well to order yourself a copy now before they’re gone … but if I’m not mistaken, this book will also become available as a Print On Demand issue, too … another fascinating new feature of Record Research Publications, meaning it’s never REALLY gone!  (kk)

Actress / Singer Ann-Margret had to cancel an autograph signing appearance after she fell and broke her elbow over the weekend. 

The incident triggered memories of the time the 84 year old bombshell fell 22 feet off the stage rehearsing for an appearance in Las Vegas in 1972.  We wish her a speedy recovery.  (kk)

Hey Kent,

Here's my 8 Track story.

Had my Kraco 8 Track bolted under the dash of my 1960 Chevy Bel Air. Took my girlfriend to see Black Sabbath in St. Paul, MN. (About 1972). Car was in the outside parking lot and after the show I went to open her door for her. (Surprised it was not locked.) She said she locked it. The dome light came on and my $35.00 Kraco was gone! My first thought was I hope they didn't take my 8 Track tapes out of the glove box? Luckily, my 8 Tracks were still there. I survived!!! Went back to 10,000 Auto Parts the next day and bought another Kraco Player. Long ago and far away.

"Thanks,"

Gary


I cannot believe what a “hot” items those 8-track players were back in the day … because they really weren’t all that expensive to buy in the first place.

I had a friend (who shall remain nameless, even ‘tho the statutes of limitations has long since passed) who had THREE 8-track players stolen from his car.  (In all fairness, he had a super hot looking supped-up blue Dodge Demon with racing stripes, so the car DID call attention to itself wherever he went.)  After the third time, he decided that this was it … so he installed a fourth player,  only this time he attached a razor blade to the bracket so that if anyone ever did try to take it, they would pay the price for doing so.

Sure enough, only a few weeks later some guy cut himself to pieces, bleeding all over the inside of my friend’s beautiful car.  When he filed a police report, it was my friend who got the ticket … and not the thief who was clearly trying to burglarize his pride and joy.  “Assault with a deadly weapon” was the charge for trying to protect his personal property.

Nope … never did like those 8-track machines!!!  (kk)

I was excited to hear about the new Peter Asher film!!!

This should be a great documentary (see trailer link below)!  Peter Asher has done SO much for music over the decades.  Besides being part of Peter & Gordon as an artist, his first work OF MANY as a producer came in January, 1968, when he produced both 45 sides of former Manfred Mann lead singer Paul Jones' single "And The Sun Will Shine" b/w "The Dog Presides."  There was certainly NO pressure on the kid with studio musicians like this list that played on the tunes that day:

Paul McCartney - Drums 

Jeff Beck - Guitar 

Paul Samwell-Smith - Bass 

Nicky Hopkins - Keyboards 

Recorded at Abbey Road and Produced by Peter Asher.

Besides all that, the A side was a Bee Gees’ written tune and the B was a Paul Jones side -- possibly because Peter knew the publishing business and that the B side got equal pay for the songwriter that A sides did.  Thus, EVERY Peter & Gordon 45 B-Side thru "Lady Godiva" was written by P&G themselves.

Paul Jones • “And The Sun Will Shine” • 1968 [Reelin' In The Years Archive]

Certainly this features some very Bee Gees’ polished orchestration.  Macca does a decent job on dominant drums.  Meanwhile, the B side incorporates dogs barking at start and end (hmm, "Hey Bulldog" came about later that year) and is totally Yardbirds sounding with Beck starring.  Two very cool sides for Peter's first taste of producing and he would soon be at Apple doing same for James Taylor.

Paul Jones - The Dog Presides

ANYWAY, this should be a great show, but I was disappointed that Gordon Waller was listed so far down near the end of the DVD case.  Gordon was very much a big part of the start of Peter's dream.

BTW, Peter also produced Andrew Gold's "What’s Wrong With This Picture" LP that gave us the "Lonely Boy" and "One of Them Is Me" hits.  PLUS, Peter WROTE the liner notes for Andrew's terrific 2020 "Something New" CD of Andrew's early recordings in 1973.  These things alone would merit a documentary, IMO!  Haha

Clark Besch


Film Trailer:  https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nIpHwQ94WvY

Opens June 19th in New York City before expanding to Los Angeles and markets nationwide starting June 26. 

Feature length documentary about the life of legendary artist / musician / A&R executive / producer / manager Peter Asher

It is also set to screen at the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame on Wednesday April 15th at 7 PM in celebration of the 50th anniversary of the Cleveland International Film Festival

https://rockhall.com/event/peter-asher-everywhere-man-screening/

Featuring (in Order of Appearance):

Peter Asher; Steve Martin; Eric Idle; Jane Asher; Clare Gillies; Gordon Waller; Lyle Lovett; Paul McCartney; Victoria Asher; Twiggy; Danny Kortchmar; Betsy Asher; Marianne Faithfull; Pattie Boyd; John Dunbar; Barry Miles; Yoko Ono; John Lennon; Paul Jones; Chris O’Dell; James Taylor; John Boylan; Carole King; Leland Sklar; Kate Taylor; Linda Ronstadt; Andrew Gold; Waddy Wachtel; Ben Fong-Torres; Wendy Asher; Beverly D’Angelo; Natalie Merchant; Robin Williams; Paul Shaffer; Cathy Shaffer; Rufus Wainwright; “Weird Al” Yankovic 

Directed & Produced by Dayna Goldfine & Dan Geller (Hallelujah: Leonard Cohen, a Journey, a Song)

Edited by: Darren Lund

Music Supervisor: Dawn Sutter Madell 

Original Score by: Laurence Juber and Jeff Alan Ross

Executive Produced by Michael Drews, Robin Sagon, Jonathan Dana, Morgan Neville, Caitrin Rogers, Keith Putney

Peter Asher: Everywhere Man chronicles Asher’s remarkable six-decade journey through the worlds of pop, folk, and rock, from his early British Invasion chart-topping fame as half of the iconic duo Peter & Gordon and his close 

friendship with Paul McCartney, to his groundbreaking work as a producer and manager for artists such as James Taylor and Linda Ronstadt. Featuring rare archival footage, intimate interviews, and never-before-heard stories, the film offers an illuminating portrait of a man who helped shape the soundtrack of multiple generations and continues to inspire musicians and fans around the globe.

RT: 117 Minutes

From Chuck Buell  ...  

 

As seen in Forgotten Hits ... 

Because I’m often asked if I’d ever return to the Daily Grind of a Radio Show again myself for any reason, I tell them, while I never say never, I DO say “Can’t Imagine Why!”

However, I did find this interesting.

>>For the first time ever – and 48 years after the fictional WKRP in Cincinnati premiered on CBS in 1978 – there will be a radio station called WKRP in Cincinnati.


But I thought it might be Fun to send a "Teaser Introduction Production" to them anyway!

 

And for any other former Forgotten Hits Radio People who might be of the same Frame of Mind as I, here it is!

CB (Hmmm ... Cincinnati Bound????? - kk) 

 

This is interesting … Charlie Daniels’ first time performance of “The Devil Went Down To Georgia,” his #3 1979 pop hit, is now available for viewing!

Charlie Daniel’s Very First Live Performance of "The Devil Went Down to Georgia" (1979) Is Now Available for Streaming for First Time Ever (April 10)

It Is The First Track Released From Forthcoming “The Best of the Charlie Daniels Band Volunteer Jam”

A piece of country music history will finally be available with the release of the very first live performance of “The Devil Went Down to Georgia” on April 10, 2026, thanks to StarVista Music.

Captured during the Charlie Daniels Band’s performance at Volunteer Jam V concert in 1979, the track marks the live debut of the legendary song, providing a rare work-in-progress view into its creation. The song is the first release from the forthcoming album, “The Best of the Charlie Daniels Band Volunteer Jam,” a collection of rare and electrifying performances drawn from Daniels’ extensive archives.

Stream “The Devil Went Down to Georgia Live” HERE or listen to it via YouTube HERE.

Long celebrated as one of the most iconic songs in American music, “The Devil Went Down to Georgia” is heard here in its raw, formative state before it became a cultural phenomenon and won a Grammy in 1980 for Best Country Performance By a Duo or Group. This newly released version captures the spontaneity of the moment, as Daniels introduced the song to a live audience for the very first time.

“It’s a very historical recording and it's exciting to hear the song in such an early stage,” says Charlie Daniels Jr. “Dad hadn't got the final phrasing of the song down yet, you hear him flub a line … and then the reaction from the crowd was electric. You can almost feel how hesitant they are at first as they listen to the song and then the energy grows as they realize that something special is happening.”

Beyond its musical significance, the song also represents a triumph of preservation. Restoring the tapes from the live performance was a painstaking process. The 47-year-old recording was in such bad shape that there were concerns it might not be salvageable.

“StarVista Music stepped in to help by bringing in a talented team to ‘bake’ the tape. Because of its condition and the fact that magnetic particles were literally shedding off the tape, only small segments of the song could be transferred at a time, so constant breaks were needed to stop, clean the equipment heads, rewind, record and start all over again until it was completely reassembled. I’m so thankful that they were able to preserve it,” explains Daniels Jr. “I’m very proud of my dad and everything he accomplished, and this recording is something that's exciting for his fans to experience and helps keep his legacy strong.”

From his Dove Award winning gospel albums to his genre-defining Southern rock anthems and his CMA Award-winning country hits, few artists have left a more indelible mark on America’s musical landscape than Charlie Daniels.  An outspoken patriot, beloved mentor to young artists and a road warrior when it came to touring, Charlie parlayed his passion for music into a multi-platinum career and a platform to support the military, underprivileged children and others in need. Over the course of his career, Charlie received numerous accolades, including induction into the Grand Ole Opry and Musicians Hall of Fame. He was presented with the Pioneer Award by the Academy of Country Music, was honored as a BMI Icon in recognition of his songwriting and received a star on the Music City Walk of Fame. In 1974 he invited some friends to join him at Nashville’s War Memorial Auditorium for an all-star concert he dubbed The Volunteer Jam.  The event continued for years and was broadcast in the U.S. and internationally.  Over the years, the Jam featured a diverse line-up that included Willie Nelson, Ted Nugent, Roy Acuff, Stevie Ray Vaughn, Crystal Gayle, James Brown, Emmylou Harris, Amy Grant, George Thorogood, Kris Kristofferson, Little Richard, Tammy Wynette, Alabama, Oak Ridge Boys, B. B. King and the Allman Brothers. 

StarVista Music: With years of experience distributing entertainment-based content and live entertainment through our sister company, StarVista LIVE, StarVista Music is a trusted and effective label partner. We provide world-class resources, including multi-channel marketing, publicity, promotion, in-house creative expertise, and long-standing industry relationships and partnerships built over our history.

You guys voted “The Devil Went Down To Georgia” as the 716th Most Essential Classic Rock Track of All Time.  The Charlie Daniels Band placed four other titles in the lower region of The Top 3333.  (We are currently in the process of revamping this list in the hopes of a more dynamic representation and, hopefully, future radio broadcast.  For now, the list has been removed from our site for reconstruction.)  kk

From Timmy ...

I have items for trade:  radio station surveys, dozens of posters of DJ's, American Top 40 program discs and more.  Can supply pics, if any interest.
Yours truly,
Timmy
We've been doing some spring cleaning of our own here ... looking to rehome numerous rock and roll books and biographies, Chicagoland surveys and VERY collectible records and picture sleeves.
If anybody out there has any interest in expanding their own collections, this just may be the perfect time to do so.  Drop me a line and we'll see what kind of connections we can make.  (kk) 
 
Kent - 
I saw that you mentioned the new Record Research book in FH.  An update to their Top Country Singles book?  I'll be passing on this one.
Instead, I'll save all my nickels for the Kent Kotal action figure -- 
That is, once they get the wardrobe right!
Sammy

kk …

QUESTION???:

Shouldn't The Kent Kotal Action Figure Be ... "DANCING???"

FB

Nope … he got that part right … kk don’t dance!  (kk)