Friday, May 29, 2015

No X Cess Baggage Blues Jon Hammond with NDR Horns Hamburg Auster Bar

*WATCH THE FILM HERE: No X Cess Baggage Blues Jon Hammond with NDR Horns Hamburg Auster Bar Jon's archive https://archive.org/details/NoXCessBaggageByJonHammondSpclThanksLufthansaNDR_201409 vers 2.1, baggage, blues, hammond organ, funky jazz, NDR Horns, Hamburg, Sessions, Auster Bar, Auster Jazz Series, ASCAP Composer, Jon Hammond, Musicians Union, Local 802 vers 2.1 Jon Hammond Band special dedication to Lufthansa and NDR "No X-Cess Baggage Blues" live performance of track from NDR SESSIONS Projekt album featuring the NDR Horns: Michael Leuschner trumpet, Lutz Büchner tenor saxophone, Fiete Felsch alto saxophone, Heinz Lichius drums, Joe Berger guitar, Jon Hammond organ + bass - concert in Auster Bar Auster Jazz Series - special thanks Nicolai Ditsch for operating the camera - the incredible NDR Musicians and Knut Benzner & Jazz Redaktion Team, Lufthansa Technik Hamburg, Apple iTunes https://itunes.apple.com/us/album/ndr-sessions-projekt/id154024761 Ham-Berger-Friz Records ©JH INTL ASCAP - Filmed in High Definition Live at Auster Bar Hamburg Eimsbüttel courtesy of Frank Blume & Torsten Wendt Auster Bar Team https://hammondjazz.wordpress.com/tag/ndr-sessions-projekt/ Jon's archive https://archive.org/details/HeadPhone2ndSetMusikmesseWarmUpParty Jon Hammond's annual musikmesse Warm Up Party in the world famous jazzkeller Frankfurt - original funk composition by Jon Hammond "Head Phone" - Jon Hammond Band: Joe Berger guitar, Peter Klohmann tenor saxophone, Giovanni Totó Gulino drums, Jon Hammond Sk1 Hammond organ - Special Thanks to Frank Poehl for operating the camera ©JH INTL ASCAP http://www.jonhammondband.com Youtube http://youtu.be/-QHH6G1w2kY Vimeo http://vimeo.com/92477592 Jon Hammond Band Facebook http://www.facebook.com/photo.php?v=814737598555039 CNN iReport http://ireport.cnn.com/docs/DOC-1123137 Blip TV http://blip.tv/jon-hammond/head-phone-2nd-set-musikmesse-warm-up-party-6853346 Sara Lee Rainbo Bread Outlet in the twilight, Jon Hammond Paul Kantner - time for some morning coffee, SF Chronicle and smoke some cigs in North Beach San Francisco - Jon Hammond https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Paul_Kantner Paul Lorin Kantner (born March 17, 1941) is an American rock musician, known for co-founding the psychedelic rock band Jefferson Airplane and its spin-off band Jefferson Starship. He was born in San Francisco, California. *Coffee Time at Caffé Trieste: Although the band was originally formed by Marty Balin, Kantner eventually became the main man of Jefferson Airplane and captained the group through various successor incarnations of Jefferson Starship. Kantner has the longest continuous membership with the band; at times he was the only founding member still in the band from the original Jefferson Airplane line up.[1] A political anarchist, Kantner once advocated the use of psychedelic drugs such as LSD for mind expansion and spiritual growth, and is a prominent advocate of the legalization of marijuana.[2][3] In a 1986 interview, Kantner shared his thoughts about cocaine and alcohol, saying, "Cocaine, particularly, is a bummer. It's a noxious drug that turns people into jerks. And alcohol is probably the worst drug of all. As you get older and accomplish more things in life in general, you realize that drugs don't help, particularly if you abuse them."[4] When Kantner suffered a cerebral hemorrhage in 1980, his attending physician at Cedars-Sinai, Stephen Levy, was quick to point out it was not a drug-related issue, saying: "There is zero relationship between Paul's illness and drugs. He doesn't use drugs."[5] Kantner's primary instrument is the rhythm guitar, and he also sings lead or backup vocals. Kantner has three children, sons Gareth and Alexander, and daughter China.[6] Early years[edit] The son of Paul and Cora Lee (Fortier) Kantner, Paul had two much older half-siblings: a half-brother and a half-sister. His mother died when he was eight years old, and Kantner remembers not being able to attend her funeral, having been sent to the circus instead.[1] His father, a traveling salesman, sent young Kantner off to Jesuit military school after his mother's death. It was in the school's library at age eight or nine where he read his first science fiction book, finding an escape by immersing himself in science fiction novels and music at an early age.[1][2][7] When he became a teenager he went into total revolt against all forms of authority, and became determined to become a protest folk singer in the manner of his musical hero, Pete Seeger.[7] He entered University of Santa Clara and San Jose State College, completing a total of three years before he dropped out to enter the music scene.[1] 1960s–1970s[edit] Paul Kantner 1972 Kantner in 1972. Kantner and Grace Slick with Jefferson Starship Kantner and Grace Slick with Jefferson Starship. Paul Kantner 1975 Kantner in 1975. During the summer of 1965 singer Marty Balin saw Kantner perform at the Drinking Gourd, a San Francisco folk club, and recruited him as part of the original Jefferson Airplane.[1][2][8] When the group needed a guitarist, Kantner recommended Jorma Kaukonen, whom he knew from his San Jose days.[1] Kantner would be the only member to appear on all Jefferson Airplane/Starship albums bearing the Jefferson prefix. Kantner's songwriting often featured whimsical or political lyrics with a science-fiction or fantasy theme, usually set to music that had a hard rock, almost martial sound. Kantner and Jefferson Airplane were among those who played at Woodstock. Forty years later, Kantner recalled: “We were due to be on stage at 10pm on the Saturday night but we didn’t actually get on until 7.30am the following day.”[9] Later in the year, the group also played at Altamont, where Marty Balin was knocked unconscious by a Hell's Angel member originally hired as security for the concert.[10] Despite its commercial success, the Airplane was plagued by intra-group fighting, causing the band to begin splintering at the height of its success.[11] Part of the problem was manager Bill Graham, who wanted the group to do more touring and more recording.[12][13] During the transitional period of the early 1970s, as the Airplane started to disintegrate, Kantner recorded Blows Against The Empire, a concept album featuring an ad-hoc group of musicians whom he dubbed Jefferson Starship.[7][11][14][15] This earliest edition of Jefferson Starship included members of Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young (David Crosby and Graham Nash) and members of the Grateful Dead (Jerry Garcia, Bill Kreutzmann, and Mickey Hart), as well as some of the other members of Jefferson Airplane (Grace Slick, Joey Covington, and Jack Casady). In Blows Against the Empire, Kantner (and Slick) sang about a group of people escaping earth in a hijacked starship. The album was nominated in 1971 for the science fiction Hugo Award.[16] A sequel, The Empire Blows Back, was released in 1983 and included most of the same musicians, performing this time under the name The Planet Earth Rock and Roll Orchestra.[17] Kanter had been in love with Grace Slick for some time, but she was involved in a relationship with the band's drummer, Spencer Dryden. After their two-year affair ended, he finally had a chance with Grace.[1][13][18] In 1969, Kantner and Grace Slick began living together publicly as a couple. Rolling Stone magazine called them "the psychedelic John and Yoko." Slick became pregnant, and a song about their love child's impending birth "A Child Is Coming" appeared on Blows Against the Empire. Kantner and Slick's daughter China Kantner was born in 1971.[19][20][21] Slick would later leave Kantner to marry Skip Johnson, a Jefferson Starship roadie.[2] Despite the split, Slick remained with the band. Kantner and Slick released two follow-up albums. Sunfighter was an environmentalism-tinged album released in 1971 to celebrate China's birth. He and Grace made news again in 1972, when they were accused of assaulting a policeman after their Akron, Ohio concert.[22][23] 1973's Baron von Tollbooth and the Chrome Nun was titled after the nicknames David Crosby had given to the couple. Through a songwriter friend Kantner discovered teen-aged guitarist Craig Chaquico during this time, who first appeared on Sunfighter and would play with all of the incarnations of the Starship name through 1991. After Kaukonen and Casady left the Airplane in 1973 to devote their full attention to Hot Tuna, the musicians on Baron von Tollbooth formed the core of a new Airplane lineup that was formally reborn as "Jefferson Starship" in 1974. Kantner, Slick, and David Freiberg were charter members along with late-Airplane holdovers drummer John Barbata, and fiddler Papa John Creach, along with Pete Sears (who, like Freiberg, played bass and keyboards), and Chaquico. Marty Balin also joined Jefferson Starship while their first album, Dragonfly, was still in the works, co-writing with Kantner the album's biggest hit "Caroline."[15][24] After the 1978 release of the album Earth - to which Kantner contributed just one song - Jefferson Starship endured major personnel changes. Slick took a leave of absence, and Balin quit the group to pursue a solo career. No attempt was made to replace Slick, but Balin was replaced by Mickey Thomas, who was previously successful as a member of the Elvin Bishop Group.[25][26] An album dominated by Kantner compositions called Freedom at Point Zero was released to commercial success. Grace Slick returned for the follow-up album Modern Time which was another record featuring Kantner's science fiction themes.[2] 1980s–1990s[edit] In October 1980, Kantner was taken to Cedars-Sinai Medical Center in serious condition from a cerebral hemorrhage.[7] Kantner had been working in Los Angeles on an album when he became ill.[27] He was 39 years old at the time and beat considerable odds with a full recovery without surgery.[28] A year later, Kantner talked about the experience, saying, "If there was a Big Guy up there willing to talk to me, I was willing to listen. But nothing happened. It was all just like a small vacation." It was his second brush with serious illness or injury, having suffered a serious motorcycle accident in the early 1960s: "I hit a tree at 40 miles an hour head first and nearly shattered my skull. I had a plate in there for a while."[2] The injury from the motorcycle accident was credited with saving Kantner from serious complications from the cerebral hemorrhage; the hole left by the accident relieved the accompanying cranial pressure.[1] Kantner in concert with Jefferson Starship, 1996. In 1984, Kantner (the last founding member of Jefferson Airplane remaining) left the group, complaining that the band had become too commercial and strayed too far from its counterculture roots.[29] Kantner made his decision to leave while Jefferson Starship was in the middle of a tour.[25] Upon quitting Kantner took legal action against his former bandmates over the Jefferson name (the rest of the band wanted to continue as Jefferson Starship).[30] Kantner won his suit, and the group name was reduced to simply "Starship."[12] Under the terms of the settlement, no group can call itself Jefferson Starship without Paul Kantner as a member, and no group can call itself Jefferson Airplane unless Grace Slick is on board.[31][32] The legal battle had personal repercussions as well, permanently damaging Kantner's friendships with Mickey Thomas and Craig Chiquico.[33] In a 2007 interview, Kantner related that the legal battles did not put an end to the name issue: "Right now she's (Grace Slick) suing me for some unknown reason, but generally we get along really well. Twenty years ago, feeling tired of the music business, she signed over her interest in Jefferson Starship to me, and now she's suing me for using the name. I actually had to go and dig up the piece of paper she signed, and I showed it to her, and she said, "I don't remember that.""[29][34] The legal issues came to an end in 2008, with Slick and former group manager Bill Thompson being declared the rightful owners of the name, but granting Kantner the right to use it for his band for a fee which was not disclosed.[35] In 1985, following his departure from Jefferson Starship, Paul Kantner rejoined with Balin and Jack Casady to form the KBC Band, releasing their only album, KBC Band (which included Kantner's hit, "America"), in 1987 on Arista Records.[11][32] There was a video made for "America" as well as a national KBC tour.[36] In 1986, Kantner headed for court with Slick and her then husband, Skip Johnson, over the taping of some telephone conversations.[37] With Kantner reunited with Balin and Casady, the KBC Band opened the door to a full-blown Jefferson Airplane reunion. In 1988, during a San Francisco Hot Tuna gig where Kantner was performing, they found themselves joined by Grace Slick. This led to a formal reunion of the original Jefferson Airplane (featuring nearly all the main members, including founder Marty Balin, but without Spencer Dryden, who left in 1970.[38][39] A self-titled album was released by Columbia Records. The accompanying tour was a success, but their revival was short-lived, although the band never formally disbanded.[40] According to Grace Slick, the reunion began as a joke: "We hadn't even talked for a year, and we were battling legally - in fact, there are still some standing lawsuits between me and Paul, something to do with the Airplane. Anyway, the idea was that I'd just sneak in, stand at the side of the stage and come out and sing 'White Rabbit' and see what Paul did. Paul never got the joke, but he liked it, the audience liked it, and that's how it started."[41] 1990s–present[edit] Kantner and his Jefferson Airplane bandmates were inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 1996.[42] The performance at the induction ceremony was the first time original members Marty Balin, Jorma Kaukonen, Jack Casady, Spencer Dryden and Kantner had played together since 1970.[43] Grace Slick had to miss the ceremonies because of a serious leg infection, but sent a message which was delivered by Kantner, "Grace sends her love."[44] In 1991 Kantner and Balin reformed Jefferson Starship and Kantner continues to tour and record with the band as of 2013. Today Jefferson Starship is primarily a Paul Kantner solo band, with various former Airplane and Starship members dropping in for tours or specific shows. With their latest female vocalist Cathy Richardson and Kantner's son Alexander Kantner on bass, Jefferson Starship released their first studio album in a decade, titled Jefferson's Tree of Liberty in September 2008.[45] The album was a return to Kantner's musical roots featuring covers of 1950's and 1960s protest songs.[33][46] In late 2010 Kantner started to compile collections of "sonic art" performed by him and various artists, including a mix of cover songs, sound effects, and spoken word, releasing multiple volumes under the title "Paul Kantner Windowpane Collective".[47] Albums discography[edit] Jefferson Airplane, Jefferson Starship, Starship, and Jefferson Starship-TNG[edit] Jefferson Airplane[edit] Jefferson Airplane Takes Off (1966) - US position: #128 Surrealistic Pillow (1967) - US position: #3 (Breakthrough album featuring "Somebody to Love" and "White Rabbit.") After Bathing at Baxter's (1967) - US position: #17 Crown of Creation (1968) - US position: #6 Bless Its Pointed Little Head (1969) US position: #17 (live) Volunteers (1969) - US position: #13 The Worst of Jefferson Airplane (1970) - US position: #12 (First greatest hits collection.) Bark (1971) - US position: #11 Long John Silver (1972) - US position: #20 Thirty Seconds Over Winterland (1973) US position: #52 (live) Early Flight (1974) (A collection of singles, B-sides, and other non-LP tracks.) Flight Log, 1966–1976 (1977) (Compilation album, also includes tracks by Jefferson Starship, Hot Tuna, as well as solo tracks.) Time Machine (1984) (Compilation album.) 2400 Fulton Street| (1987) (Compilation album.) Jefferson Airplane (1989) (1989 "reunion" album.) White Rabbit & Other Hits (1990) (Compilation album.) Jefferson Airplane Loves You (1991) (Three-disc boxed set.) Best of Jefferson Airplane (1993) (Compilation album.) Live at the Monterey Festival (1995) (Live recording, British release of Jefferson Airplane's performance at the June 1967 Monterey Pop Festival.) Journey: The Best of Jefferson Airplane (1996) (British compilation album.) Live at the Fillmore East (1998) (Live recording of 1968 performance at the Fillmore East in New York City.) The Roar of Jefferson Airplane (2001) (Compilation album.) Platinum & Gold Collection (2003) (Compilation album.) The Essential Jefferson Airplane (2005) (Compilation album.) Paul Kantner and Jefferson Starship[edit] Blows Against The Empire (1970) US position: #20 Jefferson Starship[edit] Dragon Fly (1974) US position: #11 Red Octopus (1975) US position: #1 (Best-selling album for any incarnation of the Airplane/Starship.) Spitfire (1976) US position: #3 Earth (1978) US position: #5 (Last album w/ Marty Balin until 1995.) Gold (1979) US position: #20 (Compilation album.) Freedom at Point Zero (1979) US position: #10 Modern Times (1981) US position: #26 Winds of Change (1982) US position: #26 Nuclear Furniture (1984) US position: #28 Jefferson Starship at Their Best (1993) (Compilation album.) Deep Space / Virgin Sky (1995) (Live album.) Miracles (1995) (Live album.) Windows of Heaven (1999) Greatest Hits: Live at the Fillmore (1999) (Live album.) Extended Versions (2000) (Live album.) Across the Sea of Suns (2001) (Live album) Jefferson's Tree of Liberty (2008) Compilation albums credited to "Jefferson Airplane/Jefferson Starship/Starship"[edit] Hits (1998) VH1 Behind the Music (2000) Love Songs (2000) Selected solo, duo and trio efforts[edit] Paul Kantner/Grace Slick[edit] Sunfighter (1971) US position: #89 Baron von Tollbooth and the Chrome Nun (1973) US position: #120 (By Paul Kantner, Grace Slick, and David Freiberg.) Paul Kantner[edit] Planet Earth Rock and Roll Orchestra (1983; remastered and reissued 2005) Windowpane Collective Vol. 1 - A Martian Christmas (2010) Windowpane Collective Vol. 2 - Venusian Love Songs (2011) The KBC Band[edit] Includes Paul Kantner, Marty Balin, and Jack Casady. KBC Band (1986) US position: #75 Filmography[edit] In 2004, a documentary containing 13 Jefferson Airplane performances and bandmember interviews was released on DVD. Fly Jefferson Airplane (2004) — with Paul Kantner at Caffe Trieste Bernard Purdie Plays Pocket Funk - by Jon Hammond: YOUTUBE: http://youtu.be/4c9Hi8-bZ9k Jon Hammond Band - The NAMM Show Bernard Purdie and Jon Hammond reprise "Pocket Funk" on NAMM Center Patio Stage: Koei Tanaka harmonica, Joe Berger guitar, Alex Budman tenor saxophone, Jon Hammond at the organ and Bernard Purdie on the fatback drums! Very special thanks to Dom Famularo (Sabian), Bespeco Accessori, Alex Mingmann Hsieh / P Mauriat HQ Pmauriat Albest saxophones, Suzuki Musical Instruments Instruments, JJ Guitars, The NAMM Show Organization - Greg Herreman Productions - Suzuki Musical Instruments http://www.jonhammondband.com/ "Pocket Funk" ©JON HAMMOND International ASCAP Rick Heins from Fender Scottsdale AZ for 60th Anniversary of Stratocaster - Jon Hammond Jon's archive https://archive.org/details/P.MauriatActionBluesWithJonHammond (Higher Quality) P.Mauriat HQ / Pmauriat Albest action with Jon Hammond Blues All Afternoon at The NAMM Show with P.Mauriat Artists and guests Arno Haas, Hailey Niswanger, James Carter, Joshua Quinlan, Juan Alzate, Ryan Montano - Jon Hammond at the Sk1 organ http://www.HammondCast.com/ with Hailey Niswanger, Jon Hammond, PMauriat Saxophones, Pmauriat Albest, Arno Haas, Reggie Padilla and Ryan Montano at NAMM Anaheim Convention Center Youtube http://youtu.be/4rGrMhFPbrU Vimeo http://vimeo.com/88162571 #Baggage #Blues #Hamburg #NDRHorns #HammondOrgan ASCAP Composer, Jon Hammond, Auster Jazz, Michael Leuschner, Lutz Büchner, Fiete Felsch, Heinz Lichius, Eimsbüttel

Hammondcast: Spotlight on Lou Colombo the late great Trumpet Player recorded on bandstand by organist Jon Hammond 1978

*LISTEN TO THE AUDIO HERE: Spotlight on Lou Colombo the late great Trumpet Player recorded on bandstand by organist Jon Hammond 1978 Jon's archive http://ia700407.us.archive.org/3/items/JonHammondHammondCast201KYOURadio/HammondCast201.mp3 Lou Colombo, KYOU Radio, Wychmere Harbor Club, Harwich Port MA, B3 Organ, Frank Shea, Trumpet, Jazz, Standards, Tip O'Neill, Cape Cod Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs Lou Colombo House Band at Wychmere Harbor Club L to R Frank Shea d, Lou Colombo t, Jack Pena g, Jon Hammond o Picnic Time in the Colombo's Backyard - South Yarmouth MA Cape Cod HammondCast 201 KYOU Radio, today Jon Hammond puts the spotlight on Lou Colombo trumpet player band leader originally from Brockton MA, Jon played organ with Lou for 2.5 years on the house band at the exclusive Wychmere Harbor Club and Thompson's Clam Bar in Harwich Port Cape Cod MA - a recently discovered recording from the bandstand with Lou Colombo, Jon Hammond on B3 organ, Frank Shea drums and 2 additional horns on a big Saturday night at the legendary Wychmere Harbor Club in Harwich Port! ©JON HAMMOND International Berklee College of Music -- Re-discovered recordings with Lou Colombo: HammondCast 202 Pt 2 Spotlight on Lou Colombo KYOU Radio: LINK: https://www.berklee.edu/news/re-discovered-recordings-lou-colombo-hammondcast-202-pt-2-spotlight-lou-colombo-kyou-radio Podomatic http://hammondcast.podomatic.com/entry/2011-02-23T03_07_43-08_00 Mr. and Mrs. Lee Berk founder of Berklee College of Music were in the house and Tip O'Neill Speaker of The House on a big Saturday night at the Wychmere Harbor Club in Harwich Port Cape Cod MA: AUDIO: http://ia700404.us.archive.org/26/items/JonHammondHammondCast202KYOURadio/HammondCast202.mp3 HammondCast 202 KYOU Radio special edition with part 2 of recording from Wychmere Harbor Club when Jon played B3 organ on the Lou Colombo Band, the house band at Wychmere Harbor Club in Harwich Port Cape Cod MA. First backing up a feature dance duo with cha cha ... Fort Myers Florida -- Lou Colombo and Jon Hammond just a few days before Lou was tragically killed while driving home from his gig March 2012 http://blog.sfgate.com/jon-hammond/2015/03/05/hammondcast-202-the-jon-hammond-show-audio-from-jons-radio-show/ Wikipedia in Deutsch http://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lou_Colombo Lou Colombo (* 22. August 1927 in Brockton, Massachusetts[1]; † 3. März 2012 in Fort Myers, Florida) war ein US-amerikanischer Musiker (Trompete, Kornett, Flügelhorn) im Bereich des Swing und Mainstream Jazz. Colombo begann mit zwölf Jahre Trompete zu spielen, war zunächst sieben Jahre Baseball-Profispieler bei den Brooklyn Dodgers, bevor ihn mit 24 Jahren eine Knieverletzung zwang, seine Sportlerkarriere zu beenden. Er arbeitete danach als Vollzeitmusiker meist als Ensemblespieler und Studiomusiker, u. a. in den Big Bands von Dizzy Gillespie, Artie Shaw, Benny Goodman, Buddy Morrow und Perez Prado, außerdem bei Sessions mit Meredith D'Ambrosio (South to a Warmer Place, 1989), George Masso (That Old Gang of Mine, 1996) und Jerry Jerome (Something Borrowed, Something Blue).[3] Unter eigenem Namen spielte er einige Alben ein, darunter 1990 bei Concord Records ein Tributalbum für Bobby Hackett ein, an dem u. a. auch Dave McKenna und Keith Copeland mitwirkten. Colombo, der fünf Jahrzehnte in der Jazzszene von Cape Cod aktiv war, starb Anfang März 2012 im Alter von 84 Jahren an den Folgen eines Verkehrsunfalls. Jon's archive https://archive.org/details/NAMMMemorialTributeIndustryLeadersLostHammondCastCoverage Youtube http://youtu.be/934LYZwSpxs Jon Hammond's coverage of the annual NAMM in Memoriam Tribute to Industry Leaders Lost. Always near the end of day 1 we take time to reflect, NAMM Historians Dan Del Fiorentino and Tony Arambarri put together a special reel showing members of the NAMM Community who have passed, L.A. Bagpipers play - on this clip the audio is original music from Jon Hammond "Lydia's Tune" since Youtube flags the bagpiper's track - for complete NAMM Memorial: https://www.namm.org/library/oral-history/namm-memoriam-industry-tribute-2015 - HammondCast http://www.HammondCast.com #NAMM CNN iReport http://ireport.cnn.com/docs/DOC-1213472 Vimeo http://vimeo.com/118886655 NAMM Show Day 1 -- Greg Herreman Event Producer directing operations on the big GoPro Stage just before the annual NAMM Tribute to Industry Leaders Lost - like Secret Service with a microphone in his sleeve, super slick! - Jon Hammond — with Greg Herreman at The NAMM Show. Getting closer to hit time for NAMM Memoriam Industry Tribute - NAMM Chairman Larry Morton also Kevin Cranley and Debbi Cranley are talking with Dan Del Fiorentino - spotlights are moving in to place, Hats On...Bagpipers ready! - Jon Hammond — with Dan Del Fiorentino at The NAMM Show. Dailymotion http://www.dailymotion.com/video/x2gj8lw_namm-memorial-tribute-industry-leaders-lost-hammondcast-coverage_music Head Phone Funk Masterpiece Jon Hammond Band With Bernard Purdie Side Camera *WATCH THE VIDEO HERE: Head Phone Funk Masterpiece Jon Hammond Band With Bernard Purdie Side Camera Jon’s archive https://archive.org/details/HeadPhoneFunkMasterpieceJonHammondBandWithBernardPurdieSideCamera Head Phone Funk Masterpiece Jon Hammond Band with Bernard Purdie side camera – special thanks to Tino Pavlis and Joachim Wiesel for this side view camera footage of Jon Hammond Band NAMM Showcase - Jon Hammond original funk composition “Head Phone” featuring legendary Fatback Funk drummer Bernard “Pretty” Bernard "Pretty" Purdie and Jon’s long-time colleague Joe Berger on guitar, from Tokyo Japan Koei Tanaka Suzuki Harmonica artist Suzuki Harmonica - Official Facebook Page – Official Facebook Page Alex Budman tenor saxophone and Jon Hammond at the B3mk2 organ and high-power model 3300 Leslie Speaker with FOH mix by Brian English Audio Denny Mack – this is The Jon Hammond Organ Group – Funk Masterpiece performance with announcement by Stephen Fortner Editor of Keyboard Magazine on a big Friday Night in the Anaheim Hilton Hotel Lobby, enjoy! © JON HAMMOND International, INC. ASCAP - Suzuki Musical Instruments YouTube http://youtu.be/1r0SSgNoJXU Jon Hammond Band Facebook https://www.facebook.com/video.php?v=989931187702345 Funk Masterpiece performance with announcement by Stephen Fortner Editor of Keyboard Magazine on a big Friday Night in the Anaheim Hilton Hotel Lobby, enjoy! © JON HAMMOND International, INC. ASCAP YouTube http://youtu.be/1r0SSgNoJXU - Suzuki Musical Instruments — with Jon Hammond, Joe Berger and Bernard Purdie at The NAMM Show. Jon Hammond on the scene covering Joe Franklin's annual Thanksgiving show and free turkey dinner at Laugh Factory NYC, a great tradition, Miracle on 42nd St.! Owner Richard Basciano an icon of Times Square says "By giving this holiday gift we want to give our thanks to the people NYC for making us what we are today ."
No one should be alone on this day of giving thanks and all are invited. Come out for a day of food and fun and share good times with friends. Happy Thanksgiving from Times Square Arts Center and The World Famous Laugh Factory. Enjoy Joe Franklin legend of Radio & TV here! jh










#Spotlight #LouColombo #Wychmere #Harwich #HammondOrgan Jon Hammond, Jazz Music, Organ Combo, B3 organ, NAMM Memorial, musikmesse, Local 802, Musicians Union