Jim Buck ~ Turn The Page (Bob Seger) Cover
One Link Below thought I'd introduce my new subs to a friend I haven't featured for about a year. Jim Buck does a great version of the Bob Seger classic, "Turn the Page" on the Brooklyn Bridge at NewYorkNewYork. Las Vegas. Recorded the... read more
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One more..I thought I'd introduce my new subs to a friend I haven't featured for about a year. Jim Buck does a great version of the Bob Seger classic, "Turn the Page" on the Brooklyn Bridge at NewYorkNewYork. Las Vegas. Recorded the weekend of Nov. 12, 2016. Links below.
https://www.facebook.com/JimBuckMusic/
https://itunes.apple.com/us/album/tonight-is-all-about-you/id1003447039
Jim performs in many locations in Vegas including with Terry Fator's show at The Mirage and he performs with Michael Grimm.
#LasVegas
#BobSeger
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Turn_the_Page_(Bob_Seger_song)
"Turn the Page" is a song originally released by Bob Seger in 1973 on his Back in '72 album. Though never released as a single, Seger's live version of the song on the 1976 Live Bullet album became a mainstay of album-oriented rock radio stations, and still gets significant airplay to this day on classic rock stations.
"Turn the Page" is about the emotional and social ups and downs of a rock musician's life on the road. Seger wrote it in 1972 while touring with Teegarden & Van Winkle. Drummer David Teegarden (of Teegarden & Van Winkle and later the Silver Bullet Band) recalls:
We had been playing somewhere in the Midwest, or the northern reaches, on our way to North or South Dakota. [Guitarist] Mike Bruce was with us. We'd been traveling all night from the Detroit area to make this gig, driving in this blinding snowstorm. It was probably 3 in the morning. Mike decided it was time to get gas. He was slowing down to exit the interstate and spied a truck stop. We all had very long hair back then – it was the hippie era – but Skip, Mike and Bob had all stuffed their hair up in their hats. You had to be careful out on the road like that, because you'd get ostracized. When I walked in, there was this gauntlet of truckers making comments – "Is that a girl or man?" I was seething; those guys were laughing their asses off, a big funny joke. That next night, after we played our gig – I think it was Mitchell, S.D. – Seger says, "Hey, I've been working on this song for a bit, I've got this new line for it. He played it on acoustic guitar, and there was that line: "Oh, the same old cliches / 'Is that a woman or a man?' " It was "Turn the Page."[1]
https://www.facebook.com/JimBuckMusic/
https://itunes.apple.com/us/album/tonight-is-all-about-you/id1003447039
Jim performs in many locations in Vegas including with Terry Fator's show at The Mirage and he performs with Michael Grimm.
#LasVegas
#BobSeger
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Turn_the_Page_(Bob_Seger_song)
"Turn the Page" is a song originally released by Bob Seger in 1973 on his Back in '72 album. Though never released as a single, Seger's live version of the song on the 1976 Live Bullet album became a mainstay of album-oriented rock radio stations, and still gets significant airplay to this day on classic rock stations.
"Turn the Page" is about the emotional and social ups and downs of a rock musician's life on the road. Seger wrote it in 1972 while touring with Teegarden & Van Winkle. Drummer David Teegarden (of Teegarden & Van Winkle and later the Silver Bullet Band) recalls:
We had been playing somewhere in the Midwest, or the northern reaches, on our way to North or South Dakota. [Guitarist] Mike Bruce was with us. We'd been traveling all night from the Detroit area to make this gig, driving in this blinding snowstorm. It was probably 3 in the morning. Mike decided it was time to get gas. He was slowing down to exit the interstate and spied a truck stop. We all had very long hair back then – it was the hippie era – but Skip, Mike and Bob had all stuffed their hair up in their hats. You had to be careful out on the road like that, because you'd get ostracized. When I walked in, there was this gauntlet of truckers making comments – "Is that a girl or man?" I was seething; those guys were laughing their asses off, a big funny joke. That next night, after we played our gig – I think it was Mitchell, S.D. – Seger says, "Hey, I've been working on this song for a bit, I've got this new line for it. He played it on acoustic guitar, and there was that line: "Oh, the same old cliches / 'Is that a woman or a man?' " It was "Turn the Page."[1]
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