Garland Jeffreys Paradiso Amsterdam The Netherlands December 14 1979 FM RESEED

All Music Guide tells us :


Born and raised in Brooklyn, singer, songwriter, and guitarist Garland Jeffreys began his career performing in Manhattan nightclubs
as a solo act in 1966 after attending college at Syracuse University as an art major,
where he became friends with Lou Reed.
After graduation, he spent a short time in Italy studying art before coming back to Manhattan
to further his education at New York's Institute of Arts while working with several city bands,
including Train and Romeo.
After forming a group called Grinder's Switch in 1969, they released one album, Garland Jeffreys
and Grinder's Switch, before breaking up in 1970.


Jeffreys soon returned to performing as a solo act, playing small Manhattan clubs
until signing with Atlantic Records in 1973, where he released his self-titled debut album later that year.
The album, which featured songs about New York street life, aligned him with Reed and other early
punk rock pioneers and spurred the hit "Wild in the Streets," which helped him stake out his place on the musical map.
The song was so successful on the then emerging FM radio that he recorded it again in 1977 for his second solo album,
Ghost Writer (his first for A&M Records), on which he explored topics including interracial romance ("I May Not Be Your Kind")
and mandatory busing ("Why-O"). Jeffreys returned a year later with One Eyed Jack, and recorded one more album for A&M in 1979, American Boy & Girl.

After extensive mid-'70s tours with reggae artists like Toots & the Maytals and Jimmy Cliff,
Jeffreys jumped to Epic Records to record three more albums, 1980's
Escape Artist, 1982's Rock'n'roll Adult, and 1983's Guts for Love; for a songwriter as prolific as Jeffreys,
it was ironic that his only chart single from period was a cover of ? & the Mysterians' "96 Tears,"
which featured a pumping organ and a unique arrangement.
After a long absence, he recorded his 1992 debut for RCA Records, Don't Call Me Buckwheat,
which offered such powerful statements about race matters and racism as "Welcome to the World."
He followed with Wildlife Dictionary in 1997. A single-disc overview covering the years 1977 to 1983, Wild in the Streets,
was issued by Raven in 2002. I'm Alive was released in 2006 by Universal International.

What I have here is part of a concert of Garland Jeffreys recorded by VARA Radio at the Paradiso, Amsterdam , The Netherlands on December 14 1979

Setlist :


01 I May Not Be Your Kind
02 Cool Down Boy
03 35 mm Dreams
04 Ghost Rider


Graig Jackson - bass
killer Burke - drums
Garland Jeffreys - vocals, guitar
Robert Asis - lead guitar

Source : FM > Cassette > Audacity > CD Wave Editor > FLAC

Another one from the box of old tapes !

ENJOY !

FREDHEADSET