Taj Mahal Concert

Newport Folk Festival (Newport, RI) Jul 28, 1968

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Play Taj Mahal
Taj Mahal concert at Newport Folk Festival on Jul 28, 1968

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Avg. User Rating:
  • Date:
    07.28.1968
  • Tracks:
    10
  • Total Time:
    21:57
  • Catalog:

Concert Summary

Between 1967, when Taj Mahal recorded his first solo album for Columbia, and the present day, he has created some of the most consistently engaging modern blues, inspiring countless other musicians along the way. Whether solo acoustic, fronting a rock band, or weaving his trademark National steel guitar around a tuba-dominated blues band, his multi-cultural vision of the blues transcended previous limitations of the genre and he has played an enormous role in revitalizing and preserving traditional blues.

Born Henry St. Claire Fredericks in 1942, he was raised in Springfield,…entire summary

  • Road Warrior 49 | Sunday, May 29, 2011 | 2:58 pm

    Oil City: Yes, but a "train" (i.e., pulling a train) perhaps is a double entendre vis-a-vis "catching the Katy," if you go beyond the literal meaning of the lyrics. Maybe not ... that's the fun of analyzing lyrics.

  • oil city ny | Friday, April 08, 2011 | 9:37 pm

    I'm pretty sure "the Katy" was a railroad ("the train pulled out, I swung on behind...").
    I was at Newport that Sunday afternoon, 19 years old. The half-dozen times I saw Jesse Ed Davis playing his Tele with Taj remain to this day on the short list of most transcendent, euphoric experiences of my life. I've owned, played, and dreamed about Telecasters ever since the first time I saw this band, back in February of that year in a little basement club in Boston. Ed was the man, hands down.

  • Anonymous | Sunday, June 06, 2010 | 12:22 am

    What an incredible artist! I was 3 years old when this was recorded. Damn! I missed out on some good concerts!

  • strickles | Monday, April 19, 2010 | 5:01 pm

    The liner notes that you have provided are just outstanding. No other way to describe them. I started following Taj around 1969 or so, and yet I've never read a full recap of where he'd been till then. Thanks for filling in so many blanks!

  • Peggy | Wednesday, April 14, 2010 | 7:15 am

    AWESOME!!!!

  • imdwalrus | Tuesday, April 13, 2010 | 7:37 pm

    I wish I could figure out how to make this concert play only iPhone.

  • tmyawtb | Monday, April 12, 2010 | 11:00 am

    Now this is how to write a review and one of the reasons i love the vault! The guy that wrote the review for the Grassroots could take some lessons here. People who weren't alive at this time won't really appreciate how novel Taj was. In '68, i was mostly listening to Cream, Hendrix, and Ten Years After. And yet Taj got to me.

  • Jonh | Monday, April 12, 2010 | 6:41 am

    My favourite band between 1968 and 1972 (when I moved to London). Must have seen him 10 times at least. Apart from Taj's larger than life personality, Jesse Ed Davis was the reason to go - one of the best guitarists out there. Really good songs didn't hurt either.

  • alaska slim | Sunday, April 11, 2010 | 1:40 pm

    this is the "real deal"! you folks are great at uncovering gems like this. I opened many shows for him in the 80's and 90's with his bigger bands, but this kicks it! his harp is on the edge of feedback, it's cranked so hot...I love it. Great tone! plus his vocal phrasing is always a treat.

  • Kynyrd | Saturday, April 10, 2010 | 7:12 pm

    This is a fabulous performce,really heavy

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