I lived in Muskogee, OK for a few years in about 1959 before heading up to Cincinnati for my last 1 1/2 years before college. My parents always found some musical experiences for my brother and me even though we were frequently pulling up stakes again. So we got together with the high school music teacher - Mr. Yaden? - and he dug out a wrinkled-up baritone horn and I figured out how to play it. Leo was doing trombone, so he and I sort of made up that brass backup in the school band. Our parents also played bridge together as I recall. It was a total shock to hear his name spoken with such awe several years later ----- Margaret
My friend Alex Lindsay died last night. A huge UK fan of Leo, used to get his music from German stations, way back in the seventies. I flew over from Ireland to see him in the Yorkshire moors on the last night of a hippy, muddy, festival. Alex and I got right to the front, avoiding the frisbees, bottle of wine each and listened to the superb Leo. He seemed bemused/flattered at us knowing all his stuff and politely played our requests and calls for encores. Eventually Country Joe came on, seemed moody, pointed at us and shouted "Hey, you think he's %@#&ing great? Wait'll ya hear %@#&ing Me!!" Well, we gave him his best shot, but nahh. But hey, a great 'personal' performance by Leo, and being Effed at by Joe made a memorable weekend. Rest in peace, Alex.
I was at a club performance many years ago, watching an amazingly talented guitarist tear it up on stage - he asked the audience if we had any requests; right away I shouted "Play some Leo Kotke!" He chuckled and said humbly "Only Leo Kotke can play Leo Kotle." The whole place fell out with (sympathetic) laughter.
There's a guy named Ewan Dobson who I discovered Leo little through, he covered his busted bicycle and after than I searched for the original and fell in love, I would highly recommend Ewan Dobson
@@Coolcat3 I first heard Ewan do _Wash Away_, and was blown away with it. Then on to his cover of _Vaseline Machine Gun_ . With eyes closed, it could just have well been Leo
Does anyone know if Leo ever appeared on He Haw? As I recall they would have other folk musicians like John Hartford on now and then. Can you imagine Leo and Roy Clark playing together?
Hello folks, why do people have to winge ,whine and criticise so much Leo is an excellent musician playing what he wants to play. If you don't like it turn it off don't listen learn to play yourself and then PLAY US ALL A TUNE and we can all take the Peee it is really easy to crit everybody else,give it a rest be creative or will that tax the old brain cells if you have any creative one's hidden away.Bertie.
David Hague Boy do I know that feeling as a fellow from this more mature or should I say older guitar playing sufferer at times, my personal trying to learn fix is Pierre Bensusan. Cheers
Without a doubt, the greatest guitarist of his genre ever & 12 string artistry unmatched! I was blessed, seeing him live in Scottsdale, AZ in an Ampitheater
@@je7647 I love Fahey as much as the next guy but you can't really compare Fahey to Kottke. Apples and Oranges. Also, as much as I love Fahey, he was more about the classics and about open tunings, not about 12 string and speed. (at least in the hayday)
Back in 1973 we had a couple Kottke albums in our school library, Mudlark, and Armadillo. At age sixteen, these records opened my ears and eyes to musical possiblities. At fifty-nine they still help me to believe in the magic of music making, and bring beauty to every moment. Leo never fails to evoke that special innocence and clarity of my youth back in my heart. And heart, is what he is all about. Yeah, there may be better pickers, singers, and perfomers... but nobody brings as much heart to his guitar, with "a voice that sounds like goose farts on a muggy day," I'll take Leo every time. Thanks for the memories!
When I heard that 6 and 12 string guitar record I was blown away. It was not the type of thing I usually listened to, but what an album. That was over 20 years ago I still play the album pretty regularly. It's great after a hard day. And with a valium.
Amen. I'm gonna look for Leo in Vinyl just to hear what's really goin' on. Pretty much everything's better with an anxiety agent, but I've also found that there are just never enough of 'em... he's the real deal, and when I hear these youngin's talkin' 'bout the latest picker I just grin, and say, "Well, he's no Leo..." The thing about Kottke is that he is a genuine enigma; a racounteur of all things trivial and substantial. I was in a sax and guitar duo for a stint in Cape May and the guitarist said he knew Leo when, back in the days when he was outta Minnesota and busking in NYC. What a joy that had to be to hear a young man like Leo playing as Joni would say, essentially, "For Free." I try to imagine that scene when I throw Miss Mitchell on the turntable. Thanks for the reply, and get all his records, all great and sublime and musical--perfect peace
Leo's still kickin' and grinnin' and every one of his records demand investigation. 6 and 12 string is special, but each album carries the same message--good music played with heart and soul...not bad for a white kid from Minnesota. Come to think of it, Robert Zimmerman grew up there too. I guess xanax is the new valium; both equally competent at relaxing the shoulders but good music is such a better tonic, and readily available in a pinch... perfect peace and sweet listening sessions--
Wow! That previous rcomment appears to be partially neutered. My first experience with the politically correct crowd. As a man suffering from tanarexia, I find all that stuff just incredible. I guess I can only blame my daddy and mommy for having such a pigmentally challenged child!
Can't belive he's coming to itty bitty Black Mountain, NC on 5/23 - and how lucky I am to be able to finally, finally see him. Ahhhh... --anyoldwhere58
I seen him several times, mainly at the Woodstock Opera House in a few Septembers, but I first seen him in Las Vegas around 1991, I think. It was in a park, and Leo showed up in an RV that parked close to the stage, he got out, entered the stage and played fantastic, of course. I regret not bringing my telephoto lens that day, but I did get some pictures with a smaller lens. As a guitar player myself, Leo was one of my biggest inspirations besides Chet Atkins. I first heard Leo on a PBS program in the very early 80's It was a huge moment for me. It was a catalyst for me and how deep I would get into finger picking guitar, even to this day. Thanks Leo.
The other day I sold my old seagull 12-string to an Irish fellow and he asked me to look up this guy. He left and I sat down and went through a wormhole with Leo just listening to all of his new and old stuff. all I can say is just wow what an amazing 12-string player...... the trip his music takes you on is unreal.
Saw Leo play back in the early 80"s (if memory serves, maybe??!!) in Stone City Iowa and the Stone City Tavern....great venue,,,,maybe 30 or 40 people in the audience. No sound system needed and if you closed your eyes, the music was in your head.....What a trip!!
He played two shows in one night in Stone City. I was a local newspaper writer and I spent the time between shows with him in the upstairs sound booth. It was just the two of us. He was repairing a cracked thumbnail with superglue and fiberglass, telling stories about the road and just killing time and it was unbelievably cool. I’m amazed to find this thread about Stone City. It was an awesome venue, and that was a amazing night.
In the eighties he had a whole different technique, especially in the right hand, because playing as you're seeing here gave him tendinitis. So this old aggressive Leo footage is really special.
So special. He’s got a little carpal tunnel now I think. Unbelievable. Heard him Play eight miles high in Santa Fe NM. He sent us to the stratosphere with that one!!
Yes! I remember an interview with him talking about it being the finger picks -- great booming sound and speed but the resistance of the strings applied too much leverage to the tendons (or something -- had to do with 'hysteresis'). Loved both styles, but love the post pick style (and him slowing down just a tiny bit to allow us to hear and savor every note) a little more.
Oh, Leo. An inspiration for me for many, many years. As I youngster I fell in love with his song 'Buckaroo,' which on a 6 string is relatively easy to play. On a 12, only Leo can play it like that. I still have all of his 70's LP's.
I got everybody to stop and really listen to the genius of Leo Kottke......which was my intent. Before I said anything, no one seemed to be paying any attention to him any longer, which I thought was ridiculous. Just trying to get the conversation going again about the man and his 12.
L.K....maybe is not the "best" finger picker but in 20 yrs of listening I know of no one better with a 12 string...all of his performances are nothing short of passion, and to say otherwise is out of ignorance and envy...
A lifetime ago ('70's) Leo was to appear in Toronto (Ontario Canada) .. He was strongly recommended by Livingston Taylor (James's brother). Much to my chagrin I didn't go see "Machine Gun"... Fast forward to a life later he comes to Davenport Iowa and was in a joint concert with Champagne Charlie (Leon Redbone).... I went no man should be able to get that sound out of a guitar.. Comes on stage saying "someone didn't put my guitar out.. Then "blows me away" with a concert... Making me regret not having gone the first time but thankful I had a second chance!
I saw Leo in concert at Bogart's, a Cincinnati nightclub, in 1978. It couldn't have been too long after his performance in this video. Always the boomy-voiced, good-natured virtuoso, I think he was at the top of his game. (The "warm-up act" was erstwhile Cincinnati politician, Jerry Springer!)
Leo inspired me to try to play 12 string. You think it’s hard? It’s a lot harder than you can imagine. I’m glad you saved this. This is the early arrival of an incredible genius.
This is really one of the nicer live clips of him out there. I think part of the genius of Leo Kottke, in addition to his lively, brilliant guitar playing and very nice voice, is his willingness to use unconventional melody lines and rhythms, like in Hear the Wind Howl. Leo Kottke...daring to go where pop music had not gone before...and may not go again for some time...
Leo is a true Artist and underappreciated because radio has always been kissing commercially driven ass. Ain't no rapper could put on a show like this. I heard him play with a broken ankle . He couldn't even walk from the stage, but he wouldn't quit!!!
Discovered Mr. Kottke back in the early 70's in my college years. I was pretty much addicted to guitar at the time, and Mr. Kottke made it sound interesting in a way I had never heard before. It's nice to see that over the years he hasn't lost his touch. A 12-string guitar is not an easy instrument to master, and yet he looks so comfortable while he's playing it. That lets the music come to you naturally in an unforced way... because it looks and sounds like you're witnessing magic.
Exactly the same era a friend tipped me to him. I actually had a 12 string then. Went to see him if I could and tried to watch his hands but I just was not within a thousand miles of his abilities.
he makes a sort of wall of sound like the ebb and tide of a distant river, evok'ng sad and sweet memories of a life gone bad, washed up on the flotsam tides of old age, carried to the curb of the Cosmos by Crows in 3 piece suits, with lipstick on their toes and wax in their ears..
Yes, he really is the Jimi Hendrix of the acoustic world, and the only guitarist I ever heard who could put this much feeling into it, or build this kind of relationship with an audience, was the late and impossibly great Rory Gallagher. Leo is an institution.
Saw him live around the time My Feet Are Smiling came out. He barely played anything from it, but he was so amazing I didn't care. Imagine 65 minutes of this. After the concert, my whole body was smiling.
I was introduced to Kottke The Mudlark album about 45 years ago by my dorm suitemate. It was love at the first hearing then. Still one of my favorites, especially his Eight Miles High which, for me, is the definitive recording of that song The Live version in your post is as close to the studio version one's ever likely to hear. Thanks for posting.
Leo probably did this a lot of concerts, but he came onstage and someone from the music dept at the univ must have loaned him a tuba. So he sits down and puts it around his head. "I was told to start warming up on a low note .... pumfffttt." Audience was his after that.
Leo Little is s much better vocalist than You think. If that is like geese farts on a muggy day, that will suffice for me!! As for his guitar work well he is just brilliant Leo also has a wicked dense of humour An entertainer par excellence.
Después de escuchar a Leo Kottke,he estado sacando sus canciones y mi técnica de FingerStyle ha mejorado increíble, no se quién fue quien le enseño a tocar Leo Kottke, pero debió ser el amo del FingerStyle y el Slide. Simplemente asombroso.
Like we say in the State of Minnesota....USA.....(Where Leo is at home, so he understands)....."yah, you-betcha, that Leo kid could be worse....." "how bout that weather?"...."oh yah...we've had some weather....".....
Got his autograph at the Ozark Mtn folk festival 1973 Eureka Springs, gave it to my brother who could play Kottke on his 12 string, and he promptly lost it. What an accomplished 12-string guitarist has in skill, he generally lacks in moral character - at least my brother.