As The Years Go Passing By - Philip Sayce - LIVE @ The Arcadia Blues Club - musicUcansee

Details
Title | As The Years Go Passing By - Philip Sayce - LIVE @ The Arcadia Blues Club - musicUcansee |
Author | MusicUCanSee |
Duration | 12:02 |
File Format | MP3 / MP4 |
Original URL | https://youtube.com/watch?v=01jVZuugFmQ |
Description
Click http://www.philipsayce.com for band info and show-dates. Arcadia Blues Club puts on great shows like this every weekend! musicUcansee.com Los Angeles/Nashville
On stage:
Philip Sayce - guitar / vocal
Sam Bolle - bass
Michael Leasure - drums
Cameras: Casey Reagan
Edit CJ Reagan for musicUcansee.com
The Wiki on the song: "As the Years Go Passing By" is a song penned by Peppermint Harris for Fenton Robinson, who first recorded it in 1959 on Duke Records, Duke #312. Flamboyant pianist James Booker also played on the session.[1] It is credited to have been written by 'Deadric Malone' (a pseudonym of Don Robey), owner of Duke, which was a customary practice for some producers and label owners at that time. It was originally titled "As the Years Go By"
Robinson rerecorded the song for his Grammy nominated 1977 album I Hear Some Blues Downstairs,[2] which was inducted into the Blues Hall of Fame in 2010.
Add Philip Sayce to this list:
Albert King recorded it for his Grammy Hall of Fame[4] 1967 Stax album Born Under A Bad Sign, Stax 723.[5]
Eric Burdon and The Animals covered it on their 1968 album Love Is, MGM SE-4591-2.[6]
Carlos Santana played it many times in his early career, although it wasn’t issued until his 1997 release Live at the Fillmore 1968, Columbia C2K 64860.[7]
The Elvin Bishop Group recorded it for their 1970 album Feel It!, Fillmore Records Z 30239.[8]
Al Kooper included a version on his 1973 album Naked Songs, Columbia KC 31723.[9]
George Thorogood & the Destroyers recorded it for their 1982 album Bad to the Bone, EMI America ST-17076[10]
Gary Moore included it on his 1990 album Still Got the Blues, Virgin CDV 2612[11]
Boz Scaggs and Booker T & the MG’s recorded a version in the 1990s that was released on several compilation albums.
Otis Rush included it on his 1994 album Ain’t Enough Coming In, This Way Up Records 314 518 769-2.[12]
The Jeff Healey Band covered it on their 1995 album Cover To Cover, Arista 74321 23888 2.[13]