Rainermentals :: A Holiday At The Sea Playlist

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Here’s a playlist of some Rainer Ptacek instrumentals. I remember making this mix when we lived in KY, so it must have been around 2003 or 2004 and I’ve listened to it a ton since then.

18 tracks taken from 4 different albums (follow the key after each song title).

Enjoy.

Tracklisting:

  • Here Comes Lilly? (#)

  • Cheeseball (&)

  • Instrumental #13 ($)

  • Di Lantin

  • Ode to N2O (&)

  • Instrumental #5 ($)

  • Opening Aunt Dora’s Box in 6/8 (&)

  • Instrumental #10 (chore ending) ($)

  • Improv in E (%)

  • Instrumental #9 (wait a minute) ($)

  • Within You Without You (&)

  • Horse Hair (#)

  • Instrumental #3 ($)

  • Curiouser and Curiouser (&)

  • Instrumental #4 (slight humming) ($)

  • Shifting Blues ($)

  • Instrumental #6 ($)

  • Arabing ($)

  • # = Alpaca Lips (2000)

  • & = Nocturnes (1995)

  • $ = The Farm (2002)

  • % = Live At The Performance Center (2000)


  • Visit Rainer Ptacek’s official website.

  • Purchase Rainer’s music at Bandcamp.

  • Purchase Rainer’s music at Amazon.

  • Visit previous posts about Rainer.


Rainer Plays That Voodoo Music

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The relevant information:

Rainer Ptacek performing "Voodoo Music" in the kitchen of "The 818 Club" during a live cablecast of the local music show "Electric Window".

  • Hosted and Produced by Chris Wagganer

  • Cameras: Don Dalen, Chris Babbie, Ben Minot

  • Audio: David Slutes

  • Engineering: Roy Knappenberger, Chris Babbie

  • Cablecast Support: Mark Taylor

June 6, 1986

  • Visit Rainer Ptacek’s official website.

  • Purchase Rainer’s music at Bandcamp.

  • Purchase Rainer’s music at Amazon.

  • Visit previous posts about Rainer.

Rainer Ptacek (KUAT Profile and 'Worried Spirits')

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I posted about Tucson’s (by way of Chicago by way of East Germany) Rainer Ptacek back in August, featuring two live sets from the Live Music Archive.

Rainer is one of my favorite musicians, especially his instrumental tracks and his dobro playing, but that’s probably another post. He plays the same instruments as a lot of other people, but he doesn’t play them like a lot of other people. For now, let’s watch a 1997 KUAT feature profile.

The video’s Youtube page says: “A feature on Rainer Ptacek produced for KUAT-TV's Arizona Illustrated in 1997. Includes interview footage with Howe Gelb (Giant Sand).”

This profile aired some time in 1997 which would have been about a year after he was riding his bike to work at a guitar shop and suffered a seizure which revealed that he had a brain tumor. After surgery, and almost unbelievably, Ptacek re-taught himself how to play guitar. He talks about the weight of the experience in this profile. Plus a quite young looking Howe Gelb.

Knowing that he didn’t make it, the moment he gets his daughter Lilly a cookie, gets me every time.

And next we have the ‘Worried Spirits’ video. The video’s page says: “Worried Spirits -- previously unreleased video. It was intended to be released with the CD 'The Best of Rainer - 17 Miracles' as a bonus video.”

  • Visit Rainer Ptacek’s official website.

  • Purchase Rainer’s music at Bandcamp.

  • Purchase Rainer’s music at Amazon.

  • Visit previous posts about Rainer.

Rainer Radio 1983 and 1986

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If you’re not familiar with the music and life of Arizona (by way of Germany)’s Rainer Ptacek, then let’s rectify that (though for a much better and fuller account, please read the piece by Fred Mills at the official Rainer website).

Born in East Berlin to parents of Czech and German descent, Rainer’s family fled East Germany for the United States when he was only five years old. Young Rainer was exposed to the Blues while the family lived in Chicago before landing West in Tucson in the 1970s.

Later that decade, Ptacek helped found the Giant Sandworms with Howe Gelb, a band which would later more into Giant Sand, also launching the Calexico story. Ptacek also played solo and with his own band Das Combo.

According to the Wikipedias,

“Although he never became well known in the United States, he became more and more recognized in Europe. ZZ Top guitarist Billy Gibbons was so impressed with the singer-guitarist that he arranged to have Kurt Loder review Ptacek's "Mush Mind Blues" cassette in Rolling Stone. Ptacek later traveled to Houston at the invitation of Billy Gibbons to record at Gibbons' Gold Star Sound Services studio which saw release as "The Texas Tapes" meeting international attention and approval. Robert Plant, similarly impressed, flew Ptacek to England for the sessions for B-sides to supplement the singles from Fate of Nations.”

The article continues:

“After suffering a seizure while riding his bike to work in February 1996, Ptacek was diagnosed with a brain tumor in February 1996. He was uninsured and was overwhelmed by his mounting medical expenses. Howe Gelb and Robert Plant organized recording sessions for a fund-raising tribute album. The resulting record, The Inner Flame - A Tribute to Rainer Ptacek, featured Ptacek-penned songs performed by Gelb (with Giant Sand), Plant, Jimmy Page, Emmylou Harris, John Wesley Harding, Evan Dando, Victoria Williams, Mark Olson, Tina Chesnutt, Vic Chesnutt, PJ Harvey, John Parish, The Drovers, Madeleine Peyroux, Kris McKay, Chuck Prophet, Jonathan Richman, Lucinda Williams and Bill Janovitz. Ptacek is a participant on most of the tracks.

Intense chemotherapy sessions put his tumor into remission, and Ptacek's musical skills and creativity both returned. He resumed his concert activity vigorously, beginning with a guest performance at Greg Brown's show in November 1996. By this time, media attention was more focused on him than ever before. On December 17, 1996, he performed a show for 300 doctors, nurses, and patients at the hospital where he was being treated. Just when it seemed as though he had beaten his disease, it recurred in October 1997, and he died three weeks later at age 46.

What the Wikipedia blurb fails to mention is that Rainer re-taught himself to play guitar. Imagine that.

Anyway, today we feature two live performances from the 1980’s. Each is made available by the amazing Jim Blackwood. Visit the Live Music Archive page for each show for specific notes, to stream or download for yourself (1983 // 1986)

Rainer Live at KXCI-FM Studios on 1983-12-05

Rainer Live at The Sound Factory on 1986-04-08

  • Visit Rainer Ptacek’s official website.

  • Purchase Rainer’s music at Bandcamp.

  • Purchase Rainer’s music at Amazon.