EPISODE · Sep 11, 2020 · 50 MIN
The John Sebastian Interview
from The Jake Feinberg Show · host Jake Feinberg
The latter portion of the sixties was a gymnasium of live venues which permeated sounds of acoustic instruments like Fritz Richmond's washtub base or Paul Harris' ivory for the evening. An even dozen sophisticated white musicians trying to play authentic roots music with their mentors. Through these live venues you saw the visceral qualities of Tim Hardin, Sivuca, Odetta and my guest all in one week. The differentiation the non conformity in a non violent way all the while playing music that was made live and not manufactured. My guest today was inducted into the rock and roll hall of fame at the turn of the century but he is more roll than rock. Sure he appreciated Beatle mania and some of the world culture they brought to the states but my guest wanted to plant the American flag in the heart of the country with a blending of Native American, folk, classical blue ridge mountains cooking burning instrumentals and singing his way out of prison in some back road Georgia town looking for Doc Watson or a Lovin Spoonful of the Tarzana Kid. He has been able to maintain and stay true to his art which can be hard in the " biz." He is an old folkie like Dave Van RONK and a conveyer of authenticity like Bob Dylan. He cares about community- he lives in an artist enclave that sells nostalgia t-shirts but still has a freshness from the Catskills, near the Berkshires because your a big boy now. My guest is playing Friday November 17th at the Musical Instrument Museum in Phoenix and the show sold so fast they added the 18th as well. John Sebastian welcome to the JFS
What this episode covers
The latter portion of the sixties was a gymnasium of live venues which permeated sounds of acoustic instruments like Fritz Richmond's washtub base or Paul Harris' ivory for the evening. An even dozen sophisticated white musicians trying to play authentic roots music with their mentors. Through these live venues you saw the visceral qualities of Tim Hardin, Sivuca, Odetta and my guest all in one week. The differentiation the non conformity in a non violent way all the while playing music that was made live and not manufactured. My guest today was inducted into the rock and roll hall of fame at the turn of the century but he is more roll than rock. Sure he appreciated Beatle mania and some of the world culture they brought to the states but my guest wanted to plant the American flag in the heart of the country with a blending of Native American, folk, classical blue ridge mountains cooking burning instrumentals and singing his way out of prison in some back road Georgia town looking for Doc Watson or a Lovin Spoonful of the Tarzana Kid. He has been able to maintain and stay true to his art which can be hard in the " biz." He is an old folkie like Dave Van RONK and a conveyer of authenticity like Bob Dylan. He cares about community- he lives in an artist enclave that sells nostalgia t-shirts but still has a freshness from the Catskills, near the Berkshires because your a big boy now. My guest is playing Friday November 17th at the Musical Instrument Museum in Phoenix and the show sold so fast they added the 18th as well. John Sebastian welcome to the JFS
NOW PLAYING
The John Sebastian Interview
No transcript for this episode yet
Similar Episodes
Mar 26, 2026 ·1m
Mar 19, 2026 ·34m
Feb 18, 2026 ·11m
Feb 11, 2026 ·45m