I have not listened to it for a while but I really liked his album with Emmy Lou Harris, All The Roadrunning
It’s on a Great Indigo Girls record but it’s really just Amy Ray. I like the simplicity and how it’s a little more visceral and raw. It’s not better than the original imo but it’s a different and worthy take. Amy is the lesser guitarist of the two but a first rate songwriter. I think it’s a great homage to Mark. I’m not aware of any other covers that she has recorded.
I love the sound Collings guitars. Kind of jangly and bright like Lyle Lovett. I used to dream of traveling to Austen to tour the shop and pick me one up but the price is excessive for my skill level. Also you can buy Martins, Taylors and Gibsons, thought to be of equal quality, for quite a bit less. But if I could have whatever I wanted, it would be a Collings.
I’ve never owned a Martin. When I was learning to play, they were too expensive, so I went with a Guild D-35 that I had for 48 years. Now that I’m playing again post-retirement, I can afford Collings and Santa Cruz (my Santa Cruz Vintage Artist is the best-sounding guitar I’ve ever owned, but the neck doesn’t fit my hand well so I mostly play the Collings OM1). I might go for a 1950s 000-18 if I could find one that didn’t need a neck reset and fret job.
Coupla beers in after the Lvl win and rediscovered this thread. I limited my picks to American bands I've seen play, in no particular order (expect alphabetic). Key criterion was: if this band came on the radio I would *not* change the station. Definitely skews towards longevity...
Allman Brothers
Bonnie Raitt
Bruce Springsteen
Grateful Dead
Little Feat
REM
The Shins
Steely Dan
Tom Petty
Uncle Tupelo/Son Volt/Wilco (a three-fer!)
Pearl Jam? Not even close. Pavement was up there. Was just listening to Range Life...
Immediate regrets about excluding Motown, soul, and jazz...
Interesting that you limited your options to American bands you’ve seen perform live. Either you’ve gone to a helluva lot of concerts or that leaves a great number of really good bands off your list by default.
Bruce Springsteen (though I consider him a solo artist), Grateful Dead, and Steely Dan would all make my Top 20 list as of today. And REM and Tom Petty (again, a solo artist imo) probably would as well. I really like The Allman Brothers Band, but I need to listen to more of their albums. With them I mostly only know songs I’ve heard on the radio.
Anyway, thanks for sharing your list.
The OP asked for best American Rock bands, so guessing that’s the limitation. Second good drifting thread kicked off by DukeTaylor (is DMB the REM of today or something like that).
My favorite rock bands are driven by having a decent story to tell, or at least one I want to hear. So while I like Beastie Boys and others, they were catchy tunes to me.
Bruce Springsteen and the E-street band. First four albums close to the heart. He captured a time and place.
Lynyrd Skynyrd. Turn it Up. Add Allman Brothers, as the bands are linked by tragic losses too early in their careers.
Tom Petty and the Heartbreakers. Consistent quality, incredibly minimalistic sounds. Find a song you think is overdone.
Talking Heads. They sounded like nobody else. You needed to work a bit to get their sound, and then you were hooked.
Steely Dan. Ok, they had like four topics for their lyrics (prostitution, drugs, cheating, basic debauchery). But man, they could synth jazz into rock, add some Caribbean melodies, and just be cool.
R.E.M. snappy, poppy, intelligent music that kept getting better (for a long time). I still love So. Central Rain (I’m Sorry).
Blink-182. Just kidding.
Dave Matthews Band. Musically astounding, love them live. Still the new REM.
Lots of non-rock as well, but that’s enough for now.
No I didn’t know about their Waterloo brand. The afore mentioned Collings om1 would have been my dream guitar but I’m not getting one. I’ve been playing guitar for almost 40-years but, sadly, I don’t have a real gift for it. My main guitar is a 1971 Giannini Craviola. Giannini was an Italian guitar maker with a factory in Brazil. Mine is a steel string version made from rosewood exactly like Jimmy Page played on Tangerine. I’ve spent a good bit on repairing the top and bridge but it sounds great and feels great in my hands. I also have a Blueridge guitar I like to play. My heroes tend to like playing Gibsons so I’d love to have a Hummingbird one day but it would be like throwing pearls to the swine for me to start collecting classic guitars.