In the mid-1970s
Takoma Records had offices two doors east of McCabe's and built a recording studio, with audio and video cables going from the sound booth at McCabes to the control room of the studio, which allowed easy recording of concerts. These master live recordings now reside within the McCabe's Guitar Shop Collection at the
University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill's
Southern Folklife Collection. Numerous artists have also recorded live albums at McCabe's (some of which were recorded using Takoma Studios from the mid-1970s to early 1980s) including: •
Norman Blake: ''
Live at McCabe's'' released in 1976 •
Mike Bloomfield: ''
I'm With You Always'' recorded in 1977 (
Benchmark Recordings) •
Byron Berline: ''Live at McCabe's'' released in 1978 •
Maria Muldaur:
Gospel Nights (with the
Chambers Brothers) (1980, Takoma Records) •
Ted Hawkins:
The Final Tour (1998,
Evidence Music) •
Townes Van Zandt: ''
Live at McCabe's'' recorded in 1995 •
Ralph Stanley: ''Live at McCabe's Guitar Shop 2-11-01'' •
Tom Paxton: ''Live at McCabe's Guitar Shop'' recorded in 1991 •
Henry Rollins: ''
Live at McCabe's'' recorded June 1990 •
Robin Williamson: ''Merry Band's Farewell Concert at McCabe's'' recorded in 1979 •
Nancy Wilson (from
Heart): ''Live at McCabe's Guitar Shop'' released in 1999 •
Freedy Johnston: ''Live at McCabe's Guitar Shop'' released in 1998 •
John Stewart: ''Deep in the Neon: Live at McCabe's'' released in 1991 •
Chris Smither: ''Chris Smither Live at McCabe's Guitar Shop 3/14/03'' •
David Hatfield: ''David Hatfield Live at McCabe's'' released in 2003 •
Lyle Ritz &
Herb Ohta: ''A Night of Ukulele Jazz Live at McCabe's'' recorded in 2000 •
Paul Siebel: ''Live at McCabe's'' released in 1981 •
Batdorf & Rodney: ''Live at McCabe's 1975'' •
Gene Clark &
Carla Olson:
Silhouetted In Light recorded February 3, 1990 (Demon Records) •
John P. Hammond:
John Hammond Live released in 1983 (Rounder Records) Pianist
George Winston recorded a song, "Blues in G," at McCabe's in 1975. It was later released as a bonus track of the expanded edition of his first album,
Piano Solos. A bootleg recording was also made of
R.E.M.: ''Live at McCabe's Guitar Shop'' in 1987, some of which have appeared as legitimate B-sides.
Bruce Springsteen joined
John Wesley Harding onstage at a show to help sing Springsteen's "Wreck on the Highway," which later turned up on a Harding release. Numerous audience tapes circulate of McCabe's performances, and several soundboards, including a set by
T Bone Burnett in December 1993 that featured the Williams Brothers,
Maria McKee and a cover of
Dolly Parton's "I Will Always Love You." It also featured "My Life and the Women Who Lived It." Days later, Burnett performed at Rockpalast in Europe and claimed that "My Life and..." was written on the flight to Europe. That was clearly not true.
John Hiatt sang many of his songs from
Bring the Family at several McCabe's shows just prior to recording that album. Those songs included "Memphis in the Meantime," "Your Dad Did" and "Lipstick Sunset," among others. McCabe's booker at the time, John Chelew, produced
Bring the Family, which was recorded in four days and became Hiatt's best-known album. == Gerald McCabe ==