DANNY O’KEEFE – The Global Blues – (Warner Brothers) – 1979

O’Keefe is truly eclectic.

 

Clearly he is a singular talent. When I listen to his albums for the first time I’m not sure what I’m going to get. Even when his albums have a similar sound, which occurs when albums follow each other, he still manages to throw in things which takes the music off on a different path.

 

That’s not to suggest he is too eclectic for his own good or worse still, he is swapping sounds to meet the times.

 

He isn’t and he doesn’t.

 

O’Keefe’s music is just not straight enough to be accepted as perfect commercial material. His substantive sound is singer songwriter with country thrown in to the mix, but he likes to throw all sorts of other things into the mix. On this album though he has incorporated some straight old school jazz, adult MOR (music not lyrics) and even some world and new age in with his usual sound.

 

This is American music.

 

And, this is Americana at its most engaging – when it’s drawing on different streams of American music and creating something different or interesting.

 

This is not unusual though it’s not commonplace. Tom Waits did (does) the same (though he adds elements of European music to his sound – though admittedly those European sounds were also part of the American musical tradition, both commercial and avant guard, having been brought over by waves of migrants).

 

O’Keefe’s music actually sounds like Tom Waits, though O’Keefe may have what the average punter would describe as a “better” voice, though his voice is not as expressive, perhaps.

 

Interestingly, Waits was exploring these same diverse sounds around the same time and lyrically there is some crossover between Waits and O’Keefe … O’Keefe perhaps is a little more big picture though he has his fair share of narratives focussing on individuals whereas Waits song are largely character driven.

 

The similarities don’t end there though. O’Keefe’s guitar at times sounds very much like what Marc Ribot was doing for Waits in the 1980s.

 

The only sound that Waits hasn’t included in his music is country. O’Keefe’s native Pacific north west perhaps explains the “rural” in his sound.

 

Lyrically, environmental concerns are everywhere on this album, and that was not unusual for singer songwriters at the time. O’Keefe’s lyrics are thoughtful and rarely preachy. His most direct songs though deal with human relationships.

 

This album is produced by O’Keefe and Jay Lewis (who also plays some guitar). Lewis was

Jay Donnellan and he was guitarist in Arthur Lee’s Love 1968—70.

 

Look at my other comments on O’Keefe albums for background on him.

 

Tracks (best in italics)

 

  • The Global Blues – an excellent song – slightly jazzy with tempo shifts and a slight unpredictable edge to it. Very nice indeed. Actually, a great track and not dissimilar to what Tom Waits was doing a couple of years later.

Snow cranes flew across the sky

In this dream I had with you

Where you were Bette Davis

And I was just untrue

 

"You know I couldn’t kill for love"

She said, "Darling, you’ve never tried

You’re still the man with the heart of glass

Grinding up inside

 

Then I heard the sound of wolves and whales

You could almost see the hues

Of multi-colored longing

When they sang the global blues

 

  • Livin’ in the Modern Age – an old ragtime type song about livin’ in the modern age! Excellent. The horns are arranged by Jerry Yester, folkie and late member of the Lovin Spoonful. Drums are by Jim Keltner and piano by Larry Muhoberac, both who worked with Elvis, the former in sessions and the latter as part of his touring band.
  • Falsetto Goodbye – straight 70s MOR but with an other worldly dreamlike quality which in it’s own way is as laid back at Michael Nesmith’s “Rio”.
  • The Street – a slight calypso/reggae feel before the song turns into a song of the “street”.
  • On the Wheel of Song – weird. Straight MOR but twisted..
  • The Jimmy Hoffa Mem. BLDG. Blues – A humorous song on the “missing” Union leader, again done as a  trad jazz tune.
  • (Keep Your) Back to the Wall – MOR pop soul with a catchy hook.
  • Square Sun – world music. Some nice guitar work not unlike Mark Ribot and there is even a Japanese instrument called a shakahachi – whatever that is – apparently it’s a flute of some kind. The shakahachi in played by Kazu Matsui.
  • Save the Whales – the album has a Japanese title for this song. It is world music with whale sounds …. it is also highly emotive. I assumed that this song is aimed at the despicable acts of the Japanese whalers at the time (of course it still applies now and it should go further and hold responsible the Japanese public who support the same either naively or not – they have the internet don’t they?)
  • Atlas – a “heavy” rock song …. Though done in O’Keefe’s style … weird. Great guitar again,  slightly Ribot-esque

And …

 

Diverse, eclectic and ultimately endearing. Lie back and soak it up ….. major acts on major labels don’t take chances like this, anymore.

 

This is excellent.

 

…. I’m keeping it.

 

Chart Action

 

Nothing no where.

 

Sounds

 

The Global Blues 

Attached

Danny O’Keefe – The Global Blues 

 

On the Wheel of Song

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DK5INMzCTz4

 

Others

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jCDkM3tBnWc

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-YP3pIPp8P8

 

Review

http://www.allmusic.com/album/the-global-blues-r14435/review

 

Bio

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Danny_O’Keefe

http://stevestav.com/Danny_OKeefe.html

http://www.virtualcoffee.com/may99/may_songbird.html

http://www.nucountry.com.au/articles/diary/october2005/231005_dannyokeefe.htm

 

a great long interview:

http://www.puremusic.com/90dok1.html

 

Jay Lewis

http://love.torbenskott.dk/jd.asp

http://www.sirshambling.com/artists/J/jay_lewis.html

 

Website

http://www.dannyokeefe.com/index.htm

 

Trivia

  • With Bob Dylan, O’Keefe co-wrote the environmental movement anthem "Well Well Well"
  • Danny O’Keefe speaking about this album: “Yeah. Roger Calloway plays on it. I mean, there are some really interesting things on it. It was a lesson, in a sense, that in those days — I mean, we had a budget of $125,000. I’d give a digit — not a finger, but a digit for a budget of $125,000 in this music business, the state of it is today. If we had stopped at $75,000, we had some rawness in it that was very attractive, kind of those board mixes, the first stuff that comes off and you go, "Mmmm, we got some muscle in that." But then part of the problem of having enough paint and canvas is that you just keep throwing paint there. You know that movie of Picasso, where it’s in two halves. And in the first half he’s using emotions behind a screen, and he’s just sitting there in his shorts and just painting with these ink — emotion. But then the second half of it he’s actually doing the painting. And it goes in stages. And in that painting there are at least five exquisite Picassos, right? Just gorgeous. And in the end, he finishes it, and it looks just like a Picasso. But he says, "I put too much paint on it. I ruined it." I’m not saying that I had a Picasso, I’m not trying to imply that. But I put too much paint on it”. http://www.puremusic.com/90dok5.html

 

This entry is for Brendon Annesley who passed recently and who I never knew. He was the muscian and editor of "The Negative Guest List" a local Brisbane punk zine. He probably wouldnt even like Danny O’Keefe but he liked Townes Van Zandt so who knows and in his own way his mag was as individual as O’Keefe’s music.

 

Posted in Alt Country, Americana, Singer Songwriter | Tagged | 3 Comments

CROSBY STILLS & NASH – Crosby Stills & Nash – (Atlantic) – 1969

At one stage back in the mid 80s I had most of the various permeations of Stills, Crosby, Nash, and (later) Young. It was in a post Byrds frenzy I managed to pick ‘em all as they were everywhere in op shops.

 

I got rid of a few at record fairs though some did not sell – they weren’t very popular. Their special brand of country folk rock come soft rock was not for 80s tastes.

 

Now, I find myself revisiting those same albums that did not sell. And, I’m revisiting them for the same reasons I bought them….a post Byrds frenzy. Now, though, my tastes have mellowed / broadened / changed / expanded (insert adjective). Musical taste is one thing but surely for such taste to be relevant to anyone other than the holder of the taste then the taste must be based on exposure to lots of music. No?

 

What I’m saying is I appreciate The Hollies, Stephen Stills, Buffalo Springfield and country rock more now than I did in the mid 80s (actually I don’t think I had even heard any actual music by Buffalo Springfield then).

 

Having said that, I also find some of the disappointment I had initially. This is tough going – not because the music is bad but because it allowed a world of horseshit dross soft rock to escape like a weak fart in a VW.

 

Admittedly, as I write this, I’m in a cynical mood – how many bands have you been tuned off due to bad moods?

 

But, I will try to overcome by cynicism…

 

How CSN got together (you can search with the bio links below) I don’t know but this is pure late 60s California … equal parts rock, folk rock, pop, psychedelia, singer-songwriter and soft rock.

 

A supergroup of sorts, CSN (all in their mid to late 20s) came together in 1968. David Crosby was formerly in The Byrds, Stephen Stills had been a member of Buffalo Springfield (along with Neil Young) and Graham Nash was in UK pop masters The Hollies.

 

All of them loved harmonies.

 

CSN got edgier (and better) when the (opportunistic) Neil Young joined but they lost the harmonies – Neil can’t sing. Well, not like the others. He, however, contributed significantly to their best album, “Déjà Vu” from 1970.

 

Here, the harmonies are beautiful and the band plays well and plays most of the instruments. The only other instrument is the drums (played by Dallas Taylor, from the band “Clear Light”)

 

The lyrics and themes are of the self consciously “deep” variety with meaning in every word and not much humour. The usual late 60s themes of alienation, confusion, a world out of balance are evident. But, despite all that some of the lyrics resonate and though they may be “of their time” they still have relevance today.

 

I don’t think there are any knock down stand out songs, and, like I said, the lyrics can be a bit Hippie precious but it certainly is easy on the ears. But this is also one of those albums which works because the “whole sound” is more important than the individual songs.

 

Importantly, it’s not embarrassing like some similar music from the same era ….and fans of Elliot Smith and others would probably like it also.

 

I have a lot of their other records behind me ….. be warned.

 

I dread listening to their later stuff.

 

Tracks (best in italics)

 

  • Suite: Judy Blue Eyes  -Stills- 7:25 – beautiful harmonies. Some good lyrics (written for Still’s ex, singer Judy Collins )…and a nifty title “Suite Judy Blue Eyes” …Get it? Perfect Hippie music. Definitely music to kick back to. Though Nash’s voice is a little too pop on this track.
  • Marrakesh Express -Nash- 2:39 – this is everything the last song is and perhaps even better. It is bubblegum Hippie music (and the happiest song on the album) and Nash’s pop voice suits the song. But, it contains the seeds for the slight MOR pop of the 70s.
  • Guinnevere –Crosby4:40 – a bit ponderously precious.
  • You Don’t Have to Cry – Stills – 2:45 –a lot of drama in this one.
  • Pre-Road Downs -Nash- 3:01 – groovy, man, groovy. A song if it’s time but a good song from Nash with some light psychedelica.
  • Wooden Ships -Crosby, Kantner, Stills -5:29 – co- written by Paul Kantner of Jefferson Airplane …this song isn’t bad but clearly it has some deeper meaning. It is also overly dramatic and a little hokey…”purple berries” indeed.

Stills: If you smile at me, I will understand

‘Cause that is something everybody everywhere does

in the same language.

Crosby: I can see by your coat, my friend,

you’re from the other side,

There’s just one thing I got to know,

Can you tell me please, who won?

Stills: Say, can I have some of your purple berries?

Crosby: Yes, I’ve been eating them for six or seven weeks now,

haven’t got sick once.

Stills: Probably keep us both alive.

 

Wooden ships on the water, very free and easy,

Easy, you know the way it’s supposed to be,

Silver people on the shoreline, let us be,

Talkin’ ’bout very free and easy…

Horror grips us as we watch you die,

All we can do is echo your anguished cries,

Stare as all human feelings die,

We are leaving – you don’t need us.

 

  • Lady of the Island -Nash –2:39 – Nash is trying to be Paul Simon here, both in writing and voice. Simon does it better.
  • Helplessly Hoping -Stills -2:41 – Stills is trying to be Paul Simon here, though in writing only.
  • Long Time Gone– Crosby – 4:17 – dramatic with a dose of southern soul this is apparently a reflection on the assassination of Robert Kennedy. It’s a little different to the rest of the album and at first it doesn’t work but ultimately it’s foreboding is memorable.
  • 49 Bye-Byes -Stills –  5:16 – nice tempo shifts with a grittier lead vocal from Stills.

And …

 

A legend album – no.

 

A very good and pleasant album – yes.

 

…. I’m keeping it.

 

Chart Action

 

US

Singles

1969  Marrakesh Express  The Billboard Hot 100 #28

1969  Suite: Judy Blue Eyes  The Billboard Hot 100 #21

 

Album

1969  Crosby, Stills & Nash  The Billboard 200 #6

1969  Crosby, Stills & Nash  R&B Albums #35

 

England

Singles

1969  Marrakesh Express  #17

 

Album

#25

 

Sounds

Suite: Judy Blue Eyes

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rDEiLImUUM8&feature=related

Live Woodstock

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EzF_MoXOU1E

Live

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ptEF4Oi4Uk0&feature=related

 

Marrakesh Express

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=u7XIL67QSME

Live

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CzB5eRu6HOk

 

Guinnevere

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tOsl1V0n5mI

Live

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jsmC1zrpwfQ

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LPvOTVVbMko

 

You Don’t Have to Cry

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UYjYgQX-Q0w

Live (with Neil Young)

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9qBJdpIglh0

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YJoqo9xMU6o

 

Pre-Road Downs

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yWRDzl1vIms

and attached

Crosby Stills & Nash – Pre-Road Downs

 

Wooden Ships

Live Woodstock

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=t0rG2ME4sAc

Live (with Neil Young)

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FzM5a5d5j2s

 

Lady of the Island

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-DNE3l0haKk

 

Helplessly Hoping

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=doIEwzc6k_k

 

Long Time Gone

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2DUqplxIcNk

Live Woodstock

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_PFCgAhZEO8

Live

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mYHgKYhhvg8

 

49 Bye-Byes  

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2DUqplxIcNk

 

Others

 

Review

http://www.allmusic.com/album/crosby-stills–nash-r4845

 

Bio

http://www.allmusic.com/artist/crosby-stills–nash-p3996

 

Website

http://www.myspace.com/crosbystillsandnash

 

Trivia

  • Their second live performance was in front of half a million people at Woodstock.
Posted in Country Rock, Folk Rock | Tagged | 3 Comments

BUCK OWENS – It Takes People Like You to Make People Like Me – (Capitol) – 1968

I’ve commented on Buck before and actually went on a mini Buck kick for a while, so refer to other posts for biographical details.

 

If what I have heard thus far is anything that can be extrapolated across his recorded career then I can say with some certainty that every Buck Owens album will have at least some merit.

 

The question then arises ….how much?

 

This album is perhaps a little more slick than some of his other albums both pre and post but perhaps that is because this album is Buck’s “romance” album.

 

Any country album about love will have its fair share of “real world” love. Songs about obsessive desire, infidelity, desperation, alcoholic excess and violence are familiar themes in country love songs.

 

This album seems to steer away from those typical country songs of love and desperation and sits (generally) in the love is a rose garden field (sic).

 

Perhaps that is why there is a lack the energy and enthusiasm compared to other Buck albums. Does that mean it’s bad?

 

No, it doesn’t.

 

There may be an edge missing but Buck and the bands professionalism and talent (great harmonies and musicianship and some well written songs) is enough to sustain any album.

 

All songs are written or co-written by Buck. 

 

Tracks (best in italics)

  • It Takes People Like You (To Make People Like Me)– perfect Buck Owens. The title suggests schmaltz and this may be partially true but the song is catchy and in the country folk tradition the place name checking makes it evocative.
  • The Way That I Love You – A country love song without the usual country love motifs – no alcohol, smoky nights, infidelity. There is catch though – the love here describes a love which is blind to everything else which may be a warning as well as a statement of love. Owens must have been in love at the time
  • We Were Made for Each Other – a bouncy love song. Buck’s voice is double tracked. Light but catchy.
  • That’s How I Measure My Love for You – another un-cynical (un-cynical : is that a word?) love song. What’s going on ? It’s a testament to Buck’s talent that such straight love songs are convincing and devoid of saccharine excess.
  • If I Knew – Another love song – and again relatively un-cynical.
  • I’m Gonna Live It Up – ahhh that’s better –an up-tempo number and a return to traditional country. Great lyrics, country style.

I’m gonna live it up so you can live it down I’m tired of being laughed like a clown

Well see who’s giving who the run around I’m gonna live it up so you can live it down

 

Well they say that every dog’s a gonna have his day

Well now the time has come for this ol’ hound to play

You’ll find me where the lights ‘re bright and gay

And while the sun shines I’ll be a makin’ hay

I’m gonna live it up…

 

Well you’ve had me by the nose now long enough

But now I’m a gonna change and call you bluff

Stand back and gimme room to strap my stuff

And don’t get in the way for the things might get rough

I’m gonna live it up…

 

  • Where Does the Good Times Go – indeed, a question also asked by Ray Davies. A country lament for a love / relationship that has gone cold.
  • You Left Her Lonely Too Long – a warning song about leaving your woman alone.
  • Let the World Keep on a Turnin’ – an up-tempo love song, again, not cynical.. Good upbeat lyrics.
  • I’ve Got It Bad for You – another slow love song
  • Long, Long Ago –a dramatic, slow love song – and a good one.
  • Heartbreak Mountain – a love gone wrong. Some great pickin’ and a toe tapper. Great lyrics.

Now why does a man let a woman turn him into a hollow shelf

And walk up and leave him behind her like a ship at sea with no sail

Well I’m goin’ up on Heartbreak Mountain yeah I’m goin’ up on Heartbreak Hill

I’m goin’ up on Heartbreak Mountain cause I’ve lost my will to live

 

And …

 

A little more gentle (and slight) than some of the other Owen’s albums I have heard but still quite good…. I’m keeping it.

 

Chart Action

 

US

Singles

1968  It Takes People Like You (ToMake People Like Me)  Country Singles #2

1968  Let the World Keep on a Turnin’  Country Singles #7

 

Album

#1 Country

 

England

Singles

Album

 

Sounds

It Takes People Like You (To Make People Like Me)

live

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=I578Zy51LWo

attached

Buck Owens – It Takes People Like You

 

The Way That I Love You

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2sPpYyIqIsc

 

We Were Made for Each Other

Live

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hKPgVyNqByk

 

That’s How I Measure My Love for You

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=scqMVfbdvPA

 

If I Knew

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=M3DrgiFR7Sk

 

I’m Gonna Live It Up

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8tr_XD-X65U

 

Where Does the Good Times Go

Live recording

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sXqeCi1ADhA

 

You Left Her Lonely Too Long

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0_ubzUvwjss

 

Let the World Keep on a Turnin’

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7BFTTgoiskg

Re-recording with his son

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9fe79nMPJog

 

I’ve Got It Bad for You

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wooVD8Xqoq0

 

Long, Long Ago

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=b-n4-GG4Mdc

 

Heartbreak Mountain  

live

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VFmRgUvlYXI

 

Others

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UkNsqdGm0wo

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yotVGV4BxhQ

 

Act Naturally

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ai4GKBkQEv8

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uDmDwvZSlPw

with Ringo

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zHeRq6DdxHE

 

Review

http://www.allmusic.com/album/it-takes-people-like-you-to-make-people-like-me-r244549

 

Bio

http://www.allmusic.com/artist/buck-owens-p1755

http://rjbocm.com/artists_ip/owens_buck

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Buck_Owens

 

Website

http://www.buckowens.com/index2.html

 

Trivia

  • "Let the World Keep on A Turnin’" was rerecorded a few months later with his Buck’s son, Buddy Alan. That duet version was released as a single and became a bit hit.

 

Posted in Country | Tagged | Leave a comment

CHIP TAYLOR – Gasoline – (Buddah) – 1971

After many years writing songs for others and releasing various singles under different names this was Taylor’s first solo album.

Taylor recorded and released material throughout the 70s and then disappeared.

 

Over the last 10 years he has made something of a musical comeback having been picked up by Americana and alt country aficionados, which is what Taylor’s solo work was.

 

If you don’t know anything about Taylor then read up on him. His career in music and outside of music is entertaining and with enough plot for a mini-series. The only non music background I will give away is that he was brought up in Yonkers, New York and is related to some well known film stars and a well respected vulcanologist. Hmmm, only in America.

 

By name you may not have heard of him but he wrote many, many songs including Wild Thing (The Troggs), Angel Of The Morning (Merilee Rush), Try (Just A Little Bit Harder) (Janis Joplin) and I Can’t Let Go (The Hollies). His songs have been recorded by Johnny Cash, Aretha Franklin, Willie Nelson, Frank Sinatra, Jimi Hendrix and many others.

 

Taylor went into music as a teen in the 1950s and by the 60s had released a number of singles in a variety of styles but he was having more success as a songwriter and producer in the Brill Building system. Eventually, much like his fellow Brill writers Carole King, Neil Diamond and others he went into singer songwriter music in the 70s.

 

The difference was he was into country music.

 

OK there are some strings and smooth sounds here and Nashville itself isn’t adverse to the same but the twist is going to be, and it was relatively novel at the time, that Chip is a boy from New York. Lyrically his songs touch on themes not all that common in country music. He could be lumped in with Mickey Newbury and other alt country stylists of the time though his music is less country. Sure there are country overtones, but there is also pop, folk and country rock in there. This is singer songwriter with one foot in Americana.

 

Tracks (best in italics)

 

  • Londonderry Company  – quite a bouncy little love song though lyrically it has something to do with Northern Irelands second biggest city and  the “troubles” and perhaps the infamous atrocity “Bloody Sunday” of January 1971 . Though it could be also about Londonderry, New Hampshire. Buggered if I know. Chip was raised a Catholic so who knows. The melody overwhelms the lyrics anyway making for a pretty song but also, potentially, quite a subversive one. And by the way it’s “Derry” not “Londonderry”.

I heard the news today

Soon I may take my chances on the street again

Am I a fool you say

Put down the gun, don’t run, you’re one unto the light, oh the light, oh the light

 

Well, there’s fire from the lighthouse

And it’s burnin’ through my eyes

An I surely feel you here with me

So I’m not changin’ sides, Londonderry company, Londonderry company

 

  • Angel of the Morning – the big hit for Merilee Rush. Taylor’s original version is not as angelic (sic) as the Rush version which was all strings and drama as produced by Chips Moman. It went to #7 in the US and #1 in other places around the world. This is Taylor’s original albeit done after the cover version. Still it’s a well crafted song though it’s hard not to associate it with the big, saccharine, and catchy hit.
  • Home Again   – the only non Taylor written song. A cover of the Carole King song from her “Tapestry” (1971) album. King came from a similar musical background as Taylor so it’s not surprising that this song fits in perfectly with Taylor’s originals. No doubt he knew King from his Brill Building days in NYC.
  • Lady Lisa   – very catchy.
  • Oh My Marie – Gentle, quiet
  • Gasoline – a gentle country rock number with some nice left of centre touches.
  • Lightning (Don’t Stay Mad With Me)  – very low key, almost like a private thought about nothing in particular.
  • Dirty Matthew – Not sure what’s up with Matthew but this is another very quiet song.
  • You Didn’t Get Here Last Night   a little more up-tempo – with a saxophone making an appearance to join the finger snaps. More of a “street wise” city song which you could hear Jim Croce or Harry Chapin doing.
  • Swear to God, Your Honor – a humorous country lament much in the vein of Kristofferson which is both respectful and takes the piss out of country music.

And …

 

Low key and thoughtful with some stand out tracks…. I’m keeping it.

 

Chart Action

 

US

England

 

Nothing no where

 

Sounds

 

Londonderry Company

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5wgmjPS7uyU

 

Angel of the Morning

Live

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CFcVaErgrVA

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=p1YrIr7eo8M

the Merrilee Rush hit

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cbUNVm1k3nU

 

Gasoline  

Attached

Chip Taylor – Gasoline 

 

You Didn’t Get Here Last Night  

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GphyspH9S-Q

 

Swear to God, Your Honor

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aJEWEGudMx4

 

Others

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8-aJWGSoAMA

  

Review

 

Bio

http://www.allmusic.com/artist/chip-taylor-p20941

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chip_Taylor

 

background

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Brill_Building

 

Interview:

http://www.huffingtonpost.com/mike-ragogna/emhuffpost-reviewsem-acdc_b_798921.html

http://www.spectropop.com/ChipTaylor/index.htm

 

Website

http://www.myspace.com/chiptaylorsolo

 

Trivia

  • Too much to list – read his bio.

 

Posted in Alt Country, Singer Songwriter | Tagged | Leave a comment

THUMBS – Thumbs – (Ramona Records) – 1979

 

 

Now this is obscure.

 

I bought this on a $1 whim because it was on an obscure label from the US and was from 1979.

 

I expected faux US new wave.

 

And largely that’s what I got.

 

Thumbs were a rock band from the late 70s and early 80s from Lawrence, Kansas.

 

For those not in the know Lawrence, Kansas is a bit of a college town (the large University of Kansas is there) and accordingly it has always had quite a bit of a musical scene.

 

I have no knowledge of who Thumbs were and googling provided very little other information. It seems that they were popular on the local music scene and singer (and co-songwriter) Steve Wilson, a Lawrence native,  became a Freelance music writer and manager of Kief’s Downtown Music record store, which I gather is a local institution in Lawrence.

 

Wilson said that Thumbs were named after "seeing this public TV thing on opposable digits and their role in the advance of the species". http://www.lawrence.com/news/2007/jan/19/name_game/

 

Though forgotten now, this the first album, was a minor “success” when it came out. Greil Marcus reviewed it as did the NME in England, and so did a music mag in Italy. http://news.google.com/newspapers?nid=2199&dat=19810201&id=-7YrAAAAIBAJ&sjid=u-cFAAAAIBAJ&pg=6892,107734

 

I believe they put out a follow up album to this 1979 release.

 

Wilson seems to be the main force in the band and clearly was into power pop, early 70s style, which of course became popular again with the wave of skinny tie bands from the US in the late 70s (The Knack, The Romantics).

 

In a recent interview with Wilson, as the manager of Kief’s music, Wilson said the first record he bought was The Beatles first album (I assume he meant 1964), and the first concert he went to was The Doors in 1968. His favourite concerts were the Stones in 1972 or Dylan in 1976.

http://books.google.com.au/books?id=2BoAwiB3d8wC&pg=PA37&dq=steve+wilson+kief’s&hl=en&ei=7jXDTtLmHszxmAXtuoCECw&sa=X&oi=book_result&ct=result&resnum=1&ved=0CC8Q6AEwAA#v=onepage&q=steve%20wilson%20kief’s&f=false

 

Perhaps, because Wilson and band (?) were a little older, there are other influences in their music outside the norm of the skinny tie bands.

 

There were many bands who disingenuously jumped on the powerpop / rock n roll / new wave band wagon when it became fashionable. Thumbs, I suspect, were populated by people already into the music who got swept up in the craze

 

The album was released on Ramona Records which it seems was a large indie label in Lawrence. This album though is, either, poorly produced or poorly recorded.

 

Tracks (best in italics)

 

  • Sweet & Mild – nice power pop but the drums aren’t miked or mixed properly. Very close to what you would hear live. They produced the album themselves – probably a mistake. A good song otherwise.
  • In the Family – some Dylanesque phrasing though the tune and the music are distinctly non Dylan
  • Is it asking too Much? – A touch of Springsteen circa “Greetings from Asbury Park
  • 4th of July – Graham Parker does Americana.
  • Still Bound to You – the obligatory power pop love ballad, errrr, if that’s not a contradiction in terms.
  • Inch or Two Flamin Groovies ( Roy Loney era) … I love the Groovies.
  • Straight to the Heart – filler
  • Frame of Mind – filler – maybe they are running out of ideas. Some squealy squealy guitar solos, albeit very brief, creeping in.
  • Moonlight – filler
  • Rags to Rags – so so.
  • Art History – good song, nice keyboards and a vocal slightly reminiscent of Richard Hell. 

And …

 

The band wear their hearts and influences on their sleeves. The sound is both a little clunky and a little thin….but there is a charm in there which may appeal to anyone who went to see small indie live bands in the early to mid 80s.

 

Given the obscurity of this release and the fact that there has been no subsequent “cult” around the band only God knows how this album ended up in Brisbane. Much like Mr Burns’ Teddy Bear, Bobo, there probably is a amazing story to its journey.

 

Ultimately I’m not sure if I will keep it. I may. I will tape a few songs. If I do get rid of it who knows where it will end up next.

 

Chart Action

 

US

England

 

Nothing no where

 

Sounds

 

Art History 

attached

Thumbs – Art History 

 

Others

 

Review

 

Bio

 

http://news.google.com/newspapers?nid=2199&dat=19810201&id=7YrAAAAIBAJ&sjid=ucFAAAAIBAJ&pg=6892,107734

 

Website

 

The bass player:

http://www.myspace.com/karlthebassman

 

 Trivia

 

 

 

Happy Birthday EP.

 

Posted in Power Pop | Tagged | 1 Comment

GRASS ROOTS – Leaving it All Behind – (Dunhill) – 1969

I commented on another earlier Grass Roots album very early in my blogging (or group email) career.

 

Back then I said: “I’m really keen to listen to this (notwithstanding its been a sitting in a pile for over a year) … you may ask "why are you keen to listen to a MOR vocal folk rock pop group from the 60s, Frank?"….  well I like 60s pop but more importantly P.F. Sloan and Steve Barri (writers and producers) were behind the creation of the group …and both of them are minor geniuses even thought at the time they were in their early to mid 20s!”

 

I quite liked that “Lovin Things” album from 1969.

 

A lot of what I said about that album still applies to this album.

 

Inevitably, when discussing Grass Roots questions of “authenticity” come up but they are largely redundant because this is pop music. I should say:

 

  • They weren’t a manufactured group in the normal sense of the phrase in the music business.
  • They weren’t like the The Monkees but they were a group put together by producers.
  • They were, like The Monkees, an already talented group of individual musicians brought together by a third party for a meeting of minds.

Musically, they are the logical extension of Gary Lewis and the Playboys because they play their own instruments though with a dollop of Jay and the Americans, because they have the harmonies. Like both those bands they had great success in the USA but next to nothing in England.

 

The albums, of the ones I have heard, are fairly rigidly controlled by the producers but the producers also have given all the individuals enough wiggle room to express themselves and write their own material etc.

 

So they were an authentic band but one with one ear keenly glued to the radio. And the big pop, sounds from 1969 are all canvassed on this album. There is some country, some straight pop, some psych (albeit MOR), some sunshine pop and a lot of horns no doubt following on from the success of Blood Sweat and Tears.

 

All the styles are subsumed into radio friendly pop. Is that bad? No, not here. There is still enough balls in the music to avoid blandness.

 

The album is produced by their regular producer (and founder) Steve Barri. Horns and strings are arranged by Sid Feller with the exception of “Wait a Million Years” and “Heaven Knows” where Jimmie Haskell arranged the horns.

 

Tracks (best in italics)

 

  • I’m Livin’ for You Girl – Price, Walsh – a big sound pop number, horns, dramatic and powerful vocals. Pleasant MOR but much funkier than say Tom Jones.
  • Back to Dreamin’ Again -Nolan – lyrically, not dissimilar, to a Ray Davies song.  Very “of it’s time” and very pleasant.
  • Out of This World – Lambert, Potter – More big pop sound, no subtlety but undeniably catchy. Lambert and Potter would later have substantial production and writing hits with Four Tops’ Dusty Springfield, Glen Campbell (Rhinestone Cowboy),The  Righteous Brothers, Player, and others.
  • Melinda Love – Barri, Entner, Grill – I love hand claps in songs, not enough songs nowadays have hand claps. This is in late 60s Hollies territory
  • Don’t Remind Me – Entner – a pleasant country rock song in the vein of the The Byrds and The Dillards. More pop and less country certainly but still rootsy enough. And to my ears more preferable to the big brass sound.
  • Take Him While You Can – Provisor – sung my Provisor. A mix of styles but trying to be, perhaps, Blood Sweat and Tears?
  • Heaven Knows – Price, Walsh – a nice pop song bordering on bubblegum for grown ups, if that makes any sense.
  • Walking Through the Country – Provisor – sung my Provisor. Country soul styling but not memorable. To my ears Rob Grills is clearly the better lead vocalist.
  • Something’s Comin’ Over Me – Grill – more horns … ostensibly a MOR country folk song, err with horns, done by the Beatles. Hmmm.  Not bad but could have been better.
  • Truck Drivin’ Man – Coonce – written and sung by drummer Ricky Coonce this is a country rock song a la The Byrds. Nice vocals and melody, but slight.
  • Wait a Million Years – Bottler, Zekley – starts off with some future sounds much like Zager and Evans “In the Year 2525” which it sounds a little like. This is a big sound and the top 20 hit but to my ears it’s a good song but not as good as some of the others on this LP.

And …

 

A strange album – a number of disparate styles but they are all held together by the vocals and the commitment to pure pop. …. I’m keeping it.

 

Chart Action

 

US

Singles

1969 I’d Wait A Million Years #15

1969 Heaven Knows Don’t Remind Me #24

1970 Walking Through The Country Truck Drivin’ Man #44

 

Album

#36 1969

 

England

Singles

 

Album

 

Sounds

 

I’m Livin’ for You Girl

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xKg0SDx6LL8

 

Back to Dreamin’ Again

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-2DPqOeEm7g

 

Out of This World

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9KA5mOoyP88

 

Melinda Love

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8BDbvtrGvvo

and attached

Grass Roots – Melinda Love 

 

Don’t Remind Me

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xgFMRvw0Gys

 

Heaven Knows

Live

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pT6FE4fktOs&feature=fvst

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cdej9GWq0dU&feature=related

 

Walking Through the Country

Live

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0K4x2NNHv7Q

 

Something’s Comin’ Over Me

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nKf9dfr6kns

 

Truck Drivin’ Man

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5MufSVEHBKE

 

Wait a Million Years

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PAgQOx6X9NQ

Live (recently)

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UGjHF2qcLVM

 

Others

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TJlY2QThjoA

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LuTsvTk3pMg&feature=related

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0x6B5eVK7VQ

 

Review

http://www.allmusic.com/album/leavin-it-all-behind-r8536/review

 

Bio

http://www.allmusic.com/artist/the-grass-roots-p4396

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Grass_Roots

 

Website

http://the-grassroots.com/

 

Trivia

  • The Grass Roots are:

*Warren Entner – Guitar, Vocals, Keyboards

*Rob Grill – Bass, Vocals

*Ricky Coonce – Drums

*Dennis Provisor – Keyboards

*Terry Furlong – Guitar

 

  • allmusic: The session men aren’t listed as they were on other albums by this usually formula group, and the disc, Leavin’ It All Behind, actually feels like a cohesive album by a real band, no doubt an important goal for these men — achieving their own identity. Guitarist Creed Bratton had made his exit by this point, so the guitar chores were left up to rhythm guitarist and future Quiet Riot manager Warren Entner, with Dennis Provisor joining the crew on piano and organ, maintaining the four-piece unit, at least on the surface.

 

Posted in Rock & Pop | Tagged | Leave a comment

DAVE EDMUNDS – Information – (Arista) – 1983

Check other entries on this blog for biographical details on Edmunds.

 

Edmunds is a English (or rather Welsh) rock and roll purist obsessed by 1950s and early 1960s rock. Accordingly, his records from the late 1950s to the 1980s were always out of step with the times in which they were released. But unlike purists who are slavish to the originals – so much so that the music becomes a “what’s the point” situation –  Edmunds was always willing to mix contemporary things into his music, as long as they fit within his ideal parameters. This is the sign of a smart musician and one that by necessity has to be well versed in music history.

 

Edmunds was, and is, both these things.

 

All then you need is soul, heart, or commitment and you will have music well worth listening to.

 

Edmunds has given us much worthwhile music over the years.

 

It is generally considered that this is Edmunds sell-out album, his grab for chart success. The sound certainly is 1983 mainstream contemporary but the songs are still undeniably retro though perhaps less so than his work on other albums.

 

He teamed up with Jeff Lynne (of ELO) on this album. A kindred soul when it comes to love of old school rock n roll but otherwise a musician who clearly displays a Beatles-y post Beatles sound. The problem perhaps, though, is that on this album there is too much Lynne. The album is slick and soulless, much like a lot of ELO. That works on the upbeat contemporary numbers but it doesn’t work as well on the rootsy songs that Edmunds loves to throw in. Lynne also relies heavily on synths and a lame drum sound (which he was prone to do, at least in the 80s) and that sound is just wrong for this music.

 

Lynne only produces two songs on the album “Slipping Away” and “Information”) but his presence is felt across the album. He also plays bass and synth on the session.

 

Clearly the label realized the preponderance of synths and issued the album in a vaguely “computer-y sleeve – the office of the front, and computer, keyboard and digital writing on the back.

 

Having said all that, when you have talents like Edmunds and Lynne even when wrong headed you still end up with something worthwhile …albeit some of the time.

 

Interestingly, the album did not do that well chart wise. I suspect mainly because Lynne’s sound was wearing thin by 1983 (though he would revive it with more success with The Traveling Wilburys). Edmunds would have been better to have thrown himself in with the roots rockers who sprang out of punk (as he did as a producer). Clearly he knew what was going on underground and on the fringes. His covers here are astute and support that view. Ultimately, even with a different approach he may not have had any chart success but I suspect this album would have dated better.

 

Tracks (best in italics)

 

  • Slipping Away – Lynne – a song written by Jeff Lynne which is slick and catchy and a little soulless but with an undeniably catchy hook …err, much like a lot of ELOs output.
  • Don’t You Double Cross Me – Martin – A cover of the Moon Martin song. Passable but not memorable. Even the slide guitar half way through doesn’t sting
  • I Want You Bad – Adams, Crandon – A cover of the great NRBQ song. Not as good as the original but good enough.
  • Wait – Justman, Wolf – The J. Geils Band song. I always thought the original a little duff.
  • The Watch on My Wrist – Kennerley – written by Paul Kennerly, a Englishman obsessed by US country (he a producer and writer in Nashville and was behind the Civil war concept album “White Mansions”). This song, here, is just synth mush. Totally wrong.
  • Shape I’m In – Blackwell, Cathy- made famous by Johnny Restivo in 1959 this song has been recorded many times.  A nice Tex Mex / zydeco intro works on me. That’s not on the original though so I’m not sure if this song hasn’t been done like that before this. I could certainly hear Doug Sahm doing this song in that sound. The song is totally out of step with the rest of the album and one of the best tracks on the album.
  • Information – Edmunds, Radice-  mainstream pop rock with too much synth. A pity.
  • Feel So Right – Kennerley  – filler, but passable.
  • What Have I Got to Do to Win? – David, Edmunds –  filler
  • Don’t Call Me Tonight – Edmunds- a straight ahead mid-tempo pop rocker. Derivative but pleasant.
  • Have a Heart – David – David is the second bassist on this album. Another pleasant mid tempo rocker.

And …

 

Not a bad album, but schizophrenic, and an album that should have been a whole lot better. Still, I’m keeping it.

 

Chart Action

 

US

Singles

#39 Slipping Away 1983, Hot 100

 

Album

#51

 

England

Singles

#60 Slipping Away 1983

 

Album

#92

 

Sounds

 

Slipping Away

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iGu8AD5oCJk

 

I Want you Bad

Attached

Dave Edmunds – I Want You Bad 

 

The Shape I’m In

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZJvxwr4Wv3s

 

Information

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8C8NX0JlOj4

 

Feel So Right

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JqSUy4KYlEk

 

Don’t Call Me Tonight

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1vf90LQAv6A

 

Have a Heart

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EblxmB-UkEw

 

Others

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yykXSQj6iKY

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TTkhBuNdMgY&feature=related

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=R8-gZ7V4Z_Y&feature=related

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5Bm8CsTk3I0

 

Review

http://www.allmusic.com/album/information-r6619

 

Bio

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dave_Edmunds

http://www.allmusic.com/artist/dave-edmunds-p4167/biography

http://www.rockabillyhall.com/DaveEdmunds1.html

 

Website

 

Trivia

Posted in Rock & Pop, Rockabilly and Rock n Roll | Tagged | Leave a comment

MERLE HAGGARD – My Love Affair with Trains – (Capitol) – 1976

A country album about trains.

 

Now there is a novel idea.

 

Just kidding.

 

From my collection I know Johnny Cash has done an album on trains and so has Hank Snow and there are, I know, many more train albums I don’t have. Individual train songs or songs that reference trains in country music are uncountable.

 

Trains are part of American life. Musicians, writers and filmmakers have been inspired by them, especially those who dwell on memory, regret and times past.

 

Perfect for country music and perfect for Merle Haggard.

 

It’s impossible to separate Merle Haggard’s music from his life. I’m not sure if he ever “rode the rails” (though as a child he lived in a abandoned boxcar) and his father worked with trains but the train has always been in his music, as it is in much of country music. In his work, as it is in most country music, trains are a metaphor for working, leaving, lost love, change, a better land, a better life, the hereafter and any number of other human wants and desires.

 

No other form of transport has conjured up such imagery as that of the train moving on down the track. There has been no great volume of songs about boats, planes, the segway or even the motorbike. Only the car seems to have a large volume of music associated with it, and tellingly, it seems largely associated with rock music.

 

Maybe it’s a rural (train) vs the city (car) thing?

 

Wikipedia: Merle Ronald Haggard (born April 6, 1937) is an American country music singer, guitarist, fiddler, instrumentalist, and songwriter. Along with Buck Owens, Haggard and his band The Strangers helped create the Bakersfield sound, which is characterized by the unique twang of Fender Telecaster guitars, vocal harmonies, and a rough edge not heard on the more polished Nashville Sound recordings of the same era.

 

I encourage you to read about Merle if you don’t know anything about him. It makes for an interesting read even if you put aside the fact that he is one of the most influential of all country musicians of the last 50 years.

 

Merle’s parents were dust bowl refugees who moved from Oklahoma to California in the mid 1930s. Merle grew up in Oildale, a rough working class suburb in working class Bakersfield, California. Bakersfield was home to many migrant workers who came from the midwest, southwest, and west in the 30s looking for a better life. Those migrants brought with them the music of their various regional areas into the melting pot of working people in Bakersfield. Eventually, a new country music sound emerged that incorporated all the regional elements and it came to be known as the “Bakersfield sound”.

 

Allmusic: Bakersfield was the first genre of country music to rely heavily on electric instrumentation, as well as a defined backbeat — in other words, it was the first to be significantly influenced by rock & roll. Named after the town of Bakersfield, California, where a great majority of the artists performed, the sound was pioneered by Wynn Stewart and popularized by Buck Owens and Merle Haggard. Using telecaster guitars, the singers developed a clean, ringing sound that stood in direct opposition to the produced, string-laden Nashville sound. The Bakersfield sound became one of the most popular — and arguably the most influential — country genres of the ’60s, setting the stage for country-rock and outlaw, as well as reviving the spirit of honky tonk.

 

Merle, Buck Owens, Ferlin Husky, C.W McCall, Dallas Frazier, Wynn Stewart and many others came out of this scene.

 

Allmusic: As a performer and a songwriter, Merle Haggard was the most important country artist to emerge in the 1960s, and he became one of the leading figures of the Bakersfield country scene in the ’60s. While his music remained hardcore country, he pushed the boundaries of the music quite far. Like his idol, Bob Wills, his music was a melting pot that drew from all forms of traditional American music — country, jazz, blues, and folk — and in the process, developed a distinctive style of his own. As a performer, singer, and musician, he was one of the best, influencing countless other artists. Not coincidentally, he was the best singer/songwriter in country music since Hank Williams, writing a body of songs that became classics.

 

Importantly Merle referred to his past and the shared past of those like him in his music. He, like many other country musicians, wrote many songs but he also recorded many more covers of songs by other artists. Always, though, he seemed to have a bond with the music he recorded. So, apparently, the author isn’t important but the shared experience is.

 

Merle had many life experiences to draw from.

 

He is the Johnny Cash that Johnny Cash sang about.

 

The difference is Johnny sang it and Merle lived it.

 

Merle, a child of the depression, born of his working parents drifted into petty crime, drugs, and spent his youth in detention centres, before ending up in San Quentin doing a 3 year stretch for robbery. He was a talented musician, saw Johnny Cash perform whilst in jail (in 1958), was rehabilitated and left for an uncertain world in 1960. Manual work, odd jobs and part time music were his life until he cut a record in 1963.

 

After that he never looked back, but he never forgot either.

 

He became one the biggest stars in country music being at the forefront of the Bakersfield sound as well as traditional country, western swing, honky tonk, outlaw country and even bluegrass.

 

This album is something like his 30th album in just over 10 years and despite the fact that this is quite a personal album, and a concept album, Merle only writes one track. The songs that he has selected though all reflect his own inner vision and hopes. Quite a few of them are touched with regret whilst other contain visions of hope. Clearly they reflect the 1976 US bicentennial celebrations  (1776 – 1976) with it’s celebration of the past and hope for the future. Though here the celebration of the past is shaded with some regret.

 

The songs are introduced by Merle ruminating on American rail with sound effects to reinforce the feeling of the narrator at one with what he sings about.

 

The music is a history lesson that is part country music, part folk music and part Jimmie Rodgers (a Merle Haggard childhood idol) with stories about trains, train stations and people who work and live around trains. But, as I’ve said above, the music is also about hopes, aspirations, dreams and dreams unfulfilled.

 

Oh, and keeping with country LP tradition the sleeve art is totally crappy. Unlike rock, country LP sleeve art was not as important in the scheme of things.

 

Tracks (best in italics)

 

  • My Love Affair With Trains -(Dolly Parton)- You have to love Dolly. A great lyricist and often covered. For a music (country) often portrayed as redneck it never had any problem in creating female country icons and the males never seemed to have problems in recording tunes written by females. No government grants to address any imbalance needed here. Merle starts the song with a line from his own classic “Mama Tried” …
  • Union Station -(Ronnie Reno)- writer and bluegrass musician Reno is the son of bluegrass star Don Reno. Ronnie opened and played back up for Merle (in the Strangers) in the 70s. This song is a great example of a gentle melancholy country ballad. The station of the title is threatened with demolition.
  • Here Comes the Freedom Train -(Stephen H. Lemberg)- a cash-in on the US bicentennial, which worked as the song made the country top 10.  This is pure corn but in it’s own way, a hoot. I wish there was more of a raucous country hoedown to it though. The song, as most patriotic American songs of the time, is all inclusive. 

The freedom train is rolling down two hundred years of track

Two hundred years of glory never to turn back

The train is called America your ticket is a dream

That left the torture of freedom for all the world to see

She left the station in Lexington in 1776

And rode to Philadelphia where the liberty bell was fixed

George Washington was the engineer John Adams shovelled coal

And Franklin punched the tickets Tom Jefferson added soul.

 

  • So Long Train Whistle -(Dave Kirby, Lew Quadling)- a beautiful, if slightly maudlin tale of the working man and a working train both about to be retired. This is what country music does best – evocative songs about everyday life. 

Daddy said he’s glad it’s over

But he ain’t foolin’ me

Last night I overheard him singing

This sad old melody.

 

So long train whistle

So long hmm-hmm

This near generation

Has no need for you or I.

 

We both served the nation

Long before it learned to fly

Nothing last forever

Now it’s our turn to die.

 

Lord hear that whistle cry.

 

  • Silver Ghost -(Sterling Whipple)- a slightly other worldly country song much like “Ghost Riders in the Sky”. Apparently based on some mining legend the song has a Marty Robbins type of feel.
  • No More Trains to Ride -(Merle Haggard)- a song bemoaning the loss of “hitching the rails”. Evocative.
  • Coming and the Going of the Trains -(Red Lane)- a smart song on how the train figures in American history by looking at those people whose lives it affected from it’s first incursions into native American country through to the day when “trucks and planes” are faster and the train engineers are laid off. The idea could have been exploited a little further but this is pretty good.
  • I Won’t Give Up My Train -(Mark Yeary)- a sad country lament.
  • Where Have All the Hoboes Gone -(Kirby, Danny Morrison)- the songs theme is in the title.
  • Railroad Lady -(Jimmy Buffett, Jerry Jeff Walker)- Jimmy and Jerry Jeff! A song about a lady of easy virtue is only loosely (sic) connected with trains. It still fits in with the mood of the album though.
  • Hobo -(Kirby, Glenn Martin)- an ode to the hobo, and a cheerful one at that. I don’t know why you would want to be a hobo. Perhaps I’m too urbane. 

And …

 

The album is a little gentle. It should kick a honky tonkin ass. Still, Merle’s voice is expressive and the songs are good …. I’m keeping it.

 

Chart Action

 

US

Singles

1976  Here Comes the Freedom Train  Country Singles #10

Album

1976 Country #7

 

England

Singles

Album

 

Sounds

 

So Long Train Whistle

Attached

Merle Haggard – So Long Train Whistle 

 

Silver Ghost

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=idrIyyEAT8U

 

No More Trains to Ride

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GKKrzS9DLLs

 

Coming and the Going of the Trains

Attached

Merle Haggard – Coming and the Going of the Trains  

 

I Won’t Give Up My Train

A new version

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3nScvxvoIrc

 

Railroad Lady

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5V3XqT-hn5w

 

Others

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ziFI_0Fx5ts

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=H9oXkxPxxhY&feature=related

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yyyLzu2lYVQ

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ue9Rq2U_LcE&feature=related

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZHAFmFsb9XM

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DSLZux_X46A&feature=related

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8l3zM1ko5c0&feature=related

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fpjbboA-YU0

 

Review

 

http://www.allmusic.com/album/my-love-affair-with-trains-r248953

 

Bio

 

http://www.allmusic.com/artist/merle-haggard-p1640

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Merle_Haggard

http://www.history.com/this-day-in-history/inmate-merle-haggard-hears-johnny-cash-play-san-quentin-state-prison

 

I think this link misses the point about Haggard’s politics but it has good detail:

http://www.city-journal.org/html/rev2006-01-13hh.html

 

Website

 

 http://merlehaggard.com/

 

Trivia

 

  • “In a television appearance with Haggard, Cash recalled one of his trademark prison concerts in San Quentin. Haggard remarked that he’d been there for the concert. When Cash noted that he didn’t recall Haggard being on the bill that day, Haggard replied, “I was in the audience, Johnny.” http://www.city-journal.org/html/rev2006-01-13hh.html
  • Merle put out an entire album of songs of Bob Wills, Jimmie Rodgers and Elvis. Wikipedia: “My Farewell to Elvis” is an album by American country singer Merle Haggard, released in 1977. It reached Number 6 on the Country album chart. The single "From Graceland to the Promised Land" reached number 4 on the Billboard Country Singles chart. The album is a tribute to the music of Elvis Presley”.

 

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SHAWN PHILLIPS – Furthermore … – (A&M) – 1974

 

See some of my other posts for more detail on Shawn Phillips. Suffice it to say I didn’t know a great load about him till quite recently.

 

He certainly is obscure, by contemporary standards, and there isn’t anything to suggest that his profile will be raised in the near future. He certainly doesn’t have a Nick Drake sized cult around him.

 

That’s a pity because if there was one singer songwriter ripe for rediscovery it would be Shawn Phillips.

 

Phillips was both a product of his time and one who transcended  it because of his personal vision. From the little I’ve heard by him, four or so albums, he is remarkably consistent in theme and world view. On this album his music is embellished by electric instruments, orchestras etc though generally it is quiet acoustic music dealing with human problems in an almost ethereal manner.

 

Certainly the cosmos, god, and thoughts and emotions than transcend time and place feature a lot of his music, which has been constructed to accentuate that feel.

 

It feels like he is speaking about universal emotions but not in a preachy way.

 

Of course, thematically, he can also be linked to all the hippy dippy crap of the late 1960s and early 1970s. What keeps him from tipping over into hippy-dom is the attention to detail in the music itself. His music does not follow the standard backdrop of singer songwriter albums. Clearly he is a good musician with a expressive voice but he also has quite an open mind to the music and often incorporates other styles, as well as instruments into his dominant norm. Fark….that sounds pretentious.

 

Having said that I like his music best when it is acoustic or near acoustic. The words to some of the lyrics I can take or leave but the way he explores the themes I like. His lyrics can be quite dense and not very pop friendly. He doesn’t favour choruses or even pop hooks in a song. Each song is its own tone piece

 

In an earlier comment on one of his LPs I said “Singer songwriters generally live or die on the catchiness and humability of the tunes. Phillips though isn’t concerned with catchy tunes. There are hooks in his songs but he is more concerned with an aural "landscape" over the course of the album. And this is especially difficult given that he manages to create this atmosphere while playing songs in a variety of idioms – there is folk, singer songwriter, r & b, rock, baroque, classical, ye olde worlde,  and some jazz.  Even all that would be palatable to the mainstream if he remained within conventional lines but he eschews the verse chorus verse format and he switches tempos and tones half way through a song ( a song may start off as straight folk before going electric and orchestral).…  so the sing-along-ability of the songs is near on impossible. On top of that his songs never end where you think they will.”

 

And that still applies here.

 

On this album, recorded in 1974, Phillips made some concessions to popular music and has thrown in some funk and prog rock to go with his lyrics and found an audience receptive to him. The album went to #50 in the US the highest chart place in his career.

 

I have nothing about making concessions to commerciality but sometimes it does seem to dilute the artists “vision” …it’s much better to do whatever you want and create your own audience, but how many acts can do that? Bugger all. Most people make concessions to commerciality to reach a wider audience or remain happy courting a smaller but loyal audience. I gather Phillips always had a small loyal audience and this album’s stab at commerciality is still auteurist enough to disappoint no one and good enough to create a few more followers.

 

Having said that there are a few things I dislike ….songs that run into each other, for one. OK, I acknowledge there is a point to that here …he is creating a vibe …. but I‘ve always found it annoying.

 

Also some of the songs are a bit duff in that typical pompous, pretentious, prog rock way. I don’t like prog and I know I have to cut Phillips some slack, but he even references Greek mythology which the prog rockers were always doing when they weren’t referring to Arthur, Excalibur and  the dreary knights.

 

This is Donovan, meets Pink Floyd and Jethro Tull at Woodstock, on a lonely field after the festival had closed.

 

Phillips band here also played on this album “Rumplestiltskin’s resolve” (1976). The band is:

 

  • Shawn Phillips – vcls and guitar
  • Peter Robinson – keyboards (English session man who has played with everyone and now does film composition http://www.jpeterrobinson.com/)
  • John Gustafson – bass (Liverpudlian sessionman who has played with everyone and was a member of Roxy Music http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_Gustafson_(musician))
  • Barry de Souza – drums (sessionman extraordinaire)
  • Caleb Quaye – gtr (session guitarist extraordinaire http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Caleb_Quaye)
  • Paul Buckmaster –cello (sessionman extraordinaire http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Paul_Buckmaster)
  • Raul Mayora – percussion (sessionman extraordinaire)
  • Ann Odell – mellotron on “Starbright” (session person extraordinaire http://www.annodell.com/)

Phillips wrote all the songs bar two which he co-wrote and there is a good poem, “Freeways Child” by his writer father on the back (the album was inspired by the poem apparently). See below for links to his father.

 

Tracks (best in italics)

 

  • January First  – a bit jarring. I always associate Phillips with singer songwriters – though one who is also an accomplished musician. This is a very funky chucka wucka opening that shows off the bands skills…and they are skilled.
  • Starbright     starts off well. A wistful, trippy ballad that reminds a little of Tim Buckley circa “Happy Sad”(1969). The convention song structure is clearly not important:

 

Starlight burn bright

Countless eons of time

Have you burned that way for a billion years

Glittering ever brightly

 

And I see earthrise, our eyes

How much longer to go

Little sphere of dirt that we live upon

Trembling in its last throes

 

  • Breakthrough     another great acoustic ballad …it turns a little hippy half way through, though Shawn seems prone to that.
  • Ninety Two Years     another funky song this one with a dose of 70s social realism in the lyric.
  • See You     a gentle beautiful song that again has a Tim Buckley feel
  • Planscape – a trippy prog rock instrumental with everything thrown in including a eerie chorus, dramatic crescendos, orchestra and the kitchen sink. A rock operatic instrumental very much of it’s time.
  • Troof     a ballad …..slightly overly dramatic and arguably pretentious but hard to dislike
  • Capé Barras    an instrumental with some vocal scatting? Weird.
  • Song for Northern Ireland    peace in Northern Island – very low key and not as rousing (or confrontational) as McCartney’s “Give Ireland back to the Irish”(1972). Phillips may have been American but he did live in England for short periods in the 60s and 70s (I think).
  • Mr. President     a heavy orchestral introduction with shades of “Live and Let Die” …before entering into a rapid fire rap about the President, Prime Minister and Premier and war.
  • Talking in the Garden     I expected to see dancing gnomes coming out of the speaker – this is a little like Jethro Tull and their most mushroom induced.
  • Furthermore    a funky instrumental. I suspect the instrumentals are there to show off his band and keep them happy because they have bugger all to do during the ballads.

And …

 

At first blush this is an album that doesn’t work, but it does grow…. I’m keeping it.

 

There are a few too many concessions to the music of 1974 but Phillips still dances to the music of his own drum.

 

Chart Action

 

US

Singles

Album

1975 #50

 

England

Singles

Album

 

Sounds

 

January First 

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lj_f2s1dks0

 

Starbright    

Attached

Shawn Phillips – Starbright

 

Breakthrough 

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IH18SmqpSME

live http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JQjpVxtKl8M

  

Song for Northern Ireland  

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7prcbkIhzC4

 

Mr. President    

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AcXqyQ3_Rqo

Live http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sP8uw9YRC_g

Live http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XSUIYH5Gx-s

 

Talking in the Garden    

Live http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jIUbo9PGXZs

Live http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=18mU2ZHNSAQ (the Neil Armstrong is a urban legend)

 

Others

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lRxKl0zz2tE

 

Review

 

http://www.allmusic.com/album/furthermore-r46619

 

Bio

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shawn_Phillips

http://www.allmusic.com/artist/shawn-phillips-p5140

 

Website

 

http://www.shawnphillips.com/index.html

http://www.myspace.com/shawnphillipsmusic

http://shawnphillips.wordpress.com/music/70s/furthermore/

 

Trivia

 

  • His father was crime writer James Atlee Phillips. He also co wrote the screenplay to the excellent Robert Mitchum film Thunder Road (1958), and apparently worked on the John Wayne red hysteria (but entertaining) Big Jim McLain (1952)

http://www.shawnphillips.com/photovideo/photogallery/PHJames.htm

http://articles.chicagotribune.com/1991-06-03/news/9102190460_1_mr-phillips-novels-edgar-award

 

  • His uncle (his fathers brother) is well known CIA “official” David Atlee Phillips.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/David_Atlee_Phillips

http://www.spartacus.schoolnet.co.uk/JFKphillips.htm

 

 

Posted in Singer Songwriter | Tagged | Leave a comment

GERMS – (GI) – (Slash) – 1979

Well this takes me back.
 
This album has been a long time coming for me. I never could afford it at the time and my entire Germs catalogue amounted to a couple of tracks on a couple of Slash label compilations.
 
I went through a stage of buying everything I could find on the Slash label …. and then IRS
 
I was too young for fist generation punk whereas early 80s California Hardcore got me at the exact age to satisfy my teenage angst  – The Dead Kennedys, Black Flag, Circle Jerks, X, Fear, Rollins Band, The Divine Horsemen. Don’t get me wrong, I never would have got mistaken for a Californian punk in dress. But that’s probably because I also liked everything else coming out of California – The Paisley Underground (The Three O Clock, The Long Ryders, Green on Red), Cowpunk (Rank and File, True West), Roots (The Blasters, The Beat Farmers, Los Lobos) and the plain weird (Mojo Nixon, Wall of Voodoo, The Gun Club). All were imbued with the punk spirit and all of them I loved in varying degrees.
 
OK, some of those bands weren’t from California but they ended up there.
 
Everything musically I liked, at that time, seemed to be drawn to California. I assume because it had always been a mecca for those who don’t like the cold of the north east, the lack of venues in the Midwest, the conservatism of the South but also it had all the infrastructure for music – there were venues, labels, studios and jobs to keep you employed when not playing your music.
 
Also, importantly, the punk explosion in California set new rules for punk.
 
It is often said that the Germs, The Dead Kennedys and others were inspired by UK punk and the Sex Pistols rather than NYC punk. I can’t hear it. Sure, I’m biased. Certainly there is a lot of Johnny Rotten venom and some of The Damned’s frenzy but musically there is little major influence coming from anything in UK punk. The Stooges, MC5 and The Ramones seem more like the ancestors of the low fi, furious sonic assault that was California hardcore. (admittedly those UK punk bands were influenced also by The Stooges et al).
 
The punk of California was, generally, not as arty as New York, not as political as DC, not as fashion oriented as London but it was all energy and adrenaline.
 
It was certainly more interesting, to me, than all the post punk coming out of England, which was punk for old farts ….the prog rock of punk. I found most post punk insufferably pretentious and excruciatingly dull. Like a one trick pony where the trick wasn’t very good. California hardcore also may have it’s limitations but it appealed to teenage anger like nothing else and importantly everyone was welcome – no height, age or dress restrictions.
 
Is there a message in the music – sure I can wax lyrical about disenfranchised youth, the flipside of paradise, the grey of the American dream but fuck, it’s music which moves you.
 
And this music does move you.
 
Louder, harder, faster, indeed.
 
Because of this energy California Hardcore is often dismissed as being anti-intellectual. Maybe some of it was but a lot of it wasn’t. Clearly, The Dead Kennedy’s and Black Flag weren’t but even the Germs , if you care to listen, have an intelligent lyricist in Darby Crash.
 
The Germs were young and not the best musicians at the time but that is excusable because like I said they were young. What they didn’t have in music skills they had in attitude, and angst which they managed to convey in short well written and quite literate songs. This is sloppy, loose and rough but it is all energy and quite nasty.
 
I saw many local bands that sound just as good as this live …but they never sounded this good on record.
 
The music is also one of contradictions : loose but formal, chaotic but structured, imbecilic but poetic, funny but deadly serious, juvenile but mature, naive but wise….perhaps, it sums up hardcore in all it’s facets.
 
Ultimately though this music is visceral and it bleeds.
 
It’s probably pointless talking about each individual song as the album should be listened to as a whole As Aristotle said, "The whole is greater than the sum of its parts”. There are those individual tracks that peak out above the others but listen to it as a whole and it will leave you spent.
 
The album is produced smartly by Joan Jett (who may or may not have done much producing, depending on who you read)
 
Tracks (best in italics)
 
  • What We Do Is Secret – Crash, Smear – 0:44 – now this is punk …
  • Communist Eyes – Crash, Smear- 2:15 – sounds a little like something from 1st generation English punk – perhaps Wire circa “1 2 XU”, or Spizzenergi.
  • Land of Treason – Crash, Smear –2:09 -punk
  • Richie Dagger’s Crime – Crash, Smear –1:56 – This is almost a throw back to avant garde hard rock with endearing vocals by Darby Crash.
  • Strange Notes – Crash – 1:53 – punk
  • American Leather – Crash –1:11 – punk
  • Lexicon Devil – Crash -1:44 – a touch of the MC5s here.
  • Manimal – Crash- 2:11 – a touch of the New York Dolls here
  • Our Way – Crash, Smear- 1:56 – a slow song
  • We Must Bleed – Crash- 3:05 – more English style punk.
  • Media Blitz – Crash, Smear- 1:29 – punk
  • The Other Newest One – Crash, Smear- 2:47 – some interesting lyrics – from what I can make out.
  • Let’s Pretend – Crash-2:34 – punk with some mild vocal pyrotechnics.
  • Dragon Lady – Crash, Smear –1:39 – punk
  • The Slave – Crash, Smear- 1:01 – punk
  • Shut Down (Annihilation Man) – Germs- 9:39 – A live song – this is the punk slow (angry) burn a s perfected by Black Flag. Some great guitar work. I’ve never been a fan of the long, punk slow burns but this one works.
And …
 
Am I keeping it. …fuck yes. Will I play it …not as much as I would have 20 years ago.
 
Chart Action
 
Nothing no where
 
Sounds
 
What We Do Is Secret
 
Communist Eyes
attached
 
Land of Treason
 
Richie Dagger’s Crime
 
Strange Notes
 
American Leather
 
Lexicon Devil
 
Manimal
 
Our Way
 
We Must Bleed
 
Media Blitz
 
The Other Newest One
 
Let’s Pretend
 
Dragon Lady
 
The Slave
 
Shut Down (Annihilation Man)
 
Others
 
Review
 
 
Bio
 
Website
 
 
Trivia
  • Wikipedia: Crash committed suicide December 7, 1980, at age 22. Unreported at the time, Crash had overdosed on China white heroin in a suicide pact with close friend Casey Cola, who ended up surviving. She insists that he did not intend for her to live, nor did he change his mind at the last minute and intend for himself to live. As he lay dying, he attempted to write "Here lies Darby Crash" on the wall, but did not finish. Outside the world of Germs’ fans, news of Darby’s death was largely overshadowed by the murder of John Lennon the next day. A local news station mistakenly reported that Darby had died from taking too many sleeping pills.
  • http://www.findagrave.com/cgi-bin/fg.cgi?page=gr&GRid=1223
  • Pat Smear went on to play with Nirvana and The Foo Fighters.

 

Posted in Punk and New Wave | Tagged | 4 Comments