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DAY48.
Jerry Lee Lewis........Live At The Star Club, Hamburg (1965)
Well that takes the biscuit so far in "the best live album ever" stakes, of which we have had quite a few wouldbe's and couldbe's already and we're only on album 48!
For me the raw energy and electric perfomance, although not being able to take you there, makes you wish to god you were there, from the opening bars of "Mean Woman Blues" through to "Whole Lotta Shakin' Going On" this album keeps giving.
This album is going into my collection, and I recommend giving it a listen
I'm sure you wont be dissapointed.
Last edited by arabchanter (27/9/2017 12:12 am)
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Arabnophobia wrote:
arabchanter wrote:
DAY 7.
songs for swingin' lovers! (1956)
[url= ]
This will be added to my collection, Sinatra as the suave, debonair, laid back crooner we all remember him as.
But it would all be wasted without Riddle's glorious scoring. Legend has it his unsurpassable arrangement for "I've Got You Under My Skin," hurriedly completed the night before the session, was greeted with spontaneous applause by the musicians who played it on January 12, 1956.
[/url]
Old meets new... start at the beginning...
Cheers bud sounds interesting, but will have to listen to it in the mornin', as I'm off to my scratcher now, wont last the 54 minutes
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DAY 49.
The Sonics...Here Are The Sonics (1965)
"The Sonics weren't great musicians" said Buck Ormsby, the guy who signed them to Etiquette Records, " but they had this magic thing"
With their 1965 debut album, the Tacoma,WA, five-piece managed to distill just about everything that was going on musically at the time, from the "British Invasion" scene to the rock 'n' roll sounds of Little Richard, with a ferocious energy and wildness that predates punk by more than a decade.
The idea of a "garage band" was not exactly new before The Sonics, but it was clear from debut single "The Witch" that The Sonics were going to shake things up.
Little wonder the groups name was inspired by the local Boing factory and their own jet-like sound.
Never heard of them, but usually dont mind this type of music.
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One of the best songs ever is on this album (Here Come The Sonics), written by Gerry Roslie, who also sings/screams for the band. He has a great voice for this type of music.
Along with the heavy saxophone and the tin tray drums and basic sound, this is (for me) the best album posted so far.
Strychnine (above), The Witch and Psycho are all on here (Roslie compositions), originals among the standards that most bands were covering at the time. Hopefully, the Christmas stuff that was added onto later albums isn't part of this set!
Producers of other eras would recoil at the errors and blips on the recordings, but this sort of stuff laid the foundations for punk music. A fantastic racket!
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arabchanter wrote:
Arabnophobia wrote:
arabchanter wrote:
DAY 7.
songs for swingin' lovers! (1956)
[url= ]
This will be added to my collection, Sinatra as the suave, debonair, laid back crooner we all remember him as.
But it would all be wasted without Riddle's glorious scoring. Legend has it his unsurpassable arrangement for "I've Got You Under My Skin," hurriedly completed the night before the session, was greeted with spontaneous applause by the musicians who played it on January 12, 1956.
[/url]
Old meets new... start at the beginning...
Cheers bud sounds interesting, but will have to listen to it in the mornin', as I'm off to my scratcher now, wont last the 54 minutes
An education for sure. Sorry bud, posted without reading so thought it was just a free for all.
I was trying to give a flavour mixing of completely different styles and ages as i saw Frank Sinatra and remembered this mix.
I used to dj and had great times in the house mixing my parents' & grandparents' old and ancient vinyl with latest styles, some of which extreme on my Techics 1210s.
Hiphop with old classics, even bagpipes bands and old pop etc with house, techno, drum & bass, jungle, hardcore, electronica, industrial, breakbeat, trance, psychedelic trance, garage, electro and even gabba.
Sacrilegious behaviour to some, entertaining and a unique merge to others.
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Arabnophobia wrote:
arabchanter wrote:
Arabnophobia wrote:
Old meets new... start at the beginning...
Cheers bud sounds interesting, but will have to listen to it in the mornin', as I'm off to my scratcher now, wont last the 54 minutes
An education for sure. Sorry bud, posted without reading so thought it was just a free for all.
I was trying to give a flavour mixing of completely different styles and ages as i saw Frank Sinatra and remembered this mix.
I used to dj and had great times in the house mixing my parents' & grandparents' old and ancient vinyl with latest styles, some of which extreme on my Techics 1210s.
Hiphop with old classics, even bagpipes bands and old pop etc with house, techno, drum & bass, jungle, hardcore, electronica, industrial, breakbeat, trance, psychedelic trance, garage, electro and even gabba.
Sacrilegious behaviour to some, entertaining and a unique merge to others.
Feel free to post what you like, I listened to DJ Yoda and enjoyed it, I quite like people experimenting with music certainly nothing sacrilegious imho, could you imagine if nobody tried different things in music it would be boredom city.
Post anytime you like, it would be good to get other opinions, rather than just me and Pat (but still very, very appreciative of Pat's knowledgeable input)
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DAY 49.
The Sonics.......Here Are The Sonics (1965)
This one was right up my street, I like many genres of music but would have to say at a push, this is without a doubt my favourite type.
I just love the raw, unbridled energy that the Sonics transmit in this album.
This album will be getting added to my collection.
This was my favourite track, performed live at the Forum in 2015
There probably has never been a greater example of rock’n’roll revisionism than the current respect accorded to the Sonics. Cult heroes may come and go, but the Sonics’ ascension to become the quintessential garage rock band of all time is truly remarkable.
Unlike, say, the Stooges or the Velvet Underground, there was really no awareness of the Sonics, outside of their native Pacific Northwest, until the late 1980s. Slowly but surely, the bands distinctive brand of noise has percolated up through generations of rock fans to almost enter the mainstream.For instance, in the past few years, the Sonics’ paint-peeling take on Richard Berry’s ‘Have Love Will Travel’ has been a regular fixture of television ads the world over.
There’s a simple reason why the Sonics strike such a chord. Theirs is likely the sharpest definition of garage rock that has ever existed. The rough-hewn quintet from blue-collar Tacoma, Washington drew from the implicit rawness of the 50s heroes like Little Richard and Jerry Lee, revved it up with post-British Invasion attitude, threw in the Northwest’s own unique translation of R&B energy, and in the process arrived at a sound that is the very essence of what rock should be: rock’n’roll boiled down to its very nub.
The core of the Sonics were the Parypa brothers, Larry on guitar and Andy on bass, who founded the group in the late 1950s. Like every other neophyte rock’n’roll combo in the Northwest, they looked up to local bigwigs the Wailers for inspiration. The embryonic group mutated through different personnel until singer and keyboardist Jerry Roslie entered the fray in late 1963, bringing along his school pals Rob Lind on sax and Bob Bennett on drums.
Within months of this new line-up coming together, a drastic change occurred. Together as a band, the Sonics amped up their sound to a cruder, rougher style, in an almost subconscious attempt to distil the furious energy that beat at the heart of the rock’n’roll and R&B they so enjoyed.
Headquartered at teen hotspot The Red Carpet in the Tacoma suburb of Lakewood, where the Sonics regularly jammed the joint, it wasn’t long before Buck Ormsby of the Wailers grabbed the quintet for the Wailers’ own Etiquette label. A first attempt to harness their fury in the recording studio left the group non-plussed, but when ‘The Witch’ was released in November 1964, it quickly began to get heavy airplay, capturing the imagination of teens around Puget Sound and beyond.No-one had heard rock quite that visceral on the radio in recent memory.
The follow-up, ‘Psycho’, was recorded in the spring at Kearney Barton’s famed Seattle facility, and was another Roslie-penned hamburger-throated opus. It became as big a hit with audiences and radio around the Northwest as ‘The Witch’, and both tunes rocked the airwaves well into the summer of 1965. The Sonics’ fiery template was firmly established by these first two singles, along with the fabulous sequels ‘Boss Hoss’ and ‘Shot Down’, and the entire contents of the album “Here Are The Sonics” - surely one of the most uncompromising debuts in rock history.
Rather than pad out the record with the expected hits of the day, the band filled the grooves with choice interpretations of rock’n’roll and R&B classics, all laden with their patented trademarks – searing, abrasive guitar tones, guttural vocals and pounding, unrelenting drums. And Roslie displayed a very real knack for writing – and screaming - ear-catching originals such as the classic ‘Strychnine’.
Throughout most of 1965, the Sonics wreaked havoc on audiences the length and breadth of the Northwest and beyond, and simultaneously upped the ante of the entire region’s music scene. Most remarkably, the bands dynamism even effected a change upon their mentors the Wailers, whose post-Sonics recordings very clearly bore signs of their former apprentices’ influence.
October of 1965 saw the release of a fourth Etiquette single, perhaps the most ferocious to date: ‘Cinderella’/ ‘Louie Louie’ was a double-whammy of epic proportions. It was accompanied by the Sonics’ second album, “Boom”, recorded at the lo-fi Wiley/Griffith studio in Tacoma but nevertheless continuing in the same full-blooded vein as previous releases.Word had seeped out to other parts of the country about this wild young combo, and Sonics releases were getting a lot of interest from radio stations in markets as far away as Pittsburgh and Florida. This led the group to question Etiquette’s efficiency, and miscommunication between band and label ultimately meant that the Sonics decided to part ways with Ormsby in the spring of 1966.
Waiting in the wings was Jerry Dennon, whose well-distributed Jerden imprint had most of the Northwest’s talent under contract. Dennon romanced the band with the possibility of national success.At first, the Sonics’ Jerden singles acted as a natural progression from their no-holds-barred Etiquette sides, and the initial single, ‘You’ve Got Your Head On Backwards’, a Brit-styled pounder sung by Lind, was a strong seller in the autumn of 1966. At Dennon’s behest, the group traveled to Gold Star in Los Angeles for the sessions that would become their third and final album, “Introducing.”
In retrospect, the sides the group cut there are certainly far better than is generally acknowledged, and including screamers such as ‘High Time’ and ‘Like No Other Man’. But the Sonics never really recaptured in Hollywood the pure unadulterated magic that their Etiquette sessions had in abundance, something reflected by the diminishing sales of their later Jerden releases.From there on, it seemed all downhill. The combo continued for another year, making their first and only trip back east, but the military was at the door, and once they had finished with their education, various band members began to drop out in 1967 or, like Roslie, just quit unexpectedly.
The single ‘Lost Love’ was their last rocking effort but in truth, there didn’t seem to be a place for Sonics-style dementia in the face of flower power. In a cruel twist of fate, a faceless Holiday Inn lounge act inherited the band’s good name, and watered it down well into the next decade.However, the legend of Tacoma’s once-raging rock machine began to gather moss after collectors outside the Northwest happened across the amazing Etiquette records, and began theorising in magazines such as Creem in the mid-1970s as to what kind of band could have created such a noise.
Shortly afterwards, a renewed energy resurfaced in rock’n’roll that correlated exactly with the emotions that the Sonics had espoused a decade before: punk rock. The resourceful Ormsby had hung onto the band’s vintage masters, and began to reissue them in an attempt to keep the band’s memory alive. He eventually struck a deal with Big Beat for a comprehensive anthology of the Sonics’ Etiquette material, which was released in 1993 as “Psycho-Sonic”
.Fast forward to the late 2000s. “Psycho-Sonic”, now remastered after the discovery of ear-blasting first-generation tapes, is one of the best-selling items in the entire Ace Records catalogue, in the process turning a couple of generations onto the band’s savage sound. The best of the Sonics’ Jerden sides, including unissued material, is included on the exhaustive Big Beat series “Northwest Battle Of The Bands”. And in an unprecedented and exciting turn of events, the Sonics have recently reformed around the core of Jerry, Larry and Rob to dish out some long-overdue authentic Sonics rock’n’roll, delighting fans around the world in the process.
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DAY 50.
Bob Dylan....... Bringing It All Back Home (1965)
When Bob Dylan entered Columbia Records' Studio A in mid-January 1965 and blew out an 11-song LP in three days, he didn't merely go electric, invent folk rock and transition from an acoustic troubadour to a boundary-pushing rock & roller. He conjured performances that would completely reimagine how pop music communicated – not just what it could say, but how it could say it. "Some people say that I am a poet," he wrote coyly in the prose-poem notes on the back cover. Now, he was ready to test the limits of what that meant, rewiring himself for a singularly revolutionary moment. The fallout-shelter sign in the cover shot was on point: Bringing It All Back Home was the cultural equivalent of a nuclear bomb.
"The thing about Bringing It All Back Home was his words," says David Crosby. "That's what Bob stunned the world with. Up until then we had 'oooh, baby' and 'I love you, baby.' Bob changed the map. He gave us really, really good words.
"As Dylan put it in his memoir, Chronicles, "What I did to break away, was to take simple folk changes and put new imagery and attitude to them, use catchphrases and metaphor combined with a new set of ordinances that evolved into something different that had not been heard before."
A couple of bold statements there, lets see how it shapes up?
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DAY 50.
Bob Dylan....... Bringing It All Back Home (1965)
Dylan, always value for money imho, and no change here.
From the opening bars of "Subterranean Homesick Blues" on what is commonly known as the electric side, to the beautiful "It's All Over Now Baby Blue" on the acoustic side, 47:12 of absolute pleasure.
F*** the "Newport Folk Festival" purists, this game changing album will be going into my collection.
On the evening of July 25, 1965, Bob Dylan took the stage at the Newport Folk Festival in black jeans, black boots, and a black leather jacket, carrying a Fender Stratocaster in place of his familiar acoustic guitar. The crowd shifted restlessly as he tested his tuning and was joined by a quintet of backing musicians. Then the band crashed into a raw Chicago boogie and, straining to be heard over the loudest music ever to hit Newport, he snarled his opening line: “I ain’t gonna work on Maggie’s farm no more!”What happened next is obscured by a maelstrom of conflicting impressions: The New York Times reported that Dylan “was roundly booed by folk-song purists, who considered this innovation the worst sort of heresy.” In some stories Pete Seeger, the gentle giant of the folk scene, tried to cut the sound cables with an axe. Some people were dancing, some were crying, many were dismayed and angry, many were cheering, many were overwhelmed by the ferocious shock of the music or astounded by the negative reactions.
As if challenging the doubters, Dylan roared into “Like a Rolling Stone,” his new radio hit, each chorus confronting them with the question: “How does it feel?” The audience roared back its mixed feelings, and after only three songs he left the stage. The crowd was screaming louder than ever—some with anger at Dylan’s betrayal, thousands more because they had come to see their idol and he had barely performed. Peter Yarrow, of Peter, Paul, and Mary, tried to quiet them, but it was impossible. Finally, Dylan reappeared with a borrowed acoustic guitar and bid Newport a stark farewell: “It’s All Over Now, Baby Blue….”Dylan at Newport is remembered as a pioneering artist defying the rules and damn the consequences. Supporters of new musical trends ever since—punk, rap, hip-hop, electronica—have compared their critics to the dull folkies who didn’t understand the times were a-changing, and a complex choice by a complex artist in a complex time became a parable: the prophet of the new era going his own way despite the jeering rejection of his old fans. He challenged the establishment: “Something is happening here, and you don’t know what it is, do you, Mr. Jones?” He defined his own transformation: “I was so much older then, I’m younger than that now.” He drew a line between himself and those who tried to claim him: “I try my best to be just like I am, but everybody wants me to be just like them.” And he warned those wary of following new paths: “He not busy being born is busy dying.”
A little bit about "SHB" and Dylan around about that time,
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.////////
Made a pigs ear of this one.
please see next post
Sorry.
Last edited by arabchanter (29/9/2017 10:59 am)
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DAY 51.
Otis Redding.......Otis Blue: Otis Redding Sings Soul (1965)
The world of music has thrown up it's fair share of scoundrels, cheats, and downright swine, and often seen them prosper in a degree out of proportion to their worth, making the tragedy of Otis Redding's short life especially sharp. Less than three years after this breakthrough record, on December 10,1967, his plane crashed into Lake Monona, Wisconsin. (aged 26)
As the son of a minister, gospel was in his blood, yet Otis Blue encompasses soul, R&B, and pop. Recorded at the legendary Stax Studio in Memphis, Otis Blue featured Booker T. & The MG's, a horn section featuring members of The Mar-Keys and The Memphis Horns and the up-and-coming soon-to-be legend Isaac Hayes on piano.
The whistling at the end of "(Sitting On) The Dock of the Bay" was actually something of a placeholder. Redding whistled through it because they were still working on recording the final lyrics. Sadly, he died before they could get to it. The whistling was then left in and the song became the first posthumous No. 1 hit in America.
Never really listened to Otis Redding much, apart from the obvious.
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Zimmerman could write, but couldn't sing.
Otis Redding could do both, but unfortunately didn't live long enough for us to view any sort of expansive back catalogue.
However, I can't think about 'Dock of the Bay' without picturing Reeves and Mortimer.....
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DAY 51.
Otis Redding.......Otis Blue: Otis Redding Sings Soul (1965)
A really good listen, such a shame he was taken away so early, who knows how far he could have went.
The talent and that strong soulful voice were undeniably there plus he seemed to have a good business brain.
Anyway it was an enjoyable experience, but as I can't afford to buy all the albums I like in this book I have to draw the line somewhere, so this album won't be going into my collection.
To be honest I really didn't enjoy "Satisfaction" at all, I much prefer the Stones singing it, but my favourite version is the one below by Devo.
Redding was born on September 9, 1941 in Dawson, Georgia. He was the fourth of six children, and the first son, of Otis Redding, Sr., and Fannie Mae Redding. His father was a sharecropper and later worked at Robins Air Force Base, near Macon, Georgia, and also occasionally preached at local churches. When Redding was three, the family moved to Tindall Heights, a predominantly African-American public housing project in Macon. As a young child, Redding sang in the Vineville Baptist Church choir and learned guitar and piano. Every Sunday, he earned $6 by performing gospel songs for Macon radio station WIBB.
At age 15, Redding left school to help financially support his family. His father had contracted tuberculosis and was often hospitalized, leaving his mother as the family’s primary income earner.
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DAY 52
Last edited by arabchanter (30/9/2017 10:17 am)
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DAY 52.
The Beach Boys.........The Beach Boys Today! (1965)
Despite containing what is easily the worst track in this entire book, this is the perfect Beach Boys LP, split evenly between carefree boy meets girl pop and dramatic ballads inspired by Phil Spector's girl groups.
Even arguing that it is better than "Pet Sounds" is a cinch, with a bit of practice.......there is none of the self pity that weighs heavily on the latter.
Even though it was recorded shortly after Brian Wilson had broken down while on tour, exhausted by his relentless schedule, Today opens with one of the most exuberant songs the band ever recorded, After a muted first couple of verses of "Do You Wanna Dance" Brian turns the volume up for the first chorus and the sixties starts swinging.
"the worst track in the entire book" well I've listened to some honking tracks already in this book, so it must really awful, be interesting to find out which one it is (opinion and all that)
arabchanter wrote:
DAY 50.
Bob Dylan....... Bringing It All Back Home (1965)
Dylan, always value for money imho, and no change here.
From the opening bars of "Subterranean Homesick Blues" on what is commonly known as the electric side, to the beautiful "It's All Over Now Baby Blue" on the acoustic side, 47:12 of absolute pleasure.
F*** the "Newport Folk Festival" purists, this game changing album will be going into my collection.
[/list]
Just back from hols so playing catch up (backwards )
Have to say that I'd struggle to comprehend any collection that didnt have this album in it.
A real classic
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Couldn't agree more, with you.
Good to have you back on board, hope you had a good holiday.
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DAY 52.
The Beach Boys.........The Beach Boys Today! (1965)
This album was alright imho, but not being an avid Beach Boys fan couldn't tell if this was a change in style or not, although not an avid fan I still liked the Beach Boys and respect the work they produced but I never really got into them.
So if there is any Beach Boys aficionados out there, I would be interested in finding out if this is indeed better than "Pet Sounds " and if there was a track on the album that could be considered the worst in the book?
Imho there wasn't, as I have just got to think back to a certain Mr Thelonious Monk to get the shivers.
The Beach Boys are really good at what they do, and Brian Wilson is such a talented man, but what a tortured soul.
Here's a little bit about him
Brian Wilson found his musical muse very early in childhood. Murry, his father, who had tried his own hand at song writing with little success, noticed that Brian could hum entire tunes from memory even before he could walk. Brian reportedly wrote his first song at age five. Although born deaf in his right ear, Brian taught himself to play the piano by watching his father play, observing the patterns and chord progressions. As a child, he could also play songs from memory after hearing them only once, this discovered by a music teacher who had given young Brian accordion lessons. Home life for Brian and his brothers was difficult, especially with their father, as the boys suffered physical and emotional abuse. Brian, in adolescence, used his music as an escape, playing the piano at times to drown out the bickering and fighting at home. Although he played some sports in high school, he withdrew into music, also used it to avoid social situations. But with music, Brian’s brain was wired for sound, “thinking in three part harmony,” as he once put it. As a boy, he was inspired the first time he heard the Four Freshmen singing on the radio. Their harmony “struck a chord” with Brian which he sought to emulate.
Brian Wilson’s songwriting and studio production for the Beach Boys soon became phenomenal. During the six years from 1962-68, he produced 14 albums and wrote over 120 songs. In so doing he kept the Beach Boys in keen competition with the recording giants of that day, such as Phil Spector and the Beatles. In all, Wilson produced about half of the Beach Boys’ single hits, three of which were No. 1 best sellers. He also wrote music with Jan Berry of “Jan & Dean” fame, and also sang background and sometimes lead vocals on Jan & Dean’s songs. In fact, the big No. 1 Jan & Dean hit of late July 1963 — “Surf City” — was originally Brian’s idea, and he co-wrote the song with Jan Berry. And at Jan’s invitation, Brian also sang lead vocals with him on the song — a development which did not please Brian’s father or Capitol records at the time, as Jan & Dean were viewed as the competition, and Brian, working for another label. But Brian and Jan were just friends in music and they worked well together.
Wilson was a genius at studio production. Explained Time magazine writer Richard Corliss: “Brian was a triple whiz: at pop composition, vocal arrangement and record production. He elevated harmony to sophisticated choral work. …[H]e made his magic on a primitive eight-track recorder. …[He] devoted just one track to the band and the other seven to vocals; …he doubled each vocal part to thicken the stew of sound. Brian, the self-taught studio maven, was his own George Martin [famous Beatles producer] — a wizard at weaving eccentric instruments and his pal’s voices into a majestic aural tapestry.” Brian Wilson, however, had his demons, which emerged at a most untimely juncture, precisely during the Beach Boys’ best years. By the mid-1960s he struggled with alcohol and drugs alongside the pressure of turning out the Beach Boys’ music. Early in 1965, he became involved with drugs and also had associated bouts of depression. Still he turned out the hits, some of which were written during, or in the aftermath of, drug experiences. In 1988, the Rock ‘n Roll Hall of Fame called Wilson “one of the few undis- puted geniuses” in pop music. By 1968 he became addicted to cocaine. Years went by with Wilson’s condition undiagnosed, as even friends passed it off as merely “Brian’s odd behavior.” Wilson subsequently went through a period of about 20 years of ups and down with his drug problems, rehabilitations, and periodic lapses. In 1988, after the Beach Boys were inducted into the Rock ‘n Roll Hall of Fame, he began a fuller recovery and also a solo recording career which he has continued though the 2000s. At the Beach Boys’ induction into the Rock ‘n Roll Hall of Fame in 1988, Brian was singled out in the induction notice as “one of the few undisputed geniuses in popular music.” Wilson, added the Hall of Fame notice, “possessed an uncanny gift for harmonic invention and complex vocal and instrumental arrangements.”
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The shit track on the album is the last one, spoken word stuff. An excerpt from an interview.
But like you say, ac, there have been worse on previous albums.
Not a Beach Boys fan either.
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PatReilly wrote:
The shit track on the album is the last one, spoken word stuff. An excerpt from an interview.
But like you say, ac, there have been worse on previous albums.
Not a Beach Boys fan either.
Didn't really consider that as a track Pat, but you're right it was the worst, but still a lot worse in the book imho.
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DAY 53.
John Coltrane........A Love Supreme (1965)
"A Love Supreme" pulls of the rare trick of being utterly compromising yet completely accessible, as he speaks in tongues on tenor and soprano sax, his now legendary fab four rumbled beneath him, as a journey through awakening, understanding, and spiritual enlightenment, it's damn near perfect.
I hoped I'd seen the back of this lot, even writing that bit above was pissing me off,
"talking in tongues on tenor and soprano sax," f'kn really.
Four tracks just under 33 minutes this isn't going work out well, I'd bargain.
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DAY 53.
John Coltrane........A Love Supreme (1965)
Well here's a shocker, I actually quite hated this album,.
I've come to a conclusion about these charlatans, there seems to be a common denominator here, nearly all, if not all were junkies or dipsos.
now the question is did the jazz drive them to the drink and drugs or did the drink and drugs drive them to jazz?
I'm no expert but I've only listened to a few of these jazz albums, and I've certainly needed a drink before, during and most definately after listening to some of that pish.
For me, a lot of them must have been pished or smacked up out of their boxes, to make that racket.
Anyway, I only lasted about 5 minutes then randomly listened to bits of the rest, bloody awful, this'll be coming nowhere near my house.
Some facts about Coltrane, and a weird bit of trivia at the end.
Coltrane was born in Hamlet, North Carolina during the height of lynching and segregation. At a young age, Coltrane’s father got him into music by introducing him Lester Young and Count Bassie and teaching him how to play a variety of instruments. At 13, Coltrane focused on perfecting his ability on the saxophone and he never stopped.
After moving to Philadelphia in 1943, Coltrane joined the Navy. While stationed in Hawaii, he made his album as a member of the Navy band. This nameless album predates his first studio record Coltrane (1957) by a decade. According to Allmusic.com, “the thick unified sound of Coltrane (tenor sax), Splawn (trumpet), and Shihab (baritone sax) presents a formidable presence as they blow the minor-chord blues chorus together before dissolving into respective solos.” The album was his first record as a band leader.
Coltrane was a member of many great jazz bands during the 1940s and 50s. Coltrane spent time in Eddie “Cleanhead” Vinson’s band, Jimmy Heath’s band, and working with Dizzy Gillespie. This time was also the beginning of his relationships with musicians Miles Davis and Duke Ellington.
In the early years of Coltrane’s career, he was infamous for his drug abuse and alcoholism. In 1954, Ellington heard about the talent of Coltrane and wanted the young saxophonist to temporarily replace Johnny Hodges in his band. However, Coltrane’s misuse of drugs led to his termination from Ellington’s orchestra. Even though this occurred, the two recorded an album released Sept. 26, 1962 entitled Duke Ellington and John Coltrane that puts to bed the past issues the two may have had.
Coltrane joined the Miles Davis Quintet one year after being fired from Duke Ellington’s Orchestra. Davis was impressed by the raw talent and skill Coltrane had as a player so he brought Coltrane into the fold. Their collaboration produced some of the greatest jazz records in history, including The New Miles Davis Quintet (1955), ‘Round About Midnight (1957) and Kind of Blue (1959). Even though Coltrane was sober for the majority of the time that he played alongside Davis, he just could not shake his heroin addiction. So the two parted ways.
“Coltrane was signed as a solo artist on Prestige, but his next stop was an apprenticeship of sorts with pianist and composer Thelonious Monk. With Monk’s guidance, Coltrane extended his solos and explored multiphonics, ” writes John Diliberto for NPR. Coltrane realized that starting his own band would mean that he could finally take control of his career. In the 1960s, his career took off when he created his quartet that included pianist McCoy Tyner, bassist Jimmy Garrison and drummer Elvin Jones.
Coltrane created an impressive catalog in a short period of time. His discography includes 45 studio albums, 23 compilations albums, and 19 singles. Some his greatest work includes Giant Steps (1960), My Favorite Things (1961), Impressions (1963) and Live at Birdland (1964). However, his most acclaimed and well-received record was 1965’s, A Love Supreme.Like many other talented jazz musicians in the period, Coltrane found it difficult to come up, get recognized and be financially successful. Many took to alcohol and drugs. “John Coltrane was a major innovator of avant-garde jazz in the 1960s and yet he passed away at 41 years of age in 1967 from hepatitis B and hepatocellular carcinoma,” says Dr. Paul Adams for the U.S. National Library of Medicine National Institutes of Health. “For some jazz musicians, the images of a smoke-filled bar became part of their classic sound (eg, Ben Webster, Coleman Hawkins, Lester Young, Billie Holiday, Dexter Gordon) but liver disease eventually caught up with all of them.”
“In the mid-60s, during his experiments with LSD, Coltrane played a show at the Jazz Workshop in San Francisco, where in the audience were the eventual founders of the Church of Saint John Will-I-Am Coltrane: Franzo King and his girlfriend Marina,” says writer Jules Suzdaltsev for Vice.com. The church which has roots to the African Orthodox Church uses the jazz great’s music in many of their services and prayer ceremonies. Amazingly, Coltrane was at first considered a god before being reduced to saint status. The founders of the church still operates in the Bay Area today, and Coltrane has been placed on the official list of saints.
A Saint
I make this fella right,
'An exercise in musical monotony': John Coltrane's A Love Supreme reviewed - archive, 1965
9 August 1965: The Guardian’s jazz critic is not impressed with the saxophonist’s latest release
There is natural limit to the intensity with which a musician may convey an idea and John Coltrane seems to have overstepped it. He has conceived the idea of devotional modern jazz which on its own terms is as intense form as there is, but his execution of the idea is earnest to the point of being harrowing. After wading through his tortuous confessional on the sleeve and suffering repetitive incantation of the title words during the first track of A Love Supreme one is presented with an exercise in musical monotony.
There are good ideas to be heard floating freely, but it is the poor ones that are pursued to the bitter end and beyond. On My Favourite Things in which the title number runs for about three times as long as it need, there are patches of relief especially on Ev’ry time We Say Goodbye and But Not for Me. Combined with the better parts of A Love Supreme, this might have made one good album. As it is, Coltrane exhausts his material and his listeners.
Hat well and truly doffed, Sir
Last edited by arabchanter (02/10/2017 6:49 am)
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DAY 54.
B.B. King.......................Live At The Regal (1965)
It couldn't have been easy to learn how to play the electric guitar growing up in a town with no electricity, but by the time B.B. King reached Chicago via Indianola, or Mississippi, to play the Regal Theatre he had spent 39 years trying.
Taking the stage that night with more than 20 charted singles under his wide belt, a notorious Gibson guitar named Lucille strapped on his back, and an army of women dangling from the balconies, one might say he had pulled it off.
A wee bit of triv,
Lucille
Back in the '50s, BB was performing in Twist, Arkansas when a fire broke out, caused by two guys brawling. BB evacuated the building instantly, but still jumped back to save his guitar. He later learned that the guys fought over a girl named Lucille. As a reminder to himself to never ever fight over women, he named the guitar after that gal - Lucille."Lucille got her name in a nothing town by the name of Twist, Arkansas. We were playing some club, and some guys were fightin' and they knocked over a kerosene barrel and burned the place down. I almost got killed going back in to save my guitar, and when I found out the fight was over a gal named Lucille, I named my guitar that to tell me to keep her close and treat her right," BB said.
Last edited by arabchanter (03/6/2018 6:38 pm)
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DAY 54.
B.B. King.......................Live At The Regal (1965)
They say he's the "King of the Blues" and who am I to argue?
The man is certainly One of the best blues guitarists I've ever heard, and his voice just seemlessly melds with Lucille in perfect harmony imho.
I enjoyed all the tracks, but especially side 1.
This one will be getting added to my collection, and I going to file it under "almost bladdered," you know when you've had a good skinful, but no' quite satisfied, and your other half and the bairns have all gone to bed,
just sit back, kick off your shoes, pour yourself a nice drop of malt (or whatever your poison is) and slap this album on and chill.
Tbh, I'm looking forward to it already.
Here's a wee bit about B.B.
As a child, B.B. was forbidden by his mother to sing the blues, which she called the Devil’s music, even though her cousin was renown bluesman, Bukka White. King would eventually take some of his most characteristic styles from White, including his dress and his trademark string bends
If you want to be a good blues singer,” Bukka told B.B., “people are going to be down on you, so dress like you’re going to the bank to borrow money.” That’s exactly what the King of the Blues has done for the rest of his life.
He was also deeply influenced by the use of his cousin’s slide guitar technique — using a bottleneck piece of steel, slide up and down on the strings. B.B. discovered he wasn’t very good at the side, but he could bend the strings to make a similar sound, so that’s what he did. Today, his string bends are some of the most famous and instantly identifiable guitar riffs in the world.
Over 30 years after he crashed at his cousin’s Memphis house to pursue music, the two shared the stage for a rousing setlist at the 1973 New Orleans Jazz and Heritage Festival, (Jazzfest). While White’s guitar prowess may have been one of the biggest keys to King’s early success, another crooning individuals vocals are closest to B.B.’s heart…
Although his original guitar style is influenced by Blind Lemon Jefferson, Bukka White and others, B.B. King’s favorite singer is Frank Sinatra. “I’m a Sinatra nut. No one sings a ballad with more tenderness,” wrote BB in his autobiography. I” practically put that In the Wee Small Hours album under my pillow every night when I went to sleep.”
B.B.’s career was filled with hits, but his first hit song, a cover of Lowell Fulson’s “Three O’Clock Blues” was recorded in a Memphis YMCA. B.B. eventually had 74 songs on the Billboard R&B charts between 1951 and 1985, but only two went to #1 – “Three O’Clock Blues” and “You Don’t Know Me”.
B.B.’s first radio appearance was on the Sonny Boy Williamson show on KWEM in West Memphis, Arkansas in 1949. Many, many, many bluesmen and area musicians describe Sonny Boy Williamson’s show as being hugely influential to them. In fact, most of the older delta bluesman like Muddy Waters and James Cotton discussed Williamson’s King Biscuit Time as being hugely influential on their musical development.Today, the King Biscuit Blues Festival brings thousands of visitors to Helena to experience the blues in a huge, historic festival — across the street from the King Biscuit Time studio, which decades later is still the longest continually-running radio show in the country!King’s stint on Biscuit actually lead to an influential radio milestone for BB that would set his career in motion… and give him his famous name.The first radio show BB hosted was on WDIA in Memphis, Tennessee and was called the Sepia Swing Club. It was here he got the name Beale Street Blues Boy, which got shortened to Blues Boy and finally to B.B. after first being billed as “The Pepticon Boy” — a name he earned because he was able to come up with a jingle for Pepticon on-the-spot.Nearly fifty years later, In 2007’s “B.B. King Live” DVD, he plays at his Memphis Beale Street blues club (just blocks away from the location of his first radio show,) and again sings the jingle that gained him his first opportunities.
Funny enough, BB King’s two most popular albums Live at the Regal from 1965, followed by Live in Cook County Jail from 1971, were recorded less than 15 miles from each other in Chicago. Regal, which was recoded at the Regal Theater, was permanently preserved at the Library of Congress. The album, that interestingly contained no BB originals, featured covers from Memphis Slim and John Lee Hooker. Playing live at the jail became something of a tradition for BB…
King’s message of universal hope, love, peace and joy has touched all! He’s famously played in several prisons over his career, including in 1992 when he played at a Florida correctional facility where one of his daughters was incarcerated, and his landmark 1971 Live From Cook County Jail, which spent three weeks at the Billboard R&B chart, and was ranked one of Rolling Stone’s most influential albums of all time!
Although BB’s music has been used in commercials for Wendy’s and McDonald’s, he has been a vegetarian for years.
King was drafted in the US Army in 1945, but was discharged after basic training because his skill as a tractor driver made him essential to the war effort as a civilian. Almost exactly one year later, that same tractor driving skill is what would prompt King to leave the farm and pursue music professionally…
King fled the farm he was working on because as he was putting his boss’ tractor away for the night, it bucked forward and knocked the smokestack off of the tractor. Fearing reprisal, he took off for Memphis that night. In true B.B. King style, he later went back and paid for the smokestack damage.
In 1958, King’s tour bus was destroyed after colliding with a butane truck in Texas. The company insuring the bus was suspended two days prior, leaving King financially responsible — a million-dollar-plus debt that took him years to years to pay off
.When B.B. married his second wife, Sue Hall in 1958, Reverend C.L. Franklin, Aretha Franklin’s father, presided. Interestingly enough, some of Chess Records’ earliest recordings were of C.L. Franklin preaching.
He once worked every day of the yearIn 1956, King worked every day of the year, performing 342 one-night stands and three recording sessions. In fact, King has been one of the most relentless touring acts on the road! In a career spanning more than 60 years, King has logged over 15,000 performances.
B.B. became a licensed pilot in 1963 and often flew himself to gigs until the age of 70. He stopped flying at the request of his family and close associates after a reportedly dangerously close call.
The B.B. King Museum And Delta Interpretive Centre opened in his hometown of Indianola, Mississippi in 2008. The museum, somewhat by happenstance, incorporate an old cotton gin that B.B. had worked at as a child! It’s beautiful exhibitions on his life honor King as an internationally renowned and influential musician, celebrates Delta blues music heritage and the local culture, and encourages and inspires young artists and musicians.
King has won 15 Grammy awards, a Grammy Lifetime Achievement Award, and a Grammy Hall of Fame Award (for “The Thrill Is Gone”).
King's 10,000th show came on April 17, 2006, at his namesake nightclub in New York. He performed despite having buried his son, who died of cancer, the day before.
He was baffled once when he arrived at the Filmore in San Francisco and saw it filled with white kids
King would remain a revered figure for the rest of his life, and one keenly aware of his cultural responsibilities. To keep the blues flame burning for subsequent generations, he donated his entire music collection of more than 20,000 records – including 7,000 rare blues 78s – to Mississippi University’s Center for the Study of Southern Culture. And throughout his career, King regularly performed for prison audiences, while ensuring his music eschewed the blues’ more profane celebrations of sexuality, drugs and violence in favour of an aspirational attitude focused on emotion expressed with elegance.
King died peacefully in his sleep at 9:40 p.m, on Thursday May 14, 2015 at his Clark County home in Las Vegas.
Last edited by arabchanter (03/6/2018 6:41 pm)
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Can you no' just tear the jazz pages out the book, arabchanter?
And I see you are buying some of these albums after listening: is this on vinyl, and if so, I salute your courage, your strength, your indefatigability.
Enjoyed the wee listen to BB King, know a lot of that stuff anyway. The true King of Blues.
On another note, I also read the blurbs you are writing on each artist, I know it's mostly copy and paste, but I wouldn't see it otherwise: some interesting information.