Showing posts with label so many records. Show all posts
Showing posts with label so many records. Show all posts

Tuesday, December 21, 2010

Small Town Talk /Bobby Charles

Bobby Charles

Listen: Small Town Talk / Bobby Charles

When Bobby Charles was invited by The Band to participate in their final concert and accompanying documentary, THE LAST WALTZ, seems the group and Rick Danko in particular, had a dream come true. For years regarded an important member of New Orleans’ swamp / cajun music fraternity, Bobby Charles soon after headed to their home base in Woodstock and recorded his sole album for Bearsville.
With John Simon and Rick Danko as his co-producers, the result is to this day, a perfect document of southern Louisiana-influenced rhythm and blues and magnified The Band’s quality as players better than just about anything else they recorded, in my opinion.
Even the sound those guys succeeded to document in of all places, upstate New York, rivals the most revered French Quarter studios. ‘Small Town Talk’, the 7″, is a completely different version to the album, with Dr. John, Levon Helm, Rick Danko and John Simon essentially his make shift band. The record got a bunch of evening plays on BBC programs back then. I recall John Peel championing the single which indeed now, is a cherished possession.
Read more at www.somanyrecordssolittletime.com

Monday, November 29, 2010

Lonesome Town

Original audio source (RickyNelsonLonesomeTown.mp3)

http://www.somanyrecordssolittletime.com/records/RickyNelsonLonesomeTown.mp3

Ricky Nelson

Listen: Lonesome Town / Ricky Nelson

Somewhere during their DATE WITH ELVIS / STAY SICK period, The Cramps were doing ‘Lonesome Town’ live. It was around then that I’d joined Island Records and rang Lux and Ivy to update them with my new contact info.

Ivy and I got into a long conversation about all kinds of trivia, which was not uncommon. She and Lux were always the most interesting and intriguing people. We would sometimes stay on the phone for hours.

As we were winding it down, I asked would they like any records from the label.

“What do you have?”

“There’s Robert Palmer, U2, Anthrax, Grace Jones, Julian Cope……”

“Hmmm. I’ve never heard of any of those people. Do you have any Ricky Nelson records?”

Read more at www.somanyrecordssolittletime.com
 

Monday, November 15, 2010

SMRSLT: DR. FEELGOOD

Original audio source (DrFeelgoodAnotherMan.mp3)

http://www.somanyrecordssolittletime.com/?p=8570

SO MANY RECORDS, SO LITTLE TIME

THIS BLOG'S ABOUT MY FAVORITE 7" SINGLES. ALL KINDS, ALL GENRES. AND ANYTHING ELSE: INFO, STORIES, CHARTS, CLIPPINGS, ETC. EVERY SONG IS CONVERTED FROM MY VINYL COLLECTION TO MP3. AND NOT ONE THAT I WOULDN'T RECOMMEND YOU SEEKING OUT. ANY COPYRIGHT HOLDERS WHO DON'T WANT THEIR MUSIC HEARD HERE – JUST LET ME KNOW, AND DOWN IT WILL COME. CLICK ON ANY PHOTO TO ENLARGE.

DR. FEELGOOD

Listen: Another Man / Dr. Feelgood

There’s a load of theories about where punk started. I suppose you can slice and dice it back to anywhere you want, Screamin’ Jay Hawkins or The Pretty Things, or endless garage bands from the mid 60’s. Most self appointed, gatekeeping journalists will flatter each other with either The Stooges or The New York Dolls. My vote goes to Suicide in the US and the Canvey Island bands in the UK, of which Dr. Feelgood were the first superstars.

Their live show stoked Eddie & The Hot Rods and together they lit up London fast and raw. It was indeed the speed of sound and the sound of speed all at once. New bands that clutched to the past and stood in their way were mowed down flat. Hustler and Nutz for example. It was a fun time for house cleaning. Labels like Chrysalis had their rosters fossilized overnight. Seemed like the world turned from black and white to color. Every single released was a new high.

Dr. Feelgood: Lee Brilleaux had a vocal style and stage presense not unlike Roger Chapman, and Wilko Johnson religiously perfected Mick Green’s jagged guitar style into his own. Their second album, MALPRACTICE, is a clean, articulate blueprint of the band’s attack and technique. But when Dr. Feelggod unleashed live, it was unstoppable.

Seeing them between late ‘75 through mid ‘77 really was life changing. If you did, you’ll know how hearing their records now will still sound different to us, as opposed to those who weren’t as lucky. Over three decades later, that hasn’t changed.

Not one for European pressings, I tell you honestly, my collection has less than a hundred. I make exception for singles like this, when not one but two 7″ worthy songs are issued on a 45. Both ‘Going Back Home’ and ‘Another Man’ (like ‘I Can Tell’, all from MALPRACTICE) were never released as singles in the UK or US. This Dutch pressing being the only exception to my knowledge. In fact, ‘I Can Tell’ has never come out on 7″ anywhere. How did the otherwise faultless Andrew Lauder mess this one up?

Wait. Come to think of it, there were a few numbers from Brinsley Schwarz NERVOUS ON THE ROAD that deserved single status. Andrew Lauder you have some answering to do.

Being an archivist and collector can also mean you’re a pack-rat, depending upon whom you listen to. Ask Corinne for instance and she’ll pick door number three.

Fine, I’m all of them and glad of it, having saved pretty much everything I’ve ever owned, starting with a rock that flew into my hand off my tricycle’s front wheel at about five years old. That’s how extreme, and far back, I can claim the obsession. Good thing, because the records began at age seven. Damn, if only I started at birth.

In the case of this flyer, saving every last item allowed me to pinpoint the exact date and hour when a whole new musical world was revealed behind that invisible curtain. There had been a few jolting revelations before and several after, but that moment when rock as it had been known and loved immediately became the past occured on February 29, 1976. Dr. Feelgood were a blistering no holds barred introduction to pub and punk. Gone was the polish and self indulgence, the bloat and tired outfits. What the music world changed into we all know.

It was a fantastic time to be young and insatiable. And here’s the flyer to stake that very date in my life. Corinne and I, with our dearest friend Karen Kasiner, braved a winter storm to see Dr. Feelgood. I wouldn’t trade that night for anything.

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Posted via email from ttexed's posterous

Sunday, May 24, 2009

SO MANY RECORDS, SO LITTLE TIME: Peter Green

SO MANY RECORDS, SO LITTLE TIME: Peter Green


Despite having a massive instrumental hit with Fleetwood Mac ('Albatross'), repeating the process for Reprise as a solo artist wasn't so automatic. In fact, this was a total non-starter. Released a year after his disappointing post Mac album, THE END OF THE GAME, it seems all his fans lost interest, all of the press and media lost interest and quite frankly, so too did his label.

Now the subtle grower is a damn hard single to find. Having patiently riden out his has-been phase, Peter Green graduated nicely to legend - making this record sound just a little more vital.

(LISTEN ON ORIGINAL BLOG LINK)

posted by so many records, so little time at 12:01 am
labels: FLEETWOOD MAC, PETER GREEN, REPRISE

Saturday, May 2, 2009

SO MANY RECORDS, SO LITTLE TIME: Spirit

SO MANY RECORDS, SO LITTLE TIME: Spirit

(From SO MANY RECORDS, SO LITTLE TIME Blog)
SATURDAY, MAY 2, 2009
Spirit






(Go to the original blog to hear the songs)

Luckily, despite the revolution in stereophonic sound that was going hand in hand with the album format of 1968, most singles were still issued in mono. Such was the case for Spirit's first release, on both the promo (listen above) and stock copies. 'Mechanical World' epitomized the dark side of the LSD generation, and defined late night radio. I always had fantasies of this and many tracks by The Doors being the soundtrack to driving through a pitch dark desert in the wee hours. God knows why - I'd never even been to a desert. There wasn't one near Syracuse although I certainly felt like I was growing up somewhere equally deserted, hence the possible connection in my brain.

I loved Spirit from the get go. They didn't sound English which was a strict requirement, but thankfully they didn't sound Americana either. Plus they looked good. LA bands tended to.

Somehow rather quickly, Spirit had a hit with their second 45, 'I Got A Line On You'. It was welcomed. Their albums were great and hearing them on Top 40 radio made us all feel liberated. Things were pretty good on the airwaves. The Who and The Cream were getting some play, as were Big Brother & The Holding Company, Iron Butterfly and The Crazy World Of Arthur Brown. I was rather content.

'Dark Eyed Woman' was the lead track and first single from the difficult 3rd album CLEAR. Difficult (as a second album is known to be these days) because they'd had a hit despite the 'album band' and 'live band' habitat from which they came. Top 40 was developing it's evil lack of loyalty way back then, and 'Dark Eyed Woman' didn't get much play. But FM radio, much like today's Sirius satellite stations, made up for it. Touring in support of it's release, I finally got to see the band live. Despite how fantastic they were - and believe me, fantastic is putting it mildly, I was reeling from the support acts that night (October 18, 1969): The Kinks and The Bonzo Dog Band. Reeling indeed.

It was The Kinks first US show after the three year musician's union ban. They had just released ARTHUR, much of which they played along with tracks from THE VILLAGE GREEN PRESERVATION SOCIETY, 'Waterloo Sunset', 'Autumn Almanac', 'Sunny Afternoon', 'Death Of A Clown' and 'Til The End Of The Day', their opening song. Jawdropping. Plus third on the bill: The Bonzos. I walked out of the venue never to be the same again.

I digressed, sorry.

Spirit released '1984', a non LP single, next. This was not a common move in the day. Still, it's forever attached to Spirit's CLEAR era, being of same time period. Actually, '1984' only ever appeared on LP once BEST OF SPIRIT was issued years later. The year 1984 seemed an eternity away on release and the record contributed to a political and ecological slant the band had taken from inception. Remember 'Fresh Garbage' from that first album?

Many rightfully consider the original lineup's fourth and final album, THE TWELVE DREAMS OF DR. SARDONICUS, to be their art rock pinnacle. At least I read something to that effect recently. The two singles released from it are seminal. In fact the first, 'Animal Zoo', came out seemingly months prior to the album. I swiped it from a local album rock station whose late night dj occasionally let me visit. I honestly don't remember their call letters, and he was a rather unpleasant know-it-all. I once recall him adamantly arguing with me about Humble Pie, claiming all their members, instead of just one, were from The Small Faces (wrong) and that none were from The Herd or Spooky Tooth (wrong) - which I desperately tried to point out for his benefit. He wasn't having it, his loss. Nonetheless, I would tolerate him to get the records. This became mine one summer night along with the Juicy Lucy, Sea Train and Vivian Stanshall singles.

posted by so many records, so little time at 12:01 am