What You'll Find Here: Music, Movies and Me

Since May 1976, I have written in journals. When I have nothing particularly resonant to say about my own inner turmoil, philosophic ramblings, sexual peccadillos or whining on about the state of the world around me...I have always fallen back on reporting the cultural time consumption that takes up in inordinate portion of my daily goings on.

In the 40+ years since my first concerts seeing Children's Symphony presentations on Sundays at the Pasadena Civic or The Hot Jazz Society's monthly Dixieland romps in an old meeting hall on the edge of the L.A. "River" across from Griffith Park, I have been sold heavily on the magic of live music. As Neil Young so aptly put it, "Live music is better bumper stickers should be issued."

Growing up a few orange groves and canyons length away from Hollywood also contributed greatly to my family's addiction to movie going. From the time I was a small there were weekly trips to the drive-in theaters that dotted the landscape, or the local Temple theater for the Saturday matinees. Once in a while we'd drive the 12 miles into Hollywood and see something in one of the magnificent old movie palaces like Grauman's Chinese, the Egyptian, The Pantages or later the Cinerama Dome. My dad loved Westerns and War movies, as if he didn't get enough shoot-'em-up as an L.A. County Sheriff in his day gig, my mom adored musicals and comedies. My brother and I loved them all.

At SDSU, I played in my first gigging band and began booking concerts on campus as part of the well-funded Cultural Arts Board, kindling for my future life in and around music.

So it's not surprising that my first jobs out of college were working in local video rental places (which were all the rage) or managing a couple of Sam Goody record stores in Mall's on the East Coast where we marveled at the new CD format and sold the first home computers and video games (yes Commodore and Pong and Atari).

So these are really just extensions of all of those journal entries talking about the great new movies I was seeing and LPs/CDs I was listening to.

Though iPODS/iPADs, apps, smart phones and downloads now make music and movies accessible in your own pocket, there is still nothing like sitting in front of a stack of speakers with a room full of people swaying to music created before your eyes. Nor is there anything that works quite so well for me to escape the real world and all of it's pressures just outside than two hours in a dark theater, absorbing the stories flickering across that wide screen as they pull you into their world.

But a really good taco runs a close third...

Showing posts with label R.I.P.. Show all posts
Showing posts with label R.I.P.. Show all posts

Tuesday, August 28, 2012

FIRSTS - NEIL ARMSTRONG 1st MAN ON THE MOON DIES



Neil Alden Armstrong (August 5, 1930 – August 25, 2012)

So there are a few historical signposts in history for every generation where you remember where you where when you heard the news. The biggies for my father's generation there was the bombng of Pearl Harbor and V-J Day. For my grandparents it was all defined by a larger event, The Great Depression. My generation remembers where they were when Kennedy was shot, The Beatles on Ed Sullivan and watching Neil Armstrong set foot on the moon.

When JFK announced the space program it was thrilling to a boy of seven years old. When John Glenn orbited the Earth, I was transfixed. I didn't miss one launch from Cape Canaveral (nee Kennedy). Walter Cronkite kept me posted. I read all about the astronauts, did book reports on them. I was transfixed by every thing about them as was everyone I knew. We'd get in the little yellow and red tepee in the backyard having ditched our Indian headdresses for empty cardboard ice cream buckets we'd scavenged from Baskin-Robbins and spray painted silver to use as helmets.

I was 12 years old and a child of the 60s when Apollo 11 set off for the moon. We had been dropped off at Green Oak Ranch Boys Camp in Vista, California for another summer time week of archery, horseback riding, making lanyards, studying nature and tormenting our camp counselors. But the first thing we did was run to the mess hall to watch television as Neil Armstrong took those historic steps. Of course, at the time we would never doubt the validity of anything we'd seen on TV.

Why just a couple of years earlier I was appalled when I was at the West Hollywood Sheriff's station where my father was Captain and I saw them bring in some "hippie protesters". One of the more vociferous among the young placard carrying, colorfully clothed "trouble-makers" was Bob Denver from Gilligan's Island. I was very upset that they had arrested him since I didn't even know he'd finally made it off the island. But I digress...

But the moon landing fueled our imaginations. It made us see the Earth from space for the first time and something in me felt a little scared. Finally, for the first time in my young life was I aware of the fragile nature of existence as I knew it. I was beginning to think of bigger questions than who had to pretend to be astronaut Michael Collins and stay in the tepee when we played Moon Landing in the backyard.


Here's the NYTimes Obit of Neil Armstrong
Below is a 51 minute special report on the APOLLO 11 moon landing from YouTube:




And as is always of interest to note, there are always other theories...here is a smattering of them from gawker.com.    


photo of Neil Armstrong: NASA. Original photo of moon over the mtns. from Rt. 38 outside of Redlands, CA (c)2011 Brad Riesau

Wednesday, May 30, 2012

ROBIN GIBB (1949-2012)




Robin Gibb, one of Gibb brothers from the popular Bee Gees musical group passed away on May 20 after a long battle with cancer at age 62 . Brother Barry Gibb is the last surviving brother of the hit musical family. Fellow band member and brother Maurice passed in 2003. Younger brother and pop star Andy Gibb died in 1988 of a heart condition. Andy was never an official member of the Bee Gees but collaborated with his songwriting brothers on his biggest hits.

I was never a HUGE Bee Gees fan though from the mid-60s until the '80s their songs were pretty hard to avoid. In the early days, Robin was always the one we’d make fun of as kids with his weird finger-in-the-ear stage stance. Little did I know that in those days before decent monitors and the present day in-ear monitors, he was just trying to hear himself and when you’re singing close harmonies like the Gibb Brothers were known for the importance of hearing yourself was more important than looking silly to unknowing fans. While Barry got the lion share of the lead vocals and Maurice was the major multi-instrumentalist of the band, Robin was always the oddball in the big sweater with the swoop of shoulder-length hair and his finger in his ear. But boy, could he sing. The strange timber of their individual voices always made it a bit of a stretch for me to really embrace them until I really noticed just how well-written the songs were and how great they sounded when the three of them sang together.



Some of the biggest early hits featured Robin’s voice including “Massachusetts” from their 2nd album Horizontal released in 1968.  Though Barry’s was the most heard lead voice on hits such as their breakout tune “To Love Somebody”, and later when he patented the helium disco tweet of the Saturday Night Fever-period songs like  “You Should Be Dancing”, the harmonies of Robin and Maurice were essential to the band's sound.  Like most brotherly singing groups, The Everly Brothers, The Beach Boys and many great bluegrass bands like Jim & Jesse, The Monroe Brothers, there is something about the blend of the voices is impossible to approximate with bands of unrelated singers.


Probably Robin’s most popular showcase number was “I Started A Joke” from their 3rd album, Idea.  Reached No. 6 in the US. Robin quit the band for about a year and a half beginning in early 1969. Once he was back in the fold, the Bee Gees scored their first US #1, “How Can You Mend A Broken Heart” which followed the No. 3 hit “Lonely Days’. The latter has always reminded me at the outset of a CSN-type harmony tune before tearing into the Beatle-y production elements. Love the later, more up tempo live versions of it better the the original in fact. The videos below are for the latter two songs and are gems of early promo music video. Very basic and static in today's post-MTV age.



After a lull in the mid-70s the band took Eric Clapton’s suggestion (they shared Robert Stigwood as a manager) to record in Miami with the recording team and studio that Clapton used on his comeback album, 461 Ocean Blvd. The result was a more R&B and dance influenced record ripe with Barry’s falsetto vocals and tastes of the disco groove that was beginning to be heard in clubs around the country. Main Course, is quite possibly the Bee Gees crowning achievement melding the ballads of their early records with the danceable sounds that would launch their chart-topping rejuvenation. “Jive Talking” and “Nights On Broadway” (#1 & #7 on the charts respectively) got things rolling. I remember hearing this album in my first semester in college and being bowled over by the crisp production and the freshness of the sound. In a few short years, the bane of the unavoidable disco tidal wave that this album helped spawn would practically kill my enthusiasm for this band. Barry has noted that the huge success of SNF was both a blessing and a curse. While the world went nuts for Saturday Night Fever (granted the album is still quite listenable especially the gorgeous melody of “How Deep Is Your Love”), I was attending my first batch of Grateful Dead shows, discovering the initial wave of American punk bands out of CBGBs while still under the thrall of the fusion jazz movement and prog rock like Yes, King Crimson, Mahavishnu Orchestra, and Weather Report. I was getting my jazz ears in shape listening to Miles and Trane and Mingus daily as I roamed the used record bins around San Diego State University. But what do I know, even at this late date Saturday Night Fever is the 4th largest selling album worldwide.
 
One forgets that this band has had so many big hits in their long and storied career, quite monumental by any definition. A self-contained group for the most part, like The Beatles, who wrote all of their own hits, much less producing and writing huge hits for so many others.

Just a few of the Gibb written hits they were a part of: “I've Got To Get A Message To You”, “Words”, "One", "Staying Alive", "Heartbreaker" (Dionne Warwick), "Grease" (Frankie Valli), "Guilty" and "Woman In Love" (Barbra Streisand), "Chain Reaction" (Diana Ross). "Night Fever", "More Than A Woman", "Tragedy", "If I Can't Have You" (#1 for Yvonne Elliman), "Islands In The Stream" (Kenny Rogers & Dolly Parton). With over 2,500 covers of their tunes (400 alone for "How Deep Is Your Love") they've been interpreted by artists as diverse as Eric Clapton, Red Hot Chili Peppers, Elton John, Flaming Lips, Tom Jones, Destiny's Child, Faith No More, Conway Twitty, Janis Joplin, Elvis Presley, Percy Sledge, Joss Stone and many others. The Bee Gees were inducted in to the Rock n Roll Hall of Fame in 1997.

ONE NIGHT ONLY, the full length version recently removed from YouTube is a worthwhile, a nearly two-hour concert which can be purchased on DVD.

This is a rare full-length concert video recorded in late 1997. Maurice died in 2003 and Barry and Robin retired the name of the band until 2008. This DVD is a wonderful career spanning collection. Especially cool are the early tunes “Morning of My Life”,“New York Mining Disaster 1941” and “Too Much Heaven” sung primarily band less around one microphone with Barry’s acoustic guitar as the main accompaniment. Great harmony singing. Also in this little break from the huge sound is the Robin feature “I Can See Nobody”. The signature sound of the Bee Gee’s early ballad sound was Robin’s crystal clear vibrato. Barry’s great vocal on “Run To Me” is next with Robin hitting the chorus before the signature 3 part hook, unfortunately, they only do one verse of the tune here. Robin’s vibrato reigns in “And The Sun Will Shine” and is followed by a killer stripped down roar through just one verse of “Nights On Broadway” possibly my favorite from Main Course. Makes me want to go back and revisit that album again after 40+ years.

Robin’s signature verse which opens “How Can You Mend A Broken Heart” was nabbed by Al Green and turned into one of the great soul covers of all-time. Green had a real thing for the Gibb Brothers tunes as evidenced by his original version of this tune from my Al Green blog posted here on Sept. 8, 2011 and a more recent take below. Here are some more interesting covers of signature Robin Gibb tunes.



                                 





Sunday, October 2, 2011

LET'S NOT FORGET CORNELL DUPREE & JOE MORELLO



Better late than never...I wanted to be sure to not miss talking a bit about two of the music world's great musicians who passed away earlier this year.

Within two months of each other this past Spring, the music world lost two masterful musical treasures. JOE MORELLO, the innovative jazz drummer passed on March 11th and one of the major unsung heroes of the electric guitar, the great CORNELL DUPREE died on May 8th. Dupree was 68 years old and Morello, 82.

Having recorded on more that 2500 recording sessions, the word among musicians and fans alike was that Dupree always made everyone he played with sound better. His round tone and biting attack somehow complimented each other while his speed, tasteful choices and stylistic diversity made him an in-demand session man and band member.

If you have been collecting music for more than the past 5-10 years you will undoubtedly have numerous records in your stash featuring the smoldering licks of the always slick and tasty Mr. Dupree. Just a small illustration of the breadth and influence of this largely unheralded master, check out this very minor sampling of his session work. He has recorded with:

- King Curtis:
"Memphis Soul Stew"

- Esther Phillips
- Rahsaan Roland Kirk
- Wilson Pickett
- Freddy King
- Gabor Szabo
- Lulu
- Aretha Frankin
- Laura Nyro
- Les McCann
- David 'Fathead' Newman
- Carmen McRae
- Eddie Harris
- Leon Thomas
- Herbie Mann
- Grover Washington, Jr.
- Archie Shepp
- B.B. King
- Donny Hathaway
- Rufus Thomas
- Eddie Palmieri
- Stanley Turrentine
- Bette Midler
- Sonny Stitt
- Duane Allman
- Guess Who
- James Brown
- Lou Donaldson
- Billy Cobham
- Ashford & Simpson
- Jackie DeShannon
- Maggie Bell
- Buddy Rich
- Big Mama Thornton
- Hank Crawford
- Eddie 'Cleanhead' Vinson
- Michel Legrand
- Ian Hunter
- Ringo Starr
- Elvin Jones
- Etta James
- Gladys Knight
- The Average White Band
- Carly Simon
- Chaka Khan
- John Mayall
- The Crusaders
- Sam Cooke
- Michael Franks
- Lou Rawls
- Lightnin' Hopkins
- Lena Horne
- Andy Gibb (yes, Andy Gibb)
- Mariah Carey
- Delbert McClinton
- David Sanborn
- LaVern baker
- Dakota Staton
- Jackie Wilson
- Yusef Lateef
- Grant Green
- Duke Ellington
- Ray Charles
- Peter Wolf
- Jack McDuff
- Dusty Springfield
- Sam Moore
- Quincy Jones
- Brook Benton
- David Ruffin
- Miles Davis
- The Gadd Gang:

"Watchin' The River Flow":

More Gadd Gang "Signed, Sealed, Delivered" (not Stuff as it claims)



Many of you folks of my generation know him from his work on Paul Simon's There Goes Rhymin' Simon or his work from the mid-70s with Joe Cocker. Dupree appeared on these records with his bandmates in STUFF, who released five records for Warner Brothers during the same period. This particularly prolific period for Dupree also found him recording and releasing his first records as a leader.



Cocker was a wreck on this tour but Stuff was the tightest, most inspired band he'd ever front. Here's an audio track from the tour. Listen to guitarists Dupree and Eric Gale wail!

During his recording career, his guitar playing on his own records was as diverse and genre busting as his work as a sideman. Always with a round tone and smooth, tasteful choice of notes, both his rhythm and lead playing were funky and soulful whether playing rhythmic soul numbers of more expansive jazz melodies. His late 80s/90s output was decidedly more jazzy with 1992's live UNCLE FUNKY and 1994's BOP N BLUES being among my favorites. COAST TO COAST WAS NOMINATED FOR A GRAMMY IN 1988.

"Sunny":

I recently spotted Dupree near the end of the wonderful documentary on reclusive singer Bill Withers. Withers has disappeared from the recording and live performance scene for many years and near the end of this illuminating film, we see Withers re-inspired and joining Dupree for an impromptu live version of the singer's own "Grandma's Hands". A stirring and soulful moment.

There is a ton of Dupree video on YouTube. Check out any of it...

The tasteful sounds of Cornell Dupree live on in our music collections.

##


If the only session he ever cut was Dave Brubeck's "Take Five", Joe Morello's place in musical history would be assured. The fact is that he was a vital force in the Dave Brubeck Quartet during the years when they were not only the most popular jazz band in the world but a band who brought jazz back onto the pop charts and influenced a nation of college kids and jazz fans with their popularization of non-traditional time signatures, their melodic compositions and impeccable group interplay. In the rhythm section alongside bassist Eugene Wright, Morello redefined jazz drumming for a generation of music students. 

He was child violin prodigy playing with the Boston Symphony at age 6 but by the time he turned 15 he had decided that the drums were his musical calling. He studied and played around Springfield, MA before heading out on the road with Grand Old Opry star, guitarist Hank Garland. In short order he found himself drawn to NYC where he begins getting gigs with the likes of Sal Salvador, Stan Kenton Big Band, Tal Farlow, Gil Melle, Jimmy Raney and really  began to make a name for himself with pianist Marian McPartland's Hickory House Trio (with bassist Bill Crow) in New York in the early 50s. He passed on stints with Benny Goodman and Tommy Dorsey to take a two-month tour with Dave Brubeck that would up lasting over 12 years.

When Brubeck disbanded the Quartet in 1968, Morello dove head first in academics given private lessons, clinics, lectures, etc. As a drum teacher he is raved about by all of his former students. He has mentored many young drummers through private lessons and instructional videos.

Delaware based drummer for the band Kombu Combo, John DiGiovanni remembers Joe:

"I took some lessons with Joe at Glenn Weber's Drum Shop in West Orange, where he'd been teaching for years. I don't know if he was completely blind at this point, but he didn't need to see well to know what I was doing! He was older at this point but he still had those blazingly fast hand chops. I was working through his Master Studies book at the time, putting 2 to 4 hours a day into it. Joe kept directing me to his teacher George Stone's book, Stick Control, which he basically took and made 10 times more challenging. The Master Studies book is arguably the best book for getting your hands together. Very unassuming and humble guy he was, and I wish I could have had more time with him. 

"Joe was one of the very best, one of the few drummers who could give Buddy Rich a run for his money, chops- wise, plus he had all of that sensitivity and great timing. After all, he played on the most famous jazz recording of all time!"


He eventually formed his own bands and played almost exclusively around the NYC area finding time over the years to record on over 120 records (including 60 with Brubeck).

Here are some examples of the late, great Joe Morello in action.
 
 Sounds of the Loop:


Take FIve in 1995 on Conan O'Brien


Heard here with Marian McPartland and Bill Crow in 1955:



and an hour long Drum Method video from Joe for all you drummers out there...don't say I never did anything for ya!





Sunday, June 19, 2011

R.I.P. CLARENCE CLEMONS





Clarence Clemons was never the best saxophone player in the world. He didn’t reinvent the instrument like Charlie Parker or John Coltrane. He wasn’t a groove machine like Jr. Walker or Maceo Parker, or a master of tone and soulful funkiness like Pee Wee Ellis or King Curtis. What he was was The Big Man. The perfect foil for Bruce Springsteen’s tales of the Jersey Shore. The Boss’s blend of West Side Story drama and Morricone scope, in tales from the dark, downtrodden streets of fire from where Springsteen came. Bruce needed a foil and Clemons, who died yesterday at the age of 69 after suffering stroke on June 14th, was perfectly cast.

A looming presence onstage in his early white suits and fedoras, his sleeveless silk shirts, maracas and strutting saxophone, here was the gunslinger commanding the attention of not only the crowd but of The Boss as well. While Miami Steve Van Zandt played Keith Richards to Bruce’s Mick, Clarence was a whole other beast altogether. Spinning in time with the dynamo Springsteen their instrument cords miraculously rarely tripping them up. He was the catalyst, the emotive kicker for Springsteen's flights of rock n roll redemption. Taking his cues from the great sax solos behind The Drifters slice-of-life tales and the early rock radio tunes of their youth, The Boss and The Big Man could be seen in your mind’s eye taking on all comers on the boardwalk late at night. In the early years Bruce would do long introductions to songs which took you back to dark nights of menace and desperation when out of the darkness came The Big Man amidst bolts of lightning and chaos and all was settled. Everyone took a step back and just knew the real deal had just arrived. The legend of their meeting told over the years in varying versions by Springsteen as introductions to “The E Street Shuffle” and other tunes, is told below by Clemons.





The first song we did was an early version of "Spirit In The Night". Bruce and I looked at each other and didn't say anything, we just knew. We knew we were the missing links in each other's lives. He was what I'd been searching for. In one way he was just a scrawny little kid. But he was a visionary. He wanted to follow his dream. So from then on I was part of history.


Over the years Clemons recorded eight solo albums under various monikers beginning with 1983’s RESCUE. He even had a hit single in 1985 which featured Jackson Browne called “You’re A Friend of Mine”. That same year his sax solo was featured on the Aretha Franklin hit, “Freeway of Love”. He has done numerous sessions and/or tours with artists as diverse as Todd Rundgren, Ronnie Spector, Southside Johnny & The Asbury Jukes, Joe Cocker, Twisted Sister, Ringo Starr & his All-Starr Band, The Four Tops. Roy Orbison and Lady Gaga among many others. He’s even performed with the Jerry Garcia Band and The Grateful Dead.

Clemons was also an actor on film not just onstage with The Boss. He appeared in five feature films beginning in 1997 with New York, New York and including Bill & Ted’s Excellent Adventure, Fatal Instinct and Blues Brothers 2000. He also acted in 15 episodes of major television shows.

When Springsteen disbanded The E Street Band in the 1989 for ten years (though in 1995 they reunited briefly to record four new songs for the Greatest Hits album), it was Clemons who was most missed by many of the fans on the subsequent tours without the E Street Band. His visual presence as much as the place his dramatic solos played in Springsteen’s music was hard to replace.

Finally, in 1999, Springsteen brought the band back together for highly anticipated Reunion tour, live album and sessions and tour for THE RISING. In 2005, Devils & Dust had a smattering of band members joining the proceedings and the follow year found Bruce with a very different kind of sound and band for the Pete Seeger Sessions CD and tour.

By 2007, the band had reconnected for Bruce’s album The Magic. Half way through the subsequent tour, organist Danny Federici was diagnosed with melanoma and only returned for one final appearance one month before he died. Federici passed on April 17, 2008.

With Clemons death, bassist Garry W. Tallent is the longest running E Street Band musician and only remaining original member. As difficult as it was to accept the band without Clemons during the E Street Band’s ten year hiatus, it will be incredibly hard to see the band without him. He had slowed down in recent years with physical problems (two knee replacements among them) that kept his stage movements to a minimum and found him sitting for much of the set where he wasn’t soloing.

I’ll never forget the first time I heard Clemons play live. It was November 1, 1976 in Robertson Gym at UC Santa Barbara. Bruce opened with a piano backed opening of “Thunder Road” followed by an incendiary “Tenth-Avenue Freeze-out”, Clarence and Miami Steve strutting by his side. And we believed that "wne the change was made uptown and The Big Man joined the band / from the coastline to the city all the little pretties raised their hands," because even that night, early on, hands were thrust in the air towards that growling sax sound. We were in the third row of this general admission show and after that solo the girl next to me sat down on her chair and began to cry, “This is the best thing I’ve ever heard in my life” she repeated over and over again. The show ran nearly three hours and I knew that this moment would reinvent how I thought of live music and life in general. To this day, I yearn for another show as life affirming and riveting as those three hours.

Two years later I traveled to he East Coast for the first time with the woman who would become my wife and companion for the next 25 years. She’d seen Bruce at the Main Point in 1975 and watched his career blossom as Philadelphia embraced The Boss long before the rest of the country knew who was in charge. We drove down to Cape May Point, New Jersey to meet her parents the morning after I arrived in Philadelphia. While we were there she asked, “What do you want to see while you are back here?” My answer was immediate: “Asbury Park.”

We drove up the Garden Start Parkway and when we hit the boardwalk there were still remnants of all of the places I'd heard Bruce and the E Street Band immortalize on those first three albums. I rode on The Tilt-A-Whirl, played pinball in the Casino, took my picture in front of Madame Marie’s and the Stone Pony. I even kissed her underneath the boardwalk. And I pictured Clarence Clemons walking through the storm to join the band and change rock n roll forever. On the way home, we heard on the radio that Keith Moon, legendary drummer for The Who had died, another mythic figure of rock n roll royalty.

Yesterday we lost another rock n roll icon, “the Master of the Universe, The King of the World, The Big Man, The Biggest Man You Ever Seen…Clarence Clemons.”

What follows are some songs featuring Clarence Clemons on sax including the tune that documents his becoming an E Streeter, “Tenth-Avenue Freezeout”, his most famous showpiece “Jungleland” and one of the most transcendent rock tunes of the era, “Born To Run.”



Clarence on playing with Bruce, spirituality etc.



“The River” with Clarence intro and very different arrangement from the original.

Clarence on being in the E Street Band and more











Bruce is a total goofball – now this has got to be one of the most over-the-top intro of The Big Man ever!



rare live “Kitty’s Back” from 1974 (audio only but great quality and killer version)



Clarence discusses his “Jungleland” solo




For comparison: first is an early version from 1975 at the Main Point – audio only but wow!

With some early lyric differences….interesting but without Clarence’s defining solo, the drama of the song is just not there…



Now listen to this one…Here is a later version of Clarence’s "Jungleland" solo which has settled into it’s more famous iconic spot as the emotional lynchpin of this bigger than life tune…



Interview with Alan Thicke in 1983 and he plays “Woman’s Got The Power” with his Red Bank Rockers.



CC’s big hit with Jackson Browne. The dated 80s drum sound and production was the first big production hit for the great fusion drummer Michael Narada Walden (Mahavishnu Orchestra)…boy, was this a bad and cheesy video. A the early days of MTV…




I had an opportunity to get to know "Maurice" (Pat Ieraci), a wonderful man whose name and image you may have seen on the back covers and in credits of the Jefferson Airplane's Volunteers and Jefferson Starship's Dragonfly albums as well as numerous other great recordings by Harry Nilsson, Steve Miller etc. He was a insider at RCA, liaison between bands and the label, eventually being part The Airplane families many projects as production coordinator and general troubleshooter. Pat is also a huge collector of music with a garage full of old 45s and an extensive knowledge of the history of rock music. I asked him once about what he thought was the greatest recording of all-time. Not the greatest song per se, but the ultimate record. He said immediately, "The one record I can think on which I wouldn't change a thing is the song, 'Born To Run'. It has everything a rock record should have." ... I agree. There are tons of incendiary live versions of this song but I included the classic studio cut here because I agree with Pat...great overall sound, ferocious production, amazing vocals and relentless propulsion and the timelss sax solo is perfect. There is no doubt that the band is communicating their leader's vision and that they and Bruce believe what he is singing and are desperate for you to believe it too.



R.I.P. Clarence & Danny

Saturday, December 18, 2010

CAPTAIN BEEFHEART – R.I.P.

“…you see, I don't think I do music, think I do spells." - 1980


FURTHER THAN WE’VE GONE


Associated Press obit

http://www.washingtontimes.com/news/2010/dec/17/don-van-vliet-aka-captain-beefheart-dead-at-69/


DON VAN VLIET aka CAPTAIN BEEFHEART

Died December 17th 2010 at the age of 69

Avant-garde rock musician and abstract expressionist painter and sculptor


Back in 1972, every night before I went to sleep I put on my big black head phones and listened to Captain Beefheart’s latest album, TROUT MASK REPLICA…in my dark bedroom, lying on a faux zebra patterned pillow, a double album of bluesy avant-garde, surrealistic gibberish and scrambled noise. I had literally no words to describe what I heard. The singer sounded a bit like Howlin’ Wolf who I had just recently dug into by way of his London Sessions LP. But the angular rhythms and strange aural hijinx and indecipherable lyrics...what the hell was this?...I remember noticing for the first time that my dreams were in color when I woke one morning after closing the previous day with TROUT MASKlll I’m not sure if I’d heard his semi-hit ‘Diddy Wah Diddy” in 1966 which was a distorted and loud recording of a pop/blues tune. Sort of Stonesy but filthier. The album SAFE AS MILK was Captain Beefheart & The Magic Band’s first album. I didn't catch that one til years later either.


I missed this early blues band type stuff, I jumped on the Beef wagon with the Zappa produced TROUT MASK and I’m sure it was because Zappa’s name was attached to this that had some credibility with me. Other than the Beatles “Revolution No. 9” and some of the Yoko stuff on her solo albums with John, I hadn’t heard ANY avant-garde music at all. I was hooked. From that point on anything slightly dissonant, complex or just plain weird would catch my attention over and over again.


When he went "softer" in the mid-70s, a lot of his fan base bailed but I dug them change. Soon, though with punk (and many of the punks claimed influenced by Beefheart) and the singer/songwriter boom as well as my new, real discovery of jazz I was ready. I snatched up Hot Rats in my "anything Zappa" phase and by the time Ice Cream For Crow came out I was versed in Beef legend. It's like a pallette cleanser for me. When all the music in life starts buncing up it's bloomers and sounding predictable and the same, I go back to Beefheart and though he hasn't made a record since 1982, his spirit will surely be missed.

Here’s a quick collection of major BEEF…hold on…


I'd highly recommend this great 6 part documentary. There are some spectacular shots of his later art work as well....


JOHN PEEL’S CAPT. BEEFHEART DOCUMENTARY (PT. 1 OF 6)

“THE ARTIST FORMERLY KNOWN AS CAPTAIN BEEFHEART”


JOHN PEEL’S CAPT. BEEFHEART DOCUMENTARY (PT. 2 OF 6)


JOHN PEEL’S CAPT. BEEFHEART DOCUMENTARY (PT. 3 OF 6)


JOHN PEEL’S CAPT. BEEFHEART DOCUMENTARY (PT. 4 OF 6)


JOHN PEEL’S CAPT. BEEFHEART DOCUMENTARY (PT. 5 OF 6)


JOHN PEEL’S CAPT. BEEFHEART DOCUMENTARY (PT. 6 OF 6)


The Legendary 1980 Profile by Lester Bangs

http://blogs.laweekly.com/westcoastsound/2010/12/captain_beefheart_lester_bangs.php


LA Weekly obit

http://blogs.laweekly.com/westcoastsound/2010/12/breaking_captain_beefheard_die.php


Great LA Weekly blog: Top 14 Reasons Why Captain Beefheart Was A True American Genius (features three very different songs (videos)

http://blogs.laweekly.com/westcoastsound/2010/12/captain_beefheart_facts.php


SAFE AS MILK


WHEN I SEE MOMMY I FEEL LIKE A MUMMY


1982 - DON ON LETTERMAN –


THERE ARE ABOUT 40 BEEFHEART VIDEOS ON YOUTUBE…CHECK ‘EM OUT