Showing posts with label Peter Frampton. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Peter Frampton. Show all posts

Tuesday, January 6, 2026

Various Artists - Rarities Row Vol. 3 (2025)

Just like last time, in Volume 3 of 'Rarities Row' you’ll probably see names you recognize, like Paul Simon, R.E.M and Bruce Springsteen, and one or two less so like Pat Metheny and The Marshal Tucker Band. My leadoff this time is Paul Simon’s 'Sound Of Silence' redone in a beautiful and very different way than the original. It almost ties with Disturb’s version as the best remake I’ve ever heard. It’s unique, yet familiar and haunting, all at the same time. So, let’s just get on with the music. As always, It was a blast putting this volume together, and to know that there are so many more to come. 

Enjoy! 
Michael



Track list and info:

01 The Sound Of Silence (New Unreleased Version) 
Paul Simon - Live At Webster Hall, 2011 


In June 2011, Paul Simon thrilled hometown fans with a special club performance at New York City’s historic Webster Hall. The show was the culmination of a sold-out and triumphant U.S. tour, and the set list was drawn from Simon's legendary career, and included several songs that had not been performed live in many years, including 'Kodachrome', 'Mother And Child Reunion', 'Still Crazy After All These Years', 'Late In The Evening', 'Sounds Of Silence' and 'The Obvious Child'. 

02 Gemini Dream (Live at The Forum) 
The Moody Blues - The Forum, Inglewood, California, 1983 


A live concert radio broadcast recorded at The Forum in Los Angeles, CA. on the last night of the North American “Present” Tour, and the third night of their run at The Forum, on December 3, 1983.

03 Losing My Religion (Demo)
R.E.M -1991 


The REM. guitarist, Peter Buck, wrote the main riff and chorus for 'Losing My Religion' on a mandolin. He had recently bought it and was learning how to play, recording as he practiced while watching television. Buck said that "when I listened back to it the next day, there was a bunch of stuff that was really just me learning how to play mandolin, and then there's what became 'Losing My Religion', and then a whole bunch more of me learning to play the mandolin". He said he likely would not have written the chord progression in the same way had he not played it on mandolin. In July 1990, REM. recorded a demo version with the working title 'Sugar Cane' in a studio in Athens, Georgia, featuring the banjo and Hammond organ. Mike Mills wrote a bassline inspired by Fleetwood Mac bassist John McVie. The final version was recorded in September at Bearsville Studio A in Woodstock, New York. Finding the song lacked midrange between the bass and mandolin, R.E.M. enlisted the touring guitarist Peter Holsapple on acoustic guitar. Buck said, "It was really cool: Peter and I would be in our little booth, sweating away, and Bill and Mike would be out there in the other room going at it. It just had a really magical feel." Michael Stipe recorded his vocals in a single take. The strings, arranged by Mark Bingham, were performed by members of the Atlanta Symphony Orchestra at Soundscape Studios in Atlanta, Georgia, in October 1990. In the run-up to the 25th anniversary reissue of their 1991 album 'Out Of Time', R.E.M. shared an unheard demo version of 'Losing My Religion'. The lyrics are slightly different—a couple of verses are transposed, and the “choosing my confessions” part is missing. But with fewer words and less studio polish, the song’s world-weary appeal is perhaps even more evident.

04 Rocket Ship (iPhone app demo)
Adrian Belew - Flux 1 2020 


Adrian Belew continues his later age creative renaissance with 'Flux By Belew Volume One'. These are short snippets that range from folky to crunchy guitar to cabaret to a Ventures copy to everything in between. I love music like this and this record has reinforced my belief Adrian Belew belongs on the Mount Rushmore of accessible left field rock weirdness of which his former boss Frank Zappa has the largest bust. Singularly creative and decidedly non-conforming, Belew adds to his incredibly rich musical legacy. Fans of left field idiosyncratic rock will find a ton to like here, and this is a fine place to enter the solo world of a living master. Belew says “FLUX is ‘music which is never the same twice’, and to accommodate the original concept FLUX was released on iTunes as a music app for iPhone and iPad (the only one of its kind, available on iTunes at bit.ly/FLUX_cd). With the app downloaded, you press Play to activate 30 minutes of music, songs, sounds, and visuals which will never happen again in quite the same way, because of some very clever algorithms and a huge amount of content. But it is not feasible to have the same thing occur on a CD, so I ask that you always play the CD in “shuffle” mode. This will give as close an approximation to the way I intend this music to be experienced as can be offered in this format. FLUX is not meant to be listened to in the same running sequence every time, and in order to eventually make all FLUX material available on CD, this will be an ongoing series, updated as needed. My hope is that you will make your own playlist from the content of all the CDs, then put the entire playlist in shuffle and enjoy FLUX: music that is never the same twice!”.

05 Zanzibar (Extended Trumpet Solo)
Billy Joel - My Lives Boxset


'Zanzibar' is a song written by Billy Joel and recorded for his 1978 album '52nd Street.' The song begins with a short slow section, but then moves to a shuffle rhythm. It contains two jazz trumpet solos played by the legendary jazz trumpeter Freddie Hubbard, and the song's bridge begins with a dreamy keyboard section, which leads into the first trumpet solo. According to Phil Ramone, the urgency and sexiness of the trumpet part is enhanced by the ascending and descending line played on bass guitar beneath the solo. The second solo comes at the end of the song and goes into the fade out. Of playing with Hubbard, Joel stated that it "was a special treat for me, because I've always admired and respected jazz players". Joel also recalled that after playing with Hubbard on the song, drummer Liberty DeVitto claimed that "Now I feel like a grown up". Allmusic critic Stephen Thomas Erlewine considers the melody of 'Zanzibar' to be an homage to Steely Dan's Donald Fagen. 'Zanzibar' was also included on the compilation album 'My Lives'. This version does not fade out the second trumpet solo that ends the song, providing an extra minute and a half of Hubbard's playing. According to producer Phil Ramone, Joel had written the music and had decided he liked the title 'Zanzibar' for the piece, but had not figured out what to say about Zanzibar. Hearing the music conjured up for Ramone images of people watching television in a bar, and as a result Joel decided to make the song about activity in a sports bar named Zanzibar rather than about the island of Zanzibar. The lyrics include a number of contemporary sports references, including to heavyweight champion boxer Muhammad Ali, baseball player Pete Rose, and the baseball team the New York Yankees, who were the World Champions at the time. The lyrics also use a baseball expression as a sexual metaphor when the singer wants to steal second base with a waitress in the bar if the waitress will allow it. 

06 Bright Side Life (Live)
Pat Metheny Group 


Recorded in Boston, MA, on September 21, 1976, this Performance of the title track from Metheny’s debut contains a rare solo by keyboardist Lyle Mays. This recording, which includes Mays, drummer Dan Gottlieb and bass player Eberhard Weber, was the first time 3/4 of the Pat Metheny Group performed together. It would take another year until bassist Mark Egan would join them and they would officially become the Pat Metheny Group. With 3/4 of the players here, and the official Group launch only months away, it is impossible not to regard this as a Pat Metheny Group performance. 

07 Love Comes And Goes (Demo)
Nancy Wilson and Peter Frampton - 2021 A&M Release Preview and Almost Famous Über Deluxe Box Set 


Seven demos written for Stillwater, the iconic band in the movie 'Almost Famous'. The LP was  pressed on translucent red vinyl and limited to 6800 copies for a Record Store Day 2021 exclusive. In the movie 'Almost Famous' (2000), the band Stillwater was supposedly an amalgamation of Poco, The Eagles, Led Zeppelin and a few other bands that Cameron Crowe had actually written articles about early in his career with Rolling Stone magazine. One of them leapt off a hotel balcony into a swimming pool. Another almost missed a ride on the tour bus after making a detour to an after-show bash. They met groupies and partook in their share of on-the-road partying, and a newspaper headline declared that the band “runs deep. If you think that sounds like Stillwater, the fictional band from 'Almost Famous', you’d be correct. But those tales also apply to a real-life group of the same name that existed during the same period. The 1973 moustached collective featured in writer/director Cameron Crowe’s film has a legitimate rock pedigree. Pearl Jam’s Mike McCready is the real talent behind Russell Hammond, the band’s charismatic lead guitarist (played by Billy Crudup), while ex Heart guitarist Nancy Wilson (Crowe’s wife) plays rhythm guitar for the group. What’s more, ’70s vet Peter Frampton penned several of the Stillwater tunes heard in the movie, and Wilson and Crowe co-wrote the band’s bass driven anthem 'Feverdog', which made the film’s soundtrack. Wilson, who also scored the film, says she recruited talent with classic rock roots (Frampton) and contemporary know-how (McCready), because she knew she wouldn’t create a believable sound otherwise. The goal was to make a band ”that’s really good, but not all the way formed yet,” she tells EW.com. ”An ‘opening for Black Sabbath' kind of sound”. And she also wanted to complement the movie’s satirical if loving take on rock & roll Über egos. ”We had to walk the line between parody and something that sounds legit” says Wilson. The demo nature of it makes it sound like the band is right there with you. Pure unprocessed analog glory. 

08 Havana Daydreaming (Live) 
Jimmy Buffett September 10, 1975 The Boarding House San Francisco, CA 


Singer/songwriter Jimmy Buffett and his Coral Reefer Band in their first of three nights at The Boarding House in San Francisco, CA on 9/10/1975. Recorded and broadcast by KSAN 95 FM from San Francisco, CA. 

09 Elected (Early Version)
Alice Cooper - 'Billion Dollar Babies' Expanded 


'Elected' is a song by American rock band Alice Cooper, released in 1972 as the first single off their sixth album 'Billion Dollar Babies'. 'Elected' is a glam rock influenced, hard rock song, and its political theme was inspired by the 1972 United States presidential election. Cooper called the song “total political satire," and added “we hated politics, but the idea of Alice, the scourge of the entire world, being president was just too good”. Both the riff and part of the melody were recycled from 'Reflected', which appeared on their 1969 album 'Pretties For You'. Joey Ramone acknowledged the similarity between 'Elected' and his band's song 'I Wanna Be Sedated' according to Alice Cooper, and the song was a favourite of John Lennon, who called it "a great record", but added that Paul McCartney would've done it better, which Cooper agreed with.

10 Let’s Dance (Live Rehearsal w Stevie Ray Vaughn) 
David Bowie with Stevie Ray Vaughn - Dallas 4-26/27-83 Serious Rehearsals 1983 


David Bowie and Stevie Ray Vaughan, in a broadcast performance in April 1983 just prior to Bowie's Serious Moonlight Tour, to promote his new album 'Let's Dance'. Recorded at the Las Colinas soundstage in Dallas with a small audience, and broadcast on KLBJ FM, Austin, Vaughan was supposed to join Bowie on tour, but the deal was scuttled at the last minute for various reasons. This is the only known broadcast recording of Bowie and Vaughan together, less than two weeks after 'Let's Dance' was released. Vaughan's 'Texas Flood' album with Double Trouble would be released less than two months later, in June that year. To read a piece written by Bowie on his time with Stevie Ray Vaughan, check out the pdf included with the album. 

11 Ring A Ding Ding (Test Recording) 
Frank Sinatra 'Ring A Ding Ding' Dec 19 1960 


'Ring-a-Ding-Ding!' is the twentieth studio album by Frank Sinatra, released on May 7 1961.  It was the inaugural record on Sinatra's Reprise label and, as the initial concept was "an album without ballads", it consisted only of up-tempo swing numbers. The title track was written specifically for Sinatra by Sammy Cahn and Jimmy Van Heusen. 

12 Saltwater (Spanish Version)
Julian Lennon (Single -1991) 


'Saltwater' by Julian Lennon has a Spanish version titled 'Creo Que Voy A Llorar'. This version was released in Spain and parts of South America as part of the 'Help Yourself' album, and the song's Spanish title translates to 'I Think I Am Going To Cry'.  What is little known is that in Spain as well as in selected South American countries such as Venezuela, the album contained Spanish language versions of three songs: 'Creo Que Voy A Llorar' ('Saltwater'), 'Corazón de Palmera' ('Take Me Home') and 'Es Tarde Ya' ('Maybe I Was Wrong'). Although the Spanish version of 'Saltwater' was also released in the UK and Europe on the 12" and CD single versions of that song, the two others are exclusive to the Spanish/South American pressings of the 'Help Yourself' album. Those are actually so rare that they are hardly – if ever – mentioned in Julian Lennon discographies. 

13 This Ol’ Cowboy (Live) 
The Marshall Tucker Band - Stompin’ Room Only: Greatest Hits Live 1974–76 


The jams on 'Stompin Room Only' are some of the best ever recorded by the band, and the record is the long rumored and highly anticipated album of live material recorded between 1974 and 1976. Recorded in London, Manchester (during their only European tour), in Milwaukee, and at Charlie Daniels annual "Volunteer Jam" in Murfreesboro during the years 1974-1976, the album was originally prepared for release in 1977 by producer Paul Hornsby and included the original line-up. In an unusual series of events, the album's release was first delayed by Capricorn Records and, ultimately, never released, as the master tapes could not be found for more than a quarter of a century. They were recently discovered in pristine condition and that long-awaited album, the virtual "holy grail" of jam band music, is now available. 

14 Jungleland - with violin 
Bruce Springsteen and the E Street Band -The Prodigal Son meets JEMS at the Main Point (Masters+ Edition) February 5, 1975 


One show, held as a benefit for the ~270-seat coffeehouse, with Springsteen & The E Street Band the sole act on the bill. The show was emceed by DJ Ed Sciaky and began just after 9.00pm. It was broadcast by WMMR-FM, but not as a true simulcast, rather it was broadcast on about a two-hour delay the same night. Interestingly, Springsteen almost backed out of his promise to allow the show to be broadcast, as he wanted to play new songs that were still unfinished - songs that may not be ready for a large radio audience. It took a concentrated effort by Sciaky on the day of the concert to talk Bruce around. An attendee review of the show from 1975 by critic David Fricke states the show took place on February 3, but this appears to be an error by Fricke given detailed interview comments by Sciaky, and the recollections of other attendees. Press reports suggest that Springsteen raised over $1,000 for the Main Point. The complete show was broadcast and the listed 18-song setlist represents the entire concert. Not only is it one of the longest (160 minutes) single-show gigs up to this point, but it's one of the most compelling performances of Springsteen's entire career. There are spellbinding renditions of 'Incident On 57th Street', 'New York City Serenade' and For You' (in the solo piano arrangement), the earliest known performances of 'Mountain Of Love' and 'Thunder Road' (with work-in-progress 'Wings For Wheels' title/lyrics) plus a wild, majestic version of Chuck Berry's 'Back In The U.S.A.'. 'The E Street Shuffle' includes 'Having A Party', while 'Rosalita (Come Out Tonight)' includes a snippet of 'Theme From Shaft' in the midsection. 'A Love So Fine' includes an interlude of 'Shout', and contrary to myth the police siren heard at the conclusion of 'Incident On 57th Street' is an audio prop that had been utilized at a few of Bruce's shows just prior to this one, and was not a real vehicle. Musicians in The E Street Band for this performance were Roy Bittan, Clarence Clemons, Danny Federici, Garry Tallent, Max Weinberg, and Suki Lahav on violin. Lahav is an Israeli violinist, vocalist, actress, lyricist, screenwriter, and novelist, and was a member of Bruce Springsteen's E Street Band from October 1974 to March 1975 (when her then-husband Louis was Springsteen’s sound engineer at 914 Sound Studios in Blauvelt, New York), before returning to Israel to find success there. 
There are full notes about how this 'Masters + Edition' remaster came about in Mike's pdf. 

Friday, September 17, 2021

Hank Marvin - ...and on guitar (2007)

Brian Robson Rankin, known professionally as Hank B Harvin, was born on 28 October 1941 in Newcastle upon Tyne, and as a child he played banjo and piano, but after hearing Buddy Holly he decided to learn the guitar, and also adopted Holly style dark-rimmed glasses. He chose his stage name while launching his career, being an amalgamation of his childhood nickname Hank, which he used to differentiate himself from friends also named Brian, and the first name of Marvin Rainwater, the country and rockabilly singer. When he was 16 Marvin and his Rutherford Grammar School friend, Bruce Welch, met Johnny Foster, who was Cliff Richard's manager, and who was looking for a guitarist for Richard's UK tour. He was considering Tony Sheridan, but instead he offered Marvin the position, which he accepted on condition that Welch could join as well, and so both became members of The Drifters, as Richard's group was then known. To avoid confusion with the American vocal group of the same name, The Drifters changed theirs to The Shadows, and both with and without Richard they ruled the UK charts throughout the 60's. In 1970, Marvin and Welch formed Marvin, Welch & Farrar with John Farrar, being a vocal-harmony trio which failed to appeal to either Shadows or contemporary music fans. After Welch left they then became 'Marvin & Farrar' for a vocal album in 1973 and they then reverted to the Shadows in late 1973 for the superlative instrumental 'Rockin' With Curly Leads' album. During the 60's Marvin wrote a number of songs, including 'Driftin'', 'Geronimo', and 'Spider Juice' for the Shadows, and 'The Day I Met Marie' for Richard, and this carried on after he left the band, writing and playing on 'Work's Nice – If You Can Get It' by Spaghetti Junction in 1972. In 1976 he was asked by Andrew Lloyd Webber and Tim Rice to add his distinctive guitar to their 'Evita' album, and that seems to have given him a taste for guest spots, appearing on albums by Tracey Ullman, Roger Daltry, Wings, Dennis Waterman and Leo Sayer over the next few years. He co-wrote Olivia Newton-John's 1977 hit 'Sam' with John Farrar and Don Black, and produced albums for the British showman Des O'Connor, while in 1988 he collaborated with French keyboardist and composer Jean Michel Jarre on the track 'London Kid', and he is the only artist to appear on two volumes of the 'Guitar Speak' series. In 2005 he was immortalised on Richard Hawley's 'I'm Absolutely Hank Marvin', on which he also played, as his name has become the rhyming slang for "starving" (Marvin-starvin'), but obviously it will be as one of the best UK guitarist of all time, and a major influence on a host of young musicians of the 60's and 70's, that he will primarily be remembered. 



Track listing

01 Work's Nice – If You Can Get It (single by Spaghetti Junction 1972)
02 Buenos Aires (from 'Evita' 1976)
03 Another Whiskey Sour (from 'Waterman' by Dennis Waterman 1977) 
04 Parade (from 'One Of One Boys' by Roger Daltry 1977)
05 So Glad to See You Here (from 'Back To The Egg' by Wings 1979)
06 You Broke My Heart in 17 Places (from 'You Broke My Heart In 17 Places' by 
                                                                                                                Tracey Ullman 1983)
07 Don't Wait Until Tomorrow (from 'Have You Ever Been In Love' by Leo Sayer 1983)
08 Teardrops (single by Shakin' Stevens 1984)
09 London Kid (from 'Revolutions' by Jean Michel Jarre 1988) 
10 Captain Zlogg (from 'Guitar Speak' by Various Artists 1988)
11 All Alone With Friends (from 'Guitar Speak II' by Various Artists 1990)
12 You're My World (single by Jane McDonald 1998)
13 I'm Absolutely Hank Marvin (b-side of 'Coles Corner' by Richard Hawley 2005)
14 My Cup Of Tea (from 'Fingerprints' by Peter Frampton 2007)

Sunday, December 27, 2020

Peter Frampton - ...and on guitar (1975)

Peter Kenneth Frampton was born on 22 April 1950, and first became interested in music when he was seven years old, having discovered his grandmother's banjolele in the attic, and teaching himself to play it, going on to later teach himself guitar and piano as well. His early influences were Cliff Richard & the Shadows, especially guitarist Hank Marvin, and American rockers Buddy Holly and Eddie Cochran. By the age of 12 he was playing in The Little Ravens, while both he and David Bowie, who was three years older, were pupils at Bromley Technical School, where his father Owen Frampton was Bowie's art instructor. By the age of 14 he was playing with The Trubeats, followed by The Preachers, who were produced and managed by Bill Wyman of the Rolling Stones. In 1966 he became a member of the Herd, where he was the lead guitarist and singer, and the band scored several British hit singles, at the same time as Frampton was named 'The Face of 1968' by teen magazine Rave. In 1969, while still only 18 years old, he joined with recently departed Small Faces guitarist Steve Marriott to form Humble Pie, going on to record one live and four studio albums with them, and while playing with Humble Pie he also did session recordings with other artists, including Harry Nilsson (and his alter ego Buck Earl for the 'I Guess The Lord Must Be In New York City' single), John Entwistle, Andy Bown, Lon & Derrek Van Eaton and Suzi Quatro. Frampton left Humble Pie in 1971 and embarked on a solo career, with his debut album 'Wind Of Change' coming out in 1972, and featuring guest artists Ringo Starr and Billy Preston. This was followed by 'Frampton's Camel' in 1973, which featured Frampton working within a group project, then 'Something's Happening' in 1974, and 'Frampton' in 1975.
He had little commercial success with his early albums, but this all changed when he released his live album 'Frampton Comes Alive' in 1976, from which the hit singles 'Baby, I Love Your Way' and 'Show Me The Way' were extracted, and the album was on the Billboard 200 for 97 weeks, of which 55 were in the top 40, and 10 were at the top, becoming the best selling album of 1976. His following-up 'I'm In You' contained the hit title single and went platinum, but fell well short of expectations compared to its predecessor, with all subsequent releases being unfavourably compared to that high-point. Frampton suffered a near-fatal car accident in the Bahamas in 1978 which marked the end of this prolific period of his career, returning to the studio in 1979 to record the album 'Where I Should Be', and releasing records fairly regularly since then. Although his albums generally met with little commercial success, he achieved a brief, moderate comeback of sorts in 1986 with the release of his 'Premonition' album, and the single 'Lying' was a big hit on the mainstream rock charts. His heyday, though, was undoubtedly the early to mid 70's, not only with his own albums, but also with guest appearances on records by fellow artists. The Johnny Halliday track has an interesting story, as by the end of 1968 the original Small Faces were in the middle of breaking up, with Steve Marriott going on to form Humble Pie, and the rest of the band morphing into The Faces. In late December the group were asked to collaborate with French pop legend Johnny Halliday on an album that was to showcase his attempt at hard-rock, and Marriott dragged his chum Frampton along to the recording sessions. Marriott and Lane donated three songs to the project, two of which were later recorded by Humble Pie under different titles, so this track is something of a curiosity to start this showcase of Peter Frampton's guest appearances in the first half of the 1970's.
  


Track listing

01 Regarde Pour Moi (from 'Riviere Ouvre Ton Lit' by Johnny Halliday 1969)
02 Girl From Denver (from 'Don't Freak Me Out' by Jimmy Stevens 1972)
03 The Blues In England (from 'Feel Your Groove' by Ben Sidran 1971)
04 Open Your Eyes (from' Gone To My Head' by Andy Bown 1972)
05 Sweet Music (single by Lon & Derrek Van Eaton 1972)
06 Rolling Stone (single by Suzi Quatro 1972)
07 I Guess The Lord Must Be Tn New York City (single by Buck Earl 1972)
08 Perfection (from 'Painted Head' by Tim Hardin 1973)
09 Ten Little Friends (from 'Whistle Rymes' by John Entwistle 1972)
10 Life Goes On (from 'Essence To Essence' by Donovan 1973)
11 Celebration (from 'First Of The Big Bands' by Tony Ashton & Jon Lord 1974)
12 The Serf (from 'Everything Changes' by Leslie Duncan 1974)
13 Daybreak (from 'Son Of Dracula' by Harry Nilsson 1974)
14 Slow Down (from 'Get Off Of My Cloud' by Alexis Korner 1975)