Friday, April 23, 2021

Julie Driscoll - Stay Away From Me (1969)

Julie Driscoll was born on 8 June 1947 in London, and her first taste of the music business was when she was employed by producer/manager Giorgio Gomelsky as administrator of the Yardbirds' fan club in the early 60's. Spotting something about her, Gomelssy suggested a singing career, and her first single was 'Take Me By The Hand', which was recorded with The Harold Geller Group and released on the Columbia label in 1963. Two years later she released 'Don't Do It No More', and the following year saw a cover of The Lovin' Spoonful's 'I Didn't Want To Have To Do It'. In 1967 she recorded an early Randy Newman composition 'If You Should Ever Leave Me', which appeared on the b-side of her 'I Know You Love Me Not' single, although this period is better known for her membership of Steam Packet, an R&B-styled revue band which also featured Long John Baldry, Rod Stewart and the Brian Auger Trinity. She used the Trinity as the backing band for her 'Save Me' single in 1967, which was split into two parts and spread over both sides of a 7", and sticking with the Trinity she scored her biggest hit with their version of Bob Dylan's 'This Wheel's On Fire', hitting the top 5 of the UK charts. Two more singles with the Trinity followed that success, with 'Road To Cairo' appearing in 1968, and 'Take Me To The Water', backed with Richie Havens' 'Indian Rope Man' in 1969. Following a couple of albums with Brian Auger and The Trinity in 1967 and 1969, she released the jazz-rock album '1969' (recorded in that year with The Keith Tippett Group, later going on to marry Tippett in 1970) in 1971. In the late 60's her striking appearance engendered much publicity, and a cool, almost disinterested vocal style formed the ideal counterpoint to Auger's jazz-based ambitions, but as you can hear from these early singles, Gomelsky was right to suggest a career in music, as she had that 'cool' image right from the beginning. 

01 Take Me By The Hand (single with The Harold Geller Group 1963)
02 Stay Away From Me (b-side of 'Take Me By The Hand')
03 Don't Do It No More (single 1965)
04 I Know You (b-side of 'Don't Do It No More')
05 I Didn't Want To Have To Do It (single 1966)
06 I Know You Love Me Not (single 1967)
07 If You Should Ever Leave Me (b-side of 'I Know You Love Me Not')
08 Save Me (Parts 1 & 2) (single 1967)
09 I Don't Know Where You Are (Giorgio Gomelsky session 1967)
10 This Wheel's On Fire (single version 1968)
11 A Kind Of Love In (b-side of 'This Wheel's On Fire')
12 Road To Cairo (single 1968)
13 Shadows Of You (b-side of 'Road To Cairo')
14 Take Me To The Water (single version 1969)

Paul over at albumsthatshouldexist has just posted a couple of albums from Julie Driscoll with Brian Auger and the Trinity, but only a few songs actually overlap, and so this will be a nice companion to his posts. 

The Tremeloes - Yellow River (1972)

On New Year's Day, 1962, Decca Records auditioned two promising young bands: Brian Poole and the Tremeloes and another combo (also heavily influenced by Buddy Holly) from Liverpool, the Beatles, and in a decision which defies belief in hindsight, Decca chose Brian Poole and the Tremeloes over the Beatles, reportedly based on location – the Tremeloes were from the London area, making them more accessible than the Liverpool-based Beatles. The original quintet consisted of lead vocalist Brian Poole, lead guitarist Rick West (born Richard Westwood), rhythm guitarist/keyboardist Alan Blakley, bassist Alan Howard and drummer Dave Munden, and after they signed to Decca it didn't take long for them to have their first UK chart hit with a cover of 'Twist And Shout' in July 1963. They followed that with another cover, this time of The Contours' US million-seller 'Do You Love Me', and from then on the hits just kept coming - 'I Can Dance', 'Candy Man', 'Someone, Someone', 'Three Bells' and a version of 'I Want Candy'. With Poole leaving to attempt a solo career (which proved unsuccessful) in 1966, the Tremeloes continued as a four-piece with a revised line-up after Howard left to be replaced by Len "Chip" Hawkes. Remaining with Decca, their first single as a four piece was a cover of Paul Simon's 'Blessed', but this failed to chart, so the band switched from Decca to CBS Records, with Mike Smith producing, and although their cover of The Beatles 'Good Day Sunshine' also failed to chart, it established them as a group with a more contemporary sound and image. From 1967 onwards they had a run of chart hits, starting with Cat Stevens' 'Here Comes My Baby', then 'Hello World', 'Suddenly You Love Me', 'I'm Gonna Try', and 'My Little Lady', as well as their classic number one single 'Silence Is Golden'. All members shared vocals, though most of the songs featured either Hawkes or drummer Dave Munden as the lead singer, and while their style of music proved popular with both younger music fans and parents rather than rock music fans, their albums and b-sides included more rock-styled tracks such as band compositions 'Try Me' and the instrumental 'Instant Whip. One of these more ambitious group-composed numbers was '(Call Me) Number One', which reached no. 2 in the UK in 1969, and remains one of my favourite ever tracks. Their cover version of Jeff Christie's song 'Yellow River' was shelved at the time, but when Christie wanted to release it himself he used The Tremloes backing track and just laid his vocal over the top, earning himself a number one hit single with his band Christie. 'Me And My Life' (another favourite of mine) was a no. 4 UK chart hit in 1970, while 'By the Way' reached no. 35 that year. Their album 'Master' was released a few weeks later, but failed to sell despite being a strong record, and the hits also dried up after 'Hello Buddy' just missed the UK top 30 in 1971, but they did continue to score big in the European charts throughout the 70's. Three more albums of original material were released in the 70's, one of them the belatedly-released soundtrack to the film 'May Morning', but in the first of two posts from the band I've collected all my favourite singles and b-sides that never appeared on an album, along with a few out-takes, and they all go to show that, in my opinion, splitting with Brian Poole was the best thing they ever did. 

01 Hello Buddy (single 1971)
02 No More Sad Songs (previously unreleased 1971)
03 No No No (previously unreleased 1971)
04 Yellow River (previously unreleased 1970)
05 Instant Whip (b-side of '(Call Me) Number One')
06 Right Wheel, Left Hammer, Sham (single 1970)
07 Take It Easy (b-side of 'Right Wheel, Left Hammer, Sham')
08 (Call Me) Number One (single 1969)
09 If You Ever (b-side of 'Too Late (To Be Saved)')
10 How Can You Say Goodbye (previously unreleased 1972)
11 I Like It That Way (single 1972)
12 Too Late (To Be Saved) (single 1971)
13 Heaven Knows Why (previously unreleased 1972)
14 Wakamaker (b-side of 'I Like It That Way')

Tuesday, April 20, 2021

Genesis - In The Beginning (1970)

I would think that most fans of Genesis have a fairly good idea of how they formed, but it's worth repeating for anyone who isn't aware of how they all met at Chaterhouse School, with the original line-up of the band, Peter Gabriel, Tony Banks, Anthony 'Ant' Phillips, Mike Rutherford, and drummer Chris Stewart, meeting at the public school in Godalming, Surrey. Banks and Gabriel arrived at the school in September 1963, Rutherford in September 1964, and Phillips in April 1965, and all five played in two of school's bands; Phillips and Rutherford were in Anon with singer Richard Macphail, bassist Rivers Jobe, and drummer Rob Tyrrell, while Gabriel, Banks, and Stewart made up Garden Wall. In January 1967, after both groups had split, Phillips and Rutherford continued to write together and proceeded to make a demo tape at a friend's home-made studio, inviting Banks, Gabriel, and Stewart to record with them in the process. The group recorded six songs: 'Don't Want You Back', 'Try A Little Sadness', 'She's Beautiful', 'That's Me', 'Listen On Five', and 'Patricia', an instrumental. They wanted to have them professionally recorded and so they sought out Charterhouse alumnus Jonathan King, who seemed a natural choice as their publisher and producer following the success of his 1965 UK top five single 'Everyone's Gone To The Moon'. After a friend of the group gave the tape to King, he was immediately enthusiastic about becoming involved, and under King's direction, the group, still only aged between 15 and 17, signed a one-year recording contract with Decca Records. From August to December 1967 they recorded a selection of potential singles at Regent Sound Studios on Denmark Street, attempting longer and more complex compositions, but King advised them to stick to more straightforward pop songs. In response. Banks and Gabriel wrote 'The Silent Sun', a pastiche of the Bee Gees, who were one of King's favourite bands, and it was recorded with orchestral arrangements added by Arthur Greenslade. The band considered various names for themselves, including King's suggestion of Gabriel's Angels, before agreeing to his offering of Genesis, indicating the start of his production career. King chose 'The Silent Sun' as their first single, with 'That's Me' on the b-side, and it was released in February 1968, achieving some airplay on BBC Radio One and Radio Caroline, but failing to sell. 
A second single, 'A Winter's Tale' / 'One-Eyed Hound', followed in May 1968 with the same result, and three months later Stewart left the group to continue with his studies, being replaced by fellow Charterhouse pupil John Silver. King believed that the group would achieve greater success with an album, and so 'From Genesis To Revelation' was recorded at Regent Sound in ten days during their school's summer break in August 1968. King assembled the tracks as a concept album, which he produced, and Greenslade added further orchestral arrangements to the songs - a fact which was kept from the band until after the album was released, and which particularly upset Phillips. When Decca found that there was already an American band named Genesis, King refused to change his group's name, but reached a compromise by removing their name from the album cover, resulting in a minimalist design with the album title printed on a plain black background. This actually backfired on him, as when the album was released in March 1969 it was a commercial failure because many record shops filed it in the religious music section upon seeing the title. A third single 'Where The Sour Turns To Sweet' / 'In Hiding' was released in June 1969, following the others into obscurity, and this eventually led to the band's split with King and Decca, although King retained the rights to the album, and has re-issued it numerous times to cash in on the band's subsequent success. After the album was recorded, the band went their separate ways for a year, with Gabriel and Phillips staying at Charterhouse to finish exams, Banks enrolling at Sussex University, and Rutherford studying at Farnborough College of Technology. They regrouped in mid-1969 to discuss their future, and Phillips and Rutherford decided to make music their full-time career, as they were starting to write more complex music than their earlier songs with King. After Banks and Gabriel chose to follow suit, the four returned to Regent Sound in August 1969 and recorded four more demos with Silver: 'Family' (later known as 'Dusk'), 'White Mountain', 'Going Out to Get You', and 'Pacidy'. 
The tape was rejected by every record label that heard it, and so Silver then left the group to study leisure management in the United States, and he was replaced by drummer and carpenter John Mayhew. In late 1969, Genesis retreated to a cottage that Macphail's parents owned in Wotton, Surrey to write, rehearse, and develop their stage performance. They took their work seriously, playing together for as much as eleven hours a day, and their first live gig as Genesis followed in September 1969 at a teenager's birthday party. It was the start of a series of live shows in small venues across the UK, which included a radio performance broadcast on BBC's Night Ride show on 22 February 1970, and a spot at the Atomic Sunrise Festival held at the Roundhouse in Chalk Farm a month later. During this time the band met with various record labels, including Chris Blackwell of Island and Chris Wright of Chrysalis, but nothing came of them, and in March 1970 they were recommended to John Anthony of Charisma Records by members of Rare Bird, who they had previously supported live. Anthony attended one of their shows and enjoyed them enough to convince his boss, label owner Tony Stratton-Smith, to watch their next performance, at which he was so impressed that he agreed to a record and management deal within two weeks, paying Genesis an initial sum of £10 a week (equivalent to £200 in 2021). Genesis stayed at Wotton until April 1970, by which time they had enough new material for a second album, recording 'Trespass' in June at Trident Studios in London, but that's where this story ends, as this is all about those early days, and the music that they recorded in their first couple of years as a band which didn't appear on the 'From Genesis To Revelation' album. As well as the singles, b-sides and demos already mentioned, we have that BBC radio session from 1970, and some previously unreleased demos of songs that never made it into a proper recording studio, and bearing in mind that they were all still in their late teens when most of these were recorded, the confidence and assurance of the music points to the legendary band that they would become. 



Track listing

01 Try A Little Sadness (demo 1967)
02 That's Me (b-side of 'Silent Sun' 1968)
03 She Is Beautiful (demo 1967 - later 'The Serpent' with different lyrics)
04 A Winter's Tale (single 1968)
05 Hey! (demo 1968)
06 One-Eyed Hound (b-side of 'A Winter's Tale')
07 The Mystery Of The Flannan Isle Lighthouse (demo 1968)
08 Build Me A Mountain (rough mix 1968)
09 Hair On The Arms and Legs (demo 1968)
10 Image Blown Out (rough mix 1968)
11 The Magic Of Time (demo 1968)
12 Shepherd (BBC radio session 1970)
13 Hidden In The World of Dawn (demo 1968)
14 Pacidy (BBC radio session 1970)
15 Sea Bee (demo 1968)
16 Let Us Now Make Love (BBC radio session 1970)
17 Going Out To Get You (demo 1969)

Friday, April 16, 2021

Anita Harris - London Life (1967)

Anita Harris was born on 3 June 1942 in Midsomer Norton, Somerset, and was the great niece of music hall entertainer Ida Barr. She began her professional career at the age of 8 as an ice skater, working seasons in Naples and Las Vegas, before joining the vocal harmony group The Cliff Adams Singers. In 1961, while still in her teens, she recorded her first single 'I Haven't Got You' with the John Barry Orchestra, going on to audition for Mike Margolis, who agreed to manage her, and who has produced her records almost exclusively ever since, with the couple marrying in 1973. She signed to Vocalion in 1964 to record the Margolis composition 'Lies', switching to Decca the following year, and then to Pye Records, where she stayed for a couple of years. While at Decca, she took part in the 1965 San Remo song contest in Italy, appearing alongside Dusty Springfield, Kiki Dee and Petula Clark, and performed her entry 'L’amore è Partito', later releasing it as a single to little success. Her time at Pye showcased her range, from the melancholy 'I Don't Know Anymore', to the more laid-back Bacharach/David compositions 'Trains And Boats And Planes' and 'London Life, while 'Something Must Be Done' was an upbeat stomper, and a fan favourite. In 1966 she moved from Pye to CBS, and as well as releasing singles with them, they also issued her first album 'Somebody's In My Orchard', which won the Music Critics' Album of the Year for 1966. The four-track EP 'Nursery Rhymes For Our Times' was a collection of modern fables for adults, and was a charming diversion for Harris, featuring covers of The Beatles' 'Eleanor Rigby' and Cher's 'Bang Bang', alongside two original jazz-themed compositions, 'Old Queenie Cole' and the superb 'B.A.D For Me'. Her first major chart success came in 1967 with 'Just Loving You', written by Tom Springfield at the suggestion of his sister Dusty, and it reached number 6 in the UK top 40, earning a double gold disc and staying in the charts for over a year. The follow up 'The Playground' stalled just outside the top 40, but has since become a northern soul dance floor filler, while 'Anniversary Waltz' proved more successful, reaching number 21 in the UK in early 1968. Saucy lead roles in two Carry on films, 'Carry On Doctor' and 'Follow That Camel', cemented her stardom, and she appeared on radio, TV, cinema and in theatres over the following years, but the chart success changed the focus of her music, and she became a strictly middle-of-the-road singer, abandoning the superb jazz stylings of some of her earlier recordings, which was a great shame as she was a fine jazz vocalist. She was still releasing records up to 2003, but this collection concentrates on her early work, and if you do remember her from her TV appearances in the 70's then you might be surprised at just what a gifted jazz singer she was when she started out. 

01 I Haven't Got You (single 1961)
02 Mr. One And Only (b-side of 'I Haven't Got You')
03 Lies (single 1964)
04 Don't Think About Love (b-side of 'Lies')
05 L'amore 
è Partito (single 1965)  
06 Trains And Boats And Planes (single 1965) 
07 Upside Down (b-side of 'Trains And Boats And Planes')
08 I Don't Know Anymore (single 1965)
09 When I Look At You ‎(b-side of 'I Don't Know Anymore')
10 London Life (single 1965)
11 I Run To Hide (b-side of 'London Life')
12 Who's Foolish (single 1966, from the film 'Death Of A Woman')
13 Something Must Be Done (single 1966) 
14 Funny Kind Of Feeling (b-side of 'Something Must Be Done')
15 B-A-D For Me (b-side of 'The Playground' 1967)
16 Danger Route (from the film 'Danger Route' 1967)
17 Old Queenie Cole (from the EP 'Nursery Rhymes For Our Times' 1967)
18 Men (from the Marble Arch compilation 'Anita Harris' 1967)
19 Moody Soul (from the Marble Arch compilation 'Anita Harris' 1967)

Steve Lukather - ...and on guitar (1979)

Steven Lee Lukather was born on 21 October 1957 in the San Fernando Valley, California, and from an early age he was playing keyboards and drums, teaching himself how to play the guitar starting at age seven. His father had bought him a Kay acoustic guitar and a copy of 'Meet The Beatles', and it was an album which he later said changed his life, being particularly influenced by the guitar playing of George Harrison. At Grant High School he met David Paich, and the Porcaro brothers Jeff, Steve, and Mike, all of whom eventually became members of Toto, but by the early 70's he became interested in the idea of becoming a session musician, a vocation that provided opportunities to play with a variety of famous artists. Jeff Porcaro had been playing drums with Steely Dan since 1973, and became a mentor to Lukather, furthering his interest in session work. His first job in the music industry was studio work with Boz Scaggs, after which Paich and Jeff Porcaro asked Lukather to join them in forming a band with his brother Steve, Bobby Kimball, and David Hungate, naming themselves Toto, either after the dog in 'The Wizard Of Oz', or according to an urban myth, after writing 'toto' on their demo tapes to distinguish them from other bands, they then adopted the name, as 'in toto'  was Latin for "all-encompassing", referring to the band members playing on so many records and in so many musical genres. During the 70' and 80's Lukather achieved notability as one of the most sought-after session guitarists in Los Angeles, reputedly playing guitar tracks on more than 1500 albums in his 36 years as a session musician. Named by Gibson Guitar Corporation as one of the Top 10 session guitarists of all time, he has performed on many notable tracks, including Earth, Wind & Fire's 'Faces' album, soloing on the tracks 'Back On The Road' and 'You Went Away', two tracks from the Lionel Richie album 'Can't Slow Down', and on 'Richard Marx's 'Repeat Offender', as well recording virtually all of Michael Jackson's 'Thriller' with Jeff Porcaro. With such a massive back-catalogue to choose from, compiling a representative album took quite a while, but in the end I decided just to concentrate of the period between the formation of Toto and the release of their first album, so all of these tracks are from just the two years from 1977 to 1978, with a couple from 1979 to flesh out the second disc. While I was collecting these recordings I noticed that he'd played on quite a lot of sessions for female artists, and in the end it was logical to split them into two discs, one for the guys and one for the gals. Most of the male artists were US singer/songwriters, not always well-known, but generally able to knock out a good song, and so while the original track listing also included songs from Alice Cooper, Peter Criss of KISS, and Japanese songsmith Tahao Kisugi, by excising those songs, it ends up a very cohesive, laid-back singer/songwriter album, so much so that it almost sounds like the work on one artist. The female singers are a more diverse bunch, ranging from Diana Ross and Barbara Streisand to Olivia Newton-John and Helen Reddy, and while he isn't always given the chance of a solo on some of the tracks, his work is nevertheless integral to the song. So enjoy this very small selection of the session-work of Steve Lukather, amounting to less that 1/50th of his total recorded output.  



Track listing

Disc One: The Guys
01 The War Was Over (from 'Terence Boylan' by Terence Boylan 1977)
02 Brother Of Mine (from 'Heart And Soul' by Danny Peck 1977) 
03 A Clue (from 'Down Two Then Left' by Boz Scaggs 1977)
04 But Love Me (from 'A Song Between Us' by Kenny Nolan 1978)
05 Back In Business (from 'Blue Virgin Isles' by Ted Gärdestad 1978)
06 Let The Fire Burn All Night (from 'Craig Fuller & Eric Kaz' by Craig Fuller & Eric Kaz 1978)
07 Can't Be Seen (from 'Dane Donohue' by Dane Donohue 1978)
08 Fly With Me (from 'Single' by Bill Champlin 1978)
09 Lady Of The Night (from 'A Long Time Coming' by David McCluskey 1978) 
10 Change Of Heart (from 'Touch Me' by Cory Wells 1978)
11 Long Time Till The First Time (from 'Yesterdaydreams' by Brian Cadd 1978)
12 Something's Missing (In My Life) From 'Keeping Time' by Paul Jabara 1978)
13 Sons And Daughters (from 'West Coast Confidential' by Steven T. 1978)

Disc Two: The Gals
01 Top Of The World (from 'Baby It's Me' by Diana Ross 1977)
02 Daydream (from 'Lisa Dal Bello' by Lisa Dal Bello 1977)
03 Love Breakdown (from 'Songbird' by Barbra Streisand 1978)
04 It's The Falling In Love (from '...Too' by Carole Bayer Sager 1978)
05 A Little More Love (from 'Totally Hot' by Olivia Newton-John 1978)
06 One After 909 (from 'We'll Sing In The Sunshine' by Helen Reddy 1978)
07 It's Not Impossible (from 'Well Kept Secret' by Juice Newton 1978)
08 Lady In The Dark (from 'Wild Child' by Valerie Carter 1978) 
09 You're The One (from 'Cheryl Lynn' by Cheryl Lynn 1978)
10 Love Is A Crazy Feeling (from 'Kiki Dee' by Kiki Dee 1978)
11 Think It Over (from 'Dance Forever' by Cheryl Ladd 1978)
12 Get Up (from 'Suspended Animations' by Evie Sands 1979)
13 Git Down (Guitar Groupie) (from 'Take Me Home' by Cher 1979)

For MAC users
Press command+shift+period (to show hidden files) and a grayed out folder '...and on guitar" will appear and the mp3s will be inside. Either drag those to another folder OR rename the folder without any periods at the beginning. Press command+shift+period to once again hide the hidden files.

Red Telephone - Victoria Park (2020)

Red Telephone formed in Cardiff in late 2017, and their chosen style of music is a richly layered dark psych, combining shimmering and angular guitars with an infectious melancholic melodiousness, and all topped by the idiosyncratic vocals of Declan Andrews. I was first alerted to them by the superb 'Victoria Park', and quickly sought out more from the band on Soundcloud, and I also found that they were posting on Bandcamp at the same time. Over the next few years they released seven singles, as well as posting other songs online, and there is now enough material available for a ten-track compilation of all of their music. Drawing on hypnagogic pop and industrial rock influences, the band’s experimental ethos has caught the attention of DJs such as Steve Lamacq and Huw Stephens, and I have to say that they are one of the best modern psychedelic rock bands that I've heard for a while, with an acid-tinged guitar sound that is missing from a lot of current contenders. Red Telephone are actually still going strong, unlike many of the bands in this series, so do support them on Bandcamp. 


Track listing

01 You're Not Wrong 
02 Kookly Rose 
03 Day Off
04 I'm Always Thinking About You
05 Victoria Park
06 Not Myself 
07 Suburb Machine 
08 I Don't Want It Back
09 Stamp Man
10 Dream


Frank Zappa & The Mothers Of Invention featuring Captain Beefheart - Guitarist In Bondage (1975)

I recently found a Frank Zappa/Captain Beefheart bootleg titled 'Improvisations', which looked so intriguing that I had to download it. On listening to it, and doing some online research, it turned out to be just the second disc of a 2CD bootleg of Zappa and The Mothers 1975 concert at Providence, Rhode Island, and so logically the next step was to download the whole concert rather than just hear half of it. Of all the Frank Zappa tours, the spring of 1975 is the most unusual and frustrating, as the performances could range from absolutely exhilarating to rather drab, with sloppy renditions of composed core pieces like 'Advance Romance' and 'Willie The Pimp' played in the midst of brilliant improvisations by both Zappa and Captain Beefheart and the other musicians in the band. Add to this the paucity of really good recordings, and the frustration is obvious, but luckily Zappa's April 26th show in Providence was taped by legendary bootlegger Dan Lampinski, and not only is it arguably the best sounding show from the tour, it’s a tight and enjoyable performance. It is an amazing sounding document which captures the chaotic, eclectic turns in the set starting off with an atonal cacophony of noise in the beginning improvisation, leading into 'Muffin Man', which is played as an instrumental but contains Zappa’s band introduction, and is followed by the song that they usually start off the show with, 'Stinkfoot'. Mothers classics like 'I’m Not Satisfied' and 'Pound For A Brown' are scattered throughout the set, alongside Beefheart collaborations such as 'Poofter’s Froth Wyoming Plans Ahead'. For me, the best thing about the recording was the superb lengthy instrumental portions of the songs, often featuring some stunning guitar-work from Zappa, and so as I'd been persuaded to listen to this expecting some intriguing improvisations from the band, I thought that I'd carry that to it's logical conclusion, and pick out my favourite instrumental sections and combine them together to make up over an hour of the very best of Zappa/Beefheart and the Mothers improvisational skills. If you want to hear the whole concert then it's here on Soulseek, but for me this selection condenses the whole thing down into an hour of the Mothers finest.  


01 Why Doesn't Someone Give Him A Pepsi (a.k.a. The Torture Never Stops)
02 Montana
03 Penguin In Bondage
04 Carolina Hard-Core Ecstasy
05 Willie The Pimp
06 Advance Romance 

Tuesday, April 13, 2021

Tears For Fears - Music For Tables (1990)

Tears For Fears were formed in 1981 in the city of Bath, by Roland Orzabal and Curt Smith, after the dissolution of their first mod-influenced band Graduate. Orzabal and Smith had met as teenagers in Bath, and after forming Graduate they released the single 'Elvis Should Play Ska', followed by their 'Acting My Age' album in 1980, but the band was short-lived and split the following year, with the duo becoming session musicians for the band Neon, where they first met future Tears For Fears drummer Manny Elias. Orzabal and Smith continued working together, drawing inspiration from artists such as Talking Heads, Peter Gabriel, and Brian Eno, with Orzabal developing a fondness of synthesizers after admiring the drummer-free approach of Orchestral Manoeuvres In The Dark, and the success of Depeche Mode. They first called their band History Of Headaches, which was soon changed to Tears For Fears, being inspired by Dr Arthur Janov's primal therapy. The original idea was that Orzabal and Smith would be the nucleus of the group, bringing in additional musicians to help them complete their music, and around this time they met local musician Ian Stanley, who offered them free use of his home 8-track studio. Stanley began working with the duo as their keyboard-player, and after recording two demos the band were signed to Phonogram Records in the UK, releasing their first single 'Suffer The Children' in November 1981. This was followed the next year by 'Pale Shelter', with neither release proving successful, but their third release changed all that, with 'Mad World' reaching number 3 in the UK charts in 1982. Their debut album came out the next year, and featured both guitar- and synthesizer-based songs, with lyrics reflecting Orzabal's bitter childhood and his interest in primal therapy. The album was a big success and hung around the UK charts for over a year, where it reached No. 1 and platinum status. 
Further hit singles followed, including a re-recorded version of 'Pale Shelter', all of which reached the top 5 of the UK charts. Towards the end of 1983 the band released a new, slightly more experimental single, 'The Way You Are', which was intended as a stopgap while they worked on their second album, but although it was a top-30 hit in the UK, it didn't come close to matching the success of their three previous hits. The music was a departure from their usual style, and featuring sampling and programmed rhythms, so the band decided a change of direction was needed, and they dropped the experimental style of the single, although they continued to explore this direction on the b-sides of their singles. 
In early 1984 they began working with producer Jeremy Green on their new single 'Mothers Talk', but the band were unhappy with the results and so producer Chris Hughes was brought back into the fold and the 'Mothers Talk' single was re-produced for release in August 1984. It was a departure from their earlier works, and fared better that the last single, reaching the UK top 20, but it was their next release which was the beginning of the band's rise to international stardom, with 'Shout' hitting the top 5 of the UK charts, and paving the way for their second album 'Songs From The Big Chair', which was released in February 1985. By now the synth-pop had been abandoned in favour of a more sophisticated sound that would become the band's stylistic hallmark, anchored around the creative hub of Orzabal, Stanley and producer Hughes, and the it became one of the year's biggest sellers worldwide. Following the album's release, the band went on a world tour that lasted most of the year, during which they were scheduled to appear at JFK Stadium in Philadelphia on 13 July for for the Live Aid charity event. However, on the morning of the historic event it was announced that the band had pulled out of the show, with the official reason given for their non-appearance being that two of their backing musicians, guitarist Andrew Saunders and saxophonist Will Gregory, had quit due to the expiration of their contract. They were replaced by Alan Griffiths on guitar and Josephine Wells on saxophone for the remaining bulk of the 1985 world tour, and the band pledged to donate proceeds from their concerts played in Tokyo, Sydney, London and New York to make up for their non-appearance at the concert. 
It was 1989 before the group released their third album 'The Seeds Of Love', being largely written by Orzabal in collaboration with keyboardist Nicky Holland, who had toured with the band on their 'Big Chair' world tour in 1985. The album retained the band's epic sound while showing increasing influences ranging from jazz and blues to the Beatles, the latter being particularly evident on the hit single 'Sowing The Seeds Of Love', and the album was another worldwide success, entering the UK Albums Chart at no. 1, and eventually going on to sell millions of copies internationally. After 'The Seeds Of Love', Orzabal and Smith had an acrimonious falling out and parted company in 1991. The split was blamed on Orzabal's intricate but frustrating approach to production and Smith's desire to slow down the pace of their work, and it wasn't helped by their manager Paul King declaring bankruptcy in 1990, and later being convicted of fraud and imprisoned. Following Smith's departure, Orzabal kept the band name alive by releasing the 1992 hit single 'Laid So Low (Tears Roll Down)', which was a taster for the band's greatest hits collection 'Tears Roll Down (Greatest Hits 82–92)'. Smith relocated to New York City, and in 1993 he released his first solo album 'Soul On Board', but it wasn't a commercial success, while Orzabel has carried on under the Tears For Fears name, issuing two more albums since 1993, before re-uniting with Smith in 2000 for one final record 'Everybody Loves A Happy Ending' in 2004. The band continued to tour for the following 15 years, and a new album is finally on the cards for 2021. I mentioned earlier that the band's more experimental work was saved for their b-sides, and this was evident right from the start, with the stripped-back 'Wino' appearing on the flip of their first single, and so a selection of weird and wonderful music continued to show up over the next decade, all of which you can now hear in one place.



Track listing
     
01 Wino (b-side of 'Suffer The Children' 1981)
02 The Conflict (b-side of 'Change' 1983)
03 We Are Broken (b-side of 'Pale Shelter' 1983)
04 The Way You Are (single 1983) 
05 The Maruaders (b-side of 'The Way You Are')
06 Empire Building (b-side of 'Mothers Talk 1984)
07 The Big Chair (b-side of 'Shout' 1984)
08 Pharaohs (b-side of 'Everybody Wants To Rule The World' 1985)
09 When In Love With A Blind Man (b-side of 'Head Over Heels' 1985)
10 Sea Song (s-side of 'I Believe (A Soulful Re-Recording)' 1985)
11 Always In The Past (b-side of 'Woman In Chains' 1989)
12 My Life In The Suicide Ranks (b-side of 'Woman In Chains' 1989)
13 Johnny Panic And The Bible Of Dreams (b-side of 'Advice For The Young At Heart' 1990)
14 Music For Tables (b-side of 'Advice For The Young At Heart' 1990)

Saturday, April 10, 2021

The Beatles - All Made Up (1974) **UPDATE**

Many thanks to Gumboil for providing the location of three of the four radio shows which inspired this post. Having now listened to them again I'd quite forgotten that Merton's imaginary album was a double disc set, and that I'd only compiled the first two sides, but I think this could have been because I wasn't that impressed that side three was mostly covers, and that side four included a track that wasn't recorded until 1998. I'm guessing that at the time I felt happy with just the first disc, but so that we can have the complete listening experience of the full 'All Made Up' album I've added sides three and four to the file, as well as all three radio shows that are available, so you can download the whole thing again or just the tracks that you want, to add to what you already have. I also found that I had tracks 7 and 8 switched, so that's also updated.   

And Gumboil has done it again and tracked down episode 1 of the series right here on Soulseek, so I won't add it to my file as you can grab it by searching 'merton history' (keep it simple!) and add it in yourself. 


Track listing

Side One
01 Be What You See
02 I Don't Wanna Face It
03 Cockamamie Business
04 Ram On
05 Step Lightly
06 Ain't That A Shame
07 No Other Baby

Side Two
08 Fading In Fading Out
09 Steel And Glass
10 Hi, Hi, Hi
11 Horse To The Water
12 #9 Dream
13 Morse Moose And The Grey Goose
14 Oh My Love 

Side Three
15 If You Believe
16 Ac-Cent-Tchu-Ate The Positive
17 Have You Seen My Baby
18 Rip It Up / Ready Teddy 
19 20 Flight Rock
20 Peggy Sue
21 Love Is Strange
22 I'm Losing You
23 Devil Woman
24 Between The Devil & The Deep Blue Sea

Side Four
25 Soft Hearted Hana
26 Fluid
27 When We Was Fab 

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Friday, April 9, 2021

Jesse Ed Davis - ...and on guitar (1975)

Jesse Edwin Davis was born on 21 September 1944 in Norman, Oklahoma. His parents were both Native Americans, with his father, Jesse Ed Davis II, being Comanche, and his mother's side was Kiowa. His father was an accomplished painter in the "flat-style" tradition of Southern Plains painting, with his works being exhibited in the state capitol in Oklahoma City. Davis began his musical career in the late 50's in Oklahoma City and surrounding areas, with John Ware (later a drummer for Emmylou Harris), John Selk (later a bass player for Donovan), Jerry Fisher (later a vocalist with Blood, Sweat & Tears), Mike Boyle, Chris Frederickson, and drummer Bill Maxwell, amongst others. He graduated from the University Of Oklahoma with a degree in English Literature, but by the mid-60's he was touring with Conway Twitty. He eventually moved to California, living there for 8 years, and through his friendship with Levon Helm, he met Leon Russell, who introduced him to paying session work. As well as playing on sessions, he also joined Taj Mahal's band, playing guitar and piano on Mahal's first three albums. After Mahal's 1969 album 'Giant Step', Davis concentrated on the session work for artists such as Roger Tillison and Leon Russell's band The Asylum Choir, and in 1971 he recorded his first solo album after Atco Records signed a contract with him to record two records with the label. The first was '¡Jesse Davis!', where he called in favours from Gram Parsons, Leon Russell and Eric Clapton to contribute to the recording. He was also close friends with Gene Clark, and in 1971 he played on and produced Clark's second solo album 'White Light', as well as guesting with Russell on Bob Dylan's 1971 single 'Watching The River Flow'. This led to him working with George Harrison, performing at the ex-Beatle's 1971 Concert For Bangladesh at Madison Square Garden, along with Ringo Starr, Billy Preston, Leon Russell, Jim Keltner, Eric Clapton and many others. 
Two more solo albums followed, with 'Ululu' coming out in 1972 and 'Keep Me Comin'' in 1973, but he still slotted in the odd sessions here and there, culminating in him playing lead guitar on John Lennon's 'Walls And Bridges' and 'Rock 'n' Roll' albums, and almost completing the full set, he also played on Harrison's 'Extra Texture' and Starr's 'Goodnight Vienna'. In late 1975 he performed with the Faces as second guitarist throughout their final US tour, unfortunately becoming addicted to drugs during this time, and after the tour he continued to work as a session player on albums by Eric Clapton, Rod Stewart, Keith Moon, Steve Miller, Guthrie Thomas, Harry Nilsson, Ry Cooder, Neil Diamond, Rick Danko, Van Dyke Parks, Cher, and many others. In 1977 he moved to Hawaii, but was back in Los Angeles by 1981, broke and ravaged by drug and alcohol addiction, and was in and out of clinics throughout much of the 80's dealing with his addictions. In the ten years he was with Patti Daley, they never married, but after they split up he married twice, and in 1985, with his second wife, he formed and played in The Graffiti Band, which coupled his music with the poetry of the Native American activist John Trudell. In June 1988 he collapsed in the laundry room of an apartment building following a suspected drugs overdose, and died shortly afterwards. He was 43 years old. In his short life he made his mark on the music of many of his peers, with his contributions on Marc Benno's album in particular being outstanding. This two-disc set is just a brief example of his work, as he also played with many blues legends, such as B.B. King, Albert Collins, John Lee Hooker, and Albert King, but I've omitted those as they were all legendary blues guitarists in their own right, and so Davis would only be heard as a backing musician, whereas I wanted to showcase his own exemplary playing on these other recordings from the 70's, when he was at the peak of his powers. 

Disc One
01 Funny Honey  (from 'Booker T. & Priscilla' by Booker T. & Priscilla 1971)
02 Poor Girl (from' Feel Your Groove' by Ben Sidran 1971)
03 Sweet Home Chicago (from 'Asylum Choir II' by Asylum Choir 1971)
04 Baby I Love You (from 'Minnows' by Marc Benno 1971)
05 Let 'Em Roll Johnny (from 'Roger Tillison's Album' by Roger Tillison 1971)
06 Rusty Toy (from 'Warm Waters' by Charles Lloyd 1971) 
07 Rollin' Mill Man (from 'She Used To Wanna Be A Ballerina' by Buffy Saint-Marie 1971)
08 Watching the River Flow (single by Bob Dylan 1971)
09 One In A Hundred (from 'White Light' by Gene Clark 1971)
10 Reno Street Incident (from 'Out The Window' by Jim Pulte 1972)
11 Heal Your Heart (from 'Recall the Beginning ... ' by Steve Miller Band 1972) 

Disc Two
01 Doctor My Eyes (from 'Jackson Browne' by Jackson Browne  1972)
02 Crossroads Of The World (from 'Rod Taylor' by Rod Taylor 1973)
03 Gypsy Davy (from 'Last Of The Brooklyn Cowboys' by Arlo Guthrie 1973)
04 Black Magic Gun (from 'Home At Last' by Wayne Berry 1974) 
05 Fair Play (from 'ST-11261' by Brewer & Shipley 1974) 
06 Grinning In Your Face (from 'That's A Plenty' by The Pointer Sisters 1974)
07 Subterranean Homesick Blues (from 'Pussy Cats' by Harry Nilsson 1974)
08 Open Up The Watergate (from 'L.A. Turnaround' by Bert Jansch 1974) 
09 Whatever Gets You Thru the Night (from 'Walls And Bridges' by John Lennon 1974) 
10 Only You (And You Alone) (from 'Goodnight Vienna' by Ringo Starr 1974) 
11 (What A) Wonderful World (from 'Midnight On The Water' by David Bromberg Band 1975) 
12 The Hits Just Keep On Coming (from 'Burnin' Thing' by Mac Davis 1975)

Suggested by Maybe The Devil, Maybe The Lord

For MAC users
Press command+shift+period (to show hidden files) and a grayed out folder '...and on guitar" will appear and the mp3s will be inside. Either drag those to another folder OR rename the folder without any periods at the beginning. Press command+shift+period to once again hide the hidden files.

Barry St. John - Hey Boy (1969)

Elizabeth Thompson (aka Barry St. John) was born in Glasgow in 1943, and enjoyed singing from a young age, joining Ian Campbell & The Midnighters as a teenager. In 1961 she became vocalist and backup singer with Bobby Patrick Big 6, before moving to London with the band in 1962, and then onto a tour of American bases in Germany, eventually taking up residence at a club in Hamburg. It was at this time that she took the stage name Barry St John, and after a couple of years with the Bobby Patrick Big 6 her management encouraged her to leave the band and pursue a solo career in England, so in 1964 she recorded her first single for Decca, with covers of The Jarmels 'A Little Bit Of Soap' and The Shirelle's 'Thing Of The Past'. Both highlighted perfectly her soulful vocal stylings, and the follow up single 'Bread And Butter' made the German top 40. In 1965 she had a minor UK hit with Chris Andrews' 'Mind How You Go', but when the follow up 'Hey Boy' failed to attract chart attention she was dropped by the label. Moving to Columbia Records, she had her only UK singles chart entry with an anti-protest song 'Come Away Melinda', although it wasn't in her usual style, with the b-side 'Gotta Brand New Man' being more popular with her true fans, later becoming much in demand on the northern soul dance scene. The more soulful 'Everything I Touch Turns To Tears' didn't match the previous success, and once again she was dropped by her label. In 1967 she joined The Krew as lead vocalist, and this brought her back to work with former Bobby Patrick Big 6 member Archie Legget, with the band releasing the album 'According To St. John' in 1968, produced by Mike Pasternak, alias the DJ Emperor Rosko. In the late 60's Barry became a regular session singer and worked with Alexis Korner, Long John Baldry, and Duster Bennett, and between 1972 and 1973 she was a member of The Les Humphries Singers, singing backing vocals on Pink Floyd's 'The Dark Side Of The Moon' and Roger Glover's rock opera 'The Butterfly Ball And The Grasshopper's Feast'. Whilst still a session singer and working with Bryan Ferry, Steve Harley & Cockney Rebel and Elton John in the 70s, she carried on with her solo career, releasing several singles in 1974 and 1975, and was still working in the music business into the early 90's, working with Elton John and Jorge Ben Jor.


01 A Thing Of The Past (single 1964) 
02 Little Bit Of Soap (b-side of 'A Thing Of The Past') 
03 Bread And Butter (single 1964) 
04 Cry To Me (b-side of 'Bread And Butter')
05 Mind How You Go (single 1965) 
06 Don't You Feel Proud (b-side of 'Mind How You Go')
07 Hey Boy (single 1965)
08 I've Been Crying (b-side of 'Hey Boy') 
09 Come Away Melinda (single 1965)
10 Gotta Brand New Man (b-side of 'Gotta Brand New Man')
11 Everything I Touch Turns To Tears (single 1966)  
12 Sounds Like My Baby (b-side of 'Everything I Touch Turns To Tears')
13 Cry Like A Baby (single 1968)
14 Long And Lonely Night (b-side of 'Cry Like A Baby')
15 By The Time I Get To Phoenix (single 1969) 
16 Turn On Your Light (b-side of 'By The Time I Get To Phoenix')

It's Immaterial - Bored Usherette (1991)

In my last post by It's Immaterial I mentioned that just before the band broke up in 1990 they'd started recording what would have been their third album under the guidance of 'Song' producer Calum Malcolm, even titling it 'House For Sale'. Some twenty four years later, whilst moving studios, Jarvis Whitehead and John Campbell discovered a neat cardboard box containing the original multi-track Tascam DA-88 tapes from those sessions and decided to complete the project. After restoring the tapes and recording new parts to complete them, the duo started a crowd-funding page via PledgeMusic to raise enough money to release the album, and after a couple of years they managed to reach their target, and 'House For Sale' was finally released in September 2020. But the story doesn't end there, as the ten tracks that they chose for the album aren't all that was recorded, and with some being updated and re-titled, while others were dropped completely, the final release is pretty much a brand new record compared to my old bootleg of the album. If I remove the four tracks that have now appeared on the official release, we still have nine songs left, making up a 43-minute companion to the long-awaited follow-up to 'Song'. I would encourage anyone who fondly remembers the band, or was alerted to them by my earlier posts, to support them by buying 'House For Sale', and in the meantime you can listen to this collection of songs that didn't make it, but certainly deserved to.



01 Bored Usherette   
02 Heaven Help Us All  
03 Out Of The Blue   
04 Just Drive  
05 Wyoming  
06 Is It All Right  
07 Circus Boy  
08 Betcha By  
09 New Moon   

The Beatles - All Made Up (1974)

In 2017, BBC Radio 4 broadcast a four-part series by the comedian Paul Merton, based around what would have happened if The Beatles had staged a reunion some years after they'd broken up. The year is 1974. Labour's Harold Wilson is Britain's Prime Minister, and Richard Nixon is in the White House. Abba win Eurovision, Germany win the World Cup and a new writer called Stephen King publishes his first novel. After 5 years of tension, ill feeling and fraught negotiation the four Beatles have buried their individual hatchets and are moving tentatively towards a full scale reunion, hopefully culminating in their first new album since 1969. As a warm up for the recording sessions, the Beatles - and some of their famous friends - have come together once more for a surprise concert, their first time live on stage since 1966 when they gave up live appearances after a show at Candlestick Park in San Francisco.
Join Paul Merton on the commentator's microphone as the Fab Four take to the boards once more....
Like all of us, Paul Merton is a huge Beatles fan and like all Beatle fans his mind often turns to the "What if's..." of their career. What if they'd never broken up? What if they were still playing live? What if they made another album? The series was Merton's attempt to answer those questions, and to put forward a fantastical version of Beatle history. Based on the known facts, and using the recordings available, he imagines the concert that the Beatles could have given, and follows it up with the album that they could have made. The result is a fascinating look into an alternative reality, but also a clear eyed examination of the strengths and of the forces that drove - and drove apart - the greatest band of all time. He followed up the radio series with an article in Radio Times, where he revealed the track listing of the Beatles re-union album that he hoped would have happened after the concert. 
Fifty years after the Beatles’ 'Sgt Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band' was released, Merton marks the anniversary with a radio series in which he imagines what would have happened if his favourite band had reunited, made another album, and played live one more time.
From Radio Times, May 2017
“It would have been 1974,” he says, firmly.
He’s worked on it painstakingly, plotting when these events could have actually happened as the Beatles’ solo careers were soaring and diverging, their personal lives rocking and rolling, and their finances still affected by the messy legal wrangles that plagued their final years.
He’s even done the set list for the “concert” and ordered the tracks for the “record” himself, stitching together lesser-known songs from the solo Beatles’ catalogues and live shows.
“To be honest, I’ve been doing this for years,” he says, “John Lennon said in the 70's that if you want to create a Beatles album, just take tracks off individual albums and put them together, and I always wondered, could you create something that feels right? Then work out when they could have played together, around solo records, having children, trying to get green cards? And then I developed a theory…”
Another reason Merton has enjoyed creating an alternative history is a personal one: he became a Beatles obsessive after his heroes split up. Born in 1957 in south London, he was five when they released their first album, 'Please Please Me', and 12 when they broke up, but he spent his childhood, amazingly, largely unaware of their music. “I was the least rock ‘n’ roll child ever. My parents listened to the Light Programme, and that was it, really. I was completely out of touch with what was happening in pop culture, projecting old 8mm silent films to myself and the wall. My only album was an Al Jolson album!” But as Merton’s teens whirred onwards, the Beatles’ music seeped in. He’d heard and loved 'Here Comes the Sun' from the last album they recorded together, 'Abbey Road', while wandering around Woolworths one Christmas, and borrowed the vinyl from his local library. “I remember the librarian going: ‘What, you really haven’t heard 'Rubber Soul' or 'Revolver'?’” He mimics a little boy lost. “And I was, ‘Er… no?’”. Soon he was back every other Saturday, borrowing every album in chronological order of release, like a mini-history project; he was agog at the extraordinary transitions the band had made in seven short years. “I basically did the Beatles in three months, in fortnight-long bursts, through headphones I got for my birthday, completely lost in their world.” He didn’t share the music with his friends, as he didn’t really go out to parties, he says; instead, he’d stay at home with his clunky tape recorder making compilations of tracks by the band together, and, prophetically enough, apart.
From day one, Merton loved 'Sgt Pepper'. “It’s not a rock ‘n’ roll record, really, is it? It does whimsy very well. It’s also got this strangeness, this hugeness, this going-upstairs-to-have-a-smoke-and-go-into-a-dream stuff. It’s a record that’s soaring above nature.” As a teenager, he even fantasised he might pay someone to put a photograph of him onto the 'Sgt Pepper' cover one day. Lennon is Merton’s favourite Beatle, who once said he’d rather have been a comedian than a pop star, although Merton himself gives this idea short shrift. “Rose-tinted glasses there, I think, John. I mean, when you’re in a band, you haven’t got another band heckling, trying to get you off the stage all the bloody time, have you?” 
We've all had a go at making up these 'what if......?' Beatles albums, and so here's another one to add to the long, long list, and it's actually a pretty good attempt.
Many thanks to Gumboil for providing the location of all four radio shows which inspired this post. Having now listened to them again I'd quite forgotten that Merton's imaginary album was a double disc set, and that I'd only compiled the first two sides, but I think this could have been because I wasn't that impressed that side three was mostly covers, and that side four included a track that wasn't recorded until 1998. I'm guessing that at the time I felt happy with just the first disc, but so that we can have the complete listening experience of the full 'All Made Up' album I've added sides three and four to the file, as well as all four radio shows.




Side One
01 Be What You See
02 I Don't Wanna Face It
03 Cockamamie Business
04 Ram On
05 Step Lightly
06 Ain't That A Shame
07 No Other Baby

Side Two
08 Fading In Fading Out
09 Steel And Glass
10 Hi, Hi, Hi
11 Horse To The Water
12 #9 Dream
13 Morse Moose And The Grey Goose
14 Oh My Love 

Side Three
15 If You Believe
16 Ac-Cent-Tchu-Ate The Positive
17 Have You Seen My Baby
18 Rip It Up / Ready Teddy 
19 20 Flight Rock
20 Peggy Sue
21 Love Is Strange
22 I'm Losing You
23 Devil Woman
24 Between The Devil & The Deep Blue Sea

Side Four
25 Soft Hearted Hana
26 Fluid
27 When We Was Fab 

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