Posts tagged 70′s
Rock Star Birthday Blurbs – Roger Waters
Sep 6th
I know I’ve shared this with you in the past, but I went to see Roger Waters four summers ago at the venue formerly known as Great Woods Center For The Performing Arts in Mansfield, MA. The date was September 8, 2006. It was the tour that Roger Waters was playing the entire Dark Side of The Moon LP in its entirety. I actually went on a lark as two of my friends had made the concert a priority. I had not. September is usually the time when I start thinking about how much money I blew attending concerts all summer and start dialing it back. In 2006, my friends Mark & Melanie were hell bent on attending this show so I got a single and tagged along. I went onto the Ticketmaster site at 1 PM or so just in case they had released tickets. I plugged in my requirement for a single and up came Section 1, Row F, Seat 3. I figured I was about six rows back and pinned to the right wall. If you’ve ever been to Great Woods you’d probably follow. What I got was a front row seat on the aisle. Sweet.
I wasn’t expecting a heckuva lot that night to be honest. My friend Mark only goes to the most recognizable shows (The Who, ZZ Top, Rolling Stones, etc) and I sometimes blow them off. Sometimes I’ve seen the act too many times. In my case I have half a dozen acts I’ll skip unless a crowd from my circle is going. Some bands I never miss, but those bands usually have new records to tour behind. I get really tired, no matter how much I love the band (I’m talking to you Mick), of watching a great band play the exact same set list every time they tour. They might play 25 songs and 20 of them are the so called “can’t leave ‘em out…somebody might be coming to see us for the very first time.” Fair enough I suppose, but then I reserve the right to blow off shows where the price tag is $150-$450 and the set list is stagnant. The Eagles come to mind. I did go see them last summer, but the concert was FREE or I never would have gone. I love Joe Walsh to death, but the Eagles catalogue can sometimes get a little stale in my opinion. In fairness to that tour, which is always notoriously overpriced, Walsh, Henley and company all mixed in some of their solo hits. I like that. I can only take “Peaceful Easy Feeling” so many times and the expiration date surfaced in 1979 for me.
Where were we? Oh yeah….George Roger Waters was born on this fine day, September 6th, in The Year of Our Lord 1943. On the night in question I was just tagging along, as I said, but what I got, up close and personal, was a big old whale of a concert considering David Gilmour was nowhere in sight. As a jaded concert goer from way, way back; I was impressed. As a result, I’m scheduled to take in Roger Waters performing The Wall on October 1, 2010 and I’m looking forward to it. I never did see Pink Floyd before The Feud broke out, but I did see Pink Floyd on the surprisingly good David Gilmour led Division Bell Tour on May 20, 1994 at Foxboro Stadium. Stadium shows are generally just for the party. You rarely actually see the artists unless you count the five inch figures grinding away on stage about forty yards from the action…no matter how good your seats are. I really enjoyed my one and only Pink Floyd show. If I could put myself in the Way Back machine I would go see a show during The Animals Tour, but I just didn’t get it done at 17. Curses, foiled again…
I took in Roger Waters during the Radio KAOS Tour on Saturday August 22, 1987 at the aforementioned Great Woods venue. That was highly entertaining. My ticket says “comp” on it so maybe I scored a radio station freebie, probably my last, before my non radio career faded to black. If so, it was a good way to go out. Roger Waters apparently became insufferable by the early 80′s so far as David Gilmour, Richard Wright and Nick Mason were concerned and was basically asked to leave the group he co-founded in 1965. Pink Floyd began as a Psychedelic Rock band led by Crazy Diamond Syd Barrett from roughly 1965 to 1968. Legend has it that Syd indulged in a few too many LSD trips and may have literally fried his talented brain in the process. He had been credited with writing eight of the first 11 tracks Pink Floyd ever released on their 1967 LP Piper at The Gates of Dawn and co-wrote two more. He was the dominant song writer in Pink Floyd until he fell apart.
It was Barrett who coined the band name (Pink Floyd was originally known as The Tea Set until they ran into another band with the same name) by fooling around with two American Blues Singers first names. Pink Anderson and Floyd Council inadvertently contributed to one of the biggest brand names in Rock history. Barrett, however, just couldn’t sustain as his mental health deteriorated. David Gilmour, originally slated to become an additional member to mask the non performing Barrett, essentially wound up replacing him in 1968. Syd Barrett, after releasing two 1970 solo albums, The Madcap Laughs and Barrett respectively, withdrew from the music business and went all Howard Hughes on us. He finally passed away in 2006 due to complications from diabetes and pancreatic cancer after living many years in Cambridge out of the public eye. It has been said that Gilmour made sure that Barrett received all the royalties he was due as the principal song writer in the early days. Sadly, cancer also caught up with keyboardist Richard Wright in 2008 as well. And Then There Were Three…
Pink Floyd took a few records to really gain some traction outside of the UK. They had a seriously psychedelic and esoteric sound that sometimes wasn’t very conducive to commercial radio. The first single “Arnold Layne” and Barrett’s masterpiece “See Emily Play” being the exceptions. There were plenty of long jams; “A Saucerful of Secrets” and “Careful With That Axe Eugene” to name just a couple, but while the critics loved them almost immediately, the record buying public was lagging behind. Once Barrett was thrown clear, Pink Floyd took a while to find its bearings, before exploding in 1971-1979. If they weren’t the biggest band in the world, they were in the discussion. I can’t think of a better brand than Pink Floyd. I’m not saying I inhaled, but anyone who did took an instant liking to the Pink Floyd sound. They just flat out meshed when they released Dark Side of The Moon in 1973. What a monster record. I’ll never forget, as a freshman at North Hunterdon Regional High School in 1975, a full two years after the record was released, listening to that record night and day. I think I heard “Time” on the legendary New York Progressive Rock station WNEW-FM 102.7 (Where Rock Lives) and was just blown away. Yes! No wonder I enjoyed the 2006 Roger Waters show huh? Let’s see, carry the one…that was no less than 33 years after it was released. Forget about the charts and longevity and Classic Rock radio beating the living snot out of Dark Side; it’s still a masterpiece in my book. Groundbreaking as all get out. Wish You Were Here (1975)? And Animals (1977)? Fahgeddaboutit!
OK, I need to wrap thing up…The Wall was released in 1979 and took the world by storm. No exaggeration whatsoever. By this time Roger Waters had practically usurped all song writing authority much to the consternation of the remaining members of Pink Floyd. Richard Wright had been forced out due to his perceived lack of contribution, though he did do that final tour for The Wall. Money problems had hounded the band even after several great records in a row. Bad investments and tax problems had them really depending on The Wall when it was released. It’s been said that Waters’ ego essentially split the band. As royalties were at least partially paid based on song writing credit, Waters was making more money than the others. While they resented it, apparently it was his behaviour that did the band in. Happily, three decades later, the remaining living Pink Floyd members are threatening to play together again. Frankly, Roger Waters’ solo career was a bit of a dud. I bought them all and while there is some great material on 1984′s The Pros and Cons of Hitch Hiking, 1987′s Radio KAOS and 1992′s Amused To Death, none of them reached out of the ordinary sales numbers. David Gilmour’s solo records; 1978′s David Gilmour, 1984′s About Face and 2006′s On An Island fared little better. Pink Floyd, sans Roger Waters, was able to score fairly big with 1987′s Momentary Lapse of Reason and 1994′s Division Bell, but the parting of ways Roger Waters and David Gilmour staged way back when seems a real shame today. Here’s hoping they can put their differences aside and wow us one more time. Happy birthday to Roger Waters. See you next month…
Roger Waters – 5:01 AM (The Pros and Cons of Hitch Hiking).mp3
Roger Waters – Radio Waves.mp3
Roger Waters – What God Wants – Part I.mp3
Buy or Download Flickering Flame: The Solo Years from Amazon here.
Rock Star Birthday Blurbs – Van Morrison
Aug 31st
Today is George Ivan (Van) Morrison’s Birthday. It’s also my mother’s birthday (Hi Mom!…of course she’d never find this blog…thankfully…I don’t even tell her about it…Happy 73rd Margaret). Van Morrison is a more manageable 65 today, but then again my mom doesn’t have to go on tour whenever she needs to make a buck. When you sift through All Time Critic’s Favorite books you find Van The Man material. 1968′s Astral Weeks is a long time favorite. 1970′s Moondance is another. 1974′s Live LP It’s Too Late To Stop Now is sometimes mentioned amongst the greatest live records ever made. My personal favorite is 1972′s Saint Dominic’s Preview, but I’m not really mad for Van. I saw his Avalon Sunset Tour at Boston’s Orpheum Theatre in 1989 and almost fell asleep. Sorry Van. Intentionally there were no hits, but even if there had been; I really only went because of this girl I was dating at the time. I wasn’t expecting a rockin’ show and I didn’t get one. Van Morrison is larger than life itself, but I swear, if you skim 25 songs off the top you could be happy with his work.
I don’t want to say that I don’t like Van Morrison. That is obviously not true or I would not be posting about him. The thing is, I worked at a bouncer, all 160 lbs of me at the time…if only that were true today, at The Bull & Finch Pub (Cheers) in 1984 and 1985. We had this DJ that played Van Morrison until I thought I was going to lose my lunch. It wouldn’t have been so bad if he mixed in “Wavelength” or “Blue Money” once in a while, but no….it was straight “Brown-Eyed Girl” and “Moondance” until I didn’t care if I ever heard those songs ever again. The girls love Van The Man. Like Cetera (!). I get that. Really I do, but the guy has been a crooner for decades now. Pop music, if that is what you want to call his once fresh sounding Irish Folk Rock, is a thing of Morrison’s past if you ask me. Any artist is going to be pulverized back to the stone age if their catalogue is reduced to five songs, but in Morrison’s case the rest was sit down and pay attention ballads. Usually last of my list on things to listen to at home. That doesn’t make me right or wrong, it just makes me a respectful Van Morrison fan from a distance. I own everything up until Avalon Sunset (1989), but I took a pass on the rest. I don’t even listen to Astral Weeks that much to be honest. I love Tupelo Honey (1971) and Saint Dominic’s Preview. Even Moondance is still very listenable if you skip the title track (repetition, not quality is the reason for that remark). There are several very good Van Morrison songs amongst those first ten or so records, but nobody ever hears them anymore. He’s only got five songs don’t you know (insert sarcasm here)? Most people would call themselves Van Morrison fans I would venture.
Van Morrison’s career began in earnest fronting the seminal Irish band Them in the 60′s. Patti Smith’s cover of “Gloria” (as in G-L-O-R-I-A)” in 1975 reminded everyone, in case anyone forgot, just how great Them were. You may remember “Here Comes The Night,” which is actually a Bert Berns tune (Berns also wrote “Hang On Sloopy, Piece of My Heart, Cry Baby, 25 Miles and Twist and Shout” just to name a few of his masterpieces) first recorded by Lulu and The Luvvers, as well. David Bowie did a nice rendition on his 1973 covers LP “Pinups” as well. If you are wondering, Bert Berns was a seven year veteran of the famous Brill Building; a songwriter’s haven noted for other superstar writers like Carole King and Neil Sedaka. But 1965 was a long, long time ago. Morrison began writing solo material in 1967 and released a little known single called “Brown-Eyed Girl” on his first solo LP Blowin’ Your Mind. Them eventually broke up in the early 70′s and Morrison was free to continue down the solo path without friction. He was definitely living the poor man’s starving artist’s existence for many years, but by the mid 70′s he was on his way to legend status. Boston, in particular, latched onto the Irish born Morrison because he chose to live here for a spell in the late 60′s. I’ve heard second hand tales of him palling around with Peter Wolf of the J. Geils Band, so if that’s true it’s no wonder he has a strong foothold here in Boston. Classic Rock will not let go of his early 70′s songs in this market, but I suspect it’s true of other markets across the country as well. Nobody doesn’t know the name Van Morrison.
I have to run and see Iggy Pop tonight…talk about the other end of the spectrum, but I wanted to jot down a few thoughts about Van The Man and leave you with a couple of my favorite Van tunes. Happy birthday Van. I may not be your exact market, but don’t take it personally. You are still a legend. Live on in good health.
Van Morrison – Saint Dominic’s Preview.mp3
Van Morrison – Tupelo Honey.mp3
Van Morrison – And It Stoned Me.mp3
Buy or Download Still On Top: The Greatest Hits from Amazon here.
Rock Star Birthday Blurbs – Elvis Costello
Aug 25th
Today is Declan Patrick MacManus’ birthday. Elvis Costello was born on August 25, 1954 in London, England. Let me just say this right here and now; if Elvis had packed it in after his first three albums I could have lived with it. I know that line of thinking is sacrilege amongst the faithful, but I liked Elvis Costello & The Attractions. Shoot me. I’m wise enough to recognize Elvis Costello has had a long and legendary career; I’m doing this post for instance, but I could be very happy with the first three records and a double CD greatest hits package (a real one with the exact best tracks and not one moment of forethought given to what was played on the radio). Clearly Costello has talent. I’m not much for his ballads, which seem to be 92% of everything he ever released, but I can certainly recognize the beauty of something like “Alison (My Aim is True).”
The thing is, Costello was an angry young man once upon a time even though he once wrote a song telling us he wasn’t. That’s the Elvis Costello I loved. Part Elvis Presley, part Day Costello (his father’s stage name), Elvis had an usual voice and was part of the New Wave of artists in the late 70′s that coincided with the rise of Punk Rock. Beginning in 1977 with this first single for Stiff Records (and arguably still one of his best songs in my opinion) “Less Than Zero,” Elvis Costello and his band, later on to become known as The Attractions, ripped off three classic records called My Aim is True, This Year’s Model (1978) and Armed Forces (1979). No self respecting college kid at that time (Hey! That was me!) would be without them. Chicks loved ‘em, dudes loved ‘em and they were standard party fare by 1980. Radio loved ‘em too. My Aim is True spawned several fantastically radio friendly singles. You may recall “Miracle Man, (The Angels Wanna Wear My) Red Shoes, Less Than Zero, Waiting For The End of The World (another absolute personal favorite of mine), Alison,” and, for The U.S. crowd, the greatest single of them all; “Watching The Detectives.” It was unusual for a record to chart six songs from one release back then. That trend would soon change, but by all measures Elvis Costello’s first record, credited to just Elvis Costello alone, was a smashing success. The fact that you still hear his music on Classic Rock radio really says a lot about the quality of his early stuff. You may recall in December 1977 Costello famously aborted the scheduled Saturday Night Live performance of “Less Than Zero” and blasted into Radio, Radio. It was stunt that got him a ton of notoriety, but also got him banned from SNL until 1989. That was ballsy. It ranks up there with The Doors’ Jim Morrison singing the lyric “higher” from “Light My Fire” when the folks at Ed Sullivan forbade him to in September of 1967. Compare that to Mick Jagger and The Rolling Stones acquiescing to the censors in January of 1967 by singing “Let’s Spend Some Time Together” instead of “Let’s Spend The Night Together.” How provincial we were huh? Seems silly today no?
A year later Elvis hit us with This Year’s Model. Another great record. This album wasn’t quite as radio friendly as My Aim is True, but the single everyone remembers is “Pump It Up.” “I loved (I Don’t Want To Go To) Chelsea, This Year’s Girl, Radio, Radio and The Beat,” but as a consumer Elvis mania was all the rage. Some didn’t think this one measured up to the first record, and they’d have discussion merit, but Elvis was so hip he got a pass on the dreaded Sophomore Slump. In reality there is no such thing in this case, but it reminded me a bit of when The Cars’ sophomore record Candy-O was released around the same time. Everybody wanted another The Cars and when they didn’t get it, it took a bit of time to absorb how great Candy-O really was. If you ever thought Elvis Costello was going to be a flash in the Pan, 1979′s Armed Forces put that to a crushing rest. “(What’s So Funny ‘Bout) Peace, Love & Understanding” turned out to be the biggest single on this record, but “Green Shirt, Accidents Will Happen and “Oliver’s Army” were terrific songs. After Armed Forces something started to change. For one thing the tight 10-12 song rockin’ Elvis album was beginning to be a thing of the past. Radio began to shy away from his music a bit. Not because it wasn’t any good, but because there really weren’t too many hits on any given record. He would continue recording with The Attractions right up until 1986′s Blood & Chocolate, but the thrill was gone if you enjoyed his short angry fast paced ditties.
1980′s Get Happy!! gave us “I Can’t Stand Up For Falling Down,” but that wasn’t even really his song (that would be Sam & Dave of “Hold On, I’m Comin’ fame). The songs were short enough as a rule, but there wasn’t much there for radio to sink its teeth into. In fairness, Get Happy!! wasn’t a complete departure from form for Elvis Costello, but it did signal a slight move away from intentionally radio friendly material. It was around this time that The Attractions began to splinter according to what I’ve read. 1981′s Trust brought us “Watch Your Step, Clubland and From a Whisper To a Scream.” “Watch You Step” was a great song, but things were changing fast. Later that same year, not five months later Almost Blue was released. Costello’s love of Country music was starting to impose its will. There were no radio friendly singles on Almost Blue. 1982′s Imperial Bedroom gave us “Beyond Belief, Almost Blue (Don’t you hate it when a record is named for a song that doesn’t get released until a later record? Think Houses of The Holy…) and Man Out of Time.” Piano, not guitar, started to dominate the Costello sound. We were now getting 20 plus songs and maybe two singles per record about now. Not a good combination.
There were plenty of good songs from here on out; just not enough of them. I know artists like to grow and change and once you’ve made enough money you can do what you like, but I was disappointed. I keep buying his records up until 1989′s Spike, but after that I gave up listening for the next Armed Forces. If you are an Elvis Costello fan you will recognize several of these tracks; from 1983′s Punch The Clock “Everyday I Write The Book and Shipbuilding,” from 1984′s Goodbye Cruel World “The Only Flame in Town,” from 1986′s Blood & Chocolate “Tokyo Storm Warning,” and from 1989′s Spike “Veronica.” Great singles, but there was a ton of material released surrounding these songs and I’ll admit it; he lost me. I know, because I read the music trade rags, that some of these albums, plus several of the ones I didn’t even mention, are favorites of the critics, but the critics aren’t always right. In fact, if it was my job to be a critic I don’t know how successful I would be. I like to take my time and enjoy a new release. I couldn’t listen to a record a couple of times, pass myself off as having absorbed it and then try to speak to the public with any authority. I know Elvis Costello married Jazz pianist Diana Krall in 2003 and that his tastes are all over the map, but I haven’t been following his career post 1990. I’m sure there are great songs in there somewhere, but I feel like I have to work much too hard to locate them. I’m open to being set straight, but it’s hard for me to get past my opening premise; that the first three Elvis Costello records are his best. Right or wrong the Giant Panther would like to extend good health wishes and birthday greetings to Mr Elvis Costello.
Elvis Costello – Waiting For The End of The World.mp3
Elvis Costello – This Year’s Girl.mp3
Elvis Costello – Green Shirt.mp3
Buy or Download The Best of Elvis Costello: The First Ten Years from Amazon here.
Rock Star Birthday Blurbs – Keith Moon
Aug 22nd
Monday August 23, 2010 would have been Keith John Moon’s 64th birthday. Now it’s just another reminder that excess will eventually catch up to you sooner or later. Musicians that seem to disappear prematurely have a way of bothering music fans more than most early deaths. You have their albums and hopefully there are many before their time comes, but it always leaves you wanting more. Getting cut down in the prime of your life, let alone your musical career, is just sad. And frustrating. As a life long Who fan I still miss Keith Moon. No matter how many times I hear ”Bargain” I always think of the drumming. Man could this guy play. I’ve seen what’s left of The Who dozens of times, but I never saw Keith Moon play. I was only eighteen when September 7, 1978 rolled around and Moon passed away. Most people think he partied himself to death, but his death was an accident really. He was trying to battle his alcohol demons by ingesting prescription sedatives. Unfortunately, as usual, Keith Moon overdid it. It’s hard to argue that taking 32 tablets of Clomethiazole in one sitting is the smart thing to do, but there were other factors involved with that decision it seems. It had to be more than just alcohol didn’t it? They say 26 of those pills were never even digested. Not good.
In 1970 Keith Moon was involved in an accident that haunted him for the rest of his days. In early January Moon was attempting to protect his Bentley, which was being damaged by some “fans” outside an English bar called The Red Lion Pub in Hertfordshire. Moon had been drinking, surprise, and inadvertently was involved in running over his friend and bodyguard, Neil Boland, as result of trying to flee. There are still questions as to whether Moon was actually driving, but that didn’t stop him from feeling guilty and having awful nightmares. They say he was always a damn the torpedoes type party guy, but some say this put him into overdrive. I don’t know how I’d handle it if I was responsible, in any way, shape or form, for the death of another human being so it’s hard to criticize his methods of self medicating. I won’t even try. I wouldn’t call his behavior a death wish, but there are folks who believed he thought he didn’t deserve to live after what happened to Neil Boland. It’s a theory anyway.
By all accounts Keith Moon was a fun loving guy with a big heart. He may have had a personality disorder because he had periodic displays of violence from time to time. He loved to smash things like toilets and TVs (it’s probably what made him such a great drummer) and allegedly once drove a Cadillac into a swimming pool, but that might be more lore than fact. He famously ingested animal tranquilizers and mixed them with brandy before a 1973 performance at The Cow Palace in San Francisco during the Quadrophenia Tour. He made it about forty minutes until he literally was relieved mid show by a fan named Scot Halpin. He had passed out. A kid from Iowa had to finish the show with Pete, John and Roger. Unfortunately Halpin is no longer with us having passed on in 2009, but what a story no? Another in a myriad of stories that add to the Moon legend is his remark to Jimmy Page that led to the eventual naming of his new band Led Zeppelin. He was referring to something going over like a lead balloon, but used the term “lead Zeppelin” instead. Page adroitly spelled lead “Led” so that it would always be pronounced correctly, but latched onto to that phraseology big time. Good job Keith!
I don’t think we’ll ever know everything we’d like to know about Keith Moon. Separating fact from fiction is always a chore with Rock Stars. They are generally more responsible than they would like the public to believe, but with Moon it’s hard to tell if that was true. All I know is I loved the way he attacked the drum kit. He had this great way of spacing his cascading drum rolls with split second tension building pauses. I have no idea what I’m talking about to be truthful, but if I had to pick a drummer to be my favorite I’d be leaning towards Keith Moon. He just does it for me. The Who can still produce great shows without The Ox and Moonie, but it just isn’t the same. I’m going to rummage around my Who collection now and see what I can drum up (sorry) for reasonable examples of what I’m on about here. I’m very sorry Keith isn’t around today to celebrate his birthday, but we at The Giant Panther (well maybe just me) are thinking about him.
The Who – Put The Money Down.mp3
Buy or Download The Who: The Ultimate Collection from Amazon here.
Rock Star Birthday Blurbs – Ginger Baker
Aug 19th
What are synonyms for prickly? Cantankerous? Crotchety? Ornery? Cranky? Testy? A Case could be made that legendary drummer Ginger Baker is all of these things. Jack Bruce is no picnic, but Ginger Baker, if you read Eric Clapton’s Biography, Clapton, it seems pretty clear that Baker was the uncompromising force that eventually split up Cream. Cream, for the uninitiated, was a power trio in the mid to late 60′s that shook up the Rock world. Rolling Stone Magazine, according to our good friends at Wikipedia, named Baker the third greatest drummer of all time. That is high praise indeed. Very high. Those other two drummers had better be named Moon and Bonham or I’m cancelling my subscription. Still, what Cream meant to the world of Rock music cannot be understated. Eric Clapton, Ginger Baker and Jack Bruce co-existed for four years (1966-1969) and four studio records. It feels like much more to me. Fresh Cream, Disreali Gears, Wheels of Fire and Goodbye Cream seem larger than life to this blogger. Four records can get you into the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame. I didn’t know that. I’m not arguing in the least, but that’s really something. As a baseball fan, Hall of Fame status usually requires some amount of longevity. A dominate status over a period of say, ten years. In Rock apparently you just need to dominate period. Well, amen to Cream and their domination. Spectacular.
When I was a boy of maybe seven or eight, my neighbor Tim Schneider and I used to hang around his house after school. His older brother Dickie (I haven’t had contact with these two in over 40 years, but I remember this stuff like it was yesterday) was a fan of The Rolling Stones, The Beatles and Cream. He would play his records on his parents stereo in the living room at 11. I mean ear splitting volume. The first time I heard the Rolling Stones’ classic “Street Fighting Man” I heard it loud. Thank you Dickie, wherever you are today. I was sold on the spot. I’ve been a fan ever since. The other song Dickie would consistently wail for us was “Sunshine of Your Love” by Cream. This song still gives me chills today. I know many of you have heard it so many times you don’t even hear it when it comes on. That’s how I feel about Robert Palmer’s “Bad Case of Loving You.” I don’t even hear it when it comes on the radio. Not that I should be listening to any station that plays it, but the DJs on my local Alternative/Indie Rock station are just kids. And irritating ones at that. I’m so down on radio it’s not funny and it was my first true love. Oh well.
Eric Clapton was a troubadour of sorts bouncing from band to band in the 60′s. Clearly the guy was beyond talented, but he didn’t seem to have much compromise in his bones either. I mean The Yardbirds, John Mayall’s Bluesbreakers, Cream, Blind Faith, Delaney & Bonnie, Derek & The Dominos, Solo career…enough already. I don’t know, maybe that’s what it takes to achieve what he’s achieved. We all know it was The Blues or bust in his world, but there sure seemed to be more flight than fight when it came to working with difficult musicians. Cream was something else. It’s no accident that when they reunited in 2005 for a handful of shows at Madison Square Garden and Royal Albert Hall that tickets were at a premium. The concert, even though I wasn’t privileged enough to attend, sounds wonderful. I’m not surprised.
Old Blues numbers drove Cream for the most part. “Spoonful, Born Under a Bad Sign, Rollin’ and Tumblin’, Cat’s Squirrel, Outside Woman Blues, Sitting On Top of The World, Crossroads and I’m So Glad” were a nice foundation for their catalogue. Their original tunes though were the ones that folks got into the most. “Sunshine of Your Love, White Room, Badge, Strange Brew, SWLABR and Tales of Brave Ulysses” are still played on Classic Rock radio to this very day. There is just something about the way these guys played this music that makes it timeless. The Blues are timeless, I get that, but most of their songs were played at a measured and slow pace that built to a crescendo of sorts. Blues Rock at it’s finest.
Today is Ginger Baker’s 71st birthday if my math is correct. Born August 19, 1939 in South London, Baker fancies himself a Jazz drummer. He suffers from Arthritis these days, but back in his heyday he used two bass drums as opposed to one bass drum and one kick bass drum. How that translates to his sound I’ll leave for real musicians to discuss. He apparently played harder with one hand and softer with another. Again, I know nothing about drumming. I know he sounded great, but why? I can’t help you there. After Cream and Blind Faith Baker had his own band called Air Force for a time. He also teamed up with some bands you wouldn’t expect him to in Hawkwind, Atomic Rooster and Public Image Limited. As you can see in the picture directly above he has a couple of palm prints on the Hollywood Walk of Fame. I was reading an article about him in Classic Rock Magazine recently and he trashed everyone from Led Zeppelin to The Beatles. He complained about Rock Music being so loud. Baker no longer cares for Rock music and he sounds bitter as all get out. Well, there’s nothing we can do about that here at The Giant Panther, but we can pay tribute to one of Rock’s legends. Happy Birthday GB.
Buy or Download Strange Brew: The Very Best of Cream from Amazon here.
Rock Star Birthday Blurbs – David Crosby
Aug 14th
Today is Aerosmith & The J. Geils Band at Fenway Park Day. I don’t need to see this show. I’m going to be disappointed with the set list and I’ve seen Geils twice in the last 15 months or so. It’s a social event. The acoustics at Fenway Park are putrid and there are only about 50 good seats unless you count the Executive Suites upstairs. If I had my druthers that is where I would sit for every show. Paul McCartney last summer was fantastic from that vantage point. You can see the entire mob, the big screen TV, the weather, the Prudential Center and you have your own beer stand and bathroom. The beer will still be $10 a pop, but that’s the cost of doing business in this town. Luckily the weather is going to be mint, as in not hot. Wish me luck.
Today is David Van Cortlandt Crosby’s 69th birthday. 1941 was a long, long time ago. Even before this writer’s time. How he got this far is flat amazing. I wouldn’t exactly call him Keith Richards, but I read his book Long Time Gone a number of years ago and it was quite apparent that he wasn’t a health nut. I had to struggle to find reasonably flattering photographs of young David on the Internet. In most of them he looks like he’s near death. That’s probably because he was. So You Want To Be a Rock & Roll Star you say? It’s a Long Way To The Top as some famous Australians once said. Imagine if David Crosby played more taxing music? Those groupies must have been murder. I have the feeling, give or take some substance abuse, David Crosby wouldn’t change a thing. Not sure he was expecting to be a sperm donor, but it’s all good.
Say what you will about Crosby, the man could sing. I can’t sing a lick. It’s embarrassing. Not even as well as Bob Dylan or Ozzy Osbourne. Nothing. It’s a crying shame too because I love music so much more than the casual fan it’s frightening. I was never formally trained, even though we’ve established that I’m an Alto, or more accurately was, in 6th grade. I have zero range before my voice cracks or my vocal chords begin to shred. Yes, in all my concert going years, I have attempted to sing out loud knowing nobody could hear me. I only draw attention to myself once in a blue moon. When The Who took Quadrophenia back on the road again a decade or so ago the people around me knew I knew the words. That too, was embarrassing, but for different reasons entirely. Tears of joy are not manly…
So David Crosby was in this seminal 60′s Folk Rock band called The Byrds beginning in 1964. He player rhythm guitar after trying to play bass initially. Has joined in The Byrds by Gene Clark, Michael Clarke, Roger McGuinn and Chris Hillman at the onset. The band had a number of problems over the years, probably due in part to the monster success they enjoyed as a result of a magnificent cover of Bob Dylan’s ”Mr Tambourine Man.” Few bands sounded as beautiful as did The Byrds. I don’t know anything about instruments either (another crime), but their 12 string guitar sound was promptly patented by a gazillion bands after them. Superstar Tom Petty probably represents The Byrds in all its jingle jangle glory today. His cover of “I’ll Feel a Whole Lot Better” is almost note for note. Sometimes I hate that in a cover, but not on this one. Fantastic song, fantastic cover. The Byrds are famous for a number of tracks including “Eight Miles High, Turn! Turn! Turn!, Chestnut Mare, Jesus is Just Alright and half a dozen Bob Dylan covers. Truthfully, I didn’t know much about Bob Dylan, one of my heroes, before I heard The Byrds version of “Mr Tambourine Man.” I was just too young. I fixed that over the years…
With The Byrds in acromonious turmoil, David Crosby was asked to leave the band around September 1967. He then stumbled on Stephen Stills in early 1968 at a party and began to jam with him. Shortly thereafter Hollies great Graham Nash joined the duo to form one of Rock’s all time famous trios. There was something magic about the three of them singing together. If you have seen footage of their appearance at Woodstock it might strike you as amazing that they sounded so great in what was only their second public appearance as a band. It’s kind of hard to describe the scene for me as I was only nine years old in 1969, but Crosby, Stills & Nash was a fantastic debut record. Classic Rock owns “Suite: Judy Blue Eyes, Teach Your Children, Marrakesh Express, Long Time Gone, Helplessly Hoping and Wooden Ships” to this very day. There is a ton of Classic Rock music that I don’t care if I ever hear again, but I will never get tired of “Suite: Judy Blue Eyes, Wooden Ships or Long Time Gone.” Never.
A couple of years later the legendary Neil Young recorded with the trio. Deja Vu was released in March 1970 and if you are inclined to like C,S,N & Y and you don’t own this record go sit in the corner. Deja Vu is a masterpiece of the highest Folk Rock order. Nothing less. “Carry On” still sounds magnificent to this day. “Almost Cut My Hair” is tremendous. Joni Mitchell’s reworked “Woodstock” is still a classic. Luckily 1971 brought Four Way Street, a live double album, to really document this magical time. Take an hour an listen to this record the next time you get a chance. It’s magic. It still sounds fresh today. Check it out.
OK, I’ve GOT to shut it down now. C,S,N and sometimes Y had a number of successes after 1971, but between Crosby’s substance abuse (allegedly starting in earnest when his long time girlfriend Christine Hinton was killed in an automobile accident in 1969) and Neil’s solo career the alliances sort of came and went. David Crosby, Stephen Stills, Graham Nash and Neil Young were all monster talents in their own right though none of them had the success of Neil Young. He’s one of my all time favorite artists. August 14, 1941 was the day the world met David Crosby and we at The Giant Panther are happy about it. A gentle soul and a talented musician and a Rock & Roll Hall of Famer twice over, we hope he lives another 25 years.
Crosby, Stills & Nash – Long Time Gone.mp3
Crosby, Stills & Nash – Wooden Ships.mp3
Crosby, Stills & Nash – I Give You Give Blind.mp3
Buy or Download Crosby, Stills & Nash from Amazon here.
Rock Star Birthday Blurbs – Ian Anderson
Aug 10th
Every now and again I feel like a post is going to go over like a Led Zeppelin, to coin a phrase, and this is one of them. I don’t care. I was “hired” to provide content and dad gum it (I obviously listen to too many Hawk Harrelson White Sox broadcasts on the MLB package), that is what I’m going to do. Today is Ian Scott Anderson’s 63rd birthday. Born on August 10, 1947, Anderson has built an empire by mixing Blues, Progressive Rock, Folk, Jazz and some traditional sounds to form a sound no one else has. When you are trying to establish territory in the world of Rock music, the best thing you can do is sound like nobody else…ever. Mission accomplished. Love ‘em or hate ‘em (I think you know where I stand), Jethro Tull has been an institution for some 42 years. Who else could be identified with a mere silhouette to begin the post? Ten, fifteen musicians max? Excepting the blaring headline “Rock Star Birthday Blurbs – Ian Anderson,” even folks who don’t care for Jethro Tull’s music would easily be able to identify the artwork. No words needed. Just black and white. If you are interested in building a rock brand see Anderson, Ian. My friend Mark always asks me to name five rock bands that feature the flute and I always kind of struggle to name bands he might know. The Moody Blues? Horslips? Focus? I give up almost immediately. If I dig deep with the help of the Internet I can now locate Genesis, The Guess Who, King Crimson and The Marshall Tucker Band.
If you have even a modicum of affinity for the music of JT and all you know is Aqualung, Bungle in The Jungle, Locomotive Breath, Living in The Past and the other half dozen tracks still getting Classic Rock airplay, I feel sorry for you. I’ve been a Jethro Tull fan since maybe 1972. Twelve years old. That’s a fair assessment. FM radio, with their new found Progressive formats, incorporated Jethro Tull in the early 70′s like it was going out of style. By the time Benefit, released in 1970, was released, Jethro Tull, the English Rock group with the Scottish lead singer, were already famous. I was watching The Rolling Stones’ Rock and Roll Circus the other day for fun and the first band out of the chute is none other than Jethro Tull. That might sound like warm up act material to you, but on the bill were The Who, Taj Mahal, The Dirty Mac, Marianne Faithful (I think she was sleeping with someone we all know at that time), Yoko Ono and you know who. They did a killer rendition of “Song For Jeffrey,” which appeared on This Was as well as opening up 1972′s Living in The Past. This was December 1968. You can bet Mick, Keith, Pete and the rest had respect for this fledgling band back then.
Look, I get that Tull is a polarizing act. I was giving this girl a ride home not six weeks ago and had War Child in my CD player. “The Third Hoorah” to be exact. This woman is sizzling hot and a yoga instructor. Way out of my league. And also twenty years, at least, younger than I am. I didn’t have the thing blasting or even loud, but she felt the need to complain about the music even as I was saving her ten miles worth of cab fare just the same. She asked me who it was and when I told her she said she just could never get into Jethro Tull. At least she knew who they were. I put on the local crappy R&B station after calling her high maintenance for fun. She’s a sweetheart of a woman, but Tull is out of the question apparently. That’s OK, I don’t need anyone to listen to it with me. I’ve been doing it for coming up on 40 years now. I love seeing the other die hard fans at the shows each year and my friend Jefferson, probably the only other Tull fan of any consequence I know, went to the show earlier this summer. We saw WZLX’s Carter Alan there and had a few laughs with him knowing him from our days as glorified gophers at WBCN, The Rock of Boston. Carter, at least, still likes Jethro Tull too. Tull fans are like a dinosaur cult slowly going extinct, probably because we never have sex (kidding!) like The Shakers. And I can’t even make any furniture and Ken Burns isn’t interested in doing a documentary on us. Shocking.
For those of you interested in learning more about the Tull catalogue the sleepers are Benefit (1970), Living in The Past (1972), Minstrel in The Gallery (1975), Songs From The Wood (1977), Heavy Horses (1978) and Crest of a Knave (1987). Excepting the Classic Rock format, FM radio hasn’t played current Jethro Tull since Songs From The Wood came out in 1977. I remember “Songs From The Wood, Cup of Wonder and The Whistler” getting cursory airplay back in the 70′s, but since then? 1980′s A had “Crossfire” (definitely not to be confused with the Stevie Ray Vaughan classic), 1982′s Broadsword and The Beast had the underrated “Hard Times,” 1984′s Under Wraps had “Lap of Luxury” and 1987′s Crest of a Knave had “Farm On The Freeway,” but Tull’s music had faded to black on the airways. If you listen to Classic Rock radio and you didn’t much care for them before, I can’t imagine your hatred for them now. I remember my friend Jefferson and I went out to the venerable Worcester Centrum on November 21, 1987, taking advantage of our dubious radio contacts, and got backstage to meet Ian. He couldn’t talk due to vocal problems, but we got him to sign our CDs and chatted with ZZ Top, if I have my facts straight, whom I believe were sharing the bill with them that night. A blip on the radar screen of my concert going life, but it’s still fun to look at my Crest of a Knave CD with “Hello John!, Ian Anderson, Jethro Tull” scribbled on it. It sees the light of day once every five years now that the CD is digitized, but it’ll take it’s place next to the other half dozen luminaries I suckered into signing a CD cover for me. Anyway…
My stories always make my posts run long and this was supposed to be about Ian Anderson so here goes…Ian Anderson stumbled on the Rock & Roll life while working as a sales person in a department store in the Blackpool section of England. He was reading Melody Maker and the New Musical Express and decided the Rock life might be fun. He started a band called The Blades and tried his hand at lead guitar. He quickly gave up that aspiration once he heard Eric Clapton play, but he took up the flute and mastered it rather quickly. Apparently he had been playing for only a few months before the tracks for Jethro Tull’s debut album, This Was, were laid down in 1968. Ian is a salmon farmer and has survived a bout with Deep Vein Thrombosis, a disease which he does Public Service Announcements for.
Jethro Tull still releases records every couple of years although they’ve been kind of quiet the last few years since releasing a fantastic Christmas Album in 2003. I hear there is something on the horizon, but Ian Anderson and Martin Barre will doubtless solider on until they feel like quitting. Judging from the performance I saw a couple of months back, I don’t think that will be anytime soon. Happy Birthday Ian from The Giant Panther. I’m posting a couple of my favorites for fun.
Jethro Tull – Up The ‘Pool.mp3
Jethro Tull – Nothing To Say.mp3
Buy or Download The Best of Jethro Tull from Amazon here.
My Insipid Record Collection – Emerson, Lake & Palmer
Aug 7th
I was listening to the Genesis epic classic “Supper’s Ready” at the gym this morning and I starting thinking about posting something from my Prog collection. I decided today was ELP day. Hope you don’t mind. My first exposure to Emerson, Lake & Palmer was probably somewhere around 1971 when I heard “Lucky Man” on the radio. Today, ”Lucky Man” sounds a bit quaint and outdated, but it remains a beautiful song as far as I’m concerned. I remember my friend Jim’s brother used it at his wedding. This was not uncommon in the 70′s. I’m not sure if “Lucky Man” actually hurt the careers of ELP, but it did pigeonhole them a bit. That first record, 1970′s Emerson, Lake & Palmer, had some stellar tracks on it. “Take a Pebble” was absolutely one. “Knife Edge” was probably my personal favorite, but it was “Lucky Man” that carried the day for that first voyage. The rumor mill suggests that “Lucky Man,” allegedly written by Greg Lake at ripe old age of 12, was a throwaway track considered filler at the time. Apparently the record company requested they add it. Neither Emerson nor Palmer thought very much of it the story goes. Wonder what they think of it today all those dollars later? Just curious…
I remember being in the sixth grade, somewhere around 1973, when my music teacher (do they still have those?) brought in a copy of ELP’s 1971 LP Pictures of An Exhibition. Teachers, like Mrs Pritchard (I don’t even recall her first name because we always called her “Mrs” and it was 37 years ago), could get behind ELP because they were classically trained musicians. Pictures at An Exhibition was an interpretation of work originally done by Modest Mussorgsky, a Russian composer in the 1800′s. As a 13 year old kid I didn’t know squat about ELP or Mussorgsky, but if my teacher liked it there’s a pretty good chance it wasn’t very cool. It didn’t seem half bad to me really, but I wasn’t rushing out to find my own copy that’s for sure. It was about that time that Emerson, Lake & Palmer released Brain Salad Surgery complete with it’s interesting cover and design. It was the first time I actually made the connection between Classical Music (not one of my favorite genres) and ELP’s work. When I see the words “Movement, Arrangement, Suite and Impression” I usually start sprinting in the other direction. Now I was interested.
ELP, according to our friends at Wikipedia, sold over 40 Million records worldwide. That’s a lot of records. They were considered something of a Supergroup back in the day because Keith Emerson was playing keyboards in a band called The Nice, Greg Lake was the bassist in the legendary King Crimson and Carl Palmer was drumming for a band called Atomic Rooster. I know I have mentioned that I bought more than the occasional album over the years strictly because the artwork intrigued me. Well, Atomic Rooster became one of those bands in 80′s. A CD called Home To Roost, which apparently was first released in 1977, was one of those records. I had no idea, none, that Carl Palmer was involved with this band when I grabbed the CD out of our used CD bin back when I managed a compact disc store in 1987. I just liked the artwork on the cover. I only found out about it today when I started looking into ELP’s background for this post! Now I have to listen to the CD again to see if I can actually make out Palmer’s drumming. Know what? When I went to look into Atomic Rooster’s background I found out they were predominantly made up of ex-Crazy World of Arthur Brown members. I could not get enough of TCWAB’s 1968 hit single “Fire” when I was a kid. I think I still have that 45 RPM around here somewhere. Small world huh? I know It’s Only Rock & Roll, but I Like It as someone once said.
Brain Salad Surgery was released in November of 1973 and Emerson, Lake & Palmer were instantly international superstars. The album only contained five tracks, but the last one, Karn Evil 9, had several impressions. Radio stations knew it was good, but they had to locate the shortest numbers to fit their formats. “Still…You Turn Me On” was perfect. Two minutes and forty three seconds of I love my girlfriend. Sold. ELP’s other relatively famous track from Brain Salad Surgery would be Karn Evil 9 1st Impression Part II. It contained the “Welcome Back My Friends To The Show That Never Ends” phrase and it was short enough to play on the radio at 4:46. “Jerusalem” also got some light airplay, but the record sold like hotcakes. The curious thing about Brain Salad Surgery, as good as it was, is that 1972′s Trilogy might well have been Emerson, Lake & Palmer’s finest moment. Trilogy had “From The Beginning” and several other classic ELP tracks. I’m guessing it didn’t sell nearly as well as Brain Salad Surgery though. Including their second record, 1971′s Tarkus, ELP had released their core studio records by the end of 1973. They went on an ostentatious world tour and released and unheard of triple album in 1974 called Welcome Back My Friends To The Show That Never Ends…Ladies and Gentlemen to commemorate the event, but ELP as we knew them were officially running on fumes. The Moog Synthesizer and the Hammond Organ seemed to be running out of ideas by 1975. Works Volumes I & II, released in 1977, had their moments, but by and large the changing landscape of Rock had passed them by. It was Clash, not Classical any longer.
I have one or two friends that still swear by classic Emerson, Lake & Palmer and for that I am grateful because I find myself still attached to the bands of my youth on more than one occasion. I look around and most folks my age have long since stopped rocking and I feel like the only idiot alive that loves the history of Rock & Roll as much as I do in my age group. Bleep ‘em. I got to shake Warren Haynes’ hand on Thursday, took in Interpol that night and saw Gov’t Mule at point blank range last night. I don’t care if I’m The Last Man Standing, as Jerry Lee Lewis might say, I’ll be rocking myself to the grave. OK, enough babbling. I’m leaving you with three of my favorite ELP tracks, but I wish it could be more.
Emerson, Lake & Palmer – Karn Evil 9 1st Impression – Part I.mp3
Emerson, Lake & Palmer – The Sheriff.mp3
Emerson, Lake & Palmer – Knife Edge.mp3
Buy or Download Come & See The Show: The Best of ELP from Amazon here.
Your Tour Guide – Heart & Peter Frampton
Jul 30th
I can’t possibly report back on every show I attend, but sometimes, when I have a great time, I can’t resist. I took in the Heart & Peter Frampton double bill this past Wednesday night at the Bank of America Pavilion and had a blast. I know a bunch of you youngsters will roll your eyes at the old timer reliving his glory days, but this was a lot of fun. First, I had seen Peter Frampton last summer at Showcase Live, a great little venue on the grounds of Gillette Stadium where the Patriots play football. He was really great so when I saw him on the bill with one of my Guilty Pleasures Heart not ten miles from my house I wasn’t going to pass that up. I’m glad I didn’t.
Peter Frampton can play guitar. You can make fun of him all you want, but the crowd was really pumped to see him do his thing once again the other night. He didn’t disappoint. I would imagine, after all the success he’s had, that running out there for an hour in front of one his contemporaries back in the day has got to be a bit of a downer, but if that is true you wouldn’t know it by his performance. His set list included a couple of the usual suspects including “Baby, I Love Your Way”, but he managed to play a couple of my personal favorites in “It’s a Plain Shame” and “(I’ll Give You) Money.” He ripped into “Do You Feel Like We Do” and the crowd ate it up. His encore was a cover of The Beatles classic “While My Guitar Gently Weeps.” In fact he did manage to run out his Soundgarden cover of “Black Hole Sun” as well. It was a small sample size, but if you were a Frampton fan back in the day as I was, this was a total blast. I could have gone for five more songs easy. His bows got some serious applause at the end of his set.
Heart came whipping out of the gates with “Cook With Fire” from their 1978 LP Dog & Butterfly. As someone who loved that record, I really enjoyed that. “Heartless” was next and Heart hadn’t lost a step. Ann & Nancy Wilson still front the band and they sound as good as they ever have. As I have mentioned in my previous post on Heart, I kind of jumped off the bandwagon when they went to the ballads. I know the songs “Never” and “These Dreams,” which they played, but they were not what I loved about Heart. That said, the younger folks in the crowd sang those numbers at the top of their lungs while I grabbed a refreshment. I have to tell you, between Bad Company and Heart in the great outdoors, I had to bring my own towel to remain composed. It was another lovely 90 degree day here in Boston for most folks, but I look forward to those late summer early fall crisper nights of concert going. I have The Black Keys lined up tomorrow night and I hope the weather brings some relief. It’s hard to enjoy yourself when you are perspiring your brains out.
Heart’s set included what you might expect; “Crazy On You?” Check. “Barracuda?” Check. “Magic Man?” Yep. The three most overplayed Heart songs were played consecutively prior to their encore, but they all had life to them. I really didn’t mind. I got “Straight On,” which is one my favorites, but I was disappointed to see “Love Alive” from 1977′s Little Queen left off the set list. What I loved was a mash up of “Even It Out” and one of my all time favorite songs “Gimme Shelter” played almost simultaneously. I never would have thought that they would sound remotely alike, but Heart pulled it off and then some. I loved it. They slowed down “Even It Up” and mixed the verses during the performance. Pretty cool. Rape! Murder! It’s just a shot away. They did two covers for encores; “What is and What Should Never Be” by you know who and “Love Reign O’er Me” by The Who. During their migration to the stage the PA blared the intro to the Led Zeppelin classic “In The Light.” It’s enough to make an old timer wet himself I tell you…
Bottom Line? If you are thinking about catching this show in your town don’t hesitate. Both bands were high energy and played most of their hits. Heart had about five songs going I didn’t know, but that is something I expected because I haven’t bought any of their records since 1983 or so. I know they have a new record coming out and Wikipedia is tentatively calling it Red Velvet Car, but Heart still sounds like a million bucks if you were a fan of theirs in the 70′s. The same and more absolutely goes for Peter Frampton too. Go see them for yourself.
Peter Frampton – Day’s Dawning.mp3
Peter Frampton – (I’ll Give You) Money.mp3
Buy or Download Heart’s Greatest Hits from Amazon here.









































