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May 2008

May 31, 2008

Founding Father: Tom Dowd

Tomdowd Who?

If your music collection is remotely comprehensive, pull a few albums or CDs from the shelf at random and it won't be long before you find Tom Dowd's name in the credits. Few engineers or producers in music history have worked with such an array of stars.

Dowd started out to be a physicist, and worked on what became the Manhattan Project while still a student at Columbia University. After the war, he observed nuclear tests in the Pacific. All of his work was classified, and on returning home, he figured out that if he returned to Columbia to study physics, he would be expected to learn concepts that had been made obsolete by what he had seen during the war. For this reason, he took a job at a recording studio instead. Almost accidentally, Dowd engineered a couple of hit records in 1949, including Stick McGhee's Drinkin' Wine Spo-Dee-o-Dee, which was one of the first smashes on the Atlantic label.

Dowd's list of credits is extraordinary. In the '50s, he recorded many legendary Atlantic artists including Joe Turner, the Drifters, the Coasters and Ray Charles. He also engineered sessions by jazz masters Thelonious Monk, Ornette Coleman and John Coltrane. His list of credits became even more impressive in the '60s as he began producing recordings by Otis Redding, Aretha Franklin, the Rascals and Cream (Disraeli Gears and Wheels of Fire). In the '70s, he guided the Allman Brothers Band, recording Idlewild South and producing Live at the Fillmore East. He arranged the meeting between Eric Clapton and Duane Allman that resulted in their collaboration on Layla and Other Assorted Love Songs, which he produced. Dowd went on to produce several of Clapton's solo albums, as well as career-defining albums by Lynyrd Skynyrd (Street Survivors, among others) and Rod Stewart. Dowd added some more pop-oriented projects to his resumé in the '80s--albums by Chicago, Eddie Money and Diana Ross among others -- while continuing to work extensively with Clapton and Stewart. His work with the Allmans continued into the new millennium, and included albums by Susan Tedeschi (Wait for Me) and Joe Bonamassa.

When Dowd began recording in the late '40s, musicians played live in the studio, and backed off or got closer to the microphones as needed to tweak the sound. Dowd came up with the idea of miking each instrument individually to more easily mix and balance his recordings. Later, he built the first stereo recording console used at Atlantic. As one of the pioneers multi-track recording, he's at least partly responsible for the way we hear music today.

In 2003, Dowd was the subject of a documentary, Tom Dowd and the Language of Music. The film premiered only a few months after his death in 2002 at age 77. It's must viewing for anybody interested in the history of rock, or in the life of an extremely versatile, interesting, and likable man who, in several different ways, helped make possible some of the most enduring art of our time.

May 30, 2008

The Dead, Allman Brothers & Max Creek Form a New Band?

Billkreutzmann Wow, here is some very special news for lovers of two of the greatest bands of all time, the Grateful Dead and the Allman Brothers.

Dead drummer Bill Kreutzmann and Allman Brothers bass player, Oteil Burbridge plus Max Creek guitarist Scott Murawski have formed a new band that just started on tour last week.

Bill, of course, played with the Grateful Dead for the full 34-year life of the band, one of two drummers, 'The Rhythm Devils" making the Dead one of the first bands to feature two (Genesis would be another).

Oteil is also an original, famous for playing barefoot, for his scat singing bass solos and his love of tie dye.

Max Creek also had a cult following, making the transition from country rock to Dead-esque jamming in the early '70s. They were known for massive three-hour sets and for their box set Maxology which still hasn't come out yet

The tour started May 28 in Providence, R.I., going right through to October, including the Recher Theatre in Towson, Md. (May 31), the Rocks Off Concert Cruise in New York City (June 1), The Roxy in Boston (June 5), Higher Ground in South Burlington, Vt. (June 7), and Gathering of the Vibes at Seaside Park in Bridgeport, Conn. (August 2).

Video Classics: 'Won't Get Fooled Again'

Won't Get Fooled Again by the Who ranked #11 on the last WNEW Firecracker 500 from 1996. As described in Wikipedia:

"The song originally appeared on the 1971 album Who's Next and has since appeared on various other recordings, including the live compilation soundtrack for The Kids Are Alright, the 1979 documentary film about the band. It is famous for its angular organ part set against guitar power chords, leading up to an extended synthesizer break into a drum entrance followed by a long scream."

And from rockumentary film, The Kids Are Alright...

Five Pioneering Rock Duos

Everlybrothers From the White Stripes to the Fiery Furnaces to the Raveonettes to Ghostland Observatory, it seems rock duos are everywhere these days.

It makes sense... with so many technological advances in music –- effects pedals for guitars, hard drives for keyboards, and so on –- it’s not hard to fill the air with many different textures at once, creating strange and beautiful dialogues that mimic and maybe even surpass the classic sound of two guitars, one bass and a drum kit.

But, believe it or not, the self-contained rock duo was not born yesterday. Behold, a list of five pioneering rock duos:

-T. Rex (Marc Bolan, guitar and vocals; Mickey Finn, percussion)
With such full-bodied songs as Bang a Gong (Get It On) and The Slider, it’s easy to forget that stoner pixie Marc Bolan and his guitar was accompanied by nothing more than Mickey Finn’s percussion. Sure, T. Rex’s studio recordings were bolstered by tons of guitar overdub and vocal layering, but when they took the stage, Bolan and Finn sent little English girls into 'T. Rextasy' with just a guitar and set of bongos.

-Lee Michaels
(Lee Michaels, organ and vocals; Bartholomew 'Frosty' Smith-Frost, drums)
Because he retired from music in the late 1970s and hasn’t been heard from since, Lee Michaels is usually remembered now only for his biggest hit, 1970’s Do You Know What I Mean, a jokey little number about sexual confusion backed by what sounds like an organ stolen from a minor league hockey arena. But long forgotten hits Stormy Monday and Heighty-Hi further established the Lee Michaels sound: long on attitude, short on membership.

-Suicide
(Alan Vega, vocals; Martin Rev, keyboards)
The New York punk scene of the mid-1970s was all about minimalism, and nobody captured the spirit of minimalism quite like Suicide. Martin Rev was the geek of the band, creating a deeply unsettling noise with an ancient synthesizer, while Vega did everything he could do agitate the listener, shrieking and cursing between lyrics that touched on violence, fear, paranoia and realms beyond the grave. Good times.

-Attila (Billy Joel, keyboards and vocals; Jon Small, drums)
One of the few rock bands in history that's been read about more than listened to, Attila remains a mercifully short footnote in the history of songwriter Billy Joel’s otherwise illustrious career. With songs like Brain Invasion and Amplifier Fire, Joel and drummer Jon Smalls displayed a new sound in rock: a Hammond organ fed through a stack Marshall guitar amps and backed only by some jazzy drumming. This of course created a sound so exciting that Jimi Hendrix, upon hearing Attila for the first time, said he wished he had learned to play organ instead of guitar.

Just kidding. Attila totally sucked. Their eponymous 1970 album is often declared the worst album in the history of rock and roll.

-The Everly Brothers
(Don Everly, guitar and vocals; Phil Everly, guitar and vocals)
One of the most important and influential rock and roll acts of any era, the Everly Brothers set new and still unmatched standards for two-part vocal harmonies. The Beatles, Simon and Garfunkel, James Taylor and Nick Lowe have all proclaimed their undying love for the brothers’ music. And check out those credits on the back of their 1958 album, Songs Our Daddy Taught Us: That’s right, it’s just the two of them, guitar and vocals.

20 Lesser Known (but Mind-Blowing) Psychedelic Tracks

Psychedelic Psychedelia, a critical part of the Summer of Love -- a combination of LSD, studio effects, raga-rock and folk -- was a mainstay of the mid to late '60s producing some of the best music ever made.

Well known tracks stem from the Doors, Hendrix and Velvet Underground but there is so much more to explore in this fantastic genre of rock. Here are 20 lesser known tracks to help you fly your freak flag high!

1. I Had Too Much to Dream Last Night, Electric Prunes
2. Blackberry Way, The Move
3. White Bird, It's a Beautiful Day
4. Darkly Smiling, Grace Slick and the Great Society
5. I've Got Levitation, Thirteenth Floor Elevators
6. Black Son, Blue Cheer
7. She's Not There, Vanilla Fudge
8. Stone Believer, Iron Butterfly
9. Dark Side of the Mushroom, Chocolate Watchband
10. Season of the Witch, Electric Flag
11. What's Wrong, Sweetwater
12. Time Has Come Today, Chambers Brothers
13. 7 and 7 Is, Arthur Lee
14. Green Tambourine, Lemon Pipers
15. Peace Lovin' Man, Blossom Toes
16. Old Man Going, Pretty Things
17. Your Body and Not Your Mind, Cuby and the Blizzards
18. Here Without You, Gene Clark
19. Open My Eyes, Nazz
20. It's a Beautiful Day Today, Moby Grape

A.M. Nuggets: Trey, Phish in the News; Raconteurs on NPR, in NYC

The Rothbury Festival added Trey Anastasio to the lineup yesterday. The former Phish frontman will join the already robust lineup which includes John Mayer, Phil Lesh and Friends, Primus, and Dave Matthews Band (sans Butch Taylor). This is the third time Trey's been in the news this week - he earlier made headlines with the reduction in his sentence on drug charges, and his comments regarding a possible Phish reunion. Hidden Track, as usual, has the best coverage when it comes to Phish news - check the comments on their Trey article from earlier this week.

The Raconteurs have three big, sold-out shows in NYC this weekend at Terminal 5, starting tonight. NPR streamed Wednesday night's show from the 9:30 Club in D.C., and it's still available on-demand here. I can't get over how kick-ass this band is. They keep adding U.S. tour dates so if you like rock music and you're anywhere near these remaining shows, get out there and check them out.

May 29, 2008

The Futureheads: 'This Is Not the World'

Futurehead Thanks to the Libertines, Arctic Monkeys and nearly every other recent British success story, the overly catchy sounds generated by chaotic guitar rhythms and furious drum beats combined with often sarcastic and witty lyrics have become as prevalent in music as Pete Doherty in rehab. With similar dreams of success, many young, up-and-coming bands, behind the encouragement of their labels, have embraced this post-punk sound, searching for that one chord, that one hit, that next I Bet You Look Good on the Dance Floor or Take Me Out. But in a scene with an increasingly diluted sound and and bands literally willing to fight for that shot (ask Alex Turner how many times he’s been punched), success doesn’t mean as much anymore. A strong first album doesn’t guarantee a career. The prospects of failure are always right around the corner.

Despite their acclaimed, self-titled debut in 2004, a rather lackluster follow up album and poor sales led many to believe that the four-piece band from Sunderland, England, who called themselves the Futureheads, would be the next band to suffer the fate of failure. The band was even dropped by their label, 679, resulting in speculation on just how much longer the Futureheads would remain in existence. But unlike so many similar bands were unable to do, the band composed of Ross Milliard, Dave and Barry Hyde and David Craig went back to the drawing board and gave it one more shot.

The result is This Is Not the World, a simple, but catchy 12-track album relying on the band’s characteristic dance punk sound, a cross between Franz Ferdinand and the Kaiser Chiefs with a little bit of Clash mixed in, to do most of the talking. However, unlike the band’s previous work, 2006’s News and Tributes, the Futureheads’ latest effort, while sincere and real, is lyrically unadorned, evoking a more punk-like attitude of both music rawness and passion with simple, yet profound rhetoric.

Continue reading "The Futureheads: 'This Is Not the World'" »

Video Classics: 'Satisfaction'

(I Can't Get No) Satisfaction by the Rolling Stones clocked in at #10 in the last WNEW Firecracker 500 list, and Wikipedia gives us the following details...

"The Rolling Stones first recorded the track on May 10 1965 at Chess Studios in Chicago - a version featuring Brian Jones on harmonica. They re-recorded it two days later at RCA Studios in Hollywood, with a different beat and the Gibson Maestro fuzzbox adding sustain to the sound of the guitar riff. Richards envisioned redoing the track later with a horn section playing the riff: 'this was just a little sketch, because, to my mind, the fuzz tone was really there to denote what the horns would be doing.' The other Rolling Stones, as well as manager Andrew Loog Oldham and sound engineer Dave Hassinger eventually outvoted Richards and the track was selected for release as a single. The song's success so boosted sales of the Gibson fuzzbox that the entire available stock sold out by the end of 1965."

And from 1966, the Rolling Stones performed (I Can't Get No) Satisfaction on The Ed Sullivan Show...

Rock 101: Bed-In for Peace

Yokolennonbed Protest actions took many forms by the late '60s. For example, both civil rights and Vietnam protesters held sit-ins; teach-ins were popular ways of educating people about social issues. In March 1969, John Lennon and Yoko Ono created the 'bed-in' for peace. Days after their wedding, the couple checked into a hotel in Amsterdam and invited the media in, all day every day. John and Yoko sat underneath signs that said "Hair Peace" and "Bed Peace" and talked to reporters. The event was immortalized in the BeatlesThe Ballad of John and Yoko: "Drove from Paris to the Amsterdam Hilton/Talking in our beds for a week."

After the Amsterdam bed-in, John and Yoko sent acorns to a variety of world leaders, hoping they would plant them as a gesture of peace. This, too, was mentioned in The Ballad of John and Yoko: "Caught the early plane back to London/Fifty acorns tied in a sack." This week in 1969, the couple planned a second bed-in for New York in May, but John was not permitted to enter the United States, so the scene shifted. They went to the Bahamas first, but stayed only one night before jetting to Montreal. There, they checked into the Queen Elizabeth Hotel for another week of meeting the media from their hotel bed.

Interest was greater this time, and the publicity was more intense. Some journalists criticized the peace campaign as a stunt done for money. John responded that if it was money he wanted, he could make more by writing a song than he could by staying in bed for a week talking about peace. At one point during the Montreal bed-in, a reporter asked John directly just what he was trying to accomplish. "All we are saying," he told the reporter, "is give peace a chance." John liked the phrase and immediately set it to music. On June 1, in front of a crowd of journalists, and with the participation of friends including drug guru Timothy Leary and comedian Tommy Smothers, John and Yoko recorded Give Peace a Chance right there in Room 1742. It was released as a single about one month later.

The Montreal bed-in had a more concrete result than the Amsterdam bed-in or the acorns. In December 1969, John and Yoko got a meeting with Pierre Trudeau, who was then prime minister of Canada. In the final act of the peace campaign, at Christmas 1969, they bought billboards in several cities saying, "War is over! If you want it—happy Christmas from John and Yoko."

Next to Imagine, Give Peace a Chance is probably John Lennon's most famous solo song. Oddly enough, however, it was credited to "Lennon/McCartney" until a 1990s rerelease credited it to John alone. 

A.M. Nuggets: Jackson Hole and Sunset Strip Festivals; Eagles Begin Garden Stand

Two brand new festivals were announced yesterday, and at first glance they couldn't be more different. First off is the Jackson Hole Music Festival, set to take place August 16-17 in Teton Village near the ski slopes of Jackson Hole. Wilco and the Black Crowes will headline, with Medeski, Martin & Wood and Kaki King among the supporting acts.

Metal fans should keep an eye on the Sunset Strip Music Festival, which aims to celebrate the glamor and sleaze of the good old days on the Hollywood music scene. Venues on the Strip, including the Viper Room, Whiskey A-Go-Go and the House of Blues, will host acts like L.A. Guns, Juliette & the Licks, and Louis XIV. The three-day event kicks off June 26th, and oddly enough features a panel discussion led by CNN's Larry King.

The Eagles kicked off their new U.S. tour last night at Madison Square Garden, the first night of a three night stand which continues this Friday and Saturday. The band then moves on to multiple-night runs in Boston, Toronto and Chicago. Tickets are still available for many of these shows, including this weekend in New York, and the Toronto pre-sale starts today at 10am.

May 28, 2008

Can Rockers Write?

Bobdylan2 Rock music has always taken inspiration from classic literature. The Doors took their name from a poem by William Blake. Steely Dan got its name from a novel by William Burroughs. Avant-garde punks Pere Ubu got the idea for a band name from French surrealist playwright Alfred Jarry.

But the payback has been, shall we say, less than impressive. Below are eight examples of rockers trying their hands at writing (the really weird thing is that, judging by this by-no-means-definitive list, the quality of their work seems to be in inverse proportion to the number of records they've sold):

-In His Own Write by John Lennon
"'I seem to have forgotten my bus fare, Cobber,' said Dave not realising it. 'Gerroff the bus then,' said Basubooo in a voice that bode not boot, not realising the coloured problem himself really."

-Tarantula by Bob Dylan
"Aretha with no goals, eternally single & one step soft of heaven / let it be understood that she owns this melody along with her emotional diplomats..."

-The Lords and the New Creatures by Jim Morrison
"When play dies it becomes the Game.
When sex dies it becomes Climax."

-Go Now by Richard Hell.
"The day is like a big ocean pressing its moronic face against the windows and walls of my lost apartment, and here I am, alone. I'm sunk.
Still, I'm handsome and young."

-Black Coffee Blues by Henry Rollins.
"She hates guys. She says they have their brains in their cocks. She says that she can tell that I am different. I'm going over to her house tonight to sell her the Brooklyn Bridge."

-A Night Without Armor by Jewel.
"I'd make you my many calico children
and scatter you
across
the green memories of home."

-The Coral Sea by Patti Smith.
"Addressing perhaps ... the void. The pit of the will which he pops like a stemless cherry. He regards his empty hand, the indifferent sea."

-Actual Air by David Berman (Silver Jews).
"When it's snowing, the outdoors seem like a room.
Today I traded hellos with my neighbor.
Our voices hung close in the new acoustics.
A room with the walls blasted to shreds and falling."

This Week in Rock History: Ugly and Wet

Rollingstonesagain This week in 1997, singer/songwriter Jeff Buckley drowned at age 30. He released one full-length album, Grace, during his lifetime, and three EPs. He was working on a second album, Songs for My Sweetheart the Drunk, at the time of his death; it was released in 1998. Buckley was the son of singer/songwriter Tim Buckley, who died in 1975 at age 38, although Jeff Buckley said he only met his father once, at age 8.

. . . in 1964, the Daily Mirror newspaper in Britain published a story about the Rolling Stones that is sometimes remembered as a slam against them. It's said to have called the Stones the ugliest group in Britain and to have asked readers if they’d let their sisters go out with them. But in context, the statements are much more benign: "Everything seems to be against them on the surface. They are called the ugliest group in Britain. They are not looked on very kindly by most parents or adults in general. They are even used to the type of article that asks big brother if he would let his sister go out with one of them."

. . . in 1959, one of the first outdoor pop festivals was held in Atlanta, at Herndon Stadium on the campus of Morris Brown College. Several R&B legends performed, including B.B. King, the Drifters, Jimmy Reed, Ruth Brown, and Ray Charles. (Charles' performance was recorded, and remains in print as part of the two-CD set Ray Charles Live.) A crowd of over 9,000 attended. Before the day was over, it rained. Of course.

. . . in 1945, John Fogerty was born. Despite a body of work that sounds as if it came straight out of the Louisiana bayou, Fogerty and his bandmates in Creedence Clearwater Revival were from the San Francisco Bay area. Fogerty is touring Europe this summer, and will appear at the Royal Albert Hall in London for the first time since CCR played there in 1971. He will return to the States for a few dates in August.

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