World Where You Live | Crowded House
Thursday, June 30, 2022
"Don´t Mourn - Organise!" - Songs Of Labour Songwriter: Joe Hill - ZeroGsounds
The Flatlanders - More A Legend Than A Band (1972 feat. Joe Ely, Jimmie Dale Gilmore and Butch Hancock) - Plain & Fancy
This is nice . . . not as rip roaring as Joe Ely, Jimmie Dale Gilmore and Butch Hancock fans might have expected from live recordings and that leaves the title somewhat ironic as this is scarcely a legendary performance but it IS highly enjoyable and perfectly listenable. I am unlike the enthusiast who writes the liner note review here [Brendan McGrath, April 23rd, 2007] on Rockasteria but it's . . . . . well, nice! Good call Marios!
In fairness I played it straight the way through and will play it again for sure but I am a Joe Ely and Butch Hancock and Jimmie Dale fan and this doesn't somehow quite match up to their separate work or certainly their live appearances but that's so true of so many bands. . . . . It is FINE! Have a listen and leave a comment saying you disagree! ha ha ha ha . . . . . . .
Enjoy!
The Flatlanders - More Legend Than Band - Plain & Fancy
Tracks1. Dallas (Jimmie Dale Gilmore) - 2:462. Tonight I'm Gonna Go Downtown (Jimmie Dale Gilmore, John Reed) - 2:413. You've Never Seen Me Cry (Butch Hancock) - 2:094. She Had Everything (Butch Hancock) - 2:075. Rose From The Mountain (Louis Driver) - 2:006. One Day At A Time (Willie Nelson) - 3:427. Jole Blon (Traditional) - 3:278. Down In My Hometown (Jimmie Dale Gilmore) - 2:429. Bhagavan Decreed (Ed Vizard) - 2:4510.The Heart You Left Behind (Angela Strehll) - 2:1811.Keeper Of The Mountain (Angela Strehll) - 2:4412.Stars In My Life (Butch Hancock) - 3:0013.One Road More (Butch Hancock) - 2:25The Flatlanders
*Joe Ely - Harmony Vocals, Harmonica, Guitar, Dobro*Jimmie Dale Gilmore - Lead Vocals, Guitar*Butch Hancock - Harmony Vocals, Guitar*Syl Rice - String Bass*Tommy Hancock - Fiddle*Tony Pearson - Mandolin
Sittin On Top Of The World - The Flatlanders Live in Austin Texas
Wednesday, June 29, 2022
Squeezebox 1993-06-29, Palais des Sports, Marseille, France- Bob Dylan | by Ray Padgett - Flaggin' Down The Double Es
"Mama's got a squeeze box, Daddy never sleeps at night" (P Townshend)
A great article with references on Flaggin' Down the Double E today about Dylan and his use (or not) of the accordion with all kinds of reference material and a deep appreciation of Dylan and his live use thereof!
Bob at Willie Nelson's 60th Birthday Tribute - Hard Times Come Again No More
Tuesday, June 28, 2022
Liner Notes | AXIS: BOLD AS LOVE - THE JIMI HENDRIX EXPERIENCE by Jym Fahey
THE JIMI HENDRIX EXPERIENCEAXIS: BOLD AS LOVE
Jimi Hendrix had put the finishing touches on Are You Experienced, the group’s remarkable 1967 debut album, before he began recording new songs for what would ultimately become Axis: Bold As Love. Less than nine months had passed since Chas Chandler had brought Jimi Hendrix to London in September 1966. With Chandler installed as his manager and producer, the two formed the Jimi Hendrix Experience with drummer Mitch Mitchell and bassist Noel Redding. On the strength of early singles like “Hey Joe,” “Purple Haze,” and “The Wind Cries Mary,” the Experience had conquered England and Europe. The group’s stunning performance at the June 1967 Monterey Pop Festival and the subsequent release of Are You Experienced won over American fans and clearly illustrated the magnitude of the trio’s capabilities. While touring and other commitments would delay further Axis: Bold As Love recording sessions for the new album until October 1967, the unquenchable creative fire burning within the belly of the Experience would soon produce another gem. Avidly gathered and explored by the public, the thirteen majestic songs of Axis: Bold As Love proved that Jimi Hendrix was no one album wonder.
Not satisfied with mining the same vein that had yielded the motherlode of Are You Experienced, the Experience kicked off their sophomore effort with a novelty step into the science fiction milieu that Jimi loved. “EXP” featured a faux radio announcer, played by drummer Mitch Mitchell, interviewing Jimi posing as Paul Carusoe, an expert on alien life. The track launched thirty-eight minutes of some of he most brilliant rock to be etched in vinyl the entire year. It contains a phenomenal group of songs. “Spanish Castle Magic,” “You Got Me Floatin’,” the title track, “Bold As Love,” and the now standard, “Little Wing”. Few would attempt to argue the album’s timelessness. The range of emotions and styles expressed throughout Axis equals those found on Are You Experienced, but there is a different quality about them. The time between the initial sessions for the “Hey Joe” single to the final touches on “She's So Fine” for Axis was only a year. The Experience had spent the time well. From the full out rockers to softer poetic outings, Axis: Bold As Love was chock full of well crafted pop songs.
Chas Chandler’s contribution in that vein should not be overlooked. Chas had learned a great deal about pop music structure as the bassist for the Animals, one of the most successful groups of the British invasion. His knowledge was in full display on Are You Experienced, where he was clearly in charge. It is to his credit that he recognized Jimi’s remarkable growth as a musician and composer. By the Axis sessions he and Jimi were equal partners in creative matters. His influence reined in some of Jimi’s more extravagant impulses that later reemerged with new discipline on Electric Ladyland. The longest song on Axis, “If 6 Was 9” runs 5:32. Of the other eleven songs, only “One Rainy Wish” and “Bold As Love” exceeded the three minute AM top forty radio barrier of the day. Unquestionably, Chas had carried his message well.
Just as important in the history of the Jimi Hendrix Experience was how the band reacted to their incredible initial successes. Many bands have found early success a distraction and a recipe for dissolution. The Axis days for Jimi and the Experience, on the other hand, were some of the happiest in the short tempestuous life of the group. That joy translated easily to disc and was clearly apparent throughout the sessions for the album. The trio created a union that, on the surface, might have seemed unlikely, but one that used its disparate influences to form a union of three with a single soul.
Mitch Mitchell brought his love of jazz, and Philly Joe Jones in particular, to the table, and his adroit stickmanship and machine gun fills reflects that interest throughout Axis. For example, Mitch’s breaks on “Wait Until Tomorrow” come right out of the hard bop book. His brush work (at Noel’s suggestion) on “Up From The Skies” would be just as at home in a smoky jazz piece as on this funky science fiction rocker.
Noel Redding was a converted guitar player and brought a guitarist’s sensibilities and deftness to the bass. His style pushed Jimi and Mitch into a tight union normally reserved for the tightest of bassist and drummer combinations. This coalition was a key element on Axis. Listen to the delicate interplay within “One Rainy Wish” founded on that well-established rhythmic rapport. With “She’s So Fine,” Noel’s own composition, the bassist assumed the lead vocal, leading Jimi and Mitch through this charged rocker. From start to finish, Noel’s offerings were an integral part of this fine album.
Jimi’s own passions involved the great bluesmen such as Buddy Guy, soulsters like Curtis Mayfield and jazzmen like Wes Montgomery. Those influences are apparent all through the Axis: Bold As Love album sessions. The soft rhythmic flow of “Little Wing” bears Curtis’ imprint and in Jimi’s opening rhythmic line to “Wait Until Tomorrow” we hear him tipping his hat to the R&B and Soul riffs he learned in his days on the chitlin circuit. Ironically, though Jimi heard the intricate line clearly enough in his head, he had difficulty reproducing it in the studio, according to the engineer on the sessions, Eddie Kramer. He obviously got it right eventually.
Kramer was another important part of the Axis effort. He and Jimi had, by this time, forged an important kinship. With Chandler’s full confidence and support, Kramer was astute enough to recognize Jimi’s understanding of mixing and catered to Hendrix’s suggestions. Axis: Bold As Love was his second album with the Experience and he had developed an uncanny ability to grasp what Jimi had in his mind and was willing to work doggedly to achieve it on tape. Jimi, especially when discussing the subtleties of sound, would often describe what he wanted to hear in terms of colors. Eddie was able to develop a palette that Jimi could paint with. And when Jimi said he dreamed of having his guitar sound like he was playing it underwater, Kramer, along with fellow Olympic studio engineer George Chkiantz, developed the technique of phasing to make that dream come true. The coda at the end of the title track illustrates a remarkable use of the technique.
Axis was not an album which could be easily translated into live performance, nor was it intended to be. In the first place, the songs had not been road tested like those on Are You Experienced. They were built from the ground up in the studio and the various effects that were added to the album (including a glockenspiel on “Little Wing”) were not intended to be part of the group’s thrilling live gigs. In fact only “Spanish Castle Magic” and sometimes “Little Wing” were ever regularly performed by the group. In Jimi’s mind the two areas were completely separate. On stage, Jimi’s message was entirely singular and he made the most of his opportunity to connect with his audience. The recording studio required a different focus, a different way of communicating through his music.
Axis: Bold As Love almost became a failure to communicate. After deciding on the thirteen tracks which would make the final cut, the firm of Hendrix, Kramer and Chandler began the laborious task of creating a final mix. After finishing the job in the early hours of Halloween, 1967, Hendrix and Chas Chandler took the master tapes home to the apartment they shared. Somehow, the unthinkable happened. Jimi misplaced the mixes for the album’s first side. Since the tapes had been removed before any safeties were made, their loss was truly a disaster. The mixes had been made from four-track originals and their creation had been a performance unto itself. Needless to say no one was happy with the task that faced them, remixing the half inch tapes and having to recreate what they had finished once already. With the lucrative Christmas season fast approaching, and the album already scheduled for release, the mixing had to be accomplished in one night.
“If 6 Was 9” was the one track they just couldn’t seem to get right. Each attempt had the team scratching their heads knowing that the sound wasn’t right. Despite a number of attempts, neither Chandler, Hendrix, nor Kramer were sure as to how they had achieved the earlier mix. Exasperated, they dispatched Noel in a cab to find a seven-and-a-half inch, three inch reel containing a rough mix from June that the bassist had at his apartment. The tape turned out to be badly wrinkled and needed to be ironed in order to get it through the studio machine. The mix was finally accomplished though, and beautifully so. From then on, the high praise Chandler and Kramer enjoyed for their labor has always brought on a sardonic smile. “If you only knew,” Chandler would often laugh.
For the listener, the extra effort was well worth it. With Axis: Bold As Love Jimi and company had created a magnificent and groundbreaking album that has stood the test of time. It remains not only a faithful document of its era, but it is just as relevant today as it was nearly thirty years ago. Since its initial release, Axis: Bold As Love has remained both a critical and a fan favorite. Though Jimi has been gone longer than he lived, we are fortunate to live in a time in which recordings keep his genius at our call. Axis is definitive proof both of that genius and the magnitude of our loss.
– Jym Fahey
Please note this is the liner notes only. I do NOT post links to officially released albums ( or try very hard not to!) if there are legitimate ROIOs and/or out of print albums I will post links to these only.
'Out of print' is a more difficult area I grant you as some things go out of print in certain countries and you may find things available in the United States that are no longer available here and vice versa etc but if they are not available in my country of origin here in the UK or in Europe then I consider them worthy of linking to and if anyone has any objections to my posting things that have been commercially available then please ask nicely and I will remove the link. Also it should be understood that sometimes these seem to be available via Spotify and streaming services whereas the albums are no longer available. As particularly Spotify pays little to next to nothing for such services I believe they do NOT hold copyright to the works made available these belong still to the artist and would strongly suggest checking out brilliant services like Bandcamp for things being available to purchase or to stream as THEY pay the artists considerly more than the dread spotify.
Ultimately I strongly recommend searching for artist's own websites where things are available and may be only available there and suggest you support their work directly. My sharing music here is a form of advertising and it is my strongly held view that sharing of ROIOs contributes an enormous amount to artists' pockets than some despicable service like Spotify ever does. It has made its owner a billionaire and has he written any work of any note? No! (the Author)
Patti Smith Group | LIVE in NYC NY 1975 - RADIO BROADCAST WBAI-FM - VOODOO WAGON
Now this is a doozie and another in my thesis about early boots and airplay, soundboards etc, the sound quality of bootleg discs back from the day. This from 1975 her blazing onto the scene with her debut Horses album I never quite recovered from!! This is bright and 'toppy' but none the worse for that! It is highly listenable and Patti and The Patti Smith Group at its original opening storming peak!
Patti Smith Group Live in NYC 1975 - VOODOO WAGON
If you listen to one thing today listen to 'Birdland' definitive birth of this extraordinary song about Wilhelm Reich! Crazy ole bird, Patti!
Levon Helm | LIVE in Woodstock NY 1984 - FLOPPY BOOT STOMP
LEVON HELM
Interesting set from one of my favourite drummers and singers, Mr Levon Helm over at Floppy Boot Stomp and 'new' contributor, Jeremiah we have to thanks for this . . . . . . . . . ( he was a bullfrog huh?)
It's a pretty laid back horizontal posting but heck what did you expect!?
Levon Helm Live in Woodstock NY 1984 - FLOPPY BOOT STOMP
Song of The Day| Crowded House - World Where You Live
Given the resurgence of interest in Crowded House reforming and Neil Finn engaging his two sons to back him this has to be worth a revisit. I bought pretty much all their stuff when it came out especially the first few albums
Monday, June 27, 2022
Raglan Road - John Sheahan's 80th Birthday Concert - Featuring Glen Hansard and Declan O'Rourke (tribute to Luke Kelly)
On Raglan Road on an autumn day I saw her first and knew
That her dark hair would weave a snare that I might one day rue;
I saw the danger, yet I passed along the enchanted way,
And I said, let grief be a fallen leaf at the dawning of the day.
On Grafton Street in November we tripped lightly along the ledge
Of the deep ravine where can be seen the worth of passion's pledge,
The Queen of Hearts still making tarts and I not making hay
Oh I loved too much and by such by such is happiness thrown away.
I gave her gifts of the mind I gave her the secret sign that's known
To the artists who have known the true gods of sound and stone
And word and tint I would not stint for I gave her poems to say.
With her own name there and her own dark hair like clouds over fields of May
On a quiet street where old ghosts meet I see her walking now
Away from me so hurriedly my reason must allow
That I had loved not as I should a creature made of clay
When the angel woos the clay he'd lose his wings at the dawn of day.
Patrick Kavanaugh
Song of the Day - Pokey La Farge 'Get It 'Fore It's Gone'
I pick up loads of songs from the television as I have mentioned before and this week noted examples notwithstanding that Romesh Ranganathan's new programme 'Avoidance' used a John Prine song to sign off this week's latest episode, we noted Pokey La Farge's great song ''Get It 'Fore It's Gone' on the closing of the brilliantly written and hysterically funny second series of Stephan Merchant's 'The Outlaws' . . . . . .(quite how Stephen convinced Eleanor Tomlinson to take part in this, not to mention legendary US Film Star Christopher Walken, to participate also is totally beyond me but is sheer brilliance in casting. Though I am slightly worried about Tomlinson who does seem painfully thin here)
The Outlaws Series II - Trailer
Avoidance - Romesh Ranganathan
more? . . . . . . . .
Worth remembering that I will never NOT post this . . . a favourite track and a favourite video bar NONE
I always wanted to be able to dance like Walken here . . . . . . .(who didn't?) In my mind I can!
Sunday, June 26, 2022
Big Bill Broonzy's Birthday - Don's Tunes (Facebook)
Big Bad Bill is Sweet William Now . . . . . .I have said enough before about Big Bill Broonzy and what he means to me, an earliest of blues favourites he remains so, and this was shared on his birthday by Facebook's Don's Tunes. I heard Big Bill cover such classics as See See (C C ) Rider, Trouble in Mind, Baby Please Don't Go and others too numerous to mention but it is Bill who made me remember these classics so they are somehow indelibly written in my soul
Photo by Gerrit Schilp
Remembering the blues legend Big Bill Broonzy (June 26, 1903 – August 14, 1958)
Big Bill Broonzy, one of the most important of the pre-World War II Chicago blues singers, recorded over 250 songs from 1925 to 1952, including "Key to the Highway," "Black, Brown, and White," "Just a Dream," "Hard Hearted Woman," "Looking Up at Down," "Romance Without Finance," and "When Will I Get to Be Called a Man" and is listed as composer of even more.
Muddy Waters recalled in an interview, "that's the nicest guy I ever met in my life. He first say I had it. I guess he was the cause of me going to England the first time, you see... He told 'em, "You ain't heard nothin' till you hear that young boy from Mississippi... . It's young Muddy Waters from Clarksdale, Mississippi. You gotta get him over here." (Jim O'Neal and Amy van Singel, The Voice of the Blues: Classic Interviews from Living Blues Magazine) And Memphis Slim called Bill "the greatest that I have known. There may have been some better, but I didn't know them. He was a wonderful person and a lovely artist."
By 1944, Muddy Waters was meeting the established musicians, including Big Bill Broonzy. “I call my style country style,” said Muddy. “Big Bill was the daddy of country-style blues singers. When I got here, he was the top man.” In a photograph from the 1940s, a proud young Muddy is shaking hands with Big Bill. Bill’s left arm is around Muddy’s shoulders, which slump as if unable to support the notion of Broonzy’s embrace. Muddy’s serious expression cannot hide his pleasure — it may be disbelief — at where he finds himself, and with whom. The folks back home, he seems to be thinking, will never believe it. For decades, Big Bill’s character resonated with Muddy. “You done made hits, you got a big name, the little fellow ain’t nothing,” Muddy said in the 1970s about the star attitude. “But Big Bill, he don’t care where you from. He didn’t look over you ’cause he been on records a long time. ‘Do your thing, stay with it, man. If you stay with it, you going to make it.’ That’s what Big Bill told me. Mostly I try to be like him.”
Robert Gordon - Can't Be Satisfied
Song of the Day - THE SUNDAYS - HERE'S WHERE THE STORY ENDS - HAPPY BIRTHDAY HARRIET WHEELER!
Seemed appropriate . . . . . . . . what with being a Sunday!
Happy birthday to Harriet Wheeler, born in Henley on Thames, brought up in Sonning Common na d met her husband in Bristol at college, born on this day in 1963. She never should have said the books that you read were all she loved you for.
Saturday, June 25, 2022
Poet - A Tribute To Townes Van Zandt plus Townes Van Zandt - At My Window (1987) - ZEROSOUNDS
More real Country Music . . . . . . . .now this is what I mean. The legendary tragic figure of Townes Van Zandt is an American poet of great note and of whom Steve Earle (another favourite) said
"Townes Van Zandt is the best songwriter in the whole world, and I'll stand on Bob Dylan's coffee table in my cowboy boots and say that."
Pretty sure Bob felt much the same!
Townes Van Zandt died 24 years ago, on January 1, 1997 and this fine album dates from ten years earlier when he was settled with his third wife and their newborn son Will. You can hear his voice changing and it is not a perfect album by any means but the songwriting alone redeems it. His alcoholism presumably interrupted here while living the good life with wife and child but in ten years time he was dead from the effects of alcoholism and drug abuse. He was 52
Still the haunting sorrow of his voice, cracking at times, wavering on occasion seeps through these tales from Americana as only Van Zandt could express. Earle himself no stranger to the difficulties of substance abuse, misuse and otherwise at least he seems to have rescued himself from a similar fate. Now these album are both still commercially available (certainly here in the UK and while the solo album is down low in numbers Amazon claims they have more on order as opposed to approaching being out of print. 'Poet' the tribute seems to be readily available so if anyone wants me to take these down please just ask. I would encourage you to buy both and have provided links to UK Amazon to do just that. Both are well worth having.
Townes Van Zandt - 'At My Window' 1987 - Zero G Sounds
What happens when a great poet dies is folks gather and celebrate their work and some folks admire the choice of contributors and others find fault in the selection. I defy you to make that judgemnt here as 'Poet' a tribute from all the greats of new country music join forces to sing the works of the great writer singer songster. Containing 16 cuts by a stellar cast that includes everyone from Willie Nelson and Nanci Griffith to Lucinda Williams and John Prine with lots of folks in between.