Showing posts with label bluesbreakers. Show all posts
Showing posts with label bluesbreakers. Show all posts

Sunday, July 28, 2024

THE SECOND TIER ESSENTIAL

I just heard that John Mayall passed away on the 22nd at the age of 90. There are all sorts of profiles, tributes and obituaries already online so that's covered, Here's a post I did several years ago, now with updated links...

Back when I was in high school I had an art class with Mrs. Land, a cool lady who let students bring in records to listen to when we were painting. For whatever reason, maybe because in that class there were several of them, the surf chicks dominated record player, a standard heavy duty AV Department special, built to survive the clumsiest of AV monitors. Not that these gals were clumsy, if they were I wouldn't have noticed anyway. (What part of surf chicks didn't you get?) There were four records that they played more than others. The soundtrack to the surf movie "Five Summer Stories", which everybody had. Within the surf crowd, and the peripheral beachy non-surfers, that soundtrack would have been what Nirvana's Nevermind was in the nineties, not in sound but in ubiquitousness, at least with that small demographic. I had it (surprisingly some of it still holds up). Other LPs that got repeated plays were Van Morrison's Moondance, and the most annoying of the bunch, the self titled It's A Beautiful Day. That one snuck in there because the most annoying song on that most annoying LP, "White Bird", was in the soundtrack of a surf movie. Fuck, I don't care, I hated that song and that band and still do. Surf chicks can do no wrong? Bullshit: "White Bird".



The one LP that was was on the surf chicks playlist that was kind of surprising was John Mayall's The Turning Point, an interesting choice, one that they probably rallied around because of the flute in it, precisely what bugged me about it. All of this manic breathy flute playing where the huffing and puffing is supposed be a replacement for guitar heroics. The single benefit to hearing that was that I was exposed to John Mayall, whom I didn't hate because he wasn't the flute player.

Just a year or two later, my brother brought home the first studio LP by Mayall, Blues Breakers, released in 1966 three years prior to The Turning Point. What a mind fuck that was. Not blues as I was used to, not black blues and not even American blues. Despite having covers of songs Otis Rush, Freddy King, Ray Charles, Little Walter, Mose Allison and Robert Johnson, it was 100% British blues. You've no doubt looked at the cover above, so you already know that Eric Clapton was in the band, in this case not a bad thing. It was post Yardbirds, so he knew how to turn it up, but he wasn't quite the deity he would become with "Clapton Is God" knuckleheads. Everything on this LP is period perfect, the production, guitar tone, the solos, even with some bordering on annoyingly long (a two minute drum solo in a four minute rendition of "What I'd Say"). This LP is a milestone in British blues and I've no doubt that some of you may know it backwards and forwards. For those of you who don't, I suggest you listen to the whole thing in it's entirety. One song just isn't enough. And all twelve songs on the original LP feature something different, sometimes guitar, sometimes Mayall's Hammond chops, but most importantly, no flute.

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Listen:
John Mayall and the Bluesbreakers - All Your Love mp3 at Internet Archive
John Mayall and the Bluesbreakers - Double Crossing Time mp3 at Internet Archive
The whole LP:
John Mayall and the Bluesbreakers -Blues Breakers with Eric Clapton at Internet Archive NOTE: Under "Download options" on the right side of the page, select "VBR MP3" for individual songs, or you can just stream it. Download a torrent, if you're one of those rascals.

Wednesday, March 8, 2023

IN-STRA-MEN-TOLLS


This happens more often than you would expect. I saw a photo of Freddie King and thought "I need to hear 'San-Ho-Zay' again". Then, just minutes ago, I ran into some Freddie King's stuff including, yep, "San-Ho-Zay".

So, without blabbing further, here's a few by King, including "Hideaway" that was covered by John Mayall's Clapton-era Bluesbreakers in 1966. On last thing I gotta add: I love King's way of dealing with songs that he either can't spell or can't remember how to pronounce. To wit, San Jose (a city in California) becomes "San-Ho-Zay", and "sensation" becomes "Sen-Sa-Shun". I guess it beats "Untitled Instrumental".

~ NOTE: ALL MEDIA IS HOSTED BY THE BLOGS & SITES NAMED BELOW ~
Listen:
Freddy King - The Stumble mp3
at Internet Archive
Freddy King - San-Ho-Zay mp3
at Internet Archive
Freddy King - Sen-Sa-Shun mp3
at Internet Archive
Freddy King - Untitled Instrumental mp3
at Internet Archive
Freddy King - Hideaway mp3
at Internet Archive
John Mayall and the Bluesbreakers - Hideaway mp3
at Internet Archive

Wednesday, April 25, 2018

AND NO CLAPTON!

I hadn't heard the first Bluesbreakers LP before tonight, probably because it's called John Mayall Plays John MayalI, and it only credits the Bluesbreakers on the back of the cover. Whatever. I like Mayall, enough to listen to the records I already have but not enough to actively hunt down others. This first one though, it's like the missing link between old school British blues bands and the U.S. garage bands. It was recorded live, so it sounds a little rougher, louder than the Bluesbreakers studio LPs that followed. And, yes, no Clapton. Yee haw.

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Listen:
John Mayall and the Bluesbreakers - Crawling Up a Hill mp3 at Internet Archive
John Mayall and the Bluesbreakers - Crocodile Walk mp3
at Internet Archive

Wednesday, April 13, 2016

THE BLUES ROCK TEMPLATE

It's about that time again, time for some of your basic twelve bar blues progressions. Or something like that. Back to basics type shit. And it doesn't get any more basic than John Mayall and the Bluesbreakers, the "With Eric Clapton" LP in particular. Very big with the guitarists I knew back in the day, my brother included, a gateway to Muddy so to speak. And I don't mean basic in a bad way. Textbook early blues rock is more like it, heavier on the blues side. It's when Clapton first stretched his legs. How this could devolve into "Layla" a decade later I'll never know.

The first two are from the LP, which I haven't yet mentioned is the Mayall LP to own. I don't know where "It Ain't Right" is from, maybe an outtake or something. But it's got Clapton, so it's the same era.


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Listen:

Wednesday, August 6, 2014

OTIS AND A GRAB BAG

Mother lovin' Diddy Wah did it again. That fucking rascal. He posted Otis Rush's "Homework", which many of you older Bic lighter wavers might know from the J. Geils version. Rush's original version just sent me right into a clicking frenzy, through the series of semi-related songs below. It's compare and contrast night over here..

I dig the production on all of these, as different as they are. In varying amounts of rawness, most could easily have been cut live in the studio with no overdubs, if that's any kind of reference. It's all some kind of electric blues, done by a black dude, a greasy rock band,  some ticking time bomb-weird spit shined Canadian white kids, a British blues demigod, and a really, really white guy from Texas.

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Listen: 
Otis Rush - All Your Love mp3 at Susan Piver (?)
Richie Knight and the Mid-Knights - Homework
(streaming) at YouTube
J. Geils Band - Homework
(streaming) at YouTube Studio version
John Mayall & the Bluesbreakers - All Your Love
(streaming) at YouTube
John Mayall & the Bluesbreakers - Parchman Farm mp3
at Lake Tahoe Real Estate (?)
Johnny Winter with the Traits - Parchman Farm mp3 at Lake Tahoe Real Estate (?) 1967

Saturday, December 11, 2010

WANTED: HOT POTATO GUITARIST


It's hard to pinpoint exactly were, in the chronology of British music, the blues turned into blues rock. The Yardbirds? John Mayall's Blues Breakers? Alumni, just between the two of them, account for huge chunk of the British 70s rock icons. Eric Clapton, the first guitarist for the Yardbirds, left to join the Blues Breakers, recommending Jimmy Page as his replacement. Page declined and recommend Jeff Beck. Those movements were just part of a tangled web. When you include the next level, say the members of early Jeff Beck Group, and the early Fleetwood Mac, it expands even further. Besides those three guitarists, you can add Mick Taylor, Ron Wood, John McVie, Peter Green, Rod Stewart, and more. The personnel on the Jeff Beck Group's 1968 debut "Truth" alone included two future Faces, two future Led Zepplin members, Keith Moon and studio session icons-to-be Nicky Hopkins and Mick Waller. Yeesh!

This is just a smattering of stuff. The first two mp3s are from the 1966 archetypal John Mayall Blues Breakers with Eric Clapton LP ("Hideaway" has some mean Mayall Hammond on it). The Jeff Beck Group's "I Ain't Superstitious" (from '68) has the first line up, with Ron Wood and Rod Stewart, and is right about where Beck is starting to get a little crazy. By the eponymously named fourth album (in '72, with Bobby Tench on vocals), he'd be fully aware of how to go off (listen to the guitar on that one). I threw a couple videos down there too. The one directly below is the 1983 ARMS concert, and the first time Page, Clapton and Beck all appeared together on the same stage. It's "Layla," and I hate that song, but this one is a little beefier and a little faster. The rhythm section is Kenny Jones (the Faces, and later the Who), Charlie Watts and Bill Wyman; and Steve Winwood's in there somewhere too. The bald-ish percussion guy, banging the shit out of just about anything that isn't tied down, is Ray Cooper, who worked with Rod Stewart and Elton John, among others. (He reminds me of the Oktobefest drummer at the wrong gig at 1:25 in this video). For curiosity sake, there's a link way down there to a 1957 clip of a very young Jimmy Page playing in a skiffle band.



~ NOTE: ALL MEDIA IS HOSTED BY THE BLOGS & SITES NAMED BELOW ~
John Mayall & the Blues Breakers - Hideaway mp3 at BPFastball.com
John Mayall & the Blues Breakers All Your Love mp3 at Giant Panther
The Jeff Beck Group - I Ain't Superstitious mp3 at Snuhthing Anything
The Jeff Beck Group - Going Down mp3 at Centurytel.net
Jimmy Page in skiffle band (1957), The Huw Wheldon Show, BBC at YouTube
John Mayall & the Blues Breakers with Eric Clapton at Wikipedia
Jeff Beck Group at Wikipedia