Showing posts with label jeff beck. Show all posts
Showing posts with label jeff beck. Show all posts

Tuesday, June 24, 2014

PRIMORDIAL CHILL

When it comes to restrained coolness, it really doesn't get any cooler than Santo and Johnny's "Sleepwalk". It's a multi-purpose instrumental, good for barbeques, post-beach chilling, and, as my high school friend Randy would say "a slow dance with a foxy chick" (a comment that was met with guffaws by all present because this guy never came close to slow dancing with a cardboard stand-up, let alone a foxy chick). It's been posted here before, but I just ran across an extended version, long enough to give even imaginary player Randy a run for his money. It sounds like it was recorded at a different session than the original, but retains the innate goosebump inducing vibe, four and a half minutes of it. [Note: The long version was mislabeled at Plain or Pan. It's actually the Ventures.]

~ NOTE: ALL MEDIA IS HOSTED BY THE BLOGS & SITES NAMED BELOW ~ 
Listen:
Covers:
Their first LP:
Santo and Johnny - Santo and Johnny at Basement Rug In a zip. (Click on "This self-titled 1959 LP")
Visit:
Santo and Johnny at Basement Rug Excellent bio and all the goods

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

Sunday, November 21, 2010

THE YARDBIRDS WITH PAGE & BECK


I don't know what's more awesome. The song, the movie clip, or the write-up. Dr. Mooney's 115th Dream, another always excellent, always varied blog, posted the Yardbirds' "unruly overhaul" (Dr. Mooney's words, and dead on) of "Train Kept a Rollin'," retitled "Stroll On." This was from the six month period when both Jimmy Page and Jeff Beck were in the band. If it sounds like a helluva combination, it is. It makes "For Your Love" sound like Freddie and the Dreamers. (Again, I exaggerate, but it is a lot meatier.) Film freaks will remember this line up from the scene in Michaelo Antonioni's Blow Up. A link to the clip is below and at Dr. Mooneys. You really should check out his write-up, it's a good read.

~ NOTE: ALL MEDIA IS HOSTED BY THE BLOGS & SITES NAMED BELOW ~
The Yardbirds - Stroll On mp3 at Dr. Mooney's 115th Dream
The Yardbirds in Blow Up clip at YouTube
Dr. Mooney's 115th Dream's Yardbirds post

Saturday, August 2, 2008

HERE COME DA FUZZ


While the definitive version of "Train Kept A Rollin" is open for debate, the distortion-laden version by Johnny Burnette and the Rock n' Roll Trio [sic] has gotta be the most groundbreaking. It's a general consensus that it was the first rock n' roll record with fuzz on it. What's more significant is that it set the template for just about all future interpretations.

Almost without exception, subsequent rock n' roll versions of the song all ape the Trio's treatment, itself a cover of the original by Tiny Bradshaw. But the treatment and the fuzz was all theirs. Just whose fuzz in particular, though, remains a question.

In this corner, we have the accident, according to guitarist Paul Burlison, "Just before a show, the leather strap on my blond fender amp broke, and the amp fell to the floor. When I plugged the guitar in, it had a real fuzzy sound. I looked in the back of the amp, and one of the tubes was barely sticking in the prongs -- It was acting like rheostat. The guitar sounded pretty good, so I left the tube the way it was. From then on, whenever I wanted to get that sound, I'd just reach back there and loosen the tube. It sounded real funky."

In the other corner, we've got studio whiz Grady Martin. WFMU's Beware of the Blog cites session player Martin as the guitarist. I thought that possibly a slip-up, because it also says Martin invented the fuzz guitar sound in 1960, four years after the Trio cut "Train Kept A Rollin'" and "Honey Hush", another fuzzed-out rocker. (See Country Fuzz Spectacular link below for more on Martin and other country fuzzers.)

In the process of fact checking online, I found the writing of a true fuzz-orgin fiend, and it opened up a real can of worms. It's a lengthy dissertation on the origin of the fuzz on "Train Kept A Rollin'." When I say lengthy, I mean that I spent over a half hour on a single page. It comes up with some hard-to-ague points about said fuzz, including an argument that it probably wasn't fuzz at all.

Though the still-debated fuzz was a big part of what made the Trio's version memorable, it was the overall treatment and sound, and Burnette's manic, panting, vocals, that made it theirs and a Rockabilly milestone.
I'd like to believe Burlison's version, if only to contemplate the possible power of a mistake. Either way, the lineage of the song is something remarkable and comforting. Whether a dropped amp or a song three ex-boxers made their own, I marvel at how it fed through the Yardbirds and Led Zeppelin, and on through Aerosmith, and continues today in the bedrooms of future shredders with big dreams.

Johnny Burnette & the Rock n' Roll Trio - Rockabilly Boogie (streaming) at Walk Between the Lines

Did Paul Burlison or Grady Martin play guitar for Johnny Burnette & The Rock'n'Roll Trio? Long-ass dissertation by Victor Gordon & Peter Dijkema at the Rockabilly Guitar Page

NOTE: These next three links were added 11/30/10, for reference (see comment from Paul Burlison's son in "Comments" below.)
Howlin' Wolf - I'm the Wolf mp3 at hic1.kazserv.com/~khabs(?)
Jackie Brenston - Rocket 88 mp3 at NYNetResources
Marty Robbins - Don't Worry (w/Grady Martin) mp3 at Beware of the Blog

Friday, December 7, 2007

BEHOLD THE ECONOMIC SOLO!


Back when I was about 20, I used to hang out at a small record store called Monty Rockers. When I say hang out, I mean all damn day. In the morning I would ride my entry level Honda 90 about ten miles east, park my ass on the floor by the magazine rack, and read fanzines, listen to music, and shoot the bull with the owner, Dan McLain, until the early evening. Every once in a while, in mid-afternoon, the cooler next to the bar-like counter would be be put to use, dispensing cheap beer (still another reason to hang out).

It was easy to eat up a whole day. McLain knew music and loved to talk about music. He wasn't some dorky orator of trivia, he was at his best when he was turning you on to a particular record. He would describe music in less than academic terms, and always reacted to music physically. Let him loose on a personal favorite and he'd really go nuts. He would sing along, holler, raise his fists in the air, and slam the counter like an evangelist (and you walked out a believer). This is how I was turned onto Gene Vincent and his Blue Caps.

Behind the counter in his store, up on a shelf, was a record that wasn't for sale. It was McLain's prized beat-to-shit copy of Gene Vincent and his Blue Caps' (self-titled) second album. It was long out of print, and reissues were rare back then. The first rockabilly revival hadn't even hit yet. The only Gene Vincent cut readily available was "Be-Bop-A-Lula" on a 45 (most likely backed with "Woman Love"). So, with a lack of any real context, my first exposure to Gene Vincent and his Blue Caps second album, arguably one of the best rockabilly LP's ever recorded, was something I wasn't prepared for. Augmented by McLain's animated proselytizing, I was blind-sided.
McLain knew every nook and cranny of that album. Once the needle dropped, he was almost conductor-like, pointing out the screams, yelps, catch-your-breath panting, and the short rapid fire guitar solos. Not only was this my introduction to Gene Vincent and real rockabilly abandonment, but also to the genius guitar playing of Cliff Gallup.

My guitar idol worship years had already passed a couple years earlier, when I got into punk rock (for obvious reasons). Thanks to the guitar idols of the 70s, solos were thought, rightfully so, to be self-indulgent and unneeded. Short, economic solos were nonexistent in mainstream rock; every guitarist seemed to be a prima donna or a "guitar slinger" (rock n' roll's version of a monster truck driver).

The Blue Caps' record from two decades earlier, though, was different. Between the yelping, screaming, panting, and a rhythm section-gone-wild, were compact, perfectly paced solos. Every note in place, fast and frantic, and exceptionally clean. Archetypal rock and roll licks in their purest form, before they were fucked with. Stonehenge, man.

I would soon learn that Gallup wasn't alone. There were a lot of excellent rockabilly guitarists in the early days; Scotty Moore, Paul Burlison, Eddie Cochran, Billy Lee Riley and James Burton, just to name a few. But none as revered over the years as Gallup. The respect for his playing amongst other guitarists is such that for years technical guitar freaks have studied his tablatures and his playing style. In 1993 guitar virtuoso Jeff Beck recorded a whole album of Gene Vincent covers, playing Gallup's solos note-for-note. (Not surprisingly, the album was meant not as a tribute to Vincent, but to Gallup.) Though, despite the adulation of other guitarists, Gallup's name is known little out of the circles of other players and rockabilly fanatics.

A few nights ago, while making the rounds of MP3 blogs, I ran across a posting an MP3 of Gene Vincent and his Blue Caps' "Who Slapped John?", from their first album, Blue Jean Bop. It's an excellent introduction to Gallup's playing. Though the song is short, clocking in at under two minutes, Gallup manages two solos before the one minute mark, and a third before all is said and done. (I lost count of the screams and yelps of the other band members).

The amazing thing is that "Who Slapped John?" is not unique. The bulk of Gene Vincent and his Blue Caps's first two albums rocks as hard and as efficiently. I don't usually recommend that anyone buy anything, but these albums represent rockabilly, and rock n' roll, at its very best (with sweat you can hear).

Shortly after my introduction to Gene Vincent, his first five albums began to be imported as French reissues. When they got to Monty Rockers, I worked for a day in McLain's shop in exchange for the first three. A whole day for a couple hours of recorded music. But it was, and remains, the highest reward for a day of work I've ever received. And today you can get the first two Vincent albums online, on the same CD, for under twenty dollars. (What the hell are you waiting for?)