"David Blue's strikes something like a warning with the cover, a vintage Highway 61 shot with a sullen Blue in a leather jacket. His delivery is quite like Dylan's on Blonde on Blonde. But behold, the lyrics are among the best I've recently heard. Though the stance is like Dylan's, the words themselves indicate he really knows some things Dylan knows, and some things the master doesn't,"
by Arthur Schmidt, September 28th, 1968
While Inside Llewyn Davis is loosely based on "the King of Greenwich Village" Dave Van Ronk, you could draw just as many parallels between the Coen brothers' creation and David Blue. Also a regular of the Greenwich Village folk scene, Blue frequently performed in the company of Van Ronk, Phil Ochs and Bob Dylan. After his own solo career stalled, Blue briefly joined Bob Dylan's Rolling Thunder Revue before trying his hand at acting, including roles in Wim Wenders' The American Friend and Neil Young's still-out-of-print oddball comedy Human Highway. Blue died suddenly of a heart attack in 1982 at the age of 41. Kris Kristofferson and Joni Mitchell were among the musicians who attended his memorial.
by Daniel Kreps
Tracks
1. These 23 Days In September - 5:25
2. Ambitious Anna - 3:25
3. You Need A Change - 3:01
4. The Grand Hotel - 4:00
5. The Sailor's Lament - 5:19
6. You Will Come Back Again - 3:30
7. Scales For A Window Thief - 5:44
8. Slow And Easy - 3:24
9. The Fifth One - 2:46
All songs by David Blue
One of the most unique rock groups of the 1960s, The Hello People, was created during late 1967 in New York by producer Lou Futterman. There is precious little information on this group that is available on the Internet. This is an attempt to fill that void.
The idea for creating the group stemmed from Marcel Carné's film Children of Paradise (Les Enfants du Paradis). Etienne De Crux, the father of French mime, plays the part of Bapties's father in the film. During the sixties De Crux taught painting to a group of musicians. Since these musicians learned to paint so quickly, De Crux reasoned that musicians could also learn mime and apply it in some new way to create a new form. The manager of the musicians De Crux taught, Lou Futterman, decided he would implement this new concept. He then put together a new group of musicians who would perform in mime makeup and do mime routines between songs, never speaking a word to the audience.
The group recorded for Philips Records, performed at the Café Wha? in Greenwich Village in 1968 and at The Players Theater, upstairs above the Café Wha? Although the group didn't have a hit record they were often seen on major network television shows such as The Tonight Show with Johnny Carson and the controversial Smothers Brothers Show.
Tracks
1. It's A Monday Kind Of Tuesday (Nancy Reiner) - 3:26
2. Sunrise Meadow - 6:09
3. A Stranger At Her Door - 2:39
4. Movin' And Growin' - 3:38
5. Paisley Teddy Bear - 2:53
6. (As, I Went Down) To Jerusalem (W. S. "Sonny" Tongue) - 4:15
7. Lamplight, Nightlight - 4:29
8. Mr Truth Evading, Masquerading Man - 2:21
9. Paris In The Rain - 4:52
Chad and Jeremy are remembered for little more than being posh – a shame because their sunny, gently psychedelic final album was genuinely amazing.
The Ark is a genuinely amazing album. It's luscious sound sits somewhere between baroque psychedelia and the sunshine pop Usher would go on to explore with his revered band Sagittarius (think the Zombies' Odessey and Oracle basking in the Californian sunshine). Chad and Jeremy couldn't quite stop themselves metaphorically dressing up as bowler-hatted city gents or guesting on Batman one last time – it concludes with a cover of a novelty single by Bernard Bresslaw called You Need Feet, which no one in the world needs to hear – but elsewhere, they came up with a string of utterly beautiful songs.
The gorgeous title track drifts lazily in on a sea of brass and woodwind, swelling into a mass of tumbling drums and fuzz bass: he probably wouldn't have agreed as he cleared his desk, but Usher's production was worth every penny. The harpsichord-decorated Pipe Dream is equally lovely, Sunstroke's distorted vocals and sitar perfectly capture the image of a stoned Englishman wilting in the west coast heat, while Imagination is a gleeful pop song – albeit one with a surprising amount of xylophone on it – that conjures a childlike sense of wonder without cloying. Transatlantic Trauma 1966 is, perhaps unwittingly, an intriguing snapshot of pop star self-absorption and ennui: writing to his girlfriend in London in the middle of a US tour, Clyde first explains that he won't be paying her airfare to join him, then – less of a gentleman than you might expect given his aristocratic lineage – tries to fob her off with some free albums.
You could argue that The Ark is a record very much of its era – it's the kind of album that features an Indian raga-influenced instrumental called Pantheistic Study for Guitar and Large Bird – but that's not quite true. One of the umpteen reasons for its failure was probably that The Ark arrived out of time. Its emotional tone is a kind of pacific stoned wistfulness (as you might expect from a duo who must have realised in their heart of hearts that their 15 minutes of fame was up), but in 1968, events had conspired to turn rock music darker and angrier. In fact, some of the year's darkness had seeped into The Ark: Sidewalk Requiem, Los Angeles, June 5th and 6th ruminates on the assassination of Bobby Kennedy, on whose campaign Chad Stuart had worked, but it doesn't provoke the kind of man-the-barricades anger of Street Fighting Man or Revolution; just bewildered sadness. Perhaps Chad and Jeremy were just too well brought up for that kind of thing. Either way, The Ark proves they should be remembered for something more than being posh.
by Alexis Petridis, Tue 29 Jan 2013
Tracks
1. The Emancipation Of Mr. X (Jeremy Clyde) - 2:20
2. Sunstroke (Keith Noble) - 4:10
3. The Ark (Jeremy Clyde) - 4:52
4. The Raven (Chad Stuart, Jeremy Clyde) - 1:29
5. Imagination (Jeremy Clyde) - 2:48
6. Painted Dayglow Smile (Al Gorgoni, Estelle Levitt) - 3:29
7. Pipe Dream (Jeremy Clyde) - 3:34
8. Transatlantic Trauma 1966 (Jeremy Clyde) - 3:21
9. Sidewalk Requiem, Los Angeles, June 5th And 6th (Chad Stuart, Keith Noble) - 3:04
10.Pantheistic Study For Guitar And Large Bird (Chad Stuart) - 3:35
11.Paxton Quigley's Had The Course (Jeremy Clyde, Chad Stuart) - 3:20
12.You Need Feet (You Need Hands) (Roy Irwin) - 4:29
13.Painted Dayglow Smile (Al Gorgoni, Estelle Levitt) - 2:32
14.Sister Marie (David Morrow) - 3:03
15.You Need Feet (You Need Hands) (Roy Irwin) - 2:58
16.Paxton Quigley's Had The Course (Jeremy Clyde, Chad Stuart) - 3:26
Tracks 13-16 Mono Single Versions
When David Blue came out in August 1966, folk-rock singer-songwriters with folk roots were scurrying to ride Bob Dylan's coattails into the rock mainstream. For David Blue, however, it was not enough to be influenced by Dylan, or even to emulate Dylan. David Blue, from all the sonic and even visual evidence on his Elektra debut album, wanted to be Bob Dylan.
If that seems like an extreme or rash conclusion to draw in an era that saw several "new Bob Dylans," it's justified by a listen to the end result. The surrealistic lyrics, the half-spoken half-sung vocal style, the interjection of atonal howls at the end of phrases, the basic blues-rock melodies on the hardest-rocking cuts, the rich electric keyboards and raw tremoloed electric guitars, the occasional love songs to mysterious, nebulous goddesses -- it's all there, albeit in a somewhat garage-band variation. There seems little doubt that the songs were largely the product of multiple listenings to Highway 61 Revisited - at their raunchiest and Blonde on Blonde - at their most tender. If it sometimes sounds as if you're listening to outtakes from those records, it really is no accident, as bassist Harvey Brooks and keyboardist Paul Harris played on various 1965 Dylan sessions. Drummer Herbie Lovelle, meanwhile, had played on Dylan's very first electric recordings in late 1962, which yielded the obscure "Mixed Up Confusion" single.
If he nonetheless hoped to avoid Dylan comparisons, Blue did himself absolutely no favors by putting a head shot on the cover that replicated Dylan's curly late-1965 haircut to a T. Blue's pose in 1965-66 vintage Dylan sunglasses on the back sleeve reinforced the sense of a Village hanger-on auditioning for a film role as Dylan's stunt double. You could also toss in how Blue, like Dylan, had changed his name from an obviously Jewish one - David Cohen.
Yet Blue was not some cat plucked off the street to mimic the Dylan sound as closely as possible, but an actual friend of Dylan, with similar roots in the folk circuit. The Rhode Island native had worked in the Cambridge folk scene as part of the Unicorn Jook Band, which also featured another future folk-rock singer-songwriter of note, Eric Andersen. In the early 1960s, he was one of many young folk singers scuffling around Greenwich Village alongside Bob Dylan. In the Village Voices television documentary, Blue claimed to have helped Dylan during the writing of "Blowin' in the Wind," not to the extent of contributing any music or words, but by playing chords that Dylan suggested as the composer worked out the lyrics.
Blue's association with Elektra actually began not with David Blue, but the earlier compilation album Singer Songwriter Project. For this LP, Elektra had four young songwriters -- Blue, Richard Fariña, Patrick Sky, and Bruce Murdoch -- contribute three or four songs apiece. Blue, under the name Dave Cohen, sang three average, old-timey-styled acoustic folk originals - none of which appeared on David Blue that were not especially indebted to Dylan, in either compositional or vocal style. The emulation became more egregious when Elektra went for an entire David Blue LP. By that time Dylan had gone electric, and Blue was part of the legendary in-crowd -- with Dylan as the centerpiece, but also including Phil Ochs, Eric Andersen, and Tom Paxton -- that traded verbal spars and barbs in Greenwich Village cafes.
Producing the album was Arthur Gorson, who managed and/or produced several other acts making the transition from folk to folk-rock in the mid-1960s, including Phil Ochs, Eric Andersen, Tom Rush, and Jim & Jean. Filling out the session musicians were guitarist Monte Dunn, who had played on Ian & Sylvia's Early Morning Rain album, and Buddy Salzman, who shared the drum chores with Lovelle. Several of the session men on David Blue, particularly Harris and Brooks, ended up playing on many early singer-songwriter folk-rock albums in the mid-1960s, which Gorson confesses was no accident: "At a time when we wanted to expand our audience base a bit and make slightly more commercial records, we wanted to use electric instruments in the studio. But we really didn't know much about it. We ended up using a very small group of musicians who perhaps played on a Dylan album or something like that."
If the songs on David Blue sometimes seemed like Dylan prototypes that had been thrown in the kitchen sink and tossed in the washing machine several times over, its stronger tracks were nevertheless quite enjoyable variations of their obvious model. "So Easy She Goes By," in addition to boasting the vibrating organ-piano blend that was so much a part of the sound Dylan innovated in the studio, was melodic enough to be a hit in the hands of a more conventional singer than Blue. "Midnight Through Morning" had the late-night romantic mood of several of Blonde on Blonde's more introspective numbers, pivoting around the arresting image of a would-be lover fantasizing about falling with a woman's hair as it tumbled down. "Grand Hotel," probably the album's best-known track, was also somewhat of a fetching son-of "Sad Eyed Lady of the Lowlands" creation, demonstrating conclusively that Blue was a better singer when he turned down the volume and turned up the yearning longing. Both it and another song from the album, "About My Love," were effectively covered on Jim & Jean's underrated 1966 folk-rock album Changes - which included yet another Blue composition, the outstanding "Strangers in a Strange Land," that somehow didn't make it onto David Blue.
"I guess that was the sound of the moment that he was looking for," shrugs Gorson when asked about the record's strong resemblance to mid-1960s Dylan. "It was a tough thing for [David], 'cause that's what he knew." It couldn't have been any easier when, according to Gorson, "Dylan would come to the studio and taunt David during the making of the album."
David Blue ended up being the only LP the singer recorded for Elektra. He went on to release half a dozen other albums over the next decade - one under the name David Cohen, never rising even to established cult status. Those records found him growing away from his Dylan fixation, yet, perversely, he's probably most remembered for David Blue, in which his Dylan fixation was second to none. Also achieving some small recognition as an actor - particularly for a brief part in Wim Wenders's An American Friend, he died on December 2, 1982, of a heart attack while jogging in Washington Square Park in Greenwich Village.
by Richie Unterberger
Tracks
1. The Gasman Won't Buy Your Love - 3:04
2. About My Love - 2:39
3. So Easy She Goes By - 3:34
4. If Your Money Can't Get It - 3:01
5. Midnight Through Morning - 4:55
6. It Ain't The Rain That Sweeps The Highway Clean - 3:32
7. Arcade Love Machine - 3:50
8. Grand Hotel - 4:05
9. Justine - 3:02
10.I'd Like To Know - 2:27
11.The Street - 6:01
12.It Tastes Like Candy - 4:09
13.House Un-American Blues Activity Dream - 3:30
14.Birmingham Sunday - 4:00
15.Bold Marauder - 4:48
16.Talking Socialized Anti-Undertaker Blues - 2:11
17.Many A Mile - 3:51
18.Rompin' Rovin' Days - 2:21
19.Down In Mississippi - 1:44
20.Farewell My Friend - 2:53
21.Try 'n' Ask - 1:50
22.I Like To Sleep Late In The Morning - 2:23
23.It's Alright With Me - 2:03
24.Don't Get Caught In A Storm - 2:10
Tracks 1-12, 22-24 written and perfomed by David Blue
Tracks 13-15 written and perfomed by Richard Farina
Tracks 16-17 written and perfomed by Patrick Sky
Tracks 18-21 written and perfomed by Bruce Murdoch
While Keith Christmas' second album was an improvement over his debut, there was still the sense that it was a stretch of his talents to fill an entire record with decent material. In its favor, it had some nicely integrated, varied arrangements that show more imagination than many other British folk-rock recordings of the early '70s: the jazzy piano-dominated vamp of "Waiting for the Wind to Rise," the lovely female backup harmonies on "The Fawn," the languid tempo of "Lorri," the gothic organ of "Kent Lullaby," the Mellotron-acoustic guitar-piano combination of "Hamlin," the rapid whirl of acoustic guitar picking on "Fable of the Wings." About half of the songs were mighty pretty, particularly "Hamlin" and the delicate "The Fawn." Christmas was good at establishing an attractively melancholy musical setting, but his rambling lyrics just couldn't hold up their part of the weight, and he was given to tracks that went on and on for way too long before fading, particularly on "Waiting for the Wind to Rise."
by Richie Unterberger
Tracks
1. Waiting For The Wind To Rise - 6:16
2. The Fawn - 4:57
3. Lorri - 8:26
4. Kent Lullaby - 3:48
5. Hamlin - 6:17
6. Fable Of The Wings - 4:30
7. Bednotch - 3:22
Music and Lyrics by Keith Christmas
The magic of the late-night jam session is one of those rock & roll legends that, much like Bigfoot, doesn't have a lot of concrete evidence to support it. But Delaney & Bonnie believed in it strongly enough to try to put one on tape. Released in 1971, Motel Shot was intended to document the sound and vibe of the after-show jams that Mr. and Mrs. Bramlett often took part in while on the road. After an attempt to record one such jam in the living room of recording engineer Bruce Botnick, Delaney & Bonnie and their friends ended up doing it over again in a recording studio. But if Motel Shot doesn't seem as spontaneous as the principals wanted it to be, it does have a loose, playful feel that's honestly winning.
The performances are almost entirely acoustic, and the set is dominated by traditional blues, gospel, and country standards that this crew could ease into comfortably and bend to their moods. Given that Delaney & Bonnie's friends for these sessions included Duane Allman, Leon Russell, John Hartford, Dave Mason, Gram Parsons, and Joe Cocker, it's no great surprise that this material is significantly more accomplished that most folks' musical goofing around, even if Jim Keltner is just slapping an empty box instead of playing a drum kit. And Delaney & Bonnie are both in fine voice on Motel Shot, passionate but very much in the moment, while the gospel jam of "Takin' About Jesus" features some powerful vocal interplay between Bonnie and Cocker. You can't plan a moment of spontaneous brilliance, but Delaney & Bonnie were just smart enough to know their muse didn't like to be forced, and Motel Shot is an admirable compromise between a 2 a.m. guitar pull and an acoustic studio session, and it was also their last truly effective album.
by Mark Deming
Tracks
1. Where the Soul Never Dies (Traditional) - 3:24
2. Will the Circle Be Unbroken (A. P. Carter) - 2:42
3. Rock of Ages (Traditional) - 2:17
4. Long Road Ahead (Delaney Bramlett, Bonnie Bramlett, Carl Radle) - 3:25
5. Faded Love (Bob Wills, Johnnie Wills) - 4:03
6. Talkin' about Jesus (Traditional) - 6:51
7. Come On In My Kitchen (Robert Johnson) - 2:43
8. Don't Deceive Me (Please Don't Go) (Chuck Willis) - 3:52
9. Never Ending Song of Love (Delaney Bramlett) - 3:20
10.Sing My Way Home (Delaney Bramlett) - 4:02
11.Goin' Down the Road Feelin' Bad (Traditional, Delaney Bramlett) - 5:09
12.Lonesome and a Long Way from Home (Delaney Bramlett, Bonnie Bramlett, Leon Russell) - 3:58
13.I've Told You For The Last Time (Eric Clapton) - 4:19
14.Long Road Ahead (Alternate Take) (Bonnie Bramlett, Carl Radle, Delaney Bramlett) - 3:34
15.Gift Of Love (Delaney Bramlett, Mac Davis) - 2:16
16.Come On In My Kitchen (Alternate Take) (Robert Johnson) - 3:12
17.Blues (Delaney Bramlett) - 5:38
18.Lonesome And A Long Way From Home (Alternate Take) (Bonnie Bramlett, Delaney Bramlett, Leon Russell) - 5:23
19.What A Friend We Have In Jesus (Joseph Scriven) - 2:51
20.Farther Along (Jesse Randall Baxter) - 3:40
Bobby Fuller was born in 1942 in Baytown, Texas. He enjoyed playing guitar, writing songs and singing them and eventually formed The Bobby Fuller Four in El Paso with his brother Randy and two friends, Jim Reese and DeWayne Quirico. The group played in El Paso for three years before signing a record contract and moving to Los Angeles.
The Bobby Fuller Four was influenced in its music quite a bit by another rock-and-roll star who had also come from West Texas, Buddy Holly. The lead guitar player in Holly's band, The Crickets, was Sonny Curtis, who wrote what proved to be the biggest song ever for The Bobby Fuller Four. That song was I Fought The Law. They recorded other songs, some written by Holly, but I Fought The Law was their only record to reach the top ten in the charts. In later years the influence of The Bobby Fuller Four was seen in music recorded by such groups as The Clash, the Blasters, and Los Lobos.
Bobby Fuller was a talented musician, songwriter and performer and most likely would have gone on to bigger and better things had he lived longer. Just after "I Fought The Law" became a top ten hit, Bobby Fuller was found dead in his automobile, which was parked near his Los Angeles home. The police considered the death an apparent suicide/accident, however, many people believe Fuller was murdered.
The investigation was botched from the start. The crime scene was not secured and no fingerprints were obtained. A witness also claimed seeing a police officer throw a can of gasoline found at the scene into the trash. Fuller was found with multiple wounds all over his body and covered in gasoline leading many to speculate that the perpetrators fled before they could set the car on fire. Police later changed the cause of death to "Accidental asphyxiation" citing no evidence of foul play. Despite the official cause of death stated by authorities, rumors and speculation still surround Fuller's mysterious death. Fuller is buried in the Forest Lawn Memorial Park in Los Angeles.
A three-CD box set that includes everything Fuller recorded for Mustang between 1964 and 1966: all the LP and 45 tracks, the previously import-only album recorded at PJ's on Sunset Strip, over a dozen cuts that were unreleased during Fuller's lifetime, and rarities. Although much of the music is excellent, it should be stressed that this is for the Bobby Fuller fanatic; most fans will be quite content with the all-killer no-filler distillation of his best mid-'60s cuts on Rhino's Best Of compilation. Fuller's albums were filled out with some unmemorable hot rod tunes and generic rockers that seemed to have been cranked out under pressure for product.
The rare selections (some of which, despite being designated as unreleased, have shown up elsewhere) are largely alternates of songs that were already available, and although these are occasionally interesting, the variations are mostly on the slight side. A couple of cuts by the Randy Fuller Four (led by Bobby's brother and bassist) don't measure up to his sibling's output in the least, sounding jarring and clumsy by contrast. The Live at PJ's disc is disappointing: it consists mostly of covers of familiar rock standards, for one thing, and neither the sound quality nor performance match the excitement that Fuller routinely generated in the studio during this time. But make no mistake, this is a good thing for fans to have, and is superbly packaged, with a 64-page booklet of critical essays, speculation on his mysterious death, and an interview with Randy Fuller.
by Richie Unterberger
Tracks
Disc 1
1. Let Her Dance (Bobby Fuller) - 2:32
2. Julie (Chip Taylor) - 2:18
3. A New Shade Of Blue (Bobby Fuller, Mary Stone) - 2:59
4. Only When I Dream (Bobby Fuller, Mary Stone) - 2:02
5. You Kiss Me (Bobby Fuller, Mary Stone) - 2:36
6. Little Annie Lou (Bobby Fuller, Randy Fuller) - 2:01
7. I Fought The Law (Sonny Curtis) - 2:19
8. Another Sad And Lonely Night (Bobby Fuller) - 2:23
9. Saturday Night (Bobby Fuller) - 1:38
10.Take My Word (Bobby Fuller) - 2:13
11.Fool Of Love (Bobby Fuller) - 2:39
12.Never To Be Forgotten (Bobby Fuller, Randy Fuller) - 3:00
13.My True Love (Alternate Take) (Bobby Fuller, Mary Stone) - 2:19
14.You're In Love (Alternate Take) (Bobby Fuller, Mary Stone) - 2:07
After World War II and during the 1950'ies people in the Saarland, Germanys smallest state in the Southwest, lived through a period of political conflict concerning their national status. In 1950 the Saarland was politically separated from Germany and became an autonomous state, while France was in charge of its foreign affairs. In 1955, an overwhelming majority of the population of the Saarland rejected the Saar statute that was supposed to sanction the political separation from Germany and the economic connection to France, and on 01.01.1957 the Saarland became the 10th state of the Federal Republic of Germany. However, the economic relocation did not take place until 2 years later, on 05.07.1959, in order to minimize any economic loss for France.
Then came the 1960'ies and with it Germany's new economic miracle. Everyone was keen to leave the gloom of World War II behind. People made their living working in the coal mines, the iron and steel works and the vineyards, while seeking entertainment and pleasure through the cinema, television and radio. The spi-rit of the age at that time was rather outdated and conservative, though, and the young people and those who had stayed young were keen on more up-to date entertainment. They were thrilled by Rock 'n Roll and the "British Invasion" and sought to imitate them. This is what happened in Püttlingen, a small town close to Saarbrücken, where the first bands formed in 1963. With most simple means they tried to copy their English models who were growing more and more famous. They made their first appearances in gymnasiums, schools, pubs, community centres and Kolping halls, with little time to practise and far from perfect.
The Blackbirds were founded in the beginning of March 1965, when four friends decided to devote more time to their hobby - music - by forming a band. Those four friends were: Werner Breinig (solo guitar/vocals), Klaus Altmeyer (rhythm-guitar), Siggi Burda (bass-guitar) and Helmut Vigneron (drums). They rehearsed in a small hall pertaining to the local Peter-Wust-School, where the band was not disturbed, and more importantly, could not disturb anybody. Their equipment at that time consisted of self-assembled amplifiers, E-guitars that were patched together and seemingly prehistoric pieces of percussion.
This rather increased the motivation of the boys since their aim was to appeal to fans through an attractive stage performance, and by increasing their appearances and takings they were able to improve their technical equipment. The Blackbird's first gig was not long in coming: a dance event on May 1st 1965. The group was keen to constantly improve their musical quality, and so they appeared in a ballroom in Püttlingen on every Sunday. Playing hits from the English and French charts this is where the cornerstone of their future success was laid.
As a young boy, Werner Breinig, the bandleader, had been soloist with the famous Regensburger Domspatzen, where he received first-class singing instructions. His crystal clear and penetrating voice was the band's trade mark. In Summer 1965, Hubert Koop, organ, joined the quartet and the sound of the organ did a lot to improve the musical quality of the formation.
In January 1966 the Blackbirds gained regional acclaim as the first band in the Saarland to stage a charity event. Shortly afterwards the band had their first television gig in the studio of the Saar TV during the Saarmesse, a regional trade fair. In April 1966 bass guitarist Siggi Burda had to leave the band because of his job and was replaced permanently by Heinz-Peter Koop in the end of 1966. In the meantime, Klaus Althmeyer had also left the band.
1967 was going to be the first really successful year for the Blackbirds: They were voted winner of the beat-groups in the federal festival "Chance 67" that was staged in the Ruhrlandhalle in Bochum. In July they took the second place amongst the "beat groups" during the "Festival de l'Européen" in Belgium. On Sept.11 they appeared in the regional TV show "Talentschuppen".
The proximity to France made it easy for the band to stage concerts in this neighbouring country, and the many so called "dance palaces" there offered ideal possibilities. The French particularly loved the slow titles of the band, and often asked them to "jouez un slow". Getting in and out of France was difficult, though. On each entry and exit the band had to present a list of the entire equipment, which had to be stamped at customs. Sometimes they were even controlled, which could take some time.
The band soon gained considerable reputation through the many concerts as well as through appearances on TV and radio, and the first record was not long in coming. Ambitious as they were they would not content themselves with making a single record first up, but decided to have a go at an entire LP right away.
The recordings were done in the beginning of 1968 in the studio Horst Jankowski in Stuttgart. The conditions for recording at that time (four-tracks) are hard to ima-gine these days: The entire LP was recorded and mixed in a single day. Several songs had even to be written in the hotel the night before the recording, since the record company wanted a full LP. Songs such as "Sandman's Bound" and "She" were influenced by the current weariness of the time, while other titles like "Something Different" were improvised on the spot. Although the recording conditions were far from ideal, the band was able to produce an internationally competitive LP. Remarkably, the LP was first published in Great Britain.
"Golden Sun" is a celebration in song of the transient opportunities of warm summer nights, and cherishes the hope for the coming summer.
"Space" breathes the spirit of space craft Orion (a German science fiction TV show), taking off slowly but steadily.
"No Destination", the title song of the LP, echoes the world-weariness and the 'no future' feeling' that characterized the time around 1968.
In "Sandman's Bound" the band expresses their wish to find peace at last and get some sleep, rather than having to struggle to write yet another song for the record producer.
"That's My Love" is dedicated to the ex-girl friend, who no longer trusts the vows of love, or does she…?
"Girl I'm Wondering": I always thought that you belonged to me…well you got it wrong.
"Show Me That You Love Me": but you know what we really do want…
"Something Different" is the field where organ player Hubert Koop can have his fling.
"She" expresses the hope that the positive female influences will continue, even though the young man has no job and nobody really likes him.
Unfortunately, the LP was not a big commercial success because the small record company did not get sufficiently involved. However, the group sold so many LP's regionally and during gigs that today even the musicians have run out of a copy. The titles "No Destination" and "Space" were also published on a single.
One of the highlights of the concerts was "Sherry Baby", a cover of the Four Seasons' hits. In the end of 1968 this song was published as a single, with "Lead On Light" on the B-side. They had been given this song by a team of composers of the record company Saga/UK. "Space"/ "Golden Sun" was published as a freebie on a split 7" EP with "Bing and The Birds" on the occasion of a leisure fair in Cologne. The group never saw any money for it.
There was also no money in having 5 titles of the LP "No Destination" used on a so called exploitation sampler under the band name "Snake In The Grass" and album title "Hot And Sweet With Beat" (Opp 5, 1969). The remaining 7 titles are apparently by an English band whose model were the "early" Small Faces. Although the record can be recommended, it is not a Blackbirds album under false name, as often purported.
Just how popular the Blackbirds were towards the end of the 1960ies became obvious in Manfred Sexauer's 1000th "Hello Twen Show" in the Saarlandhalle, with stars like Joy Unlimited, Jeronimo and John Mayall, where the best bands of the Saarland were awarded prizes. At that time the Blackbirds had 10 fan-clubs in Germany alone, and another 4 in France and Belgium. The city of Püttlingen honoured one of her famous sons with a "Silver Anchor".
The first successful Blackbirds formation ended when organ player Hubert Koop was drafted to the German army in 1969.
And since beat and psychedelic pop music were gradually growing out of date and bands increasingly turned towards progressive rock and Kraut-rock, musical changes had to be made as well. In 1982 "Sherry Baby" was re-recorded, with "Burn Out For Rock'n Roll" on the B-side (EHA 5065, 1982), but with a different line-up. The B-side, composed by Werner Breinig, recalls the psycho-pop of the late 1960ies, particularly in the verse parts.
by Manfred Steinheuer, March 2005
Tracks
1. Golden Sun - 3:12
2. Space (Breinig - 3:20
3. No Destination - 4:21
4. Long Tall Dorothe - 2:09
5. Sandmann´s Bound - 3:00
6. That's My Love - 2:38
7. Girl I'm Wondering - 3:06
8. Show Me That You Love Me - 3:24
9. Something Different (Werner Breinig) - 2:05
10.She - 4:32
11.Lead On Light (Judith Durham, David Reilly) - 3:31
12.Sherry Baby (Bob Gaudio) - 2:40
13.Burning Out For Rock'n Roll (Werner Breinig, Guido Klein) - 3:24
14.Sherry Baby (Bob Gaudio) - 3:02
All songs by Werner Breinig, Hubert Koop except where noted
Bonus Tracks 11-14
The Blackbirds
*Heinz Koop - Bass Guitar
*Helmut Vigneron - Drums
*Werner Breinig - Lead Guitar
*Hubert Koop - Organ
Hip Hip Hooray is actually a retitled and slightly resequenced reissue of the Troggs' 1968 U.K. album Mixed Bag (which never came out in the United States), tacking on 11 CD bonus cuts from 1970 and 1973 singles. The original title Mixed Bag was an appropriate description of this rather scrapheap assembly, as it wasn't really a regular album. Instead, it was a budget-priced compilation matching eight songs that appeared on British and American singles in 1968 with four others that made their first appearance on the LP. Although all but one of the tracks was a Troggs original ("Hip Hip Hooray" being the lone exception), and although there were a few solid cuts, overall it was disappointing due to the weakness and surprisingly low energy of many of the songs. "Hip Hip Hooray" was somewhat puerile bubblegum, and "Little Girl," a small British hit, was a lame attempt by Reg Presley to keep milking the pop ballad style he'd used the much better effect in earlier hits like "Love Is All Around."
In brighter news, the old salacious Troggs sound surfaced to good effect in "Say Darlin'"; "You Can Cry if You Want To" was one of Presley's better soft numbers; and both "Purple Shades" and "Maybe the Madman" were two of the band's best ventures into psychedelia, albeit of the rather tongue-in-cheek sort. All of the best numbers, however, were the ones most likely to show up on later best-of compilations, making Hip Hip Hooray only of interest to collectors and completists. Repertoire certainly does such collectors a service, however, by adding a pile of rare 1970 and 1973 singles onto the disc, as well as three tracks from Reg Presley solo singles of the era. Alas, none of the bonus cuts are too good or memorable (the heavy "Feels Like a Woman" is the most well known), documenting a period when the band's original force and raunch were getting diluted amid a clutch of substandard material.
by Richie Unterberger
Tracks
1. Hip Hip Hooray (Geoff Stephens, John Carter) - 2:17
2. You Can Cry If You Want To - 2:50
3. Say Darlin' (Chris Britton) - 2:44
4. Marbles And Some Gum (Pete Staples) - 2:03
5. Purple Shades - 2:22
6. Heads Or Tails (Chris Britton) - 3:41
7. Surprise Surprise - 2:46
8. Little Girl - 2:56
9. Maybe The Madman (Chris Britton) - 2:11
10.Off The Record (Pete Staples, Ronnie Bond) - 3:42
11.We Waited For Someone - 2:49
12.There's Something About You (Ronnie Bond) - 2:40
13.Lazy Weekend (Reg Presley, Tony Murray) - 3:23
14.Let's Pull Together - 2:47
15.Young And Beautiful (Ronnie Bond, Reg Presley) - 2:53
16.Everything's Funny (Chris Britton, Reg Presley) - 2:10
17.Feels Like A Woman - 3:30
18.Listen To The Man - 3:15
19.Queen Of Sorrow (Richard Glenmoore) - 2:39
20.Strange Movies - 2:54
21.I'm On Fire (Richard Moore) - 2:12
22.'S Down To You Marianne (Roger Cook, Roger Greenaway, Geoff Stephens) - 3:10
23.Hey Little Girl (Roger Cook, Roger Greenaway) - 2:52
All songs by Reg Presley except where noted
Bonus Tracks 13-23
Tracks 15, 22, 23 Reg Presley solo recordings
The Troggs
*Ronnie Bond - Drums
*Chris Britton - Lead Guitar
*Reg Presley - Lead vocals
*Peter Staples - Bass
The son of actor Rex Harrison, Noel Harrison was born In 1934. As a teenager he joined the Ipswich repertory theatre group and taught himself guitar, but his main interest was sport and most of his spare time was spent skiing in Switzerland.
At an early age he was a member of the British ski team, becoming its first giant-slalom champion in 1953 and representing Britain at the Winter Olympics in Oslo in 1952 and Italy in 1956, competing in both down-hill and slalom events.
Noel also did his National Service and, after leaving the army in the fifties, toyed with the idea of becoming a journalist, but instead he concentrated on his guitar.
When he was 20, he started playing professionally, around the tables in a Greek restaurant in London, for meals and tips.
He also made a living playing in bars and nightclubs all over Europe, including appearances at the famous Blue Angel Club, where one show was recorded for a live album.
But his early break came in 1958 when he took a regular part in the BBC TV programme Tonight, as part of a team who sang the day's news in a calypso style.
He left England for America in 1965, working as a nightclub entertainer at such venues as San Francisco's Hungry I and at the Persian Room in New York
Thanks to his managers Bob Chartoff and lrwin Winkler, who went on to produce the Rocky films, he had a record hit the charts, A Young Girl, written by Charles Aznavour. The song was included on his first studio album, Noel Harrison, which was released in 1966.
Noel's first album for Reprise features three Beatles covers, one Dylan song and one by Leonard Cohen.
Subtitled “Noel Harrison Sings Songs of Today and Tomorrow” it includes a number of Noel’s best tracks, including his wonderful cover of Leonard Cohen's Suzanne as well as the beautiful People in the Rain and Woman.
His version of the Beatles classic, Strawberry Fields Forever, is also pretty good as is the unusually titled Mrs Williams' Rose.
In their review on October 28, 1967, Billboard magazine said: "Featuring his current single Suzanne, Noel Harrison has a good chart package in this 12-cut album, which also includes his single Mrs William’s Rose. Several recent hits are given unusual treatment, such as Procol Harum’s A Whiter Shade of Pale, which gets a distinct dance beat."
On October 19, 2013, Noel played a gig in the village of Black Dog in Devon. Following a long drive home he had a heart attack and was taken to hospital. Sadly, he died in hospital on Sunday, October 20, aged 79. On Tuesday, October 29, Noel was buried in a woodland close to his home in Devon.
Tracks
1. Suzanne (Leonard Cohen) - 2:55
2. Just Like A Woman (Bob Dylan) - 3:45
3. People In The Rain (Geoffrey Stevens) - 2:35
4. Woman (Bernard Webb) - 2:22
5. Lucy In The Sky With Diamonds (John Lennon, Paul McCartney) - 2:48
6. Sign Of The Queen (Michael Brewer, Tom Shipley) - 2:40
7. Museum (Donovan Leitch) - 2:03
8. A Whiter Shade Of Pale (Gary Brooker, Keith Reid) - 2:54
9. Go Ask Your Man (Bob Lind) - 2:02
10.When I'm 64 (John Lennon, Paul McCartney) - 2:27
11.Mrs Williams' Rose (Geoffrey Stevens) - 2:35
12.Strawberry Fields Forever (John Lennon, Paul McCartney) - 3:00
Always when it comes to Africa, we immediately think of Afrobeat or traditional music, not always based on electrical resources. This is a very common ethnocentric view that minimizes or excludes the great musical accomplishments of this continent.
The Afro Rock pioneered in the late 60s (Osibisa, Assagai) subverted this condition leading the western pop into a new tinge of elements, the boys were aware of all this when they decided to make a band.
Credited as The Ofege Phenomenon, they were formed in a 70s school from St. Gregory’s College, Obalende, Lagos, (all between 15-17 of age). Their music was largely influenced by the guitar solos of Carlos Santana, Jeff Beck and the criss-cross rhythms of Osibisa (Ghanaian band formed in London).
The ‘IM’ highlights are for: Gbe Mi Lo, a wild and uncompromising instrumental tune with bits of funky elements that are dissolved into a psychedelic effect, the overall guitar work here are insanely great, with heavy fuzz and swinging rhythm.
And Lead Me On a closing track with naive lyrics and straight rock pace, delivering some raw solos and the usual beat that accompanies the whole album. The ingenuity allied with the inexperience of its members makes this album a real treasure.
Tracks
1. Nobody Fails - 4:24
2. Whizzy Ilabo - 3:32
3. Gbe Mi Lo - 4:15
4. Try and Love - 4:19
5. It's Not Easy - 4:25
6. Ofege - 4:00
7. You Say No - 4:09
8. Lead Me On - 3:23
All Music by M-Ike Meme, Lyrics by Melvin Ukachi, except track #6 Lyrics by Paul Alade
Ofege
Melvin Ukachi - Lead Vocals
Berkley Jones - Lead Guitar
Felix Inneh - Rhythm Guitar, Vocals
Dapo Olumide - Keyboards
Paul Alade - Bass, Vocals
M-Ike Meme - Drums, Vocals
Both sides of all six of the singles issued by this obscure British band between 1965-1967 (including one released only in the U.S.) are on this compilation, which also presents seven previously unissued tracks. With their clean-cut, American-influenced vocal harmony sound, the Quiet Five weren't too comparable to many other British Invasion bands; perhaps the Fortunes and Peter & Gordon, a bit, though they were earthier than the Fortunes and not as folky as Peter & Gordon. The influences of the Beach Boys and Merseybeat are also felt to varying degrees.
While the material is uneven, and isn't stunning, it's a pretty respectable slant on the more lightweight side of the mid-'60s British Invasion. Certainly their moody, folky debut single, "When the Morning Sun Dries the Dew," is a highlight, akin to Peter & Gordon in their more serious moods, making one wish Quiet Five singer/guitarist Kris Ife had penned more of the group's releases.
The more energetic B-sides "Tomorrow I'll Be Gone" (a quite tough Merseybeat-flavored number) and the soul-pop-Mersey hybrid "Let's Talk It Over" are also quite satisfying, if not typical of the approach the band usually took. Indeed, the Quiet Five's versatility sometimes worked against rather than for them, as they also delved into unimpressive updates of standards, limpid pop, and a not so hot cover of the fine Rolling Stones LP track "I Am Waiting." Still, there are more enjoyable cuts here than duds, including an uncharacteristically fuzzy stomper with lead vocals by P.J. Proby, "Didn't Give a Damn," among the unreleased items. Overall, it's a pleasantly worthwhile compilation, and recommended to British Invasion collectors trying to discover something new from the vaults, as the Quiet Five are a band about which even many serious British Invasion fans might remain unaware.
by Richie Unterberger
Tracks
1. When The Morning Sun Dries The Dew (Kris Ife) - 3:16
2. Tomorrow I'll Be Gone (Adams, B. Mason) - 1:59
3. Honeysuckle Rose (Teddy Razef, Fats Waller) - 2:10
4. Let's Talk It Over (Brian Henderson) - 2:18
5. When The Morning Sun Dries The Dew (Originall Demo) (Kris Ife) - 2:50
6. Homeward Bound (Paul Simon) - 2:28
7. Ain't It Funny What Some Lovin' Can Do (Powers, Keller) - 2:05
8. Gotta Find My Girl (Unreleased) (Unknown) - 2:30
9. Trying Too Hard (Unreleased) (Unknown) - 2:54
10.I Am Waiting (Mick Jagger, Keith Richard) - 2:46
11.Without You (Crispian St. Peters) - 2:29
12.Red Hot Scrambler Go (Bigelow, Paxton) - 2:22
13.I Understand (Pat Best) - 2:53
14.Fun Fun Fun (Unreleased) (Wilson) - 2:08
15.Willow Tree (Unreleased) (Kris Ife) - 2:29
16.Didn't Give A Damn (Unreleased) (Unknown) - 2:23
17.Just For Tonight (Mike Julien, Alan Moorhouse) - 2:20
18.Goodnight Sleep Tight (Kris Ife, Alan Moorhouse) - 2:43
19. Mess Of Blues (Unreleased) (Doc Pomus, Mart Shuman) - 4:08
Tracks 12-13 as The Fabulous Quiet Five
Track 16 by P. J. Proby
A grab bag of rare tracks from the '60s, some of which stand among Mayall's finest. His debut 1964 single Crawling Up a Hill is one of his best originals; this comp also includes a couple of 1964-1965 flipsides. The eight songs featuring Peter Green include some top-notch material that outpaces much of the only album recorded by the Green lineup (A Hard Road), particularly the Green originals Missing You and Out of Reach, a great B-side with devastating, icy guitar lines and downbeat lyrics that ranks as one of the great lost blues-rock cuts of the '60s. The set is filled out with a few songs from the Mick Taylor era, the highlight being the vicious instrumental Knockers Step Forward.
by Richie Unterberger
Tracks
1. Crocodile Walk (John Mayall) - 2:14
2. My Baby Is Sweeter (Willie Dixon) - 2:59
3. Crawling Up A Hill (Version One) (John Mayall) - 2:15
4. Mama, Talk To Your Daughter (J.B. Lenoir) - 2:58
5. Alabama Blues (J.B. Lenoir) - 2:29
6. Out Of Reach (Peter Green) - 4:42
7. Greeny (Peter Green) - 3:54
8. Curly (Peter Green) - 4:50
9. Missing You (Peter Green) - 1:57
10.Please Don't Tell (John Mayall) - 2:26
11.Your Funeral And My Trial (Sonny Boy Williamson II) - 3:55
12.Suspicions (Part One) (John Mayall) - 2:47
13.Knockers Step Forward (John Mayall, Mick Taylor) - 3:12
14.Hide And Seek (John Mayall, Hank Williams) - 2:22
Holdsworth and Williams left before Tempest’s second album "Living In Fear". Their replacement was more than a match for any musician. Ollie Halsall was a fine vocalist and keyboard player and it is certainly a measure of the rrtan that he replaced two musicians by himself.
The recruitment of Halsall was a slight move back towards jazz (ironically in view of Allan Holdworth's subsequent jazz-orientated career with Gordon Beck, Soft Machine, Gong, Bruford, and solo). He had begun his career in Timebox, a soulpop group featuring the brilliant vocalist Mike Patto, who cut several sides for Pye and Oecca, moving from soul to psychedelia (and often showcasing Halsall's excellent vibes playing). Weary of lack of success, they changed their name to Patto, and cut a string of equally unsuccessful but absolutely brilliant jazz-rock albums, wherein Ollie Halsall became a by-word for fiery jazz soloing with an avant-garde edge.
So "Living in Fear" was no less of an album that its predessor, but was a different beast. One again, Hiseman and Clark laid down complex rhythms over which Halsall laid down some startling textures. Unlike "Tempest", it is an album which has dated well. That is not to say that the first album sounds old, but rather to say that the second Tempest line-up achieved a kind of timelessness.
After a short but interesting career (like getting mobbed at the Venice Festival in '75. In recent years, he has played mainly jazz, and is still partially recovering from a heart attack suffered in 1988. Mark Clarke went on to work with Uriah Keep and Rainbow, while Ollie Halsall formed Boxer with Mike Patto, worked on Eric Idle's "The Rutles", and became more left field than ever. But we still have the music: "Grey and Black", "Funeral Empire", "Waiting For a Miracle", and "Brothers" still sounds great today!
by Andy Boot
This two-disc set takes the full recordings of Tempest's lone two releases and puts them on one disc. Hard-rocking as any of their peers, Tempest also brought a jazzier side to their sound, no doubt in part to Allan Holdsworth's involvement. The second disc contains two previously unreleased tunes and the much in-demand BBC sessions that have been traded with great frequency (and of much lower quality) by collectors.
by Rob Theakston
Tracks Disc 1
1. Gorgon (Jon Hiseman, Mark Clarke, Allan Holdsworth) - 5:43
2. Foyers Of Fun (Jon Hiseman, Mark Clarke, Allan Holdsworth) - 3:41
3. Dark House (Jon Hiseman, Mark Clarke, Allan Holdsworth) - 5:03
4. Brothers Jon (Jon Hiseman, Allan Holdsworth) - 3:37
5. Up And On (John Edwards, Allan Holdsworth) - 4:19
6. Grey And Black (Mark Clarke, Susie Bottomley) - 2:30
7. Strangeher (Mark Clarke, Jon Hiseman) - 4:07
8. Upon Tomorrow (Clem Clempson, Jon Hiseman) - 6:44
9. Funeral Empire (Ollie Halsall) - 4:25
10.Paperback Writer (John Lennon, Paul McCartney) - 2:30
11.Stargazer (Mark Clarke, Susie Bottomley) - 3:36
12.Dance To My Tune (Mark Clarke, Susie Bottomley) - 7:50
13.Living In Fear (Ollie Halsall) - 4:19
14.Yeah Yeah Yeah (Ollie Halsall, Jon Hiseman) - 3:40
15.Waiting For A Miracle (Ollie Halsall) - 5:18
16.Turn Around (Mark Clarke, Susie Bottomley) - 6:12
Tracks 1-8 from LP Tempest 1973
Tracks 9-16 from LP Living In Fear 1974
Disc 2
1. You And Your Love (Mark Clarke, Ollie Halsall) - 4:19
2. Dream Train (Jon Hiseman, Mark Clarke, Ollie Halsall) - 4:41
3. Foyers Of Fun (Allan Holdsworth, Jon Hiseman, Mark Clarke) - 6:56
4. Gorgon (Allan Holdsworth, Jon Hiseman, Mark Clarke) - 8:41
5. Up And On (Allan Holdsworth, John Edwards) - 7:39
6. Grey And Black (Mark Clarke, Susie Bottomley) - 3:38
7. Brothers (Allan Holdsworth, Jon Hiseman) - 15:25
8. Drums Away (Jon Hiseman) - 7:26
9. Strangeher (Jon Hiseman, Mark Clarke) - 5:58
Tracks 1-2 Previously Unreleased recorded April 1974
Tracks 3-9 BBC Radio One Pop Spectacular concert, recorded 2nd June 1973 at Golders Green Hippodrome, hosted by Alan Black