Showing posts with label music. Show all posts
Showing posts with label music. Show all posts

Wednesday, November 9, 2011

Stimulating sounds: "Burned Sugar: The 1973 Swedish Radio Recordings" by Sabu Martinez

Year recorded: 1973
Personnel: Sabu Martinez (congas, bongos, talking drums, gong, vocals); Bernt Rosengren (saxophone, flute), Wlodek Gulgowski (electric piano, keyboards); Mr. X (bass), Stephan Moller (drums)

Jazzy, funky grooves from the deepest depths of outer space--or the deepest archives of the Swedish National Radio, where the tapes comprising this session were accidentally discovered. The biography of this funky man comes from allmusic, while the short review comes from those almighty purveyors of all things wonderful, dustygroove.

Louis "Sabu" Martinez was one of the most prolific conga players in the history of Afro-Cuban music. In addition to his own albums, Martinez recorded with such influential jazz musicians as Dizzy Gillespie, Horace Silver, Buddy DeFranco, J.J. Johnson, Louis Bellson, Art Farmer and Art Blake and jazz vocalists including Tony Bennett and Sammy Davis Jr. Emigrating to Sweden in 1967, he continued to apply his highly melodic rhythms to a lengthy list of recordings by top-notch Swedish performers.

A native of New York's Spanish Harlem, Martinez spent his childhood beating rhythms on tin cans on 111th Street. By the age of 11, he was performing every third night on 125th Street for 25 cents a night. He was still in his early teens when he began playing with Latin bands including those led by Marcelino Guerra and Catalino Rolon. In 1944, he spent an extended period living in Puerto Rico.

After serving a year in the military, at the age of 17, Martinez resumed his musical career as a member of mambo originator Joe Loco's trio. Within a few months, his playing attracted the attention of jazz musicians. In 1946, he began a long association with drummer Art Blakey.

Martinez and Blakey continued to periodically work together until 1959. In addition to leading the rhythm section on Blakey's groundbreaking album "Orgy in Rhythm" in 1954, he was featured on the Jazz Messengers albums "Cu-Bop" and "Messages" in 1957.
Martinez continued to be a much-in-demand session player. In addition to playing traditional Latin music with the Lecuono Cuban Boys, he collaborated with Charlie Parker and Max Roach during a 13-week stint at the New York club the Three Deuces.

In April, 1949, he performed with swing clarinetist Benny Goodman.
The high point of Martinez's career came in 1948 when he joined Dizzy Gillespie's band, following the murder of influential conga player Chano Pozo. During the nine months that he performed with the group, he played on five albums: "Dizzy," "Dizzier and Dizzier," "16 Rare Performances," "When Be-Bop Met the Big Band" and "Diz." In return, Gillespie nicknamed Martinez "Sabu" when he noticed a resemblance to popular Indian actor Sabu, the "Elephant Boy."

Despite his fame, Martinez struggled with heroin addiction. In the mid-'50s, he briefly left music to run a strip joint in Baltimore. Although he overcame his addiction in 1956, it took several years for him to become "psychologically free" from the grasp of the drug. Forming his own quintet, Martinez recorded three memorable albums: the Afro-Cuban masterpiece "Palo Congo" in 1957, and two, "Safari" and "Sorcery" in 1958, that have been described as "the wildest exotica records ever."

In 1960, Martinez collaborated with Louie Ramirez to record the history-making Latin jazz album "Jazz Espagnole." Four years later, he relocated temporarily to Puerto Rico, where he performed with several bands including the Johnny Conquet Orchestra and met his future wife, Agneta.

In 1967, they were married and moved to Agneta's homeland in Sweden. Martinez
remained there for the rest of his life. Shortly after moving to Sweden, Martinez took a gig with Lill Lindfor's Musical Revue. This began a long involvement with Swedish musicians. In addition to sharing his knowledge of music and the conga as a teacher, he performed and recorded with such artists as Cornelius Vreeswick, Merit Hemmingson, Radiojazzgruppen, Björbobandet, the Eero Koisvistoinen Music Society, the Peter Herbolzheimer Rhythm Combination and Brass, Gugge Hedrenius' Big Band and Ivan Oscarsson. While in Sweden, he occasionally collaborated with American musicians including Kenny Clarke, Art Farmer and George Russell.

In 1973, he formed his own band, New Burnt Sugar, and released a book of conga exercises. His final recording sessions came while working on Debbie Cameron and Richard Boone's album "Brief Encounter" in 1978. Martinez died on January 13, 1979, of a gastric ulcer.

Review: Amazing lost funk from Sabu Martinez--rare work recorded in Sweden in the early 70s, and some of his heaviest work ever--as great, if not better than, his legendary "Afro Temple" album! The tunes are all long and very jamming--fierce Latin funk numbers that feature Sabu on a range of percussion instruments--alongside lots of electric piano, plus sax and flute from Swedish jazzman Bernt Rosengren--who's pretty great too! In addition to congas, Sabu also handles talking drums, gong, and bongos – plus a range of other percussion effects too – all heard to great form on the 17 minute jammer "Burned Sugar", plus the cuts "Bernt" and "Mambollo"

Saturday, November 5, 2011

Stimulating sounds: "His Band and Street Choir" by Van Morrison

Year released: 1970
Personnel: Van Morrison (vocals, guitar, harmonica, keyboards, tenor saxophone); John Platania (guitar, mandolin); John Klingberg (bass); Dahaud Elias Shaar (drums, percussion, bass clarinet, backing vocals); Jack Schroer (piano, alto saxophone, baritone saxophone, soprano saxophone); Alan Hand (organ, piano, saxophone); David Shaw (clarinet, percussion); Larry Goldsmith, Janet Planet, Andrew Robinson, Ellen Schroer, Martha Velez (backing vocals)

Released just seven months after "Moondance," Morrison continues his winning streak with an album of smartly executed little songs. Oddly, the two songs I like the best--"I'll Be Your Lover Too" and "Gypsy Queen," a pair of lovely, gentle tracks, are the two that get the lowest rating in the track-by-track analysis, but to each his own.

1. "Domino": Hammering out the sounds from the first note, energetic and inspired it’s a jazzy opener to the second album of 1970. Horns drive the sound from end to end as the guitar sways back and forth along with the bass. Steady percussion rounds out the sounds as the brass pushes the song into its signature chorus complete with the revolving resetting instrumental outro\intro. It’s the unbridled love and admiration Van delivers this number with that makes it more then a pop song and a hit single. It’s a damn good song that’ll move you side to side.

2. "Crazy Face": This one will sneak up on you, and before you know it, you’ll love it. Each listen provides a new level to the lyrical or musical composition that adds to the overall picture and purpose of the song. The horns scream out the chorus in place of Vans signature vocals. The verses and mesmeric and melodious and packed with nuance and feeling. Core-shaking instrumental interludes and forays into variable vocal registers and cadence. An abrupt but satisfying finale completes the pact.

3. "Give Me a Kiss": Old style R&B number that never fails to satisfy. The addition of the horns in the second verse give the song the pep and panache necessary to fit the album and serve justice to van’s creativity. Do-woppy back-up vocals and punchy horns that define an era define this song. Surprisingly delightful if not as original as a number of Vans’s other work and this and surrounding albums.

4. "I've Been Working": A definite stand out. This songs pulls you into a smoke filled studio on the day of its creation and immerses you in it’s essence. Jazzy and with a soulful swing as it motors from end to end in with a stammering swagger. Funky at its soul; it blends funk\jazz\blues\R&B seamlessly. With its “one word say’s it all” chorus there is no doubting the drive behind this song. Rumored to have been reworked from an original version jettisoned from Astral Weeks, that’s not beyond belief although it’s hard to see where a version like the final product would have fit, the origins are unquestionably alike.

5. "Call Me Up in Dreamland": An elegant and effortless soul churner. Graceful spirit and urgent anxiety are the catalyst for this forceful remnant dropped from "Moondance" into perfect place at the tail end of side one. Included amongst a cavalcade of instrumentation is a simple but satisfying sax solo inspired by or inspiring the round about ageless lyrics of the song. “Never to grow old on the saxophone” Van spits and snarls as the lyrics to open each verse are unleashed. This contrasting style along side the harmonious and full chorus propel this one to elite status.

6. "I'll Be Your Lover Too": Soft and slow with guitar plucking lead and vocal emphasis put where needed. It’s a bit of a slow if ever developing song, but a style that Van had visited before and would revisits several times over in the future. Strong lyrical performance with poetic prose and phrasing to match. The influence on Lyrics of T.S Elliot and William Blake is most notably present on this album and this song in particular.

7. "Blue Money": Another old time styled R&B tribute number, with as much playful and self effacing innocence as any Van track prior or since. Typical Van the Man musical evolution from section to section and bar to bar. Incorporating the entire arsenal including some of Van’s goofiest vocal bridge work ever. The piano pounds away the rhythm as the lyrics dance to and fro amongst a brass background. Blue Money was one the biggest hits from the album and remains critically acclaimed and universally loved by fans.

8. "Virgo Clowns": A noble and punchy sort of ballad amongst an R &B country canopy of acoustic guitars and well placed stings and brass backing. The Fog horn provides another subtle note to a song that delicately adjusts itself from punchy to strummy throughout while instructing the occupant to “let your laughter fill the room”. You’ll discover another level of the music with every listen. Impossible not to enjoy if for nothing else it’s originality and nuance.

9. "Gypsy Queen": Feathery light and gentle as Van ventures to falsetto and whispery tones in this reassuring walk through the clouds. Guided by bass and brass mainly the starry bells musical backdrop sets the necessary mood. An interesting song that can turn off a novice listener or fan. Another solid number amongst a quality compellation and while not a personal favorite all the time a song I occasionally really enjoy.

10. "Sweet Jannie": Simple bar-blues style number, which seems out if place other then the fact it’s clearly a style Van has always had allegiance towards. Very safe and limited because of its structure it fails to excite and evolve in the necessary manner. A well executed but unneeded break from the already loose format of the album.

11. "If I Ever Needed Someone": Soulful and spiritual foreshadowing though almost certainly unknowingly. There is no question the conviction of Vans pleas for divine intervention from the opening moments of the song. With gospel style back-up vocals and a step-up style bass and drum section, it’s strong musically, spiritually and lyrically. Still if there is a critique it is another somewhat safe and predictable musical effort leaving you wanting just a little more.

12. "Street Choir": The clear cut standout performance from the album. Prodigious and prestigious with an ambiguous central dynamic revolving around Van’s potentially rhetorical inquiry “Why did you leave America, why did you let me down” It’s impromptu opening, church style organs as the yin to the bellowing and fluttering horns yang, a harmonica led interlude in the songs late-middle and the fraught and frantic vocals are the elements that drive the song to excel as it does. Still a personal favorite.

Tuesday, November 1, 2011

Stimulating sounds: "Moondance" by Van Morrison

Year released: 1970
Personnel: Van Morrison (vocals, guitar, rhythm guitar, tambourine, harmonica); John Platania (guitar, rhythm guitar); John Klingberg (bass); Jef Labes (organ, piano, clavinet); Gary Mallaber (drums, vibraphone); Guy Masson (congas); Jack Schroer (alto saxophone, soprano saxophone); Collin Tilton (flute, tenor saxophone); Emily Houston, Judy Clay, Jackie Verdell (backing vocals on "Crazy Love" and "Brand New Day")

The antithesis of "Astral Weeks," "Moondance" is nostalgic, optimistic and celebratory. The title track is a heavyweight standout and a radio staple to this day, but there are several other wonderful moments throughout the album, especially the winsomely gorgeous side one closer "Into the Mystic." Here's a nice track-by-track take from a devoted Morrison fan lurking somewhere in the depths of the internet.

1. "And It Stoned Me": Country style R&B ditty recanting a day in the life of a young Van Morrison. Horn driven chorus as Morrison expresses his childhood apprehension towards leaving the countryside. The optimism builds from verse to verse as first the kids are soaked by the rain, then the sun comes out to dry them in verse two are their fortune changes. Arriving at their destination they embrace the day and jump fully clothed into the pond, their positive attitude is rewarded in the final verse when they while thirst encounter a stranger who shares who gives them a drink. This song’s placement is no accident. This is Van pulling his from the depths of "Astral Weeks" fatale finale into the celebration awaiting them.

2. "Moondance": Has probably become the most popular song from the most popular album Morrison has ever released and it’s doubtful that’s how it was envisioned in its infant stages. This jazzy and jumpy proclamation of confidence within the uncertainty of love has become a pop radio staple but was originally thought of as more of a sophisticated song, a foray into Jazz but a young man who prided him self of incorporating all elements of music he felt into his own. The stand up bass contrasts the flute behind a steady rhythm section as the songs snaps from note to note with that characteristic Morrison grace. Probably better then I give it credit because I take it for granted due to its success and relative over exposure.

3. "Crazy Love": Acoustic style ballad driven by a delicate vocal and a soothing bass line. As relaxing a track as the Van had introduced as of the time. A good song that has the ability to be even better when the listener is in the mood. There is almost no disturbance to the song, it paces along very consistently as one does when trying to pass through a room without waking someone. The bridge is as close to a step-up as there is. Best known version may be duet with Bob Dylan.

4. "Caravan" Some songs are better live then they are on LP, while great either way, Caravan is magical live. Van makes it this way by pouring his heart and soul into every performance. Caravan is a fun song that celebrates the radio and music in general while using gypsy life as a sort of parallel vehicle\metaphor. Highlighted by a gentle acoustic backup and a pulse setting horn section, includes on of Morrison’s more extended instrumental works on the albums final takes. With a powerful punchy bridge driving the song from verse to chorus and back the song is up-beat and energetic and mellow from the beginning; a real solid piece of the Moodance puzzle.

5. "Into the Mystic": The first four bars of this song are perfect. It just doesn’t get any better then this. This song gives me Goosebumps almost every time I hear it. The gentle rhythms of the verse lead into the dramatic escalating pre-chorus before exploding into the powerful symphonic chorus ascending “into the mystic”. With horns, strings, brass and keys all at work in perfect synchronization the song is a spiritual musical journey that takes a hold of you and won’t let go. As unselfish a song as there could ever be, it allows you to exist among it as if perfectly designed. Morrison describes it’s neutrality best: "Originally I wrote it as "Into the Misty". But later I thought that it had something of an ethereal feeling to it so I called it "Into the Mystic". That song is kind of funny because when it came time to send the lyrics in WB Music, I couldn't figure out what to send them. Because really the song has two sets of lyrics. For example, there's "I was born before the wind" and "I was borne before the wind", and also "Also younger than the son, Ere the bonny boat was one" and "All so younger than the son, Ere the bonny boat was won"... I guess the song is just about being part of the universe.” Exactly.

6. "Come Running": This is the song that made me buy this album. Poppy and confident Van instructs his admirer to simply “come running” to him. He even details the outcome of her actions as specifically as the lyrics can allow. Oddly, it was the only remaining song from Van’s initial "Astral Weeks" demos for Bang Records. A light hearted song of very care free subject manner it is simply a toe-tapper and a very good one. It’s in large part Van’s ability to go back and forth from a song like “Into the Mystic” to this that makes the album so successful. It’s strong, demanding chorus elevates this song for me. Van jumps out and back into place lyrically, adding to the care free nature of the song. Another extremely well placed horn section is the final piece to the puzzle.

7. "These Dreams of You": Van’s biography describes it as a song about a dream he had where as the lyrics dictate among other things “Ray Charles was shot down” and “We played cards in the dark”. Very surreal lyrically yet it keeps it’s story structure it’s more firm and structured musically and contrast creates an interesting mood for the song. Probably the strongest lyrically performance of the album all things considered. Sad at times, but never losing faith nor insistence (“… you are an angel”). Perhaps the most unfortunate of songs in terms of its outcome is Van is thrown out, kicked when he’s down and up against the wall. Still there is a determination and that prevailing optimism in the voice of Morrison as despite their unfortunate nature Van still cherishes the dreams of his love and would not trade them for anything even though it hurts.

8. "Brand New Day": With a soft and sanguine start, this song is about hope and it reflects that lyrically and musically. With a chilling steady strummed acoustic chorus and its electric bass fills backed by harmonizing vocals it give new life to a tried and true musical format. Van was “inspired” to write this song by hearing “The Weight” by The Band. He set out to write the song he felt when he was lifted by their song. Each verse is an ascending celebration with musical tempo and key to correspond. An excellent song and probably Van’s “favorite from the LP” as he’s hinted. The lyrics while not particularly insightful or original are secondary to the overall message and tone of the song which is supremely hopeful.

9. "Everyone": Another up-tempo and uplifting number but in a more care free way. The all-inclusive romp of song you may remember from the movie “The Royal Tenenbuams” is a ballad of hope as Morrison envisions, if somewhat indirectly as is his nature, for a quick end to brooding civil war in his home land of Ireland. “and make dreams come true if we want them to” and “we shall walk again…just like we use to” are among the song’s hopefully imagery. Musically highlighted by the organ and flute which had stand out performances amongst an otherwise very steady and circular musical pattern. A solid jumpy song that moves at a fast and fun pace.

10. "Glad Tidings": The final song of Moondance encapsulates the spirit of the album immaculately. With a strong and steady opening and lyrics of love leading into a celebratory chorus. The horns and strings build around the humming drum and bass rhythms which open the song and allow for continuity throughout while still having a free flowing and unpredictable aspect to the music. With a creative and beguiling lyrically structure. The song takes about faith and the happiness and satisfaction in seeing positive results from commitment. It is a song of well wishing and good intentions and an end to a cycle of a different kind with a much more desirable departing message.

Stimulating sounds: "Astral Weeks" by Van Morrison

Year released: 1968
Personnel: Van Morrison (vocals, rhythm guitar); Jay Berliner (guitar); Richard Davis (double bass); Connie Kay (drums); Warren Smith Jr. (percussion, vibraphone); Barry Kornfeld (guitar on "The Way Young Lovers Do"); Larry Fallon (harpsichord on "Cyprus Avenue"); John Payne (flute, soprano saxophone on "Slim Slow Slider")

"It was almost as if Van Morrison, elusive at any time, had deliberately created an album of music which would indefinitely withstand the vulgarity of music industry image-making. Later they might say that other albums were reminiscent of "Astral Weeks," but they could never claim that "Astral Weeks" was like anything else."--Australian music journalist Ritchie Yorke in 1975

"You can hear these moments of invention and gasping for air, and you reach your hand and close your fist and when you open your fist there's a butterfly in it. There was really something there, but you couldn't have seen it. You couldn't have known."--American music critic and writer Greil Marcus

High praise for sure, but this legendary, beautiful album is worthy of each and every adjective. What follows is a track-by-track analysis that I found on a thread somewhere and then Lester Bangs' classic review which was originally published in 1979.

1. "Astral Weeks": Emphatic and perfect. Beautiful and transcending of mood, age or station of life, a masterpiece introduction to a cycle of brilliant explanation pertaining to emotional truth and freedom. The greatest musical personification of love I’ve ever heard. Departs in a humming tranquility that exudes the message of the whole album perfectly. Playful guitar patterns palpable lyrics as violins hum builds drama and mood around the song alongside the flute which pickups on the guitars raw jubilation. A cycle itself while moving as freely as the soul and spirit of the music.

2. "Beside You": Melancholy illuminates the opening notes, desperation feeds the lyrical desperation. Urgency is the contrasting feel from the deliberate pace of the rhythm. Each measure is an experience; the story unfolds with brilliant dramatics, each chapter more compelling and critical then the last. Stand-up bass is a strong backdrop for the frantic acoustic lead and mystic tones of flautist John Payne. An amazingly relaxing song from start to finish.

3. "Sweet Thing": Carefree and effortless, the simple strumming and distant yet considerable vocals build with the supporting cast, a beautiful cavalcade of music. Featuring string interludes, interruptions and accompaniments; a cycle within a cycle gaining kinetic momentum with each revolution. The passion is unrelenting as each note pierces the willing soul. Van’s take; "Sweet Thing" is another romantic song. It contemplates gardens and things like that ... wet with rain. It's a romantic love ballad not about anybody in particular but about a feeling." A favorite of mine for quite a long time; as personally poignant as music gets for me.

4. "Cyprus Avenue": Easing into the design, simple rhythms follow exact fills as the lyrical phrasing, pacing and volume develop the story. As poetic as is necessary without an ounce of insincerity. The utilization of string instrumentals behind improvisational, stream of sentiment lyrics and phrasing develops the number into a pulsating uproar relative to the natural feel prior. The freedom Morrison allows the song gives it a chance to fully develop and come full circle with beautiful implementation. One of the better bass tracks on the album, controlling the music and moving the lot along. Cryptic and casual lyrically very interesting concept perhaps first revealed on this track. The violin’s entrance midway through the song gives it a bravado that is needed to maintain the flow of the story and the feel.

5. "The Way Young Lovers Do": A crucial vertex of a song within the unintentional concept. A swinging, dramatic number in a very different style then its predecessors yet falls into place completely at home amongst the seeming chaos. Mystery is its identity and it displays that within the album. With a wonderful musical build, it only fails to shine for me because it was initially my least favorite track on the album. Layered and precise, it uses the entire musical repertoire to create a personal stamp on Astral Weeks. A different type of love song, more bold and conceptual then on the nose and trite. Very surreal dichotomy between music and vocal style is the songs strong point.

6. "Madame George": Calling back to Cyprus Avenue and reversing the cycle using a different key and adjusting the pacing and building. The same type of calculated and captivating vocal performance persists to drive the song. A moving and motivating bone chiller; still brings me to tears on occasion. The song follows a persistent melody but evolves and emerges throughout with purpose and determination. Bass and acoustic strumming folk style opening gives way to elegant string breezes and graceful flute melody. Stream on consciousness lyrics demonstrate the commitment to tell the story inside the creators mind in a poetic and particular method.

7. "Ballerina": Energy and anticipation not embodied since “Sweet Thing” makes an entrance in the hearty and dynamic Ballerina. ‘Stepping up’ throughout, it builds with painstaking execution towards its goal of intoxication. A bold proclamation of Love beyond surrounding perception or analysis; dynamic at its surface, personal at its core. So many subtle evolutions throughout keeps the listener compelled and at attention. Pushing the cycle full circle, the track entertains and advances with outstanding assiduousness. Another fitting improvised finale pushes the song to its limits.

8. "Slim Slow Slider": The haunting, mellowing finale; a bitter sweet goodbye to what has been and rebirth of another day or way. The lyrics discuss saying good bye and death and the song ends as abruptly and ominously as it began. Completing the cycle that began during the title track (lyrics: "would you ... could you ... be born again"). "Slim Slow Slider" fulfills it purpose quickly and dissipates before you can say goodbye.

Van Morrison's "Astral Weeks" was released ten years, almost to the day, before this was written. It was particularly important to me because the fall of 1968 was such a terrible time: I was a physical and mental wreck, nerves shredded and ghosts and spiders looming and squatting across the mind. My social contacts had dwindled to almost none; the presence of other people made me nervous and paranoid. I spent endless days and nights sunk in an armchair in my bedroom, reading magazines, watching TV, listening to records, staring into space. I had no idea how to improve the situation and probably wouldn't have done anything about it if I had.

"Astral Weeks" would be the subject of this piece--i.e., the rock record with the most significance in my life so far--no matter how I'd been feeling when it came out. But in the condition I was in, it assumed at the time the quality of a beacon, a light on the far shores of the murk; what's more, it was proof that there was something left to express artistically besides nihilism and destruction. (My other big record of the day was "White Light/White Heat".) It sounded like the man who made "Astral Weeks" was in terrible pain, pain most of Van Morrison's previous works had only suggested; but like the later albums by the Velvet Underground, there was a redemptive element in the blackness, ultimate compassion for the suffering of others, and a swath of pure beauty and mystical awe that cut right through the heart of the work

I don't really know how significant it might be that many others have reported variants on my initial encounter with "Astral Weeks". I don't think there's anything guiding it to people enduring dark periods. It did come out at a time when a lot of things that a lot of people cared about passionately were beginning to disintegrate, and when the self-destructive undertow that always accompanied the great sixties party had an awful lot of ankles firmly in it's maw and was pulling straight down. so, as timeless as it finally is, perhaps "Astral Weeks" was also the product of an era. Better think that than ask just what sort of Irish churchwebbed haints Van Morrison might be product of.

Three television shows: A 1970 NET broadcast of a big all-star multiple bill at the Fillmore East. The Byrds, Sha Na Na, and Elvin Bishop have all done their respective things. Now we get to see three of four songs from a set by Van Morrison. He climaxes, as he always did in those days, with "Cyprus Avenue" from "Astral Weeks." After going through all the verses, he drives the song, the band, and himself to a finish which has since become one of his trademarks and one of the all-time classic rock 'n' roll set-closers. With consummate dynamics that allow him to snap from indescribably eccentric throwaway phrasing to sheer passion in the very next breath he brings the music surging up through crescendo after crescendo, stopping and starting and stopping and starting the song again and again, imposing long maniacal silences like giant question marks between the stops and starts and ruling the room through sheer tension, building to a shout of "It's too late to stop now!," and just when you think it's all going to surge over the top, he cuts it off stone cold dead, the hollow of a murdered explosion, throws the microphone down and stalks off the stage. It is truly one of the most perverse things I have ever seen a performer do in my life. And, of course, it's sensational: our guts are knotted up, we're crazed and clawing for more, but we damn well know we've seen and felt something.

1974, a late night network TV rock concert: Van and his band come out, strike a few shimmering chords, and for about ten minutes he lingers over the words "Way over yonder in the clear blue sky / Where flamingos fly." No other lyrics. I don't think any instrumental solos. Just those words, repeated slowly again and again, distended, permutated, turned into scat, suspended in space and then scattered to the winds, muttered like a mantra till they turn into nonsense syllables, then back into the same soaring image as time seems to stop entirely. He stands there with eyes closed, singing, transported, while the band poises quivering over great open-tuned deep blue gulfs of their own.

1977, spring-summer, same kind of show: he sings "Cold Wind in August", a song off his recently released album "A Period of Transition," which also contains a considerably altered version of the flamingos song. "Cold Wind in August" is a ballad and Van gives it a fine, standard reading. The only trouble is that the whole time he's singing it he paces back and forth in a line on the stage, his eyes tightly shut, his little fireplug body kicking its way upstream against what must be a purgatorial nervousness that perhaps is being transferred to the cameraman.

What this is about is a whole set of verbal tics--although many are bodily as well--which are there for reason enough to go a long way toward defining his style. They're all over "Astral Weeks": four rushed repeats of the phrases "you breathe in, you breath out" and "you turn around" in "Beside You"; in "Cyprus Avenue," twelve "way up on"s, "baby" sung out thirteen times in a row sounding like someone running ecstatically downhill toward one's love, and the heartbreaking way he stretches "one by one" in the third verse; most of all in "Madame George" where he sings the word "dry" and then "your eye" twenty times in a twirling melodic arc so beautiful it steals your own breath, and then this occurs: "And the love that loves the love that loves the love that loves the love that loves to love the love that loves to love the love that loves."

Van Morrison is interested, obsessed with how much musical or verbal information he can compress into a small space, and, almost, conversely, how far he can spread one note, word, sound, or picture. To capture one moment, be it a caress or a twitch. He repeats certain phrases to extremes that from anybody else would seem ridiculous, because he's waiting for a vision to unfold, trying as unobtrusively as possible to nudge it along. Sometimes he gives it to you through silence, by choking off the song in midflight: "It's too late to stop now!"

It's the great search, fueled by the belief that through these musical and mental processes illumination is attainable. Or may at least be glimpsed.

When he tries for this he usually gets it more in the feeling than in the Revealed Word - perhaps much of the feeling comes from the reaching--but there is also, always, the sense of WHAT if he DID apprehend that Word; there are times when the Word seems to hover very near. And then there are times when we realize the Word was right next to us, when the most mundane overused phrases are transformed: I give you "love," from "Madame George." Out of relative silence, the Word: "Snow in San Anselmo." "That's where it's at," Van will say, and he means it (aren't his interviews fascinating?). What he doesn't say is that he is inside the snowflake, isolated by the song: "And it's almost Independence Day."

You're probably wondering when I'm going to get around to telling you about "Astral Weeks." As a matter of fact, there's a whole lot of "Astral Weeks" I don't even want to tell you about. Both because whether you've heard it or not it wouldn't be fair for me to impose my interpretation of such lapidarily subjective imagery on you, and because in many cases I don't really know what he's talking about. he doesn't either: "I'm not surprised that people get different meanings out of my songs," he told a Rolling Stone interviewer. "But I don't wanna give the impression that I know what everything means 'cause I don't ... There are times when I'm mystified. I look at some of the stuff that comes out, y'know. And like, there it is and it feels right, but I can't say for sure what it means."

There you go/Starin' with a look of avarice/Talking to Huddie Leadbetter/Showin' pictures on the walls/And whisperin' in the halls/And pointin' a finger at me

I haven't got the slightest idea what that "means," though on one level I'd like to approach it in a manner as indirect and evocative as the lyrics themselves. Because you're in trouble anyway when you sit yourself down to explicate just exactly what a mystical document, which is exactly what "Astral Weeks" is, means. For one thing, what it means is Richard Davis' bass playing, which complements the songs and singing all the way with a lyricism that's something more than just great musicianship: there is something about it that more than inspired, something that has been touched, that's in the realm of the miraculous. The whole ensemble--Larry Fallon's string section, Jay Berliner's guitar (he played on Mingus' "Black Saint and the Sinner Lady"), Connie Kay's drumming--is like that: they and Van sound like they're not just reading but dwelling inside of each other's minds. The facts may be far different. John Cale was making an album of his own in the adjacent studio at the time, and he has said that "Morrison couldn't work with anybody, so finally they just shut him in the studio by himself. He did all the songs with just an acoustic guitar, and later they overdubbed the rest of it around his tapes."

Cale's story might or might not be true--but facts are not going to be of much use here in any case. Fact: Van Morrison was twenty-two--or twenty-three--years old when he made this record; there are lifetimes behind it. What "Astral Weeks" deals in are not facts but truths. "Astral Weeks," insofar as it can be pinned down, is a record about people stunned by life, completely overwhelmed, stalled in their skins, their ages and selves, paralyzed by the enormity of what in one moment of vision they can comprehend. It is a precious and terrible gift, born of a terrible truth, because what they see is both infinitely beautiful and terminally horrifying: the unlimited human ability to create or destroy, according to whim. It's no Eastern mystic or psychedelic vision of the emerald beyond, nor is it some Baudelairean perception of the beauty of sleaze and grotesquerie. Maybe what it boiled down to is one moment's knowledge of the miracle of life, with its inevitable concomitant, a vertiginous glimpse of the capacity to be hurt, and the capacity to inflict that hurt.

Transfixed between pure rapture and anguish. Wondering if they may not be the same thing, or at least possessed of an intimate relationship. In "T.B. Sheets", his last extended narrative before making this record, Van Morrison watched a girl he loved die of tuberculosis. the song was claustrophobic, suffocating, mostrously powerful: "innuendos, inadequacies, foreign bodies." A lot of people couldn't take it; the editor of this book has said that it's garbage, but I think it made him squeamish. Anyway, the point is that certain parts of "Astral Weeks"--"Madame George," "Cyprus Avenue"--take the pain in "T.B. Sheets" and root the world in it. Because the pain of watching a loved one die of however dread a disease may be awful, but it is at least something known, in a way understood, in a way measureable and even leading somewhere, because there is a process: sickness, decay, death, mourning, some emotional recovery. But the beautiful horror of "Madame George" and "Cyprus Avenue" is precisely that the people in these songs are not dying: we are looking at life, in its fullest, and what these people are suffering from is not disease but nature, unless nature is a disease.

A man sits in a car on a tree-lined street, watching a fourteen-year-old girl walking home from school, hopelessly in love with her. I've almost come to blows with friends because of my insistence that much of Van Morrison's early work had an obsessively reiterated theme of pedophilia, but here is something that at once may be taken as that and something far beyond it. He loves her. Because of that, he is helpless. Shaking. Paralyzed. Maddened. Hopeless. Nature mocks him. As only nature can mock nature. Or is love natural in the first place? No Matter. By the end of the song he has entered a kind of hallucinatory ecstasy; the music aches and yearns as it rolls on out. This is one supreme pain, that of being imprisoned a spectator. And perhaps no so very far from "T.B. Sheets," except that it must be far more romantically easy to sit and watch someone you love die than to watch them in the bloom of youth and health and know that you can never, ever have them, can never speak to them.

"Madame George" is the album's whirlpool. Possibly one of the most compassionate pieces of music ever made, it asks us, no, arranges that we see the plight of what I'll be brutal and call a lovelorn drag queen with such intense empathy that when the singer hurts him, we do too. (Morrison has said in at least one interview that the song has nothing to do with any kind of transvestite--at least as far as he knows, he is quick to add--but that's bullshit.) The beauty, sensitivity, holiness of the song is that there's nothing at all sensationalistic, exploitative, or tawdry about it; in a way Van is right when he insists it's not about a drag queen, as my friends were right and I was wrong about the "pedophelia"--it's about a person, like all the best songs, all the greatest literature.

The setting is that same as that of the previous song--"Cyprus Avenue", apparently a place where people drift, impelled by desire, into moments of flesh-wracking, sight-curdling confrontation with their destinies. It's an elemental place of pitiless judgment--wind and rain figure in both songs--and, interestingly enough, it's a place of the even crueler judgment of adults by children, in both cases love objects absolutely indifferent to their would-be adult lovers. Madame George's little boys are downright contemptuous - like the street urchins who end up cannibalizing the homosexual cousin in Tennessee Williams' "Suddenly Last Summer," they're only too happy to come around as long as there's music, party times, free drinks and smokes, and only too gleefully spit on George's affections when all the other stuff runs out, the entombing winter settling in with not only wind and rain but hail, sleet, and snow.

What might seem strangest of all but really isn't is that it's exactly those characteristics which supposedly should make George most pathetic-- age, drunkenness, the way the boys take his money and trash his love--that awakens something for George in the heart of the kid whose song this is. Obviously the kid hasn't simply "fallen in love with love," or something like that, but rather--what? Why just exactly that only sunk in the foulest perversions could one human being love another for anything other than their humanness: love him for his weakness, his flaws, finally perhaps his decay. Decay is human--that's one of the ultimate messages here, and I don't by any stretch of the lexicon mean decadence. I mean that in this song or whatever inspired it Van Morrison saw the absolute possibility of loving human beings at the farthest extreme of wretchedness, and that the implications of that are terrible indeed, far more terrible than the mere sight of bodies made ugly by age or the seeming absurdity of a man devoting his life to the wobbly artifice of trying to look like a woman.

You can say to love the questions you have to love the answers which quicken the end of love that's loved to love the awful inequality of human experience that loves to say we tower over these the lost that love to love the love that freedom could have been, the train to freedom, but we never get on, we'd rather wave generously walking away from those who are victims of themselves. But who is to say that someone who victimizes himself or herself is not as worthy of total compassion as the most down and out Third World orphan in a New Yorker magazine ad? Nah, better to step over the bodies, at least that gives them the respect they might have once deserved. where I love, in New York (not to make it more than it is, which is hard), everyone I know often steps over bodies which might well be dead or dying as a matter of course, without pain. and I wonder in what scheme it was originally conceived that such an action is showing human refuse the ultimate respect it deserves.

There is of course a rationale--what else are you going to do-- but it holds no more than our fear of our own helplessness in the face of the plain of life as it truly is: a plain which extends into an infinity beyond the horizons we have only invented. Come on, die it. As I write this, I can read in the Village Voice the blurbs of people opening heterosexual S&M clubs in Manhattan, saying things like, "S&M is just another equally valid form of love. Why people can't accept that we'll never know." Makes you want to jump out a fifth floor window rather than even read about it, but it's hardly the end of the world; it's not nearly as bad as the hurts that go on everywhere everyday that are taken to casually by all of us as facts of life. Maybe it boiled down to how much you actually want to subject yourself to. If you accept for even a moment the idea that each human life is as precious and delicate as a snowflake and then you look at a wino in a doorway, you've got to hurt until you feel like a sponge for all those other assholes' problems, until you feel like an asshole yourself, so you draw all the appropriate lines. You stop feeling. But you know that then you begin to die. So you tussle with yourself. how much of this horror can I actually allow myself to think about? Perhaps the numbest mannekin is wiser than somebody who only allows their sensitivity to drive them to destroy everything they touch--but then again, to tilt Madame George's hat a hair, just to recognize that that person exists, just to touch his cheek and then probably expire because the realization that you must share the world with him is ultimately unbearable is to only go the first mile. The realization of living is just about that low and that exalted and that unbearable and that sought-after. Please come back and leave me alone. But when we're along together we can talk all we want about the universality of this abyss: it doesn't make any difference, the highest only meets the lowest for some lying succor, UNICEF to relatives, so you scratch and spit and curse in violent resignation at the strict fact that there is absolutely nothing you can do but finally reject anyone in greater pain than you. At such a moment, another breath is treason. that's why you leave your liberal causes, leave suffering humanity to die in worse squalor than they knew before you happened along. You got their hopes up. Which makes you viler than the most scrofulous carrion. viler than the ignorant boys who would take Madame George for a couple of cigarettes. because you have committed the crime of knowledge, and thereby not only walked past or over someone you knew to be suffering, but also violated their privacy, the last possession of the dispossessed.

Such knowledge is possibly the worst thing that can happen to a person (a lucky person), so it's no wonder that Morrison's protagonist turned away from Madame George, fled to the train station, trying to run as far away from what he'd seen as a lifetime could get him. And no wonder, too, that Van Morrison never came this close to looking life square in the face again, no wonder he turned to "Tupelo Honey" and even "Hard Nose the Highway" with its entire side of songs about falling leaves. In "Astral Weeks" and "T.B. Sheets" he confronted enough for any man's lifetime. Of course, having been offered this immeasurably stirring and equally frightening gift from Morrison, one can hardly be blamed for not caring terribly much about Old, Old Woodstock and little homilies like "You've got to Make It Through This World On Your Own" and "Take It Where You Find It."

On the other hand, it might also be pointed out that desolation, hurt, and anguish are hardly the only things in life, or in "Astral Weeks." They're just the things, perhaps, that we can most easily grasp and explicate, which I suppose shows about what level our souls have evolved to. I said I wouldn't reduce the other songs on this album by trying to explain them, and I won't. But that doesn't mean that, all thing considered, a juxtaposition of poets might not be in order.

If I ventured in the slipstream/Between the viaducts of your dreams/Where the mobile steel rims crack/And the ditch and the backroads stop/Could you find me/Would you kiss my eyes/And lay me down/In silence easy/To be born again--Van Morrison

My heart of silk/is filled with lights/with lost bells/with lilies and bees/I will go very far/farther than those hills/farther than the seas/close to the stars/to beg Christ the Lord/to give back the soul I had/of old, when I was a child/ripened with legends/with a feathered cap/and a wooden sword.--Federico Garcia Lorca

Saturday, October 29, 2011

Stimulating sounds: "Blowin' Your Mind" by Van Morrison

Year released: 1967
Personnel: Van Morrison (guitar, vocals); Eric Gale (guitar). Can't find the rest of the personnel listings for the life of me.

So, I thought I'd take a dip into the world of Van Morrison, who--interestingly--was born on the exact same day as my mom (Aug. 31, 1945). One of the good things about being a music snob like I am is that when you finally get around to hearing more "mainstream" stuff, it's like opening up a whole new world. Morrison's class is well known, but not to me, and I think I'm going to enjoy immersing myself in his classic works.

And what better place to begin than at the beginning, his debut from that wild and crazy year of 1967, "Blowin' Your Mind." While the psychedelic cover has its detractors--critic Greil Marcus famously described it as "monstrously offensive"--the music contained within is quite good. Morrison effortlessly mixes the blues, folk and yes, psychedelic touches into a heady combo that grabs you early and doesn't let down much. Of course, the album is best known for the monster single and lead-off track "Brown-Eyed Girl," which has a thumping bassline that I heretofore didn't know existed. "He Ain't Give You None" (where Morrison reminds his girl that he's given her his "jelly roll" time and time again) and "Midnight Special," with its gospel inflected chorus, are the other standouts for me.

After the mandatory two listens, I'm still not sure what to make of the nearly 10-minute "TB Sheets." English poet and musicologist declares it a "Dickensian tale of death and decay in the big city." Marcus--not a fan of the album--calls it "sprawling" and "sensation numbing." To me, it's like certain elements of free jazz; I can appreciate the effort in putting it together but the end result leaves me un-moved. Good album though and a good beginning on a wonderful ride with Van Morrison.

Tuesday, October 25, 2011

Stimulating sounds: "Nebraska" by Bruce Springsteen

Year released: 1982
Personnel: Just the man by himself (vocals, guitar, harmonica, mandolin, glockenspiel, organ)

You're only ever going to see one album by the Boss in these pages; the rest of his work was a little too popular, over-the-top and well, just too well-known for my tastes. So I will say without reservation that this is the greatest Springsteen album of all time. At least the greatest one I've ever heard. First, a biography of the album, courtesy of wikipedia.

Sparsely-recorded on a cassette-tape Portastudio, the tracks on "Nebraska"were originally intended as demos of songs to be recorded with the E Street Band. However, Springsteen ultimately decided to release the demos themselves. "Nebraska" remains one of the most highly-regarded albums in his catalogue. The songs on the album deal with ordinary, blue collar characters who face a challenge or a turning point in their lives. Unlike his previous albums, very little salvation and grace is present within the songs.

Initially, Springsteen recorded demos for the album at his home with a 4-track cassette recorder. The demos were sparse, using only acoustic guitar, electric organ (on "Open All Night"), harmonica, mandolin, glockenspiel, tambourine, organ and and Springsteen's voice.

Springsteen then recorded the album in a studio with the E Street Band. However, he and the producers and engineers working with him felt that a raw, haunted folk essence present on the home tapes was lacking in the band treatments, and so they ultimately decided to release the demo version as the final album. Complications with mastering of the tapes ensued because of low recording volume, but the problem was overcome with sophisticated noise reduction techniques.

The Boss told "Rolling Stone" in 1984: "I got a little Teac four-track cassette machine, and I said, I'm gonna record these songs, and if they sound good with just me doin' 'em, then I'll teach 'em to the band. I could sing and play the guitar, and then I had two tracks to do somethin' else, like overdub a guitar or add a harmony. It was just gonna be a demo. Then I had a little Echoplex that I mixed through, and that was it. And that was the tape that became the record. It's amazing that it got there, 'cause I was carryin' that cassette around with me in my pocket without a case for a couple of week, just draggin' it around. Finally, we realized, "Uh-oh, that's the album." Technically, it was difficult to get it on a disc. The stuff was recorded so strangely, the needle would read a lot of distortion and wouldn't track in the wax. We almost had to release it as a cassette."

Springsteen fans have long speculated whether Springsteen's full-band recording of the album, nicknamed "Electric Nebraska," will ever surface. In a 2006 interview, manager Jon Landau said it was unlikely and that "the right version of "Nebraska" came out". But in a 2010 interview with "Rolling Stone," E Street Band drummer Max Weinberg praised the full band recording of the album as "killing." Somewhat different band arrangements of most of these songs were heard on the 1984-1985 "Born in the USA" tour and have been played in various guises ever since.

Other songs demoed during the Nebraska sessions include "Born in the USA," "Downbound Train," Child Bride," (later retitled "Working on the Highway"), "Pink Cadillac" and more. Some have leaked on bootlegs.

The album begins with the title cut, a first-person narrative based on the true story of 19-year-old spree killer Charles Starkweather and his and his 14-year-old girlfriend, Caril Ann Fugate, and ends with "Reason to Believe", a complex narrative that renders its title phrase into contemptuous sarcasm.

The remaining songs are largely of the same bleak tone, including the dark "State Trooper," influenced by Suicide's "Frankie Teardrop." Criminal behavior continues as a theme in the song "Highway Patrolman:" even though the protagonist works for the law, he lets his brother escape after he has shot someone (this became the basis for the Sean Penn-directed film "The Indian Runner.") "Open All Night," a Chuck Berry-style lone guitar rave-up, does manage a dose of defiant, humming-towards-the-gallows exuberance.

Springsteen stated that the stories in this album were partly inspired by historian Howard Zinn's book "A People's History of the United States."

A music video was produced for the song "Atlantic City"; it features stark, black-and-white images of the city, which had not yet undergone its later economic transformation. "Atlantic City" was released as a single in the United Kingdom, but not the U.S.

In 1989, "Nebraska" was ranked 43rd on "Rolling Stone" magazine's list of the "100 greatest albums of the 1980s." In 2003, the album was ranked number 224 on "Rolling Stone" magazine's list of the "500 greatest albums of all time." Pitchfork Media listed it the 60th greatest album of the 1980s. In 2006, "Q" magazine placed the album at #13 in its list of "40 Best Albums of the '80s".

And here's a thorough review/analysis, from Janet Sandford at helium.com.

The front cover of Springsteen's "Nebraska" album gives you an insight into what lies within. A desolate road, grey and forlorn, as seen from behind the windscreen of a car. Skies filled with chilling clouds and fields with no trees, like the waste ground has been burnt out. Four colours only used; black, white, grey and bold red lettering. You know the old saying--"every picture tells a story"--well this one definitely does. This album is a haunting piece of work; music to listen to on your own late at night when the rest of the world sleeps. One man only with the sounds of acoustic/electric guitars and his harmonica with a few flourishes of mandolin and glockenspiel thrown in to lighten the dark, heavy load.

For the first ten years Springsteen had moulded his career around rock and roll. He was gutsy, energetic and had a heart of fire. He was successful and adored by millions in the USA. His songs were songs about the real working men of New Jersey and the words he spoke were stories of what went on in their lives; the pain, suffering, laughter, the games they played. So why did he change direction? Surely, it was a great risk commercially? I think he knew that but was willing to take the risk - he wanted to record an album that was personal and he knew that the 10 songs would be best told by him alone with his guitar.

The sound of the album is sparse; originally recorded on a four track in his home the songs were meant to be demos for an 'electric' album but after a session in the studio with his E Street Band, Bruce and recording engineer, Mike Batlin, decided that the 'man alone' sound worked better. Bruce wanted to keep the raw, chilling essence of the acoustic folky sound he had originally created. Good job he did because this is one of his top selling albums of all time and my favourite album of his. It is a masterpiece and I don't use that word lightly.

So what is it all about? A shocking and violent look into the minds of Americans whose dreams have been consumed by the country they live in. The America we see in the pictures Bruce paints is a bruised and battered America and the theme running through the canvas is one of terror, violence and death.

The title track, "Nebraska," is my favourite track. I have played it hundreds of times and every time it leaves me cold and numb. Suddenly Bruce becomes Charlie Starkweather and as he tells us in his Dylanesque way about what him and his 14 year old girlfriend got up to in Wyoming.

I saw her standin' on her front lawn just twirlin' her baton
Me and her went for a ride sir and ten innocent people died
From the town of Lincoln Nebraska with a sawed off .410 on my lap
Through to the badlands of Wyoming I killed everything in my path

The acoustic guitar here is delicate and soothing and his voice is relaxed but so scary. I always believe that he becomes that person - he is the killer. It is such a chilling song and send shivers down my spine and makes my shoulders ache from listening to every terrible word. When he says ...

I can't say that I'm sorry for the things that we done
At least for a little while sir me and her we had us some fun

you hear the madness in his voice; there is no remorse--he isn't sorry. It's like there is a cold evil chill in the delivery of these words--it is so terribly haunting.

When the jury finds him guilty and he speaks near to the end you sense not only irony in his words but sarcasm and contempt. The lyrics are very clever--you don't know whether to believe that he wants to die with her because he loves her so much or he wants to make sure that she gets the death sentence too for her part in the heinous crimes.

Sheriff when the man pulls that switch sir and snaps my poor head back
You make sure my pretty baby is sittin' right there on my lap

The song is associated with the spree killer, Charles Starkweather who murdered 11 people in November 1957 and January 1958 during a road trip with his young girlfriend, Caril Ann Fugate, through Wyoming and Nebraska. The track is the strongest on the album and works so well because of the calmness of the guitar sound, haunting harmonica and chilling narrative. The delivery of the words is direct. Springsteen is calm and collected as he tells his unromanticised tale of cold blooded murder. An outstanding track in every way.

Moving on to "Atlantic City," the second track, we are introduced to violence once more in the form of mob war but at the same time we are introduced to the honest guys-- the ones who are trying to pay off their debts and looking to be rescued from moral corruption and evil. Bruce has moved through his beloved New Jersey, roaming into Atlantic City. I just love the chorus in this song and all the howling noises in the background. There is a sense of being on the edge and an overall feeling of panic in his voice here. Every line is sung with compassion and there's no way out. It's a very dark place and there's no peace, no peace at all but just one little thing like a pretty girl's hair and a meeting at the casino can bring sunshine back into this dark and damaged world.

Well now everything dies baby that's a fact
But maybe everything that dies someday comes back
Put your makeup on fix your hair up pretty
And meet me tonight in Atlantic City
Well I got a job and tried to put my money away
But I got debts that no honest man can pay
So I drew what I had from the Central Trust
And I bought us two tickets on that Coast City bus

If you listen to the words carefully you will notice the quirky way in which he adds the word, 'sir' on to the end of some of the lines. Like when he's talking to the judge in Nebraska but also on Mansion on the Hill when he says, 'there's a place on the edge of town, sir'. This is Springsteen's way of telling a simple tale in language used by the ordinary man who shows respect. Like Joe Roberts in the story of the Highway Patrolman...

My name is Joe Roberts I work for the state
I'm a sergeant out of Perrineville barracks number 8
I always done an honest job as honest as I could
I got a brother named Franky and Franky ain't no good

Lovely, soothing guitar on this track--and if you listen carefully you can just catch the harmonica--soft, mellow and wholesome. Spot the mandolin also played by Bruce--gently, gently--oh so gently--this is a lullaby in some ways--a sad, menacing lullaby if there is such a thing. Bruce takes on the main role of Joe Roberts, a man who works for the law. It's a tale of brotherly love and loyalty when he lets his brother drive free after shooting someone down. When he delivers this last line of the chorus, you feel his shame and disapproval but you know he did what he had to because of the permanent ties of family love.

Man turns his back on his family well he just ain't no good

Another moody track and possibly my third favourite is "State Trooper." Bleak and very dark but with a great bass rhythm on the guitar. The song starts off quietly but gradually builds up and gets louder. Love all the "whoooo" noises and howling by Bruce--really cool. The image is so strong here that I can actually see Bruce driving down the New Jersey highway with the Mr. State Trooper on his tail.

The first few songs on the album concentrate on the evil that can be found in the badlands of America and the killers who spill the blood. Springsteen has always had a special gift when it comes to telling a story. He is a master of his craft and if there is anyone in America who knows the weaknesses of his native land then it is surely him. He's not afraid to tell the world about the wrong doings of the country he loves so much and on this album the picture he paints of America isn't pretty. It is a landscape filled with dust. A stark land with a meanness in the air. The songs are deliberate and unadorned. The images are cold, sparse and very grim.

If there are any signs of optimism then I think you will find them in the song "Used Cars." Again, such wonderful story telling and delivery of the song. At least the protagonist in this song knows that his dreams of vanquishing this miserable life are empty dreams. He's so sick of seeing his Pa work so hard and sick of walking the same old dusty streets and so, so sick of sitting in a used car.

My little sister's in the front seat with an ice cream cone
My ma's in the black seat sittin' all alone
As my pa steers her slow out of the lot for a test drive down Michigan Avenue
Now, my ma, she fingers her wedding band
And watches the salesman stare at my old man's hands
He's tellin' us all 'bout the break he'd give us if he could, but he just can't
Well if I could, I swear I know just what I'd do

Now, mister, the day the lottery I win I ain't ever gonna ride in no used car again

Love the way he delicately plays the acoustic guitar here and the harmonica again, is so beautifully played. I think Springsteen must be my favourite harmonica player. He's never out of tune and it's always a joy to listen to. Which is more than I can say about Dylan's playing. Also, I actually rate Bruce as a good acoustic guitarist. I prefer his acoustic style to electric and love the way he makes the strings talk.

A little upbeat number comes in the form of a rockabilly track, "Open All Night." Possibly the weakest track on the album but still okay.

And then we come to the big one--by the big one I mean the song that tears at your heartstrings. A beautiful song that makes me cry every time I hear it. Before this album Bruce had written other songs about his father and "My Father's House" is the last song in a cycle of father songs. As Bruce quietly and slowly relates his dream about going to the sanctuary that is his father's house and falling into his arms I sense a feeling of devastation and wonder if this is the real Bruce in this song and not one of his characters. When he awakes he finds that his Pa has gone and the house stands at the end of the highway, "where our sins lie unatoned." This track would melt most hearts, I reckon and is my second favourite.

Finally, the last track--"Reason to Believe." A touch of black humour from Bruce in the form of a complex narrative that is full of scorn and sarcasm. Another terribly haunting song. Bruce sings in a confused way - sort of perplexed but with respect for the story's characters. The guitar slowly chugs behind the narrative and waves of bluesy harmonica come floating by every now and again. First class stuff, once again.

So there it is--the finished canvas of a landscape painted by one man and his old fashioned tools--no technology here. Springsteen's "Nebraska" canvas is cold, cutting and brutally abrasive. The characters who are part of the canvas are people who are just ordinary blue collar workers tying loose ends up. People who have come to the crossroads in their lives and realised that it's time to run or face a new challenge. This was the first of the Springsteen challenges. He did well - this is a fantastic portrait of America and I think he can be proud of this work as he can of the rest of his portfolio.

I will just add a small footnote here. I am bound to praise this album because I am a great fan of this man's work but I know other people who are not 'into' Springsteen but really love this album.

To which I agree!

Thursday, October 20, 2011

Stimulating sounds: "At the BBC" by Cream

Year released: 2003 (contains recordings that date from between 1966-1968)
Personnel: Jack Bruce (bass, harmonica, vocals); Eric Clapton (guitar, vocals); Ginger Baker (drums, vocals)

We close the chapter on the Cream story with this nice collection of tunes recorded for the British Broadcasting Corporation. A nice complement to the original studio albums. Reviews are from the Beeb and of course, allmusic.

There's a lesson to be learned by the likes of Spiritualized, Lambchop and the Polyphonic Spree here. With Cream less really was more. Who needs three bassists and a marimba player when you can make as sophisticated and joyous a noise with just three musicians? Even the power blues of Led Zeppelin (who surely would never have existed without Eric, Jack and Ginger paving the way) needed four members. And one of them was a multi-instrumentalist. Never before or since has so much volume been made for so many by so few. And that includes the White Stripes.

That's not to say that this is all sturm und drang. The whole secret of Cream's success was their ability to progress from Chicago blues to psychedelia and beyond with a jazzy sophistication. This was due to a seasoned rhythm section that a young Eric Clapton had lacked to support his extended (and extending) soloing in previous bands like the Yardbirds or John Mayall's Bluesbreakers. This album collects and polishes up Cream's BBC sessions - all part and parcel of a standard band's career during the 60s.

While most numbers are mono mixes the skill and sense of a band evolving in double quick time dispel any audio grumbles. Listen as Clapton's guitar style passes through a lysergic filter to move between old standards from his Bluesbreaker days, like Freddie King's ''Steppin Out'', to the wobbly wah-wah tones of ''Tales Of Brave Ulysses''. As EC's guitar gets looser Jack Bruce's vocals get more angelic and Ginger Baker's drums get, err...louder. To top this you get the shockingly youthful tones of Brian Matthew appealing to the 'groovy, tuned-in, turned-on, way out fans' and getting some remarkably ego-free interviews from EC himself.

The fact that the BBC forced the band to curtail any excessive soloing comes as a blessing for those familiar with the longeurs of Wheels Of Fire. Ginger still does his falling-down-stairs impersonation, but it's the succinct, poppy nature of tracks like ''I Feel Free'' and ''Strange Brew'' that forces Clapton to give us guitar work that he's rarely bettered since.

Strangely, this historical overview highlights how their major musical touchstone, the blues, was to eventually lead them astray. Post-Disraeli Gears their muse (tainted by bad blood and too much touring) lapsed into bloated twelve bar behemoths such as ''Politician''. Could Free and Black Sabbath be far behind? Yet even these lows surpass most other contemporaries' best efforts. If you never shelled out for the marvellous 4 cd set, Those Were The Days, here's a handy alternative career overview that'll leave you smiling.

This compilation of 22 Cream BBC tracks from 1966-1968 marked a major addition to the group's discography, particularly as they released relatively little product during their actual lifetime. All of but two of these cuts ("Lawdy Mama" and the 1968 version of "Steppin' Out," which had appeared on Eric Clapton's "Crossroads" box) were previously unreleased, and although many of these had made the round on bootlegs, the sound and presentation here is unsurprisingly preferable.

As for actual surprises, there aren't many. It's a good cross section of songs from their studio records, though a couple, "Steppin' Out" and "Traintime," only appeared on live releases, and some of these BBC takes actually predate the release and recording of the album versions, which makes them of historical interest for intense Cream fans. (There are also four brief interviews with Eric Clapton from the original broadcasts.)

There's a mild surprise in the absence of a version of "White Room," but otherwise many of the group's better compositions and covers are here, including "I Feel Free," "N.S.U.," "Strange Brew," "Tales of Brave Ulysses," "Sunshine of Your Love," "Born Under a Bad Sign," "Outside Woman Blues," "Crossroads," "We're Going Wrong," "I'm So Glad," "SWLABR," and "Politician."

Cream took better advantage of the live-in-the-studio BBC format than some groups of similar stature. There's a lean urgency to most of the performances that, while not necessarily superior to the more fully realized and polished studio renditions, do vary notably in ambience from the more familiar versions. The sound quality is good but not perfect, and variable; sometimes it's excellent, yet at other times there seem to be imperfections in the tapes sourced, with "Sunshine of Your Love" suffering from a (not grievously) hollow, muffled quality.

If there's any other slight criticism of this set, it's that a handful of BBC tracks don't appear, including some that don't make it onto this CD in any version, like "Sleepy Time Time," "Toad," and "Sitting on Top of the World." Given Cream's tendency to over-improvise on the band's live concert recordings, however, the concise nature of these BBC tracks (none of which exceed five minutes) makes them preferable listening in some respects.

Wednesday, October 19, 2011

Stimulating sounds: "Goodbye" by Cream

Year released: 1969 (three months after the band's breakup in Nov. of 1968)
Personnel: Jack Bruce (bass, piano, organ, lead and background vocals); Eric Clapton (guitar, lead and background vocals); Ginger Baker (drums, percussion, lead and background vocals); Felix Pappalardi (bass on "What a Bringdown," also produced); George Harrison (credited as "L'Angelo Misterioso," rhythm guitar on "Badge.")

Cream's parting gift is a sparse affair but still one with lots of good moments, including the anthemic "Badge." Allmusic has the lowdown.

After a mere three albums in just under three years, Cream called it quits in 1969. Being proper gentlemen, they said their formal goodbyes with a tour and a farewell album called--what else? --"Goodbye."

As a slim, six-song single LP, it's far shorter than the rambling, out-of-control "Wheels of Fire", but it boasts the same structure, evenly dividing its time between tracks cut on-stage and in the studio. While the live side contains nothing as indelible as "Crossroads," the live music on the whole is better than that on "Wheels of Fire," capturing the trio at an empathetic peak as a band. It's hard, heavy rock, with Cream digging deep into their original "Politician" with the same intensity as they do on "Sitting on Top of the World," but it's the rampaging "I'm So Glad" that illustrates how far they've come; compare it to the original studio version on "Fresh Cream" and it's easy to see just how much further they're stretching their improvisation.

The studio side also finds them at something of a peak. Boasting a song apiece from each member, it opens with the majestic classic "Badge," co-written by Eric Clapton and George Harrison and ranking among both of their best work. It's followed by Jack Bruce's "Doing That Scrapyard Thing," an overstuffed near-masterpiece filled with wonderful, imaginative eccentricities, and finally, there's Ginger Baker's tense, dramatic "What a Bringdown," easily the best original he contributed to the group.

Like all of Cream's albums outside "Disraeli Gears," "Goodbye" is an album of moments, not a tight cohesive work, but those moments are all quite strong on their own terms, making this a good and appropriate final bow.

Stimulating sounds: "Wheels of Fire" by Cream

Year released: 1968
Personnel: Jack Bruce (bass, cello, harmonica, calliope, acoustic guitar, recorder, lead and background vocals); Eric Clapton (guitar, vocals); Ginger Baker (drums, percussion, bells, glockenspiel, typanie, lead and background vocals); Felix Pappalardi (viola, bells, organ, trumpet, tonette, also produced).

Not as masterly as "Disraeli Gears" or as urgent as "Fresh Cream," "Wheels of Fire" still rocks. More experimental and split into live and studio sides, it hints at what direction the band might have gone in had it not imploded months later. And while I'm sure not everyone would disagree, I quite like "Pressed Rat and Warthog." Reviews are from the BBC and allmusic.

Recorded between July 1967 and April 1968 at Atlantic Studios in New York and live at Winterland and Fillmore West, Wheels Of Fire is the apotheosis of Cream. With one disc live and the other in the studio, you gain unparalleled insight to their strengths--the ornate studio productions of Felix Pappalardi, which kept the band lean and focused; alongside the unedited grandstanding of their live performance.

On the studio set, although with their roots very strongly in the blues (their playing and sensibilities were steeped in it), this really was rock music. The power trio format is heard at its greatest on lead track, Jack Bruce and Pete Brown's "White Room". Never were the three players so perfectly harnessed--Eric Clapton's scorching lead over Bruce and Ginger Baker's watertight rhythm section. The arrangements are stunning throughout – from folk to metal with instrumentation such as cello and recorder. However, Ginger Baker's contributions range from the great--"Passing The Time" to the not so great--the Ian Dury presaging "Pressed Rat and Warthog."

There is no such focus on the live side--aside from the extraordinary, defining reading of Robert Johnson's "Crossroads", the lengthy cuts-- including Baker's 16 minute drum solo, "Toad"--show just how excessive the group could be in demonstrating the players' very obvious virtuosity.

The album topped the charts in America and reached No.3 in the UK. Although 1967's Disraeli Gears may be more succinct appraisal of the group, Rolling Stone described the album as "the most representative slice of the Cream legacy," which is absolutely true.


If "Disraeli Gears" was the album where Cream came into their own, its successor, "Wheels of Fire", finds the trio in full fight, capturing every side of their multi-faceted personality, even hinting at the internal pressures that soon would tear the band asunder.

A dense, unwieldy double album split into an LP of new studio material and an LP of live material, it's sprawling and scattered, at once awesome in its achievement and maddening in how it falls just short of greatness. It misses its goal not because one LP works and the other doesn't, but because both the live and studio sets suffer from strikingly similar flaws, deriving from the constant power struggle between the trio.

Of the three, Ginger Baker comes up short, contributing the passable "Passing the Time" and "Those Were the Days," which are overshadowed by how he extends his solo drum showcase "Toad" to a numbing quarter of an hour and trips upon the Wind & the Willows whimsy of "Pressed Rat and Warthog," whose studied eccentricity pales next to Eric Clapton's nimble, eerily cheerful "Anyone for Tennis."

In almost every regard, "Wheels of Fire" is a terrific showcase for Clapton as a guitarist, especially on the first side of the live album with "Crossroads," a mighty encapsulation of all of his strengths. Some of that is studio trickery, as producer Felix Pappalardi cut together the best bits of a winding improvisation to a tight four minutes, giving this track a relentless momentum that's exceptionally exciting, but there's no denying that Clapton is at a peak here, whether he's tearing off solos on a 17-minute "Spoonful" or goosing "White Room" toward the heights of madness.

But it's the architect of "White Room," bassist Jack Bruce, who, along with his collaborator Peter Brown, reaches a peak as a songwriter. Aside from the monumental "White Room," he has the lovely, wistful "As You Said," the cinematic "Deserted Cities of the Heart," and the slow, cynical blues "Politician," all among Cream's very best work.

And in many ways "Wheels of Fire" is indeed filled with Cream's very best work, since it also captures the fury and invention (and indulgence) of the band at its peak on the stage and in the studio, but as it tries to find a delicate balance between these three titanic egos, it doesn't quite add up to something greater than the sum of its parts. But taken alone, those individual parts are often quite tremendous.

Stimulating sounds: "Disraeli Gears" by Cream

Year released: 1967
Personnel: Jack Bruce (bass, lead and backing vocals, harmonica, keyboard); Eric Clapton (guitars, lead and backing vocals); Ginger Baker (drums, lead and backing vocals)

Cream's masterpiece, the perfect synthesis of their bluesy and psychedelic inclinations. Two reviews here first from the BBC and the second from allmusic.

It started as a joke. Mick Turner one of Cream’s roadies was discussing with drummer, Ginger Baker, how he fancied one of those bikes with’ Disraeli gears’. He meant, of course, derailleur gears, but the band found the mistake hilarious and so the name of one of one of the UK’s premier psychedelic albums was born.

By 1967 Cream had had one rather false start. "Fresh Cream," their first album had been a rushed and rather too purist collection of blues standards and curios, and as such was already by 1966 considered out of step with what was occurring around them. “I Feel Free” had hinted at the wild lysergic undercurrent, but they’d yet to find their heartland in the London underground. One reason this had happened was because of the band’s backgrounds, not only in the blues (as Eric Clapton defected from John Mayall’s Bluesbreakers) but also in Jazz; both Jack Bruce and Baker having served time with Graham Bond. Luckily this wide-ranging set of backgrounds was invaluable in their next step.

Second time around it was far different. Chemicals had been imbibed, Clapton had struck up a friendship with Australian artist Martin Sharp who not only provided the lyrics of “Tales Of Brave Ulysses” but also came up with the splendidly baroque cover. Meanwhile Jack Bruce was now working with underground poet, Pete Brown, whose lyrics were equally trippy. “SWLABR” (it stands for ‘She walks like a bearded rainbow’), “Dance The Night Away” and “Sunshine Of Your Love” were perfect encapsulations of the point where the blues got psychedelic and in turn got heavy. “Sunshine…”’s riff is at once iconic and defines the power trio aesthetic that was to prove so popular with the band’s many disciples.

The other creative catalyst was producer Felix Pappalardi. Co-writing both "World Of Pain" he also helped transform the blueswailing “Lawdy Mama” into the slinky “Strange Brew” – a contender for best album opener of all time. Clapton’s guitar had by now been exposed to the effects heavy stylings of Jimi Hendrix and his heavy use of wah-wah gives Disraeli Gears just the right amount of weirdness, making this probably the most experimental album he ever made. The modish inclusion of Ginger Baker’s rendition of “A Mother’s lament” was the edwardiana icing on the cake. By the band’s demise, two years later Clapton had returned to his first love – straight blues and the band had become the barnstorming power trio hinted at here. For a short time they were bringers of peace and love.

Cream teamed up with producer Felix Pappalardi for their second album, "Disraeli Gears,", a move that helped push the power trio toward psychedelia and also helped give the album a thematic coherence missing from the debut.

This, of course, means that Cream get further away from the pure blues improvisatory troupe they were intended to be, but it does get them to be who they truly are: a massive, innovative power trio. The blues still courses throughout "Disraeli Gears" -- the swirling kaleidoscopic "Strange Brew" is built upon a riff lifted from Albert King-- but it's filtered into saturated colors, as it is on "Sunshine of Your Love," or it's slowed down and blurred out, as it is on the ominous murk of "Tales of Brave Ulysses."

It's a pure psychedelic move that's spurred along by Jack Bruce's flourishing collaboration with Pete Brown. Together, this pair steers the album away from recycled blues-rock and toward its eccentric British core, for with the fuzzy freakout "Swlabr," the music hall flourishes of "Dance the Night Away," the swinging "Take It Back," and of course, the schoolboy singalong "Mother's Lament," this is a very British record.

Even so, this crossed the ocean and also became a major hit in America, because regardless of how whimsical certain segments are, Cream are still a heavy rock trio and Disraeli Gears is a quintessential heavy rock album of the '60s. Yes, its psychedelic trappings tie it forever to 1967, but the imagination of the arrangements, the strength of the compositions, and especially the force of the musicianship make this album transcend its time as well.