Showing posts with label The Beatles. Show all posts
Showing posts with label The Beatles. Show all posts

Monday, April 27, 2020

A 'What if' Album: Apple Scruffs • The Beatles 1970

By Doug McIntosh & Paul Hobbs
(two fans and a fanciful rewrite of 1970)

A 'What if' Album Series:
Apple Scruffs • The Beatles 1970 | All In • CSNY 1970

The Apple Scruffs were a loosely-knit group of hardcore Beatles fans who were known for congregating outside the Apple Corps building and at the gates of Abbey Road Studios in London during the waning days of Beatlemania, in the hope of seeing or interacting with one of the band members. The name was first coined by George Harrison, who also recorded the song "Apple Scruffs" as a tribute to them for his 1970 triple album All Things Must PassWikipedia 

I actually co-opted the idea for this What If blog series from my good friend Paul Hobbs. In high school, Paul started a fun tradition of putting together imaginary new Beatle albums after their breakup in April of 1970. Paul's process would be to create a cassette tape mix from the solo albums of the post-fab-four from that year or thereabouts. I would often go over to Paul's house and we would sit in his bedroom and listen to albums on his portable record player. Sometime in 1970, Paul invited me over and shared his new Beatle album mix tape with me and together we escaped into a Beatles-forever alternate universe.

Recently in our 2020 #stayathome phone conversations, we decided to go back fifty years and put our heads together to create what that followup album might have been from our perspective today. Without too much rancor (just kidding), we both came together with a side one of seven songs, and a side two of six songs for our 42 minute mythical vinyl album. 

First we needed some basic rules to follow.

A 'What If' Album - 1970 Fantasy-Band-Land Rules
  • Our album had to be a 12" vinyl LP (Long Playing) analog record with 23 minutes maximum play time per side. So back in the day, a typical album had 12 songs or 6 songs per side.
  • Songs picked for this 'What If' album would be from John, Paul, George, and Ringo's solo recordings, no later than 1970. 
  • Think of these solo album songs as 'demo tracks' recorded without all four Beatles participating to make a final definitive Beatle track.
    1969-1970 Beatle Discography
    Abbey Road was released September, 1969 and even though Let It Be was recorded earlier in January of 1969, it was released in May of 1970.

    1970 Solo Albums -
    Paul McCartney                         George Harrison                      John Lennon                              Ringo Starr - Single
    McCartney                                 All Things Must Pass               Lennon/Plastic Ono Band         It Don't Come Easy 
    April 17, 1970                           November 27, 1970                 December 11, 1970                   March & Oct. 1970
    ••••••••••
    and now for a little fantasy... Starting with our made up press release


    Hey ‘Scruffs’ Cheer Up Good News For Beatles Fans
    Actual 1970 Circus Magazine Cover
    Dan Lingman • August 14, 1970 • Circus Magazine

    In the aftermath of courtroom battles and breakup rumors, the Beatles have resurfaced at Abbey Road Studios where they’re putting the finishing touches on Apple Scruffs a new collection of Beatle songs tentatively slated for a fall release.

    “Apple Scruffs” comes from George’s affectionate term for the fans who gather outside the Apple offices day after day, hoping for some sort of connection with their heroes,” explains Neil Aspinall, head of Apple Corps. “With all the turmoil caused by the rumors of the Beatles imminent demise the fans have been very much on the Beatles’ minds. They seem genuinely reinvigorated and refocused. I was able to pop in on a session earlier in the week and the energy in the room was extraordinary! Everyone seems very excited.”

    With the prospect of a new Beatles album when it seemed like all was lost? That’s cause for excitement, not to mention a Beatles Christmas for all of us.

    ••••••••••
    and.... A 'What If' Album Fictional Narrative


    Apple Scruffs • Release Date: October 9, 1970
    It is spring 1970, Let It Be is topping the charts and the lads after a few rough patches on a winding road have gotten back to full-form with the critically acclaimed, Abbey Road. George continues to press John and Paul in getting more of his songs on Beatle albums as he now has a war chest of songs ready to go. In a recent interview George was asked about being a songwriter and he said, "the only reason I started to write songs was because I thought, well, if they can write them, I can write them."

    Ringo is now a movie star with the release of The Magic Christian and thinks his song, It Don't Come Easy will be a single at some point.

    A 'What If' Album Cover










    The band has all agreed that the Phil Spector experiment of producing Let It Be is behind them as he has returned to America, and his gun collection. George Martin is back to steer the magical ship as Producer and 5th Beatle, full speed ahead Mr. Parker, full speed ahead.

    Also, in a stunning reversal, The Beatles have fired manager, Allen Klein and he has been replaced by The Bee Gees, Cream, and Eric Clapton's manager, Robert Stigwood.

    John and Paul are becoming more open to the new dynamics in the band as they begin a new decade together. The Lennon/McCartney team continues to balance their collaborative and solo songwriting craft as both seek greater autonomy in their professional and personal lives. John likes to call himself, "a happily married fellow" these days, and Paul has traded in his London highlife for a sheep farm in Scotland. Can these two find peace and happiness at home? Enough so, that keeps them both coming back to work together, and with George and Ringo? Time will tell, but for now they have a miraculous follow up and journey past Abbey Road's The End.

    A "What If" Back Album Cover





    Ladies and Gentlemen
    The Beatles • Apple Scruffs (1970)


    --------------
    References

    Monday, April 06, 2020

    Peter and Gordon, Chad and Jeremy, and now Peter and Jeremy

    Photo of James Taylor & Peter Asher at the
    Sweet Baby James photo shoot by Henry Diltz
    Several weeks ago, I wrote a blog called,  Sweet Baby James and 50 Years Down the Road

    While writing that blog, I had also began to read a book by James Taylor's original manager and the producer of Sweet Baby James, Peter Asher.

    Thanks to Paul Hobbs 
    for the book loan



    The book is titled, The Beatles from A to Zed and is simply a wonderful journey through the alphabet with everything Beatles, plus more interesting sidebar stories including: Peter's direct experiences with the Beatles, his days in Peter and Gordon, and life in the music business. If you're a Beatle fan, this is a must and a very fun read indeed. The book got me interested in Peter Asher and I began to look into his life and professional career as a musician and record producer.

    Some early facts about Peter Asher and his one degree of separation-
    • Peter's father was a doctor and his mother was a professional musician and Oboe teacher, who once taught a young lad named, George Martin (the future producer of The Beatles).
    • Peter went to the prestigious Westminster School in London where he met his future band mate, Gordon Waller whose father was also a doctor.
    • Peter was a child actor along with sister Jane Asher, a life-long actress. 
    • At seventeen, Jane had an opportunity to interview the Beatles in April, 1963 at the Royal Albert Hall in London, and began a five-year relationship with Paul McCartney. In December 1963, McCartney took up residence at Asher's family Wimpole Street town house and stayed there until the couple moved into McCartney's own home located in St John's Wood in 1966. McCartney wrote several Beatles songs inspired by her, including "And I Love Her", "You Won't See Me", "I'm Looking Through You", "We Can Work It Out", and "Here, There and Everywhere." Wikipedia
    • At the Asher's Wimpole St. home, John Lennon and Paul McCartney wrote "I Want to Hold Your Hand" in the front basement room, while McCartney wrote the tune to "Yesterday" in a box room at the top of the house. Wikipedia
    • Paul McCartney and Jane Asher
    • For two years, Peter's and Paul's bedrooms were right next to each other at the top of the house, and Peter as a young musician himself had constant direct access to one of the greatest singer-songwriter's of all-time. I guess I could go on about Jane's and Paul's access... what were her parents thinking?
    Anyway, John and Paul were constantly writing new songs and always revisiting and even workshopping older songs they wrote before the Beatles formed in 1960. One such song, A World Without Love was written by Paul when he was sixteen but John could never get past the first line, Please lock me away without cracking up with laughter.

    Peter Asher and Gordon Waller
    As John rejected A World Without Love as a Beatles song, an astute Peter Asher asked Paul if he could have the "orphan" song for his newly signed band, Peter and Gordon. Peter even persisted Paul to write the bridge of the still uncompleted song. Paul finished the song and gave it to Peter and Gordon who took it to their first recording sessions for EMI Records. Least to say, the rest is history as the song went all the way to #1 on the UK and American Billboard Charts in 1964 and launched Peter and Gordon as a worldwide duo.

    This past week, I thought the A World Without Love lyrics quite appropriate for our #StayatHome times even though they were written by a young Paul McCartney about waiting for a true love to finally show herself.

    Please lock me away
    And don't allow the day
    Here inside where I hide
    With my loneliness

    I don't care what they say I won't stay
    In a world without love

    Now another thing that struck me when viewing the color video of A World Without Love is that Peter Asher is the spitting image model of Mike Myers' Austin Powers character. I am of course not the first to make this observation, but I want you to play the song here and pay attention as the camera zooms in on Peter at the 0:27 - 0:37 mark. You'll see exactly what I'm talking about- Peter's expression with mop top, Buddy Holly glasses and teeth... Yeah Baby!



    Peter's close relationship with Paul McCartney proved invaluable as Peter and Gordon recorded several songs written by McCartney but credited to Lennon–McCartney. Those hits included "A World Without Love" (US & UK #1), "Nobody I Know" (US #12; UK #10), "I Don't Want To See You Again" (US #16, but not a hit in the UK), and "Woman." With "Woman", McCartney used the pseudonym Bernard Webb to see whether he could have a hit song without his name attached. First pressings of the US Capitol single listed the composer as "A. Smith". The song reached #14 in the US and #28 on the UK Singles Chart in 1966. Wikipedia

    Phil and Don Everly
    As duo groups in the 1960's started popping up such as Simon and Garfunkel, Peter and Gordon, Chad and Jeremy, not to mention such bands as The Beatles, The Beach Boys, The Byrds, The Hollies, and Bee Gees- all getting their harmonic inspiration from the well of The Everly Brothers. For Peter and Gordon, it's very interesting to hear two very different singing voices come together to make their harmony work so well. Needless to say, without the Everly Brothers, the evolution of harmony in the early to mid-sixties for singing duo's and bands just wouldn't have been the same.

    Chad Stuart and Jeremy Clyde
    Chad and Jeremy is another interesting duo from England as they too rode the British Invasion to America with a number of hits from 1962 - 1968.

    The duo had a string of hits in the US, including "Willow Weep for Me", "Before and After", and their biggest hit, "A Summer Song". Wikipedia

    For Peter and Gordon and Chad and Jeremy, the 60's wave ended as both groups disbanded in 1968. For Peter Asher, his life changed in 1968 as he briefly worked as the A&R (Artists & Repertoire) Director for Apple Records where he signed James Taylor to his first record contract and then moved to the United States to manage and produce James and later, Linda Ronstadt. Peter went on to produce many acts, and in 1995-2002 was Senior Vice-President for Sony Music Entertainment.

    Peter and Gordon, 2005
    But what attracted me to write this article and playlist this week was Peter Asher's reunion with Gordon Waller in 2005, first playing benefits, Beatlefest, and then doing clubs together. Sadly, this ended in 2009 when Gordon Waller died of a heart attack at 64 years old.
    Chad and Jeremy, 2005

    As for Chad and Jeremy, Chad Stuart continued to work in the music industry while Jeremy Clyde became a film and stage actor. In the early 1980s, the duo reunited to record a new album and perform concerts, including a multi-band British Invasion nostalgia tour. After another long period of separation, in the early 2000s Chad & Jeremy began performing again and developed a semi-regular schedule of touring for many years. Wikipedia

    Peter and Jeremy, 2020
    Incidentally, both Peter and Gordon and Chad and Jeremy often played venues together as all were life-long friends.

    In 2018, Chad Stuart retired from performing and low and behold, Peter Asher and Jeremy Clyde started performing together as, Peter and Jeremy. That kind of takes us full circle as I would like to present a mix playlist of Peter and Gordon, Chad and Jeremy, and Peter and Jeremy this week in both older and more recent videos. Make sure to watch the last two videos with a bit of fun commentary by Peter and Jeremy. Enjoy my friends!


    Note- I also want to give a big shoutout to jarichards99youtube (subscribe here) who does a fantastic job of taking old music videos and creating a Digitally ReProcessed ReCut Video and STEREO ReMix.HiQ Hybrid = Live Video Performance PLUS Studio Quality Sound.

    Monday, March 30, 2020

    50 Years of Music • January - March, 1970

    50 Years of Music Series • 1970
    January - March | April - May

    Simon and Garfunkel at the 1971 13th Annual Grammy Awards | Bettmann/Getty Images
    Something old, something new... part of the good luck tradition for a bride on her wedding day. In the past several months I haven't seen any brides floating about, but thought I'd borrow the expression.

    Three weeks ago, I put together a playlist of "something new" music releases from January-March, 2020 thinking that might be popular with so many people home and online. It wasn't a dud but maybe not the #ComfortSongs to go along with maybe some of the #ComfortFoods you've been wanting or having at your #StayatHome. By the way, has cooking made a comeback at your house too?

    Last week, I put together the 50th anniversary of CSN&Y's Déjà vu album, and Joni Mitchell's Ladies of the Canyon, and that got a pretty good bump of blog hits coming in. With that in mind, I'll continue the "something old" theme by highlighting albums released from January - March from 1970. It's an amazing collection of albums and the number of great songs within those albums are truly impressive.

    Here are a few thoughts I strung together while putting this 100+ Playlist together derived from my Wikipedia source, 1970 in music.

    I'll start with the Grammy album of the year for 1970,
    Bridge over Troubled Water by Simon and Garfunkel. What's not to like on this entire album. If I have to pick one to start off the playlist, I'm going with Cecilia an all-time favorite which also reminds me of a quick story growing up in a Baptist Church. I remember when Love The One You're With was a hit by Stephen Stills in late 1970 and a girl in my youth group commented to me, "I just can't stand these dirty songs like Cecilia and Love The One You're With." About a year later, I came up to her at church and said, "Guess you'll have to add Change Partners to your dirty songs list."

    The Magic Christian was a February 1970 movie starring Peter Sellers and Ringo Starr. The soundtrack, Magic Christian Music is by the band Badfinger and features their first big hit written and produced by Paul McCartney, Come and Get It. I thought this was going to be a quick skip-through album, but I kept saying to myself, "wait a minute, this one's good...this one's good" and so on. Like so many albums I discover fifty years after their release, Magic Christian Music's a gem from a truly great band as most people only know their hits.

    Last week I watched a 2011 documentary about George Martin (the 5th Beatle) on Amazon Prime called, Produced by George Martin (link here) that I highly recommend. George Martin produced Ringo's first solo album, Sentimental Journey and the two make a great team doing a complete album of "standards" that had not had been attempted by any rock star until Ringo did it. Ringo has always been maligned by the press over the years, but now most critics say he's not only a great drummer but a very good singer to boot. Listen to Ringo sing Night and Day by Cole Porter.

    When I was fifteen, I would have never have listened to Frank Sinatra's Watertown, much less Ringo's Sentimental Journey. In Watertown, Sinatra takes a 1970 ride on the singer-songwriter wave with a themed-based album.  All the songs were written by the same team of  Bob Gaudio and Jake Holmes which is something Frank had never done before. This indeed was a risky move as Watertown was Frank's worst selling album, but the critics loved it and I think it's a wonderful album too. It's a heartbreaking tale of a wife who leaves her husband and two children searching for stardom. Make sure you listen to, The Train.

    If I didn't mention the band Mountain here, I'd probably get a concerning phone call from my old friend and childhood next door neighbor Ron Zieman wondering if I lost my mind. Ron introduced me to the best "heavy" rock bands over the years starting with Cream. Felix Pappalardi who produced some of Cream's albums started Mountain with Leslie West and their first album Climbing climbed the charts with their big hit, Mississippi QueenWhen the group proceeded to record "Mississippi Queen", Pappalardi insisted on numerous takes. Growing weary, Corky Laing the drummer started using the cowbell to count off the song. Pappalardi liked it so much he left it in the mix, creating the song's recognizable intro (Wikipedia). And as Christopher Walken would say, "More Cowbell."

    Moondance is simply one of the greatest albums of all time. As a teenager I really didn't appreciate Van Morrison until I got to San Diego State and started rooming with my buddy Mark Hunter. Mark was from Millbrae CA, just south of San Francisco and if you're from the Bay Area you know "Van the man." Every song on this album is fantastic. In the last several years, I've really taken a deeper dive into his music and loved seeing him in Las Vegas in February. Check out Into the Mystic, this song is right up there...

    The personnel on Leon Russell's debut album is largely a who's who of rock 'n' roll royalty, not to mention half of England. Again, so many great songs on this album including the all-time, "A Song for You", written by Russell, is a slow, pained plea for forgiveness and understanding from an estranged lover, the tune is one of Russell's best-known compositions. It has been performed and recorded by over 200 artists, spanning many musical genres. Elton John has called the song an American classic (Wikipedia).

    I purchased Nilsson Sings Newman in a used record shop after Harry Nilsson become really famous with his 1971 album, Nilsson Schmilsson. Again, this album is filled with great songs. Both albums followed me to college and I listened to them often in my dorm room and then in a series of forgettable apartments. In fact in my first forgettable apartment, my complete stereo system was stolen (a high school graduation present) with Harry Nilsson's 1974 Pussy Cats album on the turntable. I'll never forget coming home, opening the door and seeing a large empty space where the stereo system used to be with now the Pussy Cats empty album jacket laying in its place. My first thought was F***!!!!!, then I thought, well Pussy Cats was not Harry's finest hour on vinyl. But as long as I'm talking today about great "standards" albums like Sentimental Journey and Watertown today, check out Nilsson's 1973 A Touch of Schmilsson in the Night, a classic and one of Harry's finest hours.

    Mary Kit says to me, "108 videos this week, man you must have some spare time..."

    Monday, January 06, 2020

    When I'm Sixty-Four... some reflective thoughts


    When I'm Sixty-Four

    When I get older losing my hair
    Many years from now
    Will you still be sending me a Valentine
    Birthday greetings bottle of wine

    If I'd been out till quarter to three
    Would you lock the door
    Will you still need me,
    will you still feed me
    When I'm sixty-four


    You'll be older too
    And if you say the word
    I could stay with you

    I could be handy, mending a fuse
    When your lights have gone
    You can knit a sweater by the fireside
    Sunday mornings go for a ride
    Doing the garden, digging the weeds
    Who could ask for more

    Will you still need me, will you still feed me
    When I'm sixty-four

    Every summer we can rent a cottage
    In the Isle of Wight, if it's not too dear
    We shall scrimp and save
    Grandchildren on your knee
    Vera, Chuck and Dave

    Send me a postcard, drop me a line
    Stating point of view
    Indicate precisely what you mean to say
    Yours sincerely, wasting away

    Give me your answer, fill in a form
    Mine for evermore
    Will you still need me, will you still feed me
    When I'm sixty-four
    –Paul McCartney


    Paul McCartney wrote When I'm Sixty-Four when he was sixteen years old in the 1950's. It's an idyllic projection that he actually lived with wife Linda if not for her early death from cancer. It is also an early expression of love experienced in his own family upbringing and tapped into as a budding genius storyteller.

    Paul would sing the song in early Beatle gigs at clubs between sets, or when some equipment broke down and the band had to stop for a bit. The song was recorded in 1966 for the Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band album when Paul's father was sixty-four. Another fun fact, Paul's kids surprised him on his own sixty-fourth birthday with their recording of the song with altered lyrics. But the ironic fact that stands out for me was that when Paul was sixty-four, he had separated from second wife Heather Mills and later divorced, or as the English say, "a fine kettle of fish."

    This past year I turned sixty-four, and as I write this (on January 2) it's my lovely wife, Mary Kit's sixty-fourth birthday! On this day, we'll be living Birthday greetings bottle of wine.

    Life is such a mixed bag. When you reach sixty-four years of age, you've lived through some fantastic, good, bad and even ugly times.

    Here's a 2020 random ying yang stream of thoughts to my wonderful wife and extended to anyone who's hit the sixty-four mark and beyond.

    You're Sixty-Four (+)

    Empathy supersedes sympathy.

    You used to be the youngest person at a meeting. 

    "Until death do us part" has probably been officially said to you at least a couple of times by a minister or justice of the peace. Also, there were less people there the second time.

    Ya go ahead and put it off, no rush.

    In the 1950's or early 60's your mom or dad had to hit the breaks and then put out their arm to stop you from flying from the back seat and into the front dashboard or glass.

    Grandchildren on your knee

    'Surreal' is such an overused word by people who are being interviewed on TV.
    The experience was NO dream or fantasy, shit gets real!

    Some of your heroes in youth turns out were not heroes at all,
    some even went to prison, some need to be.

    You shout, "Putin pinko commie asset" at the TV,
    while some old fart suddenly loves the Russians.

    You get together with friends and talk about 'aches and pains' like it's an art form.

    Insurance commercials must be banned from television. 
    You miss The Marlboro Man in sweeping vistas and the theme song- 
    (Elmer Bernstein's score for The Magnificent Seven "dum, da-da dum")
    –minus the cigarettes.

    Every summer we can rent a cottage

    You now have a personal trainer.
    No no, not a real person but a free iPhone runner's app with the synthesized female dominatrix voice, yelling, "faster faster!"

    No regrets.

    Remember rushing to finish writing assignments in school. Finishing was the only reward.
    At some point editing became a friend, and the process a life-long reward.

    The circle of life possibly now has you looking after your parents.
    Work to keep the bond with your siblings and family strong.
    In twenty or so years from now, you'll be where your parents were.

    Pop quiz - Beemans, Blackjack, Clove - What are they?

    Get off the concrete and asphalt and walk or run in nature.

    You've been involved in a major accident, and lived to tell about it.

    You don't give a rat's ass what anyone thinks about you. Anyone.

    You watched the first SNL live.
    44 years later, Eddie Murphy on SNL made you laugh through every sketch.

    The Rolling Stone's recent No Filter Tour is the best name ever for a rock 'n' roll tour.

    "Those kids are just standing on our lawn?"

    Team Tortoise - slow and steady for the long run.

    Tears now come like rain.

    Retirement...
    "Everyday is Saturday, and if not Saturday, Sunday."
    (thanks Jimmer for that one)

    At some point, you thought Don Henley was writing about you.

    You can count your true friends on the fingers of one hand, hold that hand.

    Up at 4:20am for no reason on God's green earth.
    If you're up because you have to go to your day job, hang in there,
    there's a light at the end of the tunnel; or as Mary Kit would say-
    "There's a light at the end of the tunnel as long as it's not a gorilla with a flashlight."

    You're a close friend to your children.

    John Lennon sang, "love is real." He should have added, "but sometimes illusive."

    You've had a major medical condition, and you're still here.

    Ok, when does the wisdom thing kick in?

    A smiling child yells, "Grandma" or "Grandpa" and they are looking at you.
    The reason grandparents and grandchildren get along so well 
    is that they have a common enemy. –Sam Levenson (thanks Bill for that one)

    Life's a three act play.
    The third act just started right after you got up to go to the bathroom.

    Someone has taken credit for your work.

    Elderly people who lived through World War II now have to watch some news report of some dumb ass kids at some picture ceremony giving white supremacist signs and the Hitler salute.

    You watch young children play and think what a wonderful world!

    You can't prove or disprove that there is a God,
    but at some point in adulthood you realized that rock 'n' roll saved your life.

    Vaping is... hilarious to watch.

    You've lived to see Science in the USA treated like it's astrology.

    Every hit song that you've ever loved on the radio has been turned into a TV commercial.

    Friends have died.

    In the 20th century, you thought recycling was the answer.
    Today only 9% of the world's plastic is actually recycled.

    The 'blended family' is now just, family.

    You grew up wanting to stay at the Disneyland Hotel. You've done that.

    As Billy Joel said, "We didn't start the fire." Our children think we did.
    Greta Thunberg knows we did.

    You've made When I'm Sixty-Four your new ringtone or ringback tone. This will last for only a few weeks before you go back to a standard iPhone tone.

    Fuck cancer.

    Giving exceeds receiving.

    Back in the day, you've woken up on a friends dirty carpet with all your clothes on, and now wouldn't dare sleep on the ground in a sleeping bag. Camping!

    Somewhere long ago you actually paid 25 cents for a gallon of gas.

    You go to Las Vegas to see The Beatles' Love at the Mirage,
     like it's a pilgrimage to Mecca.

    Be a light for someone.

    Roger Daltrey now hates people smoking dope at Who concerts.
    Times change, but The Who still sounds fantastic live.

    John F. Kennedy was assassinated, you were told at school by your teacher.
    You cried- if not at school, some place where no one could see you.

    Keto smeto - I'm not giving up pizza!

    You've held her hair back, or you've rubbed his back...
    while bending over the toilet and hurling Boone's Farm and Cheetos.

    Opportunity and choice are the greatest gifts you can give a young person.

    I miss it when someone doesn't initiate and say, "good morning" when you pass and you're the only person around. Or you initiate, "good morning" and they ignore you and just walk on by.

    We shall scrimp and save

    You don't put your head under water at the pool or ocean, c'mon man!

    The weight is always there, it hangs like a dark cloud, but dammit you're really happy.

    The maturation of hair loss on the top of head to then sprout like spring weeds in your nose and ears is just a cruel joke.

    Create, express you passions.

    A New Year's resolution is just a cheap setup for a fail. Actions not words win the day.

    Houdini said that the hardest thing for him was to get out of bed. You love your bed.

    Email title in my Inbox- Domino's Stuffed Cheesy Bread is calling your name.
    "hey, Fat Ass."

    You're on your third impeachment, however experience tells you this one is completely different. You realize we are living in an epic historical period in our government while many seem oblivious to the challenge to our democracy. You're watching and talking to people of reason, stay vilangent.

    Got to have a current project going. After that... onto the next project.

    Listen to music like you did in your 20's.

    Pay-per-view turned out pretty well. You never realized there would be so many good stories coming out of your flat panel television.

    Will you still need me, will you still feed me

    You're in a position where you don't have to work with assholes.
     If you are, at least you have an exit strategy.

    You've had injuries and walked down that lonesome road all by yourself.
    You've eaten orange slices with 7,000 people after the finish line.

    A long time ago, a friend put a condom under the faucet
    and filled it like a water balloon to show you it wouldn't explode.
    BTW, have you seen those water balloon kits for kids at Costco, pure genius!

    You know religion, you know spirituality.

    Think of retirement as a set of retread tires, 
    you've got new tread on old tires for the road ahead.

    Walking is one of the essential keys of life- walk, walk, walk.

    Your spouse says at the restaurant,"Don't tell them it's my birthday."
    Mine for evermore

    Your grandchildren play the song below on Alexia to you over FaceTime
    while singing and dancing.

    Monday, November 04, 2019

    Echo in the Canyon

    Rickenbacker 360-12 Electric Guitar
     So I finally got a chance to see the Andrew Slater documentary echo in the canyon (2018) starring Jacob Dylan and just released this past week on Netflix and linked here.

    This documentary has gotten a few harsh reviews, as notably Joni Mitchell is not even mentioned, even in the context of the California Sound evolving from surfing and car songs to more socially conscious and interpersonal songs. For god's sake, as a Laurel Canyon resident who released Ladies of the Canyon in 1970 she (and The Doors) deserved a little shout out here. Also the overuse  of clips from the 1969 art film Model Shop as Slater's and Dylan's inspiration for the documentary is annoying but is easily put aside.

    With that said, this 1 hour and 22 minute doc has plenty of great clips of its own as you get a snapshot of the the mid to late 60's in Laurel Canyon with some of the famous musicians who lived there and some famous musicians who didn't. My favorite was getting to watch Tom Petty talk about music one more time as this was his last recorded interview. The beginning of the film with Tom is a fantastic hook that for me is my ultimate sweet spot of Monday Monday jingle jangle 60's rock 'n' roll and my original inspiration for writing this blog. For me, learning anything new about three of my all-time favorite bands- The Mamas & The Papas, The Byrds, and Buffalo Springfield are gem pieces to the rock 'n' roll puzzle for those of us who just can't get enough of this stuff. Man, to have a time machine and be a young adult in Laurel Canyon and on the Sunset Strip in the mid-sixties, would be...



    Here's several key elements that make this film 'a must see' that covers the folk to folk rock transformation.

    This starts with the transition of folk musicians and studio recording in New York mostly moving to Los Angeles shortly after The Beatles stepped off the plane in 1964. John Sebastian tells how Roger McGuinn started singing Beatles' songs in folk clubs in New York and Los Angeles with no success but with the guts of a pioneer and a Beatles inspired 12 string Rickenbacker 360-12 electric guitar. 

    In the film, Roger McGuinn gets a much deserved feature as a major architect from musicians singing folk songs with acoustic guitars to composing folk rock songs with electric guitars. Here's a quick clip (not in the film) of Roger and his Rickenbacker.



    In the film, Roger and The Byrds take traditional folk songs like Pete Seeger's The Bells of Rhymney and transform it in their 1965 version. Here's a set of clips, first with Seeger's original version, and then The Byrds.





    I also enjoyed the conversations with famous musicians who discuss how art is a continual process of iteration and the 'cross pollination' of songs that influence song writing. I bought a book a couple of years ago by Austin Kleon with the perfect title to describe this process of creativity, Steal like an Artist. In the 1960's, Laurel Canyon becomes such a place where collaboration + competition = creativity. One example from the doc, is how George Harrison adapts Roger's riffs on The Byrds version of The Bells of Rhymney that influence him in his 1965 song, If I Needed Someone.



    Then, Brian Wilson is blown away by Rubber Soul and that inspires him to write Pet Sounds in 1966. In turn, The Beatles are inspired by Pet Sounds, and in 1967 create Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band. (As a side note to the playlist below- I also include Buffalo Springfield's (Stephen Stills) Questions, which morphs into Carry On with Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young, and then Eric Clapton adapts the Questions riff for his song, Let It Rain (1970) .

    July 25, 1965 - Newport Folk Festival
    The film's MC role is played with perfect Bob Dylan DNA detachment by son Jakob Dylan, born in 1969. I think son Dylan does a great job tapping into dad's influence without mentioning his name. As the greatest songwriter of his generation, Bob Dylan himself also makes the historic transition from acoustic folk to electric rock 'n' roll and turns the music world on its head at the 1965 Newport Folk Festival.

    As the documentary unfolds, I realize Jakob is the perfect medium to tell this story. His quiet casual manner and approach to the material works perfectly for the famous musicians who take his questions and run with it (e.g. David Crosby, Stephen Stills, Graham Nash, Tom Petty,  Eric Clapton, Brian Wilson, Jackson Browne, Lou Adler and Michelle Phillips).

    Jakob brings in his own generation of musicians to update 13 songs from the California Sound era that in their interpretation remain both current and true to the originals. In the playlist below, I start with the original 60's version and then follow it with the Jakob and friends take. I love his selections as Jakob goes for some of the deeper cuts, not just the hits and hey that's my kind of playlist! I highly recommend you make the time to watch echo in the canyon this week on Netflix, it's a trip!



    Monday, September 30, 2019

    The Beatles - Abbey Road 50th Anniversary

    September 26th, 1969 marks the 50th anniversary The Beatles released Abbey Road. The album cover is one of the most recognized photos of the 20th century. I personally have it on the mouse pad I'm using to write this blog. I also have a framed 3D image of it (and this is for real), in my Yellow Submarine bathroom- painted completely school bus yellow with an assortment of Beatle photos on the walls and memorabilia scattered about.

    My outstanding 1969 memory of the photo, is George Harrison's Clarks Desert Boots. Seeing that on the cover was just the coolest thing because all my friends and I had a pair, or at least a rip off version of the Clarks originals. In fact, I probably got mine at JC Penny after telling my mom I just had to have them. I believe in junior and senior high school I went through several pairs of both the low and high top versions. I can't speak for the rest of the world, but George had 1969 California chic down in that photo!

    Now the desert boots got me thinking about the Schwinn Stingray. My stingray was in fact a rip off model from Montgomery Ward which we used to call, "The Monkey Ward." Speaking of monkey, the banana seat and monkey bars were great for my paper route. You could wrap the cloth bag holding the rubber-banded newspapers on the bars in a perfect position for grabbing and throwing.

    Products are one thing to imitate, but The Beatles represented the music that launched the aspirations of thousands of bands across the globe. By 1965, The Beatles were the measure, the absolute standard of excellence in rock 'n' roll to emulate. And speaking of imitation, what about the countless graphics of Star Wars, Muppets, Simpsons, and other characters, or photos of people all in Beatle formation in the Abbey Road crosswalk.

    In 1969,  who knew that this was going to be their last album as a band (not counting Let it Be, recorded earlier and released after Abbey Road). It's only shortly thereafter in 1970 that "the dream is over" sunk in as reality. There were not going to be anymore Beatles albums coming out of Abbey Road StudiosAbbey Road, as brilliant as it was when we all heard it in 1969, continues to blossom with time and gets better, better, better...

    By the way, you're listening to music on the radio or let's say on a digital device in shuffle mode and a Beatles song comes on, do you ever change the station or hit skip? I can't answer for you, but I think you can for me.

    It's 50 years later this past June, Mary Kit and I are at Paul McCartney's Freshen Up Tour in Phoenix. Paul (now 77) finishes his three-hour set with the famous side two Abbey Road medley of Golden Slumbers, Carry That Weight, and The End. I had read the setlist in advance and knew I was going to cry, and I did.

    For the 50th Anniversary, The Beatles on September 26th released a three CD or vinyl 40 song box set versions of Abbey Road. The box set includes- illustrated book, demos, outtakes, and several other songs recorded during the Abbey Road sessions not on the original album, all remixed by Giles Martin.

    Here is the 2019 Abbey Road Super Deluxe Edition on Spotify.

    Here is the 2019 Abbey Road Super Deluxe Edition on Amazon Music.

    Here is the Audio CD's and Vinyl's of the  2019 Abbey Road Super Deluxe Edition sold on Amazon.

    Here's the 2019 Abbey Road Super Deluxe Edition on YouTube embedded below.

    So for your #MusicMonday, let's Come Together and give a listen to the best band that ever was. Long Live The Beatles!



    Monday, April 29, 2019

    My SECOND 100 Songs

    In November, 2016 I posted My 100 Songs as a YouTube Playlist. In the description header of that playlist I wrote, "My 100 favorite songs not necessarily rated 1-100. This playlist is part of me, like remembering listening to the Rolling Stones' Satisfaction on my transistor radio in 1965 on my front yard grass."

    If you spend anytime thinking about the music you love, 100 songs is really just a good start. So it's taken a while but I've put together My SECOND 100 Songs. Like the first 100, I did not rate them 1-100 as this continues to be more of a shuffle of mostly longtime favorites.

    These lists are my favorites not only because I like the songs, but they continue to represent a place in time for me. For example in this grouping, I selected Ohio by Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young, a song written and recorded just three weeks after the May, 4 1970 Kent State shootings. The song was released in June of that year and I remember hearing it for the first time while in the back seat of my friend Gary Hill's family station wagon. I was in the car with my pals Gary (driving), Paul and Ron and the song came on over the radio. We were driving on Main street, all talking stopped and we just quietly listened to it, blown away.

    There's some gems in here that you will easily recognize and maybe a few you've never heard before. I have included both lists here with 200 songs that continue to change over time. Some songs get deleted from YouTube and I can't remember what was deleted. Maybe that's a blessing as I just add a song here or there that I love. For example, The Zombies were recently inducted into the Rock 'n' Roll Hall of Fame and that got me listening to them again and suddenly, two songs make the latest list.

    Well, I guess I had better start working on 201-300, there's never enough good music. Enjoy my friends!

    My SECOND 100 Songs
    1. Help!, The Beatles
    2. California Dreamin', The Mamas & The Papas
    3. Jumpin' Jack Flash, The Rolling Stones
    4. Mr. Tambourine Man, Bob Dylan
    5. Won't Get Fooled Again, The Who
    6. America, Simon and Garfunkel
    7. You Really Got Me, The Kinks
    8. Higher Ground, Stevie Wonder
    9. The Story In Your Eyes, The Moody Blues
    10. Alfie, Dionne Warwick
    11. Sunshine Of Your Love, Cream
    12. I'm Looking Through You, The Beatles
    13. Suite: Judy Blue Eyes, Crosby, Stills & Nash
    14. Beginnings, Chicago
    15. Don't Think Twice, Bob Dylan
    16. Time Of The Season, The Zombies
    17. Paperback Writer, The Beatles
    18. Free Man In Paris, Joni Mitchell
    19. Souvenirs, John Prine
    20. You're Going To Make Me Lonesome When You Go, Shawn Colvin
    21. Fountain Of Sorrow, Jackson Browne
    22. Carolina On My Mind, James Taylor
    23. All My Loving, The Beatles
    24. Dusty Springfield, No Easy Way Down
    25. Be Free, Loggins and Messina
    26. On A Carousel, The Hollies
    27. Irish Linen, Seals and Crofts
    28. Changes, David Bowie
    29. No Reply, The Beatles
    30. Loves Me Like A Rock, Paul Simon
    31. A Million Miles Away, The Plimsouls
    32. If We Were Vampires, Jason Isbell
    33. For What It's Worth, Buffalo Springfield
    34. The Ragpicker's Dream, Mark Knopfler
    35. Downtown, Petula Clark
    36. The Rain, The Park and Other Things, The Cowsills
    37. Even The Losers, Tom Petty and The Heartbreakers
    38. Polaroids, Shawn Colvin
    39. Me And Julio Down By The Schoolyard, Paul Simon
    40. Getting Better, The Beatles,
    41. Orange Crush, REM
    42. You Wreck Me, Tom Petty and The Heartbreakers
    43. I Saw The Light, Todd Rundgren
    44. Shower The People, James Taylor
    45. Ooh La La, The Faces
    46. Back In the U.S.S.R., The Beatles
    47. You're Only Lonely, J.D. Souther
    48. Don't Dream It's Over, Crowded House
    49. Bare Trees, Fleetwood Mac
    50. I've Just Seen A Face, The Beatles
    51. Expecting To Fly, Buffalo Springfield
    52. Graceland, Paul Simon
    53. Rebel Rebel, David Bowie
    54. Tell Me Why, The Beatles
    55. The Waiting, Tom Petty and The Heartbreakers
    56. Don't You Worry 'Bout A Thing, Stevie Wonder
    57. You Were On My Mind, The We Five
    58. How Do I Make You, Linda Ronstadt
    59. You're Time Is Gonna Come, Led Zeppelin
    60. Dark End Of The Street, The Flying Burrito Brothers
    61. Manic Monday, The Bangles
    62. Gabriel Go On Home, Seals and Crofts
    63. So Far Away, Carole King
    64. Arms Of Mary, Leo Kottke
    65. Ohio, Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young
    66. Golden Hour, Kacey Musgraves
    67. Kodachrome, Paul Simon
    68. Angelyne, The Jayhawks
    69. Got To Get You Into My Life, The Beatles
    70. Already Gone, Eagles
    71. I Used To Be A King, Graham Nash
    72. Happy Together, The Turtles
    73. Fire Lake, Bob Seger
    74. Don't Give Up, Peter Gabriel with Paula Cole
    75. Dreams, The Cranberries
    76. Fall On Me, REM
    77. How Can I Miss You When You Won't Go Away, Dan Hicks and His Hot Licks
    78. Eight Days A Week, The Beatles
    79. She's Not There, The Zombies
    80. Her Town Too, James Taylor
    81. The Long Way Around, The Chicks
    82. Kathy's Song, Simon and Garfunkel
    83. Pipeline, The Ventures
    84. On The Road Again, Canned Heat
    85. Hypnotized, Fleetwood Mac
    86. Listen To Her Heart, Tom Petty and The Heartbreakers
    87. Sowing The Seeds Of Love, Tears For Fears
    88. City Of New Orleans, Arlo Guthrie
    89. Take It From Me, The Weepies
    90. Sweet Seasons, Carole King
    91. Superstition, Stevie Wonder
    92. Bridge Over Troubled Water, Simon and Garfunkel
    93. See The Sky About To Rain, Neil Young
    94. Rock Me On The Water, Jackson Browne
    95. Wouldn't It Be Nice, The Beach Boys
    96. A Change Is Going to Come, Sam Cooke
    97. Baba O'Riley, The Who
    98. I'll Feel A Whole Lot Better, The Byrds
    99. Reelin' In The Years, Steely Dan
    100. A Day In The Life, The Beatles

    My SECOND 100 Songs Playlist