Archive for October 14, 2010


From 1965, “Odetta Sings Dylan” was one of the first albums entirely devoted to Bob Dylan interpretations, and one of the best. In part that’s because the concept was still actually fresh then; in fact, other than an obscure 1964 album by Linda Mason, it was the very first album of Dylan covers. And in part it was because, unlike most of the artists who would take a swing at the concept, Odetta was actually a major folk musician, one who had done much to inspire Dylan himself. But most of all, it was because the arrangements were excellent, featuring the guitar of Bruce Langhorne (who, of course, played on Dylan’s “Bringing It All Back Home” and numerous 1960s folk and folk-rock recordings) and, one presumes, the bass of frequent accompanist Bill Lee.

 
Langhorne, the character who inspired “Mr. Tambourine Man,” also plays some tambourine, particularly on “Baby, I’m in the Mood for You.” Although this is not a folk-rock album, as a result the arrangements have far more rhythm, swing, and imagination than most folk records of the era did.

The song choices are good, too, not only including familiar tunes like “The Times They Are A-Changin'” and “Mr. Tambourine Man,” but also some songs that hardly anyone has recorded. Indeed, Dylan never did put “Long Ago, Far Away” or “Long Time Gone” on any of his official releases, and didn’t release three of the other songs (“Baby, I’m in the Mood for You,” “Walkin’ Down the Line,” and “Tomorrow Is a Long Time”) in the 1960s.

All of this is not to overlook Odetta’s well-nuanced, bluesy vocal interpretations of the material, particularly on an extraordinary ten-minute version of “Mr. Tambourine Man.”
 
(192 kbps, front & back cover included)

Harry Johnson, or Harry J as he’s better known to fans around the world, was a prolific producer of top-notch reggae, and continues to run one of Jamaica’s most legendary studios. Born in Kingston, Jamaica, in 1945, after leaving school Johnson worked as an insurance salesman. Interest in music, however, led him to schedule time at Studio One in 1968 to record the vocal group the Beltones. The resulting single, “No More Heartaches,” was a hit, the first of many. Lloyd Robinson’s seminal — and much versioned — “Cuss Cuss” arrived the following year, as did a slew of sizzling instrumentals from Johnson’s studio band, the Harry J All-Stars. Their first, 1968’s “Smashville,” mashed up the sound systems, but it was the phenomenal success of “Liquidator,” a number that stormed into the Top Ten of the British chart in late 1969, that cemented his reputation. The British reggae label Trojan promptly handed Johnson his own imprint, Harry J, and a slew of the All-Stars’ instrumentals saw release. Although none of them repeated “Liquidator”‘s success, the songs went down a storm with the skinhead crowd. Of course, the instrumentals were actually backings of vocal cuts, spiffed up by soloing organs or brass, and those vocal numbers were exciting plenty of attention, too. During these early years, Johnson oversaw excellent singles from the Cables, Winston Jarrett & the Flames, Joe White, Bob Andy, and Marcia Griffiths. When the latter two artists joined forces in duet, Johnson’s fortune was made, with Bob & Marcia’s cover of “Young, Gifted and Black” sailing into the U.K. Top Five, with “Pied Piper” following it up the chart.

With the money amassed from those two hits, Johnson opened his own 16-track Kingston studio on Roosevelt Boulevard. A series of masterful albums emerged across the rest of the decade, all overseen by Johnson himself. The Heptones’ Book of Rules and Cool Rasta, I-Roy’s Crisus Time and Heart of a Lion, Zap Pow’s Revolution, the Melodians’ Sweet Sensation, Delroy Wilson’s Last Thing on My Mind, Dennis Brown’s So Long Rastafari, and Sylvan Morris’ Cultural Dub and Jah Jah Dub sets are just some of the highlights. The Wailers recorded their first four albums for Island at Harry J’s, with Burning Spear and Augustus Pablo among the many other top-drawer artists who set up shop there. However, it was a young emerging singer who returned Johnson to the U.K. pop chart at the end of the decade. Sheila Hylton first hit with “Breakfast in Bed,” and her follow-up, “Bed to Big Without You,” was even bigger. In the new decade, the producer was working mainly with DJs, overseeing excellent material from Charlie Chaplin, Uglyman, and Little John, with Computer a fine roundup of these more digitized-sounding productions. By then, Johnson’s interest in production was waning, or perhaps he just couldn’t find the time anymore, so busy was he looking after the studio, which remains a mainstay of the Kingston music industry.

Sylvan Morris & Harry J – Cultural Dub (1978, vinyl rip)
(192 kbps, front cover included)

From 1965, “Odetta Sings Dylan” was one of the first albums entirely devoted to Bob Dylan interpretations, and one of the best. In part that’s because the concept was still actually fresh then; in fact, other than an obscure 1964 album by Linda Mason, it was the very first album of Dylan covers. And in part it was because, unlike most of the artists who would take a swing at the concept, Odetta was actually a major folk musician, one who had done much to inspire Dylan himself. But most of all, it was because the arrangements were excellent, featuring the guitar of Bruce Langhorne (who, of course, played on Dylan’s “Bringing It All Back Home” and numerous 1960s folk and folk-rock recordings) and, one presumes, the bass of frequent accompanist Bill Lee.

 
Langhorne, the character who inspired “Mr. Tambourine Man,” also plays some tambourine, particularly on “Baby, I’m in the Mood for You.” Although this is not a folk-rock album, as a result the arrangements have far more rhythm, swing, and imagination than most folk records of the era did.

The song choices are good, too, not only including familiar tunes like “The Times They Are A-Changin'” and “Mr. Tambourine Man,” but also some songs that hardly anyone has recorded. Indeed, Dylan never did put “Long Ago, Far Away” or “Long Time Gone” on any of his official releases, and didn’t release three of the other songs (“Baby, I’m in the Mood for You,” “Walkin’ Down the Line,” and “Tomorrow Is a Long Time”) in the 1960s.

All of this is not to overlook Odetta’s well-nuanced, bluesy vocal interpretations of the material, particularly on an extraordinary ten-minute version of “Mr. Tambourine Man.”
 
(192 kbps, front & back cover included)

Harry Johnson, or Harry J as he’s better known to fans around the world, was a prolific producer of top-notch reggae, and continues to run one of Jamaica’s most legendary studios. Born in Kingston, Jamaica, in 1945, after leaving school Johnson worked as an insurance salesman. Interest in music, however, led him to schedule time at Studio One in 1968 to record the vocal group the Beltones. The resulting single, “No More Heartaches,” was a hit, the first of many. Lloyd Robinson’s seminal — and much versioned — “Cuss Cuss” arrived the following year, as did a slew of sizzling instrumentals from Johnson’s studio band, the Harry J All-Stars. Their first, 1968’s “Smashville,” mashed up the sound systems, but it was the phenomenal success of “Liquidator,” a number that stormed into the Top Ten of the British chart in late 1969, that cemented his reputation. The British reggae label Trojan promptly handed Johnson his own imprint, Harry J, and a slew of the All-Stars’ instrumentals saw release. Although none of them repeated “Liquidator”‘s success, the songs went down a storm with the skinhead crowd. Of course, the instrumentals were actually backings of vocal cuts, spiffed up by soloing organs or brass, and those vocal numbers were exciting plenty of attention, too. During these early years, Johnson oversaw excellent singles from the Cables, Winston Jarrett & the Flames, Joe White, Bob Andy, and Marcia Griffiths. When the latter two artists joined forces in duet, Johnson’s fortune was made, with Bob & Marcia’s cover of “Young, Gifted and Black” sailing into the U.K. Top Five, with “Pied Piper” following it up the chart.

With the money amassed from those two hits, Johnson opened his own 16-track Kingston studio on Roosevelt Boulevard. A series of masterful albums emerged across the rest of the decade, all overseen by Johnson himself. The Heptones’ Book of Rules and Cool Rasta, I-Roy’s Crisus Time and Heart of a Lion, Zap Pow’s Revolution, the Melodians’ Sweet Sensation, Delroy Wilson’s Last Thing on My Mind, Dennis Brown’s So Long Rastafari, and Sylvan Morris’ Cultural Dub and Jah Jah Dub sets are just some of the highlights. The Wailers recorded their first four albums for Island at Harry J’s, with Burning Spear and Augustus Pablo among the many other top-drawer artists who set up shop there. However, it was a young emerging singer who returned Johnson to the U.K. pop chart at the end of the decade. Sheila Hylton first hit with “Breakfast in Bed,” and her follow-up, “Bed to Big Without You,” was even bigger. In the new decade, the producer was working mainly with DJs, overseeing excellent material from Charlie Chaplin, Uglyman, and Little John, with Computer a fine roundup of these more digitized-sounding productions. By then, Johnson’s interest in production was waning, or perhaps he just couldn’t find the time anymore, so busy was he looking after the studio, which remains a mainstay of the Kingston music industry.

Sylvan Morris & Harry J – Cultural Dub (1978, vinyl rip)
(192 kbps, front cover included)

“God Bless The Grass”, released in 1966, is one of Pete Seeger’s strongest efforts for Columbia.

The focus of an environmental theme gives the quintessential troubadour rare inspiration. The songs create a statement about the beauty of nature and the foibles of petty politics. But the best thing about this work is it’s a beautiful record, with fine songs and fine singing, that also makes you want to plant a tree and clean up a filthy river. It appeals to what is best in us, and that’s pretty impressive.

Pete Seeger – God Bless The Grass (1966)

(192 kbps, front cover incuded)

“God Bless The Grass”, released in 1966, is one of Pete Seeger’s strongest efforts for Columbia.

The focus of an environmental theme gives the quintessential troubadour rare inspiration. The songs create a statement about the beauty of nature and the foibles of petty politics. But the best thing about this work is it’s a beautiful record, with fine songs and fine singing, that also makes you want to plant a tree and clean up a filthy river. It appeals to what is best in us, and that’s pretty impressive.

Pete Seeger – God Bless The Grass (1966)

(192 kbps, front cover incuded)

Rallying around the considerable talents of British producer/modern dub mastermind Adrian Sherwood, the New Age Steppers were not so much a band as they were a loosely knit aggregation of musicians from some of Britain’s best avant-garde post-punk/funk bands. There was Ari Up from the Slits, Mark Stewart from the Pop Group, and John Waddington and Bruce Smith from Rip, Rig & Panic. Along with the usual gang of suspects employed by Sherwood’s dynamically creative On-U Sound (George Oban, Style Scott, Eskimo Fox) studio, the sound ofthe New Age Steppers was that of cut-and-paste dub mixing, psychedelic swirls of found sounds, dissonant aural collages, sinewy reggae riddims, and odd, semi-tuneful vocals. Not for the faint of heart, the music created by Sherwood and his Steppers was among the most exhilarating and consistently challenging to come out of Britain during the early post-punk era. It wasn’t always accessible, but it has few peers in terms of ingenuity and daring. Highly recommended to those whose musical tastes occasionally reside on pop’s radical, experimental fringes.

The third and final New Age Steppers album (unless one considers the Creation Rebel dub sets), “Foundation Steppers” is dominated by Bim Sherman’s magnificent vocals, with the majority of his showcases then segueing into a lengthy dub interlude, to complete one of the finest “traditional” reggae albums in the On-U canon. Assuming, of course, that a traditional album would find space for “Five Dog Race,” an earthquake instrumental that Adrian Sherwood would return to on several occasions in the future. Lol Coxhill, Doctor Pablo, and Prince Hammer have all distinguished subsequent versions of this mighty rhythm. Another dub, the sparser “Mandarin,” is equally forthright, but the key moments here are the vocal tracks – the buoyant “Memories,” the confidential “Misplaced Love,” and the pushy “Vice of My Enemies” (reworking the old “Rebel Party” rhythm) all testify to Sherman’s mighty presence – to the point where the absence of the Steppers’ most familiar vocalist, Ari Up, is scarcely even noticed.

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Of course they never played live in Tokio, so this is another album by the german polit-rock-band Schröder Roadshow.

With their anarchistic slogans and subversiv statements, their great live shows and their sarcastic humor the were a very important part of the german polit rock subculture.

Enjoy it!

Tracklisting:
1. Fette Ratten
2. So ein Tag so wunderschön wie heute
3. Die Verfolgung und Ermordung des Rockundroll, dargestellt durch die Musikertruppe des Hospizes zu Vicht unter Anleitung des Herrn von Schroeder, Teil 1
4. Die Verfolgung und Ermordung des Rockundroll, Teil 2
5. Asche im Wind
6. Wer sich nicht wehrt, lebt verkehrt
7. Barbara
8. Annemie
9. In toten Einbahnstraßen
10. Schrei dich frei

Schröder Roadshow – Live in Tokyo (192 kbps)

This fine Crosby, Nash & Young bootleg from 1972 is also know as “Waterbrothers”. The recording comes from a radio broadcast.

Tracks:

Wooden Ships
I Used To Be A King
Lee Shore
Harvest*
Only Love Can Break Your Heart*
Southbound Train*
Almost Cut My Hair
Page 43
And So It Goes
Immigration Man
Heart Of Gold*
The Needle And The Damage Done*
Teach Your Children*
Military Madness > No More War*
Chicago*

*with Neil Young

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Over three months, Neil Young planned to visit 65 cities and stop for a break at the end of March. The “Time Fades Away”-tour would resume in August and shift to Europe in November, playing seven shows in the UK. Then back to America to play the final dates in New York, Boston, two shows in Ohio, Chicago and finally in Berkeley.

The Stray Gators lasted only till end March and were replaced by the Santa Monica Flyers for the rest of the tour. It is also well-documented that by March, Young’s voice was shot and he asked Linda Ronstadt, David Crosby and Graham Nash to join him to offer vocal support. This is also the famous tour where the band asked and received a hefty salary increase. “Harvest” had become a multi-million seller and the money was rolling in. Young was furious but paid them anyway. Perhaps he felt guilty about the way he had dismissed the late Danny Whitten, with $50 and a plane ticket. Whitten used the money, scored heroin and died of an overdose.

Young had figured correctly. He opened with an acoustic set, playing the ballads from “After The Goldrush” and “Harvest”, winning the audience completely and setting the stage for his electric set with the Stray Gators. By then, the crowd was waiting for rock ‘n’ roll and Young delivered some new songs (“Time Fades Away”, “Look Out Joe”, “New Mama”, “Don’t Be Denied”) with some of his well-loved rockers “The Loner”, “Southern Man” and “Cinnamon Girl”. Everybody went home happy. The critics praised his shows. The only unhappy man was Neil Young – at his band, at his voice and at the audience. According to David Downing’s “A Dreamer Of Pictures”, Young “found the audiences too loud during his acoustic set, too quiet in the electric portion of the show. He started screaming at them to wake up.” Young was obviously stressed out.

Everything came crashing down at the final show in Oakland, March 31. If you know the “Citizen Kane Junior Blues” show, you can listen to Young explain how it all ended:

“I was singing away – Southern Man, better keep your head, don’t forget what the good book said – and this guy in the front row, he was about as far away as you are from me, he jumped up and yelled, ‘Right on, right on, I love it!’ He felt really good, I could tell. And all of a sudden, you know, this black cop just walked up to him, you know, and it just was the scene the way he looked at him, and he just crunched him.”I just took my guitar out and put it on the ground and got in the car and went home…” Rock ‘n’ roll was not making him happy and Young felt disconnected from his fans. This unhappy period is documented on “Time Fades Away”, the album. No doubt it remains unreleased because Young wants to forget. It would take the successful 1976 tour with Crazy Horse to lift his spirits and set him in a new direction as a rock ‘n’ roll survivor.

Of all the shows from the ’73 tour, this is one of the best in sound quality. The vocals are upfront and Young sings well. There’s also the rare “Here We Are In The Years”. The drums and guitars are properly balanced and offer a solid backing to the singing. So is this a professional recording? This show was taken from a torrent site. According to the seeder, it was copied from a vinyl bootleg, “The 1973 Tour”, re-pitched and remastered. The sound is excellentfor the acoustic portion but is a bit muddy during the electric set. You can hear the clicks and pops here. Quite hissy at loud volumes. Never officially released.
– Professor Red, bigozine2.com

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