Before the Flood

50 years ago, 20 June 1974, Bob Dylan and The Band released their double live album Before the Flood, peaking at number 3 on the U.S. Billboard 200 and going Platinum in the U.S. In addition to being Dylan’s first live album, the music was a compilation of Dylan’s greatest hits.

Stephen Thomas Erlewine of All Music comments “Dylan reworks, rearranges, reinterprets these songs in ways that are still disarming, years after its initial release. He could only have performed interpretations this radical with a group as sympathetic, knowing of his traits as the band, whose own recordings here are respites from the storm. And this is a storm — the sound of a great rocker, surprising his band and audience by tearing through his greatest songs in a manner that might not be comforting, but it guarantees it to be one of the best live albums of its time. Ever, maybe.”

Tom Nolan with Rolling Stone notes that “Throughout Bob Dylan‘s performances on this in-concert album there is evident an effort to match the material — nearly all from much earlier in his career — with a suitable style of delivery, a vocal stance which can express in a later year the brilliant and sometimes malevolent energy contained by these pieces when they were first created.”

The album was high energy, something that Dylan and the Band were not known for, but it brought a side to their music that, up till then, no one had experienced.

Source:  All Music. The Rolling Stone Album Guide. Graphic: Album Cover Before the Flood, copyright Columbia Records.

Beck-Ola

This week in June of 1969 Jeff Beck released his second studio album: “Beck-Ola”, and the first album credited to the Jeff Beck Group.  The album peaked on the Billboard 200 at number 15 and is considered a major influence on the future of hard rock and heavy metal.

According to JeffBeck.com the album “cemented the Jeff Beck Group’s place in rock history as one of the prime architects of heavy metal. “It is what it is,” Beck said, recalling the album fondly, “just a snapshot of the situation at the time. The talent was there. We were pioneering heavy rock, big time.”

The album cover is a reproduction of Rene Magritte’s 1958 version of “The Listening Room”.  The apple to Magritte was a symbol for the tension between hidden and visible. Why this painting was chosen for the album remains something of a mystery, but it may just be an expression of adding something new and hidden, heavy metal, to something old and visible, pop and early rock.

The members of the Jeff Beck Group for this album included Beck, Ronny Wood, Rod Stewert, Nicky Hopkins, and Tony Newman, a super group of talent by any measure.

Source: JeffBeck.com. Illustrated Encyclopedia of Rock, 1977. Rene Magritte Organization. Graphic: Beck-Ola Album cover, Epic Records, 1969.

Iron Butterfly’s In-A-Gadda-Da-Vida

This week in 1968, San Diego psychedelic, hard rock band, Iron Butterfly released their second album, “In-A-Gadda-Da-Vida” which sold a record, at the time, 8 million copies in its first year and a reputed 30 million, to date, worldwide. The song was voted the 24th greatest hard rock song of all time by VH1 in 2009 and also contained the 10th greatest drum solo of all time, as voted WatchMojo.

“In-A-Gadda-Da-Vida” was planned as a love song to Adam and Eve tentatively titled “In the Garden of Eden” but when vocalist and song writer Doug Ingle, sang the song after drinking a whole freaking gallon of Red Mountain wine, he slurred the words so badly that drummer, Ron Bushy, transcribing the lyrics, mis-interpreted “In the Garden of Eden” as what became one of the great rock songs, ever.

In the 1995 episode “The Simpsons – Bart Sells His Soul”, Bart pranks his church into singing “In-A-Gadda-Da-Vida” for the opening hymn which he labeled as “In the Garden of Eden” by I. Ron Butterfly in the sheet music handout.

Source: Simpson Wiki. Watch Mojo. Graphic: Album cover, Atco Records.

The White Album

The Beatle’s most innovative album originally titled The Beatles was released 55 years ago, plus a few months, in November of 1968. It was the group’s only double album containing 30 new tracks, mostly written between February and April of 1968. The album cover was released in pure white with the simple and only words The Beatles stamped on the front, causing it to be known forever more as the White Album.

The album followed Sgt Pepper, and Ringo remarks that recording the White Album calmed the seas, “Sgt Pepper did its thing, it was the album of the decade – of the century maybe. It was very innovative. Great songs, glad I was on it. But the White Album…We ended up being more of a band again and that’s what I always love, I love being in a band.”

The album went number 1 on the UK charts for eight weeks and stayed in the charts for 22 weeks. In the US it ran at number 1 for 9 weeks and stayed in the charts for an astounding 65 weeks. The 2018 50th anniversary album reissue entered the Billboard 200 at number 6. None of the 30 tracks from the original album were issued in single format. The songs covered a broad range of genres including rock, pop, folk, country rock, blues, Ska, proto-metal, and avant-garde.

Source: Apple Corp, thebeatles.com. Genius.com. Graphic: Cover of the White Album, by Beat 768, 2010, Public Domain.

The Beatles’ Get Back

Get Back was released as a single 55 years ago in April of 1969 and as the final track on the album Let It Be in May of the following year. The song was recorded by The Beatles and Billy Preston at the band’s London Apple Studios.

Preston’s relationship with The Beatles goes back to 1962 when George Harrison met him while he was touring with Little Richard, and they became friends. George Harrison, after catching Presten at a Ray Charles show in London, invited him to play the electric piano for the recording of Get Back.

Preston, while in the studio, is credited with reducing the tension that was tearing the group apart, allowing them to finish what was to be the final Beatles’ album. His presence in the studio was so appreciated that he was given credit for the song, the first and last time The Beatles ever shared that honor.

Get Back, reached number one in the UK, the U.S., and a least 7 other countries. The song was the first single released in true stereo by the Beatles in the U.S.

Jojo was a man who thought he was a loner
But he knew it couldn’t last
Jojo left his home in Tucson, Arizona
For some California grass

Source: The Beatles. Graphic: Sleave for UK Reissue of Get Back, Apple Corps, 1982.

The House of the Rising Sun

The Animals, an English rock band, released the traditional folk song: The House of the Rising Sun, 60 years ago to great commercial success. It’s a ballad as a cautionary tale about living a life in New Orleans on the wrong side of right. The song possibly goes back to, in one version or another, England in the 1600s.

Alan Price, founding member and keyboardist of The Animals arranged the folk song with a bluesy rock twist. The band recorded the song in May of 1964 and released it as a single the following month.

The song attained the number 1 position on the English and U.S. charts and has been ranked by the Rolling Stone magazine and RIAA as one of the best songs of the 20th century. Along with The Beatles and Peter & Gordon, The Animals were part of the British Invasion of 64 that controlled the top chart positions in the U.S. for that year.

Source: All Music. Song Facts. Wikipedia. Graphic is the MGM cover.

461 Ocean Boulevard

50 years ago, in 1974 Eric Clapton released his second solo album, the hugely successful 461 Ocean Boulevard. It topped the Billboard 200 weekly chart in the USA and reached the top ten in several other countries. It placed number 88 in the Billboard 200 year-end chart and was certified Platinum selling more than two million copies.

The album’s ten tracks run the gambit from hard rock to pop to blues-rock containing 3 new Clapton songs including the theme continuation of Derek & the Dominos, Keep on Growing: Let it Grow. The album’s number one hit, Bob Marley’s: I Shot the Sheriff was released as a single slightly before the album came out in July of 74.  Johnny Otis’s Willie and the Hand Jive, another hit from the album, was released as a single in October of 74.

The album was produced by the legendary Atlantic Records recording engineer, Tom Dowd who also produced the 1970 release of Derek & the Dominos album: Layla and Other Assorted Love Songs.

The album’s title: 461 Ocean Boulevard was the address of the house in Golden Beach, Florida where Clapton and the band stayed in will recording the album at Criteria Studios in Miami.

Source: All Music. Classic Rock Review.

Hey Joe

It’s that time of the year when guitarists and Jimi Hendrix fans everywhere trek to Poland for the annual “Thanks Jimi Festival”; a yearly guitar freakout where thousands from Poland and elsewhere gather to try and set a record for number of people playing Jimi Hendrix’s “Hey Joe” simultaneously.

The gig’s history goes back to a Blues Express workshop in 1997 where Leszek Cichonski, a Polish blues guitarist, found himself on stage with 17 other guitarists playing “Hey Joe” thus providing the incentive to answer the theological question of how many guitarists can fit into Wroclaw, Poland’s Main Market Square on the first day in May every year. Below is a list of the records, which, apparently, always need to be broken because the theological limit hasn’t been reached yet.

  • In 2003 “Hey Joe” was played by 588 guitarists.
  • In 2004 the number expanded to 916.
  • In 2005 it went up to 1201.
  • In 2006, 1581.
  • In 2012, 7273. The musicians were led by Jimi Hendrix’s brother, Leon Hendrix.
  • In 2019, 7423.
  • In 2020, because of Fauci cruelty and madness, the event was held online, and 7998 guitarists strummed and boomed out the five chords of “Hey Joe”.
  • In 2023, 7967 guitarists played.

The “Thanks Jimi Festival” will go live again for another record on 1 May 2024.  At this year’s festival thousands will join in and play 10 songs:

  1. Hey Joe by Jimi Hendrix, released as a single in 1966
  2. Foxy Lady by Jimi Hendrix, released on the album “Are You Experienced? in 1967
  3. Voodoo Child by Jimi Hendrix, released on the album “Electric Ladyland” in 1968
  4. Smoke on the Water by Deep Purple, released on the DP album “Machine Head” in 1972. Added to the festival lineup in 2009. The song was written in December 1971. Jimi died on 18 September 1970
  5. Little Wing by Jimi Hendrix, released on the album “Axis: Bold as Love” in 1967
  6. Wild Thing by the Troggs, released in 1966. Jimi played this song live at the Monterey International Pop Festival in 1967 aka The Summer of Love
  7. Red House Blues by Jimi Hendrix, released on the British version of “Are You Experience” in 1967
  8. Thanks Jimmi, by Leszek Cichonski
  9. Kiedy byłem małym chłopcem (When I was a little boy), Composition by Tadeusz Nalepa
  10. Like a Rolling Stone, by Bob Dylan. This song was usually performed at Hendrix’s live shows

Long live Jimi.

Source: Everything you need to know about the Guitar World Record (https://heyjoe.pl/summary/). Photo of Wroclaw, Poland’s Main Market Square during the “Thanks Jimi Festival.” Photo of Hendrix in Sweden, 1967. Public domain.

Clap for the Wolfman

Robert “Bob” Weston Smith, born in New York in 1938 recreated himself as Wolfman Jack while working as a DJ at a country music radio station in Shreveport Louisianna in 1962.

Looking for something different, where he could make big money, he headed to Mexico to broadcast on the 250,000-watt monster: XERF. The station was so strong that it could reach most of the continental U.S.

He initially went down to Mexico to work as a DJ but when he arrived, allegedly, he found that the radio station was in receivership, and he eventually gained control. In 1970 the Mexican government took control of XERF, and the Wolfman was out of a job.

In 1972 he bounced back co-hosting NBC’s late night music series; “The Midnight Special.” In 1973 George Lucas, a fan of his radio programs, offered him a part, as himself, in the hit classic film “American Graffiti.” Shortly after the success of the film, with his fame in the stratosphere, he began to distribute “The Wolfman Jack Radio Show”, eventually reaching over 2000 stations in 53 countries. He appeared in 87 TV shows and films and was the subject of at least five records including the “The Guess Who’s-Clap for the Wolfman.

On July 1, 1995, Wolfman Jack died of a heart attack at his home in Belvidere, North Carolina, but “The Wolfman Jack Radio Show” is still on the air, every night, somewhere in the world.

Source: https://bighits981.com/on-air/wolfman-jack

Immediate Family

Theaters: 15 December 2023

Streaming: 15 December 2023

Runtime:  102 minutes

Genre:  Documentary-Music-Rock and Pop

els:  9.0/10

IMDB:  8.5/10

Rotten Tomatoes Critics:  100/100

Rotten Tomatoes Audience:  92/100

Metacritic Metascore:  75/100

Metacritic User Score:  8.5/10

Awards: Tons

Directed by: Denny Tedesco (Son of 1960s session musician Tommy Tedesco)

Music by:  Everyone

Cast: James Taylor, Carole King, David Crosby, Keith Richards, Linda Ronstadt, Jackson Browne, Don Henley, Stevie Nicks, Warren Zevon, Phil Collins, Lyle Lovett, Steve Jordan, Neil Young, plus the band

Film Locations:  USA

Budget:  –

Worldwide Box Office:  $66,100

Some of the greatest rock and pop session and touring musicians ever come together after 50 years of playing for others to play as family. The Immediate Family is Danny Kortchmar on guitar and vocals, Russ Kunkel on drums, Steve Postell on guitar and vocals, Leland Sklar on bass, and Waddy Wachtel on guitar and vocals.

This documentary follows the musicians from their beginnings in the 1970s as studio musicians that decided to take their talent on the road. In the past the studio guys backed the stars and helped them get their music to the market and that was it. Studio guys didn’t go on the road because when they got back someone else would have taken their job. Going on tour is something session musicians just didn’t do until Danny, Russ, Steve, Leland, and Waddy came along. They were so good that the artists asked for them and the studios went out and brought them in.

They have just released their second studio album, Skin In the Game, on 16 February 2024 through Quarto Valley Records. Skin in the Game weighs in with 14 tracks, 13 originals plus a cover by the Sparks’: “The Toughest Girl in Town”. It is a wonderful addition to their first eponymous named album/EP.

If you followed rock and pop through the seventies and onward you heard these guys play, you just may not have known who they were; until now.