I know this is going to sound sacrilegious in some circles, but I was never that wild about The Ramones (Hackamore Brick's 1970 One Kiss Leads to Another had more imagination for me than Rocket to Russia). But, having said that, there are a couple of Ramones tracks that found their way onto my playlist. One was "She Talks to Rainbows" from their 1995 album, ¡Adios Amigos!. This number seems to harken back to the psychedelic period of the Sixties, except for its punk attitude. If this song had been sung in the Sixties, the lady who talks to trees rather than her lover would have been celebrated for having a higher consciousness. The Ramones, to their eternal credit, are left baffled and blue.
When Rod Stewart and Ronnie Wood abandoned Jeff Beck for the Small Faces, they brought a tougher sound to a group which had in previous years been tied to psychedelic pop ("Itchycoo Park," "Ogden's Nut Gone Flake") with vocalist Steve Marriott at the helm. Their debut album with Stewart and Wood, First Step (1970), was also their best. They brought an explosive passion to Dylan's "Wicked Messenger," resurrected the spirit of Sam Cooke in "Devotion," Ronnie Lane's whimsical spiritualism also found a perfect home in the British folk roots of "Stone," and Ron Wood demonstrated just how imaginative a guitarist he was revisiting "Plynth (Water Down the Drain)," a song he and Stewart recorded on their last outing with Jeff Beck (Beck-Ola).
Called "Around the Plynth (Water Down the Drain)" here, Wood's slide guitar panning from right to left like a bat scooting across a belfry, makes Beck's work on the original sound pedestrian. Stewart also improves on his performance from the original, riding the streaking guitar lines like a surfer steadying a wave, and turning this sea shanty into a breathless exercise in fear and trembling. If Ron Wood's guitar playing with the Stones seems only to compliment Keith Richards' style, "Around the Plynth" serves to remind you that there are more tools in Ron Wood's tool bag than he now cares to reveal. As for Stewart, this voice and its urgency vacated the building a long time ago.
Paul Mazursky (photo by Petr Novák) |
On their 1991 debut album, Neopolitan, the Vancouver band The Odds gave us an enduringly haunting song about losing your virginity that isn't tender and treacly, but tinged instead with mystery and anticipation. Beginning quietly out of the mix, lead singer Steven Drake tells the tale of an older woman who seduces him the night he hears on television that Elvis Presley dies. While the two events may not seem remotely related, the idea of a middle-aged woman on this night invoking early yearnings of her sexual awakening, perhaps dating back to Elvis's ascent, while introducing a young man to his own, must have made the King smile.
The Body Politic.
Poe Boy Blues.
Never one lazy about trying new ways of recording and performing, Neil Young has put together a new album of old songs, A Letter Home, produced in a refurbished 1947 Voice-O-Graph recording booth. With lo-fi production by Jack White, Young creates his own Time Out of Mind experience by going back to the music that was part of his formative years. Here he faithfully and reverently performs Bert Jansch's 1965 "Needle of Death," an anti-drug song that contains of the same topical blatancy of Young's own later "The Needle and the Damage Done." But if you listen closely to the melody, you'll hear the skeleton key to his 1974 epic "Ambulance Blues" (from On the Beach), a song whose topicality – the folk era, the music haunts of Toronto, Nixon, Watergate and Patty Hearst – is transcended by Young collapsing the seductive allure of nostalgia into the simple phrase: "There's nothing like a friend who tells you that you're just pissing in the wind."
For Akira Kurosawa.
Like his pal and colleague, Charles Ives, the early 20th Century composer Carl Ruggles heard the American spirit not as something harmonious, but as a rugged and discordant state of mind. However, in his last composition, "Exaltation," in 1958, this gorgeous tribute to his late wife took him into a quieter and contemplative dissonance.
Dedicated to Bernard Heidsieck.
While my introduction to the blues came through many of the British bands I heard as a boy, it wasn't long before I sought out the sources and happily gorged on Robert Johnson, Skip James, Muddy Waters, Howlin' Wolf, Koko Taylor and Sonny Boy Williamson. I was introduced to my favourite blues performer, however, from stumbling one night onto the late Les Blank's documentary The Blues According to Lightnin' Hopkins (1970) on television when I was a teenager. Besides being spellbound by the rhythmic cadences in Hopkins' talking style of performing, the phrases picked out in his guitar playing were as beautifully expressive as his speech. Here he sings "Mister Charlie," backed up on harp by Sonny Terry, in an outtake from Blank's documentary where Hopkins keeps the oral tradition in the music both alive and vital with humour and poignancy.
While my introduction to the blues came through many of the British bands I heard as a boy, it wasn't long before I sought out the sources and happily gorged on Robert Johnson, Skip James, Muddy Waters, Howlin' Wolf, Koko Taylor and Sonny Boy Williamson. I was introduced to my favourite blues performer, however, from stumbling one night onto the late Les Blank's documentary The Blues According to Lightnin' Hopkins (1970) on television when I was a teenager. Besides being spellbound by the rhythmic cadences in Hopkins' talking style of performing, the phrases picked out in his guitar playing were as beautifully expressive as his speech. Here he sings "Mister Charlie," backed up on harp by Sonny Terry, in an outtake from Blank's documentary where Hopkins keeps the oral tradition in the music both alive and vital with humour and poignancy.
Hear my Mail a Comin'.
Winter 2014 (for Edvard Munch).
When I'm 64.
– Kevin Courrier is a freelance writer/broadcaster, film critic and author (Dangerous Kitchen: The Subversive World of Zappa, Randy Newman's American Dreams, 33 1/3 Captain Beefheart's Trout Mask Replica, Artificial Paradise: The Dark Side of The Beatles Utopian Dream). Courrier teaches part-time film courses to seniors through the LIFE Institute at Ryerson University in Toronto and other venues. His forthcoming book is Reflections in the Hall of Mirrors: American Movies and the Politics of Idealism.
this is such a great idea kevin..most folk` facebook pages are pretty much the same and you have figured out how to expand upon it and create something viable.cheers!
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I can imagine why Muddy Waters hated the record at the time, though maybe he just hated that he had to play with these guy in order to sell records, but I think it's a lot of fun to listen to now. Psychedelic blues. Did you ever hear his tune about how Muddy Waters "put the 'unk into the Funk? It's not exactly straight blues, almost a novelty but I love it myself. Anyway I'm listening to the whole record now and it's a hoot. What about the other similar records of the time? Didn't Howlin Wolf also do one? I have Hooker n Heat and I think it basically works because Canned Heat was a good choice for Hooker. What say you?
ReplyDeleteKevin responds: It never surprised me that Chuck D of Public Enemy cited Electric Mud as one of his formative albums given its pure funkiness. I think when Muddy, Hooker and Wolf had to hook up with these white psychedelic blues groups, it worked better when those records were a fusion of pop and blues styles because both sides kept their true identities. The tension between their radically different styles also made for fascinating listening even when the records tanked. But when The Yardbirds tried to do the straight blues alongside Sonny Boy Williamson, the British band (which became much better when they later embraced pop) never sounded more fake.
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