Monday, July 31, 2017

Genesis - "Fly on a Windshield / The Carpet Crawlers" Live (1976)


Hello Friends,

Here's a live clip of a Gabriel-less Genesis performing a couple of songs from The Lamb Lies Down on Broadway.

By 1976, Phil Collins took over lead vocal duties for the band while still playing drums.

On this tour, they recruited none other than Bill Bruford as a second drummer to back up Collins when he stepped out from behind the set.

They're definitely NOT the same band without Gabriel, but (a) they were still REALLY good, (b) there's not a lot of good quality footage of the band with Gabriel on TLLDOB tour and (c) Peter Gabriel really never did that many Genesis songs on any of his solo tours!

Enjoy!

Saturday, July 29, 2017

Prog Rock Saturday: The Lamb Lies Down On Broadway

Genesis - "The Lamb Lies Down On Broadway" (1974) - Atco

Hello Friends,

We've got a true prog-rock classic on the turntable tonight.

Genesis's 1974 double LP of The Lamb Lies Down on Broadway arguably captures one of the great bands of the seventies at their absolute apex.

The process of writing, recording and touring for the record would nearly break the band and, in fact, would cause frontman Peter Gabriel to depart once the "Lamb" tour commenced.  Out, Angel, Out.

This is a crazed, bombastic, overly-ambitious affair that on paper probably shouldn't work at all.  However, it was an important album of the era and holds up today as a classic. Actually, we think this album even gets better listening to it over the years.  Revisiting it from time-to-time is like checking in on an old friend: familiar, yet distant.

Every time we listen to this record, we hear something we've never realized was there before!

There's a storyline going through the album, which to be honest, we don't really understand or care too much about.  Something about a Puerto Rican hoodlum, Rael, who while spray painting graffiti on some building in downtown New York stops and witnesses a literal lamb lying down in the middle of Broadway.  Some sort of portal opens up and Rael ends up in some underground/alternate world trying to save his brother, John.   Most of the songs vaguely describe the events, creatures and characters witnesses during Rael's "descent" and all winds up good(?) when Rael finally saves his brother from drowning and realizes that, the whole time, he and his brother were the same person.  Upon this sudden realization, Rael/John's spirit/consciousness melts away and he becomes part of his surroundings.

Definitely weird.  Whitman-esque.  Lynchian to boot. And there's more than a few hints that it might be Gabriel trying to work out some of his one schizophrenic tendencies.

We try not to get too bogged down in the specifics of the concept.  The star of the record is without a doubt Gabriel's vocals.

As with most of Gabriel-era Genesis, he can simultaneously emote whimsy, confidence, intelligence, slyness, cleverness, while all the time sounding somehow extremely vulnerable, human and unsure.  Like Ziggy Stardust (or a Replicant), he's like an alien to this world that appears to be more human than human.  Its like he's in on some mastermind "in joke" that we're all struggling to understand, but the twist is that he's as clueless and ignorant as the rest of us!

He's a Messiah & Everyman.  A prophet & popstar.  A headbanger and a folk singer.  

The music is nothing to sneer at either.  Mike Rutherford, Phil Collins, Tony Banks and Steve Hackett provide Gabriel with an equally as weird, bombastic and ambitious canvas to work with musically.  (Even Brian Eno makes an appearance with some vocal treatments!)  Throughout the 22 songs, the band achieves a near perfect balance between the soft & sublime and the over-the-top, hard-edged cacophony.  

For all its overt weirdness and avant-garde concepts, there's actually a good number of songs that you can really pound your fists to.  The opening title track, "Cuckoo Cocoon", "The Grand Parade of Lifeless Packaging" & "Carpet Crawlers" could all have been songs on Cheap Trick, Wire or Guided by Voices records.  "Counting Out Time" is one of the power poppiest songs of the mid-70's.

The album's momentous closing track, "It", teeters very closely to a dance-disco track but actually wouldn't sound entirely out of place on a later period Flaming Lips record.  

Like any great, important piece of music (or work of art) those who create it do so and leave it up to us, the audience, the fans, to make heads or tails of things.  They provide an outline, a road map, but the themes and lessons are up for personal interpretation. Is this a parable of a man trying to navigate his way through the music industry?  Is it about a struggle with drug-addiction?  A religious experience? An ode to America, more specifically, New York City in the 1970's? Is it ultimately a tale about sexual frustration? Schizophrenia? Madness?  Is it a lot of stream-of-consciousness nonsense?  A combination of all of these things?  

(Personally, I always sort of pictured this punk kid doing some graffiti art when he's literally distracted by a small lamb crossing busy Broadway.  Mesmerized, and thinking he's imagining it, he goes to approach the lying lamb street and BOOM he's run over by a passing taxi!  The rest of the album is the character's spiritual journey through Hades, Heaven or wherever.)

Whatever the consensus, at the end of the day, The Lamb Lies Down on Broadway is a rock & roll record.  Sure, it appears to be something that's much bigger than the sum of its parts, but its the dozens of amazing hooks throughout the record that keep us coming back for more and more!

'Cos its only knock & knowall, but I like it...

RATING: 5 carpet crawlers heed their callers out of 5


Monday, July 24, 2017

Three Dog Night - "Liar" (1970)



Still holds up.

Pretty amazing song featuring Danny Hutton on lead vocals.

Enjoy!

Saturday, July 22, 2017

Naturally...


Three Dog Night - "Naturally" (1970) - Dunhill


Hello Friends,

Naturally is Three Dog Night's fifth record.  Not a great record, but certainly not terrible.

For the most part definitely sounds dated and, at its worst, sounds like a bunch of white guys trying to sound soulful.

Except for the side one instrumental, "Fire Eater" the album is comprised completely of cover songs.  (Actually, we believe all of this band's hits were either cover songs or written by non-band members.  The band became a sort of proving grounds for lots of burgeoning songwriters of the era-- including Bernie Taupin, Leo Sayer, Harry Nilsson, Paul Williams, Laura Nyro, etc.)

The Hoyt Axton-penned, "Joy to the World" was obviously the big hit from this record, but our album winner is without a doubt their take on the Russ Ballard song, "Liar"-- a rollicking, bad ass, sort of sleazy early 70's anthem.

This song is amazing and heads-and-shoulders beyond anything else on the LP.  (With covers of Spooky Tooth's "I've Got Enough Heartache" and Free's creepy "I'll Be Creeping" a distant second and third.)

And yes, friends, that's the same Russ Ballard who wrote the songs "New York Groove" & "God Gave Rock & Roll To You"!

Fun Fact: Hey kids, a three-dog night is an expression that originated in the Australian outback referring the to the temperature at night.  A one dog night is cool.  A two dog night is cold.  A three dog night is fucking freezing and you will therefore need three dogs to sleep in the tent with you.  Crikey!

RATING: 3.5 fishes in the deep blue see out of 5

Tuesday, July 18, 2017

Roger Waters - "Wait for Her" (2017)



Hello Friends,

Sure ol' Rog still seems like a huge prick, but his newest record, "Is This The Life We Really Want" seems to be pretty darned good!

Spoiler Alert: He doesn't seem to be a fan of Donald Trump. Yeesh!

Enjoy!

Sunday, July 16, 2017

Roger Miller - "Oo-De-Lally" (1973)



Feeling nostalgic on this Summer afternoon.

Listen to this song enough times, friends, and its bound to drive you nuts.

Kind of like Mairzy Doats.

Friday, July 14, 2017

Linda Ronstadt - "Willin" (1977)


Happy Friday Friends,

Here's Linda Ronstadt covering one of our favorite Lowell George/Little Feat tunes, "Willin'"

Enjoy!

Thursday, July 13, 2017

Simple Dreams

Linda Ronstadt - "Simple Dreams" (1977) - Asylum Records

Hello Friends,

Simple Dreams is a pretty good name for this, Linda Ronstadt's eighth record, because we fell asleep three times while listening to it!

Actually, we're being kind of hard on the record, as it was probably the bottle of bourbon we just polished off that made us so tired, but its definitely a mellow 70's affair falling somewhere between saccharine soft rock and very middle-of-the-road country rock.

This is music for white folks, friends.

Things get started with her take on Buddy Holly's "It's So Easy", which along with her Roy Orbison-cover of "Blue Bayou" were two huge hits for her.  There's also a hot white girl take on the Rolling Stones' classic, "Tumbling Dice", and a really nice rootsy country song "I Never Will Marry" which features Dolly Parton on background vocals. 

By far the album's highlights are the two Warren Zevon covers, "Poor Poor Pitiful Me" and the junkie love song, "Carmelita".  The latter is no G.G. Allin, but she does a solid version. 

Its worth mentioning that this album was the top-selling album of Ronstadt's career.  It also has the unique distinction of being the record that unseated Fleetwood Mac's massive success, "Rumours" from the top of the charts.

RATING: 3.5 strung out on heroin on the outskirts of town out of 5 





Tuesday, July 11, 2017

Saturday, July 8, 2017

Prog Rock Saturday: Szintetizátor-Varázs

Mihaly Tamas - "Szintetizátor-Varázs" (1983) - Start


Hello barátok,

Hungarian synth wizard, Mihaly Tamas, goes full Clockwork Orange on this Import LP from 1983. (Thanks Zsolti!)

Side One is a selection of pieces by Liszt and Side Two is dedicated to pieces by Wagner.

Like a cross between Wendy Carlos & Giorgio Moroder, its proggy and weird with hints of pop and disco. A very fun listen though probably not the best record to put on if you're trying to impress the ladies on a dark & stormy Saturday night. (my bad!)

Not much is known about Mihaly here in the States (we do know he was in an early 80's Hungarian new wave band called "Omega"), but we'd definitely be down to hear some more of his stuff especially if he's done any soundtrack work.

RATING: 4 disappointing sets of blue balls on a Saturday night out of 5

Friday, July 7, 2017

Marmalade - "Reflections of my Life" (1969)



Happy Friday Friends!
Rainy & mucky today!  Here's a pretty depressing song to end your work week on!

From Glasgow's psychedelic-pop masters, The Marmalade.

Enjoy!

Saturday, July 1, 2017

Right in the Nuts

Aerosmith - "Night in the Ruts" (1979) - Columbia Records

Hello Friends,

An oft-overlooked Aerosmith record from '79 when the band was strung out on pretty much anything and everything.  Definitely not as coked-out sounding as their 1977 album, Draw the Line, but definitely not capturing a band at the height of their rock & roll powers.  The band basically fell apart in the middle of recording Night in the Ruts with their next LP, A Rock and A Hard Place, missing both Joe Perry and Brad Whitford.

That being said, Ruts isn't all that bad.  In fact, it has a handful gems that could have been Aerosmith greatest hits, including the hard-rocking opening track, the autobiographical "No Surprize", and the closing track, "Mia"-- a haunting ballad not too far removed from the great "Seasons of Wither" from 1974's Get Your Wings.  "Three Mile Smile" and "Chiquita" are pretty great rockers too.  Not big fans of the album's lone single, "Remember (Walking In the Sand)" or even their cover of an obscure Yardbyrds' tune, "Think About It".

Musically, the album holds up pretty well, its just that for the most part a lot of the songs sound as if they're being mailed in.  (This is also the first album since their debut record without longtime producer, Jack Douglas, so there's that to consider as well.)

We like this record because it does a good job of capturing one of the great acts of the sleazy 70's coming apart at the seams and who doesn't love a good trainwreck?  Still I'd take average-sounding late 70's Aerosmith over anything they've done in the decades to follow.  And you can quote me on that*!

RATING: 3.5 Coney Island Whitefish out of 5


(* Please don't quote me on that!)