The Beatles

Highly Appreciated

THE BEATLES
 
 
The Beatles  were an English rock band that formed in Liverpool in 1960.  With members John Lennon, Paul McCartney, George Harrison and Ringo Starr, they became widely regarded as the greatest and most influential act of the rock era.  Rooted in skiffle, beat and 1950’s rock and roll, the Beatles later experimented with several genres, ranging from pop ballads and Indian music to psychedelic and hard rock, often incorporating classical elements in innovative ways.  In the early 1960’s, their enormous popularity first emerged as “Beatlemania”, but as the group’s music grew in sophistication, led by primary songwriters Lennon and McCartney, they came to be perceived as an embodiment of the ideals shared by the era’s sociocultural revolutions.  (More from Wikipedia)
 
  
Bandleader Dann Klawon of the Choir knew a girl who had been to England in 1963 and picked up some of the early Beatles singles and one of their albums.  Like most of the American garage bands, they were influenced by the British Invasion; but for them, it hadn’t even arrived here yet.
 
(February 2010)
 
*       *       *
 
Bang was proud to have released a total of three albums on the Beatles’ label, Capitol Records (a fourth, previously unreleased album that predated their first album was later released when “two-fer” CD’s came out in 2004); and the first album had some charting success. 
 
(March 2010) 
 
*       *       *
 
Greg Shaw put his faith in what he called “power-pop”:  teenage pop music in the standard 3-minute format but backed up with a hard-edged punk rock aesthetic.  Pete Townshend coined the term power pop in a 1967 interview to describe the music that his band the Who and Small Faces played; many of the Beatles’ mid-period singles are also in that style, such as “Paperback Writer” and “Day Tripper”.  Among American bands, “Time Won’t Let Me” by the Outsiders and “Go All the Way” by the Raspberries are early power-pop hit songs.
 
(April 2010)
 
*       *       *
 
Four of the five songs on Side 1 of the Queen Anne’s Lace album are covers, and familiar ones at that:  “The Fool on the Hill” opens the album and is a fine if spare rendition of the Beatles song that was almost lost among the torrent of creativity that was the Magical Mystery Tour album of 1967 – besides the songs from the ill-fated Beatles TV movie of the same name, Magical Mystery Toursome of the band’s best singles were also included:  “Strawberry Fields Forever”, “Hello Goodbye”, “All You Need is Love”, and others.  It probably would have had a shot at being a successful single, except that “The Fool on the Hill” had already been a Top 5 hit in 1968 for Sergio Mendes and Brasil ’66 (a self-defeating band name that had already been renamed once from Brasil ’65).  The sole original song on the first side, “No Worry Tour” appears almost to have been named after the title of the Beatles album.
 
(August 2010)
 
*       *       *
 
If the dates on Nuggets: Original Artyfacts from the First Psychedelic Era, 1965-1968 strike you odd – thinking, wait a minute, the BeatlesSgt. Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band didn’t come out until the summer of 1967 – well, that is true; but psychedelia had been around a long time before that mainstream hit album.  
 
(January 2011)
 
*       *       * 
 
Many other artists in the 1960’s also took a whack at psychedelia.  Kenny Rogers’ first band the First Edition had an early hit song with “Just Dropped in (to See What Condition My Condition was In)”; though the lyrics kind of miss the boat, they are still charmingly corny.  “Hurdy Gurdy Man” is one of many great psychedelic songs Donovan came up with.  The Beatles had Sgt. Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band, and the Rolling Stones had Their Satanic Majesties’ Request.  Even Motown got into the act:  The Supremes hit with “Reflections”, while the Temptations had several psychedelic songs – “Psychedelic Shack”, “Ball of Confusion (That’s What the World is Today)”, “Runaway Child, Runnin’ Wild”, and others.  Many were on their 1970 album Psychedelic Shack; one of the biggest hits by the B-52’s, “Love Shack” was in part an homage to this record.
 
(March 2011)
 
*       *       *
 
Carl Perkins was beginning to slip into obscurity and was in danger of being known only as the songwriter and original performer of one of Elvis’s signature songs, “Blue Suede Shoes” (though I prefer Carl’s version of “Blue Suede Shoes” myself).  However, the Beatles gave Perkins’ career new life when they covered several of his songs early on, notably “Honey, Don’t”.
(May 2011)
 
*       *       *
 
The Unknowns played a gig once with Tom Petty and rock legend Del Shannon; and Bruce Joyner became good friends with Shannon as a result.  Del Shannon had joint concerts with the Beatles while on a European tour in 1963 and was the first American artist to cover a Beatles song, “From Me to You”. 
 
(June 2011)
 
*       *       *
 
A side man can be a wonderful thing for a musician.  For rock bands without keyboard players (and that was true of many in the 1960’s), Nicky Hopkins was the go-to guy if you wanted a pianist:  He played with everybody from Jefferson Airplane to Jeff Beck Group to Steve Miller Band, and with simply every big British Invasion group:  the Beatles, the Kinksthe Who, and especially the Rolling Stones.  His name appears on dozens of albums from the late 1960’s into the 1980’sHopkins released a couple of solo albums that I have never gotten around to buying, but I sure remember one of the first songs that I heard on college radio at North Carolina State University.  It was “Edward the Mad Shirt Grinder”; Hopkins was officially a member of Quicksilver Messenger Service at that time, and the song was the final track on their album, Shady Grove (1969).  Hopkins wrote it, and it was all his piano work along with a backing band. 
 
(August 2011)
 
*       *       *
 
Galen Niles and Chet Himes started jamming together with drummer Gary Crapster; then Himes brought in a friend of his, Frank Coy.  Much as the Beatles had done before – when each new member brought in the next – Frank added his friend Pat Cosgrove.  After a while, the band dubbed themselves Homer, though Niles is not sure why. 
 
(September 2011)
 
*       *       *
 
It is easy to argue that “they don’t make ’em like they used to”, and that would also be my main argument I suppose.  For every  Beatles and Cream and Beach Boys and U2 and White Stripes that made the big time, there are hundreds of bands that were every bit as good and were also well regarded enough to get a record deal – they just missed out on all of the stardom.  (There are thousands more that didn’t even get signed, but without some recordings, I have nothing to talk about).  
 
 (January 2012)

*       *       *
 
Happily, there is one Cyrus Erie track out there on YouTube:   “Get the Message” from 1969 is unabashedly Beatlesque and shows Eric Carmen exercising his pipes well – check it out (with several stills of the band) at www.youtube.com/watch?v=Z-Dtg295wVk . 
 
 (February 2012)
 
*       *       *
 
Before you stick up your noses at mono, the early British Invasion albums were typically recorded in monaural; thus, when you got a “stereo” album, it was electronically reprocessed in some way and, these days, sounds pretty cheesy.  Even the early stereo efforts aren’t the greatest in the world:  Many Beatles records run the instruments through one channel and the vocals through the other, and then call that stereo.  The first album that I can recall which was released only in stereo was the soundtrack album for the 1968 film 2001: A Space Odyssey.  
 
As for the Beatles, I took care of them by ordering the acclaimed Mobile Fidelity Sound Lab box set The Beatles / The Collection in 1982, with half-speed mastered copies of all of the British Beatles albums that were taken from the original master tapes.  Copies of the album covers were also made directly from the original album art and were printed in a booklet; the album covers instead were photos of the master tape boxes plus the song rosters and check-out listings that were pasted inside the boxes – pretty exciting!  They even left a couple of slots blank for future albums of songs that weren’t included in The Beatles / The Collection, though as far as I know, none were ever released.  It was a while before I realized that one of the songs that wasn’t on any of the albums was none other than “I Want to Hold Your Hand”, the Fab Four’s first big American hit.
 
I still picked up Beatles albums when I could; many that I have seen over the years were and are too rich for my blood, but I found an original pressing of Meet the Beatles for $6 once.  I remember walking into the back corner of a record store many years ago (sometime in the late 1970’s as I recall); they had every Beatles album on sale at the same prices as when they were originally released.  I wish I had bought the lot that day! 
 
*       *       *
 
Not long after I first got to college at North Carolina State University (probably in late 1969), one of the big record stores in Raleighthe Record Bar (which was within walking distance of the campus) had several tables set up in the middle of the store that were piled high with bootleg albums.  I had never heard of such a thing before, so I snapped up four right away, including Kum Back by the Beatles (practice sessions for the Let it Be album for the most part, sounds like, and including an 8- or 9-minute version of “Teddy Boy” – that song was originally going to be on Let it Be; but instead, Teddy Boy is on Paul McCartney’s solo album McCartney).  
 
*       *       *
 
Sadly, the albums (all but one) from The Beatles / The Collection were the last that I found from Katrina.  They rested, still in their metal rack, beneath the waters of the little bayou behind our former house for probably six months before I finally noticed them.  Some of the discs even have barnacles on them.  I pulled them out of the water and cleaned them up as best I could with a hose, but I haven’t tried to do the final cleaning on any of them yet. 
 
I was walking through a big record show; I think it was one in San Francisco that featured many non-record items also – one item that I remember is a wrapper for Beatles bumble gum that was all ripped up and priced at $20.  
  
(April 2012)
 
*       *       *
 
A DJ on one of our local radio stations where I was growing up in Winston-SalemDick Bennick at WTOB-AM Radio was forever calling the Fab Four “the beetley, bootley Beatles.  
 
(June 2012)
 
*       *       *
 
The curious band Stars on 45 had a Number One hit in 1981 consisting of a medley of Beatles songs.  The opening chords from the original Shocking Blue hit version of “Venus are played at or near the beginning of this song (often called “Stars on 45 Medley”).   
 
*       *       *
 
Phil and the Frantics is best known for a song called “I Must Run”, which was a local hit single in their native Arizona; the song is said to have been adapted rather openly from the flip side of the Zombies’ fourth single, “She’s Coming Home” b/w “I Must Move”.   In his really snide piece on the band, Mark Prindle runs with that and also accuses the band of copying a Beatles song and a Byrds song and a lot of other not-funny stuff.  
 
Plagiarizing music is not so straightforward to spot as, say, plagiarizing a term paper.  There were any number of bands aping the Beatles and the Byrds and the Zombies during the 1960’sBob Dylan for instance started out as a Woody Guthrie wannabe after all.  
 
 (August 2012)
 
*       *       *
 
I have previously written about the early history of the Beatles; while certainly not universally known, their fans are probably as conversant with their history as that of any rock band ever.  
 
While I would have to put the Beatles, the Rolling Stones and the Yardbirds as the Top Three British Invasion bands to my way of thinking,  the Animals would be right behind them, even ahead of the Kinks I think.  
 
Finally, I have a recommendation to go with my confession earlier.  If any of you are still signed up with Netflix, you should add the 1994 film Backbeat to your queue.  It is the early history of the Beatles mostly when they were in Hamburg, Germany and primarily follows Stu Sutcliffe (played by Stephen Dorff), an old friend of John Lennon who was in an early incarnation of the band.  Long before they were famous, Sutcliffe was drawn into photography and found a love; he died tragically young before his 22nd birthday.  Along the way, you meet Paul McCartney (the two actors who play John and Paul are dead ringers), George Harrison, and even Ringo Starr, who was hanging around the group even though he wasn't in the band yet.  Actually the words "the Beatles" were only spoken once during the entire movie; John Lennon mostly just called them “the band”. 
 
The idea is that, in those days, the Beatles were the world’s greatest punk rock group, so the band that they lined up to play the music was drawn from the top American alternative rock bands of the day, like the Afghan WhigsSoul AsylumR.E.M., and Sonic Youth.  The drummer was Nirvana’s Dave Grohl, who later became the front man for Foo Fighters (sadly, I believe that I read that they have gone on a hiatus).  However, he still hits the skins from time to time for bands like Queens of the Stone Age.  Highly recommended. 
  
(September 2012)
 
*       *       *
 
Progressive rock evolved from the wild experimentation that took place in the wake of the explosive release of the Beatles’ landmark album, Sgt. Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band, when it seemed that anything was possible in popular music.  The whole idea of a “concept album” took hold about then – though several other albums were arguably concept albums before Sgt. Pepper came along – and the Sgt. Pepper album was excellent throughout, with no obvious “singles”, which led to the idea of “album-oriented rock” (AOR).  (Like “punk rock” and “new wave”, the term “AOR” eventually was applied to so many different kinds of music that it began to lose its meaning).  An article in the college newspaper that I remember from my freshman year named many of the incredible bands that were current then, and then stated that it was hard to believe that Sgt. Pepper had come out just two years before that. 
 
 (October 2012)
 
*       *       *
 
I should point out that I mostly collect the music, whereas other collectors might specialize in everything that has ever been issued by bands like the Beatles or KISS, or try to get the most valuable covers or hidden disc differences.  I have done some specializing myself now and then:  I have purchased dozens of Bob Dylan bootleg albums plus nearly all of his regular releases; and several years ago, I was buying up every Linda Ronstadt compilation album I could find, even though I already had virtually all of the music.  
 
 
 
Unceremoniously tacked up on the wall at Goldmines Records was one of the most famous and most infamous (not to mention rarest) record covers of all time, the “butcher” cover that the Beatles briefly had as the cover for their 1966 American album, Yesterday and Today.  How the suits ever let this one get loose is absolutely beyond me:  posing the Beatles among butchered meat and decapitated baby dolls, with those same beatific smiles.  After they realized that they had a problem, Capitol Records simply pasted a new cover over the butcher cover and shipped the albums out.  The albums with the double covers are fairly easy to spot, and it wasn’t long before people were steaming off the new cover to get to the butcher cover.  Nowadays, the double-cover albums that are still intact are the most valuable, not counting of course the few albums with the original covers that were sold in the first few days of the album’s release. 
 
(November 2012)
 
*       *       *
 
What I said about this band after a few introductory remarks is this:  “But you won’t be thinking about any of that when you hear the band; what will be going through your mind is ‘Beatles’!”  Even in the punk rock era, when unfashionable seemed to be the watchword of the day, these guys never really fit in. 
 
There are a few YouTube clips out there though.  “Love of the Loved” is a classic Beatles-style Poppees performance; see it (audio only) at www.youtube.com/watch?v=trjeGWsuAAk 
 
*       *       *
 
A couple of months ago, the Jensen turntable that I was bragging on a couple of posts back started running just a tiny bit slow.  I had an inkling that this had been going on for a while, but it was pretty subtle.  Well, one day, the Beatles Sgt. Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band rose to the top of the rescued LP stack; and when I started playing it, there was no question at all that it didn’t sound right.  I took it to our local TV/audio repair store (Pass Road Tee Vee Service in Biloxi, for you locals – highly recommended; they really know their stuff, and their prices are very reasonable), and it seemed like they fixed it right up for me – Sgt. Pepper played just fine, and I went through several more LP’s. 
 
Well, several weeks later, I put on a Bob Dylan album – yes, I had a bunch of Beatles albums and Dylan albums come up for cleaning at about the same time, and that was pretty cool – and again, I had an inkling that it was running a tiny bit slow.  But it was an intermittent problem, and I just played another record instead that sounded okay; eventually I put the Dylan album back on, and it sounded fine that second time.  Finally, I put on the first Violent Femmes album – that was a record that I literally bought right off the turntable when it was playing at the time that I was shopping in a record store years ago – and it didn’t play right two times in a row, so I was resigned to having to get it fixed again.  I called the repairman up, and he said that the type of variable-speed motor that they use in turntables can sometimes need adjusting.  He told me just to bring it in anytime, and they would fix it up for me at no charge.  I hate having to do things twice, and I have been so busy at work as well, so I have been putting off taking it back to the shop. 
 
 (December 2012)
 
*       *       *
 
American teenagers (mostly white suburban kids) were also invigorated by the Beatles and the Rolling Stones and all the rest; and they responded by launching a counter-assault, when seemingly every kid in America wanted to be in a band.  This era is now known as the garage rock era (that was the most available practice space for most of these would-be rock stars, hence the name); this time period also saw the beginnings of the psychedelic rock movement on both sides of the Atlantic.  I didn’t know exactly what I was hearing at the time, but the music by bands like the SeedsBlues Magoosthe Electric PrunesQuestion Mark and the Mysteriansthe StandellsCount Five, and Strawberry Alarm Clock (among many other bands) was grabbing me almost immediately.  I don’t know that I even realized immediately how bizarre many of these American band names were, as compared to those of British Invasion bands like the AnimalsFreddie and the Dreamers, and the Dave Clark Five
 
Thankfully, in 1972 (though if I’m not mistaken, the album was actually not released in the US until 1976), Lenny Kaye – later the guitarist for the seminal Patti Smith Group – helped assemble hit songs by all of these diverse bands plus plenty more into what is now regarded as one of the greatest compilation albums of all times:  Nuggets: Original Artyfacts from the First Psychedelic Era, 1965-1968.  It remains one of my favorite records, and I have spoken of it several times before in these posts. 
 
Golden Earring (originally known as the Golden Earrings or the Golden Ear-Rings) formed in 1961 and are still together – yes, you read that right:  before the Rolling Stones formed, and before Ringo Starr joined the Beatles.  
 
A group of kids from my hometown of Winston-Salem, NC formed a rock band called the dB’s; they were unabashedly Beatlesque in a time period (late 1970’s) when that wasn’t fashionable at all, but they were very talented, particularly at songwriting. 
 
Since Year One came out, Jacco Gardner has been busy.  He has released several more singles and has a lot of YouTube videos in a somewhat different direction than his work with the Skywalkers.  The online Quip magazine has this description:  “His echo-washed sound recalls the psychedelic and lushly orchestral vibe of the Beatles’ Revolver or Syd Barrett era Pink Floyd, interspersed with the peppy, sardonic jabs of more modern fare like the Shins.”  
 
(January 2013)
 
*       *       *
 

You can talk about your pioneers of rock and roll – Chuck BerryLittle RichardElvis PresleyJames Brown, just to name a few – and you can even bring up your British Invasion greats – the Beatlesthe Rolling Stonesthe Animalsthe Yardbirds, the Kinks, just to name another few.  All of them are already in the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame, and deservedly so.  However, you can play a lot of more modern rock records all day long and not really discern more than a hint of their direct influence; no question it’s in the DNA, but actual Elvis Presley-style vocals or Chuck Berry guitar licks or James Brown wails are elusive. 

 

That is not so with Link Wray:  His influence is front and center on a good 50% of the records that I play, because he is credited with introducing the “power chord” on electric guitar to rock and roll, a technique whose effect is often enhanced by distortion

 
(February 2013)
 
*       *       *
 

Other 1970’s recordings have danced around gay issues, such as Rod Stewart’s 1976 minor hit “The Killing of Georgie” – about the murder of a gay friend of his in New York back when he was in Faces – and it was an open secret that Freddie Mercury was gay though closeted; he was the frontman of a band called Queen after all.  It was many years later though before openly gay songs and performers would arrive on the popular music scene, such as British  musician Tom Robinson in the late 1970’s (he collaborated with Peter Gabriel on one EP that I own), and mid-1980’s sensation Frankie Goes to Hollywood.  By the way, it is interesting that the first hit songs by arguably the two most famous Liverpool rock bands – the Beatles’ “Please Please Me and Frankie Goes to Hollywood’s “Relax” – deal fairly openly with the topic of oral sex. 

 

*       *       *

 

After a few gigs with the Sands Combo and the Interns in 1963 (not the same as the Welsh band called the Interns that was active from 1964 to 1967), the Giles Brothers played the longest (“758 gigs played”) with a band called Trendsetters, Ltd., from 1964 to 1967.  They released four singles on Parlophone Records (the Beatles’ label in the UK).  After guitarist/vocalist Bruce Turner left the band in 1967 to join the Lootthe band continued to record under the names the Trend and the Brain

 

(March 2013)

 

*       *       *


 

 

The Beatles are well known for honing their craft in the clubs of Hamburg, Germany in the very early 1960’s, as well as in their hometown of Liverpool.  Still, there was some question back then as to whether they could be successful selling records in a non–English-speaking country, so the Fab Four were cajoled by their manager Brian Epstein and their producer George Martin into recording German-language versions of two of their biggest hits, “I Want to Hold Your Hand” and “She Loves You” in January 1964.  “Komm, Gib Mir Deine Hand” was later released on the band’s American album, Something New about six months later. 


*       *       *
  

The second Les Sinners album (which was produced by Pierre Noles) had practically the same name as the first – Sinnerismes (“Sinnerisms”), but with a second “n” this time – and saw the band essentially abandoning the English language for most of the rest of their career (though several of the song titles were still in English).  Album highlights include a French-language version of the Beatles hit “Penny Lane”, “Les Disc-Jockeys”, and several weird psychedelic tracks like “L.S.D. Ha! Ha!”. 

 

*       *       *

 

The next album by Les Sinners (though with the name shortened to just Sinners) for JupiterVox Populi (Latin for “Voice of the People”) came out in 1968 and is among the crush of “concept albums” that followed in the wake of the Beatles’ 1967 masterpiece, Sgt. Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band.  The album has acquired legendary status among fans of Quebec’s musical scene.  The album is entirely in French and is probably the first and certainly one of the best French Canadian concept albums ever released.  A whole barrel of musical influences are present:  the Beatlesthe Monkeesthe Byrds, the WhoIndian music, etc.  The cover appears to show Jesus speaking in a snowy cemetery. 

 

 (April 2013)

 

*       *       *
 

I was born a couple of years later than Greg Shaw, so I turned 14 in 1965.  By then, the Beatles and the Rolling Stones were old news; and while I was still paying attention, what was really grabbing me at the time were American artists and bands.  First and foremost was “Like a Rolling Stone by Bob Dylan; that song – plus the flip side “Gates of Eden” that was nearly as long and every bit as good – captivated me in a way that I just couldn’t keep quiet about.  Other great folk-rock sounds of that period included the release of the cover of Dylan’s “Mr. Tambourine Man” by the Byrds and the revamped “The Sounds of Silence by Simon and Garfunkel.  Bob Dylan himself preferred the Byrds’ cover to his own recording of “Mr. Tambourine Man; but in my usual contrarian way, I preferred Dylan’s original – it was a lot longer for one thing. 

 

These songs were followed closely by the glorious sounds of garage rock and psychedelic rock that were then in their infancy.  Songs like “Pushin’ Too Hard” by the Seeds, “We Ain’t Got Nothin’ Yet” by Blues Magoos, and “I Had Too Much to Dream (Last Night) by the Electric Prunes really made an impression on me.  It wasn’t until I picked up the Nuggets collection and then the numerous Pebbles albums that I plumbed the depths of this scene, but it was by no means brand new to me either. 

  
*       *       *
 

The promotional material on the band by Alive Records lays out their basic template:  “Taking cues from classic pop, rock ’n’ roll, and AmericanaHollis Brown combines raw rock sensibilities with sweet melodies and heartfelt lyrics to create a rich, warm sound that can fill any room. . . .  You’d be hard-pressed to find a Beatles song these boys don’t know by heart, and you can hear it in the music. Classic rock with a New York state of mind, Hollis Brown is a throwback to an era when music felt fresh, songwriting was revered, and performances routinely inspired.” 

 

*       *       *
 
A promotional photo for the Not Quite looks like it has been stretched in the same way as the cover shot for the Beatles’ Rubber Soul album and was also turned into a poster by Dark Lord Rob

 (May 2013)

*       *       *
 

But there is no shortage of interpretations of “American Pie” from all quarters (I took a stab at it myself ages ago):  Bob Dylan is said to be the “jester”; the Beatles are evidently referenced in the line “sergeants played a marching tune”; and the Rolling Stones (Mick Jagger in particular) seem to have a more central role in the tale – the fifth verse includes the lyric “Jack be nimble, Jack be quick / Jack Flash sat on a candlestick” (an obvious reference to the Rolling Stones hit “Jumpin’ Jack Flash”), several mentions of Satan (“Sympathy for the Devil” is one of several times that the Stones toyed with Satanic imagery), and apparent veiled references to the horrific Altamont Speedway Free Concert that occurred on the heels of Woodstock on December 6, 1969, where the Rolling Stones were the featured act, and the Hells Angels motorcycle club provided security. 

 

*       *       *

 

The impact of this one Elvis recording can hardly be overstated.  “Heartbreak Hotel was one of the biggest influences on John Lennon that inexorably led to the formation of the Beatles.  

 

*       *       *

 

Sister Rosetta Tharpe is the only woman mentioned in the Wikipedia list, but she is not the only one that I have heard talked about.  Rosemary Clooney had one of her biggest hits with “Hey There” b/w “This Ole House”; both songs individually reached #1 in 1954 on the Billboard singles charts (in case you think – as I had – that the Beatles were the first to have double-sided #1 hit singles).  

 

*       *       *

 

While not at all minimizing the contributions of the legends that I have discussed thus far, my own nominee for the man who most directly congealed a variety of musical ingredients into what we know today as rock and roll is Chuck Berry.  Berry’s classics like “Maybellene” (1955), “Rock and Roll Music” (1957) and “Johnny B. Goode” (1958) sound as fresh to my ears today as they did the first time I heard them more than 50 years ago.  His 1956 hit “Roll Over Beethoven” – “Roll Over Beethoven” also might be my very favorite Beatles cover song – contains a truly delicious song lyric:  “Roll over [in your grave], Beethoven / And tell Tchaikovsky the news”. 

 

*       *       *

 

Writing for Allmusic, rock critic Bruce Eder states his case well:  “Buddy Holly is perhaps the most anomalous legend of ’50s rock & roll – he had his share of hits, and he achieved major rock & roll stardom, but his importance transcends any sales figures or even the particulars of any one song (or group of songs) that he wrote or recorded.  Holly was unique, his legendary status and his impact on popular music all the more extraordinary for having been achieved in barely 18 months. . . .  In a career lasting from the spring of 1957 until the winter of 1958-1959 – less time than Elvis had at the top before the army took him (and less time, in fact, than Elvis spent in the army) – Holly became the single most influential creative force in early rock & roll. . . . 

 

Holly and the band weren’t afraid to experiment even on their singles, so that ‘Peggy Sue’ made use of the kind of changes in volume and timbre on the guitar that were usually reserved for instrumental records; similarly, ‘Words of Love’ was one of the earliest successful examples of double-tracked vocals in rock & roll, which the Beatles, in particular, would embrace in the ensuing decade.” 

 

*       *       *

 

More than a few British rock groups adopted band names in tribute to Buddy Holly.  The Beatles in part took their insect-oriented name from that of his band the Crickets.  One Manchester band of the British Invasion period simply called themselves the Hollies.  Yet another British Invasion band, the Searchers took their name from the John Wayne movie of that name, The Searchers, where the Duke often said, “That’ll be the day”; the catch phrase had been adopted by Buddy Holly as the name of one of his first hits, “That’ll Be the Day

 

*       *       *

 

 

 

The above disk is of Buddy Holly’s song “That’ll Be the Day” and is the first recording that was made by the Quarrymen, the skiffle band that later became the Beatles.  Intended only as a demonstration disc, just one copy was ever pressed (in 1958); this record is one of the most valuable on earth, worth an estimated £100,000 according to NME.com.  The song was officially released in 1995 on the Beatles’ Anthology 1 retrospective album package. 

 

*       *       *

 

Both Paul McCartney and John Lennon have called Buddy Holly a primary influence on their work; Ian Whitcomb once said that “Buddy Holly and the Crickets had the most influence on the Beatles.”  The Beatles did a lovely cover of “Words of Love” that was released in late 1964 on their album Beatles for Sale.  During the recording sessions for the Let it Be album in January 1969the Beatles recorded a slow version of “Mailman, Bring Me No More Blues” (a song popularized by Buddy Holly, though not written by him); the song was later released on Anthology 3.  Also, John Lennon recorded a cover of “Peggy Sue” on his 1975 solo album Rock ’n’ Roll.  

 

*       *       *

 

Little Richard started edging back into rock and roll in 1962; a European tour with Sam Cooke where he sang his gospel material was not well received, but crowds enthusiastically applauded his older songs like “Long Tall Sally”, a song that the Beatles recorded in full-blown Little Richard style in 1964, with Paul McCartney on lead vocals.  The same year, Little Richard unapologetically returned to rock and roll and released “Bama Lama Bama Loo” in 1964; however, public tastes had changed, and he spent much of the 1960’s and 1970’s in what should have been unnecessary self-promotion. 

 

(June 2013/1)

 

*       *       *

 

Brian Wilson was the bandleader and primary songwriter of the Beach Boys; writing for AllmusicWilliam Ruhlmann says that Brian Wilson “is arguably the greatest American composer of popular music in the rock era”.  In the beginning, there were fun songs about surfing and cars and girls, as well as a (more or less) friendly rivalry with Jan & Dean that prefigured the more contentious Beatles vs. Stones debates.  It is no secret that Jan Berry – a wunderkind in his own right – wasn’t happy that the Beach Boys copied the surf sounds that Jan & Dean pioneered. 

 

*       *       *

 

Anyway, in its initial release in October 1964Wednesday Morning, 3 A.M. was unsuccessful, possibly overshadowed by the Beatles.  Of one song on the album, “The Sounds of Silence” – performed acoustically, like all the rest – Art Garfunkel wrote in the liner notes:  “‘The Sounds of Silence’ is a major work.  We were looking for a song on a larger scale, but this is more than either of us expected.” 

 

*       *       *

 

The Sounds of Silence” began climbing the charts and was the #1 single in the country for the first three weeks of 1966 (sandwiched between a Dave Clark Five song and a Beatles song).   

 

(June 2013/2)

 

*       *       *

 

It was like that about the Klubs also.  Despite having a strong local following in Liverpool for several years, the home city of the Beatles f’crying out loud, the band had faded into complete obscurity. 

 

*       *       *

 

Part of the reason has to do with the Liverpool music scene in the 1960’s:  Other than you-know-who, most of the big British Invasion bands came from somewhere else.  The Beatles’ early competitors on the American charts were the Dave Clark Five; their first big hit song “Glad All Over” hit the Top Ten in February 1964, though the Five wouldn't make #1 until “Over and Over” came out in November 1965.  The Dave Clark Five were from North London and were being promoted as the progenitors of the “Tottenham Sound”. 

 

Though only one of the big acts came from there, other 1960’s bands were based in Liverpool.  Gerry and the Pacemakers is likely the best known; like the Fab Four, this band was managed by Brian Epstein, and their records were produced by George Martin.  Their American hits include “Don’t Let the Sun Catch You Crying” and “Ferry Cross the Mersey”, a reference to the Mersey River that runs by the city – in case you are wondering why there has always been so much “Mersey” talk surrounding the Beatles

 

The Searchers is another Liverpool band that had numerous hits in the U.K., though they were less successful in the U.S.; their biggest hit songs here were remakes of “Love Potion No. 9” and “Needles and Pins”.  The Swinging Blue Jeans barely missed the U.S. Top 20 with their cover of “Hippy Hippy Shake”, which was also recorded by the Beatles.  Others include the Cryin’ Shames (not to be confused with the Cryan’ Shames, an American band from the same time period), the Merseybeatsthe Hideawaysthe Koobas (also known as the Kubas), and one of the first all-female rock bands, the Liverbirds. 

 

*       *       *

 

But mostly the Klubs began establishing themselves as a leading band in the post-Beatles Merseyside scene.  They were fixtures at the legendary Cavern Clubthe Hideaways boasted more dates there (over 250 appearances) than the Beatles themselves, but the Klubs are ranked #3 in that regard.  After they signed a management contract with Cavern Enterprisesthe Klubs were beginning to perform more original material; as a harmonica player, Alan Walker became sort of a sixth wheel in the Klubs and moved on. 

 

*       *       *

 

In July 1967the Klubs were given a recording test at EMI’s famed Abbey Road Studios, renamed for the Beatles’ penultimate album, Abbey Road in 1970.  Staff producer Alan Paramor oversaw a marathon recording session, where the Klubs worked on covers of Cream’s “NSU”, and “Desdemona” by John’s Children (back when Marc Bolan, later of T. Rex was a bandmember), plus a new recording of their own song “Livin’ Today”.  Paramor called the band “unrecordable” and sent them on their way. 

 

*       *       *

 

After auditioning the Klubs at a nightclub called the Pink FlamingoVic Smith signed them to a management deal with Don Arden’s company Aquarius.  As a result, in early 1968the Klubs again sort of followed in the Beatles’ footsteps and arrived at Decca Records – actually, Decca had famously decided against signing the Fab Four – where four tracks were laid down according to company records.  Two were covers of the Beatles’ “Drive My Car” and Jimi Hendrix’s “Fire” – the latter song (apparently recorded at a later time) is the only cover song on the Midnight Love Cycle CD – plus their own songs “Midnight Love Cycle” and “Ever Needed Someone”.  “Midnight Love Cycle also became the title of their retrospective albums. 

 

*       *       *

 

Don Arden insisted that the Klubs change their name to Revolution – perhaps he got the idea from another single by Tomorrow called “Revolution” that came out the year before the song of that name, “Revolution” by the Beatles.  When the band refused to bow to this demand and arrogantly stood their ground, Arden heaped abuse on the young bandmembers.  Don Arden, who was once called “the Al Capone of pop” by critic Johnny Rogan, was not used to taking any lip from the bands that he signed; Arden tore up their recording contract in front of the Klubs and vowed that their Decca recordings would never see the light of day. 

 


(July 2013)

 

*       *       *

 

Johnette Napolitano and another member of Concrete BlondeJim Mankey actually contributed quite a bit to the Dr. Crow album:  Jim Mankey played bass on their version of the Beatles’ classic “Strawberry Fields Forever”. 

 

*       *       *

  

Much of the overheated rhetoric about J. Reuben Silverbird is about his name changes; even the minor switch from Ruben to Reuben is mentioned.  Using stage names is hardly limited to rock musicians – the very term itself shows that its origin is in the theatre.  You needn’t go any further than the drummer for the Beatles to find one:  Ringo Starr (born Richard Starkey).  Guitarist and songwriter Keith Richards of the Rolling Stones used the name Keith Richard for many years.  The John Birch Society called Stones frontman Mick Jagger “Mick Jaeggert” back in the 1970’s; a Google search brought up only two websites using this name – one French and one Hungarian – so this is probably not for real. 

 

*       *       *

 

This photograph of the Coronados with Jack Spector, a prominent New York City disc jockey on WMCA, was published in Billboard Magazine in 1965.  (Spector is notable for having been the first DJ in New York to play the Beatles’ initial Capitol Records single, “I Want to Hold Your Hand” in late December 1963).  Their music is described in the Daily Herald article mentioned previously in this way:  “The mode became eclectic – show tunes, popular numbers – with a professional gloss appropriate to the Borscht Belt and other resort circuits.” 

 

Meanwhile, the four teenaged children of the bandmembers in the Coronados – who sometimes appeared with their parents on stage – were being attracted to rock music and began singing and performing together as the Real Americans

(August 2013)

 

*       *       *
 

Phil Spector’s work with the Beatles on their final album, Let it Be is more controversial, with many contending that it was more overproduction than production in that case.  Ultimately, the album was re-released in 2003 without Spector’s production and overdubs under the name Let it Be . . . Naked.  Still, Phil Spector worked with John Lennon on several of his solo albums. 

 

*       *       *

 

The Beatles performed a sort of mini-Wall of Sound at the close of their masterful Sgt. Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band album, not long after Phil Spector came along.  Following the second symphonic build-up within “A Day in the Life”, the orchestra swelled into a crescendo, and then there was a thunderous piano chord (an E-major chord to be exact).  Many people who have been around a piano marvel at how long the instrument can hold a note; and here, the Beatles were dealing that expectation up in spades with a long, slow fade for nearly one full minute before the sound faded into background hiss. 

 

Actually though, it wasn't just one piano:  John LennonPaul McCartney, Ringo Starr, and one of the Beatles’ roadies, Mal Evans were manning different pianos; while George Martin was playing the same chord on a harmonium.  What’s more, the gain was gradually turned up as the chord faded in order to prolong the effect – at the end (they tell me), it is possible to hear background sounds in the recording studio:  rustling papers, a squeaking chair, and the air conditioners.      

 

*       *       *

 

The Goldie and the Gingerbreads 1964 recording of “Can’t You Hear My Heartbeat” made it to #25 in the UK.  Here in this country, Herman’s Hermits released “Can’t You Hear My Heartbeat two weeks earlier; the heavy promotion of that song cut them out of the U. S. charts.  After meeting Eric Burdon and the AnimalsGoldie and the Gingerbreads was signed for a European tour, where they performed with the Who’s Who of the British Invasion the Beatles, the Rolling Stonesthe Animals, the Yardbirds, the Holliesthe Kinks, and others. 

 

*       *       *

 

Fanny” is an interesting slang term:  Here in North America, the reference is to the buttocks (hence the cover shot on their first album, Fanny); but in the British Commonwealth, it means the female vulva.  Former Beatle George Harrison is the one who suggested the name Fanny to producer Richard Perry; the bandmembers themselves were not aware of its meaning on the other side of the Atlantic Ocean until much later. 

 

*       *       *

 

The Music Emporium album opens with “Nam Myo Renge Kyo” that features chants of the Buddhist mantra that forms the title, along with psychedelic-style lyrics in the manner of the Beatles’ Lucy in the Sky with Diamonds.  “Catatonic Variations” features an atonal structure that was just coming into vogue in the classical world, if I am remembering that correctly.  The album closes with the obligatory protest song, “Day of Wrath” that features the tag lyric:  “There is no question that there will be peace on earth / But will man be here to enjoy it”. 

 

(October 2013)

 
*       *       *
 

The Mamas and the Papas are another band featuring both men and women that had enduring popularity throughout the British Invasion years.  They were also one of the first American bands that fans began to know individually the way they knew the Beatles:  Suave bandleader John Phillips, his gorgeous wife Michelle Phillips, the muscular singer Cass Elliot (who became known almost immediately as “Mama Cass”), and Denny Doherty, the other Papa.  

 

*       *       *

 

Here is a poster from a time when the Sons of the Piltdown Men – a later band similar to the Piltdown Men – shared a bill with the Beatles and other British Invasion groups: 
 
 
 
(November 2013)
 
*       *       *
 

Cheap Thrills was a true sensation – as happened so often with the BeatlesBig Brother and the Holding Company staked out territory on this album that other rock artists could only admire; no one tried to follow them.  The front cover art by top “underground comics” artist R. Crumb still looks amazing; almost as well known is the dramatic pose by Janis Joplin on the back cover. 

 

*       *       *

 

Patti Smith began performing rock music in 1974 – another year that popular music changed irrevocably, much like 1963 with the Beatles and the rest of the British Invasion – with music archivist and guitarist Lenny Kaye.  While not actually inventing the term “punk rock”, he had popularized it in his liner notes for the first compilation album of garage rock and psychedelic rock music, Nuggets, so this was most appropriate. 

 

(February 2014)

 

*       *       *

 

After Twink left the band, the remaining trio in the Pink Fairies recorded What a Bunch of Sweeties which includes another song on my All-Time Top Ten, “Marilyn”.  This album was at the top of my Want List for decades before I finally mail-ordered a copy – just in time for Hurricane Katrina.  The album also includes covers of two familiar 1960’s tracks:  the Beatles “I Saw Her Standing There” and the instrumental “Walk, Don’t Run” (originally by the Ventures).  As described by Wikipedia:  “The sleeve came in a gatefold cover by Edward Barker, the front showing a box full of goodies mostly taken from roadie David “Boss” Goodman’s personal collection of underground badges etc.”  The album is mostly a sonic assault that also includes the playful song “Pigs of Uranus” – but even that song ends with a fabulous electric guitar solo. 

 
*       *       *
 

In 1969Mick Farren “liberated” the earliest large-scale rock concert in the U.K., the 1969 Isle of Wight Festival by encouraging the fences to be torn down.  This concert – which took place the month after Woodstock (and with many of the same acts) – featured the Whothe BandFreeJoe Cocker, and the Moody Blues.  But the real excitement was caused by the inclusion on the bill of Bob Dylan, who had been little seen since his near-fatal motorcycle accident in July 1966.  When Dylan took the stage, audience members included three of the Beatles, three of the Beatle wives, three of the Rolling StonesEric Clapton, Liz TaylorRichard BurtonJane FondaRoger VadimSyd Barrett, and Elton John  

 

One of the main reasons for the location of the original Woodstock was to lure Bob Dylan out of hiding – the idea was to throw a huge party practically on his doorstep that surely he couldn’t resist attending.  Woodstock is the name of the town where Dylan lived (and also members of the Band); the festival itself was in Bethel.  But resist he did; Bob Dylan instead signed up to appear at the Isle of Wight Festival and set sail for England on August 15, 1969, the day that Woodstock opened.

 
(March 2014/1)
 
*       *       *
 

For their second single, they moved to another EMI label, Parlophone Records (the Beatles’ record company in Britain) and adopted a more pop-oriented sound reminiscent of another Parlophone band, the Hollies, releasing “I, I, I Want Your Lovin’” b/w “She Only Wants a Friend”.  For the final single by the Sons of Fred for Parlophone in 1966, they went back to R&B for “Baby What You Want Me To Do” b/w “You Told Me”. 

 

(March 2014/2)

 

*       *       *

 

     So you want to be a rock ’n’ roll star

     Then listen now to what I say

     Just get an electric guitar

     And take some time and learn how to play

     And when your hair’s combed right and your pants fit tight

     It’s gonna be all right 

 

So said the Byrds – specifically songwriters Jim McGuinn and Chris Hillman – back in 1967, and the formula still works pretty well to this day.  

 

The lyrics are more than a little cynical – check the next to last line – and the fact is, no one has really discovered the secret formula.  “So You Want to be a Rock ’n’ Roll Star” was written in the wake of the creation of The Monkees television show and the Monkees band, who became known by many as the Pre-Fab Four (the Beatles of course being the original Fab Four). 

 

*       *       *

 

Vanilla Fudge had a well developed formula of covering a variety of hit songs in a slowed down, psychedelicized manner; their debut album, Vanilla Fudge (1967) was filled with them:  the Supremes hit “You Keep Me Hanging On” (which is what got them signed in the first place to the Atlantic Records affiliate, Atco Records); two Beatles songs, “Ticket to Ride” and “Eleanor Rigby”; an Impressions classic “People Get Ready”; the Zombies song “She’s Not There”; and Sonny and Cher’s “Bang Bang”.  
 
*       *       *
 

Small Faces’ response to the Beatles’ Sgt. Pepper album was a remarkable psychedelic achievement called Ogdens’ Nut Gone Flakethe album was originally released in a round cover and had the appearance of a vintage tobacco tin.  And I sure wish it would show up from the LP’s in the Katrina mud that I still haven’t cleaned up, because I miss it! 

 

*       *       *

 

By contrast, the people at Gear Fab Records – one of the better reissue record companies – are quite enthusiastic about HomerGalen Niles was brought in to write the liner notes for the 2012 CD, Homer.  (The record company name comes from two Beatles-era expressions for “cool”; both are featured in the background singing on “All Those Years Ago”, the 1981 George Harrison song honoring recently assassinated John Lennon and also featuring the other two living Beatles in the band). 

 

(April 2014)

 

*       *       *

 

Running down something like this for a major rock band like the Beatles or Led Zeppelin would be difficult enough; but I can’t imagine where he even looked, a half-century later, to find out about every gig of the Soul Agents (18 in the month of August 1964 alone, to pick one month basically at random).  Bruno Ceriotti noted that one club where the band performed regularly, the Marquee in Soho did not normally list the supporting acts in their monthly program listings, making it that much more difficult.  

 

*       *       *

 

For the month of December 1963the Lonely Ones performed seven days a week at a club called Storyville in Cologne (Köln), Germany (almost exactly one year after the last of the Beatles’ several residencies in Hamburg, Germany took place).  British singer Paul Hanford was a sometime “guest vocalist” over this period; he previously had a hit in the U.K. with “Itsy Bitsy Teenie Weenie Yellow Polka Dot Bikini” (Brian Hyland had the original hit in 1960 with “Itsy Bitsy Teenie Weenie Yellow Polka Dot Bikini”).  At this point, the band still had more of a pop sound but would transition to a harder R&B band the following year. 

 

(May 2014)

 

*       *       *

 

Manfred Mann was one of the original British Invasion bands, but they deserve more State-side success than they had, so allow me to quote Bruce Eder’s article in Allmusic to give an overview of the band’s history:  “An R&B band that only played pop to get on the charts, Manfred Mann ranked among the most adept British Invasion acts in both styles.  The fact that their range encompassed jazz as well as rhythm & blues, coupled with some elements of their appearance and presentation – co-founder/-keyboardist Manfred Mann’s bearded, bespectacled presence – also made the Manfreds more of a thinking person’s band than a cute, cuddly outfit like the Beatles, or sexual provocateurs in the manner of the Rolling Stones.  Yet, their approach to R&B was as valid as that of the Stones, equally compelling and often more sophisticated.  They charted an impressive number of singles from 1964 through 1969, and developed a large, loyal international fandom that lingers to this day.” 

 

Manfred Mann always had a chameleon quality and, unlike the top-flight British Invasion bands like the Beatles, the Who and the Rolling Stones, had frequent changes in their line-up.  As I noted last month, Jack Bruce, later of Cream was a member in the mid-1960’s.  

 

*       *       *

 

It is natural for any band to evolve over the course of their career; though their core sound was intact, the Beatles who recorded Please Please Me in 1963 are quite different from the band who released Abbey Road in 1969.  (The Beatles released one more album, Let it Be after Abbey Road; but most of this music was actually recorded earlier).  Some bands change more than others, however. 

 

(June 2014)

 

*       *       *

 

Kris Kristofferson also co-wrote another major gospel hit song in the 1970’s, “One Day at a Time” (also the motto of Alcoholics Anonymous and other similar organizations).  He co-wrote the song with a Nashville songwriting legend, Marijohn Wilkin.  With Danny DillWilkin co-wrote “The Long Black Veil” for Lefty Frizzell – this standard is such a cultural touchstone that it was even mentioned in an opinion by the Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals in 1979.  Other songs that Marijohn Wilkin wrote or co-wrote include “Waterloo”, a #1 hit for Stonewall Jackson; “Cut Across Shorty”, which was recorded by Eddie CochranRod StewartFaces, and Freddie and the Dreamers; and “I Just Don’t Understand” that was covered by Ann-Margret and the Beatles

 

(July 2014)

 

*       *       *

 

For the Bob Dylan album Shot of Loveother players include ex-Beatle Ringo Starr on drums, current Rolling Stone Ronnie Wood on guitar, bass guitarist Donald “Duck” Dunn – formerly of Booker T and the MG’s and also the Blues Brothers Band – and veteran sessionman Danny “Kootch” Kortchmar on guitar and electric guitar.  Bumps Blackwell, who produced most of Little Richard’s most indelible songs, produced the title song “Shot of Love”. 

 

*       *       *

 

The students were encouraged in this work by one of the teachers, Anthony Meyer (who is a Jesuit).  He assembled a group of musicians from the school to be the Holy Ghost Reception Committee #9.  The liner notes describe their sound as “unique, Christian yet with a Beatle-esque psychedelic sound.”  

 

(August 2014)

 

*       *       *

 

To some extent, Pet Sounds was Brian Wilson’s answer to the Beatles’ Rubber Soul album; and in turn, the Beatles’ Sgt. Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band album is in response to Pet Sounds Sgt. Pepper and Pet Sounds were voted #1 and #2, respectively, on the Rolling Stone’s list of the 500 Greatest Albums of All Time

 

(October 2014)

 

*       *       *

 

Before the Beatles came along, Cliff Richard was the leading rock musician in the UK

 

Move It” was an original song by bandmember Ian “Sammy” Samwell and was first released as the “B” side, with the “A” side being a cover of a song by American artist Bobby Helms called “Schoolboy Crush”.  “Move It” went to #2 on the UK charts in 1958 and is widely regarded as the first authentic British rock and roll song.  John Lennon has been quoted as saying (from Wikipedia):  “Before Cliff [Richard] and the Shadows, there had been nothing worth listening to in British music.”  Cliff Richard is the third top-selling singles artist in British history, behind only the Beatles and Elvis Presley

 

*       *       *

 

In my judgment, the whole “backward masking” business is nonsense; what I have heard most of the time is the main vocal track played backwards, which seems to form other words.  The best example that I know of is on “Revolution 9 by the Beatles, where the frequently repeated line “Number Nine” played backwards sounds like “Turn me on, dead man” (one of the many so-called “clues” that Paul McCartney was dead).  It took me a while to hear that myself, since it actually sounds more like:  “Tu-u-u-u-rn me ’n, d’d m’n”.  It is obvious on its face though that there is no one on Earth who could hear “Number Nine” with one ear and “turn me on, dead man” with the other ear. 

 

(November 2014)

 

*       *       *

 

Popsicles and Icicles by the Murmaids reached #3 on both the Billboard and Cash Box record charts in January 1964.  Additionally, the song was ranked #1 on the Record World charts for the week of January 18, 1964; since the next Number One song on the Record World charts was “I Want to Hold Your Hand” by the Beatles, “Popsicles and Icicles is often cited as the last Number One song of the pre-British Invasion era.  

 

*       *       *

 

As recounted in Greg Shaw’s liner notes for the English Freakbeat, Volume 2 CDKim Fowley connected with another American expatriate, P. J. Proby.  After several failed singles in this country, Proby had a series of UK Top 20 hits that included his cover of a Lennon/McCartney song, “That Means a Lot” that the Beatles were never able to record to their own satisfaction. 

 

(January 2015/1)

 

*       *       *

 

The Beatles came to see the Rolling Stones at the Crawdaddy Club on April 14, 1963; afterwards, the two bands repaired to Mick Jagger’s flat in Chelsea.  As the Stones’ fame spread, the Crawdaddy Club was forced to move to a larger space.  

 

*       *       *

 

Ron Silva and Steve Potterf of the Crawdaddys grew up as neighbors in Point Loma, California and began listening to records together in the ninth grade.  Silva recalls of those early days:  “After a while Steve started getting into the music I liked – Beatles, early Stones.  I remember sitting in his room playing guitars along to my dad’s Chuck Berry and Elvis Presley 45’s.”  

 

*       *       *

 

Ron Silva connected with Mark Zadarnowski – who was just learning to play bass guitar – through a mutual friend and fellow Beatles enthusiast named Tim LaMadrid.  The first gig by the newly formed band the Crawdaddys was at Abbey Road in September 1978, with Ron’s brother Russell Silva – who went by the name “Scuzz” – sitting in on drums.  By their third concert at the Lions’ Club in North Park, the line-up was Ron Silva (guitar), Steve Potterf (guitar), Mark Zadarnowski (bass), and Dan McLain (drums); McLain ran a local record store called Monty Rockers

 

*       *       *

 

On May 29, 2011, at a Rhino Records pop-up store in San Diegothe Crawdaddys showed up unexpectedly with a reunion concert that included former members Ron SilvaPeter Miesner, and Keith Fisher.  After noting the surprise at the Crawdaddys being there at all, the L.A. Weekly report on the concert continued:  “Another surprise was how hot and vital the band sounded, even after being dormant for so many years.  You could certainly hear where latter-day ’60s revivalists like the Hives got their ideas, as singer-guitarist Ron Silva snarled his way through a set of Crawdaddys originals and vintage covers of primal rock classics like ‘Oh Baby Doll’, ‘Slow Down’ and ‘Let the Good Times Roll’.  The group were at their best on Rolling Stones-style blues rockers like ‘Bald Headed Woman’, but they also deftly pulled off poppier tunes like the Knickerbockers’ Beatles sound-alike ‘Lies’ and a yearning, affecting version of the Velvet Underground’s bittersweet ‘There She Goes [Again]’.”  

 

(January 2015/2)

 

*       *       *

 

Another peculiar songwriting credit has to do with Bobby Darin’s first hit song, “Splish Splash”, as I have mentioned previously.  The story is that the famous New York disc jockey Murray the K (real name:  Murray Kaufman) – who later helped promote the Beatles in this country and often referred to himself as the “fifth Beatle” – made a bet with Darin in 1958 that he could not write a song that started out, “Splish splash, I was takin’ a bath” – the phrase was suggested to him by his mother Jean Kaufman.  Bobby Darin took the song to #3 in the nation, and it was a major boost for his career. 

 

Bobby Darin wanted to give Murray the K and his mother Jean Kaufman each a songwriting credit, so they invented the name “Jean Murray”, using the first names of the DJ and his mother. 

 

*       *       *

 

Shortly after Black Russian broke up, Serge Kapustin and Nan O’Byrne worked with French singer and actress Sylvie Vartan, who is of Bulgarian-Armenian ancestry.  In the 1960’sSylvie Vartan was one of the top performers in France; from Wikipedia:  “She is known as one of the most productive and tough-sounding yé-yé artists.  Her performances often featured elaborate show-dance choreography, and she made many appearances on French and Italian TV.”  The term “yé-yé” is derived from the “yeah yeah” calls that were popularized by the Beatles and other 1960’s bands; many if not most of the performers were women, so they became known as “yé-yé girls”. 

 

*       *       *

 

Wikipedia states:  “The band [Eleven] cites their major influences as Jimmy Page and Led ZeppelinQueenThe Beatles, Johann Sebastian Bach, and Sergei Prokofiev.  With Chris Cornell [of Soundgarden and Audioslave], they recorded [Natasha] Shneider’s arrangement of Franz Schubert’s ‘Ave Maria’, which appears on the album, A Very Special Christmas 3 [1997], in the liner notes of which they state they deliberately chose a classical work to help interest young people in classical music.” 

 

(April 2015/1)

 

*       *       *

 

YouTube has “Nice Try (audio only) at:  www.youtube.com/watch?v=nnK31wgCGtY .  Their French-language cover of the Beatles song “Penny Lane” can be heard here:  www.youtube.com/watch?v=JaDlVJtDCjQ .  A mind-boggling 91 videos of Les Sinners songs is available at this address:  www.youtube.com/watch?v=5jPq6V4cPrs&list=PLsuZiqyAOc0PUl3l5cKPSI1WpVp5TWFl8 . 

 

(April 2015/2)

 

*       *       *

 

These days, the Beatles and the Rolling Stones are thought of as classic rock bands who (among many other things) formed the two halves of the quintessential 1960’s rivalry, as though they basically came along at the same time and had the same impact on the youth culture.  To some extent, that is true, but there was always more acceptance of the Beatles – perhaps because the Stones were there to provide a worse alternative to parents and other adults who didn’t approve of the Beatles’ music and long hair and all the rest of it. 
 
The above photo of the Rolling Stones from Mad magazine is one that I remember well from my younger days, not because the gag was all that great – the balloon quote from Mick Jagger is:  “I’d like people to consider me as something more than ‘just another pretty face’!” – but because the band was apparently at some sort of news conference, and there were name tags in front of each of them.  Almost as soon as we heard about the Beatles, we knew their names, “John, Paul, Georgeand Ringo”, and even casual fans typically knew the surnames as well.  But it wasn’t like that with the Rolling Stones
 
*       *       *
 

Like many of the British Invasion bands, the Rolling Stones primarily played and recorded R&B classics and were slow to begin writing their own songs.  By contrast, the Beatles were recording mostly new material, and this seemed to be more popular at least with American audiences – the Fab Four scored one #1 single after another over here, beginning with “I Want to Hold Your Hand in February 1964.   

 

*       *       *

 

Of course, the Beatles recorded their own version of “I Wanna be Your Man”; it was included on Meet the Beatles, with Ringo Starr on double-tracked lead vocals.  

 

*       *       *

 

In January 1966Mal and the Primitives did a brief tour of Norway; as Mal Ryder tells it:  “It seemed as though they hadn’t seen anything like us before; we felt like the Beatles.” 

 

(May 2015)

 

*       *       *

 
Bandmembers in Haymarket Square are Gloria Lambert (vocals), Marc Swenson (guitar, vocal), Robert Homa (bass, vocal), and John Kowalski (percussion).  The name of their sole album, Magic Lantern came out in 1968 and had been known in underground circles for several decades.  After being bootlegged several times over the years, Gear Fab Records – a reissue label that combines two Beatles-era slang terms – finally put out an authorized release in 2001.  My copy, however, is one of the bootlegs; it is dated 1996 and marked “Made in England”.  The record label is given as LSD Records, and the catalogue number is LSD-007. 
 
*       *       *
 
The Yardbirds included “Train Kept A-Rollin’ on their second American album, Having a Rave up with the Yardbirds that is absolutely chock full of classic songs; in addition to their major hits “I’m a Man and “Heart Full of SoulHaving a Rave Up includes “Evil Hearted You” and “Still I’m Sad”, plus a full side of the Yardbirds in concert featuring Eric Clapton on lead (taken from their British debut album, Five Live Yardbirds) that includes “I’m a Man again plus their devastating cover of Howlin’ Wolf’s “Smokestack Lightning that I first heard on their 1967 collection The Yardbirds’ Greatest Hits.  Anyone who thinks that the British Invasion began and ended with the Beatles and the Rolling Stones needs to hear this music post haste. 
 
(June 2015)
 
*       *       *
 

Eight Miles High is essentially a reference to an airplane ride; from Wikipedia:  “Although commercial airliners fly at an altitude of six to seven miles, it was felt that ‘eight miles high’ sounded more poetic than six and also recalled the title of the Beatles’ song ‘Eight Days a Week’. . . .  Other lyrics in the song that explicitly refer to the Byrds’ stay in England include the couplet:  ‘Nowhere is there warmth to be found / Among those afraid of losing their ground’, which is a reference to the hostile reaction of the UK music press and to the English group the Birds serving the band with a copyright infringement writ, due to the similarities in name.  In addition, ‘Round the squares, huddled in storms / Some laughing, some just shapeless forms’ describes fans waiting for the band outside hotels; while the line ‘Sidewalk scenes and black limousines’ refers to the excited crowds that jostled the band as they exited their chauffeur-driven cars.” 

 

*       *       *

 

So what is “psychedelic rock” anyway?  I once described it as “music designed to be enjoyed while under the influence of psychotropic drugs such as marijuana and LSD”, but I never intended that to be a definition.  The way that the Wikipedia article on psychedelic rock starts isn’t much better:  “Psychedelic rock is a style of rock music that is inspired or influenced by psychedelic culture and attempts to replicate and enhance the mind-altering experiences of psychedelic drugs.”  The article lists the pioneering bands as being the Beatles, the Beach Boysthe Byrds, and the Yardbirds

 

*       *       *

 

The October 1964 single by the Beatles, “I Feel Fine” (included on their album Beatles ’65) is credited as the first song to use feedback in a rock recording.  The band was about to leave the recording studio when John Lennon left his guitar resting against his amplifier, only to be greeted by a whine of sound.  A feedback note was then added to the very beginning of the song.  In one of his last interviews, John Lennon spoke proudly of this musical innovation:  “I defy anybody to find a record . . . unless it is some old blues record from 1922 . . . that uses feedback that way.  So I claim it for the Beatles.  Before [Jimi] Hendrix, before the Who, before anybody.  The first feedback on record.” 

 

*       *       *

 

One of my favorite Beatles songs, “Tomorrow Never Knows” is the first of their songs to use flanging; though by the time of its release in August 1966Wikipedia reports that almost every song on their album Revolver had been subjected to flanging

 

Anthology 2 includes the first take of “Tomorrow Never Knows, and the liner notes give the history of this groundbreaking recording (although it is the final track on Revolver, it is actually the first song that the band worked on after taking off the first three months of 1966):  “Clearly refreshed, and full of yet more innovative ideas, they conveyed at EMI Studios on 6 April [1966] and began work on their seventh album, Revolverwith what turned out to be the closing and most progressive number, ‘Tomorrow Never Knows’.  Here was Beatles music the like of which had never before been heard . . . or made.  Here was a dramatic new direction for a musical form that was ceasing to be ‘pop’ and developing into ‘rock’.  Here was a thrilling orgy of sound, all the more inventive for being made within the confines of 1966 four-track technology, less reliant on melody but focusing more on the conveyance of mind-pictures on to tape.  ‘Tomorrow Never Knows is all of this in a single piece of music, the released version (Take 3) being as stunning now as it was 30 years ago.  Recording under its working title, ‘Mark I’, Take 1, issued here for the first time, is notably different but, in its own way, just as compelling.  The Beatles’ music had indeed come a long way in the four years since ‘Love Me Do’.”  

 

(July 2015)

 

*       *       *

 

One of their finest and best known songs is the proto-feminist anthem by Lesley Gore called “You Don’t Own Me, a #2 hit in December 1963 that was kept from the top of the charts only by the Beatles’ “I Want to Hold Your Hand. The song was written by David White and John Madara; Quincy Jones was the record producer, and Jones later produced a 2015 remake of “You Don’t Own Me by Australian artist Grace featuring G-Eazy.
 
* * *
In 1965, David White and John Madara formed a band called the Spokesmen with a popular Philadelphia disc jockey named Ray Gilmore. They had an “answer song” that year to the Barry McGuire protest song “Eve of Destruction that was called “The Dawn of Correction” (“You missed all the good in your evaluation . . .”). I used to play those two singles back to back all the time back in the day. White and Madara produced the song, which was written by all three bandmembers. A cover version of the Beatles song “Michelle” by the Spokesmen was a minor hit in the Philadelphia area.
 
* * *
Carolina in My Mind” is one of James Taylor’s best known and most critically praised songs and is a frankly homesick remembrance of growing up in North Carolina (Chapel Hill specifically). He wrote the song while recording at the Beatles Apple Records studios in London. The song appeared on his 1968 debut album for Apple, James Taylor. Wikipedia says of this song: “Strongly tied to a sense of geographic place, ‘Carolina in My Mind’ has been called an unofficial state anthem for North Carolina. It is also an unofficial song of the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, being played at athletic events and pep rallies and sung by the graduating class at every university commencement.”
 
(August 2015)
* * *
I have never seen any of these local CD’s anywhere except at the place where I bought them.  But lesser known and unknown albums accumulate with the hit albums, and record stores offering both new and used albums try to sell them also.
 
I guess I first learned of this when I would go into a record store and start flipping through the stacks.  Many stores have separate sections set up for major artists like the Beatlesthe Beach BoysPat Benatar, the BandBlack Sabbath, David Bowiethe B-52’setc.  Then at the end would be a section simply marked B; here would be found albums by other artists whose names start with B.  Some would be well known – a stray Boston or Blind Faith or Jack Bruce album might be found there, say – but most were utterly unknown to me.  I would kind of flip through them, but I rarely bought anything. 
 
Now when I go into a record store that has major artists in their own marked sections, I usually pass those by and go straight to the plain “B”!
 
(December 2015)
 
*       *       *
 
When The Beatles Anthology documentary came out in 1995, I remember the filmmakers discussing how, in contrast to the mellow conversations from the three living bandmembers, they had to carefully select quotations from John Lennon who was often bitter and sarcastic about the Beatles. Lennon was assassinated at the age of 40, and the break-up of the Beatles was barely a decade in the past at that point. 
* * *
Writing for the Detroit Metro Times website, Ben Blackwell writes of the Gimme Some Action CD: “The Ramrods are the name of Detroit frontline punk warriors. . . . Ramrods lead howler Mark J. Norton barks like a bored kid with an armload of bulldogs while guitarist Peter James’s scarred-yet-smooth soloing informs us that [the Stooges album] Raw Power was safely tucked under his pillow. While the ’Rods studio output is brief, the highlight of the disc is easily their 1977 live medley: ‘Helter Skelter’ [by the Beatles] catapults into a punk-paintedMy Generation’ [by the Who] and declares the obvious in ‘Search and Destroy’ [by the Stooges] and cements its place in rock lore by adding the archetypical ‘I’m a Ramrod’.”
 
(March 2016)

* * *
You want feelthy leerics? How about this number, “Please Please Me” by the Beatles? This is the “A” side of their third single and the first to make much noise in their home country; it is also the title song on their first album, Please Please Me. To me, this song is easier to figure out than most on the Filthy Fifteen, once you think about the lyrics even a little: The singer is asking his girlfriend to perform oral sex on him, since he is already performing oral sex on her. 
(June 2016)
* * *
For some reason, over the years the 1970’s have gotten a reputation as a poor decade for music. (So do the 1950’s, for that matter, even though that is where rock and roll came from). It certainly cannot be because everything sounded the same. Most of the British Invasion bands were still active, from the Rolling Stones, to the Whoto the Kinks, to the Moody Blues, to the Hollies – to this day, even Herman’s Hermits has never broken up. Among the big English bands, only the Beatles and the Animals were gone by the end of the 1960’s.  The top American acts were still going strong as well, and many major stars arrived in the 1970’s. Anyone who says they are a music fan has to be able to find someone, and probably several someones on that list that they like a lot.
* * *
The debut Ramones by Ramones is a landmark album released in April 1976 that initially went nowhere, peaking at #111 on the Billboard album charts. In retrospect, all of the ingredients of punk rock were there, and its influence was enormous. Stephen Thomas Erlewine states flatly in his article on the band in Allmusic: “The Ramones were the first punk rock band. . . . By cutting rock & roll down to its bare essentials – four chords; a simple, catchy melody; and irresistibly inane lyrics – and speeding up the tempo considerably, the Ramones created something that was rooted in early ’60s, pre-Beatles rock & roll and pop but sounded revolutionary.” Rolling Stone lists Ramones as #26 on its list of the 100 Greatest Artists of All Time; while in 2002, Spin magazine named them the second best band, behind only the Beatles.
 
* * *
In retrospect though, most rock scribes view Fun House as the peak album in the short, frantic life of the Stooges, with more than a few calling it the greatest album of all time. As an example, as quoted in Wikipedia: “In The Rolling Stone Album Guide (2004), Scott Seward claimed that, although saying so ‘risks hyperbole’, Fun House is ‘one of the greatest rock & roll records of all time’ and that, ‘as great as they were, the Stones never went so deep, the Beatles never sounded so alive, and anyone would have a hard time matching Iggy Pops ferocity as a vocalist’.”
 
(December 2016)
* * *
Dogs from the Hare that Bit Us opens with a cover of a song by the Weirdos called “Solitary Confinement”, and follows that with inimitable covers by the Dickies of a variety of other numbers:  “Easy Livin’” (Uriah Heep), “There’s a Place” (the Beatles), “Nobody but Me” (the Human Beinz), “Can’t Let Go” (the Hollies, and also Linda Ronstadt), “Epistle to Dippy” (Donovan), and others. 
 
(March 2017)
 
*       *       *
 
After making a six-song demo and sending it to a dozen or so record labels, the Black Keys signed with Alive Records, since they were “the only label that would sign [them] without having to see [them] first” (according to Wikipedia). Dan Auerbach and Patrick Carney recorded the entirety of The Big Come-Up on an 8-track tape recorder in Carney’s basement, accentuating their raw blues rock sound. They released one single from the album on Isota Records, the blues standard “Leavin’ Trunk” backed with their cover of the Beatles song, “She Said, She Said”. At a later date, another track from their debut album, “I’ll Be Your Man” was used as the theme song for the HBO series Hung.  
* * *
While the other members of the Sloths moved on after the band broke up, Mike Rummans stuck with it. As reported in the AARP The Magazine article: “His musical résumé is a kind of pocket history of American pop. There he is on bass in the bubblegummy Yellow Payges [I just ordered an album, finally, by this band], the glam-tastic Hollywood Stars, the neo-rockabilly Kingbees. His Beatle bangs blossomed into a magnificent ’70s shag, then retreated as the ’80s arrived. Often, his bands flirted with success — the Stars were hyped as the West Coast’s New York Dolls, and the Kingbees charted two singles.”  
* * *
An overview of the Loons was published in the San Diego Reader in 2015 upon the release of Inside Out Your Mind; eight other articles about the band had been published previously by this alternative weekly. The article lists the “genre” for the Loons as noise/experimental and punk and describes the “full scope of their sound” as “Beatlesque vibes reincarnated in the form of post-punk fervency”. Influences are listed in the article as the Pretty Things, the Seeds, the Yardbirds, the Monks, the 13th Floor Elevators, MC5, the Misunderstood, and the Dutch band the Outsiders
(June 2017)
* * *
Continuing the overview of Iggy Pop and his seminal proto-punk band the Stooges from earlier in the year, here is a band that (until the present century) left behind just three studio albums, with a total of only 23 songs.  By comparison, the Beatles’ Abbey Road album alone has 17 songs.  For those who are fans, that can be extremely frustrating – and I know that all too well as someone who writes about Under Appreciated Rock Bands who often (though not always) don’t have a recorded output that is even that large.  Iggy Pop started his prolific solo career quickly enough, but Iggy’s solo albums are as different from his work with the Stooges as Elvis Presley’s music after he got out of the Army is from his early rockabilly sides at Sun Records and RCA
 
(September 2017)
 
*       *       *
 
Greg Shaw launched Bomp! Records in December 1974 with the release of the Bomp 101 single, “You Tore Me Down” b/w “Him or Me” by the Flamin’ Groovies, with the latter song being the Paul Revere and the Raiders song.  The first band signed by the new label was past UARB the Poppees, whose unabashed Beatlesque stylings were at odds with the established rock scene and the punk/new wave scene alike. 
 
*       *       *
 
In point of fact, ground-breaking music often doesn’t sell all that well.  For artists who catch the zeitgeist at just the right moment, like Elvis Presleythe Beatles and the Rolling Stones, the sky’s the limit.  Although they are household names now, however, none of the other rock and roll pioneers – Chuck Berry, Little Richard, Bo DiddleyBill Haley, etc. – made it nearly that big.  That will likely be the subject of a future UARB post. 
 
(December 2017)
 
*       *       *
 
Here is a rundown of the 2010-2011 Under-Appreciated Rock Bands/Artists of the Month for the past year: 
 
December 2010 – THE POPPEES1970’s Beatlesque power pop band (compilation album) 
 
(Year 2 Review)
 
*       *       *
 
We have been bombarded with important anniversaries this year.  In music, they all seem to go back to 1962:  The first albums by Bob Dylan (Bob Dylan) and by the Beach Boys (Surfin’ Safari) were released in the USthe Beatles first single, Love Me Do” b/w “P.S. I Love You was released in the UK (Sir Paul McCartney also turned 70 this year); the Rolling Stones had their first concert; and Andy Williams first began singing his signature song, “Moon River”.  All of this historical context might have gotten rock musicians in a writing mood:  Books by Keith RichardsPete TownshendRod Stewart, and Neil Young all came out this year. 
 
(Year 3 Review)
 
*       *       *
 
Mostly I had long series in the past 12 months:  3 of my 5 pieces in the Women in Rock series and all 5 in my Rock and Religion series.  I will no doubt have much more to say on both topics, but not right away.  In the latter, I examined Bob Dylan’s Christian period; and the religiously oriented events in the life of the Beatles, before and after the break-up, beginning with John Lennon’s notorious pronouncement that the Beatles are more popular than Jesus.  
*       *       *
 

I have tried to work out my approach to rock and roll writing, and this is what I have come up with. 

 

Keep it Interesting – Decades ago, when I first started doing this, it came to me that posts about rock should crackle. 

 

Keep it Positive – Most rock critics tend to put down other rock artists and bands while they write about the ones that they like; I try not to do that. 

 

Keep it Informative – I am not trying to show off here or to talk over someone’s head.  I am not afraid to call somebody an ex-Beatle for instance.  

 

Keep it Engaging – I try to show the same enthusiasm for something that I found out long ago and not go, ho hum, everybody knows that.  

 

Keep it Clean – I will use offensive language when needed, but without the words fully spelled out, and I keep nudity to a minimum. 

 

Keep it Sweeping – Many if not most people like a lot of kinds of music, so the writing and the UARA’s and UARB’s come from pretty much the full spectrum. 

 

Keep it Personal – I will connect up what I am writing about to my personal life when I can – but not too much; this is the Internet after all. 

 

(Year 5 Review)
 
*       *       *
 
I was finally unable to keep up the monthly schedule earlier this year. I could see it coming; issuing the Notes was taking longer and longer, with my August post not coming out until after Halloween. I had decided earlier in the summer that I am going to try to keep up a quarterly schedule after this year: December, March, June, and September. They are just taking too much time to write and are coming out too long. I was also getting sloppy: There was a perfectly good Wikipedia article on Haymarket Square, but I hadn’t even bothered to look there to see if there was one until I had already finished writing that post. Additionally, I was having trouble keeping up the enthusiasm; for instance, after writing about the songwriting angle on the Beatles and the Rolling Stones, I knew that I should follow up with posts on the Who and the Kinks. Maybe that will come at a later date. I am more than halfway through the post for December 2015, so it won’t be long before that one comes out.
 
(Year 6 Review)
*       *       *
 
Since I am down to a quarterly schedule rather than a monthly schedule, my annual list is a lot shorter, so I will try listing all of the people that I have discussed in some depth rather than just the Under Appreciated Rock Band and the Story of the Month. They are all punk rock bands of one kind or another this year (2015-2016), and the most recent post includes my overview of the early rap/hip hop scene that an old friend, George Konstantinow challenged me to write – probably so long ago that he might have forgotten.
 
 
 
(Year 7 Review)
*       *       *
 
Anyway, here is what and who I talked about last year:
March 20171980’s/1990’s punk rock band THE LAZY COWGIRLS; Story of the Month on Ringo Starr’s pre-Beatles career; also, first-wave punk rock, Iggy Pop, the Stooges, the Avengers, Penelope Houston, the Weirdos, the Dickies, Pat Todd and the Rankoutsiders
 
(Year 8 Review)

* * *
The other songs on the Racehorse album are written or at least co-written by Holly Ramos (there are no credits given in my copy of the CD), but some are echoes of other well-known songs:  “Coal Miner’s Lullaby” has almost the same name as the Loretta Lynn classic “Coal Miner’s Daughter”, and “This Bird Has Flown” lifts the parenthetical phrase from the Beatles song Norwegian Wood (This Bird Has Flown).  In this case, the song is about a real bird (as used in the Beatles song, “bird” is British slang for an attractive girl or woman):  “One day I found a bird on my way / so one time I thought I’d make him mine / No longer wild but tame / I gave that bird a name / A dark night that bird would sing instead of fly / A sad song / I left the cage open now he’s gone / It came as no surprise / When I opened up my eyes / That this bird has flown.” 
 
* * *
In order to make sure I catch them all, I figured that the best way was to go through all of the webpages alphabetically.  So far I have gotten into the F’s; I have only been doing this since mid-August, so that’s not bad for well under six months.  This includes all of the extensive writing on Allmusicthe Beatles and Bob Dylan.  I am trying to get through it as fast as I can (having retired as of the first of the year will definitely help), not only because I have an as yet unspecified deadline before Classic Google Sites goes away, but also because I doubt that I will ever find a text editor that works as well and has as many features as this one.  I doubt that I will get much new writing about music done, but I have other priorities now. 
 
(Year 9 Review)
 
Last edited: April 3, 2021