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Stolen Melodies, Copped Riffs and Royalty Robberies: What do T-Bone Walker, Chuck Berry & Keith Richards Have in Common? (The RIff)

My wife is nowhere near the music fan that I am. She does not know (or care to know) a fraction of what I do about the songs and the story behind them are concerned. She does, though, have quite an ear for music. 

She regularly surprises me when she will say, "hey, this sounds exactly like such-and-such". She asked me one time, "don't these people get mad when someone else plays their song and claims it as their own"? 

Oh, boy. That is a can of worms I'm not sure I want to open up?! On second thought, why the hell not...

The history of recorded music is full of various stories about stolen melodies, copped riffs and royalty robberies. Some of the stories are legendary:

John Fogerty was sued (unsuccessfully) by his old CCR label, Fantasy Records, for sounding too much like himself! Fantasy said that "Old Man Down the Road" sounded too much like "Run Through the Jungle" and that Fogerty was plagiarising himself. What a joke. Fogerty had to go to court to defend his style. Hear for yourselves:

In an even more maddening example, Neil Young was sued by Geffen Records for not sound like himself enough.  How can anyone say this about Ol' Neil?!  They way the man shifts musical directions, you'd think the moon is controlling him as it does the tides (I love Neil for this reason). When Neil put out "Everybody's Rockin", Geffen sued him for making "uncharacteristic and uncommercial records". Ok, ok, maybe "Ol' '80's Cantankerous Neil" wasn't trying to break new ground with this one, but to be sued by his label...?  Here is a little ditty from that album:

And then there is this story about the Aussie band, Men at Work, that is making the headline news.  You all remember their 80's hit, "Land Down Under", right? How could you not remember that jaunty, lilting, flute melody in it?  Larrikin Music Publishing managing director, Norm Lurie, remembers it to...from his childhood. Larrikin is now suing Men At Work for back & future royalties on the song. They claim the flute part comes from the refrain of an old Aussie children's song, the "Kookaburra Sits in the Old Gum Tree".  

Check out this link to see/hear the similarities between the two. When done watching, please proceed to vomit in your lap. This lawsuit is a joke, too. Post Script: I lived in in Sydney for five years...Vegamite sandwiches are good.

Crazy stories, hunh? Can you imagine if the guy that wrote "Happy Birthday" had it copyrighted!?! We'd all be in court!

There are many, many, MANY other examples like this.  Sadly, most of them are about money. What I want to do is celebrate influence.  A few months ago I wrote a post about artists wearing their influences on their sleeves.This may be a quasi-Part II to that one. In that post I quoted two people: 

Neil Young: "It's all one song". (read here for the story behind that quote)
Hunter S. Thompson: "I've been plagiarising all my life.  Its called learning". 

And that is exactly what it is, isn't it...learning. You like/listen to someone. They have an impact on you. You are influenced by them. You take on some of the characteristics in your own playing. You develop your own sound from this. Is this stealing or is this influence?

Case in point: where would we be without T-Bone Walker, Chuck Berry and Keith Richards?  My guess is the insane asylum from having to listen to Pat Boone for a decade longer than we should have.

Let's have some good ol' music fun with influence using these three R&R behemoths.  

T-Bone Walker was an early pioneer (in the truest sense of the word) with the electric guitar sound. Once he plugged it in, he made that fiddle squeal and sing out like no one had ever heard before.  Surely that would influence young hot-shot guitarists; and it did. Hendrix stated that T-Bone was a big influence. Even more importantly, Chuck Berry sites T-Bone as one of his two biggest influences (Louis Jordan being the other). We all know Chuck's sound, right?  Yes, but was it really Chuck's in the first place?  Listen to this T-Bone cut, "T-Bone Boogie", that predates any Chuck recordings:

"WOW", right? Chuck has bitched and moaned for years about how he got robbed by people stealing his sound. Most famously, he sued the Beach Boys for stealing the riff from "Sweet Little Sixteen" and won (check out this cool site called, "Sounds Just Like" for a Berry/Beach Boys comparison).  Yeah, Chuck, I guess you were influenced by T-Bone. Have a listen to one of Berry's Great 28, "Bye, Bye Johnny". Sound a little like, "T-Bone Boogie"? Hell, yes.

Now we all know that there are a lot of "Chuck's children out there playin' his licks" (thanks for that lyric, Bob Seeger), none more famously than Keith Richards. Keith is an unabashed Chuck disciple. Keith has said that all he wanted to do when he started out playing was, "to sound like Chuck Berry". Chuck's riffs are found all throughout Keef's playing with the Stones and with his solo band, the X-Pensive Winos.  Here is a track off his first solo album, "Talk is Cheap". Listen for those Chuck riffs like they "were ringing a bell". Also, Johnny Johnson, Chuck's long-time pianist is on this track pounding out on the 88's. 

There are way too many Chuck/Keef stories to talk about here.  You should watch the most excellent movie, "Hail, Hail Rock & Roll" to get a feel for the relationship Master and Pupil had.  Here is a clip of the two Gunslingers "learning" how to play "Carol"

There you have it: influence in all it's rock and roll glory. It is cool to listen to those three songs in succession to see how that guitar riff has evolved. Can you think of any other great cascading riff lineage?
_____

Bonus Cut:
While we're at it, here is one last example: the Bo Diddley Beat. Bo's Beat was the new sliced-bread and may never be topped. Here is an early Bo classic and a song by the Allman Brothers from the same name: 

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Filed under  //   Allman Brothers   Bo Diddley   Bow-Down Post   Chuck Berry   Happy Birthday   Hunter S. Thompson   influence   John Fogerty   Keith Richards   lawsuits   Men At Work   Music   neil young   record labels   riffs   Rock and Roll   royalties   T-Bone Walker  
Posted by Judd 

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Mojo Men don't quit: The search for the loudest, raunchiest guitar-based rock & roll ever preserved

A while back I asked Nev, owner of Mojo Records here in Sydney, if he knew of a way long gone out of print Bo Diddley record called, "Bo Diddley's Beach Party".  Nev said, "nope, you've got me on that one". 

Wow.

Nev is like the Axis...he knows everything. I was a bit surprised when he said he had never heard of it.  In actuality, seems like a lot of people have never heard of this album...it has been out of print since the late 1960's.  There was no question about it, we had to get our ears on that vinyl.

I found out about the album when I was checking out Bo's discography on allmusic.com.  I was looking for some live Bo when I came across this review:

"A blistering live album...and quite simply the finest live rock & roll album of its era, cut live by Diddley and band at Myrtle Beach, SC, on July 5 and 6, 1963. From the opening track to the final note, this is some of the loudest, raunchiest guitar-based rock & roll ever preserved. It also bears an uncanny resemblance to the sound that the Rolling Stones achieved on their own Got Live If You Want It, which only shows how much the Stones learned from Diddley. Currently out of print but well worth the search".

"Well worth the search"!?!  How could I not go looking for this?  This was Holy Grail, Missing Link, Davey Jones' Locker territory!  I had to have this album and so did Nev. Once he read this review, he looked me dead in the eye and said, "we gonna get that mutha". 

Damn straight, Nev.  Damn, straight.
_____

Nev jumped on eBay and found a copy in the UK.  I made my bids and waited...four days.  Finally the bidding ends and we have our vinyl.  I pay about $34 USD for it and waited for it to arrive on my doorstep in Sydney....and I waited and I waited and I waited.  No album. Now, I don't think the guy in the UK pulled a fast one. I think it was legitimately lost in the mail or sitting on the bottom of a pile of boxes in customs. Needless to say Nev and I were disappointed. 

A couple of days passed and I got fed up.  Why would the Lords of Karma play a dirty trick like that on Nev and I?!  All we wanted was some live Bo and the promise that the review made to us: "quite simply the finest live rock & roll album of its era".  I went on ebay and found two more.  I wasn't taking any more chances.  These two cost me almost $100 USD combined.  At this point, money was not an object. 

I needed to tell Nev that the album was back on the front burner.  The following is an actual email exchange between Nev and myself (no edits have been made):

Me to Nev:
Nev...this damn album can't f*ck with us.  We'll show that thing who is boss.  I'm going to go after it and go after it hard, and once I get it...I'm going to treat it like a virgin on prom night.  Caress it, hold it and tell it everything is going to be all right. And then...Whamo!  I'm going to tear that thing up!

I have two copies I am bidding for on eBay...one from the States and one from Canada.  I'm leading both.  I am going to get one for me and one for the shop.  We'll have to build a friggin' pedestal for it after we get it.  See you Friday.

Cheers.Judd

Nev to Me:

Judd, you da man. Get that mo fo and teach it not to f*ck with the mojo men and as for prom night virgins were gonna get this f*cker. I'll look forward to friday.
p.s. the dylan vinyl has turned up.

Cheers, Nev.


Damn straight, Nev.  Damn straight.
_____

Fast forward to this past weekend.   I got one of the Bo albums on Thursday.  I called up Nev and told him that the goods had arrived and I was going to wait until Friday at the shop to open it up. We had waited too long not to have the first listen in the shop.  Nev, of course, was ready to rock...and so was I.  There is nothing like anticipation rewarded.  I came home each day after work looking for Bo to be at my door.  I was so ready for that record to be there.  I wanted to hear it, but more importantly I wanted to be able to ring Nev and tell him that we had it.

Nev is a true Champion of the Blues and related music.  That shop is more than just his business, it is him. It is not just a record shop, it is a reflection of Nev and how much he cares about providing an experience and a feel for his customers and friends. It has it's own culture and character...and characters who are loyal to the cause and give back in their own ways to keep that place going.  I do my part each time I go in there (my record and CD collection grows weekly) and this Bo record was just another way to say thanks.
_____

We put word out that Bo would be played at max volume on Friday night.  Most all of the Friday regulars were there as well as few stragglers, strangers and invited guests.  We primed up on Cooper's Sparkling Ale and some choice soul cuts from the Goldwax label and then we broke out the Bo. Nev did the honours and cut that sucker lose from the packaging it was mailed in and then we dropped the needle down deep in the grooves.

This album was pure nitroglycerin from start to finish.  The (live) Bo Diddley Beat shook and the shop and had us all stomping feet, slapping backs and cheering out loud.  I looked over at Nev, who was smiling and nodding his head in approval.  He looked back and said, "Yep.  That's it baby.  That shit is Mojo.

Damn straight, Nev.  Damn Straight.

             
Click here to download:
Mojo_Men_dont_quit_The_search_.zip (3802 KB)

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Filed under  //   Bo Diddley   Bo Diddley Beat   Bow-Down Post   mojo   Originator   riffs   The Originator   Vinyl  
Posted from Sydney, Australia
Posted by Judd 

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