My shit-box stereo and the case of the missing Bobby Keys sax solo

When I was in college I had to borrow a pot to piss in. Like most all college students, I didn't have a lot of money.  What money I did have went to the essentials: beer, parties, beer, music, beer and food (in that order). I didn't have many possessions either. Living in a fraternity house for three years teaches you a thing or two.  One of which is to protect the things you love most; if you don't, they will get chewed up and spit out in that madcap, 24/7, party carnival environment. 

Of my possessions, the one thing everybody knew not to touch, was my music collection. Back then it was much, much smaller than what it has become today (1,500 albums strong: Judd's Juke Joint). It was cassettes mostly (I graduated uni in '94); the majority of which were Rolling Stones albums. I also had a few dozen mixes that I had made over the years. I called this gang of mixes the Frankenstein Collection.  I had dug up lost causes and old faves and created some monster mixes that kept parties rollickin' until many a sun-up.

My room I lived in was small. The closet was almost as big as the room itself. In fact, I chose to stuff my single mattress in the closet and sleep in there. I did this for two reasons: one winter we didn't have any heat in the house, so we were forced to hunker down in our rooms with space heaters, and two, I wanted everyone to hunker in my room to party...so I need to clear space.

People liked hanging in my room because I never closed the bar and because I had the best tunes. I had a chest of drawers in my room; the top two of which held all of my tapes and what few CDs I had. My stereo was a complete and utter piece of shit. It was a set of scrapheap components consisting of a tuner, tape deck and a cd player.

The tuner had been through the ringer: beer spilled into it, fuses blown, dropped a half a dozen times and it had a big dent in the side for good measure. Near the end of its life, it only played music through the right speaker channel. Back then, the fact that the music was only coming through one channel didn't matter to me. I wasn't listening to the music as much as I was just hearing it. I never really thought about the different instruments being played...I just liked the song, the story and the attitude that came out of the speakers.

I remember the night the tuner blew out in the left channel.  We were having a few-hundred beers and listening to Sticky Fingers.  We were right in the middle of "Brown Sugar" when the left channel went dead. At first no one noticed it. When the song made its way to Bobby Keys sax solo...it wasn't there?!  I stopped the tape and rewound it.  Nope, it was gone. I knew I was drunk...but drunk enough to lose a Bobby Keys sax solo?

After I slapped and shook the tuner, I realised that the left channel went kaput. Short of administering drunken CPR to my stereo, there was nothing I could do to fix it...and I never did.

I didn't party because I didn't have the cash to replace the stereo and party because I had stumbled upon a whole new way to listen to the songs I thought I knew so well. When I lost Booby Key's wailing, cock-sure, sax strut I gained a pulsing, driving Keef Richards rhythm machine. It was always there all along, but I had never really listened to it. Without the sax, the rhythm was isolated and I realised that it was underpinning the song. It was the spine of the song and the sax was the flesh on the bone.

I started to re-listen to all of my music again...through only the right channel. There was so much there that I had missed! 
My listening habits were forever changed. There was no turning back...my ears had been opened and tuned to listen to the layers of the songs. The song may be the sum of the parts, but the individual parts have their own stories to tell, too.

Which leads me to one of the most unheralded music documentary series ever: "Classic Albums". Have you seen any of the documentaries in this series?  If so, you are nodding your head and smiling. If not, here is what it is all about:

Musicians, producers, music biz'ers and the like talk about a particular album. They discuss how they made the album or how they were affected by it. The music, and its production, is dissected by the musicians and/or producers. They sit at the mixing console and play the multitrack recordings and spotlight the individual instrumental and vocal tracks. The insights they give into how the songs and the sounds were made is captivating.

I love this series for the storytelling. There are so many stories that exist within songs; stories about the instruments; stories about the musicians; stories about the studio; stories about the culture; stories about the stories. I am completely transfixed when the producer and musician are sitting at the console and isolating a particular piano part or back-up vocal and talking about how/why it was created. You really start to get a feel for what it was like to be in the studio.

My fave episode focuses on The Band's, "The Band" album. If you have followed along on this blog you know that Levon Helm is one of my heroes and I have said that if there was one band I could have been in, it would be the The Band...and this album is one of my top five faves of all time. This episode is all killer, no filler. Front and centre are Levon, Robbie and Rick as well as the producer John Simon.  

The beauty of The Band's music was the juxtaposition of song-simplicity with a rich cache of a multifarious, layered instrumental supporting tracks. This particular album is steeped in integrity. When you watch this episode, nothing expresses this more than watching Levon tell his stories. 

As John Simons says in this episode, "Levon sings in his own voice".  So true. Levon does not sing in a southern accent, rather he is his southern accent. This integrity, this realness is so very evident in the songs on this album. One of my fave scenes in the episode is when Levon and Simons are sitting at the console picking "Rag Mama Rag" apart.

Look how much fun Levon is having!  You hear a lot of artists say,"oh, I never listen to any of my records".  Not Levon. The songs are his life, his memories and he doesn't leave them on a shelf collecting dust. How could you not want to be hanging with Levon in the studio...

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At seven minutes into this next clip, Levon and Simons start to pick "Rocking Chair" apart. They are talking about the vocal harmonies, specifically the sweet sound of Richard Manuel's voice. It is fascinating to watch Levon relive the recording. I want to pop a couple beers and put my cuban heeled boots up on the console and kick back my chair...

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The next vid clip finishes up that segment. At one point (0:18 into it), Simons says, "I love this part".  Levon quickly follows with a, "me too". How many times have you, I, been sitting with friends talking about a song just like this: "I love this part...listent to that piano...that guitar fill just kills me...".  

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(I love the comment from Levon on "that Chinese ending")

You really should watch the entire episode on "The Band" album. Click through the vids I have here and you can watch it all...it is broken up into five parts. There are other bow-down episodes I like, too: I like the one on The Dead's, "American Beauty" (watch Bob Wier cringe when he hears his isolated vocal on Sugar Magnolia), The Who's "Who's Next", Lou Reed's "Transformer" and John Lennon's "Plastic Ono Band".  

Check out the Classic Album YouTube Channel
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When I first saw this series I thought back to my shit-box college stereo.  Essentially it was the same type of sound discovery and isolation of the bits and parts; the Classic Album series took it to another place entirely. 

The music industry critics talk about how the model for selling and distributing the music/content is changing...whether the big labels like it or not: the death of the album...subscription models...streaming services, etc.

What I want is a way to get more involved with the music.  I do that with vinyl because I actively need to make time to listen to an album front to back as well as to physically be involved in flipping the album over to side two. When I listen to my music in bits and bytes, I would like more access to it to pick it apart and play with it...I want to explore the songs the way they do on the Classic Album series. 

Why can't I buy a digital version of "The Band" on iTunes that gets played only through my Mac software, "Garage Band".  Here I can use the "mixing board" to isolate instruments or vocals...pull the song apart and listen to the guts of it. THAT would be cool. THAT would be something I would get lost in for hours. THAT would be something I would pay a few extra dollars for. If Classic Albums sold this as a special edition for each episode, I'd be first in line. 

Until then, I will do what I do with every new album by a fave artist that I get. I play it for one month as intended....through both the left and right channels. Then for one week I play it through the left channel and follow that with a week's worth of the right channel only. After that, I'm back to the right and left combo. 

Some people dream of playing on classic albums...I dream of producing them.

Flipping Vinyl: A Lunch Hour Look in to London's Vintage Vinyl Bins

                 

Lunch breaks aren't just for eating...unless you use them to gobble up the best of London's vintage vinyl.

I have recently discovered that there are almost one dozen vintage vinyl shops near my office in London. I work off of Oxford Street, near Soho. I went for a stroll the other day and realised that I was smack dab in the middle of my London Record Shop Search map (find it here)!

This is dangerous for many reasons. In the next few months I see three things happening as a result of my lunch break discovery...I will get skinnier, my wallet will get lighter and my vinyl collection will get much fatter. The other problem I see is that I will have to come up with excuses as to why my lunch hour has turned into a lunch hours.

Damn the problems!  I have mass vinyl at my fingertips! 

I am going to use this post as a photo album for my lunchtime vinyl hunt exploits. The album will keep updating as I send pics frm my iphone (via the PicPosterous app).  I'll update the comments so that you can see when new vinyl haunts have been properly hunted.

To kick things off, let me tell you a bit about what I saw today:

The first shop I stopped in was"On the Beat".  This shop has been alive and owned by the same guy for 31+ years!  He not only had the coolest old vinyl, but he was playing great tunes...RL Burnside was blaring out from the shop into the streets when I approached the shop. He had all kinds of old Melody Maker, Creem, Rolling Stone original copies hanging on the wall; tons of artifacts and souvenirs, framed, autographed pictures; many racks of obscure, bootleg and special release vinyl.  

I need more time in this shop. Too much to take in just thirty minutes. I found a gem here though: an original pressing of Bob Dylan & The Band's, "Basement Tapes".  There'll be good rocking  at my place tonight for sure.

The second shop I stopped in was "JB's Records".  JB's was a bit smaller, certainly did not lack in volume of cool vinyl.  The shop itself has been there for almost 30 years; the current owner has had it for the last ten.

Here I picked up two classics from two fave acts:

  • Booker  T. & The MGs: "Green Onions"
  • Keith Richards: "Talk is Cheap" (first solo album)

Stay tuned for more vinyl bin flipping fun...

Happy Turkey Day from the6149: Hopefully you all get a healthy dose of this today...

Thanksgiving is my fave holiday.  No gifts, no funny fat man in a red suit, no bullshit. Just good friends, good family and good food. 

Here's a little soundtrack for this post:

I'm always thankful; I don't take anything for granted...at least I try not to.  I am very thankful for my wife and our exciting life. I am thankful for our health. I am very thankful for our families and our friends.  Those are the 24/7/365 things I am thankful for.

Here are a few other things:
  • Open G tuning (that one was for you, Keef)
  • The Blues (specifically Charley Patton, Howlin' Wolf, John Lee Hooker, R.L. Burnside, Otis Rush & Junior Wells)
  • Neil Young's ever busy muse
  • Hunter S. Thompson's wisdom
  • The state of New Hampshire: ("Live Free or Die" is not only the coolest sate motto, they are words to live by)
And...of course I am very thankful for everyone that takes time out of the day to read what I post here at the6149.  

Now get off the interweb and go get a second helping of turkey and all the fixin's.

Cheers.Judd

"So Russell... what do you love about music?" Share Your Almost Famous "Everything" Moments

William Miller: "So Russell...what do you love about music?"
Russell Hammond: "To begin with...everything".

Exactly! This is the last bit of dialogue we hear before the end of the movie, "Almost Famous". It is the scene where William finally gets his interview with Russell. It is a moment that induces head nods and knowing grins from all serious music fans. I (we) know exactly what Russell means. Everything means, well, everything

It is not any thing about the music; it is everything about the music: the songs, the vocal and musical nuances, the inspiration for the song, the actual recording of it, where they recorded, the band, the guest musicians, the album cover, the naysayers, the promoters, the stories and all of the tall tales associated with the music...everything.

Here is a bit of  "everything": 

On Bob Dylan's 2001 release, "Love and Theft", drummer David Kemper tells a revealing tale about the "training" Bob put them through initially. Rehearsals for the new album started nearly a year before recording it. Kemper said that one time, for a period of three days straight, Dylan had the band play only Dean Martin songs(?!). Dylan would have them do this with many other early legendary and unheralded American recording artists. The band would rehearse these songs over and over and then never play them again once Dylan had heard what he wanted to hear. 

A year later when they began the recording process, Dylan would introduce a new song such as, "Summer Days".  He would instruct the band to play it in the style of Dean Martin or one of the other artists they had practiced. Dylan had been training the band (a year in advance!) for the sound he wanted the album to have.  Kemper said it was like going to the "School of Americana, as taught by Bob".  That gives me a whole new perspective on the album each time I put it on. You can't go back and have a listen and not think about this. 

Everything does not have to be a legendary tall tale either. There is a scene in the director's cut of "Almost Famous" where Russell give us a hint at what he means by everything. Right before Stillwater plays their first gig, Russell is talking to William about the significance of the "littlest details in songs".  Russell said that these little details are the ones that people "remember the most".  Russell uses the "first whooo" in Marvin Gaye's, "What's Happening Brother" as an example (I included that in the Tune Tags playlist below. The "whooo" shows up at 2:15...and the first one is the memorable one).

Russell (Cameron) is right. These are the unplanned, down to the bone, in the groove moments that can make bad songs good and great songs legendary. They are real moments of inspiration and emotion that collide and combust from within the musicians...because they are feeling it. That is what makes the songs special. That is why we like these little moments.

You must have a few of these yourselves. I know I do. In the spirit of Russell's "everything" and "littlest details", I am offering up ten songs that strike sparks for me.  I have included a bit of twitter'esque detail on each "little moment".  Feel free suggest some of your favourites and I will add them to the playlist for others to put their ears to. 

  • Neil Young - "Cinnamon Girl":  Here is another "whooo" for you and it happens at 2:09.  The "whooo" coincides with this guitar solo that launchs out of the heavy-duty muck n' mire rhythm that Crazy Horse is laying down. 
  • Derek and the Dominoes - "Little Wing": Clapton and Duane Allman trading licks on a Jimi Hendrix song.  I'd shout out "whooo" too if I was Clapton (1:55)
  • The band (w/The Staple Singers) - "The Weight":  This is from The Last Waltz and it is all about Mavis Staples.  There are two bits in here that make this a bow-down track for me. This is such a "breath-y" performance.  You get the feeling she is stirring something up inside and getting ready for the pay-off (an example at 1:03). That pay-off comes at 1:26.  It is a this from the gut "unh-huh" that brings me to my knees each time I hear it. 
  • Rod Stewart - "Every Picture Tells a Story": I love this song. It always make me feel like traveling...on a whim. I think it is Rod's best penned song (with help from Ronnie Wood). At 2:35, Rod lets off a rather rowdy Whooo! (another "whooo"!). It might have something to do with Kenny Jones thundering away, Ronnie starting in with this galloping acoustic and the female back singer firing off an inspired backing vocal. Whoo indeed. (by the way, this one is on the Almost Famous soundtrack)
  • The Rolling Stones - "Prodigal Son": A two for one! One of my "little moment" here comes at the end...but the entire song is needed to make it happen. Keef is strumming the hell out of his acoustic. You think he was enjoying himself? If the abrupt and ramshackle "heeyaay" is any indication...yes. The other one is a Mick moment. At 1:55, Mick drawls off a "mercy" that almost makes you feel like he means it. 
  • Tom Petty & The Heartbreakers - "Shadow of a Doubt": Another two for one. At 2:03, Tom puts this inflection on the end of "kid" that starts to rev me up...and himself, too.  The tension starts there and builds up until Tom shouts out "aaaaiy" at 2:42. The song doesn't slow down from there. 
  • Drive-By Truckers - "Sink Hole": One of my favourite "new" bands.  The Truckers tell a good story and this one by Patterson Hood is no exception. There is passion here, because it is most likely a true story.  The song moves like a stock car driver frantically trying to come up from the back of the pack. By the time Patterson gets to 3:12 and delivers that "eeeoouuuaaagh" you know he damn well means it. 
  • The Animals - "The Story of Bo Diddley": Eric Burden spends five minutes and fifteen seconds telling us Bo's story. By 5:16 he has worked himself into a tizzy and squelches off a "eeehaaaaayy Bo Diddley" that came from the soles of his feet. This is a long song, but I always find the payoff worth it. 
  • Warren Zevon - "The French Inhaler":  What a GENIUS song.  The lyrics are truly a gift to the listener.  Apparently this was about his wife (word is she was "ending up with someone different every night"). At 3:28, Zevon makes a kissing sound into the mic (the great kiss-off, perhaps). I have listened to numerous other studio takes of this track and have not heard that anywhere else. My guess is that this was a timely improve...and it works. 
  • The Rolling Stones - "Casino Boogie": Ah, Keith. The master of the perfect anti-harmony vocal. On "Exile on Main St." he was in rare vocal form. There are so many Keef moments on this album that it is hard to choose. This one always makes me smile: check out Keef's squealing of "understaaaand" at 00:46.
OK, your turn. I'll add them to the playlist...
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*Disclaimer:

I am a bonafide nut over Almost Famous. I love the story and the romantic notions of a life as an outsider on the inside of this cool scene that was/is Rock and Roll.  Cameron Crowe did a brilliant job recreating the times and telling his own story. Here is a funny story of my own: 

Circa 2003 I was living in Fort Lauderdale, Florida. My wife had gone to the Florida Keys with some girlfriends for the weekend. I came home on Saturday after a night of drinking and carousing with my buddies. I decided I was going to watch Almost Famous in its entirety...which I surprisingly did considering my state of being at the time. 

About three weeks after this night I got a package in the mail...from Cameron Crowe?! Well, it wasn't Cameron himself, but someone on his behalf. This is where things get fuzzy. Apparently, after I finished watching the movie, I went on Crowe's website. At the time they were selling screenplays from the movie with a handwritten, personally addressed note from Cameron...complete with coffee stain on the cover. I bought one. I didn't even remember that I did it. But, there it was, at my doorstep. It was nicely bound and was printed on heavy stock paper...complete with the note from Cameron.

Wow.  My wife was just shaking her head and laughing at me. I think it cost thirty or forty bucks. The funny thing is, I probably would have bought it sober. I still have it, but it is on the open sea on the way over from Sydney, Australia along with the rest of our belongings. When it gets here, I will post a picture of it and the handwritten note. 

I found a free copy online and have attached it here for reading or downloading.

Click here to download:
Cameron Crowe's (355 KB)

Tune Tags

The Goods
  • Cameron Crowe's website
  • Almost Famous Wikipedia Page (lots of great insights and factoids here)
  • Almost Famous IMBD page 
  • Check out Bill Simmons', The ESPN Sports Guy, use of Almost Famous in one of his recent columns about the offseason for the NBA (well worth the read just for the AF reference alone) 
  • Podcast that talks about the recording of "Love & Theft"
  • "Untitled": director's but/bootleg of Almost Famous (this is suberb...better than the original theatre cut)

 

The Ballad of the Music Fan and the Stolen Mix Tape...

I remember the first time that I heard it I shut it off almost instantly.  After only fifteen seconds worth I was long gone. I was equal parts confused, awed and inspired and I was thinking maybe I had gotten more than I bargained for.  That was the moment I became a true music fan.

It was just over twenty years ago that I was a sophomore in high school.  I was ambitious and curious to a fault; always peering around corners. I had my interests and one of them was music.  Actually, music wasn't so much an interest as it was an anchor. Like any good sixteen year old I was impressionable and wanted to be part of the scene.  So much happening all around me and there was so much that I wanted to be a part of. I needed something to latch on to help me make sense of it all. That was when the music started to play.

Growing up, music was always playing in my house and when it was, it meant fun.  Sometimes it was just with the family and sometimes it was with friends.  No matter what the occasion, when the music played we focused on the fun and the good times rolled. Those times left deep impressions on me. The music was synonymous with the feeling that everything was was going to plan, everything was going to be alright.  Getting lost in the sound was good for the soul; I still feel that way today.

So, I was sixteen and in search of the scene.  I remember being at a party...a "senior" party. These parties were the big time. These people had a good two, three year head start on "cool" and I was dong my best to play the part without playing the fool (which, unfortunately, happened more times than not that year).  In between lurking in the shadows, trips to the keg and staring hopelessly (hopefully) at the hottest chicks the school had to offer, I was hanging out by the stereo. There was a pile of mix tapes on the table that kept getting popped in the player throughout the night.  With all that was going on, I couldn't really focus on the sounds, but I could tell that the music was setting the pace of the party.  Fists pumped when the first riffs of a familiar song kicked off.  Back slaps and bear hugs occured when songs swelled and swooned.  Crowds swayed when they sang out the choruses in unison.  The good times were rolling.

There was one guy who seemed to own the stereo. Come to find out, he owned all of the tapes. He was playing tunes and he was in charge of the pulse and knew that he had his finger on it.  The sequencing of the songs was perfect.  One, two, three songs in a row brought the crowd up with some hard charging favourites and then set it down easy on a familiar sing-a-long. It was obvious to me that this guy knew what he was doing.  My tastes at the time were in transition. As a music listener I was the equivalent a headless chicken running in circles.  That fact hit me like a runaway train the next morning when I played the mix tape I stole.

Most likely it was the ambition/curiosity cocktail I spoke of earlier (or maybe it was just the beer), but I knew I had to get some of what he had...so, I stold one of his tapes. Yes, when no one was looking I randomly ripped one of the tapes out of the pile and shoved it in the inside pocket of my jean-jacket.  It wasn't until the morning that I remembered that I had it.  I remember pulling that tape out and looking at it.  One side said, "Side A" and the other said "Side B" and nothing else (the "A" and the "B" were circled.  I'm not sure why that was, but every mixed tape I ever made after that had a circle around the "A" & "B").  It was so unassuming and uneventful to look at; I had no way of knowing what would happen next.

I stepped up to my tape deck and slid that sucker into place.  It was almost rewound to "B" so I finished the job and started from there.  After 15 seconds worth I was long gone.  I quickly poked the stop button and said out loud, "what the hell is this?!".  It started out slow and quiet, but had the impact of a thousand screaming guitars on full blast.  There was so much texture and space in the music and it all just seemed to fall into place(!?). The twangy acoustic guitar.  The thumping, plodding drum.  The methodical pulsing piano...that rose up into a melodic and quick crescendo. The vocal...yes, the vocals. The seemingly out of sync harmonies strained and wobbled in an unthinkable way. But...it was the lead vocal that caused me to hit the stop button.

I knew that as soon as I heard what he was saying that he was speaking the truth.  I had no idea what he was talking about but I believed him...wholeheartedly.  To this day, I don't think I have heard a more truthful and honest vocal than what comes up from inside Levon Helm and comes out of his mouth. When he said that he "pulled into Nazareth" I didn't know if he meant Nazareth in Israel or Nazareth, Pennsylvania...and I didn't care.  I believed him. I also believed that he was "feelin ' 'bout half past dead".  What? Why? That was more than I could handle and that is when I hit stop.  I had to contemplate what just happened. Why did I believe this guy, who was he, why was he on the ropes, and what were those sounds?!

The song was "The Weight" and it was being played by The Band and that was the day I became a true music fan. I went on to listen to that song again and again and again that morning; I concentrated on the music; I focused on the words; I listened to the sound of Levon and Danko's vocal trade-offs.  What really struck me though was the story they were telling/playing for me.  This is where I really got hooked and this is what still hooks me to this day.  The stories that are being told through the music, the back-stories of those who made the music and my own stories that are created from these musical experiences are what turns me on. That is what makes the music come alive for me. It is why I listen and why the songs, lyrics and people are inextricably linked to my being. 

What was on the rest of that tape is lost to me.  All I really remember is that exact moment when The Weight came strolling out of my speakers and how it made me feel. After that I started to go searching other the sounds and stories. I had a few Stones albums and prior to that moment I listened to them on face value. I just assumed that the sounds and stories were Mick & Keef's...little did I know.  I read up on their influences and found my way to Clarksdale, Mississippi and the West Side of Chicago where I found Charlie Patton and Otis Rush.  And then on up to Detroit Michigan where I boogied with John Lee Hooker.  Then I hopped a few Greyhounds on down to Memphis where I looked in the front window of Sun Records and caught a glimpse of Johnny Cash playing the boom-chicka-boom for Mr. Phillips. I stuck out a thumb to help get me to 926 East McLemore Avenue in South Memphis, home of Stax Records, where I listened in on Booker T. & The MGs back up Otis Redding on hit after hit.

I've spent a lot of time in these places and I am a better man for it. And like the bluesmen, country singers and folk troubadours before me, I'm pulled by the lure of going around in search of the sounds and to share my stories.  If you want to know where I have been, have a look: Judd's Juke Joint
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This is dedicated to all of those characters in my many stories created through a lifetime of going around and finding and listening to music. You know who you are. Thanks.

Check out Part 2 of this story: The Ballad of the Music Fan and the Stolen Mix Tape (Part 2): The Road Goes on Forever...

 

Check out Part 3 of this storyThe Ballad of the Music Fan and the Stolen Mix Tape (Part 3): Sometimes you can't make it on your own...

 

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