Saturday, 24 July 2021

The Big Reveal

No, I'm playing bass

I am Some Awe

There it is: The Revelation. 

 

For the past 10 years, I have maintained this notional mystique, and having now written and published my memoir, I've considered it a good time to add a personal name to the appellation.

 

In writing a music blog for those 10 years, it's not surprising that music features in the memoir, this including a few former SDAA reviews, repurposed to further reflect on how music shapes who I was and am.

 

The following is one of the music-related vignettes, a taster for those interested in pursuing further:

 

First Time, Second Time Around

There are a number of musicians I never got to see in their prime but have since in the latter phase or twilight of their careers. These are James Taylor, Yusuf Islam (Cat Stevens), The Isley Brothers, Arthur Lee’s Love, Wishbone Ash (both ongoing versions), Crosby, Stills and Nash, Roy Harper, John Etheridge solo and in a modern Soft Machine line-up, Tír na nÓg (they were at Weeley but I’m sure I was sleeping at the time), Bert Jansch with John Renbourn, Johnny Winter, Albert Lee, Peter Green, Paul Rogers, The Doobie Brothers, Michael Chapman, Stan Webb, and Neil Young. I will mention the Freddie Mercury Memorial Concert again where I saw David Bowie and Elton John. I also got to see Conway Twitty at the Siskiu State Fair (Yreka) in 1992, taking my 12-year-old daughter, and I certainly had a great time. There are a further few who deserve to be mentioned though ‘removed’ from their original bands, like Ginger Baker with his Jazz Confusion, and Robin Williamson without any of the other Incredible String Band. In other fringe contexts I saw Roger Daltrey and Gary Brooker. I did most recently from these subsidiary categories see The Groundhogs, although the only remaining original member was drummer Carl Stocks so I don’t think this counts, as incendiary as they were then. I haven’t included Gene Simmons singing the American national anthem at the Wembley NFL Vikings/Steelers game in 2013, or any performers I saw in their prime but also subsequently.

The memoir I might have imagined writing

I only got weepily emotional seeing CS&N, me never a singalong kinda guy, but trying with opening numbers Carry On and Questions I did choke, hit by a passing freight train of nostalgia. None of the later-in-life performances were ever naff, often seeming as fresh as ever – I felt then and still do now that James Taylor’s vocal matures with age – and/or bands often have session players/singers bolstering sounds to verisimilitudes of the past, this often including their children all grown up and additions to the groups. Peter Green played with less pace than in his heyday but was nonetheless mesmerising, and Johnny Winter was similar – another fine guitarist playing with him to add occasional background oomph – though Johnny’s slide could still glide. The only one who was at times hard to take in a new incarnation was Stan Webb, formerly of Chicken Shack, his set existential and chaotic at times – though also sublime, especially his distinctive vocal – and if he ever had been PC in inclination this was clearly anathema to him now. One other more comic indication of a past catching up was Arthur Lee and Love playing the Phoenix at Exeter, and when Lee strutted up to the mic to begin the gig with that enthusiastic, shouted clichéd line (or similar) of ‘Hey, how’s it going….’ he turned to the bass player and you could just hear him asking ‘…where are we?’


 You can get the memoir here.

 

Greg Perry - One For The Road, album review


Sweeping Narratives

This re-release from the 1975 original is an expanded edition, and it is superb soul. Perry is completely knew to me, but this journeyman songwriter's solo album (first of two, I think) is regarded by those in the know as one of the greatest soul albums ever, and this could certainly rest comfortably with the host of others inevitably competing for such a title. He was a staff writer for labels Invictus and Hot Wax (Detroit), writing for Chairman of the Board and Freda Payne, and had he written for others - for example The Stylistics - one imagines his songs would have had a wider audience and become memorable. As a solo album it is excellent: the writing first and foremost, but the performaces and production are excellent - Perry's vocal quite cool enough if not distinctive as with other better-known artists. Songs like Variety is the Spice of Love (cited by many as one of his best) places his singing as a near falsetto holding its own among complexly patterned vocal accompanyments; I'll Be Comin' Back begins with clever echo/repeat effects and is a mix of truly sweet soul and some funk, and Will She Meet the Train in the Rain could have derailed in its playfulness with the title's rhyme, but it is a sweeping narrative of spoken word, some orchestral hints and a classic Motown-esque build into its 'I'm Coming Home...' storytelling. All the songs on the album evoke 70s soul at its best, and might have been more universally known as such had they had the exposure of those who did get the airplay.

Laura Nyro - Trees of the Ages: Live in Japan


Sublime?

A new re-release of a 1994 live performance in Japan, the recording intially only released in that country in 2003 - here is the sublime Laura Nyro with sublime backing vocals singing her own sublime songs and other sublime covers, for example opening with the sublime Dedicated to the One I Love.

Low - HEY WHAT, album review


Distorted Bliss

Opener White Horses sets the Low Dichotomy, a technical term – exclusive – where the fractured fuzz of the backdrop is overlaid with the beautiful harmonies, and at this song’s end there is a further disruptive staccato that segues into next I Can Wait, and the continuing ecstasy of this industrial-scratch and prettiness posits the fundamental reality of a musically perfect Distorted Bliss.