Big Star

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string arrangements on garth brooks' deathless chris gaines LP

tylerw, Friday, 16 September 2016 16:41 (seven years ago) link

one month passes...

So is there a guide to all the versions released on "Complete Third", "Keep An Eye On The Sky", "Jesus Christ" single and other demos released on comps?

Gerald McBoing-Boing, Monday, 17 October 2016 22:40 (seven years ago) link

When are the vinyl versions due to drop, and am I right in thinking I will be able to purchase just the album itself without the extra gubbins that I want but can't afford?

Robby Mook (stevie), Wednesday, 19 October 2016 08:58 (seven years ago) link

one month passes...

Surprised there's no dedicated Prix thread

calstars, Thursday, 24 November 2016 23:11 (seven years ago) link

are you really

Immediate Follower (NA), Friday, 25 November 2016 00:53 (seven years ago) link

'Girl' is a dope jam

It sounds like the earliest attempt to 'do a Big Star'

PaulTMA, Friday, 25 November 2016 01:15 (seven years ago) link

five months pass...

Wow

Trelayne Staley (James Redd and the Blecchs), Friday, 5 May 2017 21:32 (six years ago) link

two months pass...

Yep. Here's press sheet for expanded Cosmos, with Complete CB to follow:

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
July 14, 2017

EXPANDED VERSION OF CHRIS BELL’S I AM THE COSMOS ALBUM DUE OUT ON OMNIVORE RECORDINGS SEPTEMBER 15 —
PRECEDING NOVEMBER 24 RELEASE OF 6-LP SET 
THE COMPLETE CHRIS BELL

Though he died at age 27, the founding Big Star member
left a recorded legacy larger than commonly known.
I Am the The Cosmos contains eight unissued bonus tracks, plus two tracks appearing on CD for the first time. Liners by Alec Palao and Bob Mehr.

The Complete Chris Bell’s six LPs contains all the tracks released on
Looking Forward: The Roots Of Big Star and the deluxe I Am The Cosmos, plus a bonus LP with unheard 1975 interview, and an album by Bell’s Rock City.

MEMPHIS, Tenn. — After co-founding Big Star, Chris Bell released only two tracks of new music during his lifetime — a 1978 single on the Car Records label run by Chris Stamey (The dB’s, Sneakers) titled “I Am The Cosmos” b/w “You and And Your Sister.” He would lose his life in a car accident later that same year. However, those were not the only tracks Bell had recorded in his post-Big Star years.

In 1974-1975, Bell worked in the famed Château D’Hérouville near Paris, France, and later recorded at both Shoe Studios and Ardent Studios in Memphis. Some of that material arrived in 1992 as I Am The Cosmos to great acclaim. An expanded 2009 release nearly doubled the track listing, adding alternate mixes, as well as some of Bell’s pre-Big Star recordings.

With those early recordings now taking their proper place on Looking Forward: The Roots Of Big Star (released by Omnivore in July, 2017), it is now time for the definitive version of I Am the The Cosmos.

In addition to the bonus material found on the 1992 release and 2009 reissue, this new
2-CD/Digital set adds 10 more tracks, eight of which are previously unissued; two make their CD debut. The packaging contains updated liner notes from set co-producer Alec Palao as well as Memphis author and journalist Bob Mehr and features previously unseen photographs. Also available the same day, the original 12 track “album” — first pressing on clear vinyl (with download card for the album tracks). All Chris Bell projects are being approved and overseen by Chris’ estate run by his brother, David.

With renewed reverence for his work in Big Star, as well as a look back at his earlier work, and an upcoming biography from Rich Tupica, the stars have aligned. This expanded edition of I Am The Cosmos arrives at the perfect time for long-time fans, as well of those who are just discovering the magic of Chris Bell.

***
The early Chris Bell-related recordings were compiled by Omnivore in a CD/Digital release titled Looking Forward: The Roots Of Big Star, released in July 2017. Those recordings now make their vinyl debut in the first two (of six) vinyl LPs of The Complete Chris Bell as Looking Forward: The Roots Of Big Star and Rock City — See Seven States.

Bell’s post-Big Star recordings have long been well known as an album first compiled by Rykodisc in 1992, and titled I Am The Cosmos. In September 2017, Omnivore issues the original I Am The Cosmos tracks on LP, newly remastered and cut at Ardent Studios. Also released at the same time will be a comprehensive two-CD/Digital deluxe edition of the album, including all known post-Big Star recordings. The freshly remastered I Am The Cosmos vinyl is included in The Complete Chris Bell as the third LP with the additional recordings from the 2-CD deluxe edition making up the two volumes of Outtakes & Alternates as LPs 4 & 5 with all the material making its vinyl debut.

Rounding out The Complete Chris Bell is an exclusive sixth LP that will only be available in the boxed set. It includes a never-before heard 1975 interview with Barry Ballard. Ballard interviewed Bell in London, and has graciously allowed the use of his original tape for the transfer and restoration so it could be included in this set. Bell’s remarks on everything from his solo recordings to Big Star are revelatory!

The Complete Chris Bell was produced and compiled by Grammy-Award winner Cheryl Pawelski, Ardent Studios’ Adam Hill, and Grammy-nominated producer Alec Palao. It was freshly remastered by Grammy-Award winning engineer Michael Graves, and the vinyl cut on the original lathe at Ardent Studios in Memphis by Chris Jackson and Adam Hill.

Liner notes are by co-producer Alec Palao and Bob Mehr (music critic for the daily Memphis newspaper The Commercial Appeal, and author of the New York Times bestseller Trouble Boys: The True Story Of The Replacements). The booklet also features previously unseen photos and memorabilia, plus a special excerpt from the forthcoming HoZac Books release There Was A Light: The Cosmic History of Of Chris Bell And The Rise Of Big Star by Rich Tupica.

The Complete Chris Bell boxed set will be a one-time pressing with individual volumes potentially broken out in the future as demand warrants (excluding the 1975 London Interview LP which will be exclusive to the boxed set).

The entire project was developed with the oversight of the Estate of Chris Bell and should serve as the definitive collection of the massively influential Chris Bell!

http://omnivorerecordings.com/music/the-complete-chris-bell/

I Am The Cosmos 2-CD/Digital Track List:

Disc One:
1. I Am The Cosmos

2. Better Save Yourself

3. Speed Of Sound

4. Get Away

5. You And Your Sister

6. I Kinda Got Lost
7. Look Up

8. Make A Scene

9. There Was A Light

10. I Don’t Know
11. Fight At The Table

12. Though I Know She Lies

13. I Am The Cosmos (Acoustic Mix)*

14. You And Your Sister (Acoustic Version)

15. Look Up (Acoustic Movie Mix)*

16. Untitiled Acoustic Instrumental (Movie Mix)

Disc Two:
I. Am The Cosmos (Extended Alternate Version)
2. Better Save Yourself (Alternate Mix)

3. Speed Of Sound (Alternate Version)

4. Get Away (Alternate Version)

5. You And Your Sister (Alternate Version)

6. Make A Scene (Alternate Mix)

7. Fight At The Table (Alternate Mix)

8. I Don’t Know (Alternate Version)

9. Speed Of Sound (Alternate Version Backing Track)*
10. Stay With Me With Keith Sykes

11. In My Darkest Hour With Nancy Bryan
12. So Long Baby (Aka Clacton Rag)

13. Fight At The Table (Outtake Track With Partial Vocals)*
14. You And Your Sister (“Country” Underdub Mix)
15. Get Away (Outtake Track)*

16. Better Save Yourself (Outtake Track)*

17. I Am The Cosmos (Alternate Backing Track With Piano)*
18. Untitled Electric Instrumental (Movie Mix)
19 . Though I Know She Lies (Movie Mix)* 

*Previously Unissued

The Complete Chris Bell 6-LP Box Set Track List:

Looking Forward:
 The Roots Of Big Star

SIDE ONE:
1. All I See Is You 

2. Looking Forward 

3. The Reason 

4. Oh My Soul (Backing Track) 

5. Feeling High (Alternate Backing Track) 


SIDE TWO: 

1. Feeling High 

2. Sunshine 

3. Psychedelic Stuff 

4. A Chance To Live 

5. Germany (Backing Track) 

6. All I See Is You (Alternate Backing Track) 


Rock City – See Seven States

SIDE ONE:
1. Think It’s Time To Say Goodbye 

2. I Lost A Love 

3. The Wind Will Cry For Me 

4. My Life Is Right 

5. Lovely Lady 


SIDE TWO: 

1. The Answer 

2. Introduction 

3. Sunday Organ 

4. The Preacher 

5. Shine On Me 

6. Try Again (Original Mix)* 
 


I Am The Cosmos

SIDE ONE:
1. I Am The Cosmos (Original Single) 

2. Better Save Yourself 

3. Speed Of Sound 

4. Get Away 

5. Make A Scene


SIDE TWO: 

1. Look Up 

2. I Kinda Got Lost 

3. There Was A Light 

4. Fight At The Table 

5. I Don’t Know 

6. Though I Know She Lies 

7. You And Your Sister (Original Single) 


Outtakes & Alternates, Volume 1

SIDE ONE:
1. I Am The Cosmos (Extended Alternate Version)
2. Better Save Yourself (Alternate Mix)

3. Speed Of Sound (Alternate Version)

4. Get Away (Alternate Version)

5. You And Your Sister (Alternate Version)

SIDE TWO:
1. Make A Scene (Alternate Mix)

2. Look Up (Acoustic Movie Mix)

3. Fight At The Table (Alternate Mix)
4. I Don’t Know (Alternate Version)
5. Speed Of Sound (Alternate Version/Backing Track)

Outtakes & Alternates, Volume 2

SIDE ONE:
1. You And Your Sister (Acoustic Version)
2. Untitled Acoustic Instrumental (Movie Mix)

3. Stay With Me – with Keith Sykes

4. In My Darkest Hour – with Nancy Bryan
5. So Long Baby (aka Clacton Rag)

6. Fight At The Table (Outtake Track With Partial Vocals)

SIDE TWO:
1. You And Your Sister (“Country” Underdub Mix)
2. Get Away (Outtake Track)

3. Better Save Yourself (Outtake Track)
4. I Am The Cosmos
(Alternate Backing Track With Piano)
5. Untitled Electric Instrumental (Movie Mix)

Interview With Barry Ballard, London 1977

SIDE ONE:
1. Interview, Part 1*

SIDE TWO:
1. Interview, Part 2*

2. Though I Know She Lies (Movie Mix)
3. I Am The Cosmos (Acoustic Mix)

* Previously unissued

# # #

Watch and feel free to post the Chris Bell trailer:
http://youtu.be/3oCxZHzhXlE

dow, Thursday, 27 July 2017 00:02 (six years ago) link

There are few things in the world I love more than Cosomos

calstars, Thursday, 27 July 2017 00:08 (six years ago) link

Oops. speaking of Looking Fwd, forgot to post this (point of doing so is that you don't gotta buy the box to get it)

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
May 8, 2016

LOOKING FORWARD: THE ROOTS OF BIG STAR
FEATURES FOUNDING BAND MEMBER CHRIS BELL
SET FOR JULY 7 RELEASE ON OMNIVORE

22-track collection of pre-Big Star recordings also features Jody Stephens,
Terry Manning, Tom Eubanks, Steve Rhea and Alan Palmore.
Contains six unissued tracks,
plus new liner notes by Grammy® nominee Alec Palao

MEMPHIS, Tenn. — While Chris Bell is known as a founding member of Big Star (and for his posthumous classic song “I Am The Cosmos”), his story did not begin with that legendary band. Looking Forward: The Roots of Big Star featuring Chris Bell delivers the origins of his incredible, influential and far-too-short career.

The 22-track collection, including six previously unissued tracks, is the first of its kind to chronicle the music made by and with Bell before Big Star’s iconic #1 Record—with such projects as Rock City, Christmas Future, Icewater, The Wallabys and more. It examines Bell’s progress as a writer, performer and engineer leading up to Big Star, a journey in which the sounds and roots of Big Star are completely evident. Coupled with the previously issued Alex Chilton compilation Free Again: The “1970” Sessions, these two releases provide a look at the evolution of Big Star.

Looking Forward’s packaging contains photos and liners from Grammy®-nominated writer (and set producer) Alec Palao, as well as quotes from Bell’s bandmates (Jody Stephens, Terry Manning, Tom Eubanks, Steve Rhea) and collaborators (Alan Palmore, Ardent Studio founder John Fry), telling the story of how this true talent came to be, who he was, and what he means to us all—a talent we celebrate to this day.

But to truly understand the sounds that influenced so many, one only needs to be Looking Forward. As Palao writes in his liner notes, “Both the hardcore Big Star aficionado and the casual listener will enjoy Looking Forward in the spirit intended: as the inspirations behind an inspirational act.

Chris Bell’s post-Big Star material will continue to unfold in further CD, LP and Digital releases in 2017. The original I Am the Cosmos album will be released in the fall on a single LP and double-CD/Digital deluxe edition. The Complete Chris Bell—a six-LP boxed set—is set for release in late 2017 and will collect all the material from both Looking Forward and the deluxe edition of I Am The Cosmos. Complete will also include all liner notes to the aforementioned projects, plus an excerpt from the forthcoming book by Rich Tupica, There Was A Light: The Cosmic History of Big Star Founder Chris Bell. The book will be released in the winter on HoZac Books. All Chris Bell-related projects are being produced with the approval and oversight of the estate of Chris Bell.

Track listings and further details for I Am The Cosmos and The Complete Chris Bell will be announced at a later date.

Track listing:
1. Think It’s Time To Say Goodbye
2. All I See Is You
3. My Life Is Right

4. Feeling High

5. Looking Forward

6. The Wind Will Cry For Me

7. Psychedelic Stuff
8. The Reason*
9. I Lost A Love
10. A Chance To Live*

11. The Answer

12. Lovely Lady

13. Sunshine

14. Introduction
15. Sunday Organ

16. The Preacher

17. Shine On Me
18. Try Again (Movie Mix, 2012)
19. Germany (Backing Track)*
20. Oh My Soul (Backing Track)*

21. All I See Is You (Alternate Backing Track)*
22. Feeling High (Alternate Backing Track)*


* Previously Unissued

# # #

dow, Thursday, 27 July 2017 00:10 (six years ago) link

And see about expanded Man Called Destruction over on Alex Chilton S&D

dow, Thursday, 27 July 2017 00:11 (six years ago) link

But as mentioned upthread, you can find Rock City and other Big Star/Ardent-relevant material on Spotify and YouTube.

dow, Thursday, 27 July 2017 00:14 (six years ago) link

(The latter can disappear duh)

dow, Thursday, 27 July 2017 00:14 (six years ago) link

Thought Looking Forward just appeared on Spotify a few weeks ago.

I am listening to "Sunshine on my Shoulders" by John Denver for the first time in about 40 years: Greatest Hits from '73 was one of the only records my parents had (suddenly remembered the orch-prog opus "The Eagle and the Hawk" and listened to the whole comp) (know that Glen C. is the pop-country artist everybody's thinking about now, but he never meant much to me)…

I bet Chris and Alex liked this song so much that they rewrote it to address their love affair (my harebrained theory): A/B this song with "thirteen" and then dare to tell me that they or possibly John Fry didn't dig John D. Fry probably was secure enuff to admit it, but no way could Alex or Chris say that they liked a square like Denver. What would Charlie Rich think of Alex if he knew that he dug JD?

veronica moser, Wednesday, 9 August 2017 01:44 (six years ago) link

one month passes...

Finally getting around to listening to some of the alternate/rough mixes on the Complete Third. Sitting with my boy (he's 11) picking through the soundstage, trying to place, aurally, who's were, who's adding what, and what time of night (dawn) it might be. I'm sure there are examples, but right now, I can't think of another record where the grime and light of the studio space (not to mention outside) are so viscerally present in the texture of the recording.

The shard-borne beetle with his drowsy hums (Chinaski), Saturday, 16 September 2017 20:30 (six years ago) link

from Secretly Canadian (publicists):

Photography Pioneer William Eggleston Announces Debut Album, Musik, Out October 20th

Music of wild joy with freedom and bright, vivid colors."
- David Lynch

This is one of those announcements that we don't, can't, and won't get tired of repeating. Native Memphian William Eggleston, 77, who is widely regarded to be the most important photographer of the late 20th Century, has announced his debut record, Musik, due out October 20th. You likely know Eggleston for his remarkable, colorful photography and singular way of looking at the world, but let's delve into the artist's history with the musical medium.

It was during Eggleston's Sumner, Mississippi childhood, where he discovered the piano in the parlor that ignited in him a lifelong passion for music. It was a passion he carried forth his entire life, playing quite adeptly when a piano was handy: improvised turns on Bach, Handel, gospel, country, and popular selections from the Great American Songbook for friends and family. Though his travels found him rubbing elbows with Andy Warhol's Factory superstars in New York, where he lived for several years with Viva at the Chelsea Hotel, and observing a music scene in Memphis that included Big Star's Alex Chilton, and his old friend and owner of Ardent Studios, engineer Jon Fry, his own music went largely unheard by the general public.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eCLER8g0Gss

In the 1980s, Eggleston, who disdained digital cameras and modernity in general, became surprisingly fascinated with a synthesizer, the Korg OW/1 FD Pro, which had 88 piano-like keys, and in addition to being able to emulate the sound of any instrument, also contained a four-track sequencer that allowed him to expand the palette of his music, letting him create improvised symphonic pieces, stored on 49 floppy discs, encompassing some 60 hours of music from which this 13 track recording was assembled.

Eggleston lives today in a small apartment off Memphis' Overton Park that he shares with a 9-foot Bosendorfer grand piano and an arsenal of ultra-high fidelity audio equipment, some of which was designed by his son, William Eggleston III. The synthesizer, alas, is broken and stubbornly refuses to be repaired, so for the purpose of this project another was purchased in order to be able to play back the floppy discs, which, along with a handful of DATs and other digital media, though frail, were digitized and mastered for this and future releases.

Mr. Eggleston often says that he feels that music is his first calling, as much a part of him, at least, as his photography. We take special pride in allowing the world to hear this side of a great artist who may now be rightly called a great musician.

dow, Saturday, 23 September 2017 19:18 (six years ago) link

Newcomers can check Egg party pix of Big Star Upthread, also he did some of their official photos, album covers etc, played piano on xpost "Nature Boy", and is xpost Lesa A.'s cousin.

dow, Saturday, 23 September 2017 19:22 (six years ago) link

lower-case "upthread", that is.

dow, Saturday, 23 September 2017 19:23 (six years ago) link

three months pass...

Only just noticed the sex position pictures in the lower corner of the Radio City cover photo.

Moodles, Thursday, 18 January 2018 03:20 (six years ago) link

From this interview with Andy, the cover photo was taken at William Eggleston's home:

PSF: The graphics were indeed special- what was with the cover and that ceiling light fixture (if that's what it was)?

Alex knew Bill Eggleston through his parents I believe. His mother was an art dealer and Bill, of course was a very gifted local photographer. Bill was a major hell raiser, as were Alex and me at the time. We drank a lot, stayed out all night, and took all manner of drugs. Somehow we got hooked up with him and Alex talked him into doing the cover. I could go on and on about Bill's techniques and all, which were truly innovative and brilliant, and which I kind of made note of, being very much into photography myself, but I'm sure there are lots of books available that deal with all that now that he's world famous and all. But we wound up at the TGI Friday's on Overton square one Monday night which was "Rock and Roll Night." It was a major hell-raising scene in those days. A DJ would play old 45's and just everyone came and stuffed the place. That was the back cover. Then we went over to Bill's later on and he suggested the light on the ceiling pic, which he had previously taken. We all loved it and I thought it fit perfectly with the sort of avant garde nature of the LP.

Jersey Al (Albert R. Broccoli), Saturday, 20 January 2018 19:48 (six years ago) link

But was Eggleston known for sneaking erotic graphics into his photos?

Moodles, Saturday, 20 January 2018 19:55 (six years ago) link

Considering those were on the walls of his home, probably?

Jersey Al (Albert R. Broccoli), Saturday, 20 January 2018 21:00 (six years ago) link

two months pass...

Finally fixing to listen to this:

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
November 3, 2017

BIG STAR’S LIVE AT LAFAYETTE’S MUSIC ROOM
COMING FROM OMNIVORE RECORDINGS ON JANUARY 12, 2018

1973 hometown concert, which preceded the band’s legendary
Rock Writers Convention showcase,
to be available on CD, Digital and — for the first time — double LP.

Features liner notes by Bud Scoppa and new mastering
by Grammy® Award-winning producer Michael Graves.
Digital format features a 1972 radio interview with Jon Scott.

MEMPHIS, Tenn. — It is well known that Big Star played a one-off promotional concert for the Memphis Rock Writers Convention at Lafayette’s Music Room in Memphis in May of 1973. The show cemented them into legendary status, after the journalists who witnessed it carried the message of Big Star out in their writing, even though the band had only released one album, #1 Record, and were unsure of recording a second after the departure of co-founder Chris Bell.

What may not be so widely known is that the trio played the same venue four months earlier with the same power and passion opening shows for the Houston R&B band Archie Bell & the Drells. First issued as Disc 4 of the Grammy® Award-winning Keep An Eye On The Sky box set, Live At Lafayette’s Music Room sees new light as a stand-alone release, available on January 12, 2018 from Omnivore Recordings on CD, Digital, and for the first time, double LP.

The performance has never sounded better, thanks to new mastering and restoration from Grammy®-winning engineer Michael Graves, with supervision from Grammy®-winning producer Cheryl Pawelski.

The 20-track set features material from Big Star’s debut, #1 Record; songs that would appear on the (not yet recorded) follow-up, Radio City; and choice covers from The Kinks, Todd Rundgren, The Flying Burrito Brothers, and T. Rex. As an added bonus, all formats include a download of a previously unissued 1972 interview with Alex Chilton and Andy Hummel from the summer of 1971 with Jon Scott on Memphis’ FM 100.

Packaging features new liner notes from Bud Scoppa, who was friends with the band and in attendance at the 1973 Rock Writer’s show. His most recent work for Omnivore was an integral part of the acclaimed Big Star box set Complete Third, and earned him the ASCAP Foundation Deems Taylor/ Virgil Thomson Awards for outstanding print, broadcast and new media coverage of music.

Although an opening slot for Archie Bell, and with few live performances under their belt, Scoppa writes: “The recording documents a band morphing into a remarkably versatile trio under the most challenging of circumstances.”
Experience the only known document of Big Star at this pivotal point in their short, but massively influential career. Omnivore is proud to present Live At Lafayette’s Music Room.

Track Listing:
1. When My Baby’s Beside Me
2. My Life Is Right
3. She’s A Mover
4. Way Out West
5. The Ballad Of El Goodo
6. In The Street
7. Back Of A Car
8. Thirteen
9. The India Song
10. Try Again
11. Watch The Sunrise
12. Don’t Lie To Me
13. Hot Burrito #2
14. I Got Kinda Lost
15. Baby Strange
16. Slut
17. There Was A Light
18. St 100/6
19. Come On Now
20. O My Soul

Download Only:
Alex Chilton and Andy Hummel Interview with Jon Scott on FM 100, Summer 1972*

###

Watch (and feel free to post) the Big Star Live at Lafayette’s trailer: https://youtu.be/Ly4T39yQyKw
oops that's gone but here's a live set in Cambridge Mass, '74:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=W8bkWFWIcck

dow, Thursday, 12 April 2018 01:27 (six years ago) link

Digging "Mod Lang" and "Candy Says" in Cambridge---don't think that one's been on legit Big Star album? Supposedly this was recorded on a boom box--and the announcer says they're playing unfamiliar, borrowed instruments, because all their gear got stolen last night, but I especially like the room for aural definition of one guitar, bass and drums, when they get cranked up (from "Mod Lang" to "Candy..." to "Til The End of the Day" to "O My Soul," for inst)

dow, Thursday, 12 April 2018 01:42 (six years ago) link

from post-Fahey thread:

Speaking of you are there, was just now struck by an exemplary acoustic trio subset, almost midway through Big Star's Live At Lafayette's Music Room: rough and ready recording maps vivid, kinetic detail of "Thirteen," "The India Song," "Try Again," (Dobro? Bajo sexto?), and "Watch The Sunrise," which I think Edd Hurt pointed out on the main Big Star thread as being inspired by and/or lifted from Gimmer Nicholson.

This acoustically electrified sequence def. sustains and builds momentum of the whole, staying in exploratory, retrospective and introspective character while bearing down, committed to the now like trio Thompson (even though press material claims they weren't even sure at that point about making a second album, with Bell gone; maybe shows like this showed them they could).

― dow, Monday, April 16, 2018 3:06 PM (five days ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink

Also the electrically electrified, yet ballad-y as hell, in a good way, performance of "Ballad of El Goodo," which I've never been el fondo of, but they got me here.

― dow, Monday, April 16, 2018 3:13 PM (five days ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink

omg i love that song

is there someone singing?

― weird woman in a bar (La Lechera)

Oh yeah you know it! Also good picking and chording in the undercurrents of St 100/6.

― dow, Monday, April 16, 2018 7:57 PM

more on Lafayette's from blogged notes:
A plugged “Hot Burrito #2”, hooked by sour resolution,
worries intractable tractor pulls of desire and fatalism up and down
the back staircase, parking lot, and main drag, like “In A Car”
and several other BS originals, long after the set opens with
poptopia of “When My Baby’s Beside Me” (“I don’t have to think”)
and the ark arcs of “My Life Is Right.” not to mention hairline visions
at lost loveliest / whine as wine “Thirteen.”
Chilton later described his Big Star self as “a maudlin young man.”
Not cool, why try to go back to that? Except on the circuit:
Big Star 2.0's tight tributes swapping spotlights with Box Tops, and solo sets at maybe at best like
(see about expanded reissue of A Man Called Destruction over on Alex Chilton S&D)

dow, Saturday, 21 April 2018 22:00 (five years ago) link

and lastly maybe, a note to self on Twitter:
n radio interview on @BigStarBand's Live at Lafayette's Music Room, AC worries that forthcoming #1 Record is too much like Rundgren, reminding me not to overemph Beatles influences; also T.Rex v. favorably mentioned; both covered here, as on several other live recordings.

dow, Saturday, 21 April 2018 22:04 (five years ago) link

can someone id the track that starts 20 seconds into this video? first ~19 seconds are from surfer girl 1980 outtake sam phillips studio but then it cuts to this wicked solo from something else

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vkOF2PeYqMg

flopson, Sunday, 22 April 2018 01:37 (five years ago) link

"Sleepwalk"? No--? Thanks for posting that nuggetory.

dow, Sunday, 22 April 2018 03:47 (five years ago) link

"A Little Fishy," 1977 Elektra demo

https://youtu.be/qAUEvk-JL0g

peisistratos, Sunday, 22 April 2018 03:57 (five years ago) link

my man

flopson, Tuesday, 24 April 2018 23:50 (five years ago) link

three weeks pass...

The kinks “Victoria” just came on at the bar and damn it sounds very Starry

calstars, Saturday, 19 May 2018 18:00 (five years ago) link

two months pass...

You must’ve been drunk

Naive Teen Idol, Saturday, 21 July 2018 13:58 (five years ago) link

But it's over now.

The shard-borne beetle with his drowsy hums (Chinaski), Saturday, 21 July 2018 15:09 (five years ago) link

three months pass...

In 1969, Dickinson recommended Alabama’s Muscle Shoals Sound Studio to the Rolling Stones, and was allowed to attend the session that produced “Brown Sugar.” He was asked to play piano on “Wild Horses,” ostensibly because the Stones’ piano player Ian Stewart refused to play minor chords.

That is next-level.

DJI, Friday, 2 November 2018 22:16 (five years ago) link

bhahahaha what a dick

Οὖτις, Friday, 2 November 2018 22:17 (five years ago) link

lol that sounds like a dickinson tall tale to me, but I guess it's true:

He was once asked why he did not play piano on “Wild Horses.” Stu laughed and said “minor chords! “I don’t play minor chords. When I’m playing on stage with the Stones and a minor chord comes along, I lift me hands in protest.”

maybe not "refused to" but "couldn't"

tylerw, Friday, 2 November 2018 22:21 (five years ago) link

"I lift me hands in protest" huge lol

brimstead, Friday, 2 November 2018 22:53 (five years ago) link

I don't see how it's possible to be able to play major chords on piano and not be able to play minor chords - it's not like one's more difficult than the other.

Alma Kirby (Tom D.), Friday, 2 November 2018 23:08 (five years ago) link

A gang of Minor Chords beat Stu w/switch in a stable when he was a mere lad.

The Greta Van Gerwig (C. Grisso/McCain), Friday, 2 November 2018 23:10 (five years ago) link

My friend just told me the story of a famous session bassist (not being coy, forget his name!) who iirc refused to play a low E because you could't hear it on the radio.

Josh in Chicago, Friday, 2 November 2018 23:15 (five years ago) link

From "Great Moments in Recording Studio History," Spin magazine, April, 1989:

In the middle of the Rolling Stones' "Brown Sugar" session, piano player Ian Stewart stopped things dead, and told Charlie Watts that his tom-toms were out of tune with the bass guitar.
"I never tune my drums," Watts told him blankly, and they started playing again. But a bit later, Stewart stopped everyone again and looked at Watts.
"What do you mean you never tune your drums?"
"Why tune something I'm just gonna go and beat the shit out of?" Watts answered. "I'll hit them for a while and then they'll be in tune again."

Montgomery Burns' Jazz (Tarfumes The Escape Goat), Saturday, 3 November 2018 00:35 (five years ago) link

I bet John B and Eddie K tuned the shit out of the drums (in contrast)

calstars, Saturday, 3 November 2018 02:46 (five years ago) link

So if you'd like this on vinyl or a possibly better-sounding CD than the Ryko:

Big Star
Live On WLIR
Release date: January 25, 2019

Pre-Order CD $16.98

Pre-Order 2-LP $29.98

Description
Remastered and restored performance originally recorded and broadcast in 1974
Big Star recorded their second album, Radio City, as a trio, after the departure of founding member Chris Bell. When it came time to tour, original bassist Andy Hummel decided to return to school to pursue his engineering education. With this departure, Alex Chilton and Jody Stephens recruited fellow Memphis native John Lightman to take over on bass duties, and the band readied their live set.

That set is on display as Big Star recorded a radio session at Ultrasonic Studios in New York for broadcast on the city’s preeminent WLIR. Nearly two decades later, those recordings were issued as Live in 1992. Omnivore Recordings is proud to reintroduce those recordings, restored and remastered from the original tapes, as Live On WLIR, on CD—and, its first official release on LP.

The 15 track set features material from the band’s two releases, as well as a cover of “Motel Blues” by Loudon Wainwright III (which originally appeared on his classic 1971 sophomore release, Album II).

With new, updated liner notes from Memphis writer/filmmaker, Robert Gordon (who won a Grammy® for his essay in 2010’s Big Star boxed set Keep An Eye On The Sky) and an interview with John Lightman by Chris Bell biographer Rich Tupica (There Was A Light: The Cosmic History Of Big Star Founder Chris Bell), Live On WLIR enters the Big Star canon in the form it deserves. Because, you know, you get what you deserve.

CD / 2-LP TRACK LIST:
SEPTEMBER GURLS
WAY OUT WEST
MOD LANG
DON’T LIE TO ME
O MY SOUL
INTERVIEW
THE BALLAD OF EL GOODO
THIRTEEN
I’M IN LOVE WITH A GIRL
MOTEL BLUES
IN THE STREET
YOU GET WHAT YOU DESERVE
DAISY GLAZE
BACK OF A CAR
SHE’S A MOVER
LP does not include a download card.

dow, Friday, 9 November 2018 02:37 (five years ago) link

related:

Van Duren
Waiting: The Van Duren Story (Original Documentary Soundtrack)
Release date: February 1, 2019

Pre-Order CD $16.98

Pre-Order LP $21.98

Digital Available February 1

Description
Soundtrack to the original documentary film Waiting: The Van Duren Story.
Memphis musician Van Duren had it all going for himself. He was managed and produced by Andrew Loog Oldham (The Rolling Stones) in the 1970s, he was a contemporary of Big Star and was in a post-Big Star band (Baker Street Regulars) with Chris Bell and Jody Stephens, and had made a debut album, Are You Serious?, that had some people comparing him to Paul McCartney. But instead of being the next big thing, he faded into obscurity.

Though he didn’t break through with Are You Serious?, and a second album was recorded and shelved (eventually released in 1999), Van continued making music. With his band, Good Question, he had a regional hit with the song “Jane” that had record companies sniffing around, but again, to no avail.

Forty years later and a world away, two Australians, Wade Jackson and Greg Carey, came across Duren’s lost album, fell in love with the music and set out to discover what went wrong. They tracked Van Duren down on Facebook and despite having never picked up a movie camera, they journeyed to the U.S. to meet Van Duren and tell his story.

Along the way, they crossed paths with rock stars, Scientologists, and a host of talented musicians who never quite made it. The film took them to North America, Columbia, Japan and back to Australia, staying true to their pledge to finish the film and shine light on Van Duren.

Van’s lost career is a parable of the trials and tribulations of the music industry—an industry that leaves countless broken dreamers behind in its wake. Waiting: The Van Duren Story is a love letter to the artist and his music that should have helped define a generation.

The film will go a long way to right a decades-old wrong, and the Omnivore soundtrack, Waiting: The Van Duren Story Original Documentary Soundtrack—due out February 1, 2019—will put Van Duren where he’s belonged all along, in the record racks for music lovers to discover.

CD / LP / DIGITAL TRACK LIST:
GROW YOURSELF UP
CHEMICAL FIRE
WAITING
YELLOW LIGHT (Live)
TENNESSEE, I’M TRYING
POSITIVE
ANDY, PLEASE – Duren Stephens *
MAKE A SCENE
TORN IN HALF (Live)
JUST YOU TELL ME (Live at Ardent Studios) *
CATCHER IN THE RAIN – Good Question
JANE – Good Question
* Previously unissued.

dow, Friday, 9 November 2018 02:40 (five years ago) link

The filmmakers who did the Van Duren doc used some of my interview w/ Van, which is kinda cool. I haven't seen it yet. "Andy, Please" is from the Ardent sessions Van did before he cut the first album, and I've heard all of those sessions and they're actually better than what Jon Tiven did on the first LP, which was a bit stiff and lacking the aural depth of the Big Star albums. The version of "Grow Yourself Up" from the Ardent demo sessions is superior to the one on Are You Serious?/Staring at the Ceiling, which is the UK title for the album.

eddhurt, Friday, 9 November 2018 03:37 (five years ago) link

There's also a live Van Duren album from around 1979, Chemical Fire, that's OK. I'm not a big fan of his later work solo and w/ Vicki Loveland; pretty good kind of post-McCartney stuff lacking the eccentricity and bite of his early work or Big Star's, sorta Emitt Rhodes lite which is already McCartney lite. Van's been playing in Memphis for years, a journeyman. The Van Duren-Tommy Hoehn records are OK, kinda XTC lite, a bit more interesting than you'd think.

eddhurt, Friday, 9 November 2018 03:41 (five years ago) link

one month passes...

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