― Elvis Telecom (Chris Barrus), Thursday, 3 June 2004 22:33 (twenty-two years ago)
― Dadaismus (Dada), Friday, 4 June 2004 08:39 (twenty-two years ago)
Might be the tiem of the year to take out 13
― Baaderoni (Fabfunk), Friday, 4 June 2004 09:12 (twenty-two years ago)
― Dadaismus (Dada), Friday, 4 June 2004 09:16 (twenty-two years ago)
― Baaderoni (Fabfunk), Friday, 4 June 2004 09:24 (twenty-two years ago)
i still think this dude is really hit or miss. i hate his voice (it's like a cartoon version of johnny cash) and the kitsch factor is sometimes a wee bit too high for me. he's a good songwriter and a damn fine producer, though.
― amateur!st (amateurist), Friday, 4 June 2004 09:54 (twenty-two years ago)
― Dadaismus (Dada), Friday, 4 June 2004 09:59 (twenty-two years ago)
― Kerry (dymaxia), Friday, 4 June 2004 14:24 (twenty-two years ago)
― Elvis Telecom (Chris Barrus), Saturday, 28 May 2005 23:59 (twenty-one years ago)
― poortheatre (poortheatre), Wednesday, 16 August 2006 17:59 (nineteen years ago)
― Telephonething (Telephonething), Wednesday, 16 August 2006 18:09 (nineteen years ago)
Love & Other Crimes (Bugles In The Afternoon, After Six, For One Moment, etc)
-and-
The Many Sides Of Lee Hazlewood (Long Black Train, The Railroad, Whe A Fool Loves A Fool, and so many more)
― hank (hank s), Wednesday, 16 August 2006 18:36 (nineteen years ago)
― the eunuchs, Cassim and Mustafa, who guarded Abdur Ali's harem (orion), Wednesday, 16 August 2006 23:46 (nineteen years ago)
Cowboy in Sweden [Smells Like, 1999]Hazlewood is an "interesting" figure, always was. A natural hipster, in the biz but not of it, pop and rock and country and just plain weird--Duane Eddy, Nancy Sinatra, and Gram Parsons is quite a trifecta. Problem is he'snever been all that good. There's a nice best-of hiding in his collected works, including the new standards collection. But his vogue transcends crass track-by-track quality controls, combining the usual convolutional one-upsmanship, a visceral distaste for roots-rock's sonic canon, and a generation of aging slackers' discovery that doing bizness needn't deaden your mind or rot your soul. If slick blues licks make you sick, Hazlewood's studio hacks and string-section dreck will be some kind of change. If you like Nancy Sinatra almost as much as Karen Carpenter, thin-piped Nina Lizell will clean away enough Janis-and-Bonnie grit. If you doubt all shows of soul, the flaccid sentimentality of "Easy and Me" will be one more trope as far as you're concerned. But without opening a book I can recall half a dozen unreissued singer-songwriter albums that do more with their varied conventions than this Europe-only 1970 rarity--by Thomas Jefferson Kaye, Nolan Porter, Marc Benno, Hirth Martinez, Alice Stuart, Mississippi Charles Bevel. And I shudder to think of the unreasonable claims to be made when their time comes around again. B-
― timmy tannin (pompous), Thursday, 17 August 2006 01:23 (nineteen years ago)
One Last Walk for the Man Behind ‘These Boots’ an excerpt: By SIA MICHELPublished: January 28, 2007HENDERSON, Nev.
"LEE HAZLEWOOD is ready to die. Suffering excruciating pain from renal cancer, Mr. Hazlewood, the reclusive singer, songwriter and producer doesn’t have much time left, maybe a year if he’s lucky. So he has been preparing for what he calls his impending “dirt nap.”
He has decided he wants to be cremated, and to have his ashes strewn on a Swedish island where he composed some of his favorite songs. He has chosen his epitaph: “Didn’t he ramble,” referring to his loner-drifter nature. He has already given away most of his gold and platinum records, which he earned making hits for Duane Eddy, Dean Martin and Nancy Sinatra, including “These Boots Are Made for Walkin’,” one of the most famous pop songs of all time. He has released his swan song, the quirky album “Cake or Death,” which hit stores last week. And he married his longtime girlfriend, Jeane Kelley, in a drive-through ceremony in Las Vegas."
― curmudgeon (DC Steve), Sunday, 28 January 2007 22:27 (nineteen years ago)
― timmy tannin (pompous), Monday, 29 January 2007 01:23 (nineteen years ago)
― The Redd And The Blecch (Ken L), Monday, 29 January 2007 01:31 (nineteen years ago)
― curmudgeon (DC Steve), Monday, 29 January 2007 05:16 (nineteen years ago)
True, he is one of the more iconoclastic figures of 20th-century pop, a cantankerous, hard-living innovator who walked away from fame and fortune whenever he felt like it. One of the major hitmakers of the ’50s and ’60s, he helped Duane Eddy shape twang-rock, transformed Nancy Sinatra into a megastar and, on his LHI label, released what is widely considered the first country-rock record, by Gram Parsons’s International Submarine Band. And he made a series of beautifully oddball solo albums that were mostly unheard in America, until a member of Sonic Youth reissued them in the ’90s.
Today Mr. Hazlewood is sadly unsung, which is partly his own fault. He spent decades trying to disappear, flitting between Europe and the United States — particularly those states with no personal income tax. “I’m kind of a bum,” he said.
― curmudgeon (DC Steve), Monday, 29 January 2007 05:19 (nineteen years ago)
― jaxon (jaxon), Monday, 29 January 2007 07:19 (nineteen years ago)
If you're a fan you absolutely have to hear the Einsturzende Neubauten cover of "Sand".
― nicholas de jong (nicholas de jong), Monday, 29 January 2007 07:41 (nineteen years ago)
back to Lee: would that we all could display such casual bravado in the face of our own mortality...a true maverick...(Warren Zevon, too)..
― hank (hank s), Monday, 29 January 2007 13:53 (nineteen years ago)
― The Redd And The Blecch (Ken L), Monday, 29 January 2007 14:51 (nineteen years ago)
"He had a knack for mainstream pop too. Dean Martin interpreted his jaunty wandering-man lark “Houston,” a huge hit in the mid-’60s. They bonded over a love of scotch: Mr. Martin was a J&B man, Mr. Hazlewood drank Chivas Regal. “Here’s Dean Martin drinking J&B and I’m drinking something which is twice as much money and twice as good,” he said, shaking his head with mild disgust. “I didn’t drink to get drunk. I drank as a reward, and I only drank the good stuff.”
Soon Frank Sinatra wanted him to fix the floundering career of his daughter Nancy. Despite a decade-plus age difference, Mr. Hazlewood and Ms. Sinatra hit it off; they remain close friends. He thought that she was too cutesy, that she needed to seem more like truck-driver-dating jailbait. “He was part Henry Higgins and part Sigmund Freud,” Ms. Sinatra said by telephone. “He was far from the country bumpkin people considered him at the time. I had a horrible crush on him, but he was married then.”
Romance rumors swirled, but they never had an affair, Mr. Hazlewood said, “and now we’re old enough to tell you if we did.”
― curmudgeon (DC Steve), Monday, 29 January 2007 18:05 (nineteen years ago)
wow did this guy ever make a bad record?
― Roberto Mussolini (Shakey Mo Collier), Wednesday, 18 March 2009 18:12 (seventeen years ago)
I don't know about bad, but some of them are definitely better than others (most of the Anne Margaret record is not good, but it's saved by the awesome singles tacked on at the end.)
― Alex in SF, Wednesday, 18 March 2009 18:28 (seventeen years ago)
i never got into "poet, fool, or bum" personally. but the hit:miss ratio is remarkable.
― ian, Wednesday, 18 March 2009 18:29 (seventeen years ago)
ann margret record is great if you can get beyond her abrasive way of singing, but i agree the singles are more interesting
― velko, Wednesday, 18 March 2009 18:30 (seventeen years ago)
I've never heard 40 either. That one's not supposed to be great either.
― Alex in SF, Wednesday, 18 March 2009 18:31 (seventeen years ago)
also, the final few records, including the last nancy & lee one, were not good
― velko, Wednesday, 18 March 2009 18:31 (seventeen years ago)
"ann margret record is great if you can get beyond her abrasive way of singing"
Yeah see I can't do that. Cover is awesome too btw.
I just heard the Ann Margaret for the first time yesterday and totally dug it, don't mind her hamminess at all. Agree about the extra singles though - You Turn My Head Around is amazing
― Roberto Mussolini (Shakey Mo Collier), Wednesday, 18 March 2009 21:54 (seventeen years ago)
"Poet, Fool or Bum" is good, as is "Back on the Streets".
I love "Paris Bells" on that one!
― Sacco, Vanzetti, Passantino... (Tom D.), Thursday, 19 March 2009 16:47 (seventeen years ago)
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_bggeCwBR6Y
The Lee Hazlewood bug bit me pretty severely a couple months back, haven't been able to stop listening since.
― ian zamboni, Sunday, 7 February 2010 09:18 (sixteen years ago)
recently i've been listening to "guitar on my mind" that LH wrote and produced for duane & miriam eddy - really oddball song that is a proto-some velvet morning
― velko, Sunday, 7 February 2010 10:00 (sixteen years ago)
I love Lee's 1970's hungover Marlboro man look
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zCLJIi6SSZ0&feature=related
― lukevalentine, Thursday, 4 March 2010 10:46 (sixteen years ago)
I think these last two youtubes are from Swedish telivision?
this is from a Nancy TV special in the late 60's I believe:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rnkuRQ8tjIE&feature=related
I would imagine the viewing public were like, who the hell is that mustachioed man with Frank's daughter?
― lukevalentine, Thursday, 4 March 2010 10:49 (sixteen years ago)
"your thunder and your lightning" is like johnny cash stealing the mic from ian curtis for a song
― BIG HOOS aka the steendriver, Thursday, 4 March 2010 23:04 (sixteen years ago)
heeeeey cowboy.
― Joint Custody (ian), Thursday, 4 March 2010 23:06 (sixteen years ago)
http://torbjornaxelman.com/
This is a damn good song.
― zeus, Tuesday, 28 September 2010 22:49 (fifteen years ago)
"My Autumn's Done Come" is such a great song.
― Agarbatti Boy (GOTT PUNCH II HAWKWINDZ), Monday, 9 May 2011 04:29 (fifteen years ago)
No more slinky Vogue dolls for me.
― buzza, Monday, 9 May 2011 04:34 (fifteen years ago)
Yes. Yes. Yes.
― We make bouquets that fade immediately. (Turangalila), Monday, 9 May 2011 04:59 (fifteen years ago)
Anyone see BBC 4's current batch of "Singer-Songwriters at the BBC"? Lee Hazlewood on the Rolf Harris Show from 1971 (I think), not duetting unfortunately! "Cold Hard Times" is the song.
― Juice Should Be Sterliized (Tom D.), Thursday, 20 October 2011 15:36 (fourteen years ago)
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=k2k4Z12VHZk
― buzza, Sunday, 22 July 2012 08:24 (thirteen years ago)
Light in the Attic is about to put out some very rare Hazlewood stuff:
http://lightintheattic.net/releases/739-a-house-safe-for-tigers
A House Safe For Tigers is the soundtrack to one of the seven TV movies Lee Hazlewood made with the director Torbjörn Axelman during his period living in Sweden in the early 1970s. Hazlewood had moved there to lay low and to help his son avoid the draft, but wound up finding happiness and creative freedom. Many of the albums recorded in Sweden made their way no further than Scandinavia, but of them all, A House Safe For Tigers is the holy grail for collectors, often changing hands for hundreds of dollars.
― She Got the Shakes, Sunday, 22 July 2012 17:34 (thirteen years ago)
saw a couple of killer-looking comps that appear sorta similar, design-wise, to the above, recently - two vinyl reissues compiling bunches of lee's stuff seemingly by mood; there was a syrupy one with wait and see on & another with no train to stockholm, the nights, &c, iirc. they were stickered with fan-club-only or something, i don't really know much about them. they had ridiculous sleeves, one with a photoshopped remake of the trouble sleeve but with a cut-out futuristic & moustachioed head of lee taking the place of a train on the tracks in the distance. mainly stuff from the records but they looked pretty good.
― , Blogger (schlump), Sunday, 22 July 2012 17:43 (thirteen years ago)
Oh man, that Tigers reissue is great news!
― chromecassettes, Monday, 23 July 2012 03:30 (thirteen years ago)
Yea this is awesome.
― bamcquern, Monday, 23 July 2012 04:32 (thirteen years ago)
So prolific, insane how often I thought I had exhausted the catalog and then more comes up
― buzza, Monday, 23 July 2012 04:35 (thirteen years ago)
"For A Day Like Today" was my top Spotify song a couple of years ago.
You probably already knew this, but the Sweet Ride film had another perspective theme song written & recorded by Moby Grape which they mime to in the film.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Glo-RJ4go-I
― an icon of a worried-looking, long-haired, bespectacled man (C. Grisso/McCain), Saturday, 30 July 2022 18:23 (three years ago)
I did not already know this.
― Let's Get Ready to Trimble (Tom D.), Saturday, 30 July 2022 19:12 (three years ago)
Nor I.
― My Little Red Buchla (James Redd and the Blecchs), Saturday, 30 July 2022 19:34 (three years ago)
I do know that a very interesting upcoming book will feature a detailed analysis of the recording of “Omaha.”
― My Little Red Buchla (James Redd and the Blecchs), Saturday, 30 July 2022 19:35 (three years ago)
Brane is breaking just looking at the ToC: https://www.taylorfrancis.com/books/edit/10.4324/9781003093206/one-track-mind-asif-siddiqi
― My Little Red Buchla (James Redd and the Blecchs), Saturday, 30 July 2022 20:01 (three years ago)
i know this was posted before by me and maybe others but don't see it, broken link perhapsgreat song but prime wrecking crew footage is what makes ithttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=54x78pcWIgc
― buzza, Tuesday, 13 June 2023 07:49 (three years ago)
INA youtube channel has some gems in there among the rote tv promotional stuff
― buzza, Tuesday, 13 June 2023 07:59 (three years ago)
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aFNDY9ocrhE
― buzza, Saturday, 29 July 2023 08:13 (two years ago)
his best song, maybe. always puts me in a space.
― Terrycoth Baphomet (bendy), Friday, 4 August 2023 14:31 (two years ago)
TIL that Reprise thought they could make lightning strike twice by having Lee produce another Rat Pack daughter...
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=i7DI__tn7fw
― an icon of a worried-looking, long-haired, bespectacled man (C. Grisso/McCain), Tuesday, 26 September 2023 04:54 (two years ago)
Streaming for one week on lecinemaclub.com, Cowboy in Sweden: https://www.lecinemaclub.com/now-showing/cowboy-in-sweden/
― screator, Saturday, 6 July 2024 05:35 (one year ago)
I found it on Vimeo proper, apparently from the same source, for anyone who comes by after the Le Cinema Club feature expires.
https://vimeo.com/374624228
― ⓓⓡ (Johnny Fever), Saturday, 6 July 2024 05:41 (one year ago)
Filed under “things I explicitly purchased a box set for and then never got around to it”
― Western® with Bacon Flavor, Saturday, 6 July 2024 05:49 (one year ago)
so disappointed lita didn't include the dvd as a bonus on the recent 2 lp reissue (still, sounds amazing!) as they did on one of the previous releases.
― no lime tangier, Saturday, 6 July 2024 07:15 (one year ago)
I’ve spent the last month listening to nothing but lee and related and have been preparing playlists on Apple Music, Spotify and YouTube to share soon but will also be doing a write up. Basically 1955-1975. I keep discovering stuff and am just blown away.
― dan selzer, Saturday, 6 July 2024 21:22 (one year ago)
There's going to be 3 playlists. a 7+ hour version for completists, a 2 hour version for purists and a 4-ish hour version, which tells the story I'm learning and I'm working the most on.
The youtube version of that playlist is here:
https://youtube.com/playlist?list=PL-_DBT13UQzCXQOtKk7dZ01vgPtQ6iVcS&si=7ALFZKt0NDlluD3Z
Because youtube has random uploads from people, this version of the playlist has a handful of tracks not available on Apple Music or Spotify.
I think it's a good range, mostly chronological, stuff he wrote, produced, performed, some stuff he only performed. It's a mix of my personal preferences and a vague idea about what makes a Lee Hazlewood song.
There's a few stretches...I just really wanted to get a track from the Waylon Jennings album Lee produced but the only Lee song on that album is one that Lee had already recorded himself a few years before and that version is already there, but then I noticed Lee sings on Waylon's version of Utah Philips' Rock, Salt and Nails, so I was able to include that.
I'm not going to share these playlists until I write it all up in a way I see fit, but figure some people may find this interesting in the meantime.
― dan selzer, Monday, 8 July 2024 13:59 (one year ago)
I am looking forward to this!
― Theracane Gratifaction (bendy), Monday, 8 July 2024 14:16 (one year ago)
Happy Birthday Lee Hazlewood! Coincidence?
Cowboy in Sweden streaming for a few more days?
https://www.lecinemaclub.com/now-showing/cowboy-in-sweden/?utm_source=pocket_shared
Playlist of Lee on youtube, including Requiem...
https://youtube.com/playlist?list=PL-_DBT13UQzDVsiSQMFfLtX-z0Ja3D21S&si=DzizZq7pGBppn-I-
― dan selzer, Tuesday, 9 July 2024 20:08 (one year ago)
"The President is popping pillsAnd paying all the old folks' billsAnd wearing a silver spoon around his neck"
― The Olde, Old, Very Olde Man. (Tom D.), Friday, 13 February 2026 20:53 (four months ago)
Those were the days, also daze.
From my round-up of 2022's country and related reissues, prev. unreleases etc.:
"Give up, you won’t survive, you’ll never get out alive, this world won’t letcha I betcha, and if it did, what’s it gonna getcha, what counts is, how you feel inside—cause life’s a, sweeeeet riiiiiiide---"Thus Dusty Springfield blissfully calls over the crest of The Sweet Ride. which wiki sez is a 1968 American drama film with a few surfer/biker exploitation film elements. It stars Tony Franciosa, Michael Sarrazin and Jacqueline Bisset in an early starring role. The film also features Bob Denver in the role of Choo-Choo, a Beatnik piano-playing draft dodger. Sarrazin and Bisset were nominated for the Golden Globe Award for Most Promising Newcomer, Male and Female respectively.Seems promising, but right now I must focus on the contrast between Dusty and Lee (there’s a duo!)’s delivery of this key and opener to Lee Hazelwood's The Sweet Ride: Lost Recordings 1965-68, in which Light In The Attic does right by LH yet again, with a cohesive round-up of spare change, all about keeping your highest and lowest on point, on the fence of your sense, so for instance he here hunkers down and squeezes the end of the line over a rinky-tink piano. Just sit back and relax it, some day they’ve got to tax it—and when you can’t do that no more, nor shrug it off with a Roger Miller-worthy quirk over your acoustic guitar, just bug out toward Lou Reed Hazlewood cabin creak and even creekside tour guide to self-aware fantasy memories: whatever it takes to be taken etc. Relistenable beyond completism, with no need for signature layers of finished product atmospherics.
― dow, Saturday, 14 February 2026 03:03 (four months ago)
I'm still editing my Lee Hazlewood essay but his relationship to Roger Miller is fascinating. Miller lived in an apartment over Lee's garage, some of his handwritten lyrics were sold at auction by Lee's ex-wife. They were definitely sympatico. Miller's "One Dyin' and a Buryin'" sounds like a Lonesome Town outtake. Later Miller covered the Fool and sounds like he's paying more tribute to Lee than to Sanford Clark.
Finally WFMU's John Allen sent me the link to his interview with Lee during the Smells Like Records period where Lee offered a fascinating bit of trivia. The violin playing ape on the cover of Lee's The N.S.V.I.P.'s album? Roger Miller.
― dan selzer, Saturday, 14 February 2026 08:47 (four months ago)
Intriguing, thanks! Speaking of Roger Miller (and 2022), here's a round-up I did of Roger's '22 digital debuts (albums), plus a revelatory collection of his early work---turns out he was a bit of a honky-tonkin' sport of the 50s:https://mydeprodation.blogspot.com/2025/09/roger-miller-2022-digital-debuts-also.html
― dow, Sunday, 15 February 2026 21:07 (four months ago)
Thx for the tip to that WFMU interview. It's streaming here: https://www.wfmu.org/playlists/shows/24163
― Elvis Telecom, Monday, 16 February 2026 02:38 (four months ago)
the cover of Lee's The N.S.V.I.P.'s album
it's amazing how Lee's mustache seems to add around 70 pounds, he looks so tiny here
― Cattedrale metropolitana di Santa Maria de Episcopio, Monday, 16 February 2026 20:51 (four months ago)
Happy Birthday Jack Nitzsche...performing Lee's Baja here
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Oz_oJjQt7NQ
Nitzsche did a few sessions with me. I couldn't catch a hit with him at all. I introduced him to Phil Spector. They had hit after hit. I used to tease Phil…’you took my arranger.’ He said ‘you didn't do anything for him, I turned him into something.’ I said ‘you're right.'
-Lee
― dan selzer, Thursday, 23 April 2026 15:16 (one month ago)