you know what album i still have never heard? john fogerty's blue ridge rangers album on fantasy. i have a 45 of jambalaya and that's it.
http://bluestormmusic.com/store/images/fogerty-john_blue-ridge-rangersLP.jpg
― scott seward, Saturday, 2 February 2008 16:43 (eighteen years ago)
John Fogerty's Blue Ridge Rangers album is really good roots-rock; I'd go ahead and take the plunge and buy it if I were you. Right now in my listening pile is a Blue Ridge Rangers single that didn't make the album, "You Don't Owe Me"/"Back To The Hills."
Although I don't know if somebody who rocks as hard as Fogerty would be right for this thread. Talking about him on a thread devoted to Poco soundalikes is like being the token greaser in the Haight-Ashbury. But then again, that's kinda what Fogerty was about!
― Rev. Hoodoo, Saturday, 2 February 2008 17:07 (eighteen years ago)
hey, poco could rock!
and there are other rockin' things on here. like my tribute to grinderswitch.
but i put it here just cuzza the whole bluegrass/country vibe he was going for with the rangers record.
― scott seward, Saturday, 2 February 2008 17:10 (eighteen years ago)
and, hey, if you are talking about good early 70's west coast post-psych/pop/rock/folk-rock/country-rock, this album has it all:
http://tokyo.cool.ne.jp/creedence/content2/image/Pendulum.jpg
― scott seward, Saturday, 2 February 2008 17:13 (eighteen years ago)
but everyone knows that already.
hey, poco (and Grinderswitch) could rock!
Not in the rootsy, post-rockabilly-ish sense of the word, like CCR or Commander Cody or the Flamin' Groovies...Poco may have played rock, but Fogerty played rock & roll, if you dig my meaning...
i put it here just cuzza the whole bluegrass/country vibe he was going for with the rangers record.
I can kinda see that.
One thing about early-'70s country-rock is that it put bluegrass in the spotlight - "Dueling Banjos," Nitty Gritty Dirt Band, banjoist Earl Scruggs forming a semi-rock band with his sons, etc..
― Rev. Hoodoo, Saturday, 2 February 2008 17:20 (eighteen years ago)
BTW, any opinions on Southwind (who counted Moon Martin as a member)?
― Rev. Hoodoo, Saturday, 2 February 2008 17:21 (eighteen years ago)
I'm listening to The Blue Ridge Rangers right now, while living on the Blue Ridge! (Well, it's just about eight miles from here.) It makes total sense on this thread. It goes perfect with New Riders, Old & In the Way (Jerry's bluegrass outfit), Clarence White and Muleskinner, etc.
Fogerty is awesome. He plays straight up country guy on the opening track then on the second second he says "fuck that" and starts howling like a gospel fanatic. He then returns to country guy on the third. It's a fun record, with a fresh sound to it.
― QuantumNoise, Saturday, 2 February 2008 17:25 (eighteen years ago)
loved this record when i was a kiddie:
http://pixhost.eu/avaxhome/avaxhome/2007-09-18/thumbnail.jpg
RAVE ON!
― scott seward, Saturday, 2 February 2008 17:29 (eighteen years ago)
can't underestimate the impact that Will The Circle Be Unbroken had on people in the early 70's. Tons of rock fans bought that thing. a lot of people who never really listened to that music.
― scott seward, Saturday, 2 February 2008 17:42 (eighteen years ago)
Also, the home of all those coked-up canyon rats, Asylum, released two of Fogerty's records in the '70s.
― QuantumNoise, Saturday, 2 February 2008 23:55 (eighteen years ago)
x-post
Nitty Gritty Dirt Band (That cover of "Rave On" is like country-glam!) Goose Greek Symphony Pure Praire League
All vital to the development of country rock in the early 70s.
― QuantumNoise, Saturday, 2 February 2008 23:58 (eighteen years ago)
okay, so i went out to the ONE AND ONLY RECORD STORE ON THIS ISLAND just now and picked up a vinyl copy of Blue Ridge Rangers for four bucks. I don't mess around!
also picked up, in honor of this thread, Stealin' Home by Ian Matthews, and Marin County Line by the New Riders.
― scott seward, Sunday, 3 February 2008 00:20 (eighteen years ago)
Stealin Home isn't that good, man. I'm pretty shocked you hadn't picked up a dollar bin copy ten years ago!
― ian, Sunday, 3 February 2008 00:32 (eighteen years ago)
i waited until today. i can wait for most things. and i actually paid two dollars for it today!
― scott seward, Sunday, 3 February 2008 00:38 (eighteen years ago)
I don't listen to much Iain/Ian after 1974's Some Days You Eat the Bear and Some Days the Bear Eats You.
I recently snagged a copy of If You Saw Thro' My Eyes from 1971. The title track is a duet w/Sandy Denny, and it's gorgeous.
I just finished reading Hotel California. When addressing the Eagles' major influences Hoskyns dropped the ball by not mentioning Iain. They took a lot from him.
― QuantumNoise, Sunday, 3 February 2008 00:44 (eighteen years ago)
i think i already went over what ian/southern comfort albums i like on this thread. so i won't repeat myself. for two bucks i don't mind listening to later lesser stuff.
― scott seward, Sunday, 3 February 2008 01:28 (eighteen years ago)
okay, i can see you not liking stealin' home, ian, but jaxon would really dig it! totally smoooooove el-lay loverman stuff. i like this kind of thing.
― scott seward, Sunday, 3 February 2008 01:50 (eighteen years ago)
I'm listening to Amelia Earhart album by Plainsong as I type this...
― henry s, Sunday, 3 February 2008 15:07 (eighteen years ago)
*****
They only put out one John Fogerty album. The followup, Hoodoo, remains mostly unreleased (although a single came out).
Asylum also had the Dictators, who are as far from the Eagles and Jackson Browne as one can get.
― Rev. Hoodoo, Sunday, 3 February 2008 21:01 (eighteen years ago)
Still, my only point is that Fogerty and CCR totally fit here. They were from California and very much reflected that fact. Although they weren't part of the Haight-Ashbury scene, the way their music created this Bayou myth is just like the Charlatans creating their neo-Victorian image and the Eagles whipping up their desperado thing. What's more, CCR/Fogerty were very much helping invent roots rock/Americana/country along with the Burritos, Poco, Dead, Little Feat, etc.
Hell, even "the dude" listens to CCR.
― QuantumNoise, Sunday, 3 February 2008 22:07 (eighteen years ago)
You can listen to the Bobby and the Dorks recordings here: http://www.jerryradio.com/downloads/DD-70-12-20-MP3/
Bobby and the Dorks was Crosby, Garcia, Lesh and Hart playing some club gigs around the Bay Area in 1970. They do an awesome version of "Cowboy Movie," off Crosby's debut solo album.
― QuantumNoise, Sunday, 3 February 2008 23:44 (eighteen years ago)
Seeing Scott's comments about "el-lay loverman stuff" reminded me that I've never followed up my post from way the hell upthread about Emitt Rhodes. A few months back I finally happened into a vinyl copy of Farewell To Paradise, his last set for Dunhill. Dude was definitely heading in that direction. Is it just me, or was he actually getting better as he went on? I know most people (including the manager of the shop I got it from) swear by the self titled debut, but I feel his playing on FTP is tighter and more varied than on his previous "one man band" efforts, giving off the illusion that other people were in on the session. Not to mention that his songwriting was more eclectic then it had been since the Merry-Go-Round era. Too bad there wasn't an immediate follow-up, altough though Rhodes may have been too far gone by that point. His liner notes are painfully earnest about "how hard it is to do this" and so on.
― C. Grisso/McCain, Monday, 4 February 2008 18:12 (eighteen years ago)
I've not investigated anything by Emitt Rhodes beyond the Merry-Go-Round cd that Rev-Ola issued a few years ago, and I loved that. Are any of his Dunhill LPs on CD at all?
― Rob M v2, Monday, 4 February 2008 18:28 (eighteen years ago)
Farewell To Paradise is, I've got a copy...prolly hard to find, though...certainly worth it, less Macca-esque than his earlier stuff...
― henry s, Monday, 4 February 2008 18:32 (eighteen years ago)
The Rhodes Dunhill albums were out on CD from One-Way, but are long OOP. Both Varese Sarabande and Edsel have done best of's (the edsel one even has all the tracks from the s/t album), but whaddaya know, they are also OOP.
*Paging Hip-O Select*
― C. Grisso/McCain, Monday, 4 February 2008 18:33 (eighteen years ago)
No not Hip-0 Select, Emmit Rhodes should be in print longer than a month... (I only have the s/t plus a single of "Really Wanted You," myself.)
― Rev. Hoodoo, Monday, 4 February 2008 19:22 (eighteen years ago)
...maybe Sundazed should be the ones reissuing Emitt Rhodes, not some label like Hip-O Select or Rhino Handmade who will only have it around for a day.
― Rev. Hoodoo, Monday, 4 February 2008 19:24 (eighteen years ago)
"His liner notes are painfully earnest about "how hard it is to do this" and so on."
those were rough years for him!
― scott seward, Monday, 4 February 2008 19:39 (eighteen years ago)
Not a lot of competition in the one-man-band field those days, I would imagine. Rundgren & McCartney and who else?
― Myonga Vön Bontee, Monday, 4 February 2008 19:44 (eighteen years ago)
Wasn't he contracted to produce a new album of materia every six months, or something ridiculous like that? Hard to do on your own.
― Rob M v2, Monday, 4 February 2008 19:47 (eighteen years ago)
xpost
http://www.onemanband.org/omb-photo/one_man_band-aeroclube-stage.jpg
― jaxon, Monday, 4 February 2008 19:49 (eighteen years ago)
Er, that should have been 'material'. Obviously.
― Rob M v2, Monday, 4 February 2008 19:50 (eighteen years ago)
Stevie Wonder and John Fogerty (Blue Ridge Rangers).
― Rev. Hoodoo, Monday, 4 February 2008 19:51 (eighteen years ago)
Well, Fogerty was still a year or two away from making "solo" records, wasn't he? (And Stevie needed somebody to play bass, or at least program his Moog to do so.)
― Myonga Vön Bontee, Monday, 4 February 2008 20:45 (eighteen years ago)
Isn't Emmit's Farewell LP from '73? Well, so was Fogerty's Blue Ridge Rangers record, which he played and sang everything on, so he was definitely in the one-man band competition.
― Rev. Hoodoo, Monday, 4 February 2008 22:10 (eighteen years ago)
Hmmm, you're probably right - I'm only familiar with the self-titled album. Maybe I've got the chronology wrong.
― Myonga Vön Bontee, Monday, 4 February 2008 22:22 (eighteen years ago)
Your're both right. There's overlap, but Rhodes started his one-man band in 1970, if I'm not mistaken.
― QuantumNoise, Monday, 4 February 2008 22:35 (eighteen years ago)
http://static.rateyourmusic.com/album_images/393407.jpg
― dell, Monday, 4 February 2008 23:10 (eighteen years ago)
Does anybody know if the Longbranch Pennywhistle record has ever been reissued? I've never heard it.
― QuantumNoise, Tuesday, 5 February 2008 01:19 (eighteen years ago)
Okay, they weren't from the West Coast, they were from the UK, but if Christie's "Yellow River" ain't a country rock classic, then Linda Ronstadt has hair on her teeth. The album of the same name wasn't much, but the song itself is what 1970-era Byrds SHOULD have sounded like.
― Rev. Hoodoo, Tuesday, 5 February 2008 06:42 (eighteen years ago)
I don't get the Hip-O Select hate. Haven't they only sold out of, what, like one title so far during their existence? Although yes it probably would be better if Sundazed or Rev-Ola handled the Rhodes solo joints.
― C. Grisso/McCain, Tuesday, 5 February 2008 16:18 (eighteen years ago)
I don't hate Hip-O Select (or Rhino Handmade) per se, I guess it's just the now-you-see-it-now-you-don't aspect that fucks with me. But if you say Hip-O has only sold out of one title, then I believe you. I just figured both of these labels' catalogs were only available for a short period of time.
― Rev. Hoodoo, Tuesday, 5 February 2008 16:24 (eighteen years ago)
A few months back I finally happened into a vinyl copy of Farewell To Paradise... Is it just me, or was he actually getting better as he went on?
Hmmmmmm, the more rocking stuff on that album is kinda boring to me, the ballads are nice, some of his best songs are definitely on that album tho
― Tom D., Tuesday, 5 February 2008 16:32 (eighteen years ago)
I listened to Emitt Rhodes and Mirror again this afternoon. Both solid, with some good rockers on the latter ("Really Wanted You" just screams 'hit single')
― C. Grisso/McCain, Tuesday, 5 February 2008 23:44 (eighteen years ago)
Now Playing:
http://ecx.images-amazon.com/images/I/315F1A2TR4L._SS500_.jpg
So great. It's like mash-up of Astral Weeks and Histoire de Melody Nelson coated with nice dash of LA grime.
― C. Grisso/McCain, Thursday, 7 February 2008 16:16 (eighteen years ago)
RFI: any suggestions of stuff in the vein of the L.A. Getaway album? next time i DJ i want to build a set around that particular sound. i know about some of the more well known artists but i'm looking to add in some more obscure (run, surmounter!) music from that same style.
― omar little, Wednesday, 16 April 2008 18:42 (eighteen years ago)
this thread makes me angry coz i still can't find that d@mn corbett & hirsh album! I suspect I'll be posting the same thing every three months until 2011...
― Billy Pilgrim, Wednesday, 16 April 2008 18:54 (eighteen years ago)
well, according to amazon, the tags associated with that LA Getaway album are:
classic rock (95) john mayer (66) taylor hicks (65) definitive 200 (62) white stripes (62) david gilmour (47) american idol (46) pink floyd (45) rock (42) squeeze (1)
― jaxon, Wednesday, 16 April 2008 19:24 (eighteen years ago)
the gospel, blues rock immediately makes me think of the Band although they don't really sound all that much alike. and maybe a bit of the Terry Melcher s/t album
― jaxon, Wednesday, 16 April 2008 19:26 (eighteen years ago)