no no I was trying to give the Seeds credit, it's great.
― brio, Wednesday, 13 March 2013 14:18 (thirteen years ago)
and yeah it is from 1966!
bob dylan - sad-eyed lady of the lowlands 11:22 (1966)
― acid in the style of tenpole tudor (NickB), Wednesday, 13 March 2013 14:23 (thirteen years ago)
nina simone - sinnerman 10:19 (1965)
― acid in the style of tenpole tudor (NickB), Wednesday, 13 March 2013 14:27 (thirteen years ago)
Ella Fitzgerald "How High the Moon" 6:58 (1960)
― how's life, Wednesday, 13 March 2013 14:31 (thirteen years ago)
Chuck Berry and Bo Diddley
Chuck's Beat (10:36)Bo's Beat: (14:05)
1964
― how's life, Wednesday, 13 March 2013
good digging but then are instrumentals rock & pop songs?
& is ella rock or pop?
& then again aren't desolation row and sad-eyed lady really in the tradition of the long folk ballad?
See also Johnny Cash "The Legend of John Henry's Hammer" – 9:03, Blood, Sweat and Tears, 1963.
― don't call it a cloud rap i've been high for years (zvookster), Wednesday, 13 March 2013 14:50 (thirteen years ago)
woody guthrie's "tom joad" (6:34) came out on a double-sided 78 in 1940, re-issued in 1950.
― don't call it a cloud rap i've been high for years (zvookster), Wednesday, 13 March 2013 15:01 (thirteen years ago)
>>>are instrumentals rock & pop songs?
Instrumentals "Honky Tonk," "Sleepwalk" "Pipeline" etc. etc. were huge pop hits, obviously. Chuck and Bo were mining a longer, jammier version but there's a reason many of those old 45s had a part 1 and a part 2 on the B side; they were attempting to replicate in studio the lengthier workouts they were playing live.
― It's All Posable Colaboration (Dan Peterson), Wednesday, 13 March 2013 15:04 (thirteen years ago)
xp: the berry and diddley songs are morelike jams, but they are as "early rock" as anything has gotten on this thread.
Ella's song is a poppy jazz number. I dunno. You don't know what pop is, until you know the meaning of the blues.
― toulows-lautrec (how's life), Wednesday, 13 March 2013 15:05 (thirteen years ago)
Paul Butterfield Blues Band were also doing their instrumental jam "East-West" live around the time of Aftermath, which they then recorded at Chess in Chicago in time to be released in August '66 and which clocked in at 13:11. It's a much different thing than "Goin' Home," but it seems like this general idea was in the air at the moment.
― Josefa, Wednesday, 13 March 2013 15:34 (thirteen years ago)
The Godz' "Crusade" (9:00), 1967.
― clemenza, Wednesday, March 13, 2013 10:15 AM (1 hour ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink
I am no friend of The Godz but this one song slays me every time.
― multi instru mentat list (Jon Lewis), Wednesday, 13 March 2013 15:39 (thirteen years ago)
What's up with all the LA bands doing epic jams?
they were all hanging out at the ash grove watching people like ravi shankar
― wk, Wednesday, 13 March 2013 15:58 (thirteen years ago)
^^^ and jazz.
― It's All Posable Colaboration (Dan Peterson), Wednesday, 13 March 2013 16:00 (thirteen years ago)
I think Sandy Bull's "Blend" (22:00) from his first album is an important precursor
― wk, Wednesday, 13 March 2013 16:01 (thirteen years ago)
1963
maybe the first sidelong guitar track?
― wk, Wednesday, 13 March 2013 16:03 (thirteen years ago)
nice list of albums with side long tracks http://rateyourmusic.com/list/Joci/albums_containing_at_least_one_side_long_track
― wk, Wednesday, 13 March 2013 16:05 (thirteen years ago)
a bunch of son house's paramount recordings contained p long songs split up into two tracks because obvs they can't fit on a single side of a 78. those were somewhere from 1928 to 1930.
― arby's, Wednesday, 13 March 2013 16:18 (thirteen years ago)
http://www.document-records.com/images/200s/DOCD-5002.jpg
looks like at least one garfield akers track had the same treatment. the son house recordings i'm p sure were from 1930, idk about akers.
Son House01 - My black mama - part 1 Listen02 - My black mama - part 2 Listen03 - Preachin` the blues - part 1 Listen04 - Preachin` the blues - part 2 Listen05 - Dry spell blues - part 1 Listen06 - Dry spell blues - part 2 Listen07 - Walking blues ListenWillie Brown08 - M & O blues Listen09 - Future blues ListenKid Bailey10 - Mississippi bottom blues Listen11 - Rowdy blues ListenGarfield Akers12 - Cottonfield blues - part 1 Listen13 - Cottonfield blues - part 2 Listen14 - Dough roller blues Listen15 - Jumpin` and shoutin` blues ListenJoe Calicott16 - Fare thee well blues Listen17 - Traveling mama blues ListenJim Thompkins18 - Bedside blues ListenBlind Joe (Willie) Reynolds19 - Outside woman blues Listen20 - Nehi blues Listen21 - Married man blues Listen22 - Third Street woman blue ListenRube Lacy23 - Mississippi jail house groan Listen24 - Ham hound crave Listen
Willie Brown08 - M & O blues Listen09 - Future blues Listen
Kid Bailey10 - Mississippi bottom blues Listen11 - Rowdy blues Listen
Garfield Akers12 - Cottonfield blues - part 1 Listen13 - Cottonfield blues - part 2 Listen14 - Dough roller blues Listen15 - Jumpin` and shoutin` blues Listen
Joe Calicott16 - Fare thee well blues Listen17 - Traveling mama blues Listen
Jim Thompkins18 - Bedside blues Listen
Blind Joe (Willie) Reynolds19 - Outside woman blues Listen20 - Nehi blues Listen21 - Married man blues Listen22 - Third Street woman blue Listen
Rube Lacy23 - Mississippi jail house groan Listen24 - Ham hound crave Listen
― arby's, Wednesday, 13 March 2013 16:24 (thirteen years ago)
COltrane had been going to 20 minutes+ for a few years by the time those '65 tracks came out. He seems to have been a big influence on a lot of people throughout the 60s. I think the SF Ballroom sound was an attempt to introduce his influence especially what he was doing with standards like MY Favourite Things into rock to some degree too, stretching out familiar melodies etc. In th ecase of the ballroom sound a loyt of those melodies were folk tunes etc.
But on the other hand you hear that bands like the Who were doing long rave ups on r'n;b material from their beginnings, at least as the Who. Noty sure if that comes from that influence.
Seems like the constraint may have been more on the recorded version of songs than the live ones. 3 minutes haveing been arrived at as the perfect maximum duration for a single at least. I heard taht there was ome gang controlled jukebox management that meant that things remained that way for a long time.
I also heard that when the recorded version was introduced it effected the way that even classical music was played. That before that the orchestra was more influenced by the applause of the audience as to how many times they repeated sections but that went out when the lp started to mean people were more accustomed to listening to a programmed sequence of music once only in correct sequence.
Both may be apocryphal.
― Stevolende, Wednesday, 13 March 2013 18:09 (thirteen years ago)
I think you could be right about Coltrane - a big influence on early psych.
― Deafening silence (DL), Wednesday, 13 March 2013 18:13 (thirteen years ago)
uh oh, I'm having deja vu to a dumb stubborn argument I had with shakey mo about this haha. but coltrane's stretching out goes back to ravi shankar as well.
― wk, Wednesday, 13 March 2013 18:20 (thirteen years ago)
it seems to me that the idea of music with particular fixed length really only exists in relation to recorded music. the length of a folk song depends on how many verses you want to sing. obviously really long form music stretches back throughout music history. and certainly where people are dancing there has always been an impulse to keep jamming as long as people keep dancing.
― wk, Wednesday, 13 March 2013 18:28 (thirteen years ago)
Townshend has gone on record as being influenced by Coltrane (and Sun Ra!) at that time, so yeah.
― Tarfumes The Escape Goat, Wednesday, 13 March 2013 18:34 (thirteen years ago)
benny goodman orchestra's cover of "sing sing sing" rocks pretty hard for a big band tune from 1938. eight-and-a-half minutes. released as a double-sided 78. and to make sure they could get it all on record they expanded the width of the 78 from ten inches to twelve.
― Mr. Snrub, Wednesday, 13 March 2013 18:36 (thirteen years ago)
Similarly, Duke Ellington's "Diminuendo and Crescendo in Blue" in 1937. But while it was composed (and performed live) as a single, uninterrupted piece, technological constraints meant each piece had to be recorded separately.
― Tarfumes The Escape Goat, Wednesday, 13 March 2013 18:37 (thirteen years ago)
Fahey had def had long tracks throughout his early discography but "The Great San Bernadino Birthday Party" from the 1966 album of the same name clocks in at 19:00 and is the first one on record to stretch out past ten minutes (according to wiki at least)
― in 2013 we will all be yuppies from the 'eighties (Drugs A. Money), Saturday, 16 March 2013 17:32 (thirteen years ago)
first fahey track on record to stretch past 10 minutes, not first track ever.
― wk, Saturday, 16 March 2013 17:35 (thirteen years ago)
Are there exceptionally long recorded blues or folk songs that predate these, and inspired Dylan and The Stones?
There are certainly a lot of long (traditional) folk songs, with lots of verses, not sure how many had been recorded by the early 60s. Dylan would certainly have heard more than a few, I would imagine.
― Step not on a loose unforgiving stone on a pyramid to paradise (Tom D.), Sunday, 17 March 2013 14:02 (thirteen years ago)
yep. two collections of 78s released on LP by Folkways in the 50's - Dustbowl Ballads & the Anthology of American Folk Music - would have been key for the folk revivalists of the sixties and both contain two-part longish tracks, but the limitations on length in recorded music before the sixties mean it's not a very fruitful avenue, compared to live music & manuscripts & maybe radio broadcasts.
so like dylan based "hard rain" on the trad anglo-scottish ballad "lord randall" and it was ten minutes long when he was debuting it live
and he'd be familiar with songs or accounts of songs like this one by pete seeger of woody guthrie: "Then he'd hitch his guitar around and sing the longest long outlaw ballad you ever heard"
― don't call it a cloud rap i've been high for years (zvookster), Monday, 18 March 2013 14:52 (thirteen years ago)
surprised the Yardbirds didn't record any epic studio rave-ups
― brio, Monday, 18 March 2013 16:44 (thirteen years ago)
So until we find further, earlier examples, those two Chuck/Bo tracks cited upthread are basically the earliest (1964) pop/rock recordings to break the ten-minute barrier? (Aside from being fabulous jams)
― Hongro Hongro Hippies (Myonga Vön Bontee), Thursday, 24 October 2024 19:06 (one year ago)
Everyone on ILM hates the Doors, so I understand the omission, but just for the record:
The End - 11:43
― Instead of create and send out, it pull back and consume (unperson), Thursday, 24 October 2024 19:15 (one year ago)
per a discogs review:
...Chuck Berry happened to turn up at Chess studios while Bo Diddley was in cutting a session, and they decided to try and do something together. The result was a pair of superb extended guitar workouts that were genuinely unique for their time because no rock & roll record up to this point had ever featured extended jams of this length...
― Kim Kimberly, Thursday, 24 October 2024 19:23 (one year ago)
Big Joe Turner's "Wee Baby Blues" runs 7:20; it's from his 1956 album The Boss Of The Blues Sings Kansas City Jazz.
― Instead of create and send out, it pull back and consume (unperson), Thursday, 24 October 2024 19:34 (one year ago)
Ewan MacColl, "Hind Horn", from "The English And Scottish Popular Ballads (The Child Ballads) Volume I" (1956) is 10:51 (a double album too!)
― The count has shot himself (Tom D.), Thursday, 24 October 2024 20:43 (one year ago)
... "Constance of Cleveland" from "Broadside Ballads, Vol. 2" (1962) is 16:50.
― The count has shot himself (Tom D.), Thursday, 24 October 2024 20:51 (one year ago)
Chuck Berry "Concerto in b'goode" (1968) 18:44
― Mark G, Thursday, 24 October 2024 22:56 (one year ago)
Blues Project: "Two Trains Running" (Muddy Waters cover, 1966), 11:20
― Charlie Hair (C. Grisso/McCain), Thursday, 24 October 2024 23:19 (one year ago)
all due respect to the man but an 18-minute chuck berry song sounds like torture
― na (NA), Friday, 25 October 2024 13:46 (one year ago)
my father will guide me up the stairs to bed (anagram) at 1:58 13 Mar 13Ray Charles, "What'd I Say" (1959) – 6:30
― John Backflip (Camaraderie at Arms Length), Friday, 25 October 2024 14:06 (one year ago)
Xpost it's on Spotify..
― Mark G, Friday, 25 October 2024 21:54 (one year ago)
It's Chuck's version of a psychedelic jam and it's great!
― Hongro Hongro Hippies (Myonga Vön Bontee), Friday, 25 October 2024 22:09 (one year ago)
Another Pt.1 & 2 45: Bill Doggett- "Honky Tonk" (5:37 total, 1956)
― Charlie Hair (C. Grisso/McCain), Saturday, 26 October 2024 04:31 (one year ago)
concerto b goode is very cool, people can be skeptical but most people i've shown it to have liked it. it's a bit weirder than you might expect
― budo jeru, Saturday, 26 October 2024 04:55 (one year ago)
Its his “Sister Ray”
― waste of compute (One Eye Open), Saturday, 26 October 2024 05:41 (one year ago)
i like to think of it as his "in a silent way" because it's basically the same groove repeated for 18 minutes and you can hear the tape edits
― budo jeru, Saturday, 26 October 2024 15:18 (one year ago)
It's kind of a "motorik" beat, isn't it? Anyways, I really like it.
Chuck B. and band also recorded a pair of 11-minute jnstrumental jams at Chess in 1958, but I can't imagine there were any plans to release those at the time.
― Hongro Hongro Hippies (Myonga Vön Bontee), Wednesday, 30 October 2024 16:04 (one year ago)
It's kind of a "motorik" beat, isn't it?
Yeah, also sounds to me like something Manuel Gottsching might have recorded.
― Kim Kimberly, Wednesday, 30 October 2024 16:16 (one year ago)