Skynyrd is pretty big on CR radio (I live in the South tho). "What's Your Name?", "You Got That Right", "Saturday Night Special" are other big ones.
― Incident At Spanish Harlem (C. Grisso/McCain), Monday, 30 June 2014 13:10 (twelve years ago)
"...when I was in the States..." Only the big two come up on Q107's 'top 500 of all time' list.
― EveningStar (Sund4r), Monday, 30 June 2014 13:12 (twelve years ago)
Gimme Three Steps
― ©Oz Quiz© (Adam Bruneau), Monday, 30 June 2014 13:22 (twelve years ago)
I've heard "Call Me The Breeze" much more than "Simple Man" on classic rock radio (in Atlanta)
― Euler, Monday, 30 June 2014 13:27 (twelve years ago)
And "Tuesday's Gone," in Cleveland.
― Disagree. And im not into firey solos chief. (Phil D.), Monday, 30 June 2014 13:28 (twelve years ago)
I do remember a good old boy playing "Simple Man" at school on "play a song that describes you" day
― Euler, Monday, 30 June 2014 13:34 (twelve years ago)
Tbh, I might just know that one because someone wrote a paper on it when I was TAing in Buffalo?
― EveningStar (Sund4r), Monday, 30 June 2014 13:37 (twelve years ago)
Oh, Edmonton's station played "Simple Man" this morning.
― EveningStar (Sund4r), Monday, 30 June 2014 13:39 (twelve years ago)
and on "dazed and confused" sdtk.
― fact checking cuz, Monday, 30 June 2014 14:07 (twelve years ago)
Heard a ton of Skynyrd on my local station growing up. Never Simple Man, for some reason, but every other song mentioned in the last handful of posts were in heavy rotation. I grew up in a more rural area, which maybe leads to more Skynyrd airplay.
― intheblanks, Monday, 30 June 2014 16:02 (twelve years ago)
A-ha, Buffalo's station lists six (!) Skynyrd songs on their all-time '500 greatest' list, three in the top 20 : http://pro.wgrf-fm.tritonflex.com/common/page.php?pt=Final+Countdown+List&id=19184&is_corp=0
― EveningStar (Sund4r), Monday, 30 June 2014 16:48 (twelve years ago)
Since we're still talking about Skynyrd and Doctor Casino's taking a little break, I thought I'd share another picture if you don't mind.Same night, my friends and I with Gary Rossington. There were seriously about 40 of us crammed into one hotel room drinkin' and hollerin'.I was decidedly not a Skynyrd fan at that time... this was 1976, remember, and I was all about glammy English bands. A couple of my friends knew them, though, and were able to get a bunch of us on the guest list, and I went along just for the hoot of it. And they were such nice people and "Gimme Three Steps" kicks ass and so yeah, Skynyrd.
http://i58.tinypic.com/33lfl09.jpg
― Sandy, Tuesday, 1 July 2014 08:40 (twelve years ago)
Oh hell yeah.
― how's life, Tuesday, 1 July 2014 10:50 (twelve years ago)
That is totally amazing.
― Montgomery Burns' Jazz (Tarfumes The Escape Goat), Tuesday, 1 July 2014 13:26 (twelve years ago)
YES
― set the controls for the heart of the sun (VegemiteGrrl), Tuesday, 1 July 2014 15:20 (twelve years ago)
fantastic
― guwop (crüt), Tuesday, 1 July 2014 15:23 (twelve years ago)
<3
― polyamanita (sleeve), Tuesday, 1 July 2014 15:25 (twelve years ago)
I still say you rule, Sandy.
― EZ Snappin, Tuesday, 1 July 2014 15:26 (twelve years ago)
Call me the Breeze: I'm now paranoid about already knowing some of these songs, so the intros are always fraught with a certain tension: is this something I know? Or am I just thinking of something that sounds like it? Then as the verses kick in, it's either a done deal or clear sailing. So my first to-do item here is to go back and listen to the intro again, because I was feeling the interplay of the guitars and horns sliding around but it was backed up by this personal stress.
So yeah, this song. Loping along decently. I wish Skynyrd's bigger hits were like this, just kinda effective filler rock songs, unmistakably "southern" but also pretty studio-slick - those multitracked handclaps around the two minute mark didn't fall off the back of a peach truck, ditto the squonking but pristine licks that pepper the second verse (although a couple kinda sounded like mistakes). I like how the fairly rote piano line is just kinda wandering in and taking up space, feels very much like a demo for a part where they were later going to dub in a solo or another verse. This is maybe the first song we've done where I really do think it'd sound meaningfully different (rather than just better) if played loud, filling up a whole van or party. What was I saying? Oh yeah, so I feel like some of their songs are just too insistent on their big title hook, kinda in your face with SWEEET HAUUM AL-A-BAMuh or SIMPUUUUUUUUUL KIND UH MANNN. This is more laid back, which fits the idea of people calling this guy "The Breeze" (first name, presumably: "One Oh Three Five:"). Here's a band. They play your bar, you can boogie to it. They'll collect their pay at the end and head on down the road. Put them on your jukebox.
Second listen: Opening definitely more fun. I like how the guitar that comes in at 1:20 or so is kinda fuzzed over itself, just sounds like one continuous loop of white noise with only a vaguely discernible doodley-doodley-dee kinda playing. When he gets around to your more basic solo stuff it's just fine, and doesn't wear out its welcome despite being pretty long. Nice trick having the percussion kick in a little more after that. I guess the guy is the breeze cause he travels all over the place, huh? Like the Wanderer...I'm gonna choose to hear it more like, they call him The Dude, or Speedo, or Daddy-O or something. Breezy like Sunday morning. As it is, unless he really loves bopping along to this band, cruising down the highway hanging his head out the window and singing along to their Southern-fried chops, being the breeze doesn't actually sound very breezey: he has to keep running, I guess from women, to the point where he actually can't enjoy his stay in Georgia. "They Call Me The Fugitive," more like.
Overall, kinda dumb basically but thumbs up, I would endorse any CR station adding this to the playlist for texture.
― Doctor Casino, Wednesday, 2 July 2014 21:22 (twelve years ago)
loving all of Sandy's posts btw, feel touched that this thread has prompted 'em!
― Doctor Casino, Wednesday, 2 July 2014 21:23 (twelve years ago)
I only just now stumbled into this thread and am wondering what the hell my problem was.
Sandy's posts = A+
― Elvis Telecom, Wednesday, 2 July 2014 22:44 (twelve years ago)
the first reported side effects from this experiment! fear of recognition, and stress-related inability to pay attention to intros. interesting! will have to report this to the journals.
I feel like some of their songs are just too insistent on their big title hook, kinda in your face with SWEEET HAUUM AL-A-BAMuh or SIMPUUUUUUUUUL KIND UH MANNN. This is more laid back, which fits the idea of people calling this guy "The Breeze"
yes! this song -- which i didn't know at all when i was growing up and first being exposed to the rock canon -- sounds nothing at all like the skynyrd radio songs that i did know, with their gigantic pop hooks. this one's a straight-up blues jam. i would have hated it. i was all AM pop-rock, and i could not get with the blues at all. i did know the other two j.j. cale monster rock standards ("after midnight" and "cocaine") and didn't much like them, if memory serves. nowadays, "call me the breeze" is by far my favorite of the three. it's a freedom song, and the playing echoes that feeling. while i think there's a dark underbelly to pretty much any road song -- that's kind of the implicit idea of the genre, isn't it, that i'm rolling now but there's probably going to be a price to pay one day? -- i don't hear "call me the breeze" quite as darkly as doctor casino does. i think right now he quite likes being the breeze and will enjoy wherever he's running or staying or hiding or heading for. he's free as a bird now.
― fact checking cuz, Thursday, 3 July 2014 06:14 (twelve years ago)
see also: bob dylan/johnny cash "wanted man." grateful dead "friend of the devil." both darker than "call me the breeze," imo.
― fact checking cuz, Thursday, 3 July 2014 06:15 (twelve years ago)
everybody otm about sandy's posts.
― fact checking cuz, Thursday, 3 July 2014 06:17 (twelve years ago)
skynyrd are so much more than their radio hits. i wanna drive around in a van with a loudspeaker testifying on this very matter
― set the controls for the heart of the sun (VegemiteGrrl), Thursday, 3 July 2014 06:26 (twelve years ago)
oh jesus christ good god yes. grownup me is happy to have learned this.
― fact checking cuz, Thursday, 3 July 2014 06:29 (twelve years ago)
srsly anyone following this thread who hasn't dug into the skynyrd catalog
GO
NOW
DO IT
― set the controls for the heart of the sun (VegemiteGrrl), Thursday, 3 July 2014 06:35 (twelve years ago)
Well,then, since we're still on Skynyrd, and everybody seems to enjoy the pictures, I have two more. I'm kind of sad that I don't have any good stories about them... I only met them this one time. They were really nice guys. None of them smelled like garlic. Here's one of us with the late Billy Powell. Notice that Leon's hat has moved to my friend's head.
http://i62.tinypic.com/2hmogua.jpg
― Sandy, Thursday, 3 July 2014 06:37 (twelve years ago)
but where's your hat? did leon run off with it?
― fact checking cuz, Thursday, 3 July 2014 06:39 (twelve years ago)
and here's my friend Jennifer with Allen Collins and Leon.
http://i61.tinypic.com/11liyo2.jpg
― Sandy, Thursday, 3 July 2014 06:41 (twelve years ago)
Loool, Leon's wife was wearing my hat by that point. She was a hoot.
― Sandy, Thursday, 3 July 2014 06:43 (twelve years ago)
Billy!!!!!
Gorgeous piano player if ever there was one. RIP
― set the controls for the heart of the sun (VegemiteGrrl), Thursday, 3 July 2014 06:48 (twelve years ago)
Oh man, the Skynyrd guys almost look like kids in those pictures! Thanks Sandy.
― how's life, Thursday, 3 July 2014 09:04 (twelve years ago)
Wonderful pictures, Sandy!
And Leon was hella underrated as a bassist.
― Montgomery Burns' Jazz (Tarfumes The Escape Goat), Thursday, 3 July 2014 12:21 (twelve years ago)
how's life, was gonna say the exact same thing!
― Doctor Casino, Thursday, 3 July 2014 12:51 (twelve years ago)
while we're on the subject of road songs ... america's birthday is nigh, and you can't get much more american than this one. a favorite of bruce springsteen circa 1984 (he covered it live frequently) and a favorite of senator rand paul in 2014 (if you can believe his tweets):
SONG #9: ZZ TOP "I'M BAD, I'M NATIONWIDE"
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mNDZ9Ve6n5U
― fact checking cuz, Thursday, 3 July 2014 12:56 (twelve years ago)
as for The Breeze, it's not so much a dark undercurrent, just that the lyric doesn't quite come together as one convincing picture. Surely the Breeze could arrange to lengthen his Georgia weekend just a little, once he finds out how good the peaches are?
― Doctor Casino, Thursday, 3 July 2014 13:47 (twelve years ago)
the breeze has a rather large fear of commitment. the better the peaches are, the faster he's gotta run. he knows this about himself, and he's ok with this. for now.
― fact checking cuz, Thursday, 3 July 2014 13:55 (twelve years ago)
that ZZ Top song is still on my CR ballot, classic
― polyamanita (sleeve), Thursday, 3 July 2014 14:04 (twelve years ago)
This song is a total classic, interested to see DC's review.
― intheblanks, Thursday, 3 July 2014 14:06 (twelve years ago)
xxpost Would have been a good concept album - The Rise and Fall of Breezey Peach-Juice and the Skynyrds from Jacksonville. He could cross over with other songs detailing the challenges he faces on the road, like "Your Driver's License, Breeze," or the reactions of disappointed fans who think he's gone corporate ("Fake, plastic Breeze") - and of course, the impassioned cry from one of the lovers he's left behind: "Breeze, Please Me!"
― Doctor Casino, Thursday, 3 July 2014 14:08 (twelve years ago)
Yes, The Breeze is happy with his fear of commitment for now. But when he gets older, and he thinks about the women that might have loved him, he wakes up one morning, alone and hungover, and realizes that he is now Desperado.
― Sandy, Thursday, 3 July 2014 14:11 (twelve years ago)
Ha!
― carl agatha, Thursday, 3 July 2014 14:14 (twelve years ago)
Sandy otm
― polyamanita (sleeve), Thursday, 3 July 2014 14:20 (twelve years ago)
in his desperado phase, the breeze alights on los angeles and forms a supergroup with henley and frey. their signature tune is a lengthy jam during which frey is constantly imploring the breeze to solo. it is called "take it, breezy."
― fact checking cuz, Thursday, 3 July 2014 14:21 (twelve years ago)
Yeah, that'll happen... one of breeze nights.
― Doctor Casino, Thursday, 3 July 2014 14:21 (twelve years ago)
I'm Bad, I'm Nationwide: Feelin this from bar one. Not as scratchy and bothersome as the other ones of theirs I know. Another nice medium-speed road groove. Not crazy about the phase (? flange?) on the lead vocals (there's something there, right?), or the way it sorta stops mid-groove to do the guitar/piano thing at the end of the chorus. But my toes are still tappin'. I'm not sure I'm convinced this guy is all that bad, but nationwide I could believe - they've got a good instrumental thing going on, would book them for the same reasons I'd book Skynyrd above. With the return of the verse around 3:00 I'm starting to lose interest though - this thing could use a bit more of a verse melody or some other hooks or something.
Okay, this got cool with the next instrumental break, the shuffley-shaky drums and the pling-pling organ (clavinet? guitar?) anchoring the solo theatrics and that awesome chugga-chugga-dunna-dunna thing. This is cool. Kinda bummed it just fades out from that - would have accepted one last quick chorus and find a cool way to say "nationwide" for an ending. Whole thing feels like an instrumental jam that just had to be a 'song' and they had this good line about being bad and nationwide and just figured they would make up the verses as they went along.
Second listen just to check the lyrics again and hear that sweet second instrumental section. I guess there are some nice touches of detail, "cold blue steel," "beautician at the wheel," "my gold tooth displayed." Chuck Berry it ain't, though. Thumbs mildly up.
― Doctor Casino, Thursday, 3 July 2014 14:22 (twelve years ago)
Call Me the Breeze is a fairly popular and covered song. I think it's originally by JJ Cale? You may have heard it before in some of its incarnations.
― Moka, Thursday, 3 July 2014 18:27 (twelve years ago)
I dig the Spiritualized version of Breeze.
― Elvis Telecom, Thursday, 3 July 2014 19:03 (twelve years ago)
Cale version's pretty cool, too.
― the asterisk is the most sensitive part of the d*ck (GOTT PUNCH II HAWKWINDZ), Thursday, 3 July 2014 19:32 (twelve years ago)