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Showing posts with label Cream. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Cream. Show all posts

Sunday, 2 November 2014

Tribute to Jack Bruce - Radio Kras "In Campo Aperto" (podcast)

Jack Bruce

Last Friday night I had the pleasure of appearing on Gimi's "In Campo Aperto" program on Radio Kras in order to pay tribute to one of the best British bass players of the last 50 years - Jack Bruce.

Here is the podcast of the program we put together (in Spanish)

It features a few tracks form a fantastic concert Jack did with the BBC Big Band in November 2008 along with unreleased performances by Cream at the Ricky Tick Club in April 1967, the Spalding Festival in May 67 and Detroit in November 1967.

The tracks from the Ricky Tick (Sunshine of Your Love, Hey Lawdy Mama, Sweet Wine and Rolling and Tumblin) are particularly blistering and feature a band still in good humour and before the excesses and arguments of the last year of their history set in.

The Detroit performance in November 1967 at the Grande Ballroom (featured here are Steppin' Out, Train Time and I'm So Glad) is an example of three outstanding musicians at their improvisational best and pushing rock music to its outer limits. This is not necessarily "easy listening" music. At the time (and perhaps even now) it must have seemed almost avant garde and occasionally formless. Free rock even. It's challenging stuff and I would say that the Detroit performance is arguably superior to the later official 1968 live releases.

We also play tracks from West Bruce and Laing's 1974 Live album and Jack's brilliant debut solo album "Songs For A Tailor."

Jack Bruce was an outstanding and innovative musician who helped to revolutionize late 1960s rock by incorporating jazz and improvisation. This perhaps led to excess in less imaginative hands but also it made it more intelligent and complex - and interesting. Here we celebrate his life and contribution.

The program itself was somewhat improvised and we played what we had to hand on the night. Jazz radio.

Hope you enjoy it.

The discussions are in Spanish. The music is universal....


Radio Kras "In Campo Aperto / Intergalactic Sofa" - Tribute to Jack Bruce
Click to play in a new window or right click and save link
https://ia902205.us.archive.org/23/items/Aperto311014/Aperto31-10-14.mp3

If the above link doesn't work go here and download http://radiokras.net/index.php?id=2335





Rope Ladder To The Moon documentary
Here is Tony Palmer's excellent 1969 documentary which we mention in the podcast. A young Jack Bruce shows us around the Scotland of his youth, plays tracks from Songs For A Tailor and talks about Cream, music and the future.






More stranger than known
Cream live at the Spalding Bar-B-Que, 29th May 1967

Peter Green - "A Mind To Give Up Living" - The Blues of despair...

The Intergalactic Sofa - A Radio Kras Podcast

Freak Out! In praise of Improv

My Radio Kras Podcasts - From Punk to Funk

Wednesday, 7 August 2013

The Intergalactic Sofa - A Radio Kras Podcast

The Intergalactic Sofa ("one size fits all") meets the Radio Kras Tardis.


And when you touch down…
Do you remember when you first heard music? Did you ever hear a piece of music when you were a kid and suddenly things were never the same again? I remember hearing the Beach Boys' I Get Around on the radio when I was about 9 years old. It resulted in possibly the biggest peak experience of my life. In the three minutes or so that this song lasts some mysterious force in the universe picked me up, rearranged all my molecules, messed with my 9 year-old sense of reality and blasted my nervous system into a hitherto unknown region of the multiverse. Suddenly all the pieces in the cosmic puzzle fit and the universe roared YEEESSSSSS!!! Charged up? I was bloody soaring through the red... Then, finally, as the song began to fade, it deposited me safely back down in the family living room wondering what the hell was that? And where do I find some more? I was never really the same again. It gave me a passion for music and I’ve been chasing that buzz ever since.

That is what music does to you. That is what any good art will do to you. It makes you feel something and hopefully inspires you. And so...

The Intergalactic Sofa
When Gimi asked me to do another program with him on his In Campo Aperto show on Radio Kras I suggested doing something with a Grateful Dead / psychedelic theme. It is the music I have probably found most inspirational over the years and, in the case of the Dead, a pretty fail-safe tonic and general pick-me-up for when the times get too weird.

This post was actually the original inspiration for the show. Freak Out! In Praise of Improv
I ended up narrowing my choices down to about 5 or 6 hours of music. I knew I wanted to get the 19 / 09 / 1970 Grateful Dead gig at the Fillmore NY in as I think it is some of their finest recorded music. The rest we pretty much just chose as we went along.

We set the Intergalactic Sofa on auto-pilot for Eight Miles High; The Misunderstood took us to the Sun, Jonathan Wilson to the Valley of a Silver Moon and the Dead circumvented a particularly fine Dark Star. We finally ended up on the Quicksilver Messenger Service's Happy Trails.  A fine ending. Turned out quite well really...

Check the embedded program out below. Both Gimi and I agreed it's a pretty cool trip
Don't worry the chat is in Spanish. The music speaks for itself I hope this stuff inspires you as much as it does me...
  

The Intergalactic Sofa (gets you there on time)
  1. The Byrds - Eight miles high (Single). An apt start and Gimi and I chatted about how under-rated a guitarist Roger McGuinn is and how wonderfully berserk his playing is here.
  2. The Byrds - Why? (Single). From the era of Why Not?
  3. The Byrds - What's Happening? (Fifth Dimension LP). Crosby gets existential and McGuinn's guitar supplies the answers.
  4. The Byrds - Hey Joe (Fifth Dimension LP). The Byrds rock...
  5. The Misunderstood - My Mind (Before the Dream Faded LP). Hold tight. You can quite clearly hear steel guitarist Glen Ross Campbell tear holes in the very fabric of reality in the last 30 seconds.
  6. The Misunderstood - I Can Take You To The Sun (Before the Dream Faded LP).
  7. The Butterfield Blues Band - East / West (East / West LP). According to Joel Selvin when the BBB played San Francisco in '65 they had a massive effect the SF scene.
  8. The Grateful Dead Live at the Fillmore East, New York (September 19, 1970). http://archive.org/details/gd1970-09-19.mtx.chappell.SB14.31510.sbeok.flac16  Dark Star > St. Stephen > Not Fade Away > Darkness Jam > China Cat Jam > Not Fade Away. Some of the finest Dead music there is.
  9. Jonathan Wilson - The Trials Of Jonathan (Live in Aviles, Spain 8/7/2013).
  10. Jonathan Wilson - The Valley Of The Silver Moon (Live in Aviles, Spain 8/7/2013). Keeping the faith and a great live band.
  11. Cream - NSU live in Detroit Oct 1967. Eric tries to keep up with Ginger and Jack.
  12. Jimi Hendrix Experience - Red House (Live in San Diego - In The West LP). The skill and the ideas. Hendrix nails it.
  13. The Quicksilver Messenger Service - Mona, Maiden of the Cancer Moon, Calvary (Side 2 Happy Trails LP). The best psychedelic western film soundtrack that never was. 
  14. The Byrds - Captain Soul (Fifth Dimension LP). We hope you had a pleasant flyte...

Listen below


Download
available here http://radiokras.net63.net/index.php?id=1685
or here https://ww2.archive.org/details/Aperto2813




More on stranger than known

My Radio Kras Podcasts - From Punk to Funk

Freak Out! In Praise of Improv

Cream live at the Spalding Bar-B-Que, 29th May 1967

The Grateful Dead - 1969 Dark Star set to vintage 1950s San Francisco film

The Tarnished Gold of Beachwood Sparks

Texas International Pop Festival with Led Zeppelin, Janis, Johnny Winter, Delaney and Bonnie, Sly, Sam and Dave


Monday, 22 April 2013

Freak Out! In praise of Improv

© David Mainwood

Rock Improvisation?

OK. Maybe it could sound like an awful racket but what's wrong with that? It's rock music. It's supposed to be rowdy. Back before rock became predictable corporate big business it was quite often the done thing for bands to alienate the more conservative sections of their mainstream audience by dropping all pretense of form or melody and heading off into full ahead warp drive jamming mode - occasionally for quite long periods of time.

Cream, Jimi Hendrix, the Grateful Dead, the Soft Machine, Tangerine Dream, even The Pretty Things (see below)... All would embrace improv in some way during live performances. After all they were a generation schooled on blues and jazz experimentation and progression.

So bands might take off on an extended 12 bar riff and the guitarist might show off a bit. However, if you were really lucky, like on say Hendrix's Voodoo Chile (long version) on Electric Ladyland or the Grateful Dead's Dark Star, the musicians would listen to and communicate with each other in order to develop a theme or an idea and the results would be truly spectacular. Of course they weren't just making it all up as they went along. There was structure but space was left for the musicians to explore the variations that could be thrown up by the riffs and changes within the song. There was a rough map. But you don't always have to take the same route to get to where you're going do you?

In a lot of cases the results may not have been so successful but whatever happened to that spirit of adventure? By the 1980s a kind of musical post-punk puritanism held sway over the UK indie scene and with it came the belief that guitar solos were the work of the devil and that any kind of jamming was mere ego wanking. The great John Peel may even been partly responsable for this as his radio show had a massive influence on the 80s indie scene in the UK and by then Peel was not a great fan of this somewhat lengthier form of musical adventure.

This, I think, was a form of musical puritanism and it held sway over the UK indie movement for too long. As a result UK rock became predictable, safe and rather backward looking. Puritan indeed. If the UK wasn't making guitarists of the stature of Jeff Beck, Eric Clapton and Peter Green anymore, that's why.

In the 90s the US had a jam band scene of whom Phish were probably the most successful but in comparison with some of the bands featured below they seemed a little anodyne to me.

So, anyway, here are a few of my favourite examples of bands who abandoned all pretence of musical health and safety, took a risk and jumped over the edge into the improv ether and just occasionally found true inspiration...





The Pretty Things - Why?
Let's start off on reasonably safe ground with the Pretty Things doing a version of the Byrds' Why in Germany in 1969. Surprisingly for a band best known for its SF Sorrow rock opera the Pretty Things also liked a bit of a jam. R'n'B colleagues the Yardbirds were probably the band that most popularized the idea of bashing a few chords and letting the lead guitarist wail over screeching feedback when they let Jeff Beck loose on their I'm A Man single. The Who did something similar on Anyway Anyhow Anywhere where the guitar solo section is basically freeform noise and feedback. And they got that into the top 10! 
Why has a certain droning element which lends itself to extended freak-outs and here the Pretties take it all the way.






The Butterfield Blues Band Live at the Whisky A Go-Go, Hollywood California,1966
A breathtaking version of East / West. One of the first and greatest rock improvised pieces of the 1960s. According to writer Joel Selvin they had a massive influence on the direction San Francisco bands like the Grateful Dead and Jefferson Airplane would take after playing there in late 1965.






The Soft Machine live on Dutch(?) TV in 1967 with Kevin Ayers. One of the geat jazz influenced improv bands of the late 60s and probably the best UK exponents of the art. They quite often just improvised their way through whole sets.





Cream - NSU at the Grande Ballroom, Detroit, October 15th 1967.
Jack Bruce and Ginger Baker were musicians raised on jazz. Cream had ruled the roost in the UK in 1966 but by now were being upstaged by the Jimi Hendrix Experience. Eric Clapton had to raise his game to respond. Here he plays some of the most inspired music of his career. This is Cream at their competitive and thunderous best. Hold tight...






Jimi Hendrix - Red House live at the San Diego Sports Arena, May 24, 1969.
One of Hendrix's best ever performances and, for me, easily the best version of this song. The solo has structure and develops. Hendrix played this at every show and there may be hundreds of versions of this song so it would have been easy for him to churn out the crowd pleasing cliches but he didn't. He followed the muse and, jazzy interludings and all, the execution here is superb. Hendrix has the chops and the ideas. He knows what he wants and by golly he nails it.





Tangerine Dream Bath Tube Session
Filmed 1969 in the Ruins near Potsdamer Platz this is very early pre-synth Tangerine Dream when they still used guitars and is really quite spectacular. There is no song at all just extended jamming. This is really freeform rock. Musical spontaneous combustion. 1-2-3-go! And the first one to the end is the winner.






The Grateful Dead - The Eleven 
October 12, 1968 at the Avalon Ballroom, San Francisco, California.

This is it. Stunning. Sublime. The finest rock jamming you'll hear. Played in an 11/8 time signature hence its title. It's like speeding down the motorway at night with no brakes. Scary but veryf exhilarating. Listen to those drummers! Jerry Garcia really swings. What is holding this together? I get goosebumps when I listen to this.

This piece should really be listened to within the context of the 40 minute non-stop Dark Star > St Stephen > The Eleven > Death Don't Have No Mercy set that the Dead regularly played at this time. Check out the full show here
http://archive.org/details/gd1968-10-12.sbd.miller.86759.sbeok.flac16

The Dead were the real masters of improvisation in the late 60s. They played on acid and believed in the egoless concept of a musical "group mind" which would direct the flow of the music. In fact the band would romp their way through some pretty wild and intense music around 1968 - 69 and it begs the question that, although performed with electric guitars and drums, given the complexities, is this still rock music or the did the Dead come up with something else entirely?








Sunday, 10 March 2013

Cream live at the Spalding Bar-B-Que, 29th May 1967

On a warm sunny day at the end of May 1967, in the much fabled summer of love, two weeks before the Monterey Pop Festival and two days before Sgt Pepper was released, there was ... the Spalding Bar-B-Que 67.


Spalding is a market town (pop. 28,722) in Lincolnshire, England. It has an annual Flower Parade and not much else. However on Bank Holiday Monday, May 29th 1967, Cream, The Jimi Hendrix Experience, Pink Floyd, Geno Washington and the Ram Jam Band, The Move and Zoot Money and the Big Roll Band all turned up to play a gig in the local hall. The Tulip Bulb Auction Hall. Yes you read that right. Tulip Bulbs. And it was apparently just a large shed.

The festival was put on by local promoter Brian Thompson who in late 1966 had wanted to book The Move and Geno Washington but was also persuaded to take on the still unknown Jimi Hendrix Experience, Pink Floyd and Cream. In the 6 months between booking and gig however, the latter had all become rather famous, so the shed was sold out and possibly a tad overfull - the crowd do sound quite lively on the recording below and, even if it is 1967, they are probably more revved up on the local ale rather than anything hallucinogenic.


I don't know if any of the other bands were recorded or what the source of this is. Nothing else seems to have surfaced.  However, what we have here is a rather excellent recording of Cream's 40 minute set. The sound quality is surprisingly clear. Jack Bruce's vocals are buried but I suspect that was the way it was on the night. The band are raw, loud and economical. There isn't any of the lengthy improvisation of the American shows of late 1967 or 1968 but the band sound less weary and more exuberant. Ginger Baker's Toad drum solo is mercifully short too. We're Going Wrong and Stepping Out are outstanding. I'm So Glad features Eric ripping into the 1812 Overture as per the BBC sessions. It's a bit of a blinder. All in all a wonderful historic document. Thanks to whoever you are...

Actually it's hard to believe now that Eric Clapton was ever this noisy. Or that this ever happened. But then it was 1967. A year of legend, myths and half remembered daydreams... and when three of the most famous bands of the rock era played a shed opposite the village pub for £1.


Cream - Monday, May 29th 1967, Tulip Bulb Auction Hall, Spalding, Lincolnshire, England
Full setlist:
1. NSU
2. Sunshine of Your Love
3. We're Going Wrong
4. Stepping Out
5. Rollin' and Tumblin'
6. Toad
7. I'm So Glad

Here are some highlights from youtube.











More about the festival here
http://www.ukrockfestivals.com/spaulding-festival.html
and on this clip Benjamin Zephaniah tells the story of how it all came to be.






More on stranger than known
Celestial Voices - The Pink Floyd live at the Paradiso, Amsterdam 1969

Parallax - The Pink Floyd BBC Sessions

Peter Green - "A Mind To Give Up Living" - The Blues of despair...

Previously unheard Jimmy Page era Yardbirds live...

Ten Years After - Swing In 1969