Showing posts with label scorpions. Show all posts
Showing posts with label scorpions. Show all posts

Sunday 16 August 2020

Log #203 - The Rise And Fall Of Rainbow

Eddy Bamyasi

 

This is the first appearance for Rainbow in the blog. Rainbow were of course a rock band spring off from the Deep Purple family, led by Ritchie Blackmore. Their most famous and go to album for teenage metal fans was Rainbow Rising (with its brilliant painted cover and gatefold sleeve - reproduced at the top of the post) which is represented well in the first half of this The Best Of compilation. 

I had n't really appreciated how bombastic the music was, especially with Ronnie James Dio's singing. Stargazer is classic Rainbow and classic heavy rock often (at the time) near the top of best songs ever lists, up there with Stairway To Heaven and Freebird. Its most obvious bedfellow for me, though, with its slow build and slight ethnic atmosphere, is Led Zeppelin's Kashmir. All those bands were making music like this in the mid '70s.

Later in the '80s they went more mainstream with shorter rock numbers and even had a few single hits with tracks like All Night Long and I Surrender. Although not as epic as their older songs this move didn't represent a complete sellout to synthesizers and '80s production values although I do remember fans were unimpressed with new singer Graham Bonnet's haircut which was very non heavy metal.


The songs of the period aren't that remarkable but do retain a decent heavy rock edge. Various reformed versions of the band are still going generally under Blackmore's leadership but the original band disbanded in 1984.

In a similar vein we revisit more heavy rock with Led Zeppelin and The Scorpions (what a brilliant lead guitarist Uli Jon Roth was - he should be at least as famous as Jimmy Page).

However Klaus Schulze's gurgling worldy flavoured Picture Music is much more my thing these days.  

Led Zeppelin - Physical Grafitti (cd 2)
Midlake The Courage Of Others
John Legend - Get Lifted
Rainbow - The Best Of
Klaus Schulze - Picture Music
Scorpions - Tokyo Tapes

Sunday 5 May 2019

Log #136 - Living In The Live Age

Eddy Bamyasi
Ah, the Live album! Love 'em or hate 'em they were a staple of 70s rock. Most of the stalwarts of the rock scene in that decade had a live album in them. Many had two. For some artists (Frampton, Cheap Trick, and Bob Seger, their live album became their career defining moment far surpassing anything they produced in the studio).

That was just the official ones: There used to be a major trade in bootleg live recordings too. Most bands didn't appreciate the inferior quality of the bootlegs that surfaced on the market - not surprisingly when you consider many such recordings were literally made by an audience member standing in the crowd with a cassette recorder, albeit some better recordings did emerge from sound desks. (The Grateful Dead however were unusual in being the one band that positively encouraged recordings of their shows and many high quality semi official releases exist).

The unofficial recordings nevertheless served a useful purpose for the fans. Bootlegs would present full concerts from one venue on one night, with all the songs in the intended order, and all the warts, fluffs, inter song banter, and audience coughs present. To relay the experience of actually being there these usually surpassed official releases.

Official live albums were usually variously enhanced with edits and overdubs, which meant the tracks were sonically better but this did defeat the object somewhat - one didn't really want to hear a live album where the songs were identical to the studio recordings.

For me the most interesting live albums were from artists that would perform significant reinterpretations of their studio recordings. An electric track would be played acoustically on stage, or a short track would be extended for instance. Bob Dylan and Neil Young were the obvious masters at reinventing their material. Sometimes an artist would present a live recording of entirely new songs.

While the 70s was probably the heyday of the live album many artists have recently begun to release multiple recordings of live concerts from their vaults. Young for example is releasing a series of live concert recordings, many (mostly inferior versions) of which had appeared as unofficial bootlegs previously.

Not all 70s rock artists released live albums. There are some surprising omissions, whether by contractual restriction or other reason. Some artists have recorded albums live of course, but in the studio without an audience. And not all live albums work, whether by poor design or recording, or the music simply not being reproducible or suited to live performance - some of the more complicated prog rock music for instance doesn't always seem to translate so well live.

Great cover, dated film, disappointing recording

Sometimes bands would make a hash of the multi venue edits or the crowd noise - rendering the live album devoid of atmosphere or continuity. The live offerings from some very revered live bands disappoint (evidence from youtube footage would suggest that classic rock bands like Led Zeppelin or Black Sabbath were exciting particularly in their early days, but even the most loyal fan would be hard pushed to argue The Song Remains The Same, or Live Evil, are good albums - perhaps their live albums just caught them on off days (or off tours), or simply past their peaks). Drugs certainly played a part with some bands who couldn't get it together live (although I always think not as much as you would have expected - if the lifestyles of these bands were as incessantly "rock n roll" as reported the bands would rarely have been able to turn up let alone play anything).

This week Eddy revisits 6 classic live albums from the era - there were of course 100s to choose from and the subject, like the Roger Dean covers log, probably deserves a series in future, but for now he has steered clear of some of the more obvious albums (like Live in Leeds and the aforementioned The Song Remains The Same) to present a Frampton Comes Alive Free Zone below):

Why is this album so famous? Right place right time? I honestly don't know (having never heard it).

Van Morrison / Too Late To Stop Now
Wishbone Ash / Live Dates
UFO / Strangers In The Night
Rory Gallagher / Irish Tour '74
Tom Waits / Nighthawks At The Diner
Scorpions / Live In Tokyo





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