Showing posts with label traffic. Show all posts
Showing posts with label traffic. Show all posts

Sunday 1 July 2018

Log #92 - A Supreme Festival of Love, Jazz and Dad Rock

Eddy Bamyasi


1. The Cardigans - Life
2. Traffic - John Barleycorn Must Die
3. Chris Rea - The Road To Hell
4. Black Sabbath - Sabbath Bloody Sabbath
5. Various - Rock Chronicles: The Seventies
6. Neil Young - Greendale

Love Supreme 2018

It's festival season again and a particularly hot and sunny one here in England. This Sunday I visited the excellent Love Supreme Festival in beautiful Glynde, Sussex (more famous for the Glyndebourne Opera Festival).

The festival has grown appreciably since my last visit (or was this just the weather with many festival goers now so spoilt for choice they don't always have to pre-book any more?) but the site was still able to absorb the numbers (albeit the bars did run out of all except cider early).

One of the joys of the festival is the interview area known as the Jazz Lounge. Here artists talk about their music and inevitably their insights and enthusiasm encourage you to attend their slots later on and subsequently gain more out of their performances. One such highlight this weekend was world renowned tabla player Zakir Hussain who emitted such amazing sounds from his array of tablas that I could barely believe what I was hearing. Subsequent standard drummers sounded dull in comparison.

Mavis Staples followed with an energetic set of blues and soul infused with protest and anger from the US civil rights movement in the 60s. It was nice to see an established old time star without a massed band of keyboards, percussionists and backing singers. Her band consisted of drummer, bassist and electric guitar (and a couple of backing singers to be fair) and sounded all the better for it (I find the live sound of such old time acts inevitably blows newer bands out of the water).

I hotfooted over to the main stage to see a bit of Funkadelic but I didn't understand them - I think they had gone heavy rap or something (or maybe they were always like that?). On my way back to the Round Top to catch one of my favourite artists Steve Winwood I stopped by to appreciate a young upcoming talent in the jazz field, one Keyon Harrold who played trumpet like Miles Davis but also sang beautifully (sometimes instrumental music can get a bit tiresome and leaves one yearning for a song occasionally).

The young, cool and talented Keyon Harrold

Steve Winwood didn't disappoint. I've seen him before and he played a similar set of well known hits (many of which the casual punter would not realise are his). For instance I'm A Man and Give Me Some Loving from his Spencer Davis Group time, his own solo big hit Higher Love, and Can't Find My Way Home from the Blind Faith album, but the highlights were a Traffic classic from the listed album Empty Pages which I wasn't expecting, and the fantastic guitar rocker Dear Mr. Fantasy as an encore I was both hoping for and expecting.

An amazing talent on guitar, organ (with bass pedals!) and voice, ably demonstrated on the superb Traffic album John Barleycorn Must Die. I've banged on about it before being a bit of an old timer but this is when music was real and amazing (1970!).

The headliners for the night were Earth Wind and Fire. They did have a mass of people on stage of whom three were in the original band. They played a lot of easy listening ballads which didn't really float my boat but finally got to the tracks the fans were waiting for Boogie Wonderland and September and everyone went home sun kissed and happy.

Greendale

Greendale is an unfairly maligned Neil Young album. Sure it just sounds like one long jam and the plodding tracks just go on and on but there's a great barroom sound from Young and his band Crazy Horse and the effect is somewhat hypnotic and soothing. The album is a sort of concept album about a family living in a fictitious small town called Greendale but I can't say I've paid that much attention to the story.

Sabbath Bloody Sabbath

A departure from their previous albums Sabbath Bloody Sabbath (their 5th coming out in 1973) is the closest Black Sabbath ever came to prog. Just check the track titles to figure - A National Acrobat, Spiral Architect and Sabbra Cadabra. Amongst these ambitious epics are two typical riff heavy rock monsters in the title track (many fans' favourite Sabbath track of all) and Killing Yourself To Live plus a couple of down tempo tracks - the acoustic instrumental Fluff and the innovative synthesized Who Are You?

It was a different album altogether with a new sound. We experimented on that and it turned into a creative high-point which took us to a different level.
Tony Iommi

For many years this was my favourite Sabbath album (and cover!) before I settled on Master of Reality as the true greatest!

The Road To Hell

Most pleasant surprise award this week goes to Chris Rea. I was given this album a while back and have paid little attention to it; I thought I knew all I needed to know about Chris Rea, a middle of the road guitar journeyman with a gravelly voice and a hit back in the 80s. The hit was the title track to this album and it's a decent track. But there is more especially with the Looking For a Rainbow track where Rea's slide guitar builds to a David Gilmour like climax.


Dad Rock

Talking of being an old timer I know most the tracks on this naff 70s rock compilation. It's starts off with Meatloaf's Bat Out Of Hell for goodness sake. From there we progress through standard fayre from Free, Black Sabbath, Judas Preist, T-Rex and Deep Purple. The most interesting tracks are less well known - the instrumental Frankenstein by the Edgar Winter Group, Tomorrow Night by the piano funky Atomic Rooster and Sylvia by Dutch progsters Focus.

Life

Lastly we have a lovely pop record by The Cardigans. The voice of lead singer Nina Persson is a bit high and twee which makes their cover of the aforementioned Sabbath Bloody Sabbath even more bizarre. I think it works well:


It's not the band's only Sabbath cover - apparently the guitarist and bass player played in heavy metal bands previously. It does make you wonder why, just why?


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Sunday 4 December 2016

Log #10 - A Steely Dan of Sonic Perfection

Eddy Bamyasi


I remember reading once that the cover album this week was, in its time (1977), celebrated for it's amazing sound quality to such a degree that it became the "go-to" record hi-fi equipment shops would use for demo purposes. I wonder how many hi-fi shop staffers were actually aware of this dictum - it was probably an urban myth rarely put into practice on the high street.

Aja (named after a girl of that name - and although I've never noticed before there is a girl's face in the cover) is indeed a sumptuous jazz / rock / funk / R&B / fusion masterpiece with it's perfectly intertwined funky bass, smooth electric piano and drum shuffles, played by a revolving door of crack session players.
The band actually took their name from a brand of dildo featured in William Burrough's "Naked Lunch"
I had assumed the name Steely Dan was something to do with the two core players, Donald Fagen and Walter Becker, but not at all, the band was named after a dildo. Eh hem. Donald Fagen's later Nightfly album was also a favourite during my university years.

1. Ketil Bjornstad and David Darling - Epigraphs
2. The Felice Brothers - The Felice Brothers
3. Traffic - John Barleycorn Must Die
4. DJ Shadow - Preemptive Strike
5. Steely  Dan - Aja
6. AC/DC - Back in Black

Ketil Bjornstad and David Darling are a pianist/cellist duo recording for the new age ECM label. The instrumental music is verging on minimalist classical of the Philip Glass (particularly his solo piano work) and Arvo Part school - very down tempo with lots of space.

The Felice Brothers are coming to a concert hall in Brighton in the new year which made me reach for my CD. It's actually a copy someone gave me without a cover so I wasn't even aware of which album it was. The music is round the campfire accordion washboard foot stomping bar room americana most similar to Wilco with a Tom Waits/Bob Dylan feel. Hear the honky tonk piano and horn on The Greatest Show on Earth.

I'm in the lobby of the motel 8
Waiting on my lovely date
Her name is Doris Day
I'm in a suit of burgundy
There's a deer-head looking at me
It's blowing my mind away
Everyone knows she's the killing kind
She keeps a 38 Smith and Wesson at her side
I put a pistol in my pants
Cause were going out to dance
Where the water drinks like cherry wine

Tell me mama, so it seems
Your son's been a bad marine
They're shipping him home tonight
Tell me mama wheres your other son
In jail with the other one?
You must'nt of raised them right
I heard your low-life husband shout
It got me to wondering what the scene was all about
He said I'm breaking my parole
Going down to Jericho
Get me that money, or I'm gonna beat it out

Oooh happy days are here!
It's the perfect summer night
And the moonlight's shining clear
Put a pistol in your purse
Cause we're going to Gettysburg
To the stand of the Greatest Show on Earth!

Is that your daughter Mr. Kissinger?
Better keep an eye on her
She been looking me up and down
Is that your woman in the coat of fur?
Better keep an eye on her
This is a ravenous part of town
I know about you and the deputy
And how they found him shot dead in a Mercury
Some say you're paid to kill
Like that mean ol' Buffalo Bill
Watch it buddy! Don't draw no gun on me!

Oooh happy days are here!
It's the perfect summer night
And the moonlight's shining clear
Put a pistol in your purse
Cause we're going to Gettysburg
To the stand of the Greatest Show on Earth!

You get the picture! Great stuff, I'm looking forward to it.

The Traffic album is a classic. Rather like Aja it's a perfect blend of multiple styles and all the remarkable for a band comprising of only three very talented musicians. I saw multi instrumentalist Steve Winwood playing at Cropredy Festival a few years ago and was blown away as he raced through Traffic, Spencer Davis Group, and Blind Faith classics, moving effortlessly from organ (with bass foot pedal) to guitar, and that voice of course too. The encore was Dear Mr. Fantasy... play us a tune!

There are some great bass lines and languid drum beats in the DJ Shadow album. The centre piece is the four part near 30 minute What Does Your Soul Look Like? His 1996 debut Entroducing album was famous for being composed (or compiled more like) entirely from cut and pasted samples. Not traditional musicianship of course but quite a skill nontheless. I saw a full band at a festival recreating that album.

AC/DC's Back in Black album was their first after the death of lead singer Bon Scott. Brian Johnson certainly proved an able replacement and has lasted the course with the band right up to this year when hearing problems (no shit Sherlock) forced him to temporarily step aside for Axl Rose. Back in Black isn't quite as good as AC/DC's landmark Highway to Hell album but has plenty of classic stadium filling rockers. There is something irresistible about the AC/DC template of single line riff, followed by 4 by 4 drum beat, followed by one note bass. It hooks into your brain.
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