Showing posts with label blue oyster cult. Show all posts
Showing posts with label blue oyster cult. Show all posts

Sunday, 12 February 2017

Log #20 - The Jethro Oyster Harvest - Underachievers in Rock

Eddy Bamyasi

1. Randy Newman - Lonely at the Top
2. Nitin Sawhney - Beyond Skin
3. Blue Oyster Cult - Spectres
4. Barclay James Harvest - Gone to Earth
5. Jethro Tull - Aqualung
6. Paolo Nutini - Sunny Side Up

A quick word on a super local band who have been doing the rounds for a while - I had the pleasure of seeing The Mountain Firework Company at the Wellington pub in Shoreham the other night. If you get a chance catch them live and enjoy their effortlessly great swamp folk Americana. Lovely harmonies, sensitive brush stick rhythms, and a fiddle sound to die for. Bands like this should be huge but they probably don't want to be.

Barclay James Harvest eh, or BJH for short. That’s a strange one as is their name. Apparently this was decided by drawing random slips of paper from a hat and the word Harvest came before the subsequently named fledgling label they were signed to.

I first heard them at a school friend’s house one evening – I’d just broken up with my girlfriend. A girl named Penny who had decided to go out with my sister’s boyfriend, but that’s off the point! Their music is pretty sad but it was a small consolation to discover them that evening as I’d spent some time looking for other bands that sounded like King Crimson who I adored at the time, and with their prog rock mellotron strings they fitted the bill pretty well.

[They were].. everything that identified progrock then: vaulting themes, orchestra, wailing guitar riding heaving swells of tempestuous music like a doomed ship out of Coleridge, lyrics arising from areas other than the crotch, and a dexterity that would turn most composers and players on their heads.
Marc S. Tucker

Discovering new music and subsequently lending it around school was a constant excitement in those years (something I feel must be lacking in today’s digital world). I had an album called New Morning or something – an early compilation and amongst the odd mix of acoustic Simon and Garfunkel type tunes and rather portentous classical rock there was a tremendous rocker called Taking Some Time On. This tune (albeit not really representative) really turned me on to BJH and plenty of my friends too.

Progressing through the 70s their writing became more expansive and ambitious but their bloated live performances with full orchestra, allied with poor record sales, almost bankrupted the group before they underwent a renaissance with an enforced change of record label and a rebirth as a (relatively) stripped back four piece.

For a short time I bought everything they did. Personally I think they peaked with Octoberon (1976). By then they had mellowed somewhat and were writing largely radio friendly soft rock - songs like Rock N Roll Star should have been massive. After that they began that all too familiar terminal decline into 80s synthesizer irrelevance - an affliction of many 70s rock bands.

Despite playing some massive concerts (famously a 1980 live album was recorded in front of 200,000 in Berlin) they were always on the fringe of success. Bassist and singer Les Holroyd recently theorised that this had something to do with them refusing to join the London scene and remaining a "northern band". Maybe their music was just a little bit too twee – much more Moody Blues than King Crimson in hindsight - there is even a track called Poor Man's Moody Blues on the 1977 album Gone to Earth. It also sounds quite religious – something that I hadn’t really clocked at all before playing this album again this weekend.

The classic line up Wolstenholme, Lees, Pritchard, Holroyd

I saw a Holroyd incarnation of them relatively recently in Hove where they hesitatingly played to only about 300 people – what a fall from grace (albeit a relatively short-lived grace you could say). The persistent downbeat vibes surrounding this underachieving/underrated band were heightened poignantly with the suicide of keyboardist Woolly Wolstenholme in 2010.

While we are on underachievers let's talk about The Blue Oyster Cult. As I mentioned in an earlier post somewhere their early albums like their eponymous debut, Secret Treaties, and Tyranny and Mutation, are tight rock albums with an original twist. They then had their big hit Don't Fear the Reaper and like a lot of rock bands of the time drifted into a slightly more poppy sound on Spectres and Mirrors. Then possibly continuing to chase commercial success they went heavy metal with a sci-fi bent in the early 80s even recruiting sci-fi writer Michael Moorcock to pen some lyrics (as he had done for Hawkwind). Incidentally if you aren't familiar with the writings of Moorcock checkout his brilliant novella Behold the Man about a time traveller who returns to the time of Christ with blasphemous consequences.

BOC - ELO in leathers (plus Saturday Night Fever)

I picked up Spectres on the strength of the literally spooky cover! I don't remember many specific album purchases but I do this one, a single LP purchase one afternoon from an old record shop in Havant. The whole album doesn't particularly gel what with it's mix of rock tunes and ballads (indeed the picture above may suggest some degree of identity crisis although their mysterious mason like symbolism and umlauted "O" were always cool and consistent). Aside from the straight rockers like the catchy Godzilla there are beautiful tunes like Fireworks and I Love The Night, some super tight pop like Searchin for Celine and Goin' Through the Motions, and some epic prog like Golden Age of Leather and Nosferatu (lyrical extract below). 


This ship pulled in without a sound
The faithful captain long since cold
He kept his log till the bloody end
Last entry read "Rats in the hold.
My crew is dead, I fear the plague."

Da da da da daaaa da! In case you didn't recognise it, that's the riff from the title track to Jethro Tull's Aqualung - one of the most famous guitar riffs ever. It's a very strong album and probably the "go to" one for new Tull fans. Apparently there is debate about whether it was meant as a concept album - the first side about a tramp like character called Aqualung, and the second side a commentary on organised religion (actually isn't all religion "organised"?). But Tull leader Ian Anderson dismissed this:

Aqualung was just a bunch of songs.

And a mighty fine bunch of songs it is including heavy rockers like Cross Eyed Mary, Hymn 43, and Locomotive Breath and acoustic gems like Cheap Day Return and Mother Goose.

Anderson was reportedly not best pleased with the similarity between the painted Aqualung figure on the album cover and himself!

The fictitious Aqualung and the real Ian Anderson

Just a quick word this week on slots 1 and 2. Multi instrumentalist and composer Nitin Sawhney shot to fame when his album Beyond Skin was released in 1999. It is a slickly produced affair melding indian influences with electronica and jazz plus some beautiful piano pieces like Tides.

Singer-songwriter-pianist Randy Newman eschewed the Hollywood/Laurel Canyon/Troubadour scene of his native LA in the late 60s and early 70s when contemporaries like Neil Young, James Taylor, Jackson Browne and Joni Mitchell were seeking fame and fortune. This didn't stop him producing some critically acclaimed albums like Sail Away and Good Old Boys full of political satire and irony, and well represented on this 1987 compilation album. Now he has fully embraced Hollywood gaining a wealth of grammys and oscars for his film compositions especially the tunes for Toy Story.

Randy Newman - We Talk Real Funny Down Here





Saturday, 28 January 2017

Album Cover Friday Fun Challenge! (Difficult) - ANSWERS REVEALED

Eddy Bamyasi
Here again are the pictures for my earlier Album Cover location challenge. The initial collage below shows the locations as they are today where the original famous (or not so famous in some cases) album photos were shot.

A hover over will reveal the actual album covers.

Admittedly some of these pictures were obscure or just plain difficult unless you happened to have had the particular albums. Some of the albums are not even that famous and may not even be recognisable from the hover over! For example how many people had the Blue Oyster Cult live double album On Your Feet or On Your Knees with it's very spooky gothic church cover (2,2) actually located in up town New York? I was a great fan of their brand of sci-fi rock and in particular Buck Dharma's excellent guitar evident in extended glory on this album, but I don't think many of my contemporaries, even my rock fan friends, ever shared my enthusiasm, which is a shame as some of their early albums in particular are quite unique.

Speaking of gothic churches the San Franciscan turquoise church door was the backdrop for Van Morrison's split trouser shot for his St. Dominic's Preview album (1,3), an album that I personally think is right up there with his magnificent Astral Weeks.

The location for Black Sabbath's debut album cover shoot was not a gothic church but actually a water mill on the Thames in Oxfordshire (4,3). Of course the mysterious black figure adds some sabbath menace to this otherwise idealic country setting. Urban myths abound that the figure was an apparition that only appeared when the film was developed! Bassist Geezer Butler said such a dressed figure attended a gig many years later claiming to be the girl on the cover.

Who but the most avid and observant Mike Oldfield fans would get the aerial shot of the Welsh/English border especially without the glider (1,2)? Oldfield had retreated to the Hertfordshire region, known as Hergest Ridge, to live and record an album of the same name following the success of Tubular Bells.


album cover locations
Famous music locations, hover over to reveal the albums


Some of the remaining pictures are more famous and I was surprised no one got Pink Floyd's Hollywood studios Wish You Were Here shot (4,2), or Led Zeppelin's New York apartment block featured on Physical Graffitti (with actual cut out windows in the sleeve)(1,4).The other Led Zeppelin shot at (3,2) is a bit of a cheat as it is actually the back portion of the Led Zep IV cover which was shot across a park in Birmingham - quite a drab location relative to the Lord of the Rings flavoured delights inside.

The Who's obelisk from Who's Next (2,3) was taken at Easington Colliery, a former mine in County Durham in the North of England, and both the Oasis cover for What’s The Story (Morning Glory)? (1,4) and David Bowie's Ziggy Stardust cover (1,3) come from London's Soho. The famous K.West sign in the latter belonged to a long gone fur clothing company and is absolutely nothing to do with a premonition Bowie had about Kanye West. Another London shop long gone is Axfords Clothing in Vauxhall, South East London, as pictured on the Ian Dury album New Boots and Panties!! (3,4). If you look closely at the album cover you can also see the reflection of the Woolworths shop front across the street, another British institution no longer with us. Moving north of the river again you can find the less than exotic tower block in Islington which provided the night shot for The Streets' Original Pirate Material album.

Across the pond we have three New York street scenes used respectively for Bob Dylan's Freewheelin' (1,1), Neil Young's After the Goldrush (2,4) and the Doors' Strange Days (4,4), and finally Eric Clapton's 461 Ocean Boulevard (3,3) which is literally a shot of his home of that very address, Miami, in 1974.

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