Showing posts with label jj cale. Show all posts
Showing posts with label jj cale. Show all posts

Sunday, 16 September 2018

Log #103 - Don't Write Off All of Bob Dylan's Post 70s Output

Eddy Bamyasi


You (old time music listeners that is) can't really argue with this week's selection - we have a couple of "mid" period Dylan albums, the last Doors album, and some JJ Cale, plus another Bob who surprisingly sounds like Dylan, and a classic from Dylan's sometime backing band, the Band.


The Doors - American Prayer
Bob Geldof - The Happy Club
Bob Dylan - Oh Mercy
Bob Dylan - Time Out Of Mind
JJ Cale - Naturally
The Band - Music From Big Pink


American Prayer is surprisingly a really good record. It is a pot pourri of live performances, parts of existing recordings, and "new" Jim Morrison poems set to music. It shouldn't work, but it does, very well.

Morrison's spoken words are on the verge of being sung and don't sound much different to some regular Doors tracks. The accompanying music is chilled - funky and jazzy. The music fits perfectly and if you didn't know you probably would never guess that the vocal tracks were recorded separately (apparently by Morrison in 1969 and 1970). The editing is top class and the tracks merge with each other producing a coherent album which is greater than the sum of its parts and one that should really be listened to in one sitting from start to finish. 

American Prayer earns its right to be considered a genuine part of the Doors discography.

We have two what I've called "mid" period albums from Bob Dylan although really you could argue they are "late" period considering his output slowed a lot from the 90s. These two albums featured here are separated by 8 years and only one intervening (originals) album (Under The Red Sky).

Like many artists who made their name in the 60s and 70s, the 80s was a tough decade for Dylan who was struggling to find his way in the new musical environment. For many his last great album from his hey day would have been Street Legal (1978), or my personal favourite Desire (1976), or even the one before that, the classic Blood On The Tracks (1975).

He had a brief dally with religion as the 70s turned - a trilogy of gospel celebrations of his new found christianity beginning with Slow Train Coming and following up with Saved and Shot of Love.


The 'born again' trilogy

Moving into the general musical wasteland of the 80s Dylan bounced back somewhat with Infidels which is pretty alright but then fell victim of the musical fashions of the day with some bland over produced albums like Empire Burlesque and Knocked Out Loaded supplemented by some uninspiring live albums.


Dylan sits under the red sky and surveys the wasteland of most of his 80s work

But then, mirroring similar trajectories of singer-songwriter contemporaries Van Morrison (Avalon Sunset) and Neil Young (Freedom), Dylan pulled one out the bag right at the end of the decade with Oh Mercy released in 1989.

The album was hailed as a return to form on its release and this wasn't merely due to comparison with the preceding string of disappointing efforts. The production by Daniel Lanois is smooth and positively lush like on the gorgeous Most Of The Time. The sound is polished but the balance is right and the laid back introspective music flows assuredly behind Dylan's nasal outpourings (thankfully the 80s drum slap has been left behind). Man In The Long Black Coat and What Good Am I? are beautiful / Ring Them Bells could be an outtake from 1970's New Morning and I really like the blues chug of Everything is Broken which foreshadows the tracks on Time Out Of Mind:

Broken lines, broken strings,
Broken threads, broken springs,
Broken idols, broken heads,
People sleeping in broken beds,
Ain't no use jiving,
Ain't no use joking,
Everything is broken.

There is some gorgeous languid guitar on this album. I have a feeling it could be Lanois's playing? Almost certainly it won't be Dylan. Let's check...

Oh yes, it is (Lanois) at least on some of the tracks like the aforementioned Most Of The Time and the brilliant What Was It You Wanted which also features some of the best ever Dylan harmonica blowing:




Daniel Lanois also produces Time Out Of Mind but with quite a different approach. The production here is stripped right back to a raw blues and rock sound which ideally suits Dylan's new found gravelly growl and the backing band's bar room aesthetic. With plentiful gutsy guitar riffs on tracks like Can't Wait and Cold Irons Bound (below) this is one of Dylan's heaviest albums despite one or two down tempo ballads like Make You Feel My Love.




What a great looking band too.

The album finishes on the Sad Eyed Lady Of The Lowlands like Highlands - at 16 minutes Dylan's longest ever recorded song. It's no symphonic epic - the track just repeats a hypnotic blues guitar round over and over and Dylan sings long verses of stream of consciousness lyrics (just like the old days!):

I'm listening to Neil Young, I gotta turn up the sound
Someone's always yellin' "Turn it down."

When asked for a short version of the song by one of the recording engineers Dylan replied: "That was the short version."


You just never know what you're going to get. He's an eccentric man.
Daniel Lanois on Bob Dylan


It seems odd to talk about an artist finding himself (or more to the point re-finding himself) after 30 years or so but both these albums and in particular Time Out Of Mind sounds like an artist who has come to terms with a new style and is at home in his own skin. The voice is now a gruff growl but this is Bob Dylan sounding like his real self in 1997.

It is often easy to write off post 70s output of many artists especially singer song writers like Bob Dylan. These two albums demonstrate that can be a short sighted view - a view I must admit having assumed too. I'm mighty pleased to have rediscovered these two albums which have given me a new found respect for latter period Bob Dylan which opens up a whole new catalogue of listening I had assumed was unworthy of examination. Standby for some further excursions into post 1978 Bob Dylan!

It is however a shame that for the most part Dylan isn't able to reproduce the quality of the production on these two albums live. I've seen him a few times since the 80s and his live voice leaves plenty to be desired (unlike the aforementioned Young and Morrison who are still great singers). In my experience it is even difficult to recognise some Dylan songs live and you sometimes wonder if he has even met his backing band let alone rehearsed with them!

As for the other Bob - I heard this song in a shop and thought it was Dylan:




Pretty good eh? Not what I expected from Bob Geldof.

No time left this week to give the Band's record a thorough review but checkout this post for some background reading on the making of "Big Pink".

Cover art this post: The Oh Mercy cover is a picture by street artist "Trotsky" Dylan found on a wall in New York.








Sunday, 13 August 2017

Log #46 - No Change From Me

Eddy Bamyasi


1. ELO - Out of the Blue
2. JJ Cale - Naturally
3. The Doobie Brothers - The Captain and Me
4. Public Service Broadcasting - The Race For Space
5. Takemitsu - Quatrain, A Flock Descends into the Pentagonal Garden
6. Foals - Total Life Forever

It's the holiday season and my musical listening has transferred temporarily from the 6-Cd magazine to my ipod and all that that entails - ie. random plays and playlists. This isn't a state of affairs to be encouraged as I do believe a good album is a tangible entity in itself and is greater than the sum of its parts. See my essay on this phenomenon here>>.

Sunday, 6 August 2017

Log #45 - Naturally

Eddy Bamyasi


1. ELO - Out of the Blue
2. JJ Cale - Naturally
3. The Doobie Brothers - The Captain and Me
4. Public Service Broadcasting - The Race For Space
5. Takemitsu - Quatrain, A Flock Descends into the Pentagonal Garden
6. Foals - Total Life Forever

Tuesday, 3 January 2017

Log #14 - David Bowie's Black Star a Year On

Eddy Bamyasi

2016 began with the death of David Bowie in January and then continued with Prince and Leonard Cohen. The end of the year brought more musician deaths with the premature passing of George Michael and Rick Parfitt. These were the most famous names but of course there were other less mainstream losses in the music world which registered less comment, for example both Greg Lake and Keith Emerson from the fabled Emerson, Lake and Palmer prog rock pioneers.

Deaths are of course sad particularly so when premature - George Michael was only 53, Prince 57, and both David Bowie and Rick Parfitt were in their sixties. This sadness should really be irrespective of the fame of the person, our personal tastes in music, or our opinion of their importance or legacy, which is why it was a bit clumsy of radio personality Andy Kershaw to pour scorn upon George Michael mourners for elevating him to "greatness" when he was, in his opinion, nothing more than a lightweight and fleeting pop star...
Please spare me the predictable onion-from-pocket outpourings, claiming he was 'one of the greats'. No, he was not. (Really? Up there with Louis Armstrong, Johnny Cash, Joni Mitchell, Hank Williams, Jimi Hendrix, Robert Johnson, Van Morrison? I could go on…)
On one hand he probably had a point urging us to keep a sense of perspective (the Princess Diana phenomenon of massive public grief for someone very famous who we felt like we knew?) but whereas our perspective is often directed by the media (George Michael died the same Christmas Day a Russian plane went down with 92 on board - terrorist deaths in Paris are given infinitely more coverage than far greater numbers dying daily in the Middle East) I think Kershaw is missing the point here. I haven't actually got any George Michael albums in my collection and personally agree that the music of Van Morrison or Jimi Hendrix is "greater". But personally is the key word here that just defines my taste. Without being a fan I can still appreciate the sense of public shock and the connection many people of my generation had with those Wham! songs which were ubiquitous growing up in the 80s. George Michael, like Prince and Bowie, sold a lot more records, and was a lot more famous, than Van Morrison for whatever reasons, and when Van passes on one day I don't expect to see much news about it as he is more a niche artist outside the mainstream who has never had massive public or commercial appeal.


David Bowie was one of those unique artists who enjoyed both commercial appeal and critical acclaim across most of a career that included many twists and turns, retirements and rebirths. Much has been written about his death and the release of the Black Star album. The two famously coincided within a couple of days of each other and were accompanied by some extremely disturbing and challenging videos. The events seemed part of an orchestrated master plan - and we shouldn't be surprised as he has done this sort of thing before in a way with the staged "artistic" deaths of his various 70s personas including "Ziggy Stardust" and "Aladdin Sane". Rarely has an artist been so in control of his marketing and image, right up to and including the end. A true shape shifting chameleon - sometimes adapting to the surroundings, but more often than not actually making them!

David Bowie through the ages - the ultimate pop chameleon

Nearly a year on from its release I was interested to hear the Black Star music with some (that word again) perspective. This is quite hard to do with some objectivity but the album is certainly interesting and unusual with strident rhythms, driving bass and modern jazz horns, combining in a wall of sound. It feels like one of those atmosphere albums without particularly memorable melodies or catchy singles - a far cry from his classic pop of the early 70s albeit with some resemblance to his later work with the likes of Fripp and Eno and Tin Machine. This is certainly the feeling with the "first side" of the album which includes the title track and Lazarus, the two tracks released with those videos, and with the much analysed lyrics (incidentally the CD album comes in a beautifully packaged cardboard housing but the black on black lyric insert is quite hard to read!).
Look up here, I’m in heaven
I’ve got scars that can’t be seen
I’ve got drama, can’t be stolen
Everybody knows me now. 
The whole album only clocks in at around an old school 35 minutes (which is great by the way) with seven tracks - the last couple being quite easy listening relatively including Dollar Days with lovely sax solo - and Bowie is in strong voice throughout. Whether this album will stand the test of time like my favourite all time Bowie album Hunky Dory remains to be seen but I am confident it will be one I'll return to.
You know,
I'll be free,
Just like that bluebird,
Now ain't that just like me. 


Bluebirds are thought to represent angels from heaven spreading joy and peace

Incidentally I also viewed an intriguing film recently - Velvet Goldmine starring Ewan MacGregor, Christian Bale and Jonathan Rhys Meyer. The film starts with Rhys Meyer's character, a glam pop star named Brian Slade, faking his own death on stage, disappearing into obscurity before making a comeback a decade later. I was at least half way through before I realised this was the David Bowie story, with supporting cast including Lou Reed and Iggy Pop.
Although what you are about to see is a work of fiction, it should nevertheless be played at maximum volume.
The above caption appears in the opening credits of the film, perhaps a witty slight of Bowie himself who reportedly refused to sanction the movie.

Brian Slade fakes his own death in Velvet Goldmine

A couple of new albums procured this Christmas - the other Whitest Boy Alive album Rules and JJ Cale's Naturally. Both sound as expected - no surprises. I also span Jurassic 5's LP album which has the amazingly catchy Schoolyard Concrete track. I guess this may be their most famous tune, if not it should be!

1. The Whitest Boy Alive - Rules
2. David Bowie - Black Star
3. Jurassic 5 - LP
4. JJ Cale - Naturally
5. Thievery Corporation - DJ Kicks
6. Cocteau Twins - Heaven or Las Vegas


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