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Over the last couple of weeks I've been listening to John Entwistle's Smash Your Head Against the Wall, an album I hadn't heard since high school or college days and thought I should own. So a few weeks ago I rectified that situation. The purchase verified why I didn't spend my precious extra cash on that album all those years ago, but now I'm a hard-working adult with the extra cash to occasionally risk $7.99 on what would have been a good, scratchy, $1-used bin pickup circa 1980. This is one of those albums that could only have been made by a bassist in a hugely successful band in the early '70s. It's no Who's Next, but it's got enough of what's cool about early '70s Who to make the album better than something I might pick up by, I don't know, Head East, or some other cutout bin orphan from that period. But all this is not why I write of this album and include the following tracks for those of you who've never heard it.
John Entwistle, "Heaven and Hell"
John Entwistle, "Ted End"
John Entwistle, "You're Mine"
The real reason I bring up this album is because the following bonus track, a cover of Neil Young's "Cinnamon Girl"...
Follow up:
John Entwistle, "Cinnamon Girl"
Entwistle's use of handclaps during the song's main instrumental theme follows from Young's version. In terms of Young's music, specifically, the handclaps strike me are a surprisingly effective unexpected overdub on this song. I usually think of handclaps as being useful in a song with a dance beat, whether a '60s pop recording - from Motown to bubblegum to Beat group song - to range of '70s dance styles - whether a funk track, a Grand Funk-type rocker, a glam single, or a pogo-ready punk song. I don't associate Neil Young's music with dancing and much in the way of rhythmic overdubs. Does he even use tambourine on his recordings? Could that Crazy Horse drummer have kept a regular enough beat for a percussionist to follow?
The real thing I want to discuss is 1) whether the use of handclaps on Young's version of "Cinnamon Girl" is unexpected for you and 2) whether there are instances of other artists using unexpected, for them, overdubs in a surprisingly effective way.
I look forward to your complex responses to my simple, direct thoughts.
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