Jul 142008
 


Hang with me, all right? I’m sure Townsmen Andyr and Chickenfrank already know what I’m getting at, but this may be an alien subject to many of you. I really like Deep Purple’s “Hush” although I don’t like much else by the band. For me, what makes “Hush” so much better than their big hits from the years following is that they sound like a ’60s band. “Hush” has a lot in common with ’60s blues-rock hits I love, such as Spencer Davis Group‘s “I’m a Man”, the best songs of Cream, and every one of Steppenwolf‘s greatest hits. “Hush” has a chunky midsection, with large traces of soul music – no matter how plodding – that later Deep Purple songs don’t have in anywhere near the abundance. As the band took on – even helped create – the sound of early ’70s heavy rock, they started losing that groovin’, chunky, soul feel and took on a more brittle edge. (As another point of reference, I’m sure Andyr will tell you the same thing happened with Led Zeppelin from their debut to their second album.)

Maybe you’ve heard the band’s 1968 take on “Kentucky Woman”. THIS is Deep Purple I can get behind. It sounds like Mitch Ryder and the Detroit Wheels. Groovy, baby!

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Jul 142008
 

The People have (not) spoken!

Here’s one of those oddities I sometimes happen across while researching other thread ideas. It’s a 1974 interview with an Australian band I’d never heard of before, Daddy Cool. Can we SUMMON the Thunder Down Under, Homefrontradio, for some background on this band? I’m sure our old friend Links Linkerson could provide us with some links to the history and importance of this band, but he refuses to play above ground. Despite not knowing a lick about the band, they tell an age-old story I think you’ll enjoy.

Following are some clips of the band in their prime! There’s something oddly catchy about this band. Check ’em out!
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Jul 142008
 


You may have heard this before, and if so you will likely hear it again. For newer participants in the Halls of Rock as well as veterans, it’s important to note that this is your Rock Town Hall. Use the Comments section to register your dissent. Take the discussion down previously unseen paths. Knock a Townsperson off his or her high horse, if need be. Request Main Stage privileges and start your own threads. Check out the Archives. Have fun.

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Jul 142008
 


As we celebrate Bastille Day on Rock Town Hall, let’s take a few moments to remember France’s greatest contributions to the history of rock. There’s one particular contribution in particular that stands out in my mind. See if you can guess it. The winner gets the coveted Rock Town Hall Non-Prize!

To help spark discussion, remember this cool Francophile piece that The Great 48 contributed.

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GREAT!

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Jul 132008
 

Here at Rock Town Hall we often make claims for a record or artist or album cover or concert or producer or what have you as being GREAT [caps and italics for emphasis]! But what do we mean by this term? We nod our heads or disagree vehemently, as if we understand what it means, but until this RTH Glossary entry, suggested by Townsman Mwall, I’m not sure that we’ve ever been able to reach agreement on what the designation GREAT means. Listen to this Lou guy, in the following clip. I think his recounting of a GREAT concert he attended – and the telling of his experiences – clearly illustrate once and for all what’s meant when any of us proclaim something in the world of rock as GREAT!

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Jul 122008
 


Almost forget about your anniversary and need to get your woman something fast? You won’t go wrong with this album. You know what they say about all the great singers: “So-and-so could sing the phone book and make it sound good!” On Lay It Down, Al Green’s continued return to secular recording, the reverend has ?uestlove and James Poyser behind the board and in the band – it’s not exactly the phone book he sings with such mastery but Hallmark-wortthy inspirational platitudes.

Be that as it may, the considerable strengths of this album, which also includes tastefully marketing-driven cameos by contemporary artists John Legend, Corrine Bailey Ray, and Anthony Hamilton, are Green’s voice and the comfortable arrangements in which that voice is set. Each track works off the classic template of Green’s Willie Mitchell-produced ’70s albums, most notably the title track, but in a way that skirts the common problem comebacking legends sometimes face when being slavishly produced by younger acolytes. ?uestlove’s warm, flat drums and Spanky Alford‘s jazzy guitar fills are mixed front and center in ways not often heard on contemporary albums (when’s the last time I’ve heard so many tasty guitar fills peeking out through an entire pop album), but the arrangements are more romantic and sweeping than Green’s more idiosyncratic work from the ’70s. On songs like “You’ve Got the Love I Need” and “Too Much” I imagine what Gamble and Huff might have done with Green after he’d run his initial course with Mitchell and before he departed the pop music world with The Belle Album.

Al Green, “You’ve Got the Love I Need”

Al Green, “Too Much”

For all that’s solid and right about this album, the one thing that’s not resonating with me is how placcid the lyrics are. The joy of a song like “Just For Me” is palpable. But then it’s 10 songs later, with Green still expressing nothing but complete content with the love of his life, and I might as well be sitting among the choir, singing the praises of the Lord. I don’t wish the man trouble and doubt, but as a listener I hope to hear a sense of questioning and discovery from the artist. At one point in the 1984 documentary, Gospel According to Al Green, a long conversation with the Rev. Al Green that is open to nothing but questioning and discovery, Green talks about his love and longing for God being much more satisfying for him to write and sing about than the love and longing he had for any woman in his pop star days. He’s sitting in his ’80s-era minister get-up as he says this, with a guitar in his lap. Then he starts playing one of his massive, ’70s pop hits – the kind he’d just dismissed, and you can’t help but wonder where the lines are drawn in this guy’s psyche. I get goosebumps just thinking of this half-remembered scene, but on Lay It Down, despite strong performances in all areas, there’s no sense of those zig-zagging lines, no goosebumps. To paraphrase that key line in “Belle,” “Oh, it’s secular Al records that I want, but it’s Green that I need.”

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Jul 112008
 

It is, of course, possible for a ageing rocker to conquer his addictions, as Eric Clapton has proved. But one of Wood’s friends said yesterday: ‘I don’t know that Ronnie will ever straighten out.

‘For him, drinking goes hand in hand with having fun, and he’d rather be dead than be boring. I remember him saying to me when he went into rehab, “The thing is, I don’t want to end up being a boring b*****d like Clapton”.’

Here’s a pretty sad tale regarding the Stone whose fans need not apply to our hallowed Hall. I like Stones-related dirt as much as the next guy, but damn…they shoot horses, don’t they? Ron, don’t go!

E. Pluribus Gergely, this clip’s for you.

Previously, in the News!

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