Jun 212008
 


Although 1969 was one of the more contentious of years for The Rolling Stones, a year in which they lost founding guitarist Brian Jones and, symbolically, lost rock ‘n roll’s innocence at Altamont [a moment of cliched, insincere silence, please], it was a great year for the Stones’ rock ‘n roll output. The band followed up the fantastic “Honky Tonk Woman” single with what I believe is their best album of the Mick Taylor era, Let It Bleed.

In this opening round of our examination of the musical contributions by Rod Stewart and the Stones from 1969 through 1976, the acknowledged titans of swaggering Anglo-Americana Rock laid down the gauntlet. I don’t need to list the highlights, do I? What I love most about this album is its seamless mix of all that would mark the band’s transition into it’s early ’70s epic status while pushing against the constraints of danceable pop expectations. I think the album is killer rock ‘n roll, and I’ll state up front that Round 1 goes to the Stones.

Faces, “Wicked Messenger”

Rod Stewart, “Street Fighting Man”

Considering we’re booked for an 8-round bout, let’s not discount the body shots landed by upstart Rod Stewart, who by 1969 had set his sights beyond his prominent vocal role with Jeff Beck Group and embarked on the dual tasks of, with Jeff Beck Group bassist Ron Wood, replacing mighty might Steve Marriott in the no-longer small Faces AND becoming a solo star. What bolder way to open these ventures with covers of Bob Dylan and the Stones themselves?
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Jun 212008
 


How would one – me, specifically – go about investigating Duke Ellington? Although he’s constantly cited as one of the greats, I don’t know that I can identify a single recording by the man by tune alone. I have heard of certain tunes, his arranger, and a trusted musician or two – not to mention actually hearing some of his tunes (without really knowing who it was), but I have no clue what it is I’d be looking to check out. I ask because I’m watching my “making of” The Band doc (for the 100th time), and engineer John Simon compared The Band to Ellington and how he used the personalities of the musicians in his band as guides for his compositions. Assuming that it would be worth my effort, is there a collection that might be a best starting place?

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Jun 202008
 


In a few hours I will roll out the first part in my possibly mind-blowing examination of whether Rod Stewart‘s output, including his work with The Faces, from 1969 through 1976, is as good as or better than that of The Rolling Stones. A lot of Rock Nerd Points are going to be riding on this study, so I want to make sure we’re clear on the ground rules and methodology.
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Jun 202008
 

Check out the cat’s reaction at the 1:07 mark!

Seriously, this is a perfect example of a song that – Look aside – goes from being a good Rush song on the verses to a bad XTC song on the choruses. The intersection of the relatively positive comparison to a band I don’t like with a negative comparison to a band I love is too small for me to hang onto.

On second thought, I’d rather keep the focus on the cat’s reaction shot. Peace!

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Jun 192008
 


Today’s rock-ish birthdays:

June 19, 1921, Louis Jordan
June 19, 1936, Tommy de Vito (Four Seasons)
June 19, 1936, Shirley Goodman (Shirley & Lee/Shirley & Co.)
June 19, 1942, “Spanky” McFarlane (Spanky & Our Gang)
June 19, 1950, Ann Wilson (Heart)
June 19, 1953, Larry Dunn (Earth Wind & Fire)
June 19, 1959, Mark DeBarge (DeBarge)
June 19, 1963, Paula Abdul

May not be too much to be proud of here BUT you are bookended by Paul McCartney, June 18 and Brian Wilson, June 20.

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