Sunday, May 20, 2012

45's rarities Tangerine Dream - Ultima Thule









45's rarities  Tangerine Dream - Ultima Thule 

Tangerine Dream is a German electronic music group founded in 1967 by Edgar Froese. The band has undergone many personnel changes over the years, with Froese being the only continuous member. Drummer and composer Klaus Schulze was briefly a member of an early lineup, but the most stable version of the group, during their influential mid-1970s period, was as a keyboard trio with Froese, Christopher Franke, and Peter Baumann. 


Ultima Thule Part 1 
Ultima Thule Part 2 


VA - Where The Action Is (Gary Crowley Presents)


Saturday, May 19, 2012

Johnny Rivers - Rewind (1967)




Johnny Rivers is a unique figure in the history of rock music. On the most obvious level, he was a rock star of the 1960s and a true rarity as a white American singer/guitarist who made a name for himself as a straight-ahead rock & roller during the middle of that decade. Just as important behind the scenes, his recordings and their success led to the launching, directly and indirectly, of at least three record labels and a dozen other careers whose influence extended into the 1970s, 1980s, and beyond. 

Rivers was very much a kindred spirit to figures like Buddy Holly and Ronnie Hawkins, with all of the verve and spirit of members of that first wave of rock & rollers. He had the misfortune of having been born a little too late to catch that wave, however, and took until the middle of the next decade to find his audience. Born John Henry Ramistella on November 7, 1942, in New York, his family moved to Baton Rouge, LA, in 1948, and it was there that his musical sensibilities were shaped. His father, who played the mandolin and guitar, introduced him to the guitar at an early age, and he proved a natural on the instrument. 

Meanwhile, Ramistella also began absorbing the R&B sounds that were starting to turn up on the airwaves at the dawn of the 1950s. Additionally, he got to see performers like Fats Domino and Jimmy Reed in person, and by the time he entered his teens, he was immersed in rhythm & blues. He was also good enough to start playing guitar in local groups and at age 13, he formed his own band, the Spades, playing New Orleans-flavored R&B and rock & roll, especially Fats Domino, Larry Williams, and Little Richard. Ramistella made his recording debut leading the Spades in 1956 with the song "Hey Little Girl," issued on the Suede label. 

In 1957, he went to New York and wangled a meeting with Alan Freed, who was then the most influential disc jockey in the country. This led to a change of name, at Freed's suggestion, to the less ethnic, more American-mythic Johnny Rivers (which may also have been influenced by the fact that Elvis Presley had portrayed a character named "Deke Rivers" in the movie Loving You that same year), and to a series of single releases under his new name. Johnny Rivers' official recording debut took place with an original song, "Baby Come Back," on George Goldner's Gone Records label in 1958, arranged by renowned songwriter Otis Blackwell. Neither this number -- which sounds a lot like Elvis Presley's version of Blackwell's "Don't Be Cruel" -- nor any of Rivers' other early singles, recorded for Guyden, Cub, Era, or Chancellor, was successful. He made his living largely performing with the Spades and cutting demos of songs for Hill & Range, primarily in Elvis Presley's style. 

It was as a composer that Rivers experienced his first taste of success off of the stage, when a chance meeting with guitarist James Burton led to one of his songs, "I'll Make Believe," finding its way to Ricky Nelson and ending up on the album More Songs by Ricky. By 1961, he was 18 years old and a veteran performer with six years' professional performing under his belt and relatively little to show for it except the experience; even a lot of the established figures in the business who'd tried to give him various breaks over the years, including Alan Freed and George Goldner, had fallen on hard times by then. He moved to Los Angeles and began aiming for a career as a songwriter and producer. 

Fate played its hand in 1963, however, when a friend who ran a restaurant in Los Angeles appealed to Rivers for help when his house band, a jazz group, suddenly quit. He reluctantly agreed to perform for a few nights in a stripped-down version of his rock & roll act, with just his electric guitar and a drummer, Eddie Rubin. That was when lightning struck -- it turned out that audiences at the restaurant liked the way he sang and played, and soon the crowds were growing and his performing stint turned into an open-ended engagement. Bassist Joe Osborn was hired to join the combo and fill out the sound and suddenly seeing Johnny Rivers was becoming the thing to do. 

It was at those gigs that Rivers hooked up with a songwriter and music producer named Lou Adler, a business associate of Herb Alpert who'd previously worked with Jan & Dean and who was planning to start his own record company. Rivers took on Adler as his manager and also got a contract, starting in mid-January of 1964, to play at a new club opening in Los Angeles called the Whisky a Go-Go. This was where Rivers' act and reputation exploded, resulting in turn-away crowds -- his act was so rousing and the chemistry between Rivers, his music, and the audience was so strong, that Adler decided to try and record him live at the club, and to do that, he and Rivers had to borrow the money to rent the necessary equipment. 

At the time, there were other artists playing this kind of basic, danceable rock & roll, mostly in club settings, in and around Los Angeles. The most notable among them was probably Bobby Fuller, although the Standells were making something of a noise as well. In early 1964, however, none of those acts had broken nationally or even locally. Rivers got there first and, in many ways, paved the way for performers like Fuller, once he got heard. 

The tape of Rivers' performance was rejected by every record company in Los Angeles until Adler got to Liberty Records. Liberty had been founded by Al Bennett in the mid-'50s and although it had enjoyed huge success with pop singer Julie London, Liberty was also more of a youth-oriented label than most other L.A. record companies at that time. Bennett didn't believe that Rivers' tape was anything special, but he was convinced by one of his executives, Bob Skaff, to release an album from the tape on the Imperial Records label, which Bennett had purchased a few months earlier. 

Johnny Rivers at the Whisky a Go-Go, released in May of 1964, was a hit from day one, its sales boosted by the accompanying single, a powerful version of Chuck Berry's "Memphis," which got to number two on the charts. The magnitude of Rivers' accomplishment shouldn't be underestimated -- since early 1964, the American charts had been dominated almost exclusively by British rock acts, with American artists picking up the scraps that were leftover, and then along came this new white kid from Baton Rouge, playing '50s-style rock & roll and R&B like he means it (and he did). The sales of the debut album were stunning for their time, rising to number 12 in a 45-week chart run on the strength of the single. In response, another live performance was released as Here We a Go-Go Again in late August of 1964. In the interim, his debut single was followed by Rivers' version of "Maybelline," which got to number 12. 

Ironically, at around this same time, previously established performers like Dion were being ignored doing their own singles of Chuck Berry's music and even Berry himself was having trouble reaching the charts with any regularity. Part of the secret of Rivers' success was his stripped-down sound, guitar, bass, and drums, to which he and Adler only added piano a little later and which didn't get much more elaborate for two years. Dion, possibly because of all of his success prior to the British Invasion, and Berry, perhaps for the same reason and also his legal troubles (and resulting two-year absence from music ending in 1964), had trouble finding acceptance during this period, while Rivers was embraced by radio stations and listeners alike. Listening to his work, it seems almost a mid-'60s descendant of rockabilly music, with more flexibility in his range and singing. 

Rivers' next few singles, with the exceptions of "Mountain of Love" and "Seventh Son" -- which made the Top Five and Top Ten, respectively -- didn't do quite as well, but all performed very respectably. As important as his singles were in keeping him on the radio and before the public, his albums during this period were extraordinary. Rivers proved himself exceptionally prolific and versatile, releasing seven more albums through the end of 1967. Most of these were recorded live at the Whisky a Go-Go, which remained his home base for many years and his favorite concert venue. And all of the albums after his debut were carefully calculated -- the performances displayed great spontaneity and rate among the best pure rock & roll documents of their era, but Rivers and Adler were also careful to choose songs that all translated well on vinyl. 

He ranged freely between classic songs by Jerry Lee Lewis and Little Richard and then-current hits and album cuts by the Beatles and the Rolling Stones and even covers of Sam Cooke material. Other albums made room for electric versions of folk and blues numbers and his versions of '60s soul material and all of these albums sold very well by the standards of the day, climbing into the Top 50 and occasionally much higher. 

For Rivers' studio recordings, Adler assembled a core band of top talent, drummer Hal Blaine, pianist Larry Knechtel, and Joe Osborn on bass, who together went on to become one of the top studio bands in Los Angeles, backing the Mamas & the Papas, Scott McKenzie, and other Adler-produced acts as well as playing on many of the records of the Carpenters, among many others. 

It was out of the success of Rivers' Liberty recordings that Adler was able to found Dunhill Productions, initially as a management, production, and publishing company, which soon after became Dunhill Records, one the most successful independent labels of the mid-'60s, with artists including Barry McGuire, the Mamas & the Papas, and the Grassroots. Within two years of its founding, Adler had sold the new company to ABC Records for millions of dollars, which allowed him to form Ode Records, which, in turn, became the home of Carole King. 

Meanwhile, Rivers kept generating new hits, including one totally unexpected soundtrack success. In late 1964, the CBS network scheduled an hour-long British television espionage series called Danger Man, starring Patrick McGoohan. Rechristening it Secret Agent in America, the network and the British producers sought out a new theme song. Adler and Rivers decided to try and deliver one, written by the composer-producer team of P.F. Sloan and Steve Barri. Rivers recorded it for the opening credits of the show, running scarcely a minute, which went on the air in the spring of 1965. That was the last anyone involved thought of it -- the song ran less than a minute, after all -- until Liberty began getting requests for "Secret Agent Man" from radio stations and asked for a single, which required new verses. "Secret Agent Man" became a number three single in America in mid-1966 and, for years, was one of those basic songs -- alongside standards by Chuck Berry, Buddy Holly et al. -- by which aspiring guitarists learned to play. The song is the most familiar in Rivers' output, partly thanks to its fairly regular revival on radio and occasional runs of the series, and something of a pop-culture touchstone (indeed, in 1984-1985, the all-gay gender-balanced New York-based rock band Lowlife used it as one highlight of their shows, playing a hard-rocking version of it as a commentary on the AIDS crisis -- if you listen to the lyrics carefully, it works). 

Rivers' commercial career peaked in 1966 with a further Top 20 single of "(I Washed My Hands in) Muddy Water" and his number one hit, "Poor Side of Town," which was also unusual as an original song. Although he'd aspired to a career as a songwriter early in the 1960s and had seen some success in that field, once his career at Liberty took off, Rivers quickly recognized at his shows that his own songs didn't go over as well as his covers of others' songs. "Poor Side of Town" was the exception and also one of his very few singles of this period to have a very produced sound, a ballad, featuring overdubbed strings and a chorus. That decision was Rivers' own, against the advice of Adler and his record label, who didn't think the public would appreciate a change in his basic sound -- instead, it was a breakthrough and marked a change in his approach to music. 

That same year, Rivers heard a demo of a song called "By the Time I Get to Phoenix," written by a little-known songwriter named Jimmy Webb, and was impressed enough to put it on his Changes album in a gorgeous pop-soul rendition. An advance copy of the album, brought to Capitol Records, got the song placed with singer/guitarist Glen Campbell, who recorded a version very similar to Rivers' and enjoyed a huge hit with it and, in the process, put Webb on the map as a composer. In 1966, Rivers also formed his own label, Soul City, to which he signed a soul quartet that took the name the Fifth Dimension -- they, in turn, began a string of successes (initially with Jimmy Webb as composer and arranger) that would carry them and the company into the early/mid-'70s as regular denizens in the upper reaches of the charts. 

Rivers enjoyed a number three hit with his slow, intense version of "Baby I Need Your Lovin'" in early 1967 and a number ten hit with "The Tracks of My Tears" that spring. He and Adler also played a central role in helping to organize the Monterey Pop Festival, where he was one of the featured performers, though Rivers is usually overlooked in favor of flashier participants such as Jimi Hendrix, the Who, and Janis Joplin. 

By this time, rock & roll had evolved into rock and Rivers ran the risk of seeming increasingly out of step, musically and in terms of his image. His sound had evolved from its basic guitar-bass-drums configuration into more elaborate, though fairly restrained, productions, in which his voice was featured in an honest, white soul mode. He took steps to keep his music in touch with the current charts -- the Realization album featured Rivers in a slightly more sophisticated soulful vein, covering songs like "A Whiter Shade of Pale" and "Summer Rain," which became a number 14 hit in 1968. 

Cutting edge musicians by then were looking and sounding a lot shaggier than they had in 1964, however, and Rivers' commercial appeal gradually slackened through 1969. Somehow, he couldn't catch a break in those days, and while his music and image did change -- Rivers let his hair grow longer and grew a beard -- he seemed on the wrong end of the music world, even in his strategy of covering good songs by other composers. He inadvertently went head to head with James Taylor with his version of the latter's "Fire and Rain" which got out first, but stalled when Warner Bros. got Taylor's own recording out as a single. 

He soldiered on, returning to his Lousiana roots with a version of the old Frankie Ford hit "Sea Cruise" in 1971, which heralded his number six single "Rockin' Pneumonia and the Boogie Woogie Flu," part of his highly acclaimed L.A. Reggae album. He charted yet again in 1973 with "Blue Suede Shoes," a killer rendition of the Carl Perkins classic that made it to the lower reaches of the Top 40. Rivers left United Artists (which had absorbed Liberty Records) in 1973 and spent the next two years bouncing between Atlantic and Epic Records, cutting a new version of the Beach Boys' "Help Me Rhonda" with Brian Wilson singing backup for the latter label. Rivers enjoyed his last chart hit to date in 1977 with "Swayin' to the Music," which got to the number ten spot nationally on his own Soul City label. 

By 1983, he had ceased recording, following the release of Not a Through Street, but Rivers never ceased concertizing, performing regularly on several continents into the 1990s and beyond. The early 1990s saw the release of Rhino Records' Anthology, 1964-1977, presenting many of the highlights of Rivers' '60s and '70s output and Capitol reissued four of his middle/late-'60s albums in a series of two-on-one CDs. In 1998, Rivers himself returned to recording for the first time in 15 years with Last Train to Memphis. That same year, the British BGO label began undertaking the re-release of his classic '60s and early '70s albums in England.



[03:00] 01. Johnny Rivers - The Tracks Of My Tears
[03:05] 02. Johnny Rivers - Carpet Man
[03:12] 03. Johnny Rivers - Tunesmith
[02:27] 04. Johnny Rivers - Side Walk Song (27th Street)
[03:28] 05. Johnny Rivers - Itґll Never Happen Again
[02:22] 06. Johnny Rivers - Do What You Gotta Do
[03:10] 07. Johnny Rivers - Baby I Need Your Lovinґ
[02:53] 08. Johnny Rivers - For Emily, Whenever I May Find Her
[02:34] 09. Johnny Rivers - Rosecrans Boulevard
[02:21] 10. Johnny Rivers - The Eleventh Song
[02:14] 11. Johnny Rivers - Sweet Smiling Children


With a big, clean production, and quality L.A. session musicians, Rewind is a great collection of blue-eyed soul and rock. The album's two Motown covers, "Baby I Need Your Loving" and "Tracks of My Tears," are more similar to tributes than attempts to outshine the originals. Rivers sounds like a well-adjusted Southern hipster on tracks like "The Eleventh Song," which makes him sound like a cooler version of Sonny Bono. "Rosecrans Boulevard" showcases superb vocal harmonies and horn playing. The most interesting track would have to be "Sidewalk Song/27th Street," which is pretty mediocre as a song, but are the bizarre sound clips possibly attacking commercialism? No one really knows. Produced by Lou Adler, arranged by Jimmy Webb, featuring Joe Osborne on bass, Larry Knechtel on piano, and Hal Blaine on drums, this record is a solid, tight recording, with excellent production and inventive arrangements provided by Webb





In Memoriam Jimi Hendrix










In Memoriam Jimi Hendrix  part1 - Friends
In Memoriam Jimi Hendrix  part2 - Friends



Wednesday, May 16, 2012

Beat Beat Beat - vol. 19 (movie)


  Episode Six Morning Dew
  Episode Six I Hear Trumpets Blow
  Emma Rede Just Like A Man
  Knut Kiesewetter Stop Stop Stop

  The Red Squares All My Crying
  The Red Squares I Get Around
 
  Madeleine Bell Don't Come Running To Me
  Knut Kiesewetter You Were Born For Me
  The Smoke She Put The Hurt On Me
  The Smoke High In A Room
  Madeleine Bell Climb Every Mountain
 
  Whistling Jack Smith I Was Kaiser Bill's Batman
  The Smoke My Friend Jack 

Heimatliche Klaenge vol.115


Heimatliche Klaenge - Schweizer Beat 
Native Sounds - Swiss Beat
vol.115


EP The Savages (Swiss) Star 50327

01 - Beat Train -The Savages
02 - Dark Eyes -The Savages
03 - Hava Nagila -The Savages
04 - Swiss Mountains Waltz -The Savages

Lp VA Beat Train - The Camillos The Savages (Swiss) Star 164

05 - Bach Party -The Savages
06 - E'tanto Che Non Vedo Te - The Savages
07 - I'll Be With You - The Savages
08 - Gitar Shake - The 4 Camillos
09 - Red Shadows - The 4 Camillos

Georgie Fame-20 Beat Classics


Georgie Fame's swinging, surprisingly credible blend of jazz and American R&B earned him a substantial following in his native U.K., where he scored three number one singles during the '60s. Fame played piano and organ in addition to singing, and was influenced by the likes of Mose Allison, Booker T. & the MG's, and Louis Jordan. Early in his career, he also peppered his repertoire with Jamaican ska and bluebeat tunes, helping to popularize that genre in England; during his later years, he was one of the few jazz singers of any stripe to take an interest in the vanishing art of vocalese, and earned much general respect from jazz critics on both sides of the Atlantic. 

Fame was born Clive Powell on June 26, 1943, in Leigh, Lancashire (near Manchester, England). He began playing piano at a young age, and performed with several groups around Manchester as a teenager, when he was particularly fond of Fats Domino and Jerry Lee Lewis. In 1959, his family moved to London, where the 16 year old was discovered by songwriter Lionel Bart (best known for the musical Oliver). Bart took Powell to talent manager Larry Parnes, who promoted British rockers like Billy Fury, Marty Wilde, Johnny Gentle, and Vince Eager. Powell naturally had to be renamed as well, and as Georgie Fame, he played piano behind Wilde and Eager before officially joining Fury's backing band, the Blue Flames, in the summer of 1961. (The Blue Flames also included guitarist Colin Green, saxophonist Mick Eve, bassist Tony Makins, and drummer Red Reece.) When Fury let the band go at the end of the year, Fame became their lead singer, and they hit the London club circuit playing a distinctive blend of rock, pop, R&B, jazz, and ska. Their budding reputation landed them a residency at the West End jazz club the Flamingo, and thanks to the American servicemen who frequented the club and lent Fame their records, he discovered the Hammond B-3 organ, becoming one of the very few British musicians to adopt the instrument in late 1962. From there, the Blue Flames became one of the most popular live bands in London. In 1963, they signed with EMI Columbia, and in early 1964 released their acclaimed debut LP, Rhythm and Blues at the Flamingo. It wasn't a hot seller at first, and likewise their first three singles all flopped, but word of the group was spreading. 

Finally, in early 1965, Fame hit the charts with "Yeh Yeh," a swinging tune recorded by Latin jazz legend Mongo Santamaria and given lyrics by vocalese virtuoso Jon Hendricks of Lambert, Hendricks & Ross. "Yeh Yeh" went all the way to number one on the British charts, and Fame started living up to his stage name (although the song barely missed the Top 20 in America). His 1965 LP Fame at Last reached the British Top 20, and after several more minor hits, he had another British number one with "Getaway" in 1966. After one more LP with the original Blue Flames, 1966's Sweet Thing, Fame broke up the band and recorded solo; over the next few years, his backing bands included drummer Mitch Mitchell (later of the Jimi Hendrix Experience) and the young guitarist John McLaughlin (Miles Davis, Mahavishnu Orchestra). 

At the outset, Fame's solo career was just as productive as before, kicking off with the Top Ten big-band LP Sound Venture (recorded with Harry South's orchestra); thanks to its success, he toured with the legendary Count Basie the following year. Several hit singles followed over the next few years, including "The Ballad of Bonnie and Clyde," which became his third British chart-topper in late 1967 and, the following year, his only Top Ten hit in America. But by 1969, his success was beginning to tail off; hoping to make inroads into the more adult-oriented cabaret circuit, Fame was moving more and more into straight-up pop and away from his roots. In 1971, he teamed up with onetime Animals organist Alan Price and recorded an album of critically reviled MOR pop, Fame & Price; the partnership produced a near-Top Ten hit in "Rosetta," but ended in 1973. Fame re-formed the Blue Flames with original guitarist Colin Green in 1974 and attempted to return to R&B, but his records for Island attracted little attention. He spent much of the '70s and '80s making ends meet by performing on TV and the cabaret circuit, as well as writing advertising jingles; he also continued to make records, to little fanfare. 

In 1989, Fame played organ on Van Morrison's Avalon Sunset album, which grew into a fruitful collaboration over the course of the '90s; Fame played on all of Morrison's albums through 1997's The Healing Game, received co-billing on Morrison's 1996 jazz album How Long Has This Been Going On, and even served a stint as Morrison's musical director. Meanwhile, Fame's own solo work during the '90s received some of his best reviews since the '60s, starting with 1991's jazzy Cool Cat Blues, which featured a duet with Morrison on "Moondance." 1995's Three Line Whip featured his sons Tristan and James Powell on guitar and drums, respectively, and 1996's The Blues and Me further enhanced his growing jazz credibility. In 1998, Fame split with Morrison to record and tour with former Rolling Stones bassist Bill Wyman's new group the Rhythm Kings, contributing organ and vocals to several albums. In 2000, now signed to Ben Sidran's Go Jazz label, Fame released the acclaimed Poet in New York, which established him as an impressive student of jazz's vocalese tradition.


This rerelease of the pianist's greatest hits collection features 20 tracks from the 1960s and 1970s.

The best compilation of Fame's work, finding his R&B-jazz fusion at its most potent (and most commercially successful) on these 20 cuts from the mid-'60s. Like a Mose Allison for the British Invasion, Fame sings and plays with a soulful verve on this set of blue-eyed soul. Includes the #1 British hits "Yeh Yeh" and "Get Away," although "Ballad Of Bonnie And Clyde" is missing. ~ Richie Unterberger

Super reissue of the Van Morrison collaborator and veteran keyboardist's prime years of the 1960's and 70's. Includes his Top 40 hit single "Yea Yea" and his take on James Moody's "Moody's Mood For Love" as well as "My Girl" and many more


1. Yeh, Yeh 2:47
2. Get Away 2:32
3. Do Re Mi 2:14
4. My Girl 2:56
5. Sweet Things 2:32
6. Point Of No Return 2:25
7. Get On The Right Track, Baby 2:52
8. Ride Your Pony 2:37
9. Moody's Mood For Love 4:22
10. Funny (How Time Slips Away) 3:28
11. Sunny 2:36
12. Sitting In The Park 3:20
13. Green Onions 2:12
14. In The Meantime 2:34
15. Papa's Got A Brand New Bag 3:44
16. Blue Monday 2:13
17. Pride And Joy 2:23
18. Pink Champagne 3:51
19. Let The Sunshine In 2:38
20. I Love The Life I Live 3:21





Alexis Korner & Blues Incorporated – At The Cavern (1964)


Without Alexis Korner, there still might have been a British blues scene in the early 1960s, but chances are that it would have been very different from the one that spawned the Rolling Stones, nurtured the early talents of Eric Clapton, and made it possible for figures such as John Mayall to reach an audience. Born of mixed Turkish/Greek/Austrian descent, Korner spent the first decade of his life in France, Switzerland, and North Africa, and arrived in London in May of 1940, just in time for the German blitz, during which Korner discovered American blues. One of the most vivid memories of his teen years was listening to a record of bluesman Jimmy Yancey during a German air raid. "From then on," he recalled in an interview, "all I wanted to do was play the blues." 

After the war, Korner started playing piano and then guitar, and in 1947 he tried playing electric blues, but didn't like the sound of the pick-ups that were then in use, and returned to acoustic playing. In 1949, he joined Chris Barber's Jazz Band and in 1952 he became part of the much larger Ken Colyer Jazz Group, which had merged with Barber's band. Among those whom Korner crossed paths with during this era was Cyril Davies, a guitarist and harmonica player. The two found their interests in American blues completely complementary, and in 1954 they began making the rounds of the jazz clubs as an electric blues duo. They started the London Blues and Barrelhouse Club, where, in addition to their own performances, Korner and Davies brought visiting American bluesmen to listen and play. Very soon they were attracting blues enthusiasts from all over England. 

Korner and Davies made their first record in 1957, and in early 1962, they formed Blues Incorporated, a "supergroup" (for its time) consisting of the best players on the early-'60s British blues scene. Korner (guitar, vocals), Davies (harmonica, vocals), Ken Scott (piano), and Dick Heckstall-Smith (saxophone) formed the core, with a revolving membership featuring Charlie Watts or Graham Burbridge on drums, Spike Heatley or Jack Bruce on bass, and a rotating coterie of guest vocalists including Long John Baldry, Ronnie Jones, and Art Wood (older brother of Ron Wood). Most London jazz clubs were closed to them, so in March of 1962 they opened their own club, which quickly began attracting large crowds of young enthusiasts, among them Mick Jagger, Keith Richards, and Brian Jones, all of whom participated at some point with the group's performances; others included Ian Stewart, Steve Marriott, Paul Jones, and Manfred Mann. In May of 1962, Blues Incorporated was invited to a regular residency at London's Marquee Club, where the crowds grew even bigger and more enthusiastic. John Mayall later credited Blues Incorporated with giving him the inspiration to form his own Bluesbreakers group. 

Record producers began to take notice, and in June of 1962 producer Jack Good arranged to record a live performance by the band. The resulting record, R&B from the Marquee, the first full-length album ever made by a British blues band, was released in November of 1962. The album consisted of largely of American standards, especially Willie Dixon numbers, rounded out with a few originals. At virtually the same time that Blues Incorporated's debut was going into stores, Cyril Davies left the group over Korner's decision to add horns to their sound. Korner soldiered on, but the explosion of British rock in 1963, and the wave of blues-based rock bands that followed, including the Rolling Stones, the Animals, and the Yardbirds undercut any chance he had for commercial success. His more studied brand of blues was left stranded in a commercial backwater -- there were still regular gigs and recordings, but no chart hits, and not much recognition. While his one-time acolytes the Rolling Stones and the Cream made the front pages of music magazines all over the world, Korner was relegated to the blues pages of England's music papers, and, though not yet 40, to the role of "elder statesman." 

For a time, Korner hosted Five O'Clock Club, a children's television show that introduced a whole new generation of British youth to American blues and jazz. He also wrote about blues for the music papers, and was a detractor of the flashy, psychedelic, and commercialized blues-rock of the late '60s, which he resented for its focus on extended solos and its fixation on Chicago blues. He continued recording as well, cutting a never-completed album with future Led Zeppelin vocalist Robert Plant in early 1968. Korner's performing career in England was limited, but he could always play to large audiences in Europe, especially in Scandinavia, and there were always new Korner records coming out. It was while touring Scandinavia that he first hooked up with vocalist Peter Thorup, who became Korner's collaborator over the next several years in the band New Church. After his dismissal from the Rolling Stones, Brian Jones considered joining New Church; Korner, however, rejected the idea, because he didn't want his new band to be caught up in any controversy. In 1972, he became peripherally involved in the breakup of another band, inheriting the services of Boz Burrell, Mel Collins, and Ian Wallace when they quit King Crimson. 

It was during the '70s that Korner had his only major hit, as leader (with Peter Thorup) of the 25-member big-band ensemble CCS. Their version of Led Zeppelin's "Whole Lotta Love" charted in England, and led to a tour and television appearances. In response, Korner released Bootleg Him, a retrospective compiled from tapes in his personal collection, including recordings with Robert Plant, Mick Jagger, and Charlie Watts. Korner played on the "supersession" album B.B. King in London, and cut his own, similar album, Get Off My Cloud, with Keith Richards, Peter Frampton, Nicky Hopkins, and members of Joe Cocker's Grease Band. When Mick Taylor left the Rolling Stones in 1975, Korner was mentioned as a possible replacement, but the spot eventually went to Ron Wood. In 1978, for Korner's 50th birthday, an all-star concert was held featuring Eric Clapton, Paul Jones, Chris Farlowe, and Zoot Money, which was later released as a video. 

In 1981, Korner formed the last and greatest "supergroup" of his career, Rocket 88, featuring himself on guitar, Jack Bruce on upright bass, Ian Stewart on piano, and Charlie Watts on drums, backed by trombonists and saxmen, and one or two additional keyboard players. They toured Europe and recorded several gigs, the highlights of which were included on a self-titled album released by Atlantic Records. In contrast to the many blues-rock fusion records with which Korner had been associated, Rocket 88 mixed blues with boogie-woogie jazz, the group's repertory consisting largely of songs written by W. C. Handy and Pete Johnson. 

After a well-received appearance at the Cambridge Folk Festival in the early '80s, there were rumors afterward that he intended to become more active musically, but his health was in decline by this time. 


    [04:00] 01. Alexis Korner Blues Incorporated - Overdrive [04:33] 02. Alexis Korner Blues Incorporated - Whoa Baby [04:13] 03. Alexis Korner Blues Incorporated - Every Day I Have The Blues [05:35] 04. Alexis Korner Blues Incorporated - Hoochie Coochie Man [07:39] 05. Alexis Korner Blues Incorporated - Herbie's Tune (Aka Dooji Wooji) [05:32] 06. Alexis Korner Blues Incorporated - Little Bitty Gal Blues [03:15] 07. Alexis Korner Blues Incorporated - Well All Right, Ok, You Win [04:28] 08. Alexis Korner Blues Incorporated - Kansas City [00:13] 09. Alexis Korner Blues Incorporated - Announcement [BBC Session] [02:20] 10. Alexis Korner Blues Incorporated - Overdrive [BBC Session] [01:15] 11. Alexis Korner Blues Incorporated - Brief Interview [BBC Session] [02:10] 12. Alexis Korner Blues Incorporated - I Need Your Lovin' [BBC Session] [02:25] 13. Alexis Korner Blues Incorporated - Turn On Your Lovelight [BBC Session] [01:07] 14. Alexis Korner Blues Incorporated - Brief Interview [BBC Session] [02:50] 15. Alexis Korner Blues Incorporated - Please, Please, Please [BBC Session] [00:05] 16. Alexis Korner Blues Incorporated - Announcement [BBC Session] [02:21] 17. Alexis Korner Blues Incorporated - Roberta [BBC Session] [02:01] 18. Alexis Korner Blues Incorporated - Every Day I Have The Blues [BBC Session] [02:16] 19. Alexis Korner Blues Incorporated - I Need Your Lovin' [02:32] 20. Alexis Korner Blues Incorporated - Please, Please, Please


Peter Moesser's Music - Happy Time - Lotto Time (1967)






Monday, May 14, 2012

Peter Berry & The Shake Set – Berry-Go-Round






The time has now come for PETER BERRY & THE SHAKE SET to release their third album, Berry-Go-Round. Since their beginning , PETER BERRY & THE SHAKE SET have been hopelessly lost in early 60s' beat music, and it is their mission to be a band as they were in those times. This manifests itself in the group's attitude towards both live performances and recordings. The record has once again been recorded at Toe-Rag Studios in London, with Liam Watson as the producer. This time around, the difference lies in the stereo production. The recording has been done live, and with the mixing, three days have been spent in the studio. Berry-Go- Round consists of 14 tracks, both instrumental and with vocals, and has a mixture of own compositions and more and less known favorites. Some of the idea behind the entire band project is to take on a genre which is often dismissed as being somewhat lightweight and weak, and to imagine themselves in settings one dreams of as a fan of such old bands. In this sense, one might say that the project is driven by emotion, romance and daydreaming (however cheesy that may sound), rather than any ambition of or desire to make themselves heard on today's popand rock scene. The band consciously try to steer clear of what characterises their own generation's approach to 60s music; the unpolished and rough, the early beginning of punk rock and the like. This is a tribute to some of the artists who perhaps never achieved pioneer status, but still released brilliant records in the pre-BEATLES world: SHANE FENTON & THE FENTONES, HEINZ, PETER JAY & THE JAYWALKERS, MIKE BERRY & THE OUTLAWS, BOBBY ANGELO & THE TUXEDOS and many others The group consists of Peder Bernhardt (vocals/guitar), Per Oydir (bass), Bjarte Agdestein (guitar) and Thomas Martinsen (drums). The members have each been/are still playing with KARE & THE CAVEMEN, THE INDIKATION, MONO LAKE, HOWLIN' MAMA, THE CLIFTONES and THE APRICOT. 


[01:44] 01. Peter Berry & The Shake Set - Livin' Lovin' Wreck
[03:14] 02. Peter Berry & The Shake Set - Casanova (It's Over)
[02:27] 03. Peter Berry & The Shake Set - A Twosome Triumph
[02:42] 04. Peter Berry & The Shake Set - You Just Won't Let Me Know
[02:04] 05. Peter Berry & The Shake Set - Make Up Your Mind
[01:51] 06. Peter Berry & The Shake Set - Back To The Start
[03:32] 07. Peter Berry & The Shake Set - Talos
[02:10] 08. Peter Berry & The Shake Set - Pretty Good
[01:45] 09. Peter Berry & The Shake Set - Whole Lotta Lovin'
[02:25] 10. Peter Berry & The Shake Set - March Of The Eagle
[01:54] 11. Peter Berry & The Shake Set - Come On, Come On, Come On
[01:48] 12. Peter Berry & The Shake Set - Jenka Train
[02:29] 13. Peter Berry & The Shake Set - How Much More
[02:27] 14. Peter Berry & The Shake Set - Jambalaya


Sunday, May 13, 2012

Heimatliche Klaenge vol.113


Heimatliche Klaenge - Deutsche Schallplatten-Labels 
Native Sounds - German Record-Labels
vol.113

private tapes 2
Oldenburg Rocks & (Ost)Friesland Rolls - the 60s Beatscene

01. Come September - The Flying Arrows
02. Bad Boy - The Joseph Brothers & Elvire
03. Space Race - The Towners
04. Kom Van Dat Af_Tallahassee Lassie - Little Riz & His Rocking Butterflies
05. Be-Bop-A-Lula - The Joseph Brothers & Elvire
06. Treat Her Right - The Beatniks
07. What'd I Say - The Midnights
08. Little Man - The Four Spirits
09. Memphis Tennessee - The Beatniks
10. All Night Worker - The Beatniks
11. Under The Boardwalk - The Stirlings
12. Disturbance - The Stingrays
13. Peter Gunn - The Stirlings
14. Nowhere Man - The Four Spirits
15. I'm A Believer - The Starfyghters
16. Brown-Eyed Handsome Man - The Joseph Brothers & Elvire
17. Mashed Potatoes - The Midnights
18. When The Saints Go Marchin' In - The Phantoms

VA - Złote lata polskiegpolskiego beatu (1963) Poland






    [02:27] . - 01.Puste koperty - Marek Szczepkowski i Niebiesko-Czarni [03:01] . - 02.Wieczor na redzie - Majdaniec i Czerwono-Czarni [01:49] . - 03.Wesele na wsi - Niebiesko-Czarni [02:42] . - 04.Cheopiec z gitarN - Stanek i Czerwono-Czarni [01:56] . - 05.Colt - Keczer i Luxemburg Combo [03:28] . - 06.Z dziewczynN inaczej - Anna Cewe i Czerwono-Czarni [02:38] . - 07.Tylko nie mow mi o tym - Niemen i Niebiesko-Czarni [02:57] . - 08.Angelina - Czerwono-Czarni [03:13] . - 09.Wesoey twist - Majdaniec i Czerwono-Czarni [04:33] . - 10.Wezm_ w drog_ zeoty ksi_-yc - Burano i Niebiesko-Czarni [02:40] . - 11.A on do wojska - Czerwono-Czarni [01:48] . - 12.Szede Atanazy do Anny - Godlewski i Luxemburg Combo [02:01] . - 13.Piosenka i uymiech - Stanek i Czerwono-Czarni [02:55] . - 14.Ballada o szcz_yciu - Mariusz Mroczkowski i Big Beat Sextet [01:32] . - 15.Moj cheopiec - Sobczyk i Czerwono-Czarni [02:29] . - 16.Trzy czwarte nocy - Niebiesko-Czarni


VA - Złote lata polskiegpolskiego beatu (1962) Poland







[02:37] . - 01.Lucille - Burano, Czerwono-Czarni
[01:50] . - 02.Mamo, nasza mamo - Dornowski, Szczepkowski, Niebiesko-Czarni
[02:04] . - 03.Pony time - Godlewski, Czerwono-Czarni
[02:03] . - 04.Tramp twist - Niebiesko-Czarni
[02:24] . - 05.There's a gold mine in the sky - Keczer, Czerwono-Czarni
[03:17] . - 06.Bilet w jednN stron_ - Majdaniec, Czerwono-Czarni
[02:06] . - 07.Pistachio heaven (instr.) - Czerwono-Czarni
[02:55] . - 08.Malowana piosenka - Stanek, Czerwono-Czarni
[02:25] . - 09.Red river rock - Niebiesko-Czarni
[04:06] . - 10.Wakacje z deszczem - Majdaniec
[02:35] . - 11.Stary nied_wied_ mocno ypi - Dornowski, Szczepkowski, Niebiesko-Czarni
[02:43] . - 12.Sad eyes - Keczer, Czerwono-Czarni
[01:50] . - 13.Szea dzieweczka do laseczka (instr.) - Niebiesko-Czarni
[02:36] . - 14.Lekcja twista - Niemen, Niebiesko-Czarni
[03:11] . - 15.Molly-o (instr.) - Big Beat Sextet





The Critters – Touch ‘N Go With The Critters (1968)


In 1966, this New York group came off very much like a Lovin' Spoonful Jr., scoring a minor hit with a cover of John Sebastian's "Younger Girl" and then chalking up their only Top 20 single with the very Spoonful-esque original "Mr. Dieingly Sad." The group's soft harmonies and pop folk-rock were in a considerably lighter vein than their Kama Sutra labelmates, though. Much of their material was self-penned, though they also benefited from compositions by Jackie DeShannon and Brill Building tunesmiths Pete Anders, Vinnie Poncia, and Doc Pomus. Recording quite a few singles and an LP for Kama Sutra from 1965 to 1967, their gentle pop/rock was rather lightweight, with the exception of their best singles. After a final Top 40 hit in 1967 ("Don't Let the Rain Fall Down on Me"), principal songwriter Don Ciccone was drafted, and the group struggled on with a couple albums for the Project 3 label before splitting.

[02:17] 01. The Critters - 01 - Touch 'n Go
[01:57] 02. The Critters - 02 - Reason To Believe
[02:14] 03. The Critters - 03 - Because You Came To See Me Today
[02:01] 04. The Critters - 04 - Younger Generation
[02:41] 05. The Critters - 05 - A Moment Of Being With You
[02:46] 06. The Critters - 06 - Let's Love
[02:21] 07. The Critters - 07 - Awake In A Dream
[02:24] 08. The Critters - 08 - Margie Girl
[04:30] 09. The Critters - 09 - Cool Sunday Morning
[01:55] 10. The Critters - 10 - Good Morning Sunshine
[01:56] 11. The Critters - 11 - Sweet Breezes
[02:00] 12. The Critters - 12 - Forget It

This New Jersey quintet's second album, Touch n' Go With the Critters, was the group's first outing for arranger/conductor Enoch Light's Project 3 label, which was devoted to using cutting-edge "enhanced stereo" technology, the best available. By now, only the group's de facto leader, guitarist Jim Ryan (a founding Critter, he had been in the high school band called the Vibratones with Don Ciccone, who sang the lead vocals on the band's impressive hit "Mr. Dyingly Sad"), and bassist Kenneth Gorka remained in the lineup from the band's earlier Kapp period. Nevertheless, the performances as evidenced here are still first-rate, and the amazing stereo production and songwriting are among the best of the group's career. The title song, "Touch N' Go," was written by Alan Gordon and Gary Bonner, the great songwriting team who had been members of the New York-based group the Magicians a few years earlier; they also wrote the Turtles' "Happy Together" and "She'd Rather Be With Me," among others. The "Touch N' Go" track and a handful others, including the Tim Hardin cover "Reason to Believe," were produced by Charles Koppelman and Don Rubin, who also managed the Critters. The remaining tracks were produced by Ryan. There's a nice version of the Lovin' Spoonful's "Younger Generation" (John Sebastian's "Younger Girl"had provided a huge hit already, so why not see if lightning strikes twice?). The Critters were subsequently featured on Light's "Popular Science" series of stereo/quad test LPs, and recorded another album for the label, but hits continued to elude the group thereafter. Ryan later worked with Carly Simon, while Spinella went on to join Steeplechase. Gorka later became the manager of Bitter End in New York City. Darway became inventor in residence at Princeton University. This album is often considered one of the top harmony pop LPs of all time, an East Coast classic highly treasured by collectors.

Monday, May 07, 2012

Beat Beat Beat - vol. 18 (movie)


The Warriors Mister Nobody Nothing
   The Warriors Tango
 
                     P.P. Arnold     Speak To Me
   Don & Dotty   feat. Cherry Wainer & Don Storer Summer Wine
 
   The Move Walk Upon The Water
   The Move I Can Hear The Grass Grow
 
   Graham Bonney Thank You Baby
   The Move Night Of Fear
 
   Cherry Wainer  &  Don Storer Lara's Theme
   P.P. Arnold The First Cut Is The Deepest
 
   The Creation Try And Stop Me
   The Creation If I Stay Too Long
   Graham Bonney Happy Together
 
   The Creation Painter Man (video dropouts)
   The Creation Tom Tom

Saturday, May 05, 2012

Heimatliche Klaenge vol.112


Heimatliche Klaenge - Deutsche Schallplatten-Labels 
Native Sounds - German Record-Labels
vol.112

Unreleased, Acetat And Other Things

01 - I Can't Explain - Die Einsamen
02 - If You Need Me (Soundcheck) - Frederic & The Rangers
03 - If You Need Me (Soundcheck) - Frederic & The Rangers
04 - Girl - Frederic & The Rangers
05 - Why Did You Leave (Soundcheck) - Frederic & The Rangers
06 - Why Did You Leave - Frederic & The Rangers
07 - Sense Of Life - The Pimps
08 - Get Off Of My Cloud - The Pimps
09 - Just A Little Bid - Frederic & The Rangers
10 - Segeln ohne Wind - Frederic & The Rangers
11 - unknown
12 - Here I Go Again - Frederic & The Rangers
13 - You Don't Know (Like I Know) - Frederic & The Rangers
14 - Dixaner Theme - The Dixaners
15 - Greensleeves - The Dixaners
16 - Believe Me - The Anyones
17 - Can't Forget - The Anyones
18 - I Don't Just Wanna Dream - The Founders
19 - Lonely Man - The Founders
20 - Say Mama - The Stomps
21 - Skinnie Minnie - The Stomps
22 - I'm In Love - The Roggers



Heimatliche Klaenge vol.111


Heimatliche Klaenge - Deutsche Schallplatten-Labels 
Native Sounds - German Record-Labels
vol.111

The Rattles presents
Jesus Makes You High - Michael Anton & Amok

01 - Jesus Makes You High
02 - Sing And Pray
03 - Doctor Jesus
04 - Look At Birds
05 - Gospel Train (Ride On)
06 - Stranger Man
07 - Twelve Men
08 - It's A Miracle
09 - Love Your Enemy
10 - Get Out Of My Temple

Kuno And The Marihuana Brass
11 - Lass und mal haschen 
12 - Marihuana - Mantra

„Jesus Makes You High", one of the many psychedelic projects by Achim Reichel aka "Clemens Clemenzone", sounds like a great transition from "Bokaj Retsiem" to "Die Gruene Reise" der A.R.Machines.
produced by GORILLA MUSIK

Members are:
Frank Dostal 
Kuno Dreyse
(Michael) Anton Eckard
Peter Hecht
Peter Hesslein
Achim Reichel  
Dicky Tarrach