Apr
22
2010

Next I listened to this 1969 Chess Records lp that collects Elmore James and John Brim material from 1953 through 1960. I believe this is all the Chess Elmore James sides. I had never heard John Brim before, so he was a pleasant surprise. Some great tunes on here including the song Ice Cream Man that Van Halen covered.
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Apr
22
2010

Outtakes from the 1971 Stones lp. Raw versions of songs like Brown Sugar, Wild Horses, Tumbling Dice, All Down The Line, often with different lyrics. Tumbling Dice has very different lyrics, and actually, being more of a ’60s Stones fan, this is the first time I paid close attention to the lyrics of Brown Sugar. I had no idea it was about slavery.
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Apr
21
2010

Bad ass hard rock from 1969 Connecticut. Crazy fuzz leads all over, I thought it was two guitarists. Songs weren’t all that memorable, but this LP is solid.
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Apr
21
2010

After that last one, I needed to listen to something with some truer jazz content. Pete and Conte Condoli are both leading ’50s jazz trumpeters, they teamed up on Mercury Records for albums like this. This LP was heavily written and arranged by Pete Condoli, the solos aren’t the focus as much as the tight breakneck arrangements with each brother in a different stereo speaker. Jimmy Rowles and Howard Roberts feature prominently as well.
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Apr
21
2010

Simultaneously ridiculous and horrifying, this 2 CD set’s full title is Propaganda Swing, Dr Goebbel’s Jazz Orchestra, The Music of Charlie and his Orchestra. The Nazi’s hated jazz and swing, but then figured they could use it for propaganda. So they had these hack German guys, Charlie and his Orchestra, record American swing hits, then after a chorus or two the lyrics change to Nazi propaganda. Fascinating history, bigoted lyric content and as wooden and stiff as music can be played.
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Apr
19
2010

After listening to the Violators, I gave a spin to this 1980 demo from LA’s T.S.O.L. Raw early recordings, some of the tunes show up rerecorded on later releases, some don’t. I want to hear some recordings of pre-TSOL Vicious Circle.
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Apr
19
2010

In the ’70s & ’80s Denver seemed to have a Detroit Stooges/MC5 influence that led to the powerhouse that was The Fluid in the second half of the ’80s. This CD on Rave Up Records with rare recordings from 1978 by Denver’s Violators seems to be the root of this. Singer Augy Rocks (here still called Tom Pop) seems to tap into that same son-of-Iggy vibe as LA’s Rik L Rik. Great sound for recordings that were not intended for release.
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Apr
18
2010

NY punk band known for their KBD 45 of the same name from 1980. This is their ROIR cassette from 1981, recorded in North Carolina. Not bad, they play great, I just don’t find their songs all that memorable.
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Apr
17
2010

I listened to this cassette tape purchased in the ’80s from Dudley Do-Right Emporium on Sunset (Not by me,sorry). 60s pop orchestra with a bit of dixie and ragtime. The best things on here are Tom Slick theme, George of the Jungle theme and the Super Chicken theme, all in a row. But no Underdog, unfortunately. And, I blatantly googled the image, sorry.
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Apr
17
2010

So after I listened to the banjo blues, I naturally wanted to listen to some one string blues. Once again, old blues style, but recorded really well. The guitar makes a sound like a large spring is busting.
Check out the one string:

There’s a bit of a mystery there. What’s it tied to, under that bucket?
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