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Editor's Notes
R&R Editor’s Notes editoR and PubliSheR: Jann S. Wenner Managing editoR: Will Dana executive editors: Eric Bates, Jason Fine dePuty Managing editors: Nathan Brackett John Dioso AssiStant Managing editoR: Jonathan Ringen The Future Is Unwritten SenioR wRiters: David Fricke, Peter Travers SenioR editors: Michael Endelman, Thomas Walsh Sean Woods esides barack obama himself, Associate editors: Brian Hiatt, Coco McPherson there probably aren’t many peo- AssiStant editors: Nicole Frehsée, Andy Greene Julia Holmes, Sarene Leeds, Eric Magnuson ple who have done more to put Kevin O’Donnell, Jamie Reynolds, Phoebe St. John B AssiStant to the editoR and PubliSheR: Ally Lewis our current president in the White House editoRial Staff: Alison Weinflash than artist-activist-provocateur Shepard ROLLINGSTONE.COM: Robert Mancini (Executive Ed.) Caryn Ganz (Deputy Ed.), Erica Futterman, John Gara Fairey. Fairey’s samizdat “Hope” poster, contRibuting editors: Mark Binelli, David Browne Rich Cohen, John Colapinto, Jonathan Cott plastered all over America on walls, Anthony DeCurtis, Tim Dickinson, Raoul Duke (Sports) T-shirts and computer screens, helped the Gavin Edwards, Jenny Eliscu, Mikal Gilmore, Jeff Goodell Vanessa Grigoriadis, Erik Hedegaard, Christian Hoard country connect to this man who prom- Claire Hoffman, Robert F. Kennedy Jr., Steve Knopper David Kushner, Guy Lawson, David Lipsky, Kurt Loder ised voters such an extraordinary change Greil Marcus, P.J. O’Rourke, Charles Perry, Janet Reitman from politics as usual. Austin Scaggs, Jeff Sharlet, Rob Sheffield, Paul Solotaroff Ralph Steadman (Gardening), Neil Strauss, Randall Sullivan Seven months into his presidency, in Matt Taibbi, Touré, David Wild, Peter Wilkinson, Evan Wright the midst of the debate over health care, Art diRectoR: Joseph Hutchinson Obama is facing the tests that will likely Art dePaRtMent: Steven Charny (Sr. -
The Faces Unveil Their First Book with an Exhibition of Photos. a Nd New Paintings by Ronnie Wood
PRESS RELEASE Genesis House Gallery 26 October 2011 GENESIS PUBLICATIONS & Reading Rooms Fine Limited Editions Since 1974 genesis-publications.com The Faces unveil their first book with an exhibition of photos. A nd new paintings by Ronnie Wood Surrey, UK, 26 October 2011 – Last night at Genesis House Gallery & Reading Rooms, two heroes of contemporary rock music came together to announce the launch of their new book: FACES 1969-75 . The legendary guitarist of the Jeff Beck Group, Faces and the Rolling Stones - Ronnie Wood - joined fellow band mate, former drummer for the Small Faces, Faces, and The Who - Kenney Jones - for a private celebration and unveiling of the Faces’ first official book. This November 2011, a new 8-week exhibition commemorates the book’s launch: Nearly 100 pages are blown up and reproduced on Genesis’s gallery walls. Visitors are invited to stroll through the Faces’ glory years from the band’s First Step in 1969 to their eventual split in 1975. Also on display are 5 new paintings by Ronnie Wood, seen for the very first time. Entitled ‘The Famous Flames Suite’ – the paintings capture the Rolling Stones in performance. ‘Making the book we went through so many photos it brought back memories and, when we were finished, I looked through it, and it actually brought a tear to my eye. I thought it was just me but then I spoke to Woody and he said exactly the same thing had happened to him.’ Kenney Jones ‘We were bored so much hanging around in places where they didn’t even know how to make a salad… It’s amazing how such great things can come out of being bored.’ Ronnie Wood Among hundreds of guests, Ronnie and Kenney were also joined by new Faces frontman, Mick Hucknall and artist Sir Peter Blake . -
RONNIE WOOD a New Book Illuminates the Guitarist’S Life Before the Rolling Stones
ISSUE #41 MMUSICMAG.COM Q&A John Abbott RONNIE WOOD A new book illuminates the guitarist’s life before the Rolling Stones AS A MEMBER OF THE ROLLING years, we’d put two guitars and vocals in the night. I could see he had his eye on Stones for 40 years, Ronnie Wood’s legacy through one amp, and the bass player had me. I just knew in the back of my mind that is assured. But a recently discovered journal his own. That’s why we let him join the band. some day it would come around, and sure he kept in 1965—before his tenures with (laughs) But as soon as I could afford my enough, it did. the Jeff Beck Group, Small Faces and the own I started to go to Jim Marshall’s [gear] Stones—offers unique insight into the then- shop. I’d run across people like Pete You traded your guitar to play bass 18-year-old’s mindset and ambitions. The Townshend in there and we’d have a hilarious for the Jeff Beck Group? diary—which includes illustrations by Wood, friendly rivalry going to see who could get I’d reached the saturation point on guitar now a noted visual artist—is being released the biggest stack. with the Birds, so when Jeff Beck asked as a limited-edition book, How Can It Be? if I wouldn’t mind playing bass, I welcomed A Rock & Roll Diary. It chronicles Wood’s Was there camaraderie among the the idea. Playing bass gave me a new, exploits on the London club scene while he competing bands? revitalized energy to go back to guitar was with the Birds, and his interactions with The Birds never really had any hit records, later. -
Sunshine Superman (C7)(PDF)
Sunshine Superman Donovan 1966 or best or INTRO: / 1 2 3 4 / [C7] / [C7] / [C7] / [C7] / [C7] Sunshine came softly a-through my, a-window today [C7] Could've tripped out easy a-but I've, I’ve changed my ways [F] It'll take time I know it, but in a while [C7] You're gonna be mine and I know it, we'll do it in style [G7] ‘Cause I made my mind up you're [F] going to be mine I'll tell you right [C7] now, any trick in the book a-now baby [C7] All that I can find [C7] Everybody's hustlin' just to, have a little scene [C7] When I say we'll be cool I think that, you know what I mean [F] We stood on a beach at sunset, do you remember when? [C7] I know a beach where baby, a-it never ends [G7] When you've made your mind up, for-[F]ever to be mine Mmm-mmm-mmm-[C7] mmm, I'll pick up your hand and slowly [C7] Blow your little mind [G7] ‘Cause I made my mind up you're [F] going to be mine I'll tell you right [C7] now, any trick in the book a-now baby [C7] All that I can find [C7] Superman or Green Lantern ain't got, a-nothin' on me [C7] I can make like a turtle and dive for, your pearls in the sea, yup! [F] I'll give you, you can just sit there a-thinkin', on your velvet throne [C7] About all the rainbows a-you can, a-have for your own [G7] When you've made your mind up, for-[F]ever to be mine Mmm-mmm-mmm-[C7] mmm, I'll pick up your hand and slowly [C7] Blow your little mind [G7] When you've made your mind up, for-[F]ever to be mine I'll pick up your [C7] hand, I'll pick up your hand and slowly [C7] Blow your little mind [G7] When you've made your mind up, for-[F]ever to be mine [C7] www.bytownukulele.ca . -
Dec. 22, 2015 Snd. Tech. Album Arch
SOUND TECHNIQUES RECORDING ARCHIVE (Albums recorded and mixed complete as well as partial mixes and overdubs where noted) Affinity-Affinity S=Trident Studio SOHO, London. (TRACKED AND MIXED: SOUND TECHNIQUES A-RANGE) R=1970 (Vertigo) E=Frank Owen, Robin Geoffrey Cable P=John Anthony SOURCE=Ken Scott, Discogs, Original Album Liner Notes Albion Country Band-Battle of The Field S=Sound Techniques Studio Chelsea, London. (TRACKED AND MIXED: SOUND TECHNIQUES A-RANGE) S=Island Studio, St. Peter’s Square, London (PARTIAL TRACKING) R=1973 (Carthage) E=John Wood P=John Wood SOURCE: Original Album liner notes/Discogs Albion Dance Band-The Prospect Before Us S=Sound Techniques Studio Chelsea, London. (PARTIALLY TRACKED. MIXED: SOUND TECHNIQUES A-RANGE) S=Olympic Studio #1 Studio, Barnes, London (PARTIAL TRACKING) R=Mar.1976 Rel. (Harvest) @ Sound Techniques, Olympic: Tracks 2,5,8,9 and 14 E= Victor Gamm !1 SOUND TECHNIQUES RECORDING ARCHIVE (Albums recorded and mixed complete as well as partial mixes and overdubs where noted) P=Ashley Hutchings and Simon Nicol SOURCE: Original Album liner notes/Discogs Alice Cooper-Muscle of Love S=Sunset Sound Recorders Hollywood, CA. Studio #2. (TRACKED: SOUND TECHNIQUES A-RANGE) S=Record Plant, NYC, A&R Studio NY (OVERDUBS AND MIX) R=1973 (Warner Bros) E=Jack Douglas P=Jack Douglas and Jack Richardson SOURCE: Original Album liner notes, Discogs Alquin-The Mountain Queen S= De Lane Lea Studio Wembley, London (TRACKED AND MIXED: SOUND TECHNIQUES A-RANGE) R= 1973 (Polydor) E= Dick Plant P= Derek Lawrence SOURCE: Original Album Liner Notes, Discogs Al Stewart-Zero She Flies S=Sound Techniques Studio Chelsea, London. -
Mellow Yellow [Verse 1] I'm Just Mad About Saffron
Mellow Yellow (Donovan) [Verse 1] If you want your cup our fill I'm just mad about Saffron Saffron's mad about me [Hook] I'm just mad about Saffron She's just mad about me (So mellow, he's so yellow) [Hook] [Verse 4] They call me mellow yellow Electrical banana (Quite rightly) Is gonna be a sudden craze They call me mellow yellow Electrical banana (Quite rightly) Is bound to be the very next They call me mellow yellow phase [Verse 2] [Hook] I'm just mad about Fourteen Fourteen's mad about me [Verse 5] I'm just mad about Fourteen Saffron -- yeah She's just mad about me I'm just mad about her I'm just mad about Saffron [Hook] She's just mad about me [Verse 3] [Hook] Born high forever to fly Wind velocity nil (Oh so yellow, oh so mellow) Wanna high forever to fly 145 "Mellow Yellow" is a song written and recorded by Scottish singer-songwriter Donovan. It reached No. 2 on the US Billboard Hot 100 in 1966 and No. 8 in the UK in early 1967. The song was rumored to be about smoking dried banana skins, which was believed to be a hallucinogenic drug in the 1960s, though this aspect of bananas has since been debunked. According to Donovan's notes, accompanying the album Donovan's Greatest Hits, the rumor that one could get high from smoking dried banana skins was started by Country Joe McDonald in 1966, and Donovan heard the rumor three weeks before "Mellow Yellow" was released as a single. -
RUEN BROTHERS Whether It's Their
RUEN BROTHERS new again with these traditional influences.” Henry adds, “The album was Whether it’s their collaboration with the recorded using all real instruments and a legendary producer Rick Rubin, kudos live band, resulting in a different sound from the likes of Zane Lowe and the BBC, than what’s present in much of today’s or a string of memorable performances popular music.” Adds Rupert of the from the hills of Glastonbury to the collaboration, “It was incredibly exciting - deserts of Coachella, multi- he’s worked with some of our favorite instrumentalist and songwriter siblings artists of all time and is such a versatile Henry and Rupert Stansall, known by their producer. He helped us recognize the amalgam-created moniker Ruen Brothers, strength of Henry and I playing and are making a mark with a throwback rock singing together; it was a foundation to and roll sound that intersects the early build upon and the guidance we needed.” days of the genre with a dynamic present- The brothers’ artistic background and day act. The two have gone from sleepy pedigree come into full focus on their English steel town obscurity to craft- debut studio album ALL MY SHADES OF smiths ready to BLUE (out 6/01 via Ramseur), produced by make a global impact. Rubin and featuring Henry on acoustic guitar and Rupert on electric and acoustic Inspired by their music aficionado father guitar, harmonica, and bass. The album who raised the duo on a steady diet of also includes the talents of such boldface The Rolling Stones and The Everly names as Chad Smith of the Red Hot Chili Brothers, the two would rehearse in the Peppers on drums, along with The Killers’ family kitchen while scrounging for gigs in Dave Keuning on strings and Faces and their blue-collar hometown of Small Faces legend Ian McLagan on Scunthorpe, England. -
Bourdieu and the Music Field
Bourdieu and the Music Field Professor Michael Grenfell This work as an example of the: Problem of Aesthetics A Reflective and Relational Methodology ‘to construct systems of intelligible relations capable of making sense of sentient data’. Rules of Art: p.xvi A reflexive understanding of the expressive impulse in trans-historical fields and the necessity of human creativity immanent in them. (ibid). A Bourdieusian Methodology for the Sub-Field of Musical Production • The process is always iterative … so this paper presents a ‘work in progress’ … • The presentation represents the state of play in a third cycle through data collection and analysis …so findings are contingent and diagrams used are the current working diagrams! • The process begins with the most prominent agents in the field since these are the ones with the most capital and the best configuration. A Bourdieusian Approach to the Music Field ……..involves……… Structure Structuring and Structured Structures Externalisation of Internality and the Internalisation of Externality => ‘A science of dialectical relations between objective structures…and the subjective dispositions within which these structures are actualised and which tend to reproduce them’. Bourdieu’s Thinking Tools “Habitus and Field designate bundles of relations. A field consists of a set of objective, historical relations between positions anchored in certain forms of power (or capital); habitus consists of a set of historical relations ‘deposited’ within individual bodies in the forms of mental and corporeal -
Vinyl Theory
Vinyl Theory Jeffrey R. Di Leo Copyright © 2020 by Jefrey R. Di Leo Lever Press (leverpress.org) is a publisher of pathbreaking scholarship. Supported by a consortium of liberal arts institutions focused on, and renowned for, excellence in both research and teaching, our press is grounded on three essential commitments: to publish rich media digital books simultaneously available in print, to be a peer-reviewed, open access press that charges no fees to either authors or their institutions, and to be a press aligned with the ethos and mission of liberal arts colleges. This work is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution- NonCommercial 4.0 International License. To view a copy of this license, visit http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/ or send a letter to Creative Commons, PO Box 1866, Mountain View, CA 94042, USA. The complete manuscript of this work was subjected to a partly closed (“single blind”) review process. For more information, please see our Peer Review Commitments and Guidelines at https://www.leverpress.org/peerreview DOI: https://doi.org/10.3998/mpub.11676127 Print ISBN: 978-1-64315-015-4 Open access ISBN: 978-1-64315-016-1 Library of Congress Control Number: 2019954611 Published in the United States of America by Lever Press, in partnership with Amherst College Press and Michigan Publishing Without music, life would be an error. —Friedrich Nietzsche The preservation of music in records reminds one of canned food. —Theodor W. Adorno Contents Member Institution Acknowledgments vii Preface 1 1. Late Capitalism on Vinyl 11 2. The Curve of the Needle 37 3. -
Donovan 2012.Pdf
PERFORMERS PARKE PUTERBAUGH NOT DUST POP LYRICS BUT MODERN POETRY The view o f the sixties is so generalized it’s good to open up the of the Witch”), and the Allman Brothers Band (whose spirituality o f it and what the music was trying to represent. “Mountain Jam” was based on Donovan’s “There Is a It was certainly not just getting stoned and hanging out, man. Mountain”). Beyond all that, he was a gentle spirit who There was meaning and direction; there was substance to it. sang unforgettably of peace, love, enlightenment, wild —Donovan scenes, and magical visions. Born Donovan Leitch in Glasgow, Scotland, in onovan was the Pied Piper of the counterculture. 1946, he moved at age 10 with his family to Hatfield, A sensitive Celtic folk-poet with an adventurous Hertfordshire, England. After turning 1 6, he pursued a musical mind, he was a key figure on the British romantic wanderlust, running off to roam alongside Beat Dscene during its creative explosion in the mid-sixties. He and bohemian circles. He also studiously applied himself wrote and recorded some of the decade’s most memorable to the guitar, learning a sizable repertoire of folk and blues songs, including “Catch the Wind,” “Sunshine Superman,” songs, with the requisite fingerings. A single appearance “Hurdy Gurdy Man,” and “Atlantis.” He charted a dozen during a performance by some friends’ R & B band resulted Top Forty hits in the U.S. and a nearly equal number in the in an offer for Donovan to cut demos in London, which led U.K. -
A Frampton Family Affair Peter Frampton and Son Julian Show Us the Way
Peter Frampton had a monster hit with his 1976 album, “Frampton Comes Alive!” PHOTO BY MICHAEL ZAGARIS BY PHOTO A Frampton Family Affair Peter Frampton and son Julian show us the way. BY MELONIE MAGRUDER | PHOTOGRAPHY BY JOEY CARMAN hat do you do when you’re known for record- “Acoustic Classics,” and the 40 years between this effort and his ing the (at one point) best-selling album of 1976 monster hit, “Frampton Comes Alive!” seems to sit easily. all time, for playing with the most respected In this new venture, perennial favorites like “Do You Feel Like musicians on the planet, for having a poster of We Do,” “Lines On My Face” and “Sail Away” are reheard with your face plastered on millions of teenage girls’ an intimacy so immediate, it sounds like you invited Frampton Wwalls across the nation and for a decades-long history of sold- and a couple of his friends to play for you in your living room. out tours with audiences bopping to your signature hit electro- Frampton’s only obstacle to producing another hit album might rock riffs from 40 years ago? have been in deciding which songs out of his long, historical You strip it all down and record an acoustic album. canon he should include. Peter Frampton has been touring to promote his 18th album, “We decided it should just be things I personally wanted,” FALL 2016 | 39 Julian Frampton, who is on tour with his dad, Peter, said playing guitar is “part of his DNA.” Frampton told MTM. “Obviously, you want the most popular songs, but maybe something that hasn’t been heard in awhile.” His rich vocals have not lost a whisper of a note. -
MTO 11.4: Spicer, Review of the Beatles As Musicians
Volume 11, Number 4, October 2005 Copyright © 2005 Society for Music Theory Mark Spicer Received October 2005 [1] As I thought about how best to begin this review, an article by David Fricke in the latest issue of Rolling Stone caught my attention.(1) Entitled “Beatles Maniacs,” the article tells the tale of the Fab Faux, a New York-based Beatles tribute group— founded in 1998 by Will Lee (longtime bassist for Paul Schaffer’s CBS Orchestra on the Late Show With David Letterman)—that has quickly risen to become “the most-accomplished band in the Beatles-cover business.” By painstakingly learning their respective parts note-by-note from the original studio recordings, the Fab Faux to date have mastered and performed live “160 of the 211 songs in the official canon.”(2) Lee likens his group’s approach to performing the Beatles to “the way classical musicians start a chamber orchestra to play Mozart . as perfectly as we can.” As the Faux’s drummer Rich Pagano puts it, “[t]his is the greatest music ever written, and we’re such freaks for it.” [2] It’s been over thirty-five years since the real Fab Four called it quits, and the group is now down to two surviving members, yet somehow the Beatles remain as popular as ever. Hardly a month goes by, it seems, without something new and Beatle-related appearing in the mass media to remind us of just how important this group has been, and continues to be, in shaping our postmodern world. For example, as I write this, the current issue of TV Guide (August 14–20, 2005) is a “special tribute” issue commemorating the fortieth anniversary of the Beatles’ sold-out performance at New York’s Shea Stadium on August 15, 1965—a concert which, as the magazine notes, marked the “dawning of a new era for rock music” where “[v]ast outdoor shows would become the superstar standard.”(3) The cover of my copy—one of four covers for this week’s issue, each featuring a different Beatle—boasts a photograph of Paul McCartney onstage at the Shea concert, his famous Höfner “violin” bass gripped in one hand as he waves to the crowd with the other.