Devendra Banhart’s Cool Wit

Posted in Music with tags on November 8, 2009 by johnbuckley100

Fun interview with Devendra Banhart in today’s NYT.  Best exchange:

Q. Tell me about when you first learned to sing.

A.  I can’t predict the future, my friend.

Devendra In the NY Times

On The Lookout

Posted in Uncategorized with tags on November 6, 2009 by johnbuckley100

Leica M9, 35mm Summilux

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How To Sequence “Satisfaction” and “Under My Thumb” in “Get Yer Ya-Ya’s Out”

Posted in Music with tags , on November 5, 2009 by johnbuckley100

We went back to maybe the best book ever written about the Stones — Stanley Booth’s Dance With The Devil: The Rolling Stones & Their Times — to get a clue about where exactly in the set list “Under My Thumb,” “I’m Free” and “Satisfaction” flowed during the Stones’ set at MSG in ’69.  After all, now that we have more songs, we want to create our Ya-Ya‘s playlist as the set unfolded, right?

One problem is that the orignal Get Yer Ya-Ya’s Out seems to have “Midnight Rambler” and “Sympathy For the Devil” out of sequence.  Near as I can tell from Booth’s descriptions of the shows, you should put “Sympathy” after “Carol” and before “Stray Cat Blues.”  Then, after “Love In Vain,” put in four of the new entrants in sequence: “Prodigal Son,” “You Gotta Move,” and the “Under My Thumb/I’m Free” medley. “Midnight Rambler” now goes straight into “Live With Me,” followed by “Little Queenie” and  “Satisfaction.”  “Honky Tonk Women” sets up “Street Fighting Man” as the traditional closer.

Makes sense: so much more powerful to go from “Midnight Rambler” into the blitzkreig bop of that finale crescendo.  By ’72, following Altamont, they’d stopped doing “Sympathy,” and I do recall then that after “Midnight Rambler” the whole show speeded up…

Of course, going back to Booth’s book brings to the scene later that Thanksgiving night when in the Plaza Hotel, Keith turns Booth on to heroin for the first time.  Keith went onto being… Keith.  Booth went on to a lost decade.  Dance with the Devil, indeed.

Economy’s Up, But This Foreclosure Thing…

Posted in Uncategorized with tags on November 4, 2009 by johnbuckley100

Leica M9, 50mm Summilux, just off Embassy Row…  Maybe the country couldn’t pay its debt?_

Get Yer Ya-Ya’s Out! The Rolling Stones In Concert: 40th Anniversary

Posted in Uncategorized with tags , on November 4, 2009 by johnbuckley100

The only time we’d ever heard “Under My Thumb” played by the Stones on the ’69 tour, of course, was that scene in Gimme Shelter just before Meredith Hunter was murdered about 30 rows back from the Altamont stage.  To now hear it liver than we will ever be from the MSG stage that Thanksgiving weekend, aw man, it sounds alright.  As Mick would say, Can you dig it?

In ’69, the Stones came back from studio exile and a bad psychedelic album, followed by maybe their greatest album, Beggars Banquet, and certainly in “Jumpin’ Jack Flash,” their greatest single.  They hadn’t even released Let It Bleed the week they played Madison Square Garden, if I have my dates right.  They played two sets a night, like they were a bar band back in Richmond! Strutting back on stage with all the rules changed — no more girls screaming, the band able to actually hear themselves — they were, sure, the greatest rock’n’roll band in the world, and certainly the tightest.

Being able now to hear not only “Under My Thumb” — the beat languorous, the riff sweetly filagreed by Keith — but also the way it swept into a medley with “I’m Free,” is not something I’ll get out of my head anytime soon.  I mean after all, having heard it in Gimme Shelter, as brief as it was, as crappy as they were playing on that cold night in Sears Point, California as mayhem was unleashed, I’ve never forgotten it.  And now we’re free to hear that riff any old time.

Getting to hear “Prodigal Son” live — I don’t care about “You Gotta Move,” never have — brings onstage that cottage party, mushrooms and acoustic guitars sensibility that Beggar Banquet was steeped in.

The revelation here, if there is one, is “Satisfaction.”  By the ’72 tour — when I finally got to see them — they performed it as a medley with “Uptight/Outtasite”, with Stevie Wonder’s horns and singers integrated into the band.  It was a novelty, and so “Satisfaction” has been for all those tours since.  But Heavens, the version here is stinging, with the twin guitar assaults by Keith and Mick Taylor.

I have always thought  that Get Yer Ya-Ya’s Out was the greatest live album of its era, with Live at Leeds the only competition.  In my platonic dreams, the Stones would release Ladies and Gentlemen, The Rolling Stones from the vaults, and we’d see how in ’72, they were even better — Nicky Hopkins on piano, Jim Price and Bobby Keys on horns, and Mick Taylor’s guitar arrangements reaching a unique lyricism, with Keith not yet showing he couldn’t hit a curve.

But if you’re thinking of perfection, adding these five songs to what we’ve always known as Get Yer Ya-Ya’s Out is pretty damn fine.  Plus, the packaging and remastering’s pretty nice, too.

****

Update: So the DVD, with Maysle Brothers footage, is worth the price of the box set.  Did I forget that Jimi Hendrix was backstage talking with Keith, playing Keith’s Gibson with Mick Taylor?  It’s been a while since we’ve seen Gimme Shelter. For historical purposes, we also see Jo Berg telling Mick (as he strips off his shirt) that a certain someone is coming “up from the country” the next day to see the show.  Has to have been Bob Dylan, upstate in Woodstock… And of course there’s Janis Joplin as they show the band’s incredible version of “Satisfaction.”

Stones ’69 Tour Archival Dump Arrives Tomorrow

Posted in Uncategorized with tags , on November 2, 2009 by johnbuckley100

First new cuts from the Thanksgiving ’69 MSG concerts to arrive tomorrow… nearly 40 years after the shows… 39 years after Get Yer Ya-Yas Out.

Just a little bit overdue, wouldn’t you say?  But at least we’ll get to hear “I’m Free” at high fidelity, not like Liver Than You’ll Ever Be…

Happy Halloween

Posted in Uncategorized with tags , on October 31, 2009 by johnbuckley100

M9, Summilux 50mm

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So Graham Coxon’s The Guitarist on Pete Doherty’s “Grace/Wasteland”

Posted in Uncategorized with tags , , , on October 31, 2009 by johnbuckley100

Yes, it matters.  If you were to — as I did — just preview Doherty’s solo album via the iTunes 30-second snippets, you might hear the notoriously dissolute Libertine and Babyshambler in the Kinks-influenced guise all British rock stars at some point don — part music hall showman, part busker — and be tempted to pass.  It was only with the arrival of the December Uncut and its boss interview with Blur guitar genius Graham Coxon that we learned he’s the axeman on it.  And of course, when you hear a song like “Palace and Bone” it all comes clear, and it is pretty wondrous.

I didn’t succumb to the charms of Coxon’s folk album, The Spinning Top.  I want to hear him play those weird, twisted tunings like “Song 2” all the livelong day, not an update of Bert Jansch.  I want his solo albums to be like Happiness in Magazines, the best British Powerpop album of 1979, even if it was released in like 2004. On Pete Doherty’s “Grace/Wasteland”, Coxon’s able to shine the light on both sides of his musical personality, the rough and raw and the fey and magical, gloriously twisted in both camps.

Admission: Tulip Frenzy ranked Babyshambles’ Shotters Nation one of the best albums of 2007, and the resistance to Doherty’s solo album was a reluctance to commit, to take a leap of faith.  It took the knowledge that Graham Coxon — perhaps the most brilliant guitarist between Nels Cline and the White Cliffs of Dover — was standing there on that Albion precipice to get us to jump.  Thank Heaven we did.  An eye opener, and ear pleaser, this one is.

Down Dog: At Guard In The Garden

Posted in Uncategorized with tags on October 30, 2009 by johnbuckley100

No, not the house garden at Tulip Frenzy World HQ: M9, 35mm Summilux

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Fleshtones Frontman Peter Zaremba Upends The Blogosphere

Posted in Uncategorized with tags , , on October 30, 2009 by johnbuckley100

If Tulip Frenzy were a bar, we’d call Peter Zaremba a friend of the house and set him up with a free one every time he sat down.  How nice it was to hear from him yesterday, and to learn that one of rock’n’roll’s most entertaining writers has started his own blog entitled: Busybuddy, A Life of Excitement.

Now you may know Peter only as The Fleshtones’ singer, organist, and harp player, the funnest frontman ever to don a sequined shirt.  You may remember him as an MTV host back in the day when the M in MTV stood for “music,” not “moronic.” You may not know that Peter is also a journalist nonpareil.  For example, his GQ feature on the best and worst haircuts in rock history was hilarious and wonderful and only hints at his capabilities — which apparently are no longer in service to the late Modern Bride magazine, the demise of which has left a hole… well, somewhere.

Get ready to bookmark.  Tulip Frenzy is pleased to start sending traffic to Busybuddy, A Life of Excitement.

Peter Zaremba’s Blog