July 22, 2015


Development of the British Blues and Rhythm
  --- show 32 ---   7-22-2015
Climax Blues Band                    1969-1972
Chicken Shack part 2               1969 & 1970
Blind Faith                                    1969

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In 1967 Colin Cooper, harmonica and vocals as well as saxophones, and Peter Haycock, at the time considered a 16-year-old guitar prodigy sharing in the vocals, were in a soul group playing as the Gospel Truth when they decided to assemble a Blues band.  As Haycock later informed Melody Maker, “We started playing Blues for fun and the thing sort of turned around on us; it became serious.” 

By the time of their debut LP, they had recruited drummer George Newsome, bassist Richard Jones, rhythm guitarist (and occasionally organist or bassist) Derek Holt and keyboardist Arthur Wood and used the band name Climax Chicago Blues Band as the tile of the album.  Between the recording dates of September 27th and November 25th of 1968, Jones had left to return to college so Holt took over all bass duties, and we took the first ten of its twelve tracks in the order originally issued as this show’s opening set.  The disc was put out by Parlophone’s EMI label, who signed the group earlier that year, and was released in February of 1969.

The second album, Climax Blues Band Plays On, was also released in 1969 (recorded in June), and from it Hey Baby, Everything’s Gonna Be Alright, Flight, and Crazy ‘Bout My Baby open today’s fourth set, followed by Please Don’t Help Me, Reap What I’ve Sewed, Alright Blue? and Cut You Loose from the 1970 UK release A Lot of Bottle, which came out with minor differences as The Climax Blues Band in its 1971 American issue.  By the time the album was recorded in four days in August, all but schoolteacher Wood retired from their day jobs to rely solely on their music.  This LP was the first after EMI moved the group to their Harvest label.  Disc and Echo quoted Haycock, “Musically we’re not trying to do really clever things … all we are really is a stomping band.”

With the British Blues wave considered to be ebbing, the band felt that the being labeled as a Blues band was restricting their audience so for their next UK disc, recorded in May and June and tentatively titled Come Stomping, their name was changed to Climax Chicago.

Towards the Sun and That’s All were from that disc, now titled Tightly Knit, released 1971 UK and 1972 US, while our final entries, You Make Me Sick and Shake Your Love, came from the Rich Man album (still going by Climax Chicago in the UK), recorded in August and released in 1972 on both continents.  For the Rich Man sessions, the band was reduced to four members as John Cuffley (formerly a drummer with Cooper and Haycock in Gospel Truth) replaced Newsome as he and Wood left the group. As with many European ensembles of the era, the band ran into difficulties acquiring visas and work permits, therefore cancelling their first American tour scheduled for June of 1972, but they were able to make it later in the year.

While I’ve listed all the individual albums for you, this entire set was taken a “best of” styled CD, The Harvest Years, 69-72.  After these recordings, the band moved from the EMI label but had continued popularity just not in the Blues vein, so I have decided I have sufficient of their music for our purposes.

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After pianist and half of the vocal team Christine Perfect left Chicken Shack to pursue her recent marriage to Fleetwood Mac’s bassist John McVie and a solo career of her own, the band was down to a trio led by guitarist / vocalist Stan Webb fronting the rhythm section of drummer Dave Bidwell and bassist Andy Silvester.  Very soon after, Miss Perfect (now Mrs. McVie), was replaced by keyboardist (mostly playing organ) Paul Raymond.  The group stayed together for two albums, matching the output during Christine’s time, and from them come the two sets we hear today.

The September 1969 LP 100 Pound Chicken is the source for today’s first Chicken Shack set and, while The Things You Put Me Through and Maudie were released as 45s, their second set is comprised of tracks from the July 1970 album Accept.  Between the two LPs, the band had toured with Savoy Brown and after the release of the second one Paul Raymond opted to join Savoy Brown after Harry Simmonds, manager of both bands at the time, terminated the entire ensemble of Savoy Brown with the exception of his lead guitarist Kim Simmonds.  This departing trio of Roger Earle, Tone Stevens and Lonesome Dave Peverett was the group that soon would become Foghat.

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Toward the end of Cream, there were rumors of Stevie Winwood joining the super-group and that somewhat came true as he joined with Eric Clapton and Ginger Baker in Blind Faith, but after all the hoopla and possibly because Jack Bruce was no longer in the ensemble (bass being played instead by Rick Grech) the resulting album was disappointing.  However, some 45 years later, I found five of the original album’s six tracks worthwhile listening for today’s show.

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Mean Old World
Insurance
Going Down This Road
You’ve Been Drinking
Don’t Start Me Talking
Wee Baby Blues
Twenty Past One
A Stranger in Your Town
How Many More Years
Looking for My Baby
   The Climax Chicago Blues Band  

The Road of Love
Look Ma, I’m Cryin’
Evelyn
Reconsider Baby
Weekend Love
Midnight Hour
Horse and Cart
The Way It Is
Anji
   Chicken Shack  

Had to Cry Today
Can’t Find My Way Home
Well All Right
Presence of the Lord
Sea of Joy
   Blind Faith

Hey Baby, Everything’s Gonna Be Alright
Flight
Crazy ‘Bout My Baby
Please Don’t Help Me
Reap What I’ve Sewed
Alright Blue?
Cut You Loose
Towards the Sun
That’s All
You Make Me Sick
Shake Your Love
   The Climax Blues Band

The Things You Put Me Through
Telling Your Fortune
Maudie
Andalucian Blues
Smartest Girl in Town
I’ve Been Mistreated
How Am I Doing It?
   Chicken Shack  

July 8, 2015


Development of the British Blues and; Rhythm
  --- show 31 ---   7-8-2015

Free    (+Dupree)                             1968-70
John Dummer Band                           1969
Duffy Power BBC                      1968-73 + 1994

You might recall that bassist Andy Fraser was dating Alexis Korner’s daughter Sappho  when Alexis referred him to John Mayall.  After a brief period (six weeks) as a Bluesbreaker, Andy joined with drummer Simon Kirke, guitarist Paul Kossoff and vocalist Paul Rodgers as they formed the band Free in April of 1968.  Our first set comes from their debut LP, Tons of Sobs, as well as a tune from a BBC session and a jam that was not released until much later.  All the tunes were recorded in 1968.

Kossoff and Kirke also played on Champion Jack Dupree’s Blue Horizon LP From New Orleans to Chicago, along with Stuart Brooks on bass guitar, all three being members of the Black Cat Bones when the tracks were recorded in April of 1968.  Duster Bennett shows up on My Home is in Hell and Juke Box Jump.  Johnny Almond’s baritone saxophone can be heard on I Haven’t Done No One No Harm.. Both are also on Black Cat Shuffle, this time with Almond on tenor sax.

The band had two more studio albums before Free Live, which may or may not have been recorded all at one concert but was not put together for release until after the band’s decision to break up in 1971.
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John Dummer, in his youth a listener to both Blues and Modern Jazz, fronted the band Lester Square and the GTs in 1964 which also included the Yardbirds’ pre-Clapton guitarist Top Topham until they took o9n a stint in Germany.  Upon returning to the U.K., he answered a Melody Maker ad for a band looking for a vocalist (a later similar ad brought in pianist Bob Hall)   The band’s initial lineup had drummer Dave Bidwell, bassist Peter Moody and guitarist Roger Pearce and gigged as The John Dummer Blues Band.

Bidwell left in December of 1965 to move on to Chicken Shack and later Savoy Brown, and when his replacement Dave Elvidge departed in January, Dummer sat himself behind the drum kit while still handling the vocals.  Moody left in March of that year and the quartet now included Dummer, Hall, Pearce and replacement bassist Tony Walker.  Walker’s 14-year-old sister Regine added some vocals on a 1966 recordings which surfaced in 1995.

Hall was in and out of the band as he also became a part of Savoy Brown and maintained his full time day job and Dummer for a while was relieved from drum duties, but the band really took shape when Walker and Pearce left at different times in 1967 and were replaced by bassist Iain “Thumper” Thompson and guitarist Dave Kelly.  Steve Rye played harmonica with them for a short while and was followed by John O’Leary, fresh from his stint with the earliest iteration of the Savoy Brown Blues Band.

One of the band’s gigs was at the popular Nag’s Head Pub including after Mike Vernon took it over and named it after his new record label, the Blue Horizon Club.  As Dummer told Beat Instrumental, ”We were playing semi-Blues things … it was just a simple basic band which we started because of the interest the music held for us.  We were just playing at this club for our own amusement, but gradually it became more important to us.”

The group signed a recording contract with Mercury and decided they wanted to bolster Kelly’s bottleneck style as  Tony McPhee shared both guitar and lead vocal duties with Dave.  In July of 1968 the label released the single featuring Traveling Man and 40 Days and scheduled September for the release of the debut album.  By the time the LP (Cabal) was released in January, McPhee had left to establish his own label and form once again his Groundhogs.  O’Leary also moved on, but both can be heard (along with Dave’s sister Jo Ann on a couple of vocals) on our first Dummer Band set.

Adrian “Putty” Pietryga was brought in by the next recording session and Bob Hall was once again available.  The band’s next 45 was Try Me One More Time, which includes an interesting although uncredited piece of violin work, and Riding at Midnight, noteworthy because the band had a two week English tour that summer backing its author, Howlin’ Wolf.  These tracks were included on the LP when it came out in September 1969 and we include the first seven tracks from the album in order on our second Dummer set.  Shortly after the album’s release, Kelly left the band, citing too much touring and not enough time to write music as the reason, but he did recommend multi-instrumentalist (fiddle, guitar, harmonica, piano and vibes; could he have provided the violin on the second single?) Nick Pickett as his replacement.  As I read up on John Dummer, the new band appears to have moved away from the Blues, so this seems an apropos time to end this segment.

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We return for a follow-up with one of our favorite vocalists, Duffy Power, whom we first heard from way back in our fourth episode of this seemingly never-ending saga.  (But that doesn’t mean we’re running out of good music by any stretch of the imagination!)  This set is comprised of BBC takes and includes guitarist Alexis Korner on the first two tracks and sax man Dick Heckstall-Smith on the two that wind up the set.
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Walk in My Shadow
Waitin’ on You
The Hunter
I’m a Mover
Guy Stevens’ Blues
   Free   (CD: Tons of Sobs)

I Need Love
Just a Feeling
No Chance with You
After Hours
Young Fashioned Ways
Low Down Santa Fe
When You Got a Good Friend
Welfare Blues
Hound Dog
Daddy Please Don’t Cry
   The John Dummer Blues Band   (CD: Cabal)

A Racehorse Called Mae
Roll On
My Home is in Hell
Black Cat Shuffle
I Haven’t Done No One No Harm
Juke Box Jump
   Champion Jack Dupree
     (CD: From New Orleans to Chicago)

Gin House Blues
Every Day Since You Been Gone
Dusty Road
That’s All Right Mama
Hellhound
City Woman
Little Soldiers
Sky Blues
Little Boy Blue
   Duffy Power   (CD: Sky Blues)

Woman
Fire and Water
Ride on a Pony
Mr. Big
Trouble on Double Time
All Right Now
   Free   (CD: Free Live)
Few Short Lines
Bullfrog Blues
Try Me One More Time
Money And Fame
Reconsider Baby
Riding at Midnight
*Memphis Minnie   (time permitting)
Ain’t Gonna Work No More
   John Dummer’s Blues Band
     (CD: John Dummer Band)