Development of the British Blues --- show 10 ---
6-25-2014
Animals
1964-66
Georgie Fame 1964-66 Moody Blues 1964-67
I’m finalizing this show’s verbal entry Monday after an exhaustive
weekend of participation in our 23rd annual Blues Marathon so my
apologies if it still seems a little rough; I can’t imagine why I’m still
tired! Anyway, this is some music that I
have been immersing myself in for the past two weeks, thoroughly enjoying it
and looking forward to presenting it to you.
The Animals have been a favorite ever since they showed up on American
AM radio, but Georgie Fame was a newfound treat as I discovered his music, and
then there is a smattering of the earliest incarnation of the Moody Blues.
When we did our third show in this series about the British Blues,
which paired the Animals and Manfred
Mann, I made the determination to go only with what Animals material I had on
CD rather than delve into my scratchy old LPs.
This decision has proved to be wise, since plugging the gaping holes in
my Animals library has provided the opportunity to again present the band to
you.
The only tune in our first set that I was not familiar with from
those vinyl editions was Talking’ ‘Bout You.
The song actually was included on their first album (and our earlier
show) in about a two minute snippet and was among my two favorites from their
first LP (the other being Baby Let Me Take You Home) and was a great example of
a song leaving you wanting so much more, especially as the last entry on the
first side of the LP. We heard a seven
minute version a month ago when Eric Burdon shared the vocals with Sonny Boy
Williamson; still, it was a long period of anticipation before I heard the
seven minute original recording from which the short version was taken. I swear I must have kept repeating the track
almost ten times in the car before I even listened to any of the rest. Similar to Johnny Kidd’s version of Shakin’
All Over, it took almost exactly half a century before I heard the full
version. Yup, I had to use it to start
off the show rather than make you wait any longer. The rest of the set consists of their take on
some now-classic R&B and Blues tunes done by the likes of Ray Charles (The
Right Time), Little Richard (The Girl Can’t Help It) and a couple by John Lee
Hooker (I’m Mad Again and Maudie). In
fact, from the entire eponymous first album, there is only one tune that hasn’t
gotten played on these two shows. Likewise,
their follow-up album On Tour was so well represented on our first show that
only one tune has not been aired after we today added She Said Yeah, another
favorite. But these are the Animals; I
have lots of favorites. The same can be
said for Animal Tracks when we here included Take It Easy Baby. That’s only three songs of the 34 from the
first three albums which we omitted. Shows
why I consider the band to have rarely, if ever, recorded a bad track. Due to time restraints, that first show ended
before their next albums, but we round out today’s show with a few tracks from
succeeding releases.
Weirdly enough, I consider it a high tribute that my old Animals LPs
are maybe the scratchiest in my library, a condition earned by the amount of
time played on turntables of dubious quality combined with being the choice at
parties where it was commonplace for my rowdy friends to bump into the
furniture that housed the record player.
The good times were almost worth the damage done and must be a part of
why it is so endearing to hear these songs again. CDs, gotta love ’em, they just don’t get
scratched easily.
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Personally, I find many
similarities between Georgie Fame
and Chris Farlowe. To begin with, while
I have been familiar with the names since the 60s, I was only aware of one song
by each artist; for Farlowe it was Out of Time and Yeh Yeh is likely all I was
exposed to by Fame.
Therefore it was a
pleasant surprise that, after purchasing one CD for each of them, I followed my
desires for more and was able to make a couple of strong sets for their shows. They were both close enough in age to have
lived through much of the hell that was England during and after World War II
and they are both pictured seated in front of a keyboard (I believe Farlowe
always had a keyboard player in his band so perhaps it was just a comfortable
place to sit!). Their musics are not
truly Blues but rather a combination of R&B and Jazz stylings and definitely not a part of the guitar-dominated
trend that was what I had really been used to.
Because
of their proximity in age, many of the names and places appear in both profiles.
Fame also was managed by Rik Gunnell and played his nightclubs. A 1966 ad for the Gunnell agency lists Fame
at the top followed by Zoot Money, Chris Farlowe, The Alan Price Set, and John
Mayall’s Bluesbreakers as well as some lesser knowns.
Born Clive Powell in Leigh in Lancashire (near Manchester) on June
26th 1943, he was taking piano lessons by the age of seven. In the mid-50s, Georgie heard and embraced the
music of Jerry Lee Lewis, Fats Domino and Little Richard. After leaving school in 1958, he worked days
and played in the Dominoes by night. He
left his job to join Rory Blackwell and the Blackjacks but the band quickly
broke up. The Powell family had moved to
London in 1959 when he was 16 years old, so Georgie stayed on and was introduced
to the musical impresario Larry Parnes, who made him pianist for many of his
stable of singers. Regarding his name
change, Fame related, “(It) was very much against my will, but he said, ‘If you
don’t use my name, I won’t use you in the show’.”
That year, he toured playing with Parnes’ people and others,
including Gene Vincent and Eddie Cochran.
In 1961 Fame and three others, the original Blue Flames, were extracted
from the larger band specifically to back Billy Fury; then Fury (and Parnes)
dumped them in early 1962. In the
meantime, they had already recorded on Vincent’s Pistol Packin’ Mama single.
Georgie soon met his manager-to-be Rik Gunnell, who gave him
Sunday afternoons at his Flamingo Club on London’s Wardour Street. He then reformed the Blue Flames with Red
Reese, bassist Ted Makins, guitarist Colin Green and sax player Mick Eve with
Georgie’s B-3 and vocals headlining the ensemble. Fame credited his early audiences at the
Flamingo as being both an inspiration to his repertoire and also a great
sounding board for his interpretations. As
he told Record Collector, “Until the Mods came in, the Flamingo was a black
club. It was full of West Indians, pimps
and prostitutes – Christine Keeler and those – and black American
servicemen. It was their base in London
for the weekend. They could dance all
night to Jazz and R&B and they used to give me the latest records.” If it passed well on their ears, it was
likely both quality and authentic.
Through them, Georgie became hooked on the sounds of Jimmy Smith, Groove
Holmes and Booker T. and switched from piano to the more robust sound of the
Hammond B-3 organ late in 1962. Another
Soulful influence was his 1965 UK tour with the Motown Revue.
Fame was also influential in the UK’s acceptance of Ska and I
would like to pursue that at some time, if not Georgie’s music then others’
because it fits our timeline, but his earliest album Soul of Africa and two
related singles, J.A. Blues / Orange Street and Stop Right Here / Rik’s Tune,
are either hard to find or, more likely, never put out on CDs. I presume them all to be Jamaica oriented.
After his 1963 signing with EMI Columbia, his next release was the
live album Rhythm and Blues at the Flamingo from early 1964 and we played a
couple of chain gang-related tunes, Parchman Farm and Work Song (including
lyrics I was unfamiliar with even existing). Neither it nor the ensuing three singles fared
all that well, but the Blue Flames’ stature as a club band was ever increasing.
Success came in late 1964 when his single Yeh Yeh / Preach and
Teach charted #1. His follow-up single Something
(authored by John Mayall and Jon Mark) / Outrage charted in October and his
earlier 1965 album Fame at Last hit the Top Twenty. The year also included a couple of solid EPs
– Fame for Fats which grouped together No, No / Blue Monday / So Long / Sick
and Tired followed by Move It On Over / Walking the Dog / High Heel Sneakers /
Rockin’ Pneumonia & the Boogie Woogie Flu.
We included Blue Monday, Sick and Tired and Move It On Over, but I’d
really like to hear the rest of that second EP.
1966 saw another UK chart topper in Getaway / El Bandido and the May
album Release Sweet Things went as high as #6 in its 22-week run. This would be the final recording lineup
(guitarist Colin Green, Cliff Barton on bass, John Mitchell behind the drums,
Speedy Acquaye providing percussion, Glen Hughes & Peter Coe on saxes, and
Edward “Tan Tan” Thornton playing trumpet) before Fame disbanded the Blue
Flames to pursue a solo career. Before
signing with the CBS label, he took a bold step in recording Sound Venture
(also 1966) with the big band backing of Harry South’s Orchestra, reaching #9
and setting the stage for a 1967 tour with Count Basie.
Georgie’s first album for the CBS label was Two Faces of Fame with
a live half backed again by South’s ensemble.
There were more successful singles, but when his Ballad of Bonnie and
Clyde went to #1 late in 1967, CBS began reigning in his artistic control of
content and their choices were obviously based on salability. The interesting-sounding 1971 collaboration
with Alan Price, Fame & Price, was considered a middle of the road Pop
waste of time. He did again put together
the Blue Flames in 1974 while with the Island label, but was more successful
with jingle writing than his recordings.
Fame had a re-emergence with Van Morrison beginning in 1989 when
he began a highly respectable run as the organ player (including a stint as
Van’s musical director) on Avalon Sunset and every following Morrison album all
the way through 1997 with The Healing Game.
When we took our break for St. Patrick’s Day earlier this year, we used
the 1996 album How Long Has This Been Going On, with the shared billing of Fame
and Morrison, as a major portion of the show.
Georgie, once again having earned the respect he was due, still
recorded under his own name and shared a duet of Moondance with Van on Fame’s
1991 Cool Cat Blues LP. His 1995 Three
Line Whip allowed him the extra pleasure of recording with his sons Tristan (on
guitar) and James (drums) Powell. Also
critically acclaimed was his 1996 release, The Blues and Me.
In 1998, Fame ended his lengthy association with Morrison and
signed on with Bill Wyman’s Rhythm Kings as vocalist and organist on several
albums. By 2000, he was under Ben
Sidran’s Jazz label, Go, where he put out another well respected album, Poet in
New York.
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The Moody Blues were essentially a throw in for today’s presentation because I generally like to use three bands for a bit of diversity on the shows. I have never been a fan of orchestrated music when it comes to Rock ‘n’ Roll or Blues and that is definitely what I consider the Moody Blues to be. I came across a copy of the Days of Future Passed LP at a Flea Market a long, long time ago and felt that I owed it to myself to spend the 25 cents and most likely never even got around to listening to it. It is just not my style. But this was an earlier iteration of the band; I always liked their song Go Now, and there had to be some redeeming quality to a band that used Blues as part of their name. (By that logic, I should go see the Blue Man Group!) And we have become more expansive as the series progresses as to what was influencing the Blues players. After all, no one grows up in a vacuum. And with fourteen bonus tracks added to the original album (representing the entire output of the band before personnel changes), there must be a fair amount to like. And they do one of my all time favorite Blues tunes that I will play for you every chance I get, Sonny Boy Williamson’s Bye Bye Bird. Boy, was I disappointed! Even though Bye Bye Bird was a decent Blues track (and the only one in the CD), it bears no resemblance to the original except that the lead instrument is harmonica. From the 26 tracks, only Bird and Go Now plus four others were suitable for this show, including two from James Brown’s repertoire. Still, it makes an enjoyable (albeit short) set and this was before they decided to throw in woodwinds, violins, etc.
The band was assembled in May of 1964, but Ray Thomas (flute,
harmonica and vocals) and Mike Pinder (keyboards and vocals) had first played
together in El Riot and the Rebels. They
got together again in 1963 in the Krew Cats and, like so many others, honed
their skills in Germany, as Thomas later recalled, “We went to Germany and
endured the madness and diabolical living conditions of the Hamburg and
Hannover clubs”. Upon their return home,
they decided to pool the most suitable of the Birmingham talent.
First addition was Jazz drummer Graeme Edge, who had known Thomas
since their participation in Birmingham’s Youth Choir back in the
mid-fifties. Next recruited was Denny
Laine
(real name Brian Arthur Hines; guitar, harmonica and vocals), who
had been fronting the Diplomats for about a year and a half. The last acquisition was bassist Clint
Warwick.
Now the band needed a name.
There was a brewery that had a few venues that provided playing
opportunities for bands and the guys thought they might be able to wangle extra
gigs if they used the initials of the beer company, Mitchell & Butler. As
Blues was the current musical fad the second part of the name was chosen and
apparently they were all pretty moody, so … More blatantly, they abbreviated
the name to the M & B 5. When the
desired response didn’t come through they reverted back to the full name, the
Moody Blues Five.
They first played at Birmingham’s Carlton Ballroom, then got a
manager, soon acquired a recurring gig at the Marquee in London and ultimately
a recording contract with Decca. Their
first single got them a spot on BBC’s Ready, Steady, Go, but it was the second
release, Go Now, which reached the charts, and strongly, as it stayed there for
14 weeks in both the UK starting in November (topping the charts) and the US
beginning in December (although my trusty reference book tells me it was
released in February ’65) peaking at #10.
It was truly an international hit as it charted #8 in Holland and #14 in
Australia, selling over a million copies.
Their next single reached #33 and the next one got to #22, but this
ensemble never had anything more than Go Now of any consequence, including this
July 1965 12-track LP, The Magnificent Moodies.
The band did participate in the 1965 concert for the New Music Express’
poll winners amid the Beatles, Rolling Stones, Seekers, Searchers, Cilla Black,
Donovan and Tom Jones.
Though these guys never made a US tour, the band was recorded in
concert at the Richmond-on-Thames Jazz Festival and portions were presented on
American television’s Shindig program. Strictly
coincidentally, the Animals and Georgie Fame appeared on the same December 4th
show.
Laine and Warwick departed the band by August with Denny going
solo and eventually playing in Paul McCartney’s Wings between 1971 and 1979. By November, their places in the band were
taken by Justin Hayward providing guitar and vocals and John Lodge doing bass
and vocals, Lodge having been one of El Riot’s (Thomas) Rebels. Within a year, the altered group would
release Days of Future Passed in November of 1967 and massive success ensued.
Regarding the original Moodies, as Graeme Edge put it, “We were
tagged one-hit wonders. We had nine
months of glory and then went back to fifty pounds a night on the road.”
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Key to the Highway
June 25th, 2014
Talkin’
‘Bout You
The
Right TimeThe Girl Can’t Help It
She Said Yeah
I’m Mad Again
Maudie
Club a-Go-Go
I’m in Love Again
The Animals
Parchman
Farm
Work Song
Get
on the Right TrackWork Song
Yeh Yeh
Do Re Mi (Forget About the Dough)
I Love the Life I Live
It’s Got the Whole World Shaking
Let the Sunshine In
Georgie Fame & the Blue Flames
Inside
Looking Out
Blue
FeelingSee See Rider
Gin House Blues
Baby What’s Wrong
Don’t Worry Much
Don’t Bring Me Down
Cheating
The Animals
I’ll
Go Crazy
Something
You GotGo Now
Bye Bye Bird
I Don’t Mind
And My Baby’s Gone
The Moody Blues
Something
Sick
and TiredOutrage
Move It On Over
In the Meantime
Soul Stomp
See Saw
The World is Round
Last Night
Getaway
El Bandido
Dawn Yawn
Ride Your Pony
Georgie Fame & the Blue Flames
Memphis,
Tennessee
Sweet
Little SixteenI’m Gonna Change the World
Take It Easy Baby
Outcast
That’s All I Am to You
Mama Told Me Not to Come
Squeeze Her, Tease Her
The Animals