Monday, 26 July 2021

The 500 - #360 - Singles Going Steady - Buzzcocks

I was inspired by a podcast called The 500 hosted by Los Angeles-based comedian Josh Adam Meyers. His goal, and mine, is to explore Rolling Stone Magazine's 2012 edition of The 500 Greatest Albums of All Time. 


Album: # 360

Album Title: Singles Going Steady

Artist: Buzzcocks

Genre: Punk, Pop-Punk

Recorded: Various Studios

Released: September, 1979

My age at release: 14

How familiar was I with it before this week: One Song

Song I am putting on my Spotify Playlist: Ever Fallen in Love?

Buzzcocks, an English pop-punk band formed at the Bolton Institute of Technology in 1976 when Howard Trafford placed a notice on the college bulletin board looking for musicians who liked the song Sister Ray by The Velvet Underground.
The Velvet Underground - Sister Ray
Trafford soon recruited Peter McNeish and the pair took the stage names Howard Devoto and Pete Shelley. “Devoto” was borrowed from the Spanish word for “devoted”. McNeish’s pseudonym was inspired by his favourite Romantic poet, Percy Bysshe Shelley, husband of the “Frankenstein” author Mary Wollstonecraft.
Percy Bysshe Shelley
Despite forming the band, Devoto left one year later, in 1977, after the release of Buzzcocks’ first record, Spiral Scratch, Devoto remained an important figure in the punk movement, forming the group Magazine. Former partner Shelley kept the name Buzzcocks and recruited new members, including guitarist Steve Dingle. There have been many line-up changes throughout the 45-year history with only Dingle and Shelley as constants.
Buzzcocks (1979)
Although it may seem so, the name is not vulgar. It was taken from a magazine reviewing the British television series Rock Follies. The headline read; “It’s the buzz, cock”. “Buzz” was a colloquialism for a feeling of exhilaration or excitement and “cock” was slang specific to Northern England, meaning “friend”.

PERSONAL CONNECTION

The city of Bolton is part of the Greater Manchester area and Buzzcocks are the fifth of six bands from the region with albums on The 500 list. I have already written about The Stone Roses, Oasis, New Order and The Smiths twice. Two additional Smiths’ records are coming up, as well as Closer by Joy Division. That’s eight culturally-significant records from an area smaller than 500 square miles -- pretty impressive.
Greater Manchester, centrally located in the northern English moorlands, has a special significance for me. Both my parents were born and raised there. My father, from a large, working-class town called Rochdale and my mother from Littleborough, an adjacent village. I was born in Canada, but returned to live in Littleborough through my pre-school years, and my brother and sister, twins, were born there.
I haven’t been there since 1977, so my memory is somewhat fanciful -- scattered romanticized images in my head. I remember windswept moorlands straight out of a Bronte novel, a few miles farther to the east, as well as emerald fields dotted with sheep. Each farm, a veritable postcard picture, seemingly captured by low, stone walls that date back to the 13th century. Train engineers blasting their whistles to announce their sojourn through valleys that meander across the landscape. Among them, a tunnel that was the longest in the world when it was built during the industrial revolution.
Then there are the busier cities and milltowns, like Rochdale, once teeming with factories and hundred-foot-smokestacks that dominated a smoky skyline. The residential streets had a perpetual sameness of row-houses, occasionally with small front yards sporting rose bushes. Behind each row, alleyways, hemmed in with stone walls and blackened by centuries of chimney smoke, resembled a scene from a musical number in Monty Python's Meaning Of Life.
Monty Python's Meaning Of Life
As I’ve made the journey through the first 140 records, I’ve felt a strange jolt of pride when an artist from the Manchester area appears on the list. It’s the same feeling I get when a citizen from my actual hometown (London, Ontario) makes it big in the world of sports or film. Even Justin Bieber, although many Londoners quickly clarify that he is actually from the town of Stratford, 40 kilometers away.
Plaque in Stratford, Ontario celebrating Justin Bieber
This got me thinking. Why do we take pride in accomplishments that are not our own, but tangentially connected to us by a geographic fluke? It’s easier to understand pride in your local sports team. Then, as a supporter, you are part of the shared experience of victory and defeat. However, I had nothing to do with the success of Buzzcocks or any other Manchester band. Despite this, I feel a connection, knowing that we were knocking about the same Lancashire streets in the mid-seventies, or perhaps Noel Gallagher of Oasis, who is of a similar age, was on a bus with me in the summer of 1977.
Noel Gallagher at Manchester City stadium
Common experiences, specific locations and cultural markers create a feeling of community, a collective kinship. Humans love order and patterns and will seek out the familiar with strangers. If I were to meet a member of The Smiths, New Order, or this week’s artist, Buzzcocks, I know my time in Manchester would be mentioned shortly into our conversation, despite the fact that I really don’t know that region at all.

SINGLES GOING STEADY

Singles Going Steady is a compilation record by Buzzcocks. It features their eight U.K. single releases and eight additional “B-side” songs in chronological order. It was intended to be the band’s introduction to the U.S. market. Though well received by critics, it failed to chart in North America. Nonetheless, it has sold well and is highly regarded by music historians as a seminal record in the punk-ethos.
Devoto and Shelley - reunited in 2018
Founding member Shelley, who remained with the group through all incarnations, died in December, 2018, aged 63, after retiring to Estonia with his second wife, Greta. Fortunately, he was present at a reunion concert, that included Devoto, in 2012. The remaining “original” member, Steve Dingle, has confirmed that Buzzcocks will continue with a “post-Shelley” line-up to begin a new era.

Wednesday, 21 July 2021

The 500 - #361 - Stankonia - Outkast

I was inspired by a podcast called The 500 hosted by Los Angeles-based comedian Josh Adam Meyers. His goal, and mine, is to explore Rolling Stone Magazine's 2012 edition of The 500 Greatest Albums of All Time. 


Album: # 361
Album Title: Stankonia
Artist: OutKast
Genre: Southern Hip-Hop, Funk
Recorded: Stankonia Tree Studios, Atlanta, Georgia
Released: October, 2000
My age at release: 33
How familiar was I with it before this week: One Song
Song I am putting on my Spotify Playlist: So Fresh, So Clean

When I began this journey through The 500 List, 137 albums ago, the first entry was Aquemini by the Atlanta hip-hop duo OutKast. Although unfamiliar to me two years ago, it has since become a favourite and I spin it regularly.

Curious, I went back to read that first post and found it surprisingly short. Maybe I was unsure what this blog might become and I had a feeling of hesitancy. Was I starting something I couldn't complete? So far so good. We've arrived at album #361, Stankonia.

Screen Capture of my first 500 Blog Post

The hip-hop duo formed in East Point, Georgia (a suburb of Atlanta) in 1992. They are Andre Lauren Benjamin, aka "Andre 3000" and Antwan "Big Boi" Patton. Regarded by many music critics as one of the most influential hip-hop groups of all time. Their melodies are catchy and their lyrics are intricate, clever and meaningfully introspective.

OutKast (l-r) Big Boi & Andre 3000

While researching this group, and the album Stankonia, I became fascinated by the comparison several critics made between OutKast and The Beatles. Not in their sound, but in their career trajectories.

OutKast & The Beatles

There is an easy comparison in songwriting. Big Boi and Andre 3000 are, much like Paul McCartney and John Lennon, a duo with distinct personalities and visions that work together masterfully.

Andre is, like Lennon, more avant-garde, pushing the boundaries within the hip-hop style. Also like Lennon, he is OutKast’s more gentle spirit. On Stankonia, he penned the album's biggest hit, Ms. Jackson, a song inspired by a difficult break-up Andre had with singer, songwriter and actress Erykah Badu following the birth of their son. He wrote the song in the form of an open letter to Badu's mother, explaining his side of the split and making clear his intention to fulfil his commitments as a father to her newborn grandson.

Andre, Erykah & their son Seven Sirius (r-l) in 1997

Big Boi is, akin to McCartney, a studio craftsman who dedicates hours developing the intricate machinations of their sound. He is also the primary gatekeeper of their legacy, well known for the time he has spent in the group's Atlanta Studio, which they also dubbed Stankonia. The name is a portmanteau of the words "stank", meaning funky and "Plutonia", lifted from an album title by jazz pianist Sun Ra's 1957 record The Nubians Of Plutonia.

Sun Ra's record The Nubians Of Plutonia (1957)

Much like the Beatles before them, OutKast was the catalyst for a regional explosion in music. The Beatles famously ushered in The British Invasion. Prior to 2000, Hip-Hop was almost exclusively a bi-coastal phenomenon, with legendary rap groups coming from either New York, the birthplace of the genre, or Los Angeles. OutKast broke the convention and became pioneers of the southern hip-hop scene, sometimes called "The Third Coast" by hip hop writers.

The Third Coast by Roni Sarig documents

the rise of Southern Hip Hop

Finally, if you are willing to stretch the Beatles/OutKast comparison a little further, some critics, with tongues planted playfully in their cheeks. even highlight similarities between records.


ATLiens (1996) is OutKast's Rubber Soul (1965)

Aquemini (1998) is their Revolver (1966)

Stankonia (2000) is their Sgt. Pepper (1967)

Speakerboxxx/The Love Below (2003) is their White Album (1978)

Beatles Albums with their OutKast "counterparts"

There are other comparisons, some more solid than others. The bottom line for me is indifference. I've been a Beatles fan for more than 40 years and I really enjoyed discovering Stankonia and Aquemini. Interestingly, on the updated version of The 500 Greatest Albums of All Time, released in September, 2020, there were significant changes to the placement of both records.

Aquemini moved from 500 to 49
Stankonia moved from 361 to 64
Additionally, the fifth OutKast record, Speakerboxxx/The Love Below has been added to the updated list at position #290
Meanwhile, The Beatles lost their place at #1 on the 2012 version, with Sgt. Pepper, moving all the way down to #24.

Clearly, the current generation of music critics is recognizing the importance of OutKast on the hip hop landscape.

(Special thanks to Alec Banks and his article OutKast Is More Like The Beatles Than You Think for additional information).


 


Friday, 16 July 2021

The 500 - #362 - Siamese Dream - Smashing Pumpkins

I was inspired by a podcast called The 500 hosted by Los Angeles-based comedian Josh Adam Meyers. His goal, and mine, is to explore Rolling Stone Magazine's 2012 edition of The 500 Greatest Albums of All Time. 

Monday, 12 July 2021

The 500 - #415 - Debut - Van Halen (Part Two)

I was inspired by a podcast called The 500 hosted by Los Angeles-based comedian Josh Adam Meyers. His goal, and mine, is to explore Rolling Stone's 2012 edition of The 500 Greatest Albums of All Time. 

Album # 415

Album Title: Debut (Self-Titled)
Artist: Van Halen
Genre: Hard Rock, Heavy Metal
Recorded: Sunset South Recorders, Hollywood, California
Released: February, 1978
My age at release: 12
How familiar was I with it before this week: Very
Song I am putting on my Spotify Mix: Runnin' with the Devil

Part Two--About a week ago, as I was thinking about this blog post, a friend of mine Glen "Archie" Gamble posted (below) an incredibly cool picture of Van Halen from this era. It was captioned "When Gods Walked The Earth" and those feelings of star-struck awe from my youth returned in a flash. I reached out to him to share some thoughts on the band. He is a writer, traveller, music fan and has been a professional drummer for 30+ years. He is also host of the YouTube Travel-Vlog The Gamble Ramble I knew he would have an interesting perspective.
Van Halen's original Late 70s/Early 80s line-up

It was the summer of 1978 and, despite being only ten, I was quickly burgeoning into a dedicated fan of music. At that time, the band KISS ruled my turntable and, almost obsessively, my life. One day, a school chum I knew only vaguely invited several of us to his house to hear a band that he proclaimed "...better than KISS".

"Better then KISS!?" "Blasphemy!" KISS was the hottest band in the world in 1978 and had been at the forefront of my every waking thought every day of that scorching summer in Brantford, Ontario. I wanted to laugh off the suggestion and walk away, but the prospect of a cool, air-conditioned basement was too appealing. I'd humour him.
Kiss (Original Line Up)
As the needle dropped on the first side of the record, an uneasy feeling crept over me. The sound of a massive group of car horns (tuned to A-440 Hz) began to hum through the speakers, slowly, the sound dipped to an E tuning and the car horn symphony was supplanted with a eight throbbing bass pulses. I was riveted, fully attuned to the "bottom-end" attack on the speakers, when a sprite-like "plink" as a pick scraped the strings on the headstock of a guitar made the hair on my arms stand on end.  

Then the drums steamed in, full force, with a mighty kick/snare introduction, and we were off to the races. As this sonic shockwave rolled over me, the voice of a true Rock & Roll god graced my ears...but wait...this wasn't singing in the traditional sense? It sounded like the wail of a half-drunk lion living on a diet of Jack Daniels, Marlboros and Cheeseburgers. "Who IS this guy?" I thought as I grabbed for the album cover. The "lion" in question...David Lee Roth...one-part Jim Dandy and two-parts "Rat-Pack" crooner...shaken, not stirred. 

As the song continued to play, I stared at the record cover, mouth agape. With the confusion of adolescent loyalty racing through my brain, I began to embrace it. "Was my school chum right? Am I listening to my new favourite band?" 

"I live my life like there's no tomorrow!" The incredible opening lyrics to the band's first original hit Runnin' With The Devil. But, it wasn't just the words he sang. It was the perfectly timed screams and his impossibly perfect heavy-metal take on jazz style scat-singing that made his vocal delivery so remarkable. 

I fought it, fiercely. I had to. How can ANYTHING be better than KISS?! But, the Panzer like assault of sonic waves continued from this basement stereo. The next song, Eruption, gave me pause.
"There is no way that is a guitar player!" I confidently announced to my friends.
They quickly agreed, after all, I was the musician in our group.
"It's got to be a keyboard or something..." I proclaimed as this musical assault of lightning fast melodic scales continued to pound us all into aural submission.

I would soon learn I was wrong. It was not a keyboard...but a fretboard...masterfully played by Edward Van Halen, perhaps the greatest guitarist in the world, credited with revolutionizing the instrument with his finger-tapping virtuosity.

Yep...in that cool, dark basement in 1978, I split my allegiance from the KISS Army and shared active duty in the Van Halen Corps. 

Signed, Sealed & Delivered and Reporting for Duty, Sir.

Glen "Archie" Gamble

Wednesday, 7 July 2021

The 500 - #363 - Substance - New Order

I was inspired by a podcast called The 500 hosted by Los Angeles-based comedian Josh Adam Meyers. His goal, and mine, is to explore Rolling Stone Magazine's 2012 edition of The 500 Greatest Albums of All Time. 

Saturday, 3 July 2021

The 500 - #364 - L.A. Woman - The Doors

I was inspired by a podcast called The 500 hosted by Los Angeles-based comedian Josh Adam Meyers. His goal, and mine, is to explore Rolling Stone Magazine's 2012 edition of The 500 Greatest Albums of All Time.