Sunday 13 October 2024

The 500 - #191 - Fun House - The Stooges

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: #191
Album Title: Fun House
Artist: The Stooges
Genre: Multiple genres: Proto Punk, Experimental Rock, Garage Rock, Punk Jazz 
Recorded: Electra Studios, Los Angeles, California
Released: July, 1970
My age at release: 4
How familiar was I with it before this week: One Song
Is it on the 2020 list? Yes, at position #94 - climbing 97 spots
Song I am putting on my Spotify Playlist: Dirt
Last week, I got another chance to see American rock band The Doobie Brothers perform. The celebrated group, who hail from San Jose, California, are marking their 54th anniversary as a band by  commemorating their 2022 induction into The Rock and Roll Hall of Fame. The multi-instrumental septuagenarians brought terrific energy to London, Ontario, for a spirited, break-free, two-hour performance.
Beyond their talent, catalogue of hit songs, effortless grooves and four-part harmonies, The Doobie Brothers also dabble in multiple genres. At their recent performance, they played their interpretations of blues, jazz, hard rock, progressive rock, Americana country, pop, bluegrass and blue-eyed soul. Like the weather in Scotland, "If you don't like the sound The Doobie Brothers are making, just wait five minutes, it'll change."
The same can be said about this week’s fare from The 500 list – The Stooges and their second studio release, Fun House, which includes garage rock, hard rock, psychedelic stoner jams and experimental, jazz-influenced noise. It was a precursor to the punk rock genre that exploded a few years after its release. The album is considered  integral to the development of punk and Stooges lead singer Iggy Pop (born: James Osterberg Jr.), is often dubbed "The Godfather of Punk".
Iggy Pop, 1970, at a Stooges concert in Cincinnati. 
Originally billed as The Psychedelic Stooges, the group formed in Ann Arbor, Michigan, in 1967 and they released their self-titled debut record two years later. Initially a quartet, they comprised Pop (vocals), Dave Alexander (bass), Ron Asheton (guitar), and Scott Asheton (drums).
The Stooges album cover (#185 on The 500).
Although aware of The Stooges and a fan of Iggy Pop's solo work and acting career, I only really knew the "hits" that were played on commercial radio or appeared on movie soundtracks. These included,  Down On The Street, I Wanna Be Your Dog, and Search And Destroy. So, in preparation for this blog I cued up Fun House for my first extensive listen to their work.
Back cover and track listing for Raw Power by The Stooges.
I was not disappointed. The first six tracks are raw, powerful and undeniably engaging capturing intensity, urgency and even some danger. In his 1981 book, Christgau's Record Guide: Rock Albums Of The Seventies, author Robert Christgau described it thusly:
"Now I regret all the times I've used words like 'power' and 'energy' to describe rock and roll, because this is what such rhetoric should have been saved for. Shall I compare it (Fun House) to an atom bomb? a wrecker's ball? a hydroelectric plant? Language wasn't designed for the job."
That said, the final track, L.A. Blues, might not be for everyone and, I'll admit, I skipped it a few times on repeated listens. The song features a fifth Stooge, Steve Mackay, on saxophone. L.A. Blues is cacophonous and discordant, featuring a wailing, screeching improvisational saxophone solo punctuated by Pop's unintelligible screams in the background. It could be likened to a shotgun marriage between acid jazz and a torture scene in a horror film.
Steve Mackay with Iggy Pop in 2010.
With the exception of Pop, all the original members of The Stooges have passed on. Much like The Doobie Brothers, however, 77-year-old Iggy continues to perform live. He also continues to bring a raw, unfettered and, frankly, enviable energy that belies his advanced years. It makes me look forward to listening to the next Stooges' record on The 500 in six weeks.

Sunday 6 October 2024

The 500 - #192 - The Gilded Palace of Sin - The Flying Burrito Brothers

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: #192
Album Title: The Gilded Palace Of Sin
Artist: The Flying Burrito Brothers
Genre: Country Rock
Recorded: A&M Studios, Hollywood, California
Released: February, 1969
My age at release: 3
How familiar was I with it before this week: A little
Is it on the 2020 list? Yes, at position #462 - dropping 270 spots
Song I am putting on my Spotify Playlist: Hot Burrito #2
Despite being a commercial disappointment, The Gilded Palace Of Sin has been applauded by critics, citing it as a seminal influence on multiple artists, many on The 500 list, including Eagles, Lucinda Williams, Wilco and Steve Earle. Elvis Costello, with four records on The 500, considers it among his favourite albums of all time, having performed several of the group's songs while touring. He even recorded Hot Burrito #1 (renamed I'm Your Toy) on his 1981 record, Almost Blue.
Album cover for Elvis Costello's Almost Blue.
The Flying Burrito Brothers comprised Gram Parsons (guitar, piano, organ, vocals), Chris Hillman (guitar, mandolin), "Sneaky" Pete Kleinow (pedal steel guitar) and Chris Ethridge (bass guitar, piano).  Eddie Hoh is credited as the drummer on the songs, but he was a session player and not a member of the group. The quartet formed in Los Angeles in 1968 shortly after Parsons and Hillman left The Byrds. Coincidently, this was after the recording of The Byrds’ sixth record, Sweethearts Of The Rodeo (#120 on The 500), which also had limited commercial success. Like The Gilded Palace Of Sin,  it, too, is considered massively influential in the country rock genre.
Album cover for Sweethearts Of The Rodeo from The Byrds.
I wasn't familiar with Gilded Palace until I came across it while researching my May, 2020, post about Grievous Angel by Gram Parsons (#425 on The 500 list). As a result, Parsons finds himself on three records on The 500, appearing with two  groups – The Flying Burrito Brothers and The Byrds, and as a solo artist. The solo effort joined the other two in being a commercial disappointment that was later accorded tremendous critical acclaim and powerful influence. It was a remarkable legacy for Parsons who died at the age of 26.
Album cover for Grievous Angel by Gram Parsons.
Much like painter Vincent Van Gogh and poet William Blake, Parsons did not live long enough to witness the impact his art would have on the world. He would have turned 78 this year, and I imagine he would be delighted to know that his fusion of country, R&B, soul, funk, psychedelia and rock into a genre he called "Cosmic American Music" had made a powerful impact on the music industry. Among his beneficiaries were many successful musicians and songwriters.
Parsons in his Nudie Cohn designed "Nudie Suit" from the
album jacket to "The Gilded Palace Of Sin".
That said, there is a mystic aura attached to those who leave this world while young. In Greek mythology, it was believed that those favoured by the gods were taken at an early age -- hence the expression, "Only the good die young." The Bible, in Isiah 57:1, suggests that "the righteous perish... before their time...to be spared the evil of the world".
It is the reason that James Dean and Marilyn Monroe remain an enduring symbol of youthful beauty and why musicians such as  Kurt Cobain maintain legendary status. Dean and Monroe never faced the challenges of aging in the public eye, and Cobain left the earth after recording three groundbreaking records, including Nevermind (#17 on The 500). Cobain didn't live long enough to record a bad record or become embroiled in a negative controversy.
Marilyn Monroe remains a symbol of beauty and youth, in part
because of her untimely demise at 36.
Actor John Cazale only appeared in five films during his seven-year career –  The Godfather, The Conversation, The Godfather II, Dog Day Afternoon and The Deer Hunter, each of which was nominated for, or won, Academy Awards for Best Picture. It's a heck of a resume and his death in 1978 made him one of the few actors about whom it can be said only made award-winning films.
When all is said and done,  I am delighted to be on this side of the grass -- showing the impact of aging.  I won't be a groundbreaking musician who revolutionized an art form or an Oscar-winning actor. However, I am working with Teacher Candidates who are 35 years my junior and I'm sure some of the lessons, strategies and activities I share with them will live beyond me. Additionally, there are the 1000 students who have been in my classes.

I also have this blogging project which will rattle around the internet in perpetuity. It's no Nevermind, no Dog Day Afternoon or Gilded Palace Of Sin, but I'm proud of it and I get to keep adding to it in my late-fifties. Perhaps dying successful and young isn’t so great after all – but more about doing your best and contributing your talents, no matter how small, throughout one’s days.

Sunday 29 September 2024

The 500 - #193 - Dookie - Green Day

 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: #193

Album Title: Dookie

Artist: Green Day

Genre: Punk Rock, Pop Punk, Skate Punk

Recorded: Fantasy Studios, Berkley, California; and Music Grinder Studios, Los Angeles

Released: February, 1994

My age at release: 28

How familiar was I with it before this week: Very

Is it on the 2020 list? Yes, at position #375, dropping 182 spots

Song I am putting on my Spotify Playlist: Longview

I once bought a birthday card for a friend that read: "Don't you wish you were as old as the first time you thought you were old?" It is a sentiment that lodged in my head and has stuck with me for many years.
The first time I felt old, I was turning 25 in 1990 – certainly the result of life choices. Foolishly, I had left my university studies to take a job as a restaurant manager. I presumed a career in the service industry would lead to financial and emotional satisfaction. That was dead wrong. Instead, I found myself living in a boring townhouse in Mississauga, Ontario, commuting through heavy highway traffic to Toronto six days a week so I could work long, frustrating hours earning less money than I'd made as a bartender and server. The only plus was that I worked with fantastic people who regularly made me laugh. Our softball team even made it to the finals of the North Toronto restaurant league and I fondly remember those warm, summer nights on the schoolyard diamonds of Thornhill, Willowdale and North York.
Tucker's Tornados - I'm #17 on the right.
Fast forward three years and I'd left the management world to return to university. By then, I had completed my baccalaureate degree but was still working in restaurants, slinging cocktails in my hometown of London, Ontario. However, I was making buckets of money and continuing to  play  restaurant league softball with a different group of fantastic people. I was in the best shape of my life. It was a great situation -- but I knew it was unsustainable. I knew I needed to figure out a permanent career and, with the big 3-0 looming, that had to be sooner than later.
Sidelines of a London, Ontario Restaurant League game with the
Kelsey's South crew. (I'm behind the camera on this shot).
Then, in 1994, Green Day came along with their third studio record, Dookie, and triggered my age anxiety. The album marked the start of a pop-punk revival and I was around for the original wave of this melodic, up-tempo sub-genre of music. To me, the reprise felt like it should have been the music of the next generation -- and I was working alongside them at the restaurant. With each passing year, more of my contemporary co-workers moved on with their chosen paths, while the cooks, servers and support staff got younger. I started to feel ancient.
Bussing a table at Kelsey's restaurant in September, 1994.
The song Basket Case from Dookie was charting in the Top 10.
However, feeling old didn't stop me from purchasing the Dookie album on CD. I made a cassette copy and it accompanied me to the gym throughout the summer of 1994. It, along with the Rage Against The Machine debut record and Soundgarden's BadMotorFinger, got me through many cardio workouts. However, the lyrics on Dookie weren't doing my mindset any favours. The songs address themes that include anxiety, apathy, panic attacks and failed relationships. At the time, my future wife and I were working our way through a rough patch that threatened to end our relationship. The lyrics to the Dookie's tenth track, When I Come Around, seemed custom made to reinforce my insecurities and amplify my melancholy.
Album cover for the single When I Come Around
Time passed and life sorted itself out. By 1995 I was in Teachers College and working toward a fulfilling career that I have now loved for nearly 30 years. My wife and I navigated the choppy waters of our late-twenties and, for a little while, I stopped feeling old. When I re-listened to Dookie ahead of this post, the emotional effect it had on me  in 1994 simply wasn’t there. It's just a record of catchy, up-tempo pop-punk that, it turns out, was part of my generation after all.

Addendum:

Former guest blogger, Steve "Lumpy" Sullivan, was also one of those terrific people I worked with in 1993 at Kelsey's Restaurant. In fact, he hired me. He recently attended the Green Day show in which they played Dookie in its entirety. He shared one of his trademark "Big Head" shots with me and I think this post is made better because of it.








Sunday 22 September 2024

The 500 - #194 - Transformer - Lou Reed

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: #194

Album Title: Transformer

Artist: Lou Reed

Genre: Glam Rock, Pop Rock

Recorded: Trident Studios, London

Released: September, 1972

My age at release: 7

How familiar was I with it before this week: Somewhat

Is it on the 2020 list? Yes, at position #109, moving up 85 spots

Song I am putting on my Spotify Playlist: Andy's Chest

I am excited to introduce a new guest poster to The 500 Blog series – Jennifer Jones. I have been friends with Jennifer for more than 25 years, having met her through her husband Oscar. Not only was Oscar the goaltender on my tournament hockey team, he was also a talented musician and is still part of the live music scene here in the city of London, Ontario. There were many nights when my wife, Jen and I would be in the audience at a local watering hole (The Wick, The Brass Door, The Salt Lounge, Call The Office) while Oscar played bass. I always appreciated her perspective on music, as her tastes varied from mine.

Last November, Jennifer was posting photos of some of her favourite albums of all time. Among those posts was the cover to this week’s record, Transformer by Lou Reed. I dropped her a line and asked if she would be interested in sharing a few thoughts and, delightfully, she agreed. Here is her post.

—-------------------------


As a really young teenager, the soundtrack of my life was monopolized by the Velvet Underground, and by Lou Reed in particular. It’s hard to explain my love for Lou: Despite his infamy, I can say that this love has been long-lived and has zero chance of dying.
Guitarist, singer and songwriter Lou Reed (Circa 1975) 
To me, Lou’s music is about stories: Stories that paint a picture of the people he surrounded himself with (or who happened to surround him) and the kinds of things that irked or inspired them. These stories are so raw and colourful and real, I’ve always felt a little transported back to Andy Warhol’s Factory and the dirty streets of New York. (Holly, good for you, girl - I would have gone too!) I feel like Lou did with his music what Andy did with his art, which was to create these stark, unapologetic snapshots capturing – even elevating - the culture around them and reflecting this back to those living it - and to anyone paying attention.
American visual artist Andy Warhol (left) and Reed in the 70s.
Warhol's studio in New York was called "The Factory" and
was a famous hang-out for artists, musicians and celebrities. 
I was later to the Transformer party, for sure, but since I first heard it, it’s always been my favourite: It is simply impossible to get sick of this album. Like my love for Lou, I find it hard to explain, but I suspect it’s because it is textured with a little of everything, from the catty, campy, burlesque (New York Telephone Conversation, Good Night Ladies), to the sweet, melodious, slightly tragic (Perfect Day and Satellite of Love) and of course the ultimate story-scape anthem that is Walk on the Wild Side.
Album cover for the single, Walk On The Wild Side. An
iconic song and Reed's best known, Rolling Stone ranked
it #223 on The 500 Greatest Songs of All Time.
Although some of the songs were written or recorded earlier than Transformer, every single one belongs here - and has to be here - to make up this magnificent whole. Even in the midst of some of Lou’s most celebrated work, Andy’s Chest is still one of my all-time favourite Lou songs, less for the honour it gives Warhol (wonderful in itself) but more for the magical intimacy of its tiny, nonsensical, surely drug-fueled, vignettes. For me, this song has always been a kind of demented lullaby - maybe it’s all that swooping and rocking.
Marilyn Diptych - one of Warhol's best know art pieces.
While Transformer does feel a little gentler in some ways than what I think of as typical Lou (because of David Bowie’s involvement and influence?), Lou’s trademark “snark” is definitely felt all the way through. The connection between Lou and Bowie is interesting: I always saw Lou as much grittier and rougher around the edges, but maybe paired with Bowie’s grace and elegance, the match was all the better.
Friends and musical collaborators, Bowie (left) and Reed (right)
take a humorous photo with Iggy Pop. Collectively, with
14 records on The 500 list (as musicians).
I like to think about the album title and all that it evokes: Lou transforming himself, becoming “someone else, someone good”, moving in a different, separate direction (I’m So Free, Hangin’ Round), and the evolution/ transformation/becoming that occurs in some of the songs (Make Up, Walk on the Wild Side).

There’s an addictively bold, infectious, prideful energy to all of Transformer’s stories that draws you back to listen again and again - and again! To me, overall, Transformer is disarmingly poetic, a little fantastical, and a little snide – just like Lou.


Guest Blogger - Jennifer Jones

Monday 16 September 2024

The 500 - #195 - Blues Breakers - John Mayall with Eric Clapton

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: #195
Album Title: Blues Breakers 
Artist: John Mayall with Eric Clapton
Genre: Blues, Blues Rock
Recorded: Decca Studios, London
Released: July, 1966
My age at release: 1
How familiar was I with it before this week: Quite
Is it on the 2020 list? No
Song I am putting on my Spotify Playlist: Double Crossing Time
Once again, as has been documented in this blog series, there is a record on The 500 list that I discovered through the Eric Clapton box set Crossroads. In 1988, I wanted to learn more about the Blues genre in music and felt that a deeper dive into the music of Clapton would be a good crash course.
It turns out that, in a time before streaming services and easy Google searches, Crossroads was a wise and fortuitous purchase. The four-CD (72-song) compilation contained music from albums that now occupy nine spots on The 500 list.
  • Eric Clapton has two records on the list as a solo artist. (461 Ocean Boulevard at #411 and Slowhand at #325).

  • Cream (featuring Eric Clapton on guitar) have three entries. (Wheels of Fire at #205, Disraeli Gears at #144 and Fresh Cream #102).

  • The Yardbirds have two records (one with Clapton). (Having A Rave Up at #355 and Roger The Engineer #350)

  • Derek and the Dominos (again, with Clapton) have one. (Layla and Other Assorted Love Songs at #117)

Finally, this debut record, Blues Breakers, from English blues-rock band John Mayall and The Bluesbreakers appears at position #195. Colloquially, this is often dubbed The Beano Album, because Clapton can be seen reading a 1966 issue of Beano comics magazine on the cover of the Blues Breaker album.
Issue #1242 of Beano, published May 7, 1966 -
being "read" by Clapton on the Blues Breaker album cover
Beano, originally The Beano Comic, was a weekly newsprint publication by the Scottish company DC Thomson. Debuting in July, 1938, it is the best-selling comic publication outside of Japan, with more than two billion issues sold. It is available today, through subscription or in convenience stores and supermarkets throughout the U.K. There are also hardcover "annuals" traditionally published in August (in plenty of time for the Christmas season).
The cover for the 2024 edition of the Beano Annual,
celebrating 85 years of publication.
My first memories of Beano comics were from the early ‘70s when my family had temporarily relocated from Canada to the Greater Manchester (Rochdale, Littleborough) area. Sometimes, on walks with my elders, we would step into a Newsagents (a U.K. equivalent to a convenience store) and I would flip through the comic book selection while my pop, grandad or uncle chatted with the shopkeeper. If it was a good day, I might get a copy of Beano (or its sister magazine, Dandy) and perhaps even a sugary treat to go with it. I was a big fan of Curly Wurlys, Mars Bars, Flakies and Fruit Pastilles.
Modern packaging for a classic British treat - mine came in a 
tightly wrapped tube.
I remained an avid reader of Beano and collected issues every time I returned to England for visits. My mom, attuned to my interest, purchased Beano & Dandy Annuals for me regularly, continuing the tradition well into my thirties. I made them available to my students as part of my classroom library. Sadly, the few that remain are quite battered. I've moved them to a cupboard. I am concerned that some of the "gags" and "jokes" within the covers might not have aged well.
My grade 4 students learning how to pickle in 2012. A copy
of the Dandy Annual can be seen on my cluttered shelves at 
the back - circled in red.
My favourite bit of trivia about Beano magazine involves one of their longest running strips and a character named Dennis The Menace who has a wire-haired hound named Gnasher. The character is a badly-behaved schoolboy who pulls pranks and terrorizes a group of well-behaved classmates he dubs "The Softies". The main target of Dennis' scorn is a well-groomed, and effeminate boy named Walter the Softy. (See what I mean about the jokes not aging well?) That said, Walter often gets the last laugh on Dennis in many of the weekly strips.
Dennis the Menace and Gnasher.
North American audiences are likely familiar with a different version of Dennis the Menace. Created by American cartoonist Hank Ketchum, this daily newspaper comic strip centres on a blond, freckle-faced, five-year-old boy growing up in a middle class Kansas neighbourhood.

Unlike his dark-haired British counterpart, this Dennis is kind-hearted and his antics occur when he makes a genuine effort to help others. It is his enthusiastic naivety, coupled with his ebullient energy, that leads to comedic misadventures -- often at the expense of his beleaguered neighbour, Mr. Wilson.
Fascinatingly, the two characters debuted on the same day, March 12, 1951, without any of the creators or production team being aware of the other's project. Consequently, both were able to retain the rights to the character’s names.

As a kid who regularly traversed the Atlantic, spending time in Canada and England, I was, initially, a fan of both versions. However, I quickly grew bored of the U.S. version of Dennis. It was sappy and often over-sentimental. Blond Dennis was a playful, well-meaning scamp, with many jokes of the “kids say the darndest things" variety. Even as an eight-year-old, it felt like the U.S. comic was either trying to teach me a life lesson or working way too hard to get me to laugh at Dennis' malapropism and idiom gaffes.
The British Dennis with his peashooters, water pistols and slingshot seemed dangerous. His antics were ferocious and unpredictable and when they inevitably failed, he faced brutal repercussions -- often in some form of corporal punishment from his teachers and parents. In some strips, Dennis even ends up hospitalized.
The stark difference between the "antics" of the two Dennis characters.
Just the act of reading those strips felt rebellious. Even his dog Gnasher, with its spiky black hair, ferocious teeth and sinister demeanor was terrifying -- and I couldn't get enough.
While preparing this post, my rabbit-hole research led me to a 2016 article from James Parker, originally published in Smithsonian Magazine. Parker goes even further to connect these two Dennis variations to their respective homelands with the following quote:
"American Dennis radiated the irrepressible energy of a young republic. In contrast, British Dennis represented a form of transgression that didn’t even exist in the United States. He emerged during a time of class struggle and waning empire, when the U.K. establishment feared the oik, the yob, the ungovernable prole. In short, British Dennis was a proto-punk-rock-hooligan."

It would be a stretch to suggest that Clapton's "reading" of Beano on the cover of Blues Breaker held any significance. It seems more likely that the notoriously prickly guitarist was either bored with the photo shoot or amplifying his general disinterest with the entire experience. Sure, Clapton, Mayall and the other members of the band (John McVie and Hughie Flint) were from working class backgrounds. However, connecting the dots between the economic struggles of these musicians and a transgressive comic strip would require the musical history equivalent to a yoga master.
Blues Breakers (l-r) Mayall, Clapton, McVie, Flint
Clapton, despite his well documented reputation as a jerk, is the only individual to be inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame three times -- as a solo artist and a member of Cream and The Yardbirds. Mayall, who passed away this year - July, 2024 - will be inducted this October. Although it will be a posthumous induction, Mayall did learn about the honour in April, a few months before he died at 90.

I'm glad I discovered Mayall's distinctive and powerful voice when I wisely purchased that Crossroads record...26 years ago.