Showing posts with label Various Artists. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Various Artists. Show all posts

Sunday, 22 February 2026

The 500 - #120 - Sweetheart Of The Rodeo - The Byrds

I was inspired by a podcast called The 500 hosted by New York-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 #: 120
Album Title: Sweetheart of the Rodeo
Artist: The Byrds
Genre: Country-Rock, Roots-Rock, Americana, Progressive Country
Recorded: Columbia Studios in Nashville and Los Angeles
Released: August, 1968
My age at release: 3
How familiar was I with it before this week: One song
Is it on the 2020 list? Yes, at #274, dropping154 places
Song I am putting on my Spotify Playlist:
 One Hundred Years From Now
I am delighted to welcome back, for his third visit as a guest blogger, podcaster and writer of the My Life In Concerts media page, Various Artists. Enjoy.

The Byrds were never one of those bands that I “discovered”: they already existed fully-formed as a contemporary, thriving entity as my awareness of the world around me began to take shape in my later-1960s, childhood brain.

I loved how they sounded, with McGuinn’s chiming, jangling guitar, the gorgeous choirboy harmonies, the brilliant songwriting and interpretations, their musical adventurousness, the trippy folk rock sound, and also their supercool look via McGuinn’s fringe and granny glasses, David Crosby’s capes, and drummer Michael Clarke out-Brian-Jonesing Brian Jones with his barnet.
Michael Clarke with his "barnet" aka: hair. Barnet is cockney
rhyming slang, taken from the annual horse fair, held in Barnet, England.
Barnet fair = hair.
I was also very aware of them as my 12-year-old sister went along with her friends to scream at them when they played here at the London Arena in 1966. She loved the show. (I also only just now realized: my sister and I saw our first concert at the same age).
Concert poster for The Byrds show at the 
London Arena.
While I loved the band, I didn’t actually own a Byrds album until the early 80s. At that time, that 12-string Rickenbacker jangle sound had returned as a massive influence to indie and alternative rock in a big way. So many of my favourite bands of the time -- R.E.M., The Smiths, Orange Juice, Echo and the Bunnymen, and a bit later, The Grapes of Wrath -- were clearly indebted to The Byrds (and Big Star for most of them too) in their music. Most also actively championed California’s Five Mop Tops as an influence and sonic inspiration.
A 12-string, Model 360 guitar from the Rickenbaker manufacturer.
They first hit hard in the summer of 1965 with their innovative folk rock take on Bob Dylan’s Mr. Tambourine Man. As it turns out, that sense of innovation was a quality that the band never stopped embracing, leading to musical tangents and line-up fluctuations in the years ahead. The next few years saw them release a series of adventurous and increasingly psychedelic albums.
Album cover for Mr. Tambourine Man by The Byrds.
In the mid-80s, after purchasing Greatest Hits, a friend of mine who was already a Byrds nut taped most of their albums for me. It was then that I went deep into my own Byrdsmania, particularly loving the journey through their first six.

For those rare bands or artists who literally change the course of music, it is usually one of their greatest honours. Well, The Byrds changed the face of music THREE TIMES.
The Byrds' 1968 line-up, (l-r) McGuinn, Kevin Kelley, Gram
Parsons and Chris Hillman.
First, with their original folk rock hits which launched that genre and movement. The second time around, they became one of the premier California rock acts to go early and deep into psychedelic experimentation, with 1966’ Eight Miles High as one of the very first psychedelic hits.
Album cover for The Byrds' Eight Miles High.
And then there’s change number three which brings us to this week’s album: 1968’s Sweetheart of the Rodeo. Album number six was a sharp left turn into country music, but modern and infused with young people’s values and vibes.

They’d birthed folk-rock. Now they were birthing its cousin, country-rock.

By this time, three of the five original Byrds were gone (Gene Clark, David Crosby, and Michael Clarke) replaced by Kevin Kelly on drums and, much more importantly, Gram Parsons on guitars and keyboards.
The Byrds original line-up, (l-r) Crosby, Clark, Clarke, Hillman
and McGuinn.
At the time, Parsons was largely unknown. He himself had started exploring the country-rock synthesis with his own small-time group, the International Submarine Band. And indeed, a variety of artists had contemporaneously been exploring this genre merge with specific tracks: Buffalo Springfield, Mike Nesmith of The Monkees, even The Beatles and The Stones.
Gram Parsons, who appears three times on The 500 list, with
two bands (The Byrds and The Flying Burrito Brothers) and solo.
But Sweetheart of the Rodeo was a complete leap into the deep end. Initially, McGuinn’s vision for the album was going to be a survey of 20th Century American music, starting with bluegrass and country through jazz, R&B, etc. But it was the newly-installed Parsons who eventually swayed Roger and bassist Chris Hillman into making the record an all-country affair, blended with aspects of rock music and attitude.

Essentially, Parsons wanted to blend a variety of roots genres into what he named as Cosmic American Music.
Image from Robert Rubsum's 2017 article, Cosmic American Music.
The LP’s material ranged from traditional-to-recent country classics (I Am a Pilgrim, The Christian LifeBlue Canadian Rockies, Life in Prison, etc.) as well as countryfied folk (Pretty Boy Floyd) and R&B (You Don’t Miss Your Water). And since this is a Byrds' album, there is the requisite, and excellent, Dylan covers (You Ain’t Goin’ Nowhere and Nothing Was Delivered) although here they were making their public debut as McGuinn sourced both of these songs from the then-unreleased Basement Tapes. (#292 on The 500 list).
The Basement Tapes album cover - a 1975 release from Bob Dylan
backed with members of The Band.
Then there were the two Parsons originals: One Hundred Years from Now and the classic Hickory Wind which he later re-recorded for his seminal and final album, Grievous Angel (#425 on The 500)

When I got that glut of Byrds cassettes in the ‘80s, Sweetheart was one of the first I played as I had read so much about it. I couldn’t have been introduced to it at a more perfect time. In that era, I was listening first to some country-inflected bands, particularly R.E.M., as well as some of the great country legends such as Johnny Cash, Patsy Cline, and Hank Williams along with some of the new, more left-field country artists such as Steve Earle, k.d. lang, Emmylou Harris, and Dwight Yoakam.

In hearing Sweetheart, I experienced the seed that flowered into a variety of more alternative country sounds and movements over the next several decades. I also rediscovered Gram Parsons. I knew who he was as my brother had some Flying Burrito Brothers albums in the early 70s, but had largely forgotten about him and them.
Album cover for The Flying Burrito Brothers, The Gilded Palace
of Sin
, #192 on The 500.
I absolutely loved this album from first listen: the songs, the vocals, all the pedal steel and great playing, the whole feel and aesthetic. I went on to play it obsessively in the years ahead, buying the CD upon its ‘80s release and a deluxe version from this century. I still love it today.
A pedal steel guitar being played.
In and around this time, Pamela Des Barres released her landmark book, I’m With the Band: Confessions of a Groupie, of which Parsons is one of the key players. It all just seemed to be in the air at that time.
I'm With The Band: Confessions of a 
Groupie
book by Pamela Des Barres.
As with most innovators and innovations, the wider audience is usually not prepared or open-minded enough to initially welcome such a deviation. Indeed, during the recording of this album, the band played a show at the Grand Ole Opry where they received a hostile reaction from the mainstream country audience.

Furthermore, when the album dropped in August 1968, it absolutely tanked (just like the two other very different albums from 1968 that Marc has had me write about: The Velvet Underground’s White Light/White Heat and The Kinks’ Village Green Preservation Society). 
Album cover for The Kinks' Village Green Preservation
Society
(1968).
The band and album were essentially shot by both sides upon its release. Anything to do with country music couldn’t have been more toxic or undesirable to the hippie cognoscenti while the typical country audience saw them as long-haired hippie freak weirdo interlopers.

It resulted in SOTR being their lowest-charting and lowest-selling album to date. Initially.

Meanwhile, Parsons had already jumped ship two months before its release as the album vanished.

As it turns out, it was just slightly ahead of the curve. 1968 also saw a roots music revival countering psychedelia with the arrival of The Band’s debut, Music From Big Pink, as well as Bob Dylan’s John Wesley Harding and 1969’s Nashville Skyline, and back-to-roots albums by the Beatles and Stones.

Sweetheart’s influence began making an impact as the country rock genre surged in the ‘70s, with this album -- and Parsons’ post-Byrds career with the Burritos -- being its progenitors.

By that time, SOTR was retrospectively hailed as an influential classic, with its impact now spanning the decades, especially on the Outlaw and then Alt-Country movements.

What started as a commercial failure has become a consistent seller over the decades.

I put it on to relisten to it a few times before writing this piece and it still sounds so fresh, vibrant, and sparkling. Here’s a rodeo always worth attending.

Monday, 3 July 2023

The 500 - #258 - The Kinks Are The Village Green Preservation Society - The Kinks

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: #258
Album Title: The Kinks Are The Village Green Preservation Society
Artist: The Kinks
Genre: Pop Rock, Baroque Rock, Folk Rock
Recorded: Pye Studios, London, U.K.
Released: November, 1968
My age at release: I was 3, my guest blogger was 5
How familiar was I with it before this week: Not At All
Is it on the 2020 list? Yes, at #384, dropping 126 spots
Song I am putting on my Spotify Playlist: The Village Green Preservation Society
Please welcome back, "Various Artists", who hosts the website, blog and podcast My Life In Concerts. He wrote his first post for us back in October, 2022, when he shared his rich knowledge of Velvet Underground's 1968 record, White Light, White Heat. Enjoy this post about the sixth studio record from The Kinks.

It’s 1968.

Police bash hippie protesters in London’s Trafalgar Square. Civil rights icon Martin Luther King is assassinated outside his Memphis hotel room, followed by rioting. Czechoslovakia explodes with potential during the Prague Spring, which is quickly and brutally repressed. Students revolt amid violence in Paris. The Vietnam war rages on. There are riots at the 1968 Democratic convention. American Senator Robert F. Kennedy is gunned down after winning the California primary.

And the reigning kings of UK rock—The Beatles and The Rolling Stones—release astonishing, high-water-mark LPs within a two-week span near the end of the year. Each album speaks to and reflects on the turmoil of the times: the former with their fragmentary, self-titled double album—colloquially referred to as The White Album -- and the latter with their first in a series of four roots-rock masterpieces, Beggar’s Banquet.

“But when you talk about destruction 

Don't you know that you can count me out/in” 

(Revolution 1: The Beatles)

“What did you kill, Bungalow Bill?” 

(The Continuing Story of Bungalow Bill: The Beatles)


“Summer's here and the time is right for fighting in the street” 

(Street Fighting Man: The Rolling Stones)

“Who killed the Kennedys?”

(Sympathy For The Devil: The Rolling Stones)


They are instant classics that have never lost their punch or appeal, with reverential praise following them through the decades. Each captures the zeitgeist of the era for all posterity and are major commercial successes.
1968 releases from The Beatles (White Album) and 
The Rolling Stones (Beggar's Banquet).
On the same day that The Beatles unleash their White Album (November 22), another legendary ‘60s UK rock great, The Kinks, unveil their new LP: The Kinks Are the Village Green Preservation Society. The album is a sepia-toned reflection of a vanishing Britain, played simply and directly with music that seems simultaneously antiquated and contemporary. It features tunes with titles like Do You Remember Walter?, Picture Book, and Last of the Steam Powered-Trains, and sports wholly unironic lyrics like “I miss the village green and all the simple people'' and “God save little shops, China cups, and virginity.” It is a commercial disaster that sinks like a stone in a rural stream.

Well, at least initially.
Back Cover of The Kinks Are The Village Green
Preservation Society album cover.
To say that the Kinks sixth UK album was wildly out of step with its time would be an understatement. The band had already been heading in a downward commercial spiral by this point. They exploded out of the British Invasion with 1964’s You Really Got Me, following that by a few years of raw and rocked-out hits, with the band’s explosive sound and Dave Davies’ ferocious guitar riffs having a profound influence on garage rock, punk, and hard rock in the years to come.
Dave Davies (front) with drummer Mick Avory. (1967)
But even on their early releases, main songwriter Ray Davies’ wistful and reflective side was evident on tunes such as Tired of Waiting, See My Friends, and Where Have All the Good Times Gone? This type of uniquely British observational songwriting came to the fore with late ‘65’s appropriately titled Kwyet Kinks EP, featuring the lynchpin track, the pointed and satirical A Well-Respected Man, among others.
Album Jacket for A Well-Respected Man.
Davies delved further into this type of songwriting during ’66 and ’67, setting the tone for their classic albums Face to Face and Something Else by The Kinks (#289 on The 500). Meanwhile, an onstage fist fight between Dave Davies and drummer Mick Avory got them banned from live appearances in America for four years, with all the possibility of airplay in tandem with promotional tours there similarly lost.
Mick Avory and Dave Davies (1965).
With The Kinks completely isolated from the US, Ray began to focus on specifically British-themed songs and subject matter. Related singles from this time in that vein initially rewarded Davies and the band well with big, beloved hits such as Sunny Afternoon and Waterloo Sunset (surely in my 10 favourite songs of all time).
Kinks Extended Play disc featuring Waterloo Sunset.
But this wouldn’t last. As psychedelia advanced, the Kinks slowly found themselves in a commercial no man’s land, with their reflective, (mostly) untrippy tunes out of style. As for those who wanted the Kinks to continue with their mid-decade rocked-out style, the band’s contemplative turn inward was a turn off. 1967’s Something Else (my fave Kinks album along with Village Green) was their first commercial disappointment since their breakthrough.
Something Else By The Kinks (1967).
Ray Davies felt that the Kinks’ career might irrevocably be skidding to an end, with the commercial tide turning against them, and therefore saw Village Green as possibly his final musical statement. It was initially supposed to be a solo album, but at some point mutated into The Kinks’ new project. Regardless, this was a decidedly personal album. He dug in deep and produced it himself. This one was for Davies’ own satisfaction, and if the fans came along, so be it. Unfortunately, not many did. While the album’s related, stand-alone single, the excellent Days, returned them to the UK singles chart, and the LP got rave reviews from the UK press, the album itself performed poorly. 
Days single release album cover. 
I did not hear this album at the time but was an early Kinks fanatic. My parents had emigrated from the UK to Canada in the mid-50s, and I grew up in a Brit culture-focused household where I was born a decade later than my older siblings. The Big Brit Four (Beatles, Stones, Kinks, & Who) were ever-present via albums in our home or those brought over by their friends. It’s hard to know exactly why—perhaps the visceral empathy and intelligently detailed songwriting--but I always felt a deep and immediate bond with all things Kinks. In fact, the first album that I ever bought with my own money was the Kinks’ 1969 release, Arthur (or The Decline and Fall of the British Empire). It was heady stuff for my seven-year-old self, and it took months for me to save up my allowance to buy it in 1971, but I loved it then as now. 
Village Green and Arthur from Various Artist's collection
Every word and moment on that album is engrained deeply in my DNA. I bought more vintage Kinks in the early 70s and was totally on board when they signed to Arista records in 1977, kicking-off with their terrific Sleepwalker. It heralded a new era for the band, resulting in a huge American audience for more stadium-friendly material (which I also like -- the 1972-75 concept albums on RCA, not so much).But for me, the Kinks’ ’66-’68 corridor (which actually I would extend on through to Muswell Hillbillies in ’71) are their finest hours, with Something Else/Village Green and era singles as their apex. There is not one weak track on VG, and Davies’ passion and compassion shine through on each one. It’s a concept album looking back to a rapidly retreating past of a gone Britain, revisited in songs ranging from buoyant (People Take Pictures of Each Other) to strange (Phenomenal Cat) but always bittersweet and contemplative.
Alternative album jacket for Village Green.
Sonically, the album also marked a step forward for the band who had suffered crappy productions via tight-fisted Pye Records. Some tracks, such as the title cut, still sound a bit rough and distorted, whereas others, such as Animal Farm and All of My Friends Were There, sound cleaner and brighter than most of their previous recordings, paving the way for follow-up Arthur’s crisp, sharp production. While Village Green was their lowest-selling product at the time, their career began to rebound in 1969 with Arthur and its single, Victoria, achieving full breakthrough with 1970’s Lola Versus Powerman And The Moneygoround and its massive hit, Lola. I pretty much played the grooves off my Pye 45 copy of that one.
Lola Versus Powerman And The Moneygoround album cover.
Even then, I loved songs that progressively screwed with assumptions. New appreciation for late ’60 Kinks started to blossom as the 70s and 80s went on. I did not hear Village Green until 1988--20 years after its release--when a friend taped it for me. I immediately went ‘verklempt’ over it, eventually buying both vinyl and CD versions.

It has since gone on to be their most acclaimed release, finding particularly large fanbases in the UK Britpop and US alternative scenes. After decades of great critical acclaim along with several reissues of this title, it has gone from being their worst to best-selling catalogue LP in the UK. The world eventually caught up with Davies and his mission, and we’re all the better for it.




Sunday, 21 August 2022

The 500 - #303 - John Wesley Harding - Bob Dylan

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: # 303

Album Title: John Wesley Harding

Artist: Bob Dylan

Genre: Folk-Rock, Country-Rock

Recorded: Over three sessions in the late fall,1967

Released: December, 1967

My age at release: 2

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

Is it on the 2020 list? Yes, 337 (Dropping 24 spots)

Song I am putting on my Spotify Playlist: The Ballad of Frankie Lee and Judas Priest

John Wesley Harding is the eighth studio record by American singer, songwriter and multi-instrumentalist Bob Dylan. It is also the third of 11 Dylan records on The 500 list. I wrote about Dylan’s Time Out Of Mind (#411) in August, 2020,and Love And Theft (#385)in January, 2021. It was written and recorded about a year after Dylan’s motorcycle accident and just before the birth of his fourth child, Jakob Dylan – who would rise to fame in the early 90s as the guitarist and singer for the band, The Wallflowers.
Jakob Dylan (front) with his band The Wallflowers
I don't want to be "treading trodden trails" here, so I will skip the biographical information included in those previous posts. I will simply say, John Wesley Harding really grew on me and my respect and appreciation for Dylan continues to grow as I learn to get the "it" of Bob Dylan -- an intangible quality that makes so many fans passionate about this celebrated talent.
Dylan, around the time of this record's recording.
Several months ago, my Facebook feed displayed a public message board posting on a site called If You Grew Up in London (Ontario) by an individual identified by the pseudonym Various Artists.
Homepage for the "If You Grew Up in London" Facebook group
Various Artists hosts a website, blog and podcast under the banner, My Life In Concerts. It is a multi-media diary of experiences attending concerts in the Southwestern Ontario region between 1975 and the present. From reading the blogs, it became apparent the author and I have much in common. We are both Londoners of about the same age, with a love of music who have (independently of each other) chosen to chronicle our interest through blogging and podcasting.
The current My Life In Concert Webpage
Two weeks ago, I had the chance to dig a little deeper into the content on the My Life In Concert website and was really impressed. He (Various Artists) is a skilled writer and dynamic orator. His first podcast detailed his experiences at the same Roxy Music show that a guest blogger, pal Dougie, wrote about on this blog site last year. (See Album #374, Siren).
A partial ticket from that Roxy Music performance in London
Two weeks ago, I contacted Various Artists and discussed our mutual online projects. He was, as I expected after hearing his podcasts and reading his posts, good-natured and agreeable to email conversation about our musical undertakings. Surprisingly, he volunteered to read all of my posts -- nearly 200 of them!

Over the past two weeks, he has done exactly that, while I have been listening to his podcast. We have agreed that, as young adults, our discordant music tastes would likely have made us adversaries rather than friends.
When he saw, through my social media post, that John Wesley Harding by Bob Dylan was next on my list he wrote:
"One of his very best. In my Dylan Top 10, maybe Top 5. This album along with The Band's Music From Big Pink (#34 on The 500) played a big part in launching the roots music movement at the end of the 60s. I love Dylan's stark simplicity and songwriting on John Wesley Harding. A third album that was a key cornerstone to the fledging roots movement of the late 60s was The Byrds' Sweetheart of the Rodeo (#120). It certainly wasn't a commercial success in its time, but it influenced the right people and truly launched Gram Parsons career and his second and final record Grievous Angel (#425)."
As a recent convert to the music of Bob Dylan, I have to say that this is my favourite of the three records I've reviewed so far. As I indicated in that first Dylan post two years ago...I am starting to get "it". Gleaning tidbits of information from a fan like Various Artists is certainly helpful in my journey. Perhaps I can entice him to guest-blog or participate in a cross-over event one day.