domingo, 15 de janeiro de 2017

THE SHADOWS: "Rhythm & Greens" (EP)


Original released on EP Columbia SEG 8362 (mono)
(UK, November 1964)

The Shadows play these tracks on a short film (32 minutes) directed by Christopher Miles, released September 1964: a pop group of musicians are getting to know four attractive girls on a sunny beach to the sound of their transistor, when the programme changes to a history of the English beaches. The Shadows and the girls enact the drama of mankind down to the present day and into the future, when over- crowding pushes them back into the primeval sea. The EP climbed to nº 8 (two weeks) in the UK charts (a total of 14 weeks)

DD,D,B,M&T - An Indigestion of Music and Love

Original released on LP Fontana STL 5388
(UK, November 1966)

Dave Dee, Dozy, Beaky, Mick & Tich followed up their self-titled debut LP with the tongue-in-cheek "If Music Be the Food of Love... Prepare for Indigestion". The quintet of Dave "Dee" Harman (guitar/vocals), Trevor "Dozy" Davies (bass), John "Beaky" Diamond (rhythm guitar), Michael "Mick" Wilson (drums), and Ian "Tich" Amey (lead guitar) return with another batch of strong Brit-pop compositions, including a pair of their most prolific sides, "Bend It" and "Hideaway." While all but unknown stateside, the combo became hugely popular throughout Europe - which may well account for the distinctly conspicuous Mediterranean flavor on the former. Their left-of-center sense of humor surfaces on the Noel Coward-esque potty platter "Loos of England." Matching their obvious wit was an equally sharp musicality, effortlessly transcending concurrent pop music styles. Their range at once incorporated the full-throttled backbeat of "Bang" and the decidedly hip "Hideaway" and "Hands Off!". "Shame" is an edgier tune, with a mod progressive slant that would not be out of place from the likes of the Yardbirds. This is contrasted by the emotive "All I Want" or the cover of Robert "Bumps" Blackwell's "Hair on My Chinny-Chin-Chin," which is perhaps best known via the Sam the Sham & the Pharaohs version. While the prospect might sound odd, it seems no more out of place than the Who's reading of "Heat Wave," for instance. Interested parties should note that this 2003 reissue of "If Music Be the Food of Love..." contains 14 supplementary mono and stereo bonus track mixes, including "Touch Me, Touch Me," "Zabadak," the proto-punk "He's a Raver," and others. (Lindsay Planer in AllMusic)

sábado, 14 de janeiro de 2017

MANFRED MANN: "So Long, Dad" (EP)



Original released on EP Fontana 465 400 TE
(PORTUGAL, 1967)


MANN'S INSTRUMENTALS

Original released on LP HMV Records CSD 3594 (mono)
(UK 1967, January 13)

Amidst their pop/rock, blues, and folk-rock, Manfred Mann peppered their early recordings with jazzy instrumentals that faintly suggested a jazz-rock direction. "Soul of Mann", never issued in the U.S., is a compilation of most of these early instrumental efforts, which originally appeared on various singles, EPs, and LPs between 1963 and 1966 (though one song, "L.S.D.," and is actually a blues-rocker with a Paul Jones vocal). Instrumentals were not the band's forte, but this collection is more interesting than you might think. No one would put Manfred Mann on the level of a jazz artist like Oscar Peterson, but these cuts are executed with a surprising amount of style and wit. And Mann and his men were nothing if not eclectic, producing downright strange instrumental takes on "Satisfaction," "I Got You Babe," and "My Generation." There are straighter (but still imaginative) versions of songs by the Yardbirds and Cannonball Adderley, as well as their own originals (the bluesy stomper "Mr. Anello" is a standout). Manfred Mann fans will find this worth picking up, especially given that several of the tracks never came out in the U.S., such as the aforementioned "Mr. Anello," and all of the pop covers they did for the 1966 EP Instrumental Asylum. (Richie Unterberger in AllMusic)

sexta-feira, 13 de janeiro de 2017

RUMER'S IN LOVE (WITH YOU)

Original released on CD EastWest 0825646482313
(2016, October 21)

After trying her hand at writing her own vintage-inspired material with 2014's "Into Colour", singer Rumer returns to her core inspiration of covering classic '60s and '70s pop with 2016's sophisticated "This Girl's in Love (A Bacharach & David Songbook)". Produced by her husband and longtime collaborator Rob Shirakbari at Capitol Studios, "This Girl's in Love" finds Rumer applying her supple vocals and soft-focus aesthetic to songs written by the legendary team of Burt Bacharach and Hal David. While Rumer has most certainly sung many of these songs in live settings, it's surprising, given her association with the time period, that she's never actually recorded any of this material in the past. Here, we get renditions of such beloved songs as Dusty Springfield's "The Look of Love," the Carpenters' "(They Long to Be) Close to You," and Dionne Warwick's "Walk on By." We also get to hear a sweetly gruff-voiced Bacharach sing the intro to the album's title track, a rewording of the Herb Alpert hit "This Guy's in Love with You." Thankfully, Rumer and Shirakbari don't simply stick to the best-of hits and additionally pepper the album with some well-curated, lesser heard choices like the poetic "Balance of Nature," the heartbreaking "Are You There (With Another Girl)," and the harmonically nuanced "The Last One to Be Loved."


As with past Rumer albums, these are gorgeously rendered productions featuring orchestral-tinged arrangements from Shirakbari that capture the golden era of soft pop without falling into garish pastiche. While the album is technically one of Rumer's most faithfully old-school, it still sounds fresh, and the analog production aesthetic only works to magnify the purity, lyricism, and expressiveness of her voice. If Rumer has consistently drawn favorable comparisons to the late Karen Carpenter in the past, "This Girl's in Love (A Bacharach & David Songbook)" will do nothing to diminish them. Ultimately, it serves to reinforce the idea that Rumer stands as one of the brightest torchbearers for the easy listening AM pop that Carpenter, and more specifically, Burt Bacharach and Hal David, helped make such an indelible part of 21st century pop history. (Matt Collar in AllMusic)

GILBER BÉCAUD: "Dimanche à Orly"


Original released on EP La Voix de Son Maitre EGF633
(FRANCE, 1963)


Dedicado ao Hugo Santos, de quem se transcreve
o excelente texto seguinte:

Os aviões estavam guardados para os domingos de Verão, quando o futebol estava no chamado defeso e não havia jogos. A vida do meu avô, a minha também, regulava-se por haver, ou não, jogos no Estádio da Luz. Na Praça do Chile (Lisboa), apanhávamos aqueles autocarros verdes, de dois andares, para a Portela e ali ficávamos a ver os aviões. O aeroporto não era o que hoje é e, mais uns anos, pelo andar da carruagem, nada será, e o movimento de aviões era diminuto. No edifício havia uma esplanada, com grandes chapéus-de-sol, que se via cá de baixo, do gradeamento que limitava a pista. Adivinhavam-se mulheres com vestidos vaporosos às ramagens, homens de fato e gravata, a beberem o seu chá, o seu café, a sua limonada ou o seu “whisky”, pensa ele.

Cá em baixo, famílias em grupo passeavam-se à espera de ver os aviões subir ao céu ou dele descer e havia mulheres a vender, em cestos de palha trançada, com uma asa ao meio, em cartuchinhos de papel, tremoços, amendoins, também colares de pinhões, alfarroba, paladares. Por tudo isto – e não só – haveria um dia de passar a gostar, terna e nostalgicamente, de uma canção do Gilbert Bécaud: “Dimanche à Orly”. Ainda hoje, quando a ouve, é do avô e dos domingos da Portela que se lembra, e, não raro, uma lágrima atrevida, furtiva lágrima, intenta brotar. Pelos idos de 1969 viu um anúncio de jornal a pedir pilotos para a TAP. O anúncio dizia: “Há homens que não suportam estar colados ao chão, esses serão os nossos pilotos. Oferecemos-lhe dezenas de céus. E dezenas de terras. Oferecemos-lhe um viver cheio de à-vontade dentro da responsabilidade. Sem e com experiência de voo venha para piloto da TAP".

Aquele chamamento de quem não suporta estar colado ao chão, sem e com experiência, fez-lhe desejar ir para piloto da TAP. Os olhos azuis tinha, as habilitações académicas exigidas é que não. Passados anos conheceu quem tivesse ido para piloto da TAP por causa da feliz frase de “marketing” daquele anúncio. Era, então, a TAP um exemplo de companhia aérea. Hoje é a javardice que se sabe. Lembra-se também de uma velha canção de Milton Nascimento de saudação à Panair do Brasil, assim como se lembra de, na Portela, ver esses aviões da Panair. Agora chama-se Varig.

E aquela briga e aquela fome de bola
E aquele tango e aquela dama da noite
E aquela mancha e a fala oculta
Que no fundo do quintal morreu
Morri a cada dia dos dias que eu vivi
Cerveja que tomo hoje é apenas em memória
Dos tempos da Panair
A primeira Coca- Cola foi me lembro bem agora
Nas asas da Panair
A maior das maravilhas foi voando sobre o mundo
Nas asas da Panair


Não foi para piloto da TAP, mas mais tarde haveria de trabalhar numa agência de navegação e foram tempos felizes: barcos, escadas de portaló, marinheiros, gruas, cabos grossos esticados até aos cabeços da muralha, azáfama de estivadores, gruas, aquela dança serena do barco com as águas e, sempre, aquele ruído de motor que mantém o barco vivo e se transforma num qualquer apelo. Agora teve um problema: andou às voltas e às voltas à procura do EP do Gilbert Bécaud, a cantar “Dimanche a Orly”, e não encontrou. A memória traz-lhe a brisa longínqua que, provavelmente, um dos seus primeiros amores terá ficado com o disco. Fez bem. Nunca teve grande simpatia pela propriedade privada.


A l'escalier 6, bloc 21,
J'habite un très chouette appartement
Que mon père, si tout marche bien,
Aura payé en moins de vingt ans.
On a le confort au maximum,
Un ascenseur et un' sall' de bain.
On a la télé, le téléphone
Et la vue sur Paris, au lointain.
Le dimanche, ma mère fait du rangement
Pendant que mon père, à la télé,
Regarde les sports religieusement
Et moi j'en profit' pour m'en aller.

Je m'en vais l' dimanche à Orly.
Sur l'aéroport, on voit s'envoler
Des avions pour tous les pays.
Pour l'après-midi... J'ai de quoi rêver.
Je me sens des fourmis dans les idées
Quand je rentre chez moi la nuit tombée.

A sept heures vingt-cinq, tous les matins,
Nicole et moi, on prend le métro.
Comme on dort encore, on n'se dit rien
Et chacun s'en va vers ses travaux.
Quand le soir je retrouve mon lit,
J'entends les Bœings chanter là-haut.

Je les aime, mes oiseaux de nuit,
Et j'irai les retrouver bientôt.
Oui j'irai dimanche à Orly.
Sur l'aéroport, on voit s'envoler
Des avions pour tous les pays.
Pour toute une vie... Y a de quoi rêver.
Un jour, de là-haut, le bloc vingt et un
Ne sera qu'un tout petit point.

THE TEDDY BEARS SING!



Original released on LP Imperial 9067 (mono)
(US, January 1959)


The first experience Phil Spector had with recording an LP was, apparently, so disruptive that for many years he intended it to be his last. With the Teddy Bears having been lured over to the Imperial label by promises of artistic freedom, Spector was then mortified to learn that he'd been granted no more than a week in which to record the band's debut album. He managed to have that span increased to two weeks, but ultimately, he was peremptorily pulled off the project, only to see it handed over to staff producer Jimmie Haskell. The clash of the two titans is not to the album's benefit, although Spector was scarcely excelling himself even before he was deposed. Contractual clashes had already forced the omission of the Teddy Bears' biggest hit, "To Know Him Is To Love Him," and, frankly, few of the songs that replaced it didn't even come close to its heartbreaking majesty. Rather, "The Teddy Bears Sing" is dominated by none-too-special ballads, both Spector originals and covers. "Oh Why" and "If You Only Knew" have a certain warm charm, but Annette Kleinbard's vocals never touch the heights that the single suggested were within her reach, while versions of "Unchained Melody," "Little Things Mean A Lot," and "Tammy," are lacking even a vague sense of occasion.The end result, its maker's subsequent reputation notwithstanding, is very much a child of its time — an album cut to capitalize on a major hit single, and so loaded down with filler that the single's really all you need. Absent the single from that brew, and "The Teddy Bears Sing" isn't even that alluring. (Dave Thompson in AllMusic)

quinta-feira, 12 de janeiro de 2017

MOUSTAKI: LES DEUX PREMIERS LPs


LE MÉTÈQUE
Original released on LP Polydor 184851
(FRANCE, 1969)


Vinha do tempo em que os animais falavam, se quisermos perceber a doçura que há nesta expressão e na ideia quando olhamos a música popular. Significa que era um dos pilares, um dos últimos guardiões de uma época em que as palavras em francês ainda tinham – passe a redundância – uma palavra a dizer na definição das regras da canção antes da hegemonia esmagadora do império anglo-americano. Mais: o homem era um dos exemplos da disponibilidade gaulesa para aceitar gente de fora entre os seus maiores. Basta lembrar que Henri Salvador veio da Guiana, Jacques Brel e Adamo eram belgas, Serge Reggiani e Yves Montand nasceram em Itália, Charles Aznavour pertence a uma família da Arménia, Dalida nasceu no Egipto. Tal e qual como o homem que aqui nos traz, filho de gregos judeus [de língua italiana], mais um dos talentos descobertos por Edith Piaf, admirador incondicional de Georges Brassens ao ponto de lhe ter pedido emprestado para sempre o nome próprio, a que juntou depois uma adaptação do apelido. Símbolo do Maio de 68, vagabundo incorrigível das canções: é de Georges Moustaki [de seu verdadeiro nome Giuseppe Mustacchi] que aqui se fala, ao mesmo tempo que nos lembramos de "Le Métèque" ou de "Ma Liberté", de "Milord" ou de "Il Faudra Mourir un Jour"E voltamos a concluir que este parceiro de barba e cabelos soltos, tantas vezes fotografado com a viola que o seguia para toda a parte, personificou o lado bom da globalização ao assumir sem preconceitos, e com todas as vantagens para quem o ouvia, a sua miscigenação cultural.


IL Y AVAIT UN JARDIN
Original released on LP Polydor 2393.019
(FRANCE, 1971)


Gravou em, pelo menos, meia-dúzia de idiomas – francês, italiano, castelhano, português, grego e árabe – e teve oportunidade de completar os cinquenta anos de carreira, até que uma insuficiência respiratória ditou o irreversível e amargo adeus aos palcos e aos estúdios. Antes de oferecer "Milord", um clássico, a Edith Piaf [1958], já tinha mergulhado nas causas e nas boémias parisienses, tendo chegado à cidade em 1951. Tinha dezassete anos. Acabaria por ser cantado por muitos dos grandes: de Salvador a Herbert Pagani, sem esquecer Barbara, Montand, Reggiani, Françoise Hardy ou a eterna Juliette Gréco, a mesma que sobre a sua morte deixou justas sentenças: «Georges possuía uma doçura infinita e imenso talento. Era, como todos os poetas, alguém diferente, porque acaba sempre por ser essa diferença que conduz ao talento». Colaborou com alguns dos seus músicos de eleição, de Astor Piazzolla a António Carlos Jobim. Deixa cerca de trezentas canções como bandeiras de um património em que a simplicidade sempre andou de braço dado com a convicção, tendo igualmente assinado adaptações memoráveis como, por exemplo, a do "Fado Tropical", de Chico Buarque, a que chamou simplesmente "Portugal". Usou-a para festejar a Revolução Portuguesa. Despediu-se de nós na última digressão em 2008, quando lançou o espantoso disco "Vagabond". Com ele, morto aos 79 anos, desaparece provavelmente o último de um grupo, mais do que de uma geração, de geniais autores, daqueles que usamos como faróis de nevoeiro nos dias cinzentos como os de agora. Dele disse Leo Ferré: «Georges sussurra onde eu grito, mas é a mesma coisaFerré sabia o que dizia: depois de "Avec le Temps" não há canção maior sobre a erosão e o desgaste do amor do que 'La femme qui est dans mon lit / N'a plus vingt ans depuis longtemps' [canção "Sarah"]. É de Georges Moustaki, um daqueles que parte mas fica para sempre. (João Gobern, 2013).

quarta-feira, 11 de janeiro de 2017

THE STONES FIFTH ALBUM


Original released on LP Decca 
LK 4852 (mono) / SKL 4852 (stereo)
(UK 1967, January 20)


According to Robert Christgau, “Between the Buttons” was «among the greatest rock albums», and AllMusic's Richie Unterberger hailed it as «one of the Rolling Stones' strongest, most eclectic LPs». In a retrospective review for Entertainment Weekly, David Browne called the album «a cheeky set of sardonic Swinging London vaudeville rock», while Billboard magazine's Christopher Walsh wrote that «it's brimming with overlooked gems, the band delivering a captivating blend of folky, Beatles-esque pop and tough bluesy rockers.» Tom Moon wrote in The Rolling Stone Album Guide (2004) that the album was «lighter and thinner» than “Aftermath” and, «having belatedly discovered pop melody, Jagger and Richards were suddenly overdosing on the stuff.» Jim DeRogatis included “Between the Buttons” in his 2003 list of the essential psychedelic rock albums. The album is presented here in both mono and stereo versions.


The photo shoot for the album cover took place in November 1966 on Primrose Hill in North London. The photographer was Gered Mankowitz, who also shot the band photos for the cover of “Out of Our Heads”. The shoot took place at 5:30 in the morning following an all night recording session at Olympic Studios. Using a home-made camera filter constructed of black card, glass and Vaseline, Mankowitz created the effect of the Stones dissolving into their surroundings. The goal of the shoot was, in Mankowitz's words, «to capture the ethereal, druggy feel of the time; that feeling at the end of the night when dawn was breaking and they'd been up all night making music, stoned.» Brian Jones' dishevelled and ghostly appearance on the cover disturbed many of his fans, and critic David Dalton wrote that he looked «like a doomed albino raccoon.» The back cover of “Between the Buttons” is dominated by a six-panel cartoon accompanied by a rhythmic poem drawn by drummer Charlie Watts. When Watts asked Oldham what the title of the album would be, he told him it was "between the buttons", a term meaning "undecided". Watts gave the phrase to the title of his cartoon which in turn became the title of the album.

segunda-feira, 9 de janeiro de 2017

THE DOORS DEBUT ALBUM


Original released on LP Elektra EKL 4007
(US 1967, January 4)


A tremendous debut album, and indeed one of the best first-time outings in rock history, introducing the band's fusion of rock, blues, classical, jazz, and poetry with a knock-out punch. The lean, spidery guitar and organ riffs interweave with a hypnotic menace, providing a seductive backdrop for Jim Morrison's captivating vocals and probing prose. "Light My Fire" was the cut that topped the charts and established the group as stars, but most of the rest of the album is just as impressive, including some of their best songs: the propulsive "Break on Through" (their first single), the beguiling Oriental mystery of "The Crystal Ship," the mysterious "End of the Night," "Take It as It Comes" (one of several tunes besides "Light My Fire" that also had hit potential), and the stomping rock of "Soul Kitchen" and "Twentieth Century Fox." The 11-minute Oedipal drama "The End" was the group at its most daring and, some would contend, overambitious. It was nonetheless a haunting cap to an album whose nonstop melodicism and dynamic tension would never be equaled by the group again, let alone bettered. (Richie Unterberger in AllMusic)


DISCOGRAPHY

Formed July 1965, Los Angeles, CA, United States
Disbanded 1973

Jim Morrison (born 1943 > died 1971): vocals
Robby Krieger (born 1946): guitar
John Densmore (born 1944): drums
Ray Manzarek (born 1939 > died 2013): keyboards, bass, pedals, vocals

1967-01-04 LP THE DOORS (US Elektra EKL 4007): A1. Break On Through (To the Other Side); A2. Soul Kitchen; A3. The Crystal Ship; A4. Twentieth Century Fox; A5. Alabama Song (Whisky Bar); A6. Light My Fire; B1. Back Door Man; B2. I Looked at You; B3. End of the Night; B4. Take It as It Comes; B5. The End
1967-01 Sg (US Elektra EK 45611): A. Break On Through (To the Other Side); B. End of the Night
1967-05 Sg (US Elektra EK 45615): A. Light My Fire; B. The Crystal Ship
1967-09-11 Sg (US Elektra EK 45621): A. People Are Strange; B. Unhappy Girl
1967-09-25 LP STRANGE DAYS (US Elektra EKL 4014): A1. Strange Days; A2. You’re Lost Little Girl; A3. Love Me Two Times; A4. Unhappy Girl; A5. Horse Latitudes; A6. Moonlight Drive; B1. People Are Strange; B2. My Eyes Have Seen You; B3. I Can’t See Your Face in My Mind; B4. When the Music’s Over
1967-12 Sg (US Elektra EK 45624): A. Love Me Two Times; B. Moonlight Drive
1968-03 Sg (US Elektra EK 45628): A. The Unknown Soldier; B. We Could Be So Good Together
1968-07 Sg (US Elektra EK 45635): A. Hello, I Love You; B. Love Street
1968-07-12 LP WAITING FOR THE SUN (US Elektra EKS 4024): A1. Hello, I Love You; A2. Love Street; A3. Not to Touch the Earth; A4. Summer’s Almost Gone; A5. Wintertime Love; A6. The Unknown Soldier; B1. Spanish Caravan; B2. My Wild Love; B3. We Could Be So Good Together; B4. Yes, the River Knows; B5. Five to One
1968-12 Sg (US Elektra EK 45646): A. Touch Me; B. Wild Child
1969-03 Sg (US Elektra EK 45656): A. Wishful Sinful; B. Who Scared You
1969-06 Sg (US Elektra EK 45663): A. Tell All the People; B. Easy Ride
1969-07-18 LP THE SOFT PARADE (US Elektra EKS 75005): A1. Tell All the People; A2. Touch Me; A3. Shaman’s Blues; A4. Do It; A5. Easy Ride; B1. Wild Child; B2. Runnin’ Blue; B3. Wishful Sinful; B4. The Soft Parade
1969-09 Sg (US Elektra EK 45675): A. Runnin’ Blue; B. Do It
1970-02-09 LP MORRISON HOTEL (US Elektra EKS 75007): A1. Roadhouse Blues; A2. Waiting For the Sun; A3. You Make Me Real; A4. Peace Frog; A5. Blue Sunday; A6. Ship of Fools; B1. Land Ho!; B2. The Spy; B3. Queen of the Highway; B4. Indian Summer; B5. Maggie M’Gill
1970-07-20 LP ABSOLUTELY LIVE (US Elektra EKS 9002): A1. Who Do You Love; A2. Medley: Alabama Song (Whisky Bar) – Backdoor Man – Love Hides – Five to One; B1. Build Me a Woman; B2. When the Music’s Over; C1. Close to You; C2. Universal Mind; C3. Break On Through #2; D1. The Celebration of the Lizard; D2. Soul Kitchen
1971-04-29 LP L.A. WOMAN (US Elektra EKS 75011): A1. The Changeling; A2. Love Her Madly; A3. Been Down So Long; A4. Cars Hiss by My Window; A5. L.A. Woman; B1. L’America; B2. Hyacinth House; B3. Crawling King Snake; B4. The WASP (Texas Radio and the Big Beat); B5. Riders on the Storm
1971-05 Sg (US Elektra EKS 45726): A. Love Her Madly; B. (You Need Meat) Don’t Go No Further
1971-07 Sg (US Elektra EKS 45738): A. Riders on the Storm; B. The Changeling
1971-10-25 LP OTHER VOICES (US Elektra EKS 75017): A1. In the Eye of the Sun; A2. Variety Is the Spice of Life; A3. Ships Without Sails; A4. Tightrope Ride; B1. Down on the Farm; B2. I’m Horny, I’m Stoned; B3. Wandering Musician; B4. Hang on to Your Life
1972-07 LP FULL CIRCLE (US Elektra EKS 75039): A1. Get Up and Dance; A2. 4 Billion Souls; A3. Verdilac; A4. Hardwood Floor; A5. Good Rockin’; B1. The Mosquito; B2. The Piano Bird; B3. It Slipped My Mind; B4. The Peking King and the New York Queen
1978-11 LP AN AMERICAN PRAYER (Jim Morrison and the Doors) (US Elektra 5E-502): A1. Awake (Ghost Song-Dawn’s Highway-Newborn Awakening); A2. To Come of Age (Black Polished Crome-Latino Chrome-Angels and Sailors-Stoned Immaculate); A3. The Poet’s Dream (The Movie-Curses, Invocations); B1. World on Fire (American Night-Roadhouse Blues-The World on Fire-Lament-The Hitchhiker); B2. An American Prayer

quinta-feira, 5 de janeiro de 2017

BUCKINGHAM-NICKS

Original released on LP Polydor PD 5058
(US 1973, September 5)

While it will be hard to find, this lone album cut by a young and ambitious (and still romantically attached) Stevie Nicks and Lindsey Buckingham a short two years before joining Fleetwood Mac is well worth digging out for your turntable. Considering what the duo was to later accomplish, Buckingham Nicks is an engaging listen and served as a proving ground of sorts for both artists' songwriting chops and for Buckingham's skills as an emerging studio craftsman. It was a good enough resumé for Fleetwood Mac, who re-recorded the beautifully cerebral "Crystal" when the duo joined them for 1975's self-titled comeback album. The high-octane rockabilly of "Don't Let Me Down Again" became a staple of the band's concert sets well into the 1980s. Crisp, ringing acoustic guitars and a bottom-heavy rhythm section (using the talents of Waddy Wachtel, Jim Keltner, and Jerry Scheff) framed the pair's songs in a sound something akin to FM-ready folk-rock. Lesser known tracks like the glistening opener, "Crying in the Night," from Nicks and Buckingham's lonely-guy lament, "Without a Leg to Stand On," are on a par with their later mega hits. At the same time, the misogyny of Buckingham's "Lola, My Love" is a real eye-roller and the orchestral overtones of "Frozen Love" show that the two were over-reaching themselves just a bit. "Buckingham-Nicks" was a stiff however and the couple had lost their deal with Polydor. But 1975, of course, proved to be one of their better years. (John Duffy in AllMusic)

quarta-feira, 4 de janeiro de 2017

STEVIE NICKS: The First 2 Albums

Famed for her mystical chanteuse image, singer/songwriter Stevie Nicks enjoyed phenomenal success not only as a solo artist but also as a key member of Fleetwood Mac. Stephanie Lynn Nicks was born May 26, 1948, in Phoenix, Arizona; the granddaughter of a frustrated country singer, she began performing at the age of four, and occasionally sang at the tavern owned by her parents. Nicks started writing songs in her midteens, and joined her first group, the Changing Times, while attending high school in California. During her senior year, Nicks met fellow student Lindsey Buckingham, with whom she formed the band Fritz along with friends Javier Pacheco and Calvin Roper. Between 1968 and 1971, the group became a popular attraction on the West Coast music scene, opening for Jimi Hendrix, Janis Joplin, and Creedence Clearwater Revival.



Ultimately, tensions arose over the amount of attention paid by fans to Nicks' pouty allure, and after three years Fritz disbanded; Buckingham remained her partner, however, and soon became her lover as well. After moving to Los Angeles, the duo recorded its 1973 debut LP, "Buckingham Nicks". Despite a cover that featured the couple nude, the album flopped; however, it caught the attention of the members of Fleetwood Mac, who invited Buckingham and Nicks to join their ranks in 1974. In quick time, the revitalized group achieved unparalleled success: after the LP "Fleetwood Mac" topped the charts in 1975, the band recorded 1977's "Rumours", which sold over 17 million copies and stood for several years as the best-selling album of all time. (Jason Akeny in AllMusic)


BELLA DONNA
(Original released on LP Modern 38139-1)
(US 1981, July 27)


Stevie Nicks' solo career was off to an impressive, if overdue, start with "Bella Donna", which left no doubt that she could function quite well without the input of her colleagues in Fleetwood Mac. The album yielded a number of hits that seemed omnipresent in the '80s, including the moving "Leather and Lace" (which unites Nicks with Don Henley), the poetic "Edge of Seventeen," and her rootsy duet with Tom Petty, "Stop Draggin' My Heart Around." But equally engaging are less exposed tracks like the haunting "After the Glitter Fades." Hit producer Jimmy Iovine wisely avoids over-producing, and keeps things sounding organic on this striking debut. (Alex Henderson in AllMusic)






THE WILD HEART
(Original released on LP Modern 90084-1)
(US 1983, June 10)


Stevie Nicks was following both her debut solo album, "Bella Donna" (1981), which had topped the charts, sold over a million copies (now over four million), and spawned four Top 40 hits, and Fleetwood Mac's "Mirage" (1982), which had topped the charts, sold over a million copies (now over two million), and spawned three Top 40 hits (including her "Gypsy"), when she released her second solo album, "The Wild Heart". She was the most successful American female pop singer of the time. Not surprisingly, she played it safe: "The Wild Heart" contained nothing that would disturb fans of her previous work and much that echoed it. As on "Bella Donna", producer Jimmy Iovine took a simpler, more conventional pop/rock approach to the arrangements than Fleetwood Mac's inventive Lindsey Buckingham did on Nicks's songs, which meant the music was more straightforward than her typically elliptical lyrics.

Iovine did get a Mac-like sound on "Nightbird," in which Nicks repeated her invocation to "the white winged dove" from "Bella Donna"'s "Edge of Seventeen," and on "Sable on Blond," a "Gypsy" soundalike. His most daring effort was the album's leadoff single, "Stand Back," which boasted a disco tempo. Elsewhere, the songs were largely interchangeable with those on "Bella Donna", even down to the obligatory duet with Tom Petty. Nicks seemed to know what she was up to - one song was called "Nothing Ever Changes." As a result, "The Wild Heart" sold to the faithful - it made the Top Ten, sold over a million copies, and spawned three Top 40 hits ("Stand Back," "Nightbird," and "If Anyone Falls"). And that was appropriate: if you loved "Bella Donna", you would like "The Wild Heart" very much. (William Ruhlmann in AllMusic)


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