Showing posts with label Phil Spector. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Phil Spector. Show all posts

Wednesday, January 7, 2009

TALK TO THE HAND, BUT LISTEN TO THE WALL


Okay, this will be quick. Just one last post about the Wall of Sound before we move on to other things. I found this video in my travels around YouTube, and if you haven’t seen it, it’s worth the viewing just for the old photos, not to mention the music. See how many your can guess, the link will take you to the answers on the More Info drop-down.




Graffiti wall photo from WIkimedia commons
Video by YT member olmerpictureshow
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=X2nA_9D-mMs

Saturday, January 3, 2009

WE GOT OUR BACKS TO MONO AND WE’RE UP AGAINST THE WALL


Yesterday’s playlist for me was even more eclectic than usual. I started out with the Chambers Brothers, “Time Has Come Today” in a video I saw on somebody’s blog (and unfortunately didn’t bookmark it, and now can’t remember which of you it was, so can’t credit you, sorry!!) Anyway, from there I bounced around the later 60s, a little Iron Butterfly (In-A-Gadda-Da-Vida) a little Deep Purple (Hush) and little Scott McKenzie (If you’re goin’ to San-Fran-cisco… After that, a big leap pover to Berlioz, and then some Canadian talent – Cape Breton’s finest, Jimmy Rankin. I ended the day listening to the oldies station on my dish, and was lucky to catch a string (unintentional, I’m sure) of 60s Wall of Sound hits, produced by Phil Spector.

Phil has fallen on hard times of late, but back in the 60s he was the Boy Genius of the music industry. His signature sound was really something to behold – still is. The Wall of Sound (WOS) was a little something he whipped up using huge conglomeration of multiple musicians, unorthodox combinations of instruments, a whole swack of tracks and an echo machine. The resultant music hit you like a wall…well, of sound. And while he denounced stereo in favor of mono, after he got through with it, it sounded like a tsunami of sound that enveloped the listening in pop splendor that stereo just can’t touch. The studio musicians became famously known as The Wrecking Crew. Here, from Wikipedia:

In the 1960s, Spector usually worked at the Gold Star Studios in Los Angeles because of its exceptional echo chambers, essential to the Wall of Sound technique. Microphones in the recording studio captured the sound, which was then transmitted to an echo chamber—a basement room outfitted with speakers and microphones. The signal from the studio would be played through the speakers and would reverberate around the room, being picked up by the microphones. The echo-laden sound was then channeled back to the control room, where it was transferred to tape. The natural reverberation and echo from the hard walls of the room gave his productions their distinctive quality and resulted in a rich and complex sound when played on AM radio, with an impressive depth rarely heard in mono recordings.

WOS number came in two basic speeds: slow and mellow and here-we-go. Here’s one of each. I purposely picked selections from YouTube that don’t have live footage or other distracting videos. Not this time. So turn up your speakers, and listen to that fullness of sound, that great big wall of it, and remind yourself how lucky you are that you born at the right time...

Ike and Tina Turner “River Deep, Mountain High”



The Righteous Brothers “You’ve Lost That Loving Feeling”




Videos by YT memeber tinturnerfan84, vwestlife
Album cover at http://rateyourmusic.com

Wednesday, March 12, 2008

WHEREVER THAT RIVER GOES - SOME TRIVIA ABOUT EASY RIDER

Like many baby boomers – at least the older ones like me – whenever I hear the words “easy rider” I can only think of one thing. And to all you smarty-pants types out there, no I’m not talking about those recumbent exercise bicycles that they have in all the senior centers. Not yet anyway. No, I think of that 1969 psychedelic road movie staring Peter Fonda, Dennis Hopper, and Jack Nicholson in his breakout role. I think of Easy Rider.

Despite the fact that at this very moment I’m looking out my window at gi-normus plowed-up piles of lake effect snow, the roads are clear, and when the March sun shines, the motorcyclists come out and roar about. Nothing says spring more than robins piping and hogs revving. So I decided to celebrate with a post about Easy Rider, and that’s when I made an astounding discovery. The term “easy rider” neither started, nor ended, with the famous hippie era movie! It most often has (no big surprise) a sexual connotation, but seems to be applicable to women and men. Check it out.

Some of the earliest known origins of the term comes from late 19th and early 20th Century, particularly in African-American blues culture. Over time, it referred to

  • A woman who was sexually experienced and, ahem, good at said activity. Well, I guess that makes sense. But it also can refer to…
  • A man, which might make even more sense, if you follow me. And that’s all I’m going to say on that particular subject.
  • Other trains of thought suggest that “easy rider” dates to the time of the Great Depression, when hobos road the rails. Arguments for that interpretation say that the term “easy rider” was pretty much interchangeable with “C.C. Rider” and its variation, “See See Rider.” Some say it’s comes form the ubiquitous Colorado Central line (with two big capital Cs stenciled on the boxcars).
  • Some say it meant any slow moving train.
  • Still others will swear on a stack of Bibles that C.C. refers to the old time itinerant Circuit Court judges.
  • In WWII, the term was adapted for use by G.I.s who hired local young women as housekeepers-with-benefits, and thus had a pretty “easy ride” (clean living quarters, regular sex).
  • Here come the 60s and free love. Same general application of the term, although how that applies to the film Easy Rider isn’t that clear to me. Dennis Hopper, who directed Easy Rider, said the term applied to pimps. But Captain America and Billy weren’t pimps. They got their grubstake from a big cocaine deal (cameo by Phil Spector!) What can I say, folks, I just reports ‘em like I find ‘em.
  • Easy rider can also be Cockney rhyming slang for a pint of cider. And Bob’s your Uncle!
  • “Easy rider” can be found is several Led Zeppelin songs – “Out on the Tiles” is supposed to be one, I checked it out at a few lyrics sites, but I’m not totally convinced.
  • Jimi Hendrix paid his respects to the tradition with a number called “Ezy Rider.”
  • Back in the late 50s a group, Terry Gilkyson and the Easy Riders, had a big Island-flavored hit with “Marianne” (remember “all day all night Marianne, down by the seaside siftin’ sand”?)
  • Terry Gilkyson’s daughter, Eliza, is a singer/songwriter and has written a song to her father, called (you got it) “Easy Rider.”
  • Easy Rider is the name of a transportation smartcard in England.
  • Easy Riders is a Norwegian band, and their self-titled first album in 2004.

I’m sure the list will continue to grow as time marches on; it’s a pretty sure thing that Easy Rider is a permanent part of our global culture.

My fave from the Easy Rider soundtrack - http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=M597-6lhKrg

Marianne - http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1cuvB2XrP_M