Friday, May 15, 2015

68 – Story of a Rock and Roll Band – Randy Newman – 1979 and 76 - Diary of Horace Wimp – ELO - 1979



                The Story of a Rock and Roll Band 




                        “The Story of a Rock and Roll Band” is Randy Newman’s homage to ELO, a parody/history of how they came to be. It was on 1979’s “Born Again”, from which #65, “It’s Money That I Love” also came.

They were six fine English boys
Who knew each other in Birmingham
They bought a drum and guitar
Started a rock-roll band

And Johnny played little violin
And Bobby Joe played the big violin
The one that stands on the floor
They were all in the rock-roll band

Their first song sounded like this
Please get me a witness
Please get me a witness

Right off, they needed a name
Someone said, "How 'bout the Renegades ?"
Johnny said, "Well I don't know.
I prefer E.L.O."

I love their "Mr. Blue Skies"
Almost my favorite is "Turn to Stone"
And how 'bout "Telephone Line"?
I love that E.L.O.

Yes, they were from Birmingham, but the rest of the story is made up. There was no “Johnny” who played the little violin, nor a “Bobby Joe” who played the big violin, “…the one that stands on the floor.” I also don’t think they were ever called the Renegades; ELO was created from the Move, by Roy Wood and Jeff Lynne.

            The first ELO song (10538 Overture) also didn’t have any lyric like…”please get me a witness,” 

            Newman’s production mimics that of Jeff Lynne, who took over ELO from Roy Wood, which is on display in the other song, ELO’s “Diary of Horace Wimp”, which is from 1979’s “Discovery”, when ELO was starting to get away from actual strings and beginning to use synthesizers (though in the accompanying video, the violin and cellos can be seen and heard).

            1979 was a pretty good year for music and you can read  #6-1979 to see what was going on in my life then.

Wednesday, May 13, 2015

67- Lilywhite – Cat Stevens - 1970



            Lilywhite - Cat Stevens


           This is the last song on Cat’s “Mona Bone Jakon”, his first album after his recuperation from tuberculosis. 


            It’s short and sweet, summing up all that’s gone before (I think)…


Back upon the mended road I pause.
Taking time to check the dial
And the Lilywhite, I never knew her name
But she'll be passing my way sometime again


I raise my hand and touch the wheel of change
Taking time to check the dial
And the Lilywhite, I never knew her name
But she'll be passing my way sometime again
She'll be passing my way sometime again.





            Those of you who remember vinyl know that songs were placed in a particular order, on Sides 1 and 2, for maximum impact, and it’s something we’ve lost with CDs and digital downloads. Back then, maybe every song on the album wasn’t a great song, but taken together the album held together as a whole because of the way the songs were placed.


            This reminds me of my second favorite podcast on the Steve Dahl Network, Bob andRon’s Record Club.  It’s basically a rollicking, stream of consciousness dialogue between two likeable potheads (and I use that term with all affection) who talk about the different albums they’ve acquired and their attempts to navigate the digital age, where turntables are rare. And their taste in music is way more eclectic than mine, from Frank Zappa and Hawkwind to the Beach Boys and Cat Stevens (now you know why I love them so).


            Where else do you hear about “The 12 Dreams of Dr. Sardonicus”? Their say so alone will get me to buy this album someday when I have disposable income again.


Bob and Ron consistently make me laugh out loud and they’ve re-kindled my interest in vinyl, especially the work of the Turtles, the underappreciated pop group of the 60s (and led me to read Howard Kaylan’s biography, “Shell Shocked: My Life with The Turtles, Flo and Eddie, and Frank Zappa, etc.”)


            Sadly, my turntable is only hooked up to my computer right now, to digitize my several hundred albums (someday, not right now with a 4 year old and a nine year old), but when I hook it back up to my stereo…


           

Monday, May 11, 2015

66- Book of Days – 1991 and 100 – Orinoco Flow – 1988 – Enya






I know…I know…Enya…New Age…lame…but I find her music very calming and it reminds me of one of my favorite movies of the 1990s, LA Story, written by and starring Steve Martin.


In it Martin is a wacky TV weatherman in LA (who pre-records his forecasts because they’re always the same in LA), who falls in love (after finding out his girlfriend is sleeping with his agent) with Victoria Tennant (Martin’s wife at the time) and gets messages from the freeway traffic condition signs concerning this new relationship.


Lynn and I saw this with Kevin, my college roommate and his wife Janet (who sadly succumbed to ovarian cancer at 40, leaving Kevin to raise his 7 year old son alone) at a theater in Chicago and I recall they were not as enamored with it as I was.


Neither of these two songs appears in the film, but after you hear one Enya, you’ve heard them all.