At the Movies- The Lyricists

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Song and Dance has been an integral part of Indian cinema since the talkies. Mainstream Hindi movies along with commercial regional cinema have effectively used music and songs cleverly weaved into the narrative either to keep the storyline moving or to convey a character’s thoughts and feelings. Pain, joy, love, challenges, victory, defeat and every other emotion possible have all been essayed on screen through music and the lyrics accompanying them. 

Lyricists like writers were a much sought after breed. Back in the day during the peak creativity years as cinema was evolving, the film industry attracted and recruited phenomenal talent and a lot of published authors and poets found themselves in the studios penning the most intense and philosophical lines as they found another outlet for their creativity.

These hugely talented lyricists met and mingled with highly creative directors, script writers and movie stars which was to lead to some of the best work cinema or published poetry has seen as young an old stalwarts came together to create something everlasting.

Whilst the talkies, as they were called, started in the early 1930’s, the period between 1940 and 1960 is referred to as the Golden Age of Indian Cinema. This is not to negate the works that came through the classic 70’s or thereafter and with the resurgence in content, technology and craft in recent years but historically the period between the 40’s and 60’s is called the Golden Age for good reason.

This period was the height of innovation and technique as a young recently independent and poor nation struggled to find normalcy in the aftermath of the freedom struggle. Social disparities, societal constructs, political upheaval, industrialisation all provided a lot of fodder for the creative minds of the day and literature and cinema benefitted.

While there have been great lyricists and music directors through the ages, this will feature on the creative output and the minds that worked between the 40’s and 70’s.

To understand song writers and poets, it would also be fitting to shed some light on the music composers of the day. They came from diverse backgrounds, the great SD Burman from the Tripura Royal family, Naushad one of the most prolific composers of his time, the powerful duos of Shankar- Jaikishen, Laxmikant -Pyarelal, MadanMohan etc. All these were stalwarts in Indian classical and adapted it to light folk and western instrumentation to create a unique sound.

These music directors were powerful entities in themselves and worked with a chosen clique of singers, musicians, arrangers and lyricists. Lyricists themselves were also powerful and had on occasion refused to work with certain  music directors or had them replaced on projects if they didn’t think they were suitable. All this led to coteries, ego clashes and some of the most creative work of that era.

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Shailendra (1923-1966)

While the more famous names Sahir Ludhinavi, Majrooh Sultanpuri and in later years Anand Bakshi come to mind as some of the top most Hindi lyricists, Shailendra was a titan,  ‘geeton ka rajkumar,’ the prince of songs.  He was Raj Kapoor’s main songwriter and worked on all of his films. An idealist, he had first refused to work for Raj Kapoor when he was offered the opportunity at a mushiara after the reading of his poem ‘Jalta hai Punjab.’ Besides RK Studios he worked with Dev Anand and Naveketan and Bimal Roy.

Shailendra’s film credits include Awaara, Shree 420, Sangam, Anari, Chori Chori, Dil Ek Mandir, Guide, Kala Bazaar, Teesri kasam, Mera Naam Joker, Madhumati, Junglee, Dil apna preet parayi, Harayali aur Raasta, Bandhini, Door gagan ki chaaon mein, Yahudi, Aah amongst many others.

His lyrics had far deeper meaning and a philosophical approach. His ‘wahan kaun hai tera musafir’ song from Guide preaches wisdom of the ages and exhorts the traveller to just take it easy and live life in the present.  The monumental ‘ae bhai zara dekh ke chalo’ from Mera naam Joker which basically throws light on the impermanence of it all and compares life to a circus show as Shakespeare did when he wrote ‘ All the world’s a stage…’

‘tu jahan aaya hai woh tera ghar nahin galli nahin gaon nahin kucha nahin

basti nahin rasta nahin duniya hai

aur pyare duniya yeh circus hai…’

in a later stanza he describes the cycle of life and karma   and triumph and defeat              ‘upar se neeche neeche se upar toh aana jaana padta hai and  ‘hero se joker ban jaana padhta hai…’

His understanding of human character and its failings and triumphs allowed him express himself writing for a variety of filmi situations and emotions. He was equally at home with light folk based tunes such as ‘ramaiya vastavaiya, ‘paan kahaye saiyaan hamar ‘ ‘chalat musafir’  a tip of the hat no doubt to his childhood in Mathura, and the romantic songs from Shree 420, Madhumati and Sangam. His track for Barsaat became the first ever title song to be  featured on film. When he was taken in his fledging days by Raj Kapoor to K A Abbas’ house for the narration of Awaara which lasted two and a half hours, when asked by Raj Kapoor whether he’d understood the script and story, he summed it up in two lines ‘gardish mein hoon aasman ka tarra hoon, awaara hoon.’

His understanding of phoentics introduced new words to the lyric lexicon such as zindagani, a word not used before. He wrote ‘khoya khoya chaand’ composed by SD Burman by asking RD Burman to play percussion on a matchbox. He also introduced the concept of riddles and answers in his lyrics like the song ‘ek sawaal mein karoon’ where one character asks a question and the other answers or counters with another question of their own.

Shailendra’s poems are more reflective of society and its taboos, poverty, societal struggles as well as a commentary on the politics of the day. He shot straight from the hip, was a man who stood up for and never compromised his principles. His lyrics were accepted by producers as they were, with no changes. He also used poetry as a platform to voice the cry for freedom during the Independence struggle.

His songs have an optimism about them even though they talk of the daily struggles and hardships the poor and oppressed face. Like this one from Awara

‘abad nahin barbad nahin gaata hoon khushi ke geet magar,

zakhmon se bhara seena hai mera, hasti hai magar yeh mast nazar…’

Guide’s ‘wahan kaun hai tera’ is an introspective philosophical look at life and its meaning

‘wahan kaun hai tera musafir jaayega kahan

dum le le ghadi bhar yeh chaiyan payega kahan

kehte hain gyaani duniya hai paani

paani pe likhi lihayi sab ki hai dekhi sab ki hai jaani haath kisi ke na aayi

kuch tera na mera musafir jaayega kahan…’

His ‘Ae Bhai zara dekh ke chalo’ from Mera Naam Joker talks of the impermanence of all things including life. Life is compared to a circus show and how everyone plays their part but  ultimately are just puppets in the hands of the Creator. It also exhorts the listener to be positive and strong and overcome the obstacles and struggles life puts in one’s path

‘ girne se darta hai kyun,marne se darta hai kyun,

thokar tu jab tak na khayega, zindagi kya cheez hai nahin jaan payega

rota hua aaya hai rota chalajayega…’

‘ jeena yahan marna yahan’ from the same film is another example…

‘kal khel mein hum ho na ho gardish mein taare rahenge sada

bhoolenge hum bhoolenge tum par hum tumhare rahenge sada

rahenge yahin apne nishan iske siva jaana kahan…’

The song was completed by his son Shaily on his passing. Raj Kapoor said later it captured the spirit of Shailendra.

Shailendra will never be forgotten and his songs and poems will live on forever. Not for nothing did Gulzar call him India’s greatest lyricist.

Sahir Ludhianvi (1921-1980)

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Another great son of the soil, poet and lyricist Sahir Ludhianvi, born Abdul Hayee, penned some of the greatest songs in Hindi cinema for producers and music directors like Guru Dutt, S D Burman, Yash Chopra, Khayyam, Dev Anand amongst others. Sahir Ludhianvi was already a published poet when he entered the film industry. His book Talkhiyan written when he was 22 was published in 1945.  It became one of the most popular published works second only to Ghalib. A revolutionary with communist leanings, he  like others of the day used his pen  as a weapon and wrote about the daily struggles of the poor and oppressed. He captured the the pain of the daily wage labourer, the farmer, the prostitute, partition and victims of the system. His next work, the long  Parchaeeyaan also came out soon after catapulting him among the top poets of the day.

He was born in Ludhiana but later went to Lahore. His strong revolutionary ideas and communist leanings forced him to leave Lahore when a warrant was issued for his arrest and he made his way to Bombay where he lived till his death.

He started writing lyrics in 1949 but it was only in 1951 that with Naujavan and later Dev Anand’s Baazi, with music by SD Burman directed by Guru Dutt that he found success.

Credited for raising the profile of lyricists, he was the one who insisted on lyricists being credited on film posters and had All India Radio announce and credit lyricists of the songs they would play on the radio. He also insisted on being paid Re. 1 more than Lata Mangeshkar, arguably the greatest playback singer of the Indian film industry. He was instrumental in replacing the top music directors of the day Shankar -Jaikishen  with Khayaam for the Raj Kapoor starrer Phir Subah Hogi based on Fyodor Dostoveski’s Crime and Punishment saying the movie required music by one who had not only read the book but understood it as well. His ego and persona did come in the way of his relationships though, which eventually led to the break up of his extremely successful partnership with S.D. Burman with whom he did 15 odd films between 1951-57.

His songs from Pyaasa are monumental. Just these two gems are enough for his name to be written in golden letters as one of India’s greatest.

‘ yeh mehlon, yeh taqton yeh taajon ki duniya

yeh insaan ke dushman samaajon ki duniya,

yeh daulat ke bhooke rawazon ki duniya

yeh duniya agar mil bhi jaaye toh kya hai… ‘

One of Nehru’s favourite lines from the song                                                                               ‘yeh kooche yeh nilamghar dilkushi yeh loot te hue karwaan zindagi ke,                          kahan hai kahan hai muhafiz khuda ke, jine naaz hai hindustan pe kahan hain..’

His relationship with Amrita Pritam which could not be sustained found its way into the following from ‘Gumrah’

‘tarruff rog ban jaaye to usse bhulan behtar

talukk bhoj ban jaaye toh usko todna accha

woh afsana jisse anjaam tak laana na ho mumkin

usse ek khoobsurat modh dekar chorrna accha…’

This philosophical song from ‘Hum Dono’ teaches you how to really live life in the present and take its ups and downs in one’s stride. It puts into words the fine art of living…

‘main zindagi ka saath nibhata chala gaya

har fiqr ko dhuein mein udata chala gaya

gham aur khushi ka farq na mehsoos ho jahan

main dil ko uss muqam pe laata chala gaya

jo mil gaya ussi ko muqaddar samajh lya

jo kho gaya ussi ko bhulata chala gaya…’

The optimistic song from Humraaz is a primer on how to live one’s life

‘na mooh chuppa ke jiyo aur na sar jhuka ke jiyo

ghamon ka daur bhi aaye toh muskare ke jiyo

ghata mein chupke sitarein fana nahin hote

andheri raat ke dil mein diye jalake jiyo

na jaane kaun sa pal maut ki amanat ho

har ek pal ki khushi ko gale laga ke jiyo

His romantic songs weaved the elements of nature beautifully to express the longing, desires and feelings of the heart like this gem from the movie ‘Railway Platform’

‘Chaand madham hai aasman chup hai

neend ki god mein jahan chup hai

duur vaadi mein doodhiya baadal jhuk ke parbat ko pyaar karte hain

dil mein naakaam hasratein lekar hum tera intezaar karte hain’

His  other lighter and romantic songs like ‘ae meri zohra zabeen’ from Waqt  ‘ abhi na jao chorkar from ‘Hum Dono’ or the  light folk tunes from ‘Naya Daur’ and the intense poetry from ‘Kabhie Kabhie’ showcase his versatility and depth as a songwriter and poet.

His main pal do pal ka shaayar hoon from Kabhie Kabhie  has the lines ‘kal koi unko yaad kare kyun mujhko koi yaad kare’ but Sahir Ludhianvi has written his name in golden letters across the sky…

There is talk of a biopic on his life with Sharukh Khan slated to play Sahir. Lets hope the movie rolls and we get to relive and celebrate his life and his work…

Majrooh Sultanpuri (1919-2000)

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One of the most prominent lyricists through the ages, Majrooh Sultanpuri or Asrar Ul Hassan Khan, was an Urdu poet born in the 1920’s just like the illustrious lyricists listed above. He was at the forefront of the Progressive Writers Movement and was even jailed with other leftists of the time in 1949 and spent two years in prison because he refused to apologise. He came to Bombay in 1945 and after resisting the lure of Hindi Cinema, he finally wrote a few lines for the great composer Naushad for the film Shah Jahan on the basis of which he was signed on and didn’t look back in all the sixty years he spent in the industry.

Schooled in a Madrassa he actually studied to be a doctor. He practiced as a hakim and the language used by hakims in those days was Farsi. His knowledge of Farsi and Urdu made him a formidable force.

His work in the Dilip Kumar starrer Andaz was highly successful as was the song  he wrote at Raj Kapoor’s request for Teesri Kasam ‘ Duniya banane wale kya tere mann mein samayi ‘ KL Saigal had said he wanted Majrooh’s song ‘jab dil hi tooth gaya’ to played at his funeral which was actually played in accordance with his wishes.

He worked with all the greats including  Naushad, SD Burman, Shankar- Jaikishen, Laxmikant- Pyaarelal, Kalyanji -Anandji and RD Burman. He also worked with the next generation of directors through the 80’s and 90’s including Anu Malik, Anand -Milind Jatin -Lalit etc

While his poetry or shaiyari was a commentary on the Independence struggle and the socio political landscape of his time, his songs were rich in capturing the diversity of human experience. His songs in Yaadon ki baraat, Qayamat se Qayamat Tak, Teesri Manzil, Baharon Ke Sapne, Tumsa Nahin Dekha and  so many others will always be remembered. His understanding of the finer nuances of human relationships gave birth to some of the most romantic tunes of the day that are still heard, hummed and sung by many to this day like this one from Teesri Manzil  produced by Nasir Hussain with whom he did 13 films from Paying Guest to Akele Hum Akele Tum  – ‘o lekar yeh haseen jalwe tum bhi na kahan pahunche aakhir toh mere dil tak kadmon ke nishaan pahunche’  or the irrepressible optimist lover’s call ‘vaadiyan mera daman raaste meri baahein jao mere siwa tum kahan jaaoge’ from Abhilasha. Poets of the day used metaphors and similes from nature to highlight human feelings and emotion and Majrooh Sultanpuri did it admirably as is evident in all his songs especially from Mere Jeevan Saathi .

His work in Dosti though was outstanding and the songs he created whether the pathos filled ‘Chahunga main tumhe shaam savere’ or the philosophical ‘rahi manwa dukh ki chinta’ touched a chord and left an indelible mark.

‘Duur hai manzil duur sahi, pyaar hamara kya kum hai

pagh mein kaante lac sahi per yeh sahara kya kam hai

humraah tera koi apna toh hai

sukh hai ik chaaon dhalti aati hai jaati hai dukh toh apna saathi hai’

One of his most quoted couplets best mirrors his life… ‘main akela hi nikla tha janib e manzil magar log saath aate gaye aur karvaan banta gaya…’

Hasrat Jaipuri (1922-1999)

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Born Iqbal Ahmed in Jaipur he came to Bombay in 1940. He had already started writing poetry and was discovered at a mushiara by Prithviraj Kapoor who recommended him to Raj Kapoor. He started his career writing for Raj Kapoor’s ‘Barsaat’ and together with Shailendra remained in the RK Camp throughout his life. When Shailendra turned producer with the Raj Kapoor starrer Teesri Kasam, he requested Hasrat to write the lyrics for the film.

A published poet both of Hindi and Urdu poetry, Hasrat Jaipuri made his mark in the film world penning lyrics for  the great Raj Kapoor. Films like Barsaat, Mera Naam Joker, Prem Rog, Ram Teri Ganga Maili and Shammi Kapoor starrers like Junglee, Andaz etc cemented his place in filmdom. In fact the philospohical ‘zindagi ek safar hai suhana’ from the Shammi Kapoor starrer Andaz but ‘picturized’ on the superstar of the day Rajesh Khanna, went on to become a hugely popular hit hummed to this day.

‘zindagi ek safar hai suhana yahan kal ya ho kisne jaana

maut aani hai aayegi ek din jaan jaani hai jayegi ek din

aisi baaton se kya ghabrana yahan kal kya ho kisne jaana…’

His early days in Bombay though were a far cry from the dizzying success he saw later. He lived on the footpaths and worked as a bus conductor for the princely sum of Rs 11/- a job he did for 8 years. He never charged women for tickets apparently and said the experience helped him  tremendously in his writings as he saw the daily trips and the coming and going of so many passengers as a metaphor for life itself. It was his poem Mazdoor ki laash written about a daily wage labourer who used to sleep next to him on the footpath that caught the attention of the great Prithviraj Kapoor at a mushiara. He introduced hime to Raj Kapoor who was working on Barsaat at the time. The rest is history.

Shakeel Badayuni ( 1916-1970)

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Born in Badaun UP, Shakeel Badayuni moved to Bombay in 1944 after having attended Aligarh Muslim University and winning a lot of shayari competitions. While other poets were writing about the issues of the day, the poor and the freedom struggle, he focussed on romance and matters of the heart. Asked to sum up his shayari in one line by the great Naushad, he said ‘hum dard ka afsana duniya ko sunna denge, har dil mein mohabbat ki aag laga denge… ‘ He went on to work with Naushad for 24 years forming one of the most successful collaborations of all time with movies like Mughal -e- Azam, Baiju Bawra, Mother India, Deedar, Ganga Jamuna, Mere Mehboob. He also worked with other music directors like Ravi and S D Burman for films like Sahib Biwi aur Ghulam, Chaudhvi ka Chaand etc.

The qawaali from Mughal-e Azam showcases his craft and understanding of romance         ‘agar dil gham se khaali ho to jeene ka mazaa kya hai agar na ho khoon e jigar to ashq peene ka mazza kya hai mohabbbat mein zara aanso bahakar hum bhi dekhenge…’          as does ‘Chaudhvi ka chaand ho ya aftab ho jo bhi ho tum lajaawab ho…’and of course the evergreen ‘pyaar kiya toh darna kya…  His versatility was evident with Ganga Jamuna where he was equally at home in Bhojpuri and dialects of the heartland as he was in Urdu.

These nuggets from his poems encapsulate his life…                                                                jab hua zikr zamaane mein mohabbat ka toh mujhe shakeel apne dil e nadaan pe rona aaya…

mujhe fakr hai meri shaayari meri zindagi se judaa nahin…

Anand Bakshi (1930-2002)

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Prolific lyricist Anand Bakshi is credited with writing over 3500 songs and in a career spanning several decades he has written songs for 636 films with about 205 directors capturing almost every emotion and feeling known to man. Born in Rawalpindi, Pakistan, his family arrived in India in 1947 and settled in Delhi. He joined the Navy at 14 was relieved of his duties at 16 and then later joined the Army at 20. He left the Army in 1956 to try his hand as a songwriter, singer and composer.

To compete with the stalwarts of the day like Shailendra, Hasrat Jaipuri, Sahir Ludhianvi, Kaifi Azmi and Majrooh Sultanpuri was no mean feat and it was along time before he got a break writing for some decent films. His determination to get work was such that once after perstering Roshan the music director to listen to his songs, Roshan told him to come to his house in Santa Cruz at 10 the following morning. The next day it was raining heavily in Bombay and all transportation services had ceased. Anand Bakshi was up at 6 and decided to walk from his shared room in Borivilli to Santa Cruz and arrived at the appointed hour.

It took 50 films and and almost nine years to get his first super hit Himalay ki god mein which released in 1965 proving that patience, persistence and determination pays. The film catapulted him into the big time. Jab jab phool khile also came out in 1965 where each song was a major hit. In aaye din bahar ke he went against the trend of normal romantic or ‘sad’ songs by writing a song written keeping the enemy or the one who has hurt you in mind ‘ mere dushman tu mere dosti ko tarse…’

His understanding of all styles of music from classical to folk to pop and his ability to write so that the common man could understand the lyrics by simplifying language  from the high flowing poetry that the other stalwarts were writing, made him extremely popular.

Milan and Farz in 1967  and then Aradhana cemented his position as the premier lyricist of his time. By the 70’s he was writing songs for about 80% of the films and was the then superstar Rajesh Khanna’s lyricist of choice. While most of his songs were of the romantic nature a few philosophical gems did come out of his pen like these immortal songs:-

‘yeh jeevan hai iss jeevan ka yehi hai chaon dhoop

thode gham hai thodi khushiyaan yehi hai rang roop

yeh na socho iss mein apni haar hai ke jeet hai

usse apna lo jo bhi jeevan ki reet hai…’

‘zindagi ke safar mein guzar jaate hain jo makam woh phir nahin aate

kuch log ik roz jo bichar jaate hain woh hazaron ke aane se milte nahin

umr bhar chahe koi pukara kare unka naam woh phir nahin aate…’

Amar Prem is another movie which had a lot of songs with a varied look at life and society and love.  From the thought provoking ‘ chingari koi bhadke’ to the tongue – in- cheek ‘yeh kya hua’, or the social ‘kuch toh log kahenge with the line tu kaun hai tera naam hai kya seeta bhi yahin badnaam hui phir kyun sansaar ki baaton se bheeg gaye tere naina’

His song ‘gaadi bula rahi hai’ beautifully used the train as a metaphor for life and he says his biggest award was when he received a post card from the hinterland written by a poor man who had lay down on the tracks to give his life when he heard the song play from a hutment nearby and the lines ‘gaadi ka naam na kar badnaam patri pe rakh ke sar ko, himmat na haar kar intezaar aa laut jaaen ghar ko, yeh raat ja rahi hai woh subah aa rahi hai…’ made him change his mind and saved his life. Each verse in the song is an inspiration to keep going no matter what like these exhorting the traveller to overcome difficulties with a song in one’s heart:-

‘sar pe hai bhoj seene mein aag, labh pe dhuan hai jaano,

phir bhi woh ga rahi hai nagme suna rahi hai

aage toofan peeche barsaat upar gagan mein bijli

soche na baat din ho ya raat signal hua ke nikli

woh dekho aa rahi hai woh dekho ja rahi hai’

or these inspiring lines full of grit, optimism and  encouragement saying the power to shape one’s destiny lies in one’s hands

‘sunn yeh paigham yeh hai sangram jeevan nahin hai sapna

dariya ko phaand parbat ko cheer raasta bana le apna

neendien uda rahi hai jaagi jaga rahi hai…’

and of course the clincher ‘jeena sikha rahi hai marna sikha rahi hai…’

Unlike the other poet/lyricists of the day, he came with no intellectual baggage. He didn’t claim to be a poet or shaiyar but would write simple songs to fit the mood, situation and sensibilities of the music composers and the film director. He was a prolific writer and would write many verses for each song for directors to pick and choose sometimes writing 39-40 verses for a song.

‘main koi barf nahin hoon jo pighal jaaoonga chaand suraj ki tarah waqt pe nikala hoon mein chaand sooraj ki tarah waqt pe dhal jaaoonga…’ sums up his life, his work and his impact on generations to come.

All these lyricists came from an era where songs were composed over various ‘sittings.’ The director, producer, music director/s, story writers and lyricists sat together to understand the story, the situations, the characters and then went on the create. Each song could take roughly a month from conception to the final outcome. There were many other great lyricists of the day like Kaifi Azmi, Indeevar and many that followed like Gulzar and Javed Akhtar each contributing immensely to the rich and varied

Javed Akhtar recounts meeting Majrooh Sultanpuri  towards the end and asking him how he was doing. Majrooh replied ‘andhon ko aaiyana bech raha hoon…’ I’m selling mirrors to the blind…’ Unless people start listening to  the spoken word and reading the written lines and unless educational systems don’t encourage reading, writing and a deep appreciation of literature and the fine arts and unless Government institutions and private houses don’t build monuments and museums showcasing our finest poets and writers, we will be nothing but a robotic society having acquired bookish knowledge but having lost an education…

At the movies…1975

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

The Best Albums II- LIVE

In the first article of this series on  The Best Albums,  I talked about the best debut albums by bands or artists, which by no means was an exhaustive list but was based purely on personal preference and the influence the bands went on to have on the industry. Here’s a link to that article:- The Best Albums I- Debut

We now take a look at what in my opinion are some of the best LIVE albums to have been captured on tape.

The LIVE album was an event. It was the hallmark of a great band or artist to have a stellar LIVE record that captured the essence of their music and their relationship with the fans and back in the day when there was no video or internet, the only way the audience got to see their favourite artists were cameo appearances on TV or LIVE Concert venues and of course pictures in the magazines and posters on the wall.

However to reach a wider audience of hungry fans who wanted a piece of the action and who wanted to experience what their favourite bands sound and look like LIVE, bands and performers started to record their LIVE concerts and after some studio overdubs to get rid of the odd glitches here and there, released ‘in concert’ albums which were either culled from a variety of performances while on tour or served straight up LIVE in whatever city the band was playing in.

LIVE albums are always exciting for the band and the audience. Bands get to connect with their audience, revisit their material especially if they’ve been around awhile and they have an exhaustive catalogue and reinterpret their music to add some freshness for the fans. Fans also get to see their idols and experience their music in a new light.

Pop, Jazz, Rock, Metal, Soul, Funk, Reggae, any every other genre and their Uncle has seen a slew of LIVE releases over the decades but in this one we revisit some of the rock and pop releases of the 60’s 70’s and 80’s  which  capture the sounds of what could arguably be the best era the music scene has well, ever seen…

Deep Purple – Made in Japan

Capturing the energy and musicianship of one of the best bands in the world, Made in Japan was a double album which had just seven songs featuring extended versions of their loud and rocking studio albums Machine Head, Fireball and In Rock this arguably one of the best LIVE albums of all time. The album captured the spontaneity, the trade- offs and moments rarely captured on vinyl since. There were also no studio overdubs, fake applause and all of that studio jugglery to enhance the production.

Improvisations, extended solos and interplay between the band recorded by legendary producer Martin Birch who after his work wth Deep Purple  and other outfits went on to produce metal band Iron Maiden’s work right through the 80’s.

The Mark II line-up featuring Ian Gillian- Vocals, Richie Blackmore- Guitar, Jon Lord- Keyboards, Roger Glover- bass and Ian Paice- Drums is in top form belting out their hits including Highway Star, a twelve minute version of Child in Time, a twenty minute version of Space Truckin and the eternal smash Smoke on the Water. The musical interludes and jams in between make those extended versions a collectors item. Recorded over concerts in Osaka and Tokyo in 1972, Made in Japan is a piece of music history.

Scorpions- World Wide LIVE 

My personal favourite, this is a must have for any collector or music fan. Released in 1985, that mega year in music, the album, a double LIVE set successfully captured the band in their element. Recorded over large arena concerts and festivals shows a tour that spanned over 13 months and saw 2.2 million fans in attendance, the excitement and energy of the band and the audience is what strikes you from the get- go  as the countdown begins and the band rips through Coming Home, Blackout, Bad Boys Running Wild, the ballad Still Loving You, the monster Rock you like a hurricane and the sing along Holiday amongst others. The tracks featured from their Love at First Sting, Blackout, Love Drive and Animal Magnetism are all powerhouses and are taken from the Mathias Jabs era. For fans of the Uli Jon Roth era, Scorpions’ Tokyo Tapes is an excellent LIVE album as well. By the time they get to Dynamite they are powering full steam ahead. It really knocks your socks off this one, its a trip… Incidentally the album ranks number two behind Frampton Comes Alive as the largest selling LIVE albums of all time in the US.

Iron Maiden- LIVE After Death

Mega band Iron Maiden’s 1985 ( what is it about 1985?) offering LIVE after Death recorded over 4 nights in Long Beach, California, as part of their World Slavery Tour to promote their 1984 release Powerslave. No studio overdubs on this one and what you hear is what the audience in the arena got on the night. 90000 people and a heavy metal band means only one thing, a helluva lot of noise… The band is rocking, the fans are ecstatic, the critics are bewildered wondering as frontman Bruce Dickinson says how a band with no radio airplay cold sell out Long Beach Arena four nights in a row. Because its Iron Maiden, because its the music and because heavy metal fans are known to be some of the most loyal fans in the world…

The band sets the mood with a snippet from Churchill’s World War II Speech as they rip into Aces High after which there is no let up. They power through the staples Two Minutes to Midnight, Trooper, Number of the Beast, the 13 minute Rime of the Ancient Mariner, Hallowed be thy Name amongst others… The album was recorded and produced by the previously mentioned legendary Martin Birch.

Neil Diamond- Hot August Night

Another personal top favourite LIVE album of mine, Neil Diamond’s voice just takes you away to that special place and the pace, tone and flow of the album transports you to this magical place where all the elements are aligned as it were and you’re one with the music and the moment…

Hot August Night came out in 1972. What is it about 1972? As we saw earlier, Deep Purple’s Made in Japan is a 1972 release as well. It was recorded at the Greek Theater, Los Angeles over a series of sold out dates. The Prologue sets the tone of  the album as the orchestra kicks in building up to Neil Diamond’s entry on stage and launching into Crunchy Granola Suite and making his way to Solitary Man, Sweet Caroline, Song Sung Blue, I am I said and so many more talking about the stars and the night and the tree people, it has it all, orchestral highs, powerful sequences, quiet moments the works…  Featuring quintessential Diamond, it covers his body of work from the mid sixties up to that point extensively.  A collector’s absolute essential and a ‘trip…’

Peter Frampton- Frampton Comes Alive

One of the best selling LIVE albums of all time, it featured 25 year old Peter Frampton ex Humble Pie LIVE in San Francisco, it showcased the talented performer at his finest backed by a stellar band. Both Electric and Acoustic material were part of the  set and his trend setting use of the Wah pedal and talk box inspired a generation of musicians who came later. Featuring Show me the way, an extended sing along version of Do you feel like I do, Baby I love your way, All I wanna be is by your side and a cover of the Rolling Stones’ Jumping Jack Flash amongst others. A double album release in 1976 it went straight into the Billboard Top 200 and has sold over 11 million albums so far.

The songs were so popular on radio that it prompted Thin Lizzy’s Phil Lynott to ask what’s it about this album that’s so special. What’s he doing that we can’t, why can’t we do this, which set the stage for Thin Lizzy’s iconic LIVE offering LIVE and Dangerous…

Thin Lizzy- LIVE and Dangerous

Running in contention for the best LIVE album, LIVE and Dangerous was recorded over many different concert tours and released in 1978. Featuring the classic line up of Phil Lynott- Vocals and Bass, Brian Robertson- Guitar, Scott Gorham- Guitar,Brian Downey- Drums, and their twin guitar sound,  the double album hit No. 2 in the UK charts. The band’s high voltage energy was recorded and captured on tape and while there were studio overdubs to remove the glitches, the album remains iconic and one of the best ever.

Pink Floyd- p.u.l.s.e.

Pink Floyd fans would be hard pressed to choose between Delicate Sound of Thunder         ( love the title) and p.u.l.s.e. However with the latter offering a full LIVE play through of the phenomenal Dark Side of the Moon as well besides their regular set and a song from the Syd Barett era Astronomy Dovine and the fancy LED cover had all the bells and whistles. Featuring a full backing band besides Dave Gilmour, Nick Mason and Rick Wright of Pink Floyd, the band is in its usual element. It reached Number One in many countries.

Dire Straits- Alchemy

A Dire Straits LIVE recording is a phenomenal piece of work. Dire Straits in the early days were a two guitar band but LIVE they transformed their material  with a bigger band, two keyboardists, two guitarists, a steel guitar player, drums, percussion and a sax. The whole sound just gets bigger and the songs feature extended solos, parts and pieces that so take you to a higher place… Alchemy featured songs from their first four albums, the classic Dire Straits catalogue but the treatment especially in the opener Once Upon a Time in the West with the groove they set and extended guitar solo , or the beautiful sax piece in Romeo and Juliet, the extended Telegraph Road, Tunnel of Love and need I mention Sultans of Swing. The album has fewer songs but still spills over to two CD’s and is an absolute must have for any music lover. Oh yes it classifies as a ‘trip’ as well…

UFO- Strangers in the Night

Anybody who hasn’t heard the seminal guitar player of Michael Schenker hasn’t lived. The 70’s was an experimental time in music and fans were open to all sorts of music and influences and ideas and so on. Their demand for explorative musical ideas to existing and new material spawned a lot of the studio double albums and LIVE album releses of the time. UFO’s Strangers in the Night released in 1979 was one of them.  Recorded in the USA over two nights it captured the UFO sound and Michael’s playing in all its glory cementing his position as a guitar hero and player extraordinaire.

Another album in contention for the best LIVE album of all time, the classic lineup of Phil Mogg -Vocals,  Michael Schenker- Guitar, Paul Raymond- Guitar and Keyboards, Pete Way- Bass and Andy Parker – Drums , play through the UFO catalogue including the smash hit Doctor Doctor,  Only You Can Rock Me, I’m a Loser, Let it Roll and carry with them the emotions of not only those who were there but the listener as well. The deafening roar of the crowd is proof enough of the impact of the show.

Simon and Garfunkel- Concert at Central Park

Slated as a fund raiser as well as the reunion for night only of the classic duo Paul Simon and Art Garfunkel who came together after eleven years in 1982 to raise funds for the conservation of New York’s Central Park. They played to an audience of 500,000 people with an eleven piece band and captured the essence of their classic hits of the 60’s and 70’s despite working together after so long. The concert also covered some of their solo recordings. The voices were in fine fettle and the night despite rains earlier in the day was magical.

Al De Meola, Paco De Lucia, John Mclaughlin– Friday Night in San Francisco

45 minutes of acoustic guitar madness, this album which released in 1981 features five tracks, four of which were recorded LIVE at the Warfield Theater and one in the studio. The recordings feature left and right channel separation so the audience can discern who’ds playing each piece.  Featuring a fusion of Jazz and Flamenco styles, the album featured stalwarts John Maclaughlin of Shakti, Mahavishnu Orchestra, Chick Corea, Spanish sensation Paco de Lucia who despite not studying music formally played with the greats all over the world and Italian American Al de Meola who played with Chick Corea, Stanley Clarke and Lenny White in Return for Forever and went solo after recording three albums with them. All three stalwarts are legends in their own right and their solo and collective work and projects are monuments by themselves. An exciting album to have.

There are many others Rush, Exit Stage Left; Clapton 24 Nights; The Who Live at Leeds; , Wishbone Ash LIVE Dates an album I have to get my hands on, Dream Theater, Scenes from a memory,  John Mayer Live in Los Angles and a few Englebert Humperdink LIVE albums floating about as well, BB King LIVE in Japan or LIVE in San Quentin and the lsit goes on…

The Best Albums I- Debut

That year in Music I; 1969

That Year in Music II… 1972

That Year in Music III… 1985

The Best Albums I- Debut

The Best Albums II- LIVE

 

 

 

 

The Best Albums I- Debut

In this series we’ll take a look at the best albums in my humble opinion and mostly off my personal CD collection. We kick of this series with the best debut albums.The debut albums featured here and in the subsequent articles are my own personal preference and everyoneI’m sure will have their own personal favourites and lists and you’re welcome to take up the thread and list out your own.

While I will be attempting a top ten list, the albums will not be listed in any particular order:-

Van Halen:: Van Halen

The band burst into the scene in 1978 with this self titled monster debut. The tome of the album, nay the band, is apparent from its first cut, ‘Running with the Devil’, still on the set and a crowd favourite. The overly flanged and phased sound of guitar cranked up beyond maximum signalled the birth of a band that cold truly take over from where Led Zeppelin left off. It also introduced to the world guitar hero and genius Eddie Van Halen, who literally rewrote the book on what a guy could do with six strings and 22 frets. His experiments with amplifiers and guitar sound are now stuff of legend and his two handed tapping technique, use of the tremolo bar, harmonics, speed and flash have all gone to trademark his playing style all evident on the second track ‘Eruption.’ Their version of The Kinks’ ‘You really got me’ was wild and loud and certainly got everyone’s attention and the opening bars of ‘Ain’t talking about love’ is a guitar chugging sound that went on to define ’80’s metal. Songs like ‘Jamie’s Crying’, ‘ Atomic Punk’ with its speed metal feel and ‘ Little Dreamer’ featured a new playing style and sound.

The sound was big with loud tight drums by brother Alex Van Halen and Michael Anthony’s pulsating driving bass line keeping pace with Eddie’s guitar notes and extended chords by Michael Anthony and the ultimate showman on stage David Lee Roth ensured the band would write itself into the history books.

Despite initial reviews that trashed the album, it went gold soon after release and has sold over ten million copies. It is considered a  ‘must have’ for any collection and Eddie Van Halen will always be regarded as one of the greatest guitar players ever.

Led Zeppelin :: Led Zeppelin

Take yourselves back now to 1969. The Beatles have just released the phenomenal Sergeant Pepper, The White Album and Abbey Road in the years between 67-69 and are on the verge of splitting up. A lot of new exciting sounds seem to be rumbling out and Cream, Clapton, Jimi Hendrix, The Who are all spilling out the woodwork. In the midst of all this ace session player Jimmy Page finally puts together his band who release the phenomenal self titled Led Zeppelin album. The cover with the Zeppelin flying overhead sets the tone and as you spin the album, the first sound of what would later be termed Heavy Metal assail your ears.

Jimmy Page, guitarist extraordinaire was a studio veteran having played with super groups like The Yardbirds and on many sessions, recorded and funded the album himself. He was going for a new heavier sound while still retaining his blues roots but the writing, arrangements and  lyrical content was moving towards heavy rock interspersed with some brilliant acoustic songs.  He also used many innovative recording techniques to capture the band in full flight. The opening cut ‘Good times bad times’ lays down their intentions  and John Bonham’s powerful drum sound, John Paul Jones bass and Jimmy Page’s overdriven riffs perfectly complement Robert Plant’s distinctive wail and high pitched vocals which would form the template for many rock and metal vocalists to come. The blues influenced ‘ You shook me’, the trippy ‘Dazed and Confused’ the acoustic ‘Babe I’m gonna leave you’ all set the bar and standards for the ultimate rock song. Chords, Riffs, melodic parts and heavy layered rhythms and searing guitar solos with screaming vocals went on to form the sound we now know as heavy metal.

Dire Straits :: Dire Straits

Another stellar 1978 release, Dire Straits came like a breath of fresh air. Just what was that sound seemed to be the constant refrain. The album that kicked off a sterling career and brought guitar legend Mark Knopfler to the forefront. His Dylanesque voice, storyline lyrics and finger style guitar picking and unique tone brought a whole new dimension to easy listening and rock that was undefinable. One of the few debut albums that received critical acclaim when released and went on to become a multi platinum album worldwide.

From the first bar of the opening track ‘Down to the Waterline’, you can feel this band is special. You can almost smell the places and touch the characters  as the music draws you in to the lives and times of all that it speaks of. ‘ Water of Love’ has that cool groove and ‘Setting me up’ and ‘Southbound Again’ uses the rock n roll shuffle to pep things up. ‘ Six blade knife’, and ‘Lions’ strike a sombre note with a heavier slower tone and groove while ‘In the Gallery’ has an upbeat funkier style but its the first cut on Side B the monster ‘ Sultans of Swing’ that lifts the album and sets the band truly apart. Knopfler’s chops with the band keeping pace ensured the song would catapult them to super stardom. The album is a great listen front to back even today and Mark Knopfler whether with Dire Straits or as a solo artist  will go down in the annals of history as one of the all time greats…

Steve Forbert :: Alive on Arrival

There are those who’ve heard of Steve Forbet and there are those that haven’t. Those who haven’t, well too bad you’ve missed out and those who have know him as a serious singer songwriter  whose songs are rooted in the old folk traditions with a modern touch. He’s a poet and philosopher knows as the melodic Dylan whose finely crafted songs and unique voice touch a chord somewhere deep down. Street busker, folk rocker, pop singer call him what you will, his songs and his music are sublime.

Alive on Arrival, believe it or not also came out in 1978, a year that’s is turning out to be quite the year for stellar debuts. ‘ Going down to Laurel’ ‘A midsummer night’s toast’, ‘Thinkin’ and ‘It isn’t gonna be that way’ all had wistful and introspective lyrics  set to an acoustic guitar and instrumentation that’s playful, grooving and a voice that’s sincere. while ‘Big City Cat’ was the big band sound, loud and a rock n rolla while’ Grand Central Station’ was autobiographical in a way since he used to busk there in the early days. Get it if you don’t have it and all his other stuff too, its brilliant.

Jimi Hendrix Experience :: Are You Experienced 

What does on say of the phenomenal Jimi Hendrix? This 1967 release, which came out in the same year as that landmark Beatles album Sergeant Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band launched Jimi Hendrix into the stratosphere. as one of the best debut albums ever, it set the stage for psychedelia and a harder sound through innovative chord structures and rhythm and lead playing enabling a three piece to belt out a lot of music. It had the standard classic hits which still rock today ‘ Purple Haze’ ‘Foxy lady’ And the wind cries Mary’ ‘Red House and ‘Hey Joe’ are still the standards that every garage and bar band starts out playing> Hendrix was a virtuoso and inventive guitar player who had style and stage presence as well. The music borrowed heavily from  blues and R&B as well elements of jazz. Long solos, interesting chord progressions, heavy rhythms and melody are the hallmark of this cracker of an album. Not for nothing is Jimi Hendrix regarded as one of the greatest guitar players ever. He set the bar back in the 60’s when there were no real guitar effect pedals and all the technology that goes into recording albums and staging concerts today.

Queensryche :: The Warning 

One of my all time favourite albums, this is a monster. Each track pulsates with heavy guitars, a throbbing backbeat, driving bass and searing vocals and the album moves from one song to the next rolling like an unstoppable heavy metal train at full speed. The title track’ Warning’ ‘ Child of Fire’ ” Enforcer and the international hit ‘ Take hold of the flame’ are crowd favourites even today. Twin guitars, screaming vocals, melodic runs and heavy rhythm define the band. Their experimental albums were to come later. This one though is a classic.

Incidentally an Ep featuring their demo recordings before they were signed was also released by the record label later as bootleg versions began to become popular and while technically they predate the Warning album, Warning is their first full length studio cut and was released in 1984.

Incidentally I have never heard this album right through sitting down. Somehow I’ve always stood and head-banged from the first song down to the last. So no, its never played in my car…

Guns and Roses :: Appetite for Destruction

1987 announced a band that would bring back the legendary excess and musicality of the bands of the late 60’s and early 70’s. Guns and Roses with their hard rock sound, melodic content, vibe and energy burst onto the world stage with a debut album worthy of the best. Appetite for destruction had everything, energy, melody, flash, and a band that everyone could see had immense talent and attitude proven by the fact that their debut album sold over 30 million copies. Further testament to the greatness of the record is the fact that decades later at least six of the twelve tracks form part of the band’s current LIVE set. The moment you spin the album and hear the first notes of ‘Welcome to the jungle’ you know the band is special. With ‘Nightrain’ ‘Mr Brownstone’ ‘Rocket Queen’ and the epic ‘Paradise City’ and  massive ‘ Sweet Child of Mine’ this is an unbelievable debut album which launched the band into the big time.

Black Sabbath :: Black Sabbath

Featuring the Prince of Darkness, Ozzy Osbourne himself and the other three giants of metal, Toni Iommi, Geezer Butler and Bill Ward, Black Sabbath released their self titled album in 1970. Dark, brooding and heavy as hell, this one spawned the title track ‘Black Sabbath’ ‘The Wizard’ and ‘NIB’ with their signature riffs and heavy sound immediately struck a chord signifying the beginning of a new era and a million bands that still dish out pure metal.

America :: America

America’s self titled debut album released in 1971 and amid all the loud hard and heavy sounds coming out at the time, an acoustic laid back folk rock band was like a breath of fresh air. Featuring their trade mark vocal harmonies and guitar parts, the album went to number one on Billboard and became an international hit.  Featuring eternal favourites ‘ Horse with no name’ ‘Sandman’ ‘I need you’ as well as the opening track ‘Riverside’  ‘Rainy Day’ where one hears their unique style of singing vocal harmonies and arrangements that enthralled fans for years to come.

The Doors :: The Doors 

No discussion on albums is complete with a mention of the mighty Doors. Released in 1967, the album featured perennial hits ‘ Light my fire’  ‘Break on through to the other side’ ‘ In the end’ and ‘ Soul Kitchen’. As the opening bars with the drums and keyboards sets the groove on the opening track ‘Break on through to the other side’, the excitement and curiosity of the listener is drawn to this new sound that uplifts them through the haze and holds the promise of a new world. The pace doesn’t relent as it moves into ‘Soul Kitchen’ but slows down for ‘The Crystal Ship’ and its promise of newer pastures The album heralded the birth of psychedelic rock era as The Beatles’ concept album Sergeant Pepper and Pink Floyd’s Piper at the gates of dawn released the same year.  Jim Morrison’s poetry and personality further cemented the band’s cult status. The album sold over 20 million copies and

There are many more albums and many genres that could easily make any list. Being a musician one understands how special the first album is, I still love listening to and playing our own…  Anyway these are just some of my favourite debut albums. They also stand testament to the longevity not only of the artists and bands who wrote, recorded and performed the music but to the music on those first recordings. Do give them a spin…

The Best Albums II- LIVE

That year in Music I; 1969

That Year in Music II… 1972

That Year in Music III… 1985

That Year in Music III… 1985

 

Welcome to 1985!

1985 is considered by many to be one of the best if not the best year in music. The 80’s itself is a decade remembered, reminisced and talked about by music lovers and not a day goes by when someone, somewhere doesn’t hark back to the good ole 80’s. Musicians love it, budding musicians learn and play that stuff all the time and its popularity still ranks really high with listeners judging from all the playlists devoted to the 80’s on every streaming service and greatest hits package.

And why not? Considering the sheer repertoire of music that came out that year. Pop, rock, metal, LIVE, fusion, progressive rock, jazz, funk, it was all happening.

The genesis of the sound that came out of the airwaves though goes back to 1978. In the rock world the old blues and rock bands were beginning to get a makeover as ace axmen like Eddie Van Halen and Mark Knopfler burst on the scene. Van Halen changed guitar players’ lives forever just like Jimi Hendrix, Jimmy Page and Eric Clapton started to do in the late 60’s.

His heavy two handed techniques, lightning speed, tapping and just that wall of sound screeching, screaming launched a million shredders when they launched their self titled debut album Van Halen. In sharp contrast was the fresh, unmistakable and uniquely clean sounds of Mark Knopfler as his band Dire Straits became a phenomenon with the release of their debut album which oddly enough was self titled as well. Both bands represented contrasting styles with Van Halen playing flashy and loud and amplifying their sound to a new metal wave while Dire Straits had a brand new sound with Dylanesque drawl of Knpfler and a unique guitar tone and playing style in that he fingerpicked and didnt use a plectrum even for all those fast runs and passages.

Meanwhile the Bee Gees were burning up the charts with their movie soundtrack of Saturday Night Fever and Chic the funk band had also come out with a sound that became very popular in the discotheques creating a whole new era of dance and pop music. The Police were out with their album as well with a mix of reggae and rock fusion. The Boss, Bruce Springsteen released the classic Darkness on the edge of town album. All in all 1978 was laying the foundations of the next decade in music.

The early 80’s saw the NWOBHM movement begin (New Wave Of British Heavy Metal) with bands like Iron Maiden, Saxon, Def Leppard who went on to consolidate their position as premier metal bands with a heavy pulsating sound, head banging mania and well produced and well crafted material. David Bowie, Elton John, Hall and Oats and Simple Minds were hitting their notes in the pop world, Ozzy Osbourne went solo and unleashed Guitar God Randy Rhoads to the world and radio still played rock with bands like REO Speedwagon, Tom Petty, Queen and The Rolling Stones ruling the airwaves besides of course a certain Michael Jackson who released the largest selling album of all time Thriller in 1982.

By 1983-84, Britain’s Iron Maiden had released Number of the Beast, Piece of Mind and Powerslave with Bruce Dickinson and were an arena rock band playing stadiums throughout the world. Scorpions from Germany had Animal Magnetism, Love Drive, the killer Blackout and Love at first sting albums out by ’84 as well with guitar player Mathias Jabs after Uli Jon Roth’s departure. Van Halen had one of their biggest albums 1984 out and Their charismatic front man David Lee Roth was about to leave the band paving the way for Sammy Hagar in 1986 which would give them their first number one album. Oddly enough if it wasn’t for Kiss bassist Gene Simmons who heard Van Halen back in 1976 playing at a local watering hole and agreed to fund their demo. Management companies believed they had no chance of making it. God knows what they’re doing now considering they went on to become one of the biggest bands in the world.

Dire Straits had also released four albums by then and were about to have their number one album out in 1985.

Bruce Springsteen: Born in the USA

The year saw Bruce Springsteen come out with his biggest release Born in The USA. Just the cover of his back with a white T and jeans and a baseball cap hanging carelessly out of the hip pocket against the American Flag was enough for people to pick up the album and with cuts like Born in the USA, Dancing in the Dark, Darlington County, I’m going down, No Surrender etc. had his signature raspy vocals sounding better than ever and most of the songs were up tempo and meant to be played loud and lent themselves really well to a LIVE setting which helped sell out his stadium concerts across the world and cement his place in rock history as The Boss. Incidentally it was the best selling album of 1985 selling over 30 million copies.

Dire Straits: Brothers in Arms

While Born in the USA did pay homage the soldier, Dire Straits’ Brothers in Arms album was another look at the futility of war. The album went to number one and represented a more laid back singing style, lots of instrumentation with the addition of keyboards, synthesizers, slide guitar and the sax and they became more than a four piece guitar toting rock n roll band. It won them two Grammy awards as well. Recording in a small studio in Montseratt had its challenges and they used innovative mic techniques to capture the instruments which involved a lot of trial and error and it was during one of those sessions when the unusual mic placement on Knopfler’s amplifier including one that was facing the ground captured the signature sound of the Money for Nothing riff we know so well today.

The album had the up- tempo Walk of Life as well which soon became a perennial crowd favourite as well as did So Far Away. Most of the album though had softer passages and a touch of sadness in some tunes but for a darker album was surprisingly hugely successful.

Madonna: Like a Virgin

Although released in late 1984, the album made the charts in Feb 1985 making here a household name. Her tours were extravagant and over the top and did really well. While metal and rock were ruling the roost, Madonna proved a kid could come out of nowhere and rule the pop world. The album boosted the pop scene and the likes of Cyndy Lauper, Culture Club, Wham, Tears for Fears, Whitney Houston all had massive pop hits in what was the golden period of rock at the time.

Whitney Houston: Whitney Houston

Whitney Houston burst on to the scene in 1985 with here self titled debut album. her single from the album Saving all my love for you was a smash hit and the album topped the Billboard charts for 14 weeks. Later on she went on to have seven consecutive number one songs on the charts including two number one albums on Billboard. She had a glittering career through to the millennium until she tragically died in 2012.

To add to all those albums and hits from so many genres, 1985 saw a lot of music festivals and LIVE Concerts that brought in record crowds. The first edition of Rock in Rio tool place in Brazil bring 1.5 million fans featuring Queen, Iron Maiden, Scorpions, AC/DC, Ozzy Osbourne, Whitesnake, George Benson, Rod Stewart amongst others. Whitesnake incidentally were a last minute replacement for Def Leppard who were going through a lot of problems including drummer Rick Allen’s accident that cost him his arm.

Iron Maiden released their LIVE Album and Concert Film LIVE After Death featuring the band in full flight four nights in a row at the Long Beach Arena, Los Angeles playing songs from their catalogue of albums from theor debut Iron maiden to their latest release in ’84 Powerslave.

Scorpions also released their most definitive LIVE Album and Concert Film World Wide LIVE featuring concert footage from their world tour. The album is a must have for all Scorpions and metal fans.

USA for Africa the coming together US superstars to record We are the World to raise funds for the famine victims in Ethiopia. Featuring some of the biggest artists of the time, the song was a smash hit and helped raise awareness and funds as well as led to the concert of all concerts LIVE AID held simultaneously at Wembley, London and JFK Stadium, Philadelphia with 150 nations and almost 2 billion people watching the event LIVE. About 150 million pounds were raised from the concerts and phone ins.

All told the 80’s spawned the greatest rock and pop acts with bands like U2, Metallica, Van Halen II and Guns n Roses to follow and continue to enthrall audiences and music lovers throughout the world. However at the end of the 80’s things were beginning to change, the hip hop/rap movement was taking shape, punk was back and mainstream rock and metal went through a tailspin while bands like Nirvana and Pearl Jam and many others gave the changing world a new sound and sowed the seeds of a new rebellion… The way music was going to be consumed was also going to change forever… Bob Dylan’s immortal words ‘Times they are a changing’ never rang truer.

That Year in Music II… 1972

That year in Music I; 1969

The Best Albums I- Debut

The Best Albums II- LIVE

 

 

That year in Music I; 1969

Should that read 1967 perhaps? I’ve always wondered as I trudged through the liner notes of the CD’s while spinning that seminal album ‘Sergeant Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band by arguably the greatest band in the world The Beatles, what were the other great cats doing when these guys were writing and recording what would become one of the greatest albums of all time and create a template for what would become the ‘concept’ album and the progressive rock and psychedelic music movement that came about in the 70’s and continues to this day.

Imagine if you will, the fab four sitting about at the Abbey Road studios with Producer extraordinaire George Martin ( Sir) and engineer Geoff Emerick trying to put all those far out ideas on tape coming on the back of what I think were the seeds of this sound, the album Revolver in 1966. What must’ve been going through their minds when they were coming up with all those ideas? The conversations, the debates and discussions and the vibe of just creating and playing all that stuff!!!

The liner notes say it took about 700 hours over 129 days to record the album and put all those ideas in some coherent form. Since they had decided to give up touring they weren’t faced with the additional burden of trying to capture the sound LIVE in concert and hence were liberated and free to experiment and experiment they did.

While recording began in 1966, three tracks recorded for the album were left out including Its only a Northern Song and Penny Lane and the seminal Strawberry Fields Forever the latter two featuring on the concept release later that year Magical Mystery Tour

Whether it was mic placement across every instrument down to the bells of the brass instruments, the use of tech gear like compressors and limiters and distortion or using all that tape echo and Leslie speaker circuitry with giant oscillators or chopping pieces of tape and sticking them together the wrong way round, using multi track recording on a four track recorder by ingenious recoding and mixing all back in the day.

But it all started with the writing. Musically it explored rock, pop, circus with classical progressions and instrumentation. The idea of developing a persona in a fictional band gave them a license to pretty much go musically to wherever they wanted to and the direction, process and outcome was limited only by their imagination, ability and technique, something they had loads of in any case.

Whether its the rocker Sergeant Pepper peppered as it were with brass and other instrumentation leading to the bouncy With a Little Help from my friends which Joe Cocker and Jimmy Page gave a whole new life too at Woodstock… The very imaginative and visual lyrics of Lucy in the sky with diamonds and its obvious associations powering through the rest of the album each cut a classic and a trendsetter in its own way exploring fusion, instrumentation, themes, stretching musical ideas culminating in a Day in the Life.

One can’t end a discussion on the album without discussing the album cover. A collage of all the people and the Beatles would have liked to have at a concert morphed into what would become one of the most iconic covers of all time.

No discussion on the Beatles is of course complete without a nod to the other band who came along at around the same time The Rolling Stones who’ve enjoyed an incredible career since the early sixties and are still one of the highest grossing LIVE acts today. More power to them. In 1967 they released Between the Buttons which included the hits Ruby Tuesday and Let’s spend the night together. Beggars Banquet in 1968 featured the classic Jumpin Jack Flash, and Sympathy for the devil. They remain master of the blues based three minute song and have no pretensions of being otherwise. With a cult following and an incredible stage show they are one of the most sought after acts even after more than fifty years of the business.

But what were icons Eric Clapton, Jimi Hendrix, Jimmy Page, Pink Floyd and the rest of them up to while the Beatles were churning out one concept album after another. By 1969 they had Sergeant Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band, Magical Mystery Tour, The White album and Abbey Road out, each one a classic.

Turns out Pink Floyd were beginning to define this whole new sound that would finally make them one of the biggest bands in the world. Their Piper at the gates of Dawn album followed Sergeant Pepper’s release by a few months in 1967 and the psychedelic magic created by Syd Barret and Richard Wright. Their mix of long improvised tracks and shorter tracks became the mainstay of their albums and sound. While David Gilmour’s entry into the band in 1968 propelled them into the force they would become defining a new guitar tone. Incidentally, the album cover was shot by Vic Singh with a prism lens that his friend Beatle George Harrison gave him. Oh and does’nt the outro of Bike sound like the intro of Time from the album of all time Dark side of the moon for a short bit… They went on to release the acid rock defining genre A Saucerful of Secrets in 1968 (with the line Lucy in the sky featuring in the first cut Let there be more light) and Ummagumma in 1969.

Guitar legend Jimi Hendrix had left The Isley Brothers and Little Richard and moved to England in 1966 forming his legendary trio The Jimi Hendrix Experience and gain the attention of his peers Lennon, McCartney, Jagger, Clapton, Townsend, as the ‘Phenomenon’ Singles Hey Joe, And the Wind Cries Mary were followed by the smashing Are you Experienced. With the monster hit Purple Haze, and tracks like Foxy Lady, and Manic Depression this became one of the strongest debut albums of all time. While Hendrix did pursue the odd psychedlic experience in his lyrics, his blues and rock leanings and his rhythm and lead style of playing using extended chords became the mainstay bread and butter licks and style of all the guitar players that were to come. He released Axis As Bold As Love and Electric Ladyland ( with the Bob Dylan cover All along the watchtower on which according to me he played just about every trick there was to play except perhaps tapping) in 1968. By 1969 Jimi Hendrix was the highest paid artist in the world.

Meanwhile Guitar God Eric Clapton was strutting about playing his thing with Yardbirds and John Mayall and earning himself the reputation of being the most prolific guitar player in the world, joined the power trio Cream with drummer Ginger Baker and Bassist Jack Bruce and released Disraeli Gears featuring the cuts Strange brew, Tales of Brave Ulyssses and Sunshine of your Love in 1967. The album was recorded in five days as opposed to the 129 days The Beatles took that very year. Wheels of Fire in 1968 had the hits Cross roads, Spoonful, Born Under a Bad Sign and White Room which were Cream staples and their final album in 1969 was aptly titled Goodbye. Cream could arguably called the world’s first supergroup as it had three phenomenal talents each unique and equally famous.

The sonic landscape in the late sixties was developing and no band added or influenced future generations of what would become heavy metal musicians than the might Led Zeppelin. The mercurial talents of guitar player Rock God Jimmy Page, the power drumming of John Bonham, John Paul Jones’ running and complimentary bass and keyboard playing and Robert Plant’s soaring vocals all blended into this sound nobody had heard before. Their debut album creatively titled Led Zeppelin was laden with power riffs, had acoustic guitar pieces, blues standards and the head banging power that left you feeling you’d been hit by a sledgehammer. Imagine coming home one day with a new record with an intriguing picture of the Zeppelin space ship on the cover and innocently placing it on the turn table and as you get your coffee or tea or special amber, being jolted out of your seat as the opening bars of Good Times Bad Times grab you and take you down a road you’ve never been before with screaming guitars a furious drummer and a soaring vocal. Even their acoustic songs like Babe I’m gonna leave you and the others that followed in later albums are hard and have balls. The trippy section in Dazed and Confused before the solo is a classic build up and also a nod to the concept albums of the day and we hear it in so many more but none like in Stairway to Heaven which was still years away. They also released their second album Led Zeppelin II that year with cuts like Whole Lotta Love, Heartbreaker, The Lemon Song and Moby Dick influencing generations of music lovers and musicians. You can hear those chops in the work of Van Halen, Steve Vai, Deep Purple and Iron maiden amongst countless more.

They laid the foundation for what would become heavy metal and all the bands that followed and their songs became templates influencing generations of song writers whether it was the ballads with the soft introductions leading to the hard build up and middle eight section and the screaming vocals and guitar solos or the straight up riff based hard hitters, every rock band since then has just followed and improvised along the way. They went on to become of the greatest bands of all time recording nine albums (six of them at number one) over ten odd years selling over 300 million units worldwide.

The Who released their rock opera Tommy in 1969 as well. Tommy was a concept album/movie/theatrical production on a scale never seen in the rock world. The story about a deaf dumb and blind kid took the world by storm…

The other concept and progressive rock album pioneers Jethro Tull were also floating about at the time and released their debut album This Was in 1968 and Stand Up in 1969 as well. Both the albums were predominantly blues based though. Formed in 1967 this power house went through many changes in lineups and musical styles always experimenting, always on the edge but never abandoning their own core style no matter if their albums were pure rock, folk or psychedlic. They had a core sound and Ian Anderson’s superbly crafted songs, flute playing, stage persona and acoustic guitar work were the mainstay of the band.

On the other side of the Atlantic, Creedence Clearwater Revival were making clearwater music as Lennon put it releasing their self titled debut album in 1968 and three albums in 1969 namely Bayou Country, Green River and Willie and The Poorboys.

The prolific Doors released their debut album The Doors in 1967 and unleashed the sounds of four of the trippiest musicians the world had ever seen. Robby Krieger on guitar, John Densmore keeping the backbeat Ray Manzarek playing organ and doubling bass parts on the keys and the ethereal Jim Morrison who would go on to carve out a unique sound and a place in rock n roll history.   Keeping the psychedelic theme of the times intact they had Morrison’s sublime poetry to set music too and trip out on with long musical interludes that would be a big part of their concerts. The album featured Break on through, the seven minute Light my fire, and The End.

Their second album Strange Days released later that year. They had another two releases towards the end of the decade Waiting for the sun in 1968 and The Soft Parade in 1969.

Jefferson Airplane, the pioneers of psychedelic rock released Surrealistic Pillow in 1967 with the title track, White rabbit and Somebody to love. After Bathing at Baxter’s released in 1967 as well. Crown of Creation in 1968 with the subliminal Lather. Their music floated into spaces and realms that paved the way for the likes of The Doors and Pink Floyd Rush and all the and others who followed.

Crosby Stills and Nash released their debut album in 1969. The folk sound, acoustic arangements, vocal harmonies and lyrical content was a change from the heavier and psychedelic stuff coming out at the time and earned them a spot in Woodstock that mother of festivals playing alongside giants The Who, Jimi Hendrix, Jefferson Airplane and CCR.

Oh another debut album came out that year from the band set to become the giants of the heavy rock scene; Deep Purple but that’s another saga.

There were many albums, releases, artists and bands that came along in that era and these are the few I have listed more out personal preference and of course the impact these artists made on musicians and music lovers. 1969 was a landmark year as it closed out the 60’s decade with a wide spectrum of music, sounds, genres, concept albums, themes a reflection of the socio political scene of the times. It was a landmark year for this and a lot more…

See you in 1972…

  • All views and musical preferences listed are personal
  • Albums featured/mentioned:-
  • The Beatles:-Sergeant Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band, Revolver, The White Album, Abbey Road
  • The Rolling Stones:- Between the Buttons, Beggars Banquet
  • Pink Floyd:- Piper at the Gates of Dawn, Saucerful of Secrets, Ummagumma
  • Jimi Hendrix:- Are You Experienced, Axis as Bold as Love, Electric Ladyland
  • Cream:- Disraeli Gears, Wheels of Fire, Goodbye
  • Led Zeppelin:- Led Zeppelin I, Led Zeppelin II 
  • The Who:- Tommy
  • Jethro Tull:- This Was, Stand Up
  • CCR:- Bayou Country,Green River, Willie and The Poorboys
  • The Doors:- The Doors, Strange Days, waiting for the Sun, Soft Parade
  • Jefferson Airplane:- Surrealistic Pillow, After Bathing at Baxters, Crown of Creation
  • Crosby Stills and Nash:- CSN 

That Year in Music II… 1972

That Year in Music II… 1972

That Year in Music III… 1985

The Best Albums I- Debut

The Best Albums II- LIVE