Monday, December 29, 2025

Top 40 for December 2025 Lynda Laurence of the Supremes / Stevie Wonder, Bette Midler, Ralph Santosuosso. Woodland Road Under the Sky so Blue / Deep Purple Book of Taliesyn / Star Trek Commentary / Alice Cooper Easy Action

  Some of my articles are on Rock and Roll Central https://clubbohemianews.blogspot.com/2025/12/deep-purple-reviews-by-joe-viglione.html  , Rock Journalist Joe Vig and my Substack and Facebook pages.  https://substack.com/@joeviglione


1)DEEP PURPLE CLASSIC ALBUM



The Book of Taliesyn Review by Joe Viglione

Several months after the innovative remake of "You Keep Me Hanging On," England's answer to Vanilla Fudge was this early version of Deep Purple, which featured vocalist Rod Evans, and bassist Nick Simper, along with mainstays Ritchie BlackmoreJon Lord, and Ian Paice. This, their second album, followed on the heels of "Hush," a dynamic arrangement of a Joe South tune, far removed from the flavor of one of his own hits, "Walk a Mile in My Shoes." Four months later, this album's cover of Neil Diamond's Top 25, 1967 gem "Kentucky Woman," went Top 40 for Deep Purple. Also like Vanilla Fudge, the group's own originals were creative, thought-provoking, but not nearly as interesting as their take on cover tunes. Vanilla Fudge did "Eleanor Rigby," and Deep Purple respond by going inside "We Can Work It Out" -- it falls out of nowhere after the progressive rock jam "Exposition," Ritchie Blackmore's leads zipping in between Rod Evans smooth and precise vocals. As Vanilla Fudge was progressively leaning more towards psychedelia, here Deep Purple are the opposite. The boys claim to be inspired by the Bard of King Arthur's court in Camelot, Taliesyn. John Vernon Lord, under the art direction of Les Weisbrich, paints a superb wonderland on the album jacket, equal to the madness of Hieronymous Bosch's cover painting used for the third album. Originals "The Shield" and "Anthem" make early Syd Barrett Pink Floyd appear punk in comparison. Novel sounds are aided by Lord's dominating keyboards, a signature of this group.

Though "The Anthem" is more intriguing than the heavy metal thunder of Machine Head, it is overwhelmed by the majesty of their "River Deep, Mountain High" cover, definitely not the inspiration for the Supremes and Four Tops 1971 hit version. By the time 1972 came around, Deep Purple immersed themselves in dumb lyrics, unforgettable riffs, and a huge presence, much like Black Sabbath. The evolution from progressive to hard rock was complete, but a combination of what they did here -- words that mattered matched by innovative musical passages -- would have been a more pleasing combination. Vanilla Fudge would cut Donovan's "Season of the Witch," Deep Purple followed this album by covering his "Lalena"; both bands abandoned the rewrites their fans found so fascinating. Rod Evans' voice was subtle enough to take "River Deep, Mountain High" to places Ian Gillam might have demolished.  


2)Joe South's HUSH by Deep Purple


Hush Review by Joe Viglione

Deep Purple's phenomenal version of "Hush", written by country/pop songwriter Joe South, took the Vanilla Fudge style of slowing a song down and bluesing it up another step, venturing into the domain of psychedelic heavy metal. Covered by Kula Shaker in the 1997 film I Know What You Did Last Summer other versions were recorded by Billy Joe Royal, Gotthard , former Ritchie Blackmore lead vocalist Joe Lynn Turner on his 1997 Under Cover album of song interpretations and even John Mellencamp. But once the tune received this rendition's indellible stamp no one could touch it again, not even the songwriter. South's

lyrics are highly suggestive, beyond Van Morrison's "Gloria", straight into Louie, Louie" territory with: "She's got a loving like quicksand... It blew my mind and I'm in so deep/That I can't eat, y'all, and I can't sleep." Or as Aimee Mann sang, hush hush because voices carried this one right by the censors with Jon Lord's quagmire of thick chaotic keyboard sound meshed with Ritchie Blackmore's guitar. Tetragrammaton Records single #1503 went Top 5 in August of 1968, 4:11 as originally released on the Shades Of Deep Purple album, 4:26 on Rhino's 2000 reissue The Very Best Of Deep Purple. Imagine a fuzz box on the organ in a church cathedral to get the intensity of the opening chords, a sound stolen less than two years later by Detroit's Frijid Pink with their rendition of "House Of The Rising Sun". Frijid Pink, however, couldn't get the intense rhythmic nuances of original bassist Nic Simper and drummer Ian Paice, not to mention Rod Evans haunting vocal. "Smoke On The Water" equaled this song's chart position five years later, and might have made a bigger impact, but there's no denying that Deep Purple in its original progressive pop form was a far more dynamic and literate band. "Hush" remains their most cosmic moment, a truly unique blend of converging 60's styles preferable to connoisseurs of stuff that found itself on the Nuggets compilation lp. This track was conspicuous in its absence.  


3 Alice Cooper   Easy Action


REVIEW
by Joe Viglione, allmusic
The author of the book Alice Cooper, Steve Demorest, accurately calls this "the great undiscovered" Cooper album. Pretties for You is a difficult record, and Love It to Death is a classic, but this pre-Bob Ezrin album, created with help from Neil Young producer David Briggs, might be the perfect picture of an evolving Alice Cooper Group. "Mr. & Misdemeanor" has Cooper beginning to define his nasty trademark vocal style: "Here's new pretties for you/nobody likes me but we adore you." Cooper became known for writing two-and-a-half- to three-minute catchy tunes with negative themes, augmented by longer pieces toward the end of the recordings. With that in mind, this is almost pre-production for Love It to Death, although the band is more inventive here. "Shoe Salesman" could be Strawberry Alarm Clock, and this clone British pop/punk would've been a nice arena for AC to continue dabbling in, had Ezrin not transformed them into hard rockers. For those not convinced of Cooper's ability to sing after the beautiful adult contemporary songs he composed with Dick Wagner in the late '70s, Easy Action gives evidence that Cooper has more of a voice than he got credit for. "Still No Air" has a sci-fi slant, a slant they could've taken up when the members departed from Cooper and became the Billion Dollar Babies. "Below Your Means" is almost seven minutes of early Who-style musical investigation. There is that great West Coast Jefferson Airplane sound throughout, some hybrid of L.A./U.K. garage rock and psychedelia (this material would fit nicely on a soundtrack for American International Pictures). Side two opens with "Return of the Spiders," with upfront fuzz guitar. Dedicated to Gene Vincent, one wonders if this was influenced by David Bowie or if David Bowie influenced it? Both artists emerged around the same time, with Alice Cooper under Frank Zappa's wing, for better or for worse. Their androgynous personas both covered simultaneously in Rolling Stone magazine. "Laughing at Me" is very similar to Bowie's "Man Who Sold the World." There's the cryogenic "Refrigerator Heaven"; a very British pop "Beautiful Flyaway," which is listed as fifth on the album cover, but is actually the fourth track; and "Lay Down and Die, Goodbye," a seven-minute-and-30-second song which clearly sounds like it belongs on Zappa's record label. That this band could run the gamut from Zappa to Bowie, and perhaps inspired both, makes Easy Action a good study and entertaining record.
TRACKS:
All songs written by Alice Cooper, Glen Buxton, Michael Bruce, Dennis Dunaway and Neal Smith.
Side one
"Mr. & Misdemeanor" – 3:05
"Shoe Salesman" – 2:38
"Still No Air" – 2:32
"Below Your Means" – 6:41
Side two
"Return of the Spiders" – 4:33
"Laughing at Me" – 2:12
"Refrigerator Heaven" – 1:54
"Beautiful Flyaway" – 3:02
"Lay Down and Die, Goodbye" – 7:36
(Via All Things Music Plus)


4)WOODLAND ROAD


"Morning Sun" is two minutes and fifty-two seconds of smart pop with heavey '60's influences,
smooth vocals actually leaning towards British Pop.  Very entertaining and worth your time.

https://music.apple.com/us/album/under-the-sky-so-blue/1849641075



Woodland Road Band


5)Van Morrison and Them HERE COMES THE NIGHT






6)STAR TREK THE TALOSIANS, WATCH FOR MY ARTICLE ON 'FLINT" COMING SOON




Star Trek failed to "Seek Out New Life and New Civilizations..." It Was Too Busy Obliterating Them

Joe Viglione's unique thoughts on Star Trek and True Space Exploration




7)Friends Joe Viglone reviews the song "Friends" with help from the song's co-writer, Buzzy Linhart



https://youtu.be/BvTTsPxDlc8
https://www.allmusic.com/song/friends-mt0011354479
Friends Review by Joe Viglione
Atlantic single #2980, "Friends" by Bette Midler, is a different vocal and mix of a magical song which opens and closes side two of the singer's sensational 1972 debut, The Divine Miss M. The first version on the lp is campy with tons of off-the-cuff vocalizing by the soon-to-be superstar. After the first chorus she says touchingly "Standing at the end of the road, Buzz" instead of "boys", a nod to co-songwriter and friend Buzzy Linhart. The second go round on that version she says "Standing at the end of a real long road, Jack." This version is an entirely different take with different musicians save for pianist/rhythm track arranger/co-producer Barry Manilow. It features David Spinozza on guitars, Ron Carter on bass, Ralph MacDonald on percussion with Ray Lucas on drums.

All the vocals are by Bette, and they get quite energetic and wonderfully chaotic.

The single is actually taken from the second version which concludes the album, featuring a new vocal by Miss M. on at least the first half of the 45 rpm where she goes up an octave. It is one of the interesting and cool aspects of the single version. Another important component is arranger, conductor and co-producer Barry Manilow's gorgeous harmony vocals up in the mix(on the album the instrumentation is in front of Barry's voices). It's a stunning production by Ahmet Ertegun, Geoffrey Haslam and Manilow which has a fade nine seconds longer (2:59) than the two minute and fifty-second version that concludes the album. The song hit the Top 40 in November of 1973, the third hit for the singer that year, but it should have been much, much bigger. Barry Manilow covered it on his Bell Records debut, also in 1973, and though Manilow would prove to be an incredible interpreter - how can this be said with respect - his version on Barry Manilow I is absolutely dreadful. Those delicious harmonies he added to the Midler disc are replaced by neo-disco. Just imagine this wonderful tune transformed into some sort of prototype for his 1978 Top 10 hit "Copacabana (At The Copa)". If that combo sounds bad on paper, rest assured the end result is even worse. Barry has 2/3rds of The Harlettes on his version, Gail Kantor and Merle Miller (then girlfriend of co-writer Moogy Klingman ). Laurel Masse is the third backing vocalist on Manilow's version while Melissa Manchester is the original Harlette with Bette and appears on the hit. Steve Gadd plays drums on Barry's rendition, Utopia drummer Kevin Ellman is on the Midler smash while the guitar on both Bette (model 2 and 3) and Barry's is by Dickie Frank with pianos by Sir Barry.

In an interview with AMG 5/08/03 co-writer Linhart noted that the song still hasn't peaked. He listened to all three versions with this writer and we picked out the nuances three decades after it charted. The song appears for a moment in the smash film Shrek, finds its presence in other movies, was used on the Cher farewell television special in March of 2003 - a version with that diva and Lily Tomlin, but is more than just an extraordinary song about people caring about other people. Linhart notes that it hauntingly became a source of consolation after the AIDS epidemic hit. Bette Midler, after all, found her initial fame in the alternative lifestyle environment of The Continental Baths and the line "I had some friends but they're gone" became a tragic reality. Linhart's original version was released in 1971 with the Ten Wheel Drive rhythm section on his The Time To Live Is Now album, re-recorded for the noted vibraphonist's critically acclaimed 1974 release Pussycats Can Go Far. Various early renditions have been issued on both Klingman and Linhart's respective labels in the 2000's. The songwriters composed the tune relatively quickly, and were invited to a Midler performance when she was interested in it becoming her theme song. Friends indeed is synonymous with The Divine Miss M, opening and closing her beautiful 1977 Live At Last double disc, produced by Lew Hahn, the original engineer and re-mixer from the Divine Miss M sessions. The hit single was tracked at Atlantic Recording Studios in New York City and is as timeless a pop tune as could ever be written. That's because like "Happy Birthday", Bobby Hebb's "Sunny" and Paul McCartney's "Yesterday" the song does something so important to gaining classic status - it can move every single human being on the planet, quite simply because - you've got to have friends.





9 BETTE MIDLER LIVE AT LAST


Live at Last Review by Joe Viglione

The double-LP live album phenomenon was utilized in 1973 on Around the World With Three Dog Night to collect loads of hits and release them in another format. Three years later, Bob Seger's Live BulletJ. Geils Band's Blow Your Face Out, and Frampton Comes Alive solidified the double disc as a way to bring important rock artists to the forefront. Come 1977, the Rolling StonesLove You Live failed to live up to their single disc Get Your Ya Ya's Out or any of the brilliant bootleg performances of theirs proliferating. In the middle of all this arrives the very strong in-concert artist, Bette Midler, with her fourth album for Atlantic. This undated (probably 1976) performance from the Cleveland Music Hall, Cleveland, OH, does a decent job of capturing the magic of Midler. Having a show stretched across four sides was essential for this performer; the brilliance of her rendition of the Supremes' 1970 hit "Up the Ladder to the Roof" takes it out of the Motown context and brings it to Midler's Andrews Sisters world of girl group devotion. Segueing into a driving "Boogie Woogie Bugle Boy" answers the question asked in the opening medley of her signature tune, "Friends," with Ringo Starr's "Oh My My," Midler being astonished that anyone would ask the question if she can boogie. Another live LP, Divine Madness, was released only three years after this when she was riding her fame from the film The Rose, and that single disc concentrated on the comedienne's song performances ("Boogie Woogie Bugle Boy" gets reprised there), while 1985's single disc Mud Will Be Flung Tonight gave the fans her funny bits; thankfully with four sides of music and fun, Live at Last is allowed to run the gamut. With an adult contemporary (dare it be said, Vegas-style) act like Bette Midler, the sad thing is that bootlegs and live tapes don't proliferate. It's a shame, as she has lots to offer on every show, and when you think about it, only one double-live disc in a career this rich and this lengthy is unfair to both the artist and her fans. There are some brilliant moments here; along with "Up the Ladder to the Roof," her version of Johnny Mercer's "I'm Drinking Again" is better than the studio take on her self-titled second disc. "Delta Dawn" is wonderful, as are the up-tempo "Do You Wanna Dance" and John Prine's "Hello in There." Midler performs Neil Young's "Birds," tells raunchy jokes so cliché that they depend upon her brilliant delivery, and has her personality captured in audio form splendidly. There's a very interesting "intermission" which features a Tom Dowd studio production of "You're Moving out Today," a tune written by Bruce Roberts, Midler, and Carole Bayer Sager, who simultaneously released a studio version the same year. It was a neat trick sliding it onto this release. Live at Last has lots to offer and has yet to be appreciated as the pure document that it is. Atlantic should be given a thumbs up for giving their performer the chance to artistically breathe here. A similarly misunderstood Top 40 artist from this era was the Guess Who, and it took 30 years for that group's pivotal 1972 Live at the Paramount album to get the full treatment. Luckily for fans of Midler, she -- and they -- were spared the indignity that may have cost the Guess Who serious FM radio time. Classic stuff exists in the grooves of Live at Last. [The label did release a single-disc promo-only version to radio which contained highlights.]

Performer Notes
  • Personnel includes: Bette Midler (vocals).
  • Personnel: Lou Volpe (guitar); Elizabeth Kane (harp); Jaroslav Jakubovic (reeds); Miles Krasner (trumpet); Richard Trifan, Don York (keyboards); Joseph Mero (vibraphone, percussion); Ira Buddy Williams (drums); Charlotte Crossley, Sharon Redd, Ula Hedwig (background vocals).
  • Audio Remixer: Lew Hahn.
  • Liner Note Author: Joe Reagoso.
  • Recording information: The Cleveland Music Hall, Cleveland, OH.
  • Photographer: Houghton .
  • The double-LP live album phenomenon was utilized in 1973 on Around the World With Three Dog Night to collect loads of hits and release them in another format. Three years later, Bob Seger's Live Bullet, J. Geils Band's Blow Your Face Out, and Frampton Comes Alive solidified the double disc as a way to bring important rock artists to the forefront. Come 1977, the Rolling Stones' Love You Live failed to live up to their single disc Get Your Ya Ya's Out or any of the brilliant bootleg performances of theirs proliferating. In the middle of all this arrives the very strong in-concert artist, Bette Midler, with her fourth album for Atlantic. This undated (probably 1976) performance from the Cleveland Music Hall, Cleveland, OH, does a decent job of capturing the magic of Midler. Having a show stretched across four sides was essential for this performer; the brilliance of her rendition of the Supremes' 1970 hit "Up the Ladder to the Roof" takes it out of the Motown context and brings it to Midler's Andrews Sisters world of girl group devotion. Segueing into a driving "Boogie Woogie Bugle Boy" answers the question asked in the opening medley of her signature tune, "Friends," with Ringo Starr's "Oh My My," Midler being astonished that anyone would ask the question if she can boogie. Another live LP, Divine Madness, was released only three years after this when she was riding her fame from the film The Rose, and that single disc concentrated on the comedienne's song performances ("Boogie Woogie Bugle Boy" gets reprised there), while 1985's single disc Mud Will Be Flung Tonight gave the fans her funny bits; thankfully with four sides of music and fun, Live at Last is allowed to run the gamut. With an adult contemporary (dare it be said, Vegas-style) act like Bette Midler, the sad thing is that bootlegs and live tapes don't proliferate. It's a shame, as she has lots to offer on every show, and when you think about it, only one double-live disc in a career this rich and this lengthy is unfair to both the artist and her fans. There are some brilliant moments here; along with "Up the Ladder to the Roof," her version of Johnny Mercer's "I'm Drinking Again" is better than the studio take on her self-titled second disc. "Delta Dawn" is wonderful, as are the up-tempo "Do You Wanna Dance" and John Prine's "Hello in There." Midler performs Neil Young's "Birds," tells raunchy jokes so clich that they depend upon her brilliant delivery, and has her personality captured in audio form splendidly. There's a very interesting "intermission" which features a Tom Dowd studio production of "You're Moving out Today," a tune written by Bruce Roberts, Midler, and Carole Bayer Sager, who simultaneously released a studio version the same year. It was a neat trick sliding it onto this release. Live at Last has lots to offer and has yet to be appreciated as the pure document that it is. Atlantic should be given a thumbs up for giving their performer the chance to artistically breathe here. A similarly misunderstood Top 40 artist from this era was the Guess Who, and it took 30 years for that group's pivotal 1972 Live at the Paramount album to get the full treatment. Luckily for fans of Midler, she -- and they -- were spared the indignity that may have cost the Guess Who serious FM radio time. Classic stuff exists in the grooves of Live at Last. [The label did release a single-disc promo-only version to radio which contained highlights.] ~ Joe Viglione

10)THE ROSE SOUNDTRACK
The Rose [Original Soundtrack] The Rose [Original Soundtrack] (1979) The Rose [Original Soundtrack] The Rose [Original Soundtrack] (1979) Divine Madness Divine Madness (1980) No Frills No Frills (1983) Mud Will Be Flung Tonight! Mud Will Be Flung Tonight! (1985) Beaches [Original Soundtrack] Beaches [Original Soundtrack] (1989) Some People's Lives Some People's Lives (1990) For the Boys For the Boys (1991) Gypsy [1993 CBS Television Cast] Gypsy [1993 CBS Television Cast] (1993) Bette of Roses Bette of Roses (1995) Bathhouse Betty Bathhouse Betty (1998) Bette Bette (2000) Sings the Rosemary Clooney Songbook Sings the Rosemary Clooney Songbook (2003) Sings the Peggy Lee Songbook Sings the Peggy Lee Songbook (2005) Cool Yule Cool Yule (2006) It's the Girls! It's the Girls! (2014) Hello, Dolly! [2017 Broadway Cast Recording] Hello, Dolly! [2017 Broadway Cast Recording] (2017) AllMusic Review  The Rose [Original Soundtrack] Review by Joe Viglione Paul A. Rothchild produced the final Janis Joplin studio album, Pearl, as well as many a Doors disc, and the late producer was the perfect guy to tackle this tribute to Joplin featuring "The Divine Miss M" as "Pearl"/"The Rose." In March of 1980, the version of "When a Man Loves a Woman" from this 1979 film soundtrack went Top 35, and Midler's biggest hit followed her Oscar nomination, but it was a well-produced version of the title track, different from the album, which went Top Three, the gold single the biggest of her six hits up to this point in time. It's a strange twist of events, Bette's previous 1979 album, Thighs and Whispers, has technically better sounds, Arif Mardin drenching it in the disco of the day, but that artificial episode pales next to this project, which features Lou Reed's "Rock 'n' Roll Animal" bandmates guitarist Steve Hunter and drummer Whitey Glan. The concerts were recorded live during June and July of 1978, and there's more than a touch of the Mitch Ryder sound on "Whose Side Are You On," the album opener. Hunter was in the Mitch Ryder band Detroit, which led up to Lou Reed's ensemble, so the level of authenticity goes far beyond what filmmakers put into, say, the Blues Brothers. They utilize a different set of musicians on "Love Me With a Feeling," the "Turtle Blues" of this story, vaguely referencing the original title to the Big Brother & the Holding Company album that tune came from with the "sex, drugs and rock & roll" chant. Bette Midler is a star perpetually evolving into icon, and this album's success, as well as the two hit singles it spawned, certainly helped the film, as much as the movie brought Midler to a new level of fame. Her voice is terrific on "Midnight in Memphis," and the material is extraordinary for many reasons. Midler gets to show what a tremendous blues singer she can be, drawing from the many elements she's secured from years on the stage. It's a pivotal moment in her career. The rendition of Genya Ravan's chestnut, "Stay With Me," penned by one of Joplin's favorite songwriters, producer Jerry Ragovoy, could have been the showstopper album track here. It isn't. The listener has to know the film in order to understand why the singer's voice is purposely falling apart. The strange twists of fate mentioned earlier appear again here -- the soundtrack to the Janis Joplin biography film contained studio versions of great live performances that are in the film; as Midler cut a different version of the title track,which became a number one adult contemporary hit and Top Three on the popular charts, "Stay With Me" also should have been re-recorded. Had Midler released a version of that tune with the same desperation and passions of "When a Man Loves a Woman," this LP might have had that so necessary third hit to catapult it into the record books. One of the best moments in the film is missing from this "soundtrack," the questionable move of leaving Bob Seger's "Fire Down Below" off of this disc. It's one of the most memorable moments in the film, tailor-made for MTV. Three years after this release, Bette Midler put another soundtrack out, Bette Midler in Divine Madness. The last two songs which end side two are actually "Fire Down Below" and "Stay With Me," and though Bette can't touch Genya Ravan's classic performance, this is still how the music should have been presented on The Rose soundtrack LP. It's hard to get too down on this record, though; it has the magic, it established Bette Midler to the larger audience she deserved, it brought Paul Rothchild the follow-up to Pearl he was cheated of by Joplin's death, and it rocks. The bluesy feel was a complete about face from the previous Thighs and Whispers, and, actually, it is truly Bette Midler's only real rock & roll album. That it did so much for her might suggest she try it again.

https://joeviglione.com/?page_id=113

https://www.fishpond.co.nz/Music/Live-at-Last-Edition-Bette-Midler/0829421290001?srsltid=AfmBOorvF15hCFYVgmZVw8HJsLqIG7QCsgZeZrSdTc_yEVJ31UiOErn0


11)BETTE MIDLER




Joe Viglione: All Music Guide   https://bootlegbetty.com/reviews-bette-midler-bette-midler/
“An earthy mix of blues, R&B;, and ’40s boogie-woogie” is how Bill Carpenter describes Bette Midler’s second album, a strangely elaborate transition containing some of the elements which made The Divine Miss M so divine. The album features superb production from her former piano player, Barry Manilow, and the man who would help craft 1979’s disco effort, Thighs and Whispers, Arif Mardin. The result is a solid album without the Top 40 fascinations of “Do You Wanna Dance?,” Buzzy Linhart / Mark “Moogy” Klingman’s “Friends,” or “Boogie Woogie Bugle Boy.” Rather than focus on a hit the way Clive Davis helped Manilow go to number one with “Mandy” in 1974, this big cast concentrates on being artistic, and on that level, Bette Midler works. No, she isn’t Shirley Bassey or Eartha Kitt, but material from Hoagy Carmichael and Johnny Mercer, Kurt Weil, and Bertolt Brecht, along with a dash of Bob Dylan, really covers the gamut. Where Midler could excel is with the girl group stuff, touched upon on The Divine Miss M. The medley of “Uptown” and “Da Doo Run Run” is fun, but lacking the satisfying elements Phil Spector jammed into his 45s. Midler really needed to go for it here, an explosive remake of “He’s a Rebel” or “Da Doo Run Run” would have been appropriate for 1973, not something that sounds like it was recorded during a live performance at the Continental Baths. It’s literally a cast of thousands; Bernard “Pretty” Purdie, Steve Gadd, and Luther Rix are just some of the drummers and guitarists Cornell Dupree and Hugh McCracken are onboard, as are Kenny Ascher, Don Grolnick, and Barry Manilow on keys, just to name a few. The talent was all lined up, and the music is immaculate, but there is no concentration on returning to the singles charts. “I Shall Be Released” as recorded here is just perfect for an album with a whisper of gospel, but still holds something back. A choir of voices and a production like Melanie Safka’s “Lay Down” would have broken this wide open on radio. It wasn’t until Mardin produced “Married Men” six years later on the Thighs and Whispers album that Midler would return to contemporary radio, and like “Friends,” her hit from 1973, “Married Men” only lingered at the bottom rung of the Top 40 charts. Great vocals, great musicianship, but no focus for radio action. Rita Coolidge took Jackie Wilson’s “Higher & Higher” Top Three in 1977, and Bette Midler ends the album with a marvelous version of that four years before Coolidge. The trouble is, it’s all so artsy. It’s a beautiful record ignoring the need to match the success of her first two singles, and in a world driven by radio, where timing is everything, the question to this day remains — why? There’s an excellent version of Johnny  Mercer’s “Drinking Again” which Rod Stewart had cut with the Jeff Beck Group; it’s a song that should have dominated ’70s radio which says, perhaps, the producers were being too careful for this record’s own good.



12)the rolling stones


https://thesomervillenewsweekly.blog/2019/11/18/the-rolling-stones-bridges-to-buenos-aires-by-joe-viglione/

By Joe Viglione

Perhaps a hundred years or so from now viewers will see two old men singing the song “Like a Rolling Stone” and wonder what it is doing on the film Bridges to Buenos Aires? Or maybe like Spinal Tap’s manager – National Lampoon editor Tony Hendra imitating John Lennon on “Magical Misery Tour” proclaiming “I’m a genius! Like Shakespeare and Beethoven and Van Gogh” – the distant future world will see this wonderfully scrambled duet between Mick Jagger and Robert Zimmerman as rock & roll versions of Beethoven and Shakespeare. For Stones and Dylan fans, twenty-one and a half years after the 1998 concert for the 1997 Bridges to Babylon CD, it is sheer magic, a nugget inside a very nice, very nice concert. The release date for this show was November 8, 2019, following up the September 2nd, 1998 German concert, Bridges to Bremen, which was released June 21, 2019.

So to get things organized here, the April 1998 show from Argentina is released in November of 2019 while the September show from Germany was issued earlier in June of this same year, 2019, twenty-one years after it was recorded. The Stones made sloppiness their trademark yet if you watch Bridges to Bremen, the 1990s Stones, as they are today, are inescapably refined. A Vegas show as slick as Cher, Elton John, Rod Stewart of Bette Midler. It has to be, these are different times. But a guest star of the magnitude of Dylan takes all bets off the table. Jagger’s harmonica is delightful and the band plays with a wild abandon (yet still in full Vegas mode) that is everything real rock and rollers want. Or maybe what rock historians want.

The press release writes: “Bridges to Buenos Aires captures the complete show from April 5, 1998, the last date of the band’s five-night sell-out residency at the River Plate Stadium in Argentina’s capital city. Without introduction, Bob Dylan, guitar in hand, joined the band on stage to sing “Like A Rolling Stone” with Jagger.”

You can catch some of the videos on YouTube as well as an informative trailer, and as this chronicler has stated in many a review of these magical artifacts, we want it all to sift through. It’s hard to imagine a hard rock band like Deep Purple having fanatics that revere them the way the expanded underground remains in awe of every drop generated by the Velvet Underground, but it is true. Deep Purple has ascended into a place where a multitude of their followers are obsessed with them. Personally I find their first hit, Joe South’s “Hush,” the Deep Purple worthy of that mantle. The first three Tetragrammaton albums were a British band giving their spin on Shadow Morton’s Vanilla Fudge formula. The Stones, Mick, Keith and Charlie, take the cult devotion to a level that only the Beatles and Dylan can share. Star Wars, Harry Potter, Beatles, Rolling Stones, Bob Dylan – the Velvet Underground enshrined as the hippest of all, millions adoring them against the multi-millions the Beatles, Dylan and Stones enjoy.

Now maybe I’m imagining things but the Bridges to Buenos Aires is just a bit more cutting edge than the German show, Bridges to Bremen, and it is much harder to gauge these days for, as stated, the audience demands the mega concert. And as this musicologist does quite often, I bring you back to the future by keying in on the benchmarks, Oakland 1969 and Madison Square Garden 1969.

Fifty years prior to the release of Bridges to Buenos Aires, November 9, 1969 was the performance(s) of the brilliant Oakland concert(s) that is indelibly pressed into the brains and souls of pure Rolling Stones fans. The bootleg, Live’r Than You’ll Ever Be.

Also recorded in November of 1969 were the concerts in Maryland (Baltimore, Nov 26, 1969) and New York (Madison Sq. Garden, Nov 27, 28, 1969) resulting in Get Yer Ya-Ya’s Out, released September 4, 1970. The bootleg – as legend has it – forcing out the commercial release.

Now here’s the Bridges to Buenos vs Bridges to Bremen 1999 meets Live’r vs Ya-Ya’s. The Dylan track on Buenos Aires differentiates the two concerts which, of course, have some kind of similarity, a professional touring band out on the road forever is not going to be as experimental as they were in 1969. The band featuring the powerhouse Mick Taylor/Keith Richards duo commanded with authority. Just listen to the July 18, 1972 Boston show that this writer attended, 2nd row: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ew_F-RHtGhs

Watch “You Can’t Always Get What You Want” from Buenos Aires. The classics work better than “Saint of Me” or “Flip the Switch,” real majesty in “You Can’t Always Get What You Want,” methodical, professional and sublime. Ron Wood, God love him, works well on this, yet hardcore Stones’ fans yearn for Mick Taylor’s counterplay with Keith. Nice to hear Mick sing “to my friend Jimmy,” the great Jimmy Miller, and the cameras are thankfully subdued, the main camera on Mick, fades to Keith and then to the backing chicks. It’s terrific, actually, quite terrific. Ronny’s lead is a different dimension, not Mick Taylor, then suddenly the pace picks up, the greatest rock and roll band in the world being just that.

“Jumpin’ Jack Flash” has good energy and Mick dressed for the occasion, including sun glasses. Keith, Ronny and Jagger all moving around with Charlie slamming away. Sure, this isn’t the Bill Wyman/Mick Taylor fantastic five, but this particular rendition is superb, chirping horns, the Vegas band actually playing like they’re at Sir Morgan’s Cove in Worcester again, seeming to throw caution to the wind, as Steely-Dan-precise as they actually are. A reasonable facsimile and worthwhile in a way far removed from the July 18, 1972 Boston show. We’ll call this a sophisticated rocking “Jumpin’ Jack Flash.”
There’s so much to like about Bridges to Buenos Aires, the packaging, the sixteen-page booklet, the double CD of the concert and the video. It’s a keeper though, as I’ve stated many times, we’d like to have all the Stones concerts in collectible form, from their first show up to present time. In a perfect world, the vibrations – if you believe the scientists and the mystics – are still floating out there in the universe like the light of stars that have long since evaporated.

13)BLOODROCK

POSSIBLY JOE VIGLIONE'S FIRST RECORD REVIEW IN THE HIGH SCHOOL PAPER IN ARLINGTON,  MA




One of the first record reviews that I ever wrote

Arlington High School THE CHRONICLE  


FROM A HIGH SCHOOL NEWSPAPER ABOVE TO ROLLINGSTONE.COM ABOUT 45 YEARS LATER....HA HA.....



14 THIS IS PROBABLY AEROSMITH'S FIRST PROFESSIONAL AUTOGRAPH

OUTSIDE OF HIGH SCHOOLS

I SAW AN UNKNOWN STEVE TYLER AND JOE PERRY AT A HUMBLE PIE

CONCERT AND FELT LIKE ASKING FOR THEIR AUTOGRAPHS....



15)jackie deshannon   new arrangement
JACKIE DESHANNON
NEW ARRANGEMENT   REVIEW BY JOE VIGLIONE IN THE ALLMUSIC GUIDE TO ROCK BOOK













16)BARBARA ACKLIN, AM I THE SAME GIRL LYRICS ON INSTRUMENTAL SONG SOULFUL STRUT





17)The same song as Soulful Strut 
YOUNG-HOLT UNLIMITED




18)Me and Bobby McGee   Jennifer Love Hewitt

19 BRANDY YOU'RE A FINE GIRL
LOOKING GLASS
NEW VOCAL OVER ORIGINAL BACKING TRACK ON TV





20 “Why I Left The Supremes” | Lynda Laurence on Diana Ross, Motown & Her Untold Story









22  Lynda Laurence - Very Best of the Supreme Ladies - Music & Performance - CD




23 SIGNED SEALED DELIVERED LYNDA LAURENCE WITH STEVIE WONDER
ALSO APPEARED FIRST TIME TOGETHER ON THE DICK CAVETT SHOW



24  STEVIE WONDER WITH LYNDA LAURENCE ON THE DICK CAVETT SHOW

 



25  Ralph Santosuosso
Kensington, New Hampshirehttps://ralphsantosuosso.bandcamp.com/album/new-again  Ralph Santosuosso
Hey Friends!
I just released my first EP! It's called New Again and it's available on Bandcamp. A huge thanks to MMike Lecuyer my engineer and co producer. Bob Nash at Wonka Sound ....Musicians Ken Kalajyian,Michael Zizza,Chris Felknor Kevin Roche Brian Waterhouse and my friend Catie Curtis for her support and contributing her beautiful voice on "Eden". This one is called "Hey Girl" I hope you like it ...Thank you for listening!
Ralph's band opened for Rory Gallagher  (Max Thorn) in 1985




26


1)David Kubinec's MAINHORSE AIRLINE:Geneva Tapes

{$David Kubinec} released {^Some Things Never Change}
in 1978, an album on  {@A & M} produced by {$John
Cale}, and that  brought him to the attention of
{$Velvet Underground} fans, but had these lost tapes
from {$Mainhorse Airline} had that major distribution
perhaps history would be different.  {^The Geneva
Tapes} feature ten performances from
vocalist/songwriter Kubinec who, along with drummer
{$Bryson Graham}, were found by a young keyboard
player and future member of {$The Moody Blues} and
{$Yes}, {$Patrick Moraz}, and his bassist/cellist
friend {$Jean Ristori}.  If it sounds like a minor
supergroup, well, it is as {$Bryson Graham} went on to
play with {$Spooky Tooth} and {$Gary Wright} and
{$Ristori} became a mastering engineer of note,
working with many of the bands this music reflects.
The unique combination of these musical gents
generated some compelling and heady sounds that turn
out to be a tremendous find.  Though labeled
"progressive rock", the truth is that {$Mainhorse
Airline} on these lost tapes from 1969/1970 prove a
wonderfully psychedelic/progressive band with some
heavy pop leanings.  {&"What The Government Can Do For
You"} seems cut right out of 1960's San Franciscan
rock while {&"Blunt Needles"} recalls {$The Blues
Magoos} seeking out the heavier sounds of {$The Amboy
Dukes}. A Kubinec/Moraz composition, {&"The Passing
Years"}, is heavily influenced by early {$Deep Purple}
by way of {$Procul Harum}, but it's the colours of
British psychedelia that is the frosting which makes
the mix most engaging. {$Pale Sky} is a paradox in a
bit of a quandary.  It could be the U.K. Kaleidoscope,
{$The Small Faces} or {$The Electric Prunes}, a
delightful combination of sixties psychedelia swirling
through the speakers with an adventurous Moraz
building eerie sounds that complement Kubinec's vocals
perfectly, perhaps {$Eddy Pumer} and {$Peter
Daltrey}'s U.K. band {$Kaleidoscope} influencing the
music within, their Brit rock psychedelia edge added
to this experimental progressive concoction.  The
extensive liner notes from {$Louise Campbell} in the
twelve page booklet make for fun and informative
reading, how Dutch millionaire {$Sam Miesegaes} helped
both {$Mainhorse Airline} and {$Supertramp} get their
careers in order.  Meanwhile a composition like
{&"Directions For Use"} spins one way while opening
track, {&"Overture & Beginners"}, dives off into
another.  {$Pat Moraz} released an album after this,
{^Mainhorse}, while {$David Kubinec} joined/formed
{$Rats}, the evolution worth noting.  On {$Rats}
{^First Long Player Record} there's a shorter, three
minute version of the uplifting {&"Very Small Child"}
(this rendition clocks it at a minute and a half
longer), and both are worth giving the blindfold test
to.  Exotic and very different from {&"Make It The Way
You Are"}, the material here was heading in absolutely
the right direction.  It's too bad they didn't
continue the journey together.  {$John Cale} and
{$David Kubinec} should go back and re-mix the {^Some
Things Never Change} lp with these ideas in mind,
especially considering the {$Strawberry Alarm Clock}
feel of {&"The Daybreak Of Eternity"}.  The music on
that {@A & M} disc from 1978 went unrealized and these
great {^Geneva Tapes} point the way towards how that
can be corrected.

Ristori, Jean/cello, bass
Graham, Bryson/drums
Kubinec, David/vocals, engineer
Bonnett, Graham/mastering
John, Nicholas/coordination
Stratford, Mark/coordination
Millar, Adrian/engineer
Moraz, Patrick/keyboards
Yeldham, Adam/artwork, design
   
===================================================
2)Iggy Pop  Live In San Fran 1981

It is tough to compete with {^The Stooges} and {^Fun
House} when it comes to menacing rock & roll / punk
with as much ambiance as attitude.  With a bootleg
type feel {^Live In San Fran 1981} is still able to
rise above the predictable with a few choice cuts to
satisfy those devoted to Iggy's music. Opening with a
decent {&"Some Weird Sin"} from 1977's {^Lust For
Life} this set is not comprehensive, and that it is so
haphazard is actually a plus here.  The obligatory
{&"TV Eye"} and {&"1969"} are included, but outside of
the title track to {&"Lust For Life"}, everything else
will be obscure to people not acquainted with {$The
Stooges} brand of mayhem. The core of the album is in
support of the 1981 {@Arista} release {^Party} and the
second track, {&"Houston Is Hot Tonight"}, is one of
the more manic and exciting cuts here.  It sounds like
a bizarre and revamped sequel to {&"White Light/White
Heat"} by {$The Velvet Underground} with plenty of
grunge to bring it over the top.  {&"Rock & Roll
Party"}, {&"Eggs on Plate"}, {&"Pumpin for Jill"} and
{&"Bang Bang"} are the other titles from {^Party},
those five tracks being half that album represented
here on the twelve live tunes.  {&"Dum Dum Boys"},
the only track from 1977's {^The Idiot}, has eerie
guitars and a sinister vocal that propels and
differentiates it from most of the show on display in
this package. {&"I Need More"}, a  ($Matlock}/{$Pop}
collaboration, has a good anthemic feel to it with a
made-for-football-game chorus  and {&"I'm A
Conservative"}, also from 1980's {^Soldier} disc on
Arista, has some decent moments. Despite the low
sonics the performance is very good and some of the
selections - {&"Houston Is Hot"}, {&"Bang Bang"},
{&"Dum Dum Boys"}, even parts of {&"I'm A
Conservative"}, are hard driving and successful.

The two studio bonus tracks, {&"Fire Engine"} and
{&"Warrior Tribe"}, were produced by {$Cars}
mastermind {$Ric Ocasek} They don't have Pop's sneer
nor Ocasek's trademark edge, but they are nice to have
for completists. At the end of {&"Bang Bang"} the Ig
announces the band to an appreciative audience, though
the tracking appears to be not in the order of the
concert. About {$Iggy Stooge}/{$Jim Osterberg}'s
recorded "live" concerts {$Greg Prato} says in his
review of {^Ultimate Live}: "either Iggy is focused
and ready to take on the whole crowd (1977-1978,
1985-present day), or indifferent and half-hearted
(1979-1983)".  This 1981 disc is the exception to that
rule, except for the Ocasek produced studio material,
which is a shame because {$Richard Otcasek} is a truly
gifted producer when he puts the elbow grease in.
Perhaps Ric and Iggy were having too much fun to
settle down and let it rip as the techno drums on both
tracks get in the way of the hard-rocking live set.
But all of it - live and studio - is nice to have for
Iggy completists, and there are some key moments on
this fine little platter.

===================================================


3) R&R Outlaw Japan Tour 2003: Unplugged Version
David Peel/Lower East Side


The {@Captain Trip} label in Japan treats {$David
Peel} like a rock star and...{^Rock 'n' Roll Outlaw
Japan Tour 2003 Unplugged Version} proves that the
journeyman deserves said star treatment.  Peel has a
truly unique charisma and his incessant prayers to the
gods of marijuana take the term obsessive/compulsive
to a new level.  As you might guess this acoustic
collection of nine songs recorded between December
2-12 2003 sound like they were taped in John & Yoko's
hotel room Suite 1742 of Fairmont The Queen Elizabeth
hotel where {&"Give Peace A Chance"} was indelibly
captured for the ages.  The tambourine is omnipresent
and Peel is trapped in a time warp, but that's the
charm at play here. These "official bootleg
recordings" rise above true bootleg, there's clarity
and there's energy. Producer {$Ken Matsutani} realizes
the value of {$David Peel}'s controlled mania and
eternal immersion in the counterculture.  If the once
suit-and-tied {$G.G.Allin} was merely playing the part
of a degenerate until the role overtook him, Peel
never had to go through a similar transformation - he
is what he was and what he always will be, and it is
captured wonderfully in all its glory on this disc and
its companion piece,  {^Rock 'n' Roll Outlaw Japan
Tour 2003 Electric Version}.  Though {&"Free Tommy
Chong"}, {&"I Like Marijuana"}, {&"The Hippie From New
York City"} and {&"The Pope Smokes Dope"} are on both
discs, they are dramatically different recordings
making both albums unique and deserving to be issued
together.  The lyrics to {&"The Pope Smokes Dope"} are
as hilarious now as when they were first committed to
vinyl but it is in a sing/songy folk style on the
unplugged epic that gives the humor a larger platform.
On the companion disc it might as well be {$The
Gizmos} or the very early {$New York Dolls} tearing
the song to and fro...with wonderful ...unintelligible
results.  The fact that Peel can keep the energy up
both live and acoustic is evidence he is  more serious
than his demeanor indicates.  The irreverence is part
of the persona and the simple chord changes come to
life when his endless party routine draws the
unsuspecting in.
Peel would make annual visits to his friend, the late
{$Jo Jo Laine}'s house, and the living room would
erupt in this same fashion; on this tour Jo Jo's son,
{$Boston Kane} (nee O'Donohue), appears with {$David
Peel} carrying on in the tradition started when Peel's
guitarist {$Tommy Doyle} met Ms. Laine at the {-Mar Y
Sol} festival in the 70s.  Let the party ramble on ...
both discs are necessary to get the full effect.  Put
this guy on tour with the reconstituted {$New York
Dolls} because decades after his first flash of fame
the dude still has it.
====================================================

4)Destroy All Monsters  Grow Live Monsters

Originally in the VHS format from {@Lobsterland
Videos} this bizarre film makes the translation to DVD
splendidly. With some material recorded between 1973
and 1977 the collage of images and exotic sounds is
kind of like colorizing an original print of the movie
{#Night Of The Living Dead} and putting it into a
blender with {$Jerry Goldsmith}'s soundtrack to
{^Planet Of The Apes}.  Intentionally made to be hard
to describe there's an eight page interview with
filmmaker and {$Destroy All Monsters} band member
{$Cary Loren}, and it is helpful.  If ever a
compilation DVD needed extensive liner notes, this is
it, and MVDVisual smartly puts the instructions on the
back of this musical version of a chocolate chip
cookie mix. For those who felt {$The Mentors} {^El
Duce Vita} too immature and vile and {$The
Chesterfield King}'s {#Where Is The Chesterfield
King?} a victim of extreme haphazard disarray, the
erratic vibrations splashed under these cinematic cuts
give new meaning to the term "art for art's sake." But
they are much more effective than the other two
aforementioned DVDs. There's lots of material to
choose from, a "Hometown Horrors" slide show as well
as  a selection from a 3 hour {$Destroy All Monsters}
performance in Seattle, Washington in 2000.  If it is
art imitating life, then the band's embrace of
Japanese horror flicks has come home to roost as some
of these sounds and visions would please Mothra and
Godzilla.  Great stuff to play in the background at
parties.
===============================================
5)60's Summer Love

Some records are such a delight to review that a new
perspective can be found when going over music we've
heard time and time again.  The fact that major labels
often miss the point is something {@Universal Music
Group} can contest with a two cd fifty-song monster of
a compilation entitled {^Sixties Summer Love}. It is
as much of a gem as {^Endless Summer} by {$The Beach
Boys} is a compilation classic, but unless UMG blasts
this on overnight television commercials it won't get
1/100th of the acclaim as that perennial favorite.
What is the key to this collection's brilliance?  It
is the mix of overplayed material like {$The Turtles}'
{&"Happy Together"} with sublime and underplayed
masterpieces like {$P.P. Arnold}'s take on {$Cat
Steven}'s {&"The First Cut Is The Deepest"} or {$Billy
Fury}'s {&"Wondrous Place"}, or the song that {@Ode
Records} and {$Lou Adler} kept forgetting to demand
{$Carole King} re-create when she ruled the world in
the early 70s, {&"It Might As Well Rain Until
September"}.  If your CD player shuffles, all the
better, for {$Bobby Hebb}'s {&"Sunny"} and {&"The More
I See You"} by {$Chris Montez} are always essential
listening...though the {&"Sunny"} tape transfer is
bass heavy like the Japanese import and not the
re-mastered version on Uni's {@Hip0 Select} label.
Any album that contains {$The Beach Boys} {&"God Only
Knows"} and then can slip in a {$Herman's Hermits}
outrageously wonderful rarity (as far as airplay goes
in the U.S.A.) like {&"My Sentimental Friend"} had
someone in the tape room having some fun instead of
listening to the program director/accountants upstairs
-  {&"I Got You Babe"} is as neo-{$Phil Spector} as
anyone could ever get, and {$Sonny Bono}'s masterpiece
fits nicely on a disc with his mentor's ubiquitous
{&"You've Lost That Lovin' Feelin'} by {$The Righteous
Brothers} followed quickly by {$The Isley Brothers}
{&"This Old Heart Of Mine"} - heck, in the days of
Ipods and satellite radio and MIKE FM this is an
ultimate combo for pop fans that beats out all the new
fangled formats.  The tracking and the selections are
as, {$Peter Noone} sings  in {&"My Sentimental
Friend"}, "just beyond compare".  Now some people may
say it is blasphemy to call this a "desert island
disc" or put it in the same category as the
aforementioned {^Endless Summer} or {$David Bowie}'s
off-base masterwork, {^Pin Ups}, but when {$The
Mersey}'s {&"Sorrow"} is plugged into four dozen plus
songs along with {$Tim Hardin}'s {&"Hang On To A
Dream"}, the argument is solid that even major labels
can come up with winners once in awhile.  As {$Bruce
Eder} says in his AMG review of {^Endless Summer} "no
notes, not a word of historical context, just a great
collection of songs...The packaging was nigh perfect,
a simple, celebratory sun-lit graphic that spoke
volumes about the music" - and Eder might as well have
been talking about this excellent selection of
melodies.  {$The Mamas & The Papas} meeting {$The
Kinks} is all pop fans really want...but I guess it is
time to burst the bubble...this double CD was
manufactured in the U.K. by {@Universal Music TV} and
not something people in the states are used to
finding. {&"Whiter Shade Of Pale"} on a comp with
{&"Hey Paula"} by {$Paul & Paula} as well as
selections from {$Buddy Holly}, {$Cliff Richard}'s
take on {&"The Twelfth Of Never"} (take that {$Donny
Osmond} ), {$Marvin Gaye}, early {$Bee Gees} and
{$Dinah Washington}'s {&"Mad About The Boy"}...c'mon,
what more can one ask?.  And they put {$Percy
Sledge}'s {&"When A Man Loves A Woman"} on the second
disc so {$Procul Harum} fans wouldn't get confused!
{$Astrud Gilberto}'s {&"The Girl From Ipanema} closes
it all and it sounds even better in its stereo mix
than it ever did on a little transistor...if you can
believe it. Tremendous!  In 1997 Uni had a similar
compilation in release, {^The First Summer of Love: 45
Classic Hits From Sixties}, and it's just about as
good as this.  Tell those executives to get these
things on TV in America - the music is magical and
still so very relevant.  The fact that this critic
purchased his copy instead of getting a promotional
should be a clue that there's much gold in these
grooves.

=====================================================
6)And I Write The Songs


One of the most eclectic singer/songwriters you'll
ever encounter, {^And I Write The Songs: 34
Singer/Songwriter Classics} works on many levels by
gathering extraordinary original songs by a diverse
group of original artists.  The fact that the album
that opens with {$Richard & Linda Thompson} and closes
with {$James Brown} ought to tell you the mission -
and in-between there's some unforgettable music like
{$Joe Jackson}'s {&"It's Different For Girls"} a step
away from {$Kirsty MacColl}'s driving {&"Theres A Guy
Works Down The Chip Shop Swears Hes Elvis"}.
Certainly {$Tim Hardin}'s {&"The Lady Came From
Baltimore"} is as deserving as {$Neil Sedaka}'s
lilting {&"Our Last Song Together"}, but putting those
titles kitty-corner to {$Roger Miller}'s {&"King Of
The Road"}...well... perhaps {$Hardin} would've been
the better segue.  The CD is a strange mix of country
singer/songwriters like {$Jim Stafford} and {$Billy
Ray Cyrus} just a few cuts apart from {$Elton John}'s
{&"Daniel"} and {$Rod Stewart}'s {&"Mandolin Wind"}.
{$Nils Lofgren}, {$Chris De Burgh} and {$Rosie Vela}
will, no doubt, be pleased to be included, as will
{$Lloyd Cole}, and where {$Steve Winwood}'s {&"While
You See A Chance"} has a relationship to {$Marianne
Faithful}'s {&"Broken English"}, at least as label
mates, they share little with {$Dillard & Clark}.  But
the envelope pushing mix is what makes this so
intriguing.  Liner note writer {$John Collis} misses
the mark a bit on {$Bobby Hebb}, though the album
uniquely places {$Hebb}'s {&"Sunny"} (resplendent in a
little extra reverb in the mastering) next to {$Marvin
Gaye} and {$James Brown}, who both covered the Hebb
classic, and two spaces away from {$Hank Williams}'
{&"Cold Cold Heart}, which {$Bobby Hebb} covered on
his {^That's All I Wanna Know} album.  And, yes,
{$Joan Baez} being associated with country is not a
stretch, but her {&"Diamonds & Rust"} on an album with
{&"Achy Breaky Heart"} is, and it is that warped sense
of irony that makes this collection so very intriguing
and exciting.  {$Gallagher & Lyle} deserve wider
exposure, as does {$Joan Armatrading} and {$Murray
Head}, but chances are they never thought they would
all be sequenced together on one album.  Seek it out
for though there's a plethora of singer/songwriter
compilations through the ages, this one is very
special.  Leaving {$Bruce Johnston}'s title track off
of the collection was a mistake, however.  The
proverbial softball coming at you at one mile per
hour, it would have been the frosting on the cake.

======================================================
7)Cy Curnin The Returning Sun


On 2005's {^Mayfly} lead singer of {$The Fixx} {$Cy
Curnin} had mainstream keyboardist {$Bill Champlin}
and guitarist {$Bruce Gaitsch} (both of {$Chicago} /
{$Peter Cetera} fame)  working with him, but fear not,
with {$Lou Reed}/{$Marianne Faithful} bassist
extraordinaire {$Fernando Saunders} and the equally
"faithful" (to Cy's solo work} {$Billy Ward},
{$Curnin} comes up with a super contemporary album of
of pop hooks and high tech sound on this outing, {^The
Returning Sun}, released two years after {^Mayfly} .
Opening track {&"We Might Find It"} nicks exactly from
the {&"Don't You (Forget About Me)"} {$Simple Minds}
riff, recycling it 22 years after that song hit #1.
And if track 2, {&"Remember Me When I'm Gone"}, isn't
playing with the {$Simple Minds} title (...don't you
forget about me when I'm gone...), well, going to that
source and bringing it back to the future is the
trick, and this veteran artists pulls it off
majestically. {&"Falling Apart Together"} blends Euro
pop with just a dash of some machine shop industrial,
to very good effect.  Meanwhile the title track eases
up a bit, perhaps some techno/folk with island
flavorings, reverse reggae under a very nice melody.
Real staying power here, {&"The Returning Sun"}
possibly being a double entendre...some musical
prodigal son returning to his roots - perhaps in light
of what went down on the {^Mayfly} disc!  All ten
songs are under ten minutes except for {&"The Future's
Not What It Used To Be"}, maybe a nice theme song for
a {#Terminator 4} movie?  The packaging is elegant on
{$Cy Curnin}'s own record label and the music is easy
to absorb.  {&"Nothing Is Normal"} would fit on any
{$Fixx} album, and that's a good thing, the voice is
strong and the message is communicated.  {$Clark
Stiles} programs a wonderful {&"The World Will Always
Turn"}, solid progressive pop that can fit onto Top 40
playlists...and should.  The stereo separation is
great and there's loads of creativity keeping the
tracks fresh enough to warrant repeated spins.
Hopefully the mates in his main band will embrace the
final two tracks here for {&"Damned If You Do"} also
has something special to groove to and an attractive
production mixing gloss into the sound spaces. {^The
Returning Sun} is an impressive disc from Curnin and
{&"Nothing Is Normal"} keeps coming back as a standout
on a collection rippling with potential.

==================================================
8)The Complaints  FEAR

This very smart music from Cranston, Rhode Island's
{$The Complaints} was engineered by the legendary
{$Phil Greene} - former guitarist with {@Warner
Brothers} act {$Swallow} and heavily associated with
{$John Cafferty & the Beaver Brown Band} as well as
{$New Kids On The Block}.  For a trio they wield some
serious power, {$Dean Petrella}'s vocals and guitar
protrude like an unholy marriage between {$Nirvana}
and the more mainstream {$Neighborhoods} from Boston,
a group Greene also worked with.  But the finished
product works for these nine short pop tunes - all
bordering on the two and a half to three and a half
minute length - pack a lot of punch.  {&"House Wife"}
is spunky enough to evoke what {$The Doobie Brothers}
might've sounded like if they were churning out their
hits in the new millennium...funky with drive.  The
snare drum sure feels like one of {$Phil Greene}'s old
tricks, something called "Janet's Beaver" where the
recording studio combined samples from {$Janet
Jackson}'s {&"Nasty"} with some {$Beaver Brown} drum
sounds.  BAM - the crackling sample was utilized on
many tracks coming out of that notable Rhode Island
facility and the snap works to good effect on this
disc.  {&"Ugly Girl"} is another stylistic change, the
nine {$Neil Petrella} originals clever and concise.
The rhythm section of {$Chris Cruz} on bass and
{$Anthony Marotti}'s drums keep the foundation
together for {$Petrella} while the haunting backing
vocals on {&"Ugly Girl"} show the band knows the needs
of its pop audience.  In a move that's most
appreciated to those who like to read the words the
trio publish all the lyrics on their TheComplaints.com
website which also has clean navigation that doesn't
annoy, though the lyrics are included in the
obligatory tiny type inside the black eight page
booklet with a very intriguing blurry photo of the
band.  There's a montage of dozens of photos inside
the jewel case making for novel packaging along with
some solid music. Check out {&"I Won't}, a jangly
{$Raspberries}/old-style {$Beatles} tune that comes in
at two minutes and forty-eight seconds and exits
before you can get tired of it.  With songs short and
sweet the boys get the message across and shut it down
quick, which is the best avenue for pop artists to
take. Some tracks work better than others but the
{^Fear} cd is an admirable first effort that rocks
with authority.

Petrella, Dean/vocals, guitar
Cruz, Chris/bass
Marotti, Anthony/drums
The Complaints/arrangements, production, design,
layout design
Greene, Phil/producer, engineer, mixing
Lannon, Chris/engineer
Petronia, Jay "Petro"/assistant engineer
Lian, Roger/mastering
Castillo, John A./photography
==================================================

9)Linda Draper  One, Two Three Four

On her fourth release since 2001 - thus the title -
{^One, Two, Three, Four} - {$Linda Draper} takes a
less is more formula on these dozen tunes and lets her
pretty voice and minimal folk strums tell each tale.
Though probably not influenced by early {$Marianne
Faithful} and {$Nico} she has that little girl voice
which speaks with authority over dangling arrangements
that are pleasant and insightful. The wordy essays are
printed in the six page booklet that accompanies the
music, a photo inside recalling {$Jennifer Warnes}
circa her days with {$John Cale} as producer.  And
{$Cale} himself could have put this solid outing
together, the six minute and eighteen second
{&"Lifeboat"} would do {$The Sutherland Brothers &
Quiver} proud, and would also be a nice track for a
{$Gavin Sutherland} solo disc.  The piano taking a
dominant place over the guitar among the eerie sounds
makes for a dynamic and plodding
mini-masterpiece...someone mail this to {$John Cale}
for his observations...  Most of the material hovers
around the three minute mark, {&"Jezebel"} displaying
a 1920's vocal-style that sounds like {$Norman
"Hurricane" Smith} took over the console and found a
vintage microphone just for fun.
The perpetual semi-jangle guitar strums border on
monotony, but like {$The Ramones} and {$Chuck Berry},
Draper knows how to take a great riff and milk it for
all its worth.  The approach to each melody and vocal
is what holds the attention of the waterfall folk
strums, especially on the title track.  Draper goes
from lecturing to analyses, whatever hits her fancy,
but she does it in an engaging way and after a few
spins she's won you over.  There's some captivating
magic here very, very worth exploring.

Draper, Linda/vocals, Acoustic & Nylon String guitar,
arrangements

Kramer/production, engineering, arrangements, vocals

Tess/Vocals

Friend, David Michael/photos
DelParto, Neil/photography
DelParto, Angelo/design, layout
==================================================
10)Pete York & Friends - Spencer Davis Drummer

Drummer {$Pete York} emerged from {$The Spencer Davis
Group} with {$Steve Winwood}, {$Spencer Davis} and
{$Muff Winwood} and it is commendable that without the
name recognition of his three colleagues York has
amassed a body of work that demands a
directory/in-depth scorecard.  This 3 CD box is a
beautifully packaged collection from 1984, 1985 and
1988 with the CDs pressed on black and resembling
mini-lp's, even with grooves painted on the face. What
the box fails to note is that all three of these live
albums have been previously released with the same
titles although under different artist's names.  And
that aspect of the project muddies the waters for the
fans - and even for {$York} himself.

Disc one is from October 1, 1984 and features fourteen
tracks titled "Live Together" with {$Spencer Davis}
and {$Colin Hodgkinson} participating.  It is actually
the
{^Live Together} album released multiple times
starting in 1988 and credited to {$Spencer Davis},
{$Pete York}, {$Colin Hodgkinson}.  You get the hits
of the {$Spencer Davis Group} and more which, of
course, you could also get if you picked up {@Angel
Air}'s {^Spencer Davis Group Live In Manchester 2002}.
The version of {&"Gimme Some Lovin"} here sounds like
a drunken bar-room at 3 A.M., long after closing time
- while the rendition on 'Manchester 2002' rocks out
more.  After four decades this material has been
played on thousands and thousands of stages and
there's nothing extraordinary here, though true fans,
of course, appreciate the redundancy.

Disc 2 is named {^Steaming} - {$Pete York} presents
{$Brian Auger} & {$Colin Hodgkinson} - and is also a
{$Brian Auger} release on its own.  Out of the three
albums here this one has the most dynamic recording
and will actually call out for repeated spins.
{$Auger}'s keyboard sound is immense and {$York}'s
drumming reacts to the greatness with a subtle
showcase of his own skills - a display of the man's
unique drumming technique -  not just mere
run-throughs of his favorites songs which is the
direction the other two discs take. {$Donovan}'s
{&"Season Of The Witch"} drifts off into different
dimensions after they've played the melody out while
{&"Prelude To A Kiss"} is dreamy...and could've been
recorded at someone's wedding.  In a bizarre way this
heavy jazz album from April 19, 1985 is the most poppy
of all the CDs included here.

The third disc "Extremely Live at Birmingham Town
Hall", is from July, 1988 with bassist {$Colin
Hodgkinson}, {$Miller Anderson} on guitar, {$Zoot
Money} on keyboards along with {$Spencer Davis} and
{$Chris Farlowe}, who comes in halfway through to sing
titles by {$Randy Newman}, {$Bob Dylan} and {$T.Bone
Walker}.  The material is well performed, as one would
imagine, which is exactly the point...that you can
imagine what this would sound like before putting it
into the player!  The rendition of {&"Watching The
River Flow"} doesn't add anything that {$Dylan}'s
mystique and legend could benefit from,  in fact,
{$Chris Farlowe} has more biting renditions out there
than this one - try the {^Wine, Women & Song}
compilation from 'various artists' for an example.
But it is also hard not to be respectful of these
gents and their work  and since this 3 CD package is
not a total bust, it is, as they say, better to have
more than less.

With the elegant packaging the {@Inakustik} label
should have gone the extra mile and included an
extended booklet.  The casual listener would probably
find the story as appealing as the music - and without
liner notes the project tends to aim for the audience
that already has versions of these songs that sound so
much alike, at least on CDs 1 and 3.  The uninitiated
just will not be able to tell the music apart from
disc to disc.  Recorded on different years during the
1980s the sound is surprisingly consistent...and very
similar.  With {$Ginger Baker's Air Force} and so many
{$Ringo Starr} live packages including famous friends,
{$Pete York}'s performances need just a bit more star
power.  Perhaps if they added  practice sessions from
{$Eric Clapton's Powerhouse} or a lost live tape this
unique package could garner a bit more attention.  On
its own {^Pete York & Friends} is a nice collectible
for those who appreciate British rock and blues
musicians, especially the rhythm section of {$York}
and {$Hodgkinson}, who are the one constant from disc
to disc.  It's just that you've heard  most of this
many times before.


York, Pete/drums, producer
Davis, Spencer/guitar, vocals
Hodgkinson, Colin/bass
Ullmann, Andre/Engineer
Auger, Brian/keyboards
Anderson, Miller/guitar, vocals
Farlowe, Chris/vocals
Money, Zoot/vocals, keyboards
Rössle, Bernhard/Realization 




27

28

29

30


40   

Fri, Aug 1, 2003 at 6:30 AM


{&"Big Spender"} is a song from the Broadway Musical {-Sweet Charity}
and at ten seconds shorter than {$The Box Tops} hit {&"The Letter"},  a
succinct minute and forty-eight seconds, it packs a tremendous punch.  This {$Ernest
Freeman} arrangement was recorded on September 12, 1967 and  released in
England that same month.  It reached #21 on the U.K. charts October 11.
{@United Artists} put this rendition out as a single on Halloween that
year in the U.S. and despite the wide variety on Top 40 radio in the
'60's, the format wasn't quite ready for something so over the top.
The {$Cy Coleman}/{$Dorothy Fields} composition was covered by many
including {$Pearl Bailey}, {$Helen Gallagher}, {$Bobby Hackett},
{$Shirley MacLaine}and {$The Supremes}, among others.

Despite the lack of radio play it is {$Bassey's} rendition  that really
stuck, drag acts with lips synchronized to every nuance of this
Shirley's emotion can't wait for those horns and a single bell
anticipating the lady's monologue aimed at "a man of distinction."
Getting "right to the point" she sets the ground rules for having fun -
if he's so free with the cash, maybe the "big spender" is equally free
with his time?  In the seduction she's only asking for a "little" of
that time promising laughs and more. The drama is condensed into a
riveting blast of traditional pop that is as powerful as it is quick.

Top 40 for January 2026 Nils Lofgren, Two Lovers - Dolly Parton, Louise Cordet, Mary Wells with Smokey Robinson duet, The Toys, West Bruce and Laing / Dame Shirley Bassey

  Viglione has reviewed several of Bassey's albums, including And I Love You So and Nobody Does It Like Me.     His reviews are cited as...