Showing posts with label Jimi Hendrix. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Jimi Hendrix. Show all posts

Wednesday, December 20, 2017

HAPPY HOLIDAYS! A Rock'n'Soul Music Player


Hear hundreds of great Christmas, Hanukkah, and Kwanzaa songs, all in order from 1947 to Today!




Rockabilly! Jazz! Blues! Soundtracks! Soul! Country! Garage! Psychedelic! Funk! Glam! Reggae! Punk! New Wave! HipHop! Electro! and more!

Spotify playlist title= HAPPY HOLIDAYS!: Rock'n'Soul Playlist
This is a Spotify player. Join up for free here.

*(The Player is limited to the first 200 songs. Hear the unlimited Playlist here.)


Featuring:
Julie London, Elvis, LaVern Baker, Ella Fitzgerald, Ramsey Lewis, John Coltrane, The Everly Brothers, Aretha Franklin, The Ronettes, The Surfaris, The Beach Boys, Jimmy Smith, The Sonics, Stevie Wonder, Booker T & The MGs, James Brown, The Who, Isaac Hayes, Jimi Hendrix, Donny Hathaway, The Temptations, John Lennon and Yoko Ono, Laura Nyro, Marvin Gaye, Johnny Cash, Big Star, David Bowie, The Damned, Kurtis Blow, The Yobs, Al Green, Monty Python's Flying Circus, Queen, Prince, Fishbone, Run DMC, The Bangles, U2, Los Lobos, Ramones, El Vez, Luscious Jackson, The Fall, Reigning Sound, The Flaming Lips, William "Bootsy" Collins, The Smithereens, The Hives, Bob Dylan, Sharon Jones And The Dap Kings, 45 Grave, Jeff Buckley, The Black Keys, and many more!



© Tym Stevens



See Also:

HALLOWEEN!: A Rock'n'Soul Music Player

DIA DE LOS MUERTOS: A Rock Music Player

THANKSGIVING!: A Rock'n'Soul Music Player

HAPPY HOLIDAYS! A Rock'n'Soul Music Player

BEATLESQUE: Christmas


The Real History of ROCK AND SOUL!: The Music Player Checklist



Monday, March 2, 2015

JIMMY REED: The Groover of Rock, From Motown To Sesame Street


...with 2 strutting
Music Players!




RockSex
brings you the actual, all-inclusive
history of Rock'n'Soul music,
with essay overviews and Music Players.

History Checklist


Today, the jaunty Jimmy Reed, the groover of Rock!
Hear 2 extensive music players, one of Reed and one of all his disciples from the 1950s to today!

Music Player quick-links:
𝟭 Jimmy Reed
𝟮 Jimmy Reed's disciples: 1950s-Today




𝟭
ROCKIN' WITH REED!:
The Music of Jimmy Reed




The "Sesame Street" theme and many other famous songs we love all exist because of one Blues man.

Sometimes you can tell a history of Rock'n'Soul through the influence of one guitarist, or one voice, or one beat, or one song, or a groove. Jimmy Reed trademarked a groove that defined generations of music afterward.


JIMMY REED
by Tym Stevens

This is a Spotify player. Join up for free here.



Jimmy Reed was an unassuming gentle soul who raised up a lot of noise and ripples.

A Mississippi blues man, a peer in the new 1950s electric wave of John Lee Hooker, Muddy Waters, and Howlin' Wolf, Jimmy regularly galloped hits and standards into the pop charts alongside upstart colts like Chuck Berry> and Bo Diddley>. Catchy, no frills, all thrills. Jimmy bridged the worlds of Rock and Blues exactly as the first youth of Rock'n'Roll> were learning to play.

Jimmy had a sweet disposition, like a cherished uncle talking loose, that felt like casual confessionals of hidden depth. He was a whisper and a smile, a gas and a groove. You could catch the melody, dance to it, and play it. Many many did and do.

He rolled out classics like printing money. "Ain't That Lovin' You, Baby?", "Baby, What You Want Me To Do?", "Bright Lights Big City", "Big Boss Man", "I Ain't Got You", "Shame, Shame, Shame". Each one pinballs the skull, tickles the tongue, taps the feet.

He was a good soul with a fine run and some bad breaks. And in the long run he was great.






𝟮
AIN'T THAT LOVIN' YOU, BABY!:
The Disciples of Jimmy Reed





JIMMY REED: Disciples 1950s-Today
by Tym Stevens

This is a Spotify player. Join up for free here.


*(This Player is limited to the first 200 songs.
Hear the unlimited Playlist here.)


All songs in order from the 1950s to today.

16 hours and seven decades of music
influenced by Chuck Berry, including:

Chuck BerryBo DiddleyLittle Walter
Link WrayDale HawkinsDale Hawkins

Marvin GayeEverly BrothersSam Cooke
Barbara LynnLonnie MackEtta James
Rolling StonesJackie WilsonVelvelettes
The AnimalsSoloman BurkeLos Brincos
ThemSly + The Family StoneMoody Blues
Bob DylanThe Ad LibsBeach Boys
Booker T And The MGsThe Pretty Things
Shangri-LasThe StandellsIrma Thomas
Piero PiccioniSmall FacesCapt. Beefheart
Stevie WonderWilson PickettElvis
The WhoJohn MayallThe Who
Shangri-LasThe StandellsBobbie Gentry
Frank ZappaJimi HendrixCharlie Rich

The DoorsT.RexThe Grateful Dead
Freddie KingAretha FranklinThe Byrds
Jim CroceJohn LennonChicagoZZ Top
Koko TaylorBryan FerryJoe Sample

Blues BrothersClifton ChenierStray Cats
Neil YoungElvis CostelloHalf Japanese
Meat PuppetsLyresThe Delmonas

Paul McCartneyThee Headcoatees
Eddie ClearwaterBodecoJeff Beck

James Blood UlmerThe KillsHeadCat
Willie NelsonWynton MarsalisOasis
Rosie FloresBarrence Whitfield

Black Joe LewisGary Clark JrNikki Hill
The BaboonsTony Joe WhiteDon Bryant
and many, many more!




Jimmy Reed is the mover and the groover. His easy-to-learn chords, earworm tunes, and amiable candor cut the baby teeth of Blues, Rock, and Soul folks for the long stroke.

His classic songs have been routinely covered from the late-'50s up to this day. You'll even hear the young Jackson 5 (1967) learning how to play to Jimmy Reed!


Link Wray; Barbara Lynn; The Doors; The Blues Brothers



The Jimmy Reed groove is a boogie shuffle that was becoming standard in Blues and the emerging Rock in the mid-'50s. He stamped it with his stark directness, catchy simplicity, and leisurely ease. He took such sonic possession of it, or it him, that it became hard to believe it ever existed without him.

After his first strutting hits, it started to diverge into two tempos, each of which launched many covers and imitations: e.g., the slow stroll of "Bright Lights Big City", and the sunny jaunt of "Big Boss Man".



The BRIGHT LIGHTS BIG CITY Groove

The Rolling Stones; The Yardbirds; Bob Dylan; ZZ Top


Jimmy Reed turned the standard slow blues shuffle into a stripped, insular, smokey mood. It's the sound of shack backrooms, creaking floors and bones, raspy regrets, and woozy funk. It can be wandering midnight city cement, lost and glazed, on the wrong side of downhill. Or it can be sinuous and sultry, or lazed and content, or drunk and drained. It starts in rough Rockin' form on "I Found My Baby", simmers down on "Baby, What You Want Me To Do" and "Take Out Some Insurance", and reaches pure slow burn with "Bright Lights Big City". The groove and the mood becomes his through the spare atmosphere, languid vocal, and bleak harp.

You can hear this groove and mood play out in other classics like The Yardbirds' "Like Jimmy Reed Again", The Rolling Stones' "The Spider And The Fly", Ray Hoff and The Offbeats' "My Good Friend Mary Jane" (Australia), Chicago's "Anyway You Want", and in mutant spirit in Bob Dylan's "Rainy Day Women #12 & 35" and ZZ Top's "Tush", or Half-Japanese splicing their cover with The Ventures' "Walk Don't Run".



The BIG BOSS MAN Groove
(or, "Can You Tell Me How To Get Some Respect For Jimmy Reed?")

Tommy Tucker; Marvin Gaye; Solomon Burke; The Ad Libs


But it's the jaunty groove that everyone loves, even if they don't realize it's origin.

It's especially odd that songs influenced by 'the Bo Diddley' beat>' are named, noted, and archived routinely, but no one seems to do the same for the upbeat Jimmy Reed groove. Yet it's often as ubiquitous.

It is paralleled early by similar groovers like Little Walter's "My Babe", Chuck Berry's "You Can't Catch Me" and "Memphis, Tennesse"*, and Little Willie John's "Leave My Kitten Alone". But Jimmy distills the blues jaunt into a classic rhythm with "Big Boss Man" (1960). He refines it with "Baby What's Wrong" (1961) and perfects it on "Shame, Shame, Shame" (1963).

* (One critic contends that all of the songs I will ascribe as the Jimmy Reed jaunt are just variations of Chuck Berry's "Memphis, Tennessee". But I would respectfully counter this by expanding it. Rather than the false borders of antithesis, this is the fluid reality of synthesis in action.

Chuck's original was a 1959 b-side that sounds like a proto sketch, more of a straight jog than a jaunt, and was rarely heard. Only after Lonnie Mack (1963) and Johnnie Rivers (1964) had hit covers with it that skewed closer to Jimmy's rhythm did the song become famous, and even Chuck then changed how he played it after their lead. Creativity is endless synthesis. Note that Lonnie covered Jimmy's "Baby, What's Wrong" with the signature jaunt on the same album, and how much of Reed he brought into his very loose cover of "Memphis". So I contend that Jimmy Reed, though perhaps initially influenced by his peer Chuck, crystalized the rhythm that everyone will continue to expand on. But I've included all on the player for your own estimation.)

As Jimmy furrows the major groove, it mirrors in minor sides like The Esquires' "The Sight Of You", Cheryl and Pam John's "That's My Guy", and The Crickets' "All Over You". Even as Jimmy lay tread with "Shame, Shame, Shame", Tommy Tucker was on his heels with "Hi-Heel Sneakers".

It bops into the popstream with Marvin Gaye's "Can I Get A Witness?", laces loose in The Velvelettes' "Needle In A Haystack", and parties up Solomon Burke's "Everybody Needs Somebody To Love".


The Pretty Things; The Standells; Bobbi Gentry; Black Joe Lewis


But it probably reaches critical mass with The Ad Libs' "The Boy From New York City" (1965). By then it's a standard rhythm underscoring acolytes like Jean Wells' "Put The Best On The Outside" and answer songs like The Beach Boys' "The Girl From New York City". By now it's international, like Roy Head's "Apple Of My Eye" (England) and Los Johnny Jets' cover "El Leon" (Mexico), Les Furys' "Aide-Moi" (Canada), The Times' "Glad Not Sad" (Australia), and Datar's "Alveg ĂŚr" (Iceland).

This is the juncture in creative interchange when covers become clones become cousins. It goes from covers like The Pretty Things' or Bobbi Gentry's "Big Boss Man"; to clones like The Olympics' "We Go Together (Pretty Baby)" and The Arthur Brown Set's "The Green Ball"; to cousins like Booker T & The MGs' "Outrage", The Standells' "Dirty Water", The Ad Libs' "He's No Angel", The NightRiders' "Love Me Right Now", and Black Joe Lewis' "Black Snake".

Two cool things birth a third cool thing. Just as Jimmy echoed the blues shuffle in his own way, others reverbed his way into their way, and then all of them started to ricochet with each other. The Stones channel the Jimmy jaunt via Marvin Gaye with their response "Now, I've Got A Witness". Sugar Pie DeSanto gets there by answering "Hi-Heel Sneakers" with "Soulful Dress", as do Oasis with "(Get Off Your) High Horse Lady". The young Sly And The Family Stone strut Willie Mabon's "Seventh Son" sidelong into the Jimmy jaunt. Inez and Charlie Foxx burn into "Hurt By Love" by way of Martha And The Vandellas' "Heatwave". Shirley & Company cross Jimmy with Bo Diddley in their "Shame, Shame, Shame". Elvis Costello gets there in "Tokyo Storm Warning" by way of The Stones' "Satisfaction". Thee Mighty Caesars broadcast "Signals Of Love" on waves of Link Wray.

Cross-fertilization is how creativity (and culture, and the human lineage) works.


The original Sesame Street cast


The universality of the groove paved the way for the TV theme, "Can You Tell Me How To Get To SESAME STREET?" (1969), by Joe Raposo. The series began as a counterculture response to MISTER ROGER'S NEIGHBORHOOD, with an urban slant emphasizing diversity in the cast, film mediums, and especially music styles. Raposo was excellent at underscoring all of the segments with folk, jazz, blues, soul, rock, and more, a subtle music education for budding minds. Having the pulse of the times, he would have been aware of the Jimmy Reed jaunt in some form. So there it shines in a sunny tune that beamed itself into the cultural DNA of five decades of children.

Today is brought to you by the letter G, for Groove!



© Tym Stevens





See Also:

Revolution 1950s: The Big Damn Bang of Rock'n'Roll!

1950s PUNK: Sex, Thugs, and Rock'n'Roll!


CHUCK BERRY: The Guitar God and His Disciples

BO DIDDLEY: The Rhythm King and His Disciples

BUDDY HOLLY: Rock's Everyman and His Disciples

LITTLE RICHARD: The Voice of Rock and His Disciples


The Real History of Rock and Soul!: A Manifesto, A Handy Checklist



Monday, February 23, 2015

LITTLE RICHARD: The Voice of Rock and His Disciples


...with 2 piano-smashing
Music Players!


Little Richard, by Tim O'Brien



RockSex
brings you the actual, all-inclusive
history of Rock'n'Soul music,
with essay overviews and Music Players.

History Checklist


Today, the sanctified Little Richard, the full-throttle throat of Rock!
Hear 2 massive music players, one of Richard and one of all his disciples from the 1950s to today!

Music Player quick-links:
𝟭 Little Richard
𝟮 Little Richard's disciples: 1950s-Today




Buddy Holly and Little Richard



𝟭
RIP IT UP:
The Music of Little Richard


LITTLE RICHARD
by Tym Stevens

This is a Spotify player. Join up for free here.




"and rose incarnate in the ghostly clothes of jazz in
the goldhorn shadow of the band and blew the
suffering of America's naked mind for love into
an eli eli lamma lamma sabacthani saxophone
cry that shivered the cities down to the last radio"


- Allen Ginsberg, HOWL (1956)


All of his life one exultant declaration.

Born bonepoor Georgia, starved skinny and 'little', wanting bigger. A Deacon father -alias bootlegger -also nightclub owner. One leg shorter but always two steps ahead of his surroundings. Running with the girls and mischief and make-up, shunned by men and beaten and scorned.

Deep soul forged in smolder, singed but singing, a blues heart a gospel throat. Like a minister you must love administer, sort out the sinister, writhe out pain adorn all in light. Hear inner word, give outer voice.

Calling up the crowds via alto saxophone transmission brawk squawk bleat squee, upjump crowds, fervor nerves, pound floorboards, sweat fire, amass joy.

Opening for Sister Rosetta Tharpe at fourteen 1947 gospel chorus boy, swaying secular with swingjive tours, drag king in vaudeville and circus. Show biz early '50s, pancaked and floodlit, pizazz pulpit, the volt dynamo.



Absorbing boogie piano from Esquerita 1951, burning through record labels and blues tours and mentors. In punk spirit bands together The Upsetters blazing rhythm rock 1953.

Specialty Records 1955, New Orleans club improv "Tutti Frutti", too profane! sanitize the insane but revolution remains, a wax attack in guerilla grooves, flaming young hearts all around the world. Standing at or on piano, footloose and finally free stomping keys kicking out all divisions, integrating dancing ears hearts souls in tune A WOP BOP A LOO BOP A LOP BAM BOOM!

Little Richard and The Upsetters
in THE GIRL CAN'T HELP IT (1956)


He wrought in Rock the androgyny the wild the theatrical the cinematic the uninhibited the omnisexual. The go-getter the upsetter the upender the offender the end of pretenders the blender. Bane to klan and The Man and the ban and the banal, bane to the youth and the uncouth and tall-taling upscaling of the truth.

Feral firebrand become consumptive fireball "Good Golly, Miss Molly/ You sure like to ball!" coming apart in a carnality carnivale. Best-dressed on the excess express deranged duressed unrest need blest. 18 hits three years on a ripping tear unabashed, a canon fired from circus cannons, a fastblast era moving too fast to control all a blearing smear a coming crash.

He saw the fireball in the sky above (1957 Sputnick), he saw the ministry as a grounding. Felt he'd lost God for gold, threw away his rings and his royalties in sacral loyalty, the man who fell to earth to reach out to heaven.

All of his life one exultant declaration.







𝟮
ALL AROUND THE WORLD!:
The Disciples of Little Richard


Little Richard meets The Beatles, Hamburg, 1962


LITTLE RICHARD: Disciples 1950s-Today
by Tym Stevens

This is a Spotify player. Join up for free here.

*(The Player is limited to the first 200 songs.
Hear the unlimited Playlist here.)


All songs in order from the 1950s to today.

19 hours and seven decades of music
influenced by Little Richard, including:

Etta JamesElvis PresleyBuddy Holly
EsqueritaWanda JacksonLaVern Baker
Carl PerkinsJohnny OtisEddie Cochran

James BrownLos Teen TopsMarvin Gaye
The SonicsEverly BrothersSam Cooke
Laurel AitkenThe BeatlesJackie Wilson
The KinksTom JonesWilson Pickett
Mitch RyderThee MidnitersStevie Wonder
Otis ReddingCreedenceJoe Cocker

MC5Fleetwood MacThe Band
Deep PurpleDavid BowieJohnny Winter
Canned HeatMott The HoopleELP
Rolling StonesThe StoogesNilsson
Elton JohnRocky HorrorJohn Lennon
Led ZeppelinBTOELOElvis Costello
RezillosWaylon JennningsFrank Zappa
Bob SegerPatti SmithElvis Costello

The DamnedMotorheadHeartRamones
Cheap TrickThe BusBoysXStray Cats
Emmylou HarrisTom WaitsQueen
AerosmithAerosmithLos Lobos

Paul McCartneyLiving ColourThe Gories
Yusef LateefThe A-BonesTeengenerate
Iggy PopJetNoisettesTy Segall

Detroit CobrasGuitar WolfThe Dirtbombs
OutkastLos LobosHot Damn!
JetNoisettesTy Segall

Barrence WhitfieldBruno MarsDel Moroccos
Los FabulocosJD McPhersonLittle Rachel
The CoathangersKing SalamiFleshtones
ThunderbitchDeath GripsEzra Furman
and many, many more!



"It was if, in a single instant, the world changed from monochrome to Technicolor."

- Keith Richards, on hearing "Tutti Frutti"


And the Rock faithful heard the word horde and saw the floodlights.

Little Richard, the bedrock of their bedlam, canon of their carols, artisan of their attitude, the verve of their voice.

Ray Charles and Little Richard seduced gospel stars to secular Soul> like Sam Cooke, the Womacks, Johnny Taylor, Aretha Franklin, Al Green (and like him they swayed back and forth).

He is the jump and grit of James Brown and Otis Redding. His shattering shout is the voice of Garage Rock> and Punk and Metal.

His early '60s second coming galvanized The Beatles in Hamburg (who befriended his organist, Billy Preston). The Rolling Stones were his amen chorus opening for him in '63. Jimi Hendrix was his harpist in '64 ("I Don't Know What You Got"). His songs were the psalms of the British Invasion>.

Little Richard and Jimi Hendrix


As Rock went roots and rough in the late '60s, his third coming graced the festival circuit with Chuck Berry> and Bo Diddley>, a revival that will summon Glam and Pub Rock> and Punk and Psychobilly>.

His paint-peeling howl possesses Etta James, James Brown, Tina Turner, Paul McCartney, Otis Redding, The Sonics, Wilson Pickett, Jim Morrison, The Outcast (Japan), Creedence Clearwater Revival, MC5, Rod Stewart, Steven Tyler of Aerosmth, Motorhead, Bon Scott and Brian Johnson of AC/DC, Barrence Whitfield, The Lime Spiders, Tom Waits, The A-Bones, Guitar Wolf, and Alexis Saski.

His world ministry amens in Los Teen Tops' "La Plaga" and Los Gibson Boys' "Lucila" (Mexico) and The Black Dynamites' "Send Me Some Lovin'" (Netherlands) and Masaaki Hirao's "Lucille" (Japan) and Moustique's "Good Golly, Miss Molly" (France) and Adriano Celentano's performance of "Ready Teddy" in Fellini's LA DOLCE VITA (Italy, 1960).

David Bowie; Freddy Mercury; Boy George


His pagentry, Pancake 31, and punch is the creator of Glam Rock and New Romantic, his theatre a launching stage for David Bowie and Freddie Mercury and Suzi Quatro and Siouxsie Sioux and Lou Reed and Jayne County.

His erotic ambiguity and androgyne edge sired Grace Jones, Michael Jackson, Annie Lennox, Boy George, Prince, Lady Gaga, and Janelle Monae.

Little Richard; Grace Jones; Prince; Janelle Monae


His "Ooh! My Soul" begat Ritchie Havens' "Ooh! My Head" which begat Led Zeppelin's "Boogie With Stu". His spin on "Keep A-Knockin'" begat Eddie Cochran's "Somethin' Else" and the intro drums of Led Zeppelin's "Rock and Roll". His canon begat Deep Purple's "Speed King".

His spirit catalyzed The Beatles' "I Saw Her Standing There", "I'm Down", and "She Came In Through The Bathroom Window"; and CCR's "Travelin' Band"; and The Rolling Stone's "Rip This Joint"; and Elton John's "Saturday Night's Alright For Fighting"; and Bob Seger's anthem "Old Time Rock and Roll". Listen anew.

His "The Rill Thing" begat the drum samples on 60 hiphop songs alone.

His fourth comeback after a bestselling bio in the '80s led him to new music, talk shows, and Fishbone and Living Colour.

His "Tutti Frutti" was voted #1 in Mojo's "The Top 100 Records That Changed The World".

Yes, verily, to all and whom,
A WOP BOP A LOO BOP A LOP BAM BOOM!


Amen.


The Minister of Rock'n'Roll



© Tym Stevens
(except Ginsberg's "Howl")





See Also:

Revolution 1950s: The Big Damn Bang of Rock'n'Roll!

1950s PUNK: Sex, Thugs, and Rock'n'Roll!


CHUCK BERRY: The Guitar God and His Disciples

BO DIDDLEY: The Rhythm King and His Disciples

BUDDY HOLLY: Rock's Everyman and His Disciples

JIMMY REED: The Groover of Rock, From Motown To Sesame Street


The Real History of Rock and Soul!: A Manifesto, A Handy Checklist



Sunday, December 22, 2013

ROCK Sex: "Electric Ladyland" - Peggy Moffitt > Janelle Monae


J a n e l l e ➤ P e g g y


Janelle Monae's new album, THE ELECTRIC LADY, expands her Sci-Fi opus about an android sent to save humanity. Besides continuing themes from the classic silent film Metropolis (1927), the title alludes to the album "Electric Ladyland" (1968) by The Jimi Hendrix Experience.



The cover art is a direct homage to a scene from the French film, "Who Are You, Polly Magoo?" (1966). This satirical film by esteemed photographer William Klein was a mock documentary about the fashion world which ridiculed its excesses, our voyeurism that empowers it, and the loss of real identity in an exploitative media.

In the scene above, supermodel 'Polly' (Dorothy McGowan, third from left) is lost in a sea of clones of real-life model Peggy Moffitt (far left).

_______________


P E G G Y
M O F F I T T



Peggy Moffitt is the most radical fashion model of all time.

In the Mod '60s, she created an andryogyne character in futurist kabuki makeup who, wearing the abstract designs of Rudi Gernreich, came to us from a world and timeline all her own.

Working with her husband, photographer William Claxton, Peggy approached the fashion shoot as a forum of conceptual art, challenging the viewers' preconceptions about gender, identity, consumerism, and modernity.


_______________


P E G G Y
M O F F I T T :
Her Influence On Rock'n'Roll Style

It's a safe bet that her influence on Rock'n'Roll is incalculable.

From David Bowie and Siouxsie Sioux and Soo Catwoman, to Grace Jones and Annie Lennox and Boy George and Robert Smith (The Cure), to Karen O (Yeah Yeah Yeahs) and Chicks On Speed and Janelle Monae, her revolutionary influence continues today.

1) David Bowie, 1972.
2) Lou Reed, 1974; Split Enz, 1976.
3) Siouxsie Sioux.
4) Adam Ant and Jordan, 1977;
Soo Catwoman, 1976 (Ray Stevenson).


Annie Lennox; Grace Jones; Boy George; Robert Smith.


Marilyn Manson; Peaches; Karen O;
Rooney Mara (The Girl With The Dragon Tattoo)




And here's a video I made about her:

ENNIO MORRICONE / EDDA DELL'ORSO
-"Ma Non Troppo Erotico" (1971)



© Tym Stevens




See Also:

Peggy Moffitt on TUMBLR

Peggy Moffitt on PINTEREST

Mod Color: Peggy Moffitt

"Cultural Touchstone: Peggy Moffitt", LA TIMES


Rene Magritte > THE EXORCIST > THE POSSESSION

MAGRITTE = The Beatles > Jeff Beck > THE EXORCIST > Jackson Browne > Styx > TWIN PEAKS

Astounding Science Fiction > Queen

PLANET STORIES - Whip It Good!




Monday, March 15, 2010

ROCK Sex: "Sing A Simple Song" - Sly Stone > Jimi Hendrix > James Gang > P-Funk > Chili Peppers > Public Enemy



Today is SLY STONE's birthday. I love him like the sun in the sky.

If I said what I really feel about this guy, we'd be here all year. So let's keep it simple. SLY & THE FAMILY STONE invented Funk as you know it, and rewrote Rock, Jazz, Dance, and Rap forever afterward.

> -SLICE TONES: Sly Stone & His Infinite Influence!,
with 5 Music Players

But today, let's follow how one single tune -"Sing A Simple Song"- relays that sonic baton beyond all boundaries to this very day.

_______________


S I N G
A
S I M P L E
S O N G




"Sing A Simple Song", and the album STAND after it, defined the new super heavy Funk that superceded Soul. The trademark descending "yeah yeah yeahs..." are sung by sister Rose Stone.

SLY AND THE FAMILY STONE -"Sing A Simple Song" (1968)



Here's New Orlean's finest to extend the funky vamp.

THE METERS -"Sing A Simple Song" (1969)



Here's they are again to extend the same song again into a new song with a winking title.

THE METERS -"Same Old Thing" (1969)



Now welcome the Dutch Indo sisters Bianca, Stella and Patricia Maessen, putting some sitar sting in it.

THE HEARTS OF SOUL -"Sing A Simple Song" (1969)



After having a hit covering Sly's "I Want To Take You Higher", Ike And Tina give the funky women some with this wholecloth rewrite.

IKE AND TINA TURNER -"Bold Soul Sister" (1970)



The guitar rhythm of "Sing A Simple Song" gets abstracted by JIMI HENDRIX here, and then played explicitly at the 0:30 minute mark.

BAND OF GYPSIES -"We Got To Live Together" (1970)



Here's Joe Walsh getting some more power strut out of that guitar riff (0:27).

THE JAMES GANG -"Funk #49" (1970)



Here's an ultra-Funky Reggae gloss on it.

THE MEGATONS -"Funk The Beat" (1970)



Sly's longtime running partner Billy Preston takes the title of the song and cheekily crosses it with the sentiment of Melanie's "What Have They Done To My Song, Ma".

BILLY PRESTON -"I Wrote A Simple Song" (1971)



It is the framework of this production by Sly-acolyte Norman Whitfield, a cover of Motown label-mate Edwin Starr.

THE TEMPTATIONS -"Funky Music Sho Nuff Turns Me On" (1972)



HERBIE HANCOCK takes the guitar vamp and flies into the future of Jazz Fusion with it.

HERBIE HANCOCK + HEADHUNTERS -"Sly" (1973)



Kerrie kicks it out like the whole Family all by herself on this rockin' cover.

KERRIE BIDDELL -""Sing A Simple Song"" (1973)



George Clinton and the P-Funk mob borrow the descending "yeah yeah yeahs" for the chorus of this interstellar groover.

PARLIAMENT -"Unfunky UFO" (1975)




That Space Funk approach permeates this first HipHop cover of the original, including some uncanny impersonations of bassist Larry Graham.

WEST STREET MOB -"Sing A Simple Song" (1982)



P-Funk's Punk/Funk proteges borrow the "yeah yeah yeahs" for their chorus, too.

RED HOT CHILI PEPPERS -"Behind the Sun" (1986)



Another P-Funk disciple, PUBLIC ENEMY collages parts of it all the way through this protest jam. ("Sing A Simple Song" is also central to their "Party For Your Right To Fight", and is used again in several other songs.)

PUBLIC ENEMY -"Brothers Gonna Work It Out" (1990)


"Sing A Simple Song" has been sampled by over 400 artists, including Grandmaster Flash, Big Lady K, Stetsasonic, Digital Underground, De La Soul, Jungle Brothers, Mellow Man Ace, Kool Moe Dee, LL Cool J, Stereo MC's, TLC, Prince, A Tribe Called Quest, Ice-T, EPMD, Arrested Development, The Pharcyde, Common, Cypress Hill, Me Phi Me, Paris, Run-DMC, Del the Funky Homosapien, Erick Sermon, KRS-One, 2Pac, MC Solaar, Soul II Soul, BjĂśrk, Michael Jackson, Lenny Kravitz, Alanis Morissette, Barry Adamson, Masaki Sakamoto, DJ Shadow, The Beatnuts, Musiq Soulchild, and Snoop Dogg.


Bringing the familial full circle, here's D'Angelo, Chuck D, and Isaac Hayers covering the song with the original remixed in.

D'ANGELO, with Chuck D and Isaac Hayes -"Sing A Simple Song" (2005)



Here's Staten Island's THE BUDOS BAND with a killer remake of the song channeling Fela along the way!

THE BUDOS BAND -"Sing A Simple Song" (2005)




"I'm livin' livin' livin' life with all its ups and downs
I'm givin' givin' givin' love and smilin' at the frowns
You're in trouble when you find it's hard for you to smile
A simple song might make it better for a little while!"




© Tym Stevens



See Also:

FUNK, The True History: The 1960s, with 3 Music Players!

SLICE TONES: Sly Stone & His Infinite Influence!, with 5 Music Players

Sly Stone's "I Want To Take You Higher" And Its Unending Influence!, with Music Player!

"If You Want Me To Stay" - Sly Stone > Bootsy Collins > Red Hot Chili Peppers > Prince > Nikka Costa


The Real History of Rock and Soul!: A Music Player Checklist


Monday, March 8, 2010

ROCK Sex: "California Dreamin'" - The Mamas and The Papas > Eddie Hazel




ROCK Sex is going "for a walk on a winter's day".

Today, the relay hand-off of "California Dreamin'".

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Here's the evergreen harmonies of The Mamas And The Papas with the original version.

THE MAMAS AND THE PAPAS -"California Dreamin'" (1965)



And here's Eddie Hazel, the guitar god of Funkadelic, taking it to the cosmic church:

EDDIE HAZEL -"California Dreamin'" (1977)




© Tym Stevens



See Also:

Cool Ethereal Folk: VASHTI BUNYAN

ROCK Orgy: "American Pie"

FUNK, The True History: 1970-1974, with 3 Music Players!

BEYOND COOL: Pedro Bell, Funkadelic's visionary!


The Real History of Rock and Soul!: The Music Player Checklist


Thursday, February 18, 2010

ROCK Orgy: "F.U.N.K." by Betty Davis


Betty Davis, NASTY GAL (1975)


ROCK Orgies are songs that call out a lot of other artists and songs.

_______________


Here's the queen of Funk Rock, badder than bad BETTY DAVIS, giving us a crash course in "F.U.N.K."!

BETTY DAVIS -"F.U.N.K." 2.0* (1975)

*This is the second, better version of a video for the same song

Party guests (in order):

The Funk Brothers (Motown house band), Booker T & the MGs (Stax house band), James Brown; Fred Wesley, Maceo Parker (The JBs, P-Funk) The Meters (New Orleans), Sly And The Family Stone, Stevie Wonder, Tina Turner, Al Green, Ann Peebles, Miles Davis, Billy Preston, Carlos Santana, Curtis Mayfield, Barry White, Larry Graham, Isaac Hayes; The O'Jays, Betty Davis, Jimi Hendrix Experience, Rare Earth, Herbie Hancock and Headhunters, Aretha Franklin (seen with Ahmet Ertegun), Rufus with Chaka Khan, Parliament/Funkadelic, The Ohio Players, Marvin Gaye, WAR, Earth Wind & Fire, Bootsy Collins, and -the Man- Sly Stone now.

_______________


BONUS: Here's the sequel video, which expands out with more stellar stalwarts of 1970s Funk.

YVONNE FAIR -"Funky Music Sho' Nuff Turns Me On" (1975)




-videos by Funk'n'Roll
© Tym Stevens



See Also:

FUNK, The True History: The 1960s, with 3 Music Players!

FUNK, The True History: 1970-1974, with 3 Music Players!

BEYOND COOL: Pedro Bell, Funkadelic's visionary!


ROCK Orgy: "American Pie"

ROCK Orgy: "Sweet Soul Music"

ROCK Orgy: "Life Is a Rock (But the Radio Rolled Me)!"


The Real History of Rock and Soul!: The Music Player Checklist


Monday, January 25, 2010

LADIES FIRST: "Hound Dog" - Big Mama Thornton > Elvis > Jimi Hendrix



LADIES FIRST brings you another classic that 'she did first'.

Today it's the monster classic "Hound Dog".

_______________


"Hound Dog" was written and produced by the budding talents Jerry Leiber & Mike Stoller, and first recorded by the irrepressible Big Mama Thornton. Along with her blues-belting style, Mama also retooled some of the lyrics, did flavorful ad libs, and hard accents in the phrasing that gave the song its fierce identity.

BIG MAMA THORNTON -"Hound Dog" (1952)



Thornton's version was recorded in 1952, but released in the spring of 1953. Within a month there were a handful of Country artists who did their take on it, like Jack Turner and His Granger County Gang, Billy Starr, and Cleve Jackson and His Hound Dogs.

One of the most unsung is this one by Betsy Gay:

BETSY GAY -"Hound Dog" (1953)



Here's a Country answer record forecasting Rockabilly.

CHARLES GORE And LOUIS INNES -"(You Ain't Nothin' but a Female) Hound Dog" (1953)



Memphis radio DJ Rufus Thomas did an answer record to it, taking mock affront to his nickname as 'hound dog'. It was too similar and Sun Records' first hit got in a lot of legal trouble. Later, Rufus and his daughter Carla Thomas recorded classics for Stax Records.

RUFUS THOMAS -"Bear Cat" (1953)



A burlesque group called Freddie Bell And The Bellboys did a campy, striptease-style take on it. Freddie smoothed over some of the lyrics, adding such pivotal lines as "cryin' all the time" and "You ain't never caught a rabbit, and you ain't no friend of mine." They performed it regularly in Las Vegas.

FREDDIE BELL AND THE BELLBOYS -"Hound Dog" (1956)




The young and barely-known Elvis Presley saw their show and put it in his rep for fun. When he appeared on the huge TV hit, "The Milton Berle Show", Milton urged him to leave his rhythm guitar and stand out front. The song's strippery rhythm and Elvis' startlingly sexual gyrations (and air of threatening menace) caused a storm of shocked controversy and made him a national star overnight.

This may have done as much to inject Rock'n'Roll into world awareness as any other event.

ELVIS PRESLEY -"Hound Dog" (1956)



Rock'n'Roll was written off as dumb Pop for juvie kids by the robot mainstream of the times. They probably thought it was cute to trot out little Brenda Lee like Shirley Temple in the family parlor. But it backfired, because you can still hear all the raw Blues anger and cocky swagger in Brenda's great voice.

BRENDA LEE -"Hound Dog" (1956?)



Cliff Johnson's answer song aims to make Elvis high-tail it.

CLIFF JOHNSON -"Go Away Hound Dog" (1957)



Betty Everett ("You're No Good") brings some Soul swing go it.

BETTY EVERETT -"Hound Dog" (1964)



Jimi Hendrix loved Elvis and also all the Blues greats like Big Mama Thornton, who was on the bill at many of the same Blues and Rock festivals reclaiming her song (with her cool penchant for wearing mens' clothing). Here he is jotting off genius like it was a gesture.

JIMI HENDRIX -"Hound Dog (acoustic)" (1968)



And chasing this tail 'round to its front again, here's Blues powerhouse Koko Taylor...

KOKO TAYLOR -"Hound Dog" (1993)




© Tym Stevens



See Also:

Revolution 1950s: The Big Damn Bang of Rock'n'Roll!

WOMEN OF ROCK: The 1950s, with 2 Music Players!


LADIES FIRST: "When the Levee Breaks!" - Memphis Minnie > Led Zeppelin

LADIES FIRST: "Fujiyama Mama" - Annisteen Allen > Wanda Jackson > Pearl Harbor

LADIES FIRST: "See See Rider" - Ma Rainey > Janis Joplin > Mitch Ryder


Bill Monroe > Elvis Presley > The Marcels

"Mystery Train" - Carter Family > Jr. Parker > Elvis Presley > Jim Jarmusch

"Jailhouse Rock" - Elvis Presley > Dean Carter


The Real History of Rock and Soul!: A Music Player Checklist


Wednesday, December 2, 2009

ROCK Sex: "I'm A Man" - Bo Diddley > Muddy Waters > Spencer Davis > Chicago > Devo



ROCK Sex gives you the rewind of the throughline!

Here's how the declarative statement, "I'm a Man!", took some terrific and unlikely paths.


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Bo Diddley was inspired by the riff and swagger of Muddy Waters' Hoochie Coochie Man" (1954) to rewrite it as a youthful boast:

BO DIDDLEY -"I'm a Man" (1955)



Muddy Waters was a labelmate with Bo at the legendary Chess Records. He responded with a wry wink in this response:

MUDDY WATERS -"Mannish Boy" (1956)



Later, as a generation of rock groups kept homaging his work, Waters responded by re-recording his song in an Acid Rock style:

MUDDY WATERS -"Mannish Boy" (1968)



Acolyte JIMI HENDRIX can be heard in this candid studio jam taking that further:

JIMI HENDRIX -"Mannish Boy" (1969)


Jimi also used the phrase "I'm a man/ at least I'm trying to be" to kick off his song, "Steppin' Stone".


Coming round lately, here's BLACK STROBE (France) merging the tough Blues with a touch of Electronica:

BLACK STROBE -"I'm a Man" (2007)



Taking the electronic angle to fruition, here's perennials DEVO protesting violence against the common people:

DEVO -"Don't Shoot (I'm a Man)" (2008)







On a parallel track, The Spencer Davis Group, propelled by the soulful organ and vocals of young Steve Winwood, kicked out the jams with this proto-Funk classic of their own:

SPENCER DAVIS GROUP -"I'm a Man" (1967)



Here's organist Mick Weaver, working under the band name WYNDER K. FROG, tearing up the party some more:

WYNDER K. FROG -"I'm a Man" (1967)



And here's how many people know the song, in this stellar cover by the emerging band CHICAGO, with lead guitar and vocals by the late Terry Kath, along with bassist Peter Cetera:

CHICAGO -"I'm a Man" (1970)



The song was done in Disco versions by the appropriately named MACHO from Italy in 1978, and by rocker KEITH EMERSON for a 1981 film soundtrack.


Lately the song has been covered by these Texican brothers:

LOS LONELY BOYS -"I'm a Man" (2008)






© Tym Stevens



See Also:

"I'm A Woman" - Peggy Lee > Helen Reddy > Yoko Ono > Chaka Khan > Neneh Cherry

"Walk On the Wild Side" - Genderblenders/ Enders/ Transcenders!


The Struggle For the Moral Soul: MARTIN LUTHER KING and Civil Rights

SHAKE AND FINGER POP! Soul Music and the Interior Truth, with Music Player!

REVOLUTION! - A 'Fight The Power' Music Player


BO DIDDLEY: The Rhythm King and His Disciples, with 2 Music Players!

The Real History of Rock and Soul!: The Music Player Checklist