Pop singer Neil Diamond will enter the US Rock and Roll Hall of Fame next year. The ‘Sweet Caroline’ singer will be inducted alongside Alice Cooper and singer-songwriter Tom Waits. Diamond said he had thought in the past that he may be nominated “but I kind of figured they”d get around to me at some [...]
Posts Tagged ‘Phil Spector’
Neil Diamond to be inducted into Rock and Roll Hall of Fame
10 Most Retarded Redneck Haircuts
It’s easy to be cruel about rednecks, but can you really think of a better life? What more could one want than to spend the day in the beating sun, sucking Colt 45 from the can, shirtless, with your feet cooling in a paddling pool, and free reign to shoot as many firearms and drive [...]
Randy & Evi Quaid Talk Murder Plot With Esquire: “RadarOnline Arranged Dairy Queen Conspiracy Against Us!â€
Either we’re on Candid Camera or kooky couple Randy and Evi Quaid truly are “CooCoo for Coco Puffs.” If you thought you’d already heard the best of The Quaids ramblings about those pesky StarWhacker, who are out to kill them — leaving a trail of unpaid hotel bills in their wake, pull up a chair. [...]
Al Pacino Phil Spector Biopic
Hollywood legend Al Pacino has been cast as eccentric music icon Phil Spector in a HBO Films TV movie to be written and directed by David Mamet, Britain’s Daily Mirror has learned. The “Wall of Sound” pioneer, who recorded with iconic acts like The Beatles, Sonny & Cher, and The Ronettes as one of the [...]
Roger Waters & David Gilmour: Complete Reunion Footage
COMPLETE TWENTY EIGHT MINUTE PERFORMANCE NOW AVAILABLE
Last month, Pink Floyd
legends Roger Waters and
David Gilmour took to the
stage before 200 guests to benefit the Hoping
Foundation and raise funds for children in Gaza.
Yesterday, the Hoping Foundation posted footage of the entire reunion on their official website. Check out the
complete 28 minute performance featuring “To Know Him Is To Love Him” (Phil Spector), followed by “Wish You Were
Here”, “Comfortably Numb”, and closing out with “Another Brick In The Wall (Part 2)”.
As previously reported, Gilmour will join Waters for one date on Waters’ Wall Tour.
Thanks to Consequence of Sound.
Pink Floyd duo reunite for charity show
Putting their differences aside, Pink Floyd”s David Gilmour and Roger Waters performed on stage for charity. The musicians, who separated in the early 1980s, performed at a fundraising event hosted by Jemima Khan to help Palestinian children, reports the Mirror. The pair performed a trio of Floyd tracks – ‘Wish You Were Here’, ‘Comfortably Numb’ [...]
Lost Phil Spector Interview Unearthed
We never pass up an opportunity to post footage of the creepy hornet’s nest otherwise known as Phil Spector’s hair piece! A bizarre interview, in which the convicted killer talks in detail about the 2003 slaying of Lana Clarkson, has been released by a former employee of the “Wall of Sound” legend.In the interview, said [...]
Morning Crunch Crumbs
Good Morning! Happy Foolery — How ya been? Don’t forget to say ‘Hello’ to PopCrunch on Facebook. On To The AM Gossip:-A new season of frightening brides and big gawdy weeks is headed to WE tv. Bridezillas and My Fair Wedding return June 6. In celebration of the new lineup, WE is giving viewers [...]
Fabled Music Producer Phil Spector Announced Judicial Mistakes
Lawyers for fabled music producer Phil Spector have demanded an appeals court to discard his second-degree murder sentence on grounds of judicial mistake and prosecutorial misbehave.
In a highly elaborated 148-page brief registered Wednesday, the attorneys cited multiple causes they think Spector was refused his right to a just trial run. They enquired the California Second [...]
Bruce Springsteen | 9.20 | Chicago
Words by: Cal Roach | Images by: Chad Smith
Bruce Springsteen & The E Street Band :: 09.20.09 :: United Center:: Chicago, IL
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I swear, when I first started going to concerts they never, ever started on time. But over the past decade or so, it seems like everybody (excluding Phish) seems to have become oddly punctual. So it was a bit of a surprise that 45 minutes after ticket time on a Sunday night, still no sign of Bruce Springsteen. Even the “Bruuuuuuce” chants in between every track were getting lethargic. He kept the delay under an hour, though, with The E Street Band entering the stage in darkness and charging out of the gates with surprise opener “Seeds,” a non-album track which set the times-are-tough tone for the show. What better time than a recession (er, recovery, depending on who you ask) for the working man’s champion to lift our spirits?
The crowd was in rapt anticipation of the announced performance of 1975′s Born To Run album in its entirety, but the opening stretch of the show was a bit grim, featuring tearjerkers “Johnny 99,” “Cover Me” and “Outlaw Pete.” This last tune, from Springsteen’s latest album, Working On A Dream, is little more than a caricature of the Bruce character-study idiom, and it just doesn’t resonate. This opening might have been a snooze if it hadn’t been for Max Weinberg‘s dynamic finesse on drums. When the rest of the band threatened to fall apart in the transitions, he kept the train rolling all by himself.
“Hungry Heart” rescued the early goings; only the most jaded anti-popster could’ve been bored by this, and the band finally gelled into cohesionÂ…until Bruce lost his place during “Working On A Dream,” first proclaiming, “I hear the SOUNDÂ…of the E Street Band fuckin’ up!” but sheepishly admitting it was his mistake at the end of the song.
Bruce then introduced the night’s main event, calling Born To Run “our last chance” after his first two albums had flopped. Few songs evoke passionate longing so palpably as “Thunder Road,” and the celebratory “Tenth Avenue Freeze-Out,” featuring guest trumpeter Curt Ramm (from Springsteen’s Seeger Sessions band), drove the energy in the United Center through the roof. Naturally, the title track was a highlight of the night, the house lights and the crowd ablaze. The breakdown following the bridge was one of the most climactic musical wallops I can remember experiencing, one of those moments that set the collision of certain songwriters and bands above the rest.
Nils, Max, Bruce :: 09.20.09 :: Chicago |
Even though there were moments when the 11-member group seemed to crowd the music, Springsteen himself was riveting through the whole album section and for the rest of the night. It’s not like any member of the band is a glaring weak link, but at times, I couldn’t help wanting to experience this with just Bruce, Little Steven Van Zandt (guitar), the Big Man (Clarence Clemons, sax), Garry Tallent (bass) and Max. How many bald keyboardists does one band need, after all? Part of the problem was the stale acoustics of the United Center, which mashed all the instruments together somewhat. Still, when it all came together, as on album-closer “Jungleland,” everybody had a reason to be up there.
Putting the album right in the middle of the set was the perfect choice. This whole play-your-classic-album trend usually plays out as constricting, but tonight’s set flowed, start to finish. Bruce brought a young fan up to sing a few shaky lines from “Waitin’ On A Sunny Day,” then blazed through “The Promised Land” like a preacher in the grips of a prophetic vision, with Clemens’ solo shining a beacon of rock and roll truth. But overall, other than Bruce, Weinberg was the star of this show. His playing was rock solid, featuring an abundance of creative fills, at times overshadowing the rest of the band entirely.
Then there were moments, like set-closer “Badlands,” when the iconic image of Bruce and Little Steven sharing a mic just set everything right with the world. “Hard Times” featured vocal harmonies ringing out like Phil Spector’s heyday, with Bruce pushing himself to maximum capacity to sing this one out for the downtrodden. This may have been the peak of the whole show, although “Dancing In The Dark” (but, um, with all the lights on?) had the whole crowd in a frenzy, even after nearly three hours of music. The finale of “Rosalita” left nobody unsatisfied. It encapsulated the whole show – ebullience with a somber undercurrent, loose almost to the point of coming unglued – but if you couldn’t feel the benevolence radiating from The Boss, you just don’t know how to have a good time.
Bruce Springsteen & The E Street Band :: 09.20.09 :: United Center:: Chicago, IL
Seeds, No Surrender, Johnny 99, Cover Me, Outlaw Pete, Hungry Heart, Working On A Dream, Thunder Road, Tenth Avenue Freeze-Out, Night, Backstreets, Born To Run, She’s The One, Meeting Across The River, Jungleland, Waiting On A Sunny Day, The Promised Land, Radio Nowhere, Lonesome Day, The Rising, Badlands
E: Hard Times, Da Do Ron Ron, Rockin’ Robin, I’m Going Down, American Land, Dancin’ In The Dark, Rosalita
Continue reading for more of Chad Smith’s fabulous pics…
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Springsteen and his merry band continue their tour into late November. Find dates here.
JamBase | Jungleland
Go See Live Music!
Charles Manson Seeking Musical Direction From Phil Spector
Homicidal loon Charles Manson — who is incarcerated for life stemming from the notorious Manson Family Murders of 1969 — is forging ahead with plans for a musical career and is seeking help from a fellow inmate, legendary producer Phil Spector. Manson is known for masterminding the savage Tate/LaBianca massacre forty years ago.
Spector is serving [...]
The indie kid’s guide to classical
Chopin has made it on to Radio 1, courtesy of Muse’s latest hit United States of Eurasia. But don’t stop there,
kids: here’s where you and your iPod should venture next
Kids up and down the country are tuning in to Radio 1 and scratching their heads. What’s that weird, long piano section doing at the end of Muse’s new Bohemian Rhapsody-esque single, United States of Eurasia. Isn’t that (whisper it) . . . classical music? Being played on the nation’s favourite youth station? That’s right, kids, it’s Chopin’s Nocturne in E-flat major, Op 9 No 2 to be precise. So now, for all you puzzled young ‘uns out there, here’s how to get in to that classical music vibe . . .
How do you listen?
What you need to do is close the curtains, take your clothes off, lie face down with your teeth sunk deep into the carpet. Then get your butler to sprinkle your buttocks with rose petals and put on the 16-plus hours of Wagner’s operatic tetralogy, The Ring, before he retreats, locking the door on you, until the bloody ordeal is over. Not really: what you need is peace, quiet and concentration.
What am I supposed to be listening for?
Radio 3 helps here. It offers two great entry points to classical music. On Discovering Music (Sunday teatime), leading conductors take you passage by passage through a whole work, explaining what the composer was trying to achieve and what you might enjoy. In Building a Library (Saturday mornings), a critic anatomises different recordings of the same work in a manner that switches between the hilariously pernickety and the genuinely instructive – you can even download it as a weekly podcast.
What should I avoid?
For the time being, avoid anything labelled Salford Toccata by Harrison Birtwistle, explosante fixe . . . by Pierre Boulez, Helikopter-Streichquartett by Karlheinz Stockhausen. Stuff by Alban Berg, Arnold Schoenberg and Olivier Messiaen might well have you calling 999 and shouting hysterically “Fire in the pet shop! Fire in the pet shop!”
What should I try?
Download Thomas Tallis’s Spem in Alium and, if you have functioning ears, prepare to weep. It is a 10-plus minute, 40-part motet written in the late 16th century: a wall of sound more overwhelming than anything in Phil Spector’s philosophy.
Liked that. Now what?
David Mellor is, as we know, wrong about everything, but the name of his Classic FM show, “If you liked that, you’ll like this”, is helpful here. If you liked the Chopin on Muse’s single, then listen to some more Chopin music – say Martha Argerich’s 1965 concert of his sonatas, mazurkas and nocturnes. Or try the andantino from Schubert’s sonata in A – it’s what Isaiah Berlin insisted be played at his funeral. If you like Roy Orbison, Terence Trent d’Arby or – though you really shouldn’t – James Morrison, then you might well like lieder. Lieder is German for songs – helpfully as short as anything on Chris Moyles’s playlist, but more heartfelt than anything that comes from his mouth. Try some lieder cycles: Schubert’s Winterreise or Schumann’s Dichterliebe will shatter your heart. If you like Kraftwerk, you’ll probably dig minimalist music: try Steve Reich’s Music for 18 Musicians or his Different Trains.
Any chance I’ve heard any of this classical stuff before?
Remember Torvill and Dean hurling each other across the ice? Perhaps you weren’t even a twinkle in your dad’s eye then, but if you were, you might enjoy realising that that stuff they were skating to was Ravel’s Bolero and you’d get a kick listening to it properly. And then there was Wagner’s Ride of the Valkyries used when Robert Duvall napalmed Vietnam.
Symphonies – they go on and freaking on. Help me over this experiential hump.
Don’t try (yet) the forbiddingly sculptured hours of Bruckner’s symphonies. Plump instead for Beethoven. You’ll know the opening to his fifth (“Da-Da-Da-Dah”) but stick around for its second movement which, if you have heartstrings, will pluck them mercilessly. If you don’t find the first movement of his sixth the perfect accompaniment to a summer walk in the country, then look into my eyes as I give you the frowning of a lifetime. For those of you whose attention spans have been ruined by daytime telly, Haydn symphonies (try his No 94th, the so-called”Surprise”) are often obligingly short.
Five downloads to getyou started
Schubert: the Trout Quintet
Bach: Brandenburg Concertos
Mozart: Clarinet Concerto
Beethoven: Symphony No 9
Puccini: Madame Butterfly
George Harrison:
Let It Roll: Songs of George Harrison
By: Ron Hart
align=right src="http://images.jambase.com/bands/Wednesday/HarrisonRoll.jpg">
Over the last ten years, Capitol/EMI has been notorious for treating its reissue campaign of George Harrison‘s post-Beatles catalog like some kind of under-appreciated stepchild whose parents force ugly new clothes and disgusting new food onto.
First was the 30th Anniversary reissue of the Quiet One’s masterpiece, All Things Must Pass, from early 2001, considered by many to be the single greatest work by a Beatle outside of the band itself. In addition to the ghastly “colorization” of the original album artwork that would even make the people who tarnished It’s A Wonderful Life cringe, whoever engineered the remaster somehow buried the vocals and guitars even deeper in the mix than original producer Phil Spector had already done initially with his Wall of Sound recording style. Then, there was the label’s 2005 hatchet job on Harrison’s sublime 1971 double-live album chronicling his acclaimed Concert for Bangladesh. While the remastering job of the actual live cuts themselves was great, they cut out the majority of the breaks between songs, destroying the natural flow of the concert that made you feel as though you were right inside Madison Square Garden when listening to the original LP. And worst of all, Capitol finally got its way with the album artwork. After losing its original battle with Harrison over the cover concept – that stunning, iconic image of a malnourished refugee child sitting cross-legged in front of an empty bowl of food, which the suits thought was too depressing and would hurt album sales and then wound up becoming a bestseller and winning the Grammy for Album of the Year in 1973—the label went with the cover they had wanted all along, an image of Harrison from the accompanying concert film, for the reissue (and doing so after Harrison’s tragic demise due to cancer in November 2001, thus adding a whole new layer of sleaze to the whole predicament). Meanwhile, the label’s 2006 reissue of 1973′s Living In The Material World as well as the box set covering the albums released on the guitarist’s own Dark Horse imprint were modest campaigns that somewhat offered a reprieve for fans otherwise annoyed by the label handling of the Quiet One’s catalog thus far, in that it vastly improved upon the original issues in both sound quality and packaging (although some beefier bonus material would have been nice).
Now comes Let it Roll: Songs by George Harrison, a single-disc retrospective released by the EMI group on June 16 touting itself as the first-ever collection spanning the length of George’s career. Compiled largely by George’s widow Olivia Harrison and engineered by legendary Beatles producer George Martin’s son Giles Martin, who did such an outstanding job in 2007 mashing up classic Fabs tracks for the soundtrack to Cirque de Soleil’s Beatles-themed production Love at the Mirage in Las Vegas, the 19-track collection focuses primarily on Harrison’s biggest successes as a singles artist, something he was much stronger at as opposed to his former mates John Lennon and Paul McCartney, who exhibited supremacy creating both killer hit songs and outstanding full-length albums to back them up. Harrison, meanwhile, produced albums that basically consisted of one or two really great songs backed by a majority of filler material that was neither here nor there. True, Harrison did produce some gems in his solo career beyond All Things Must Pass, notably 1973′s Living In The Material World (which, to its credit, EMI did a masterful job reissuing back in 2006) and his 1987 comeback album, Cloud Nine. Not to mention 2002′s posthumous swan song Brainwashed and his pair of experimental solo albums he released while still with The Beatles, 1968′s Moog-tastic Electronic Sound and 1969′s Indian-flavored drone-fest Wonderwall Music, both of which remain woefully out of print at press time.
While there have been George Harrison compilations in the past, none have chronicled the span of his entire career. And though Let It Roll is not exactly a completist’s ideal set, as this collection could have easily been beefed up to anthology status given there are much stronger points in Harrison’s solo catalog than, say, Ringo Starr, but it certainly does an excellent job in gathering the guitarist’s sonic crème de la crème. Sequenced not by chronology but almost seemingly by vibe, the 19 tracks that ultimately made the cut here interweave as though they have existed side by side on the same long player for all these years. For instance, the segue between Brainwashed‘s “Rising Son” and Cloud Nine‘s phenomenal tribute to his old bandmates, “When We Was Fab,” flows one into the other so perfectly. The same can be said for the blending of “Blow Away” off Harrison’s eponymous 1979 effort into the thankfully-included “Cheer Down” from the Lethal Weapon 2 soundtrack, not to mention “Give Me Love (Give Me Peace On Earth)” going into Let It Roll‘s title track, “The Ballad of Sir Frankie Crisp,” originally featured on All Things Must Pass. And while stubbornly elitist Beatles fans (like this writer) might wonder why the likes of “Old Brown Shoe” and “Blue Jay Way” were excluded from the fray here, the inclusion of his big three from his Fab Four output – “While My Guitar Gently Weeps,” “Something” and “Here Comes The Sun” – is imperative to any collection with GH’s name on it, and the fact that the versions came from the Bangladesh concert album seems more appropriate for this project. Another great inclusion on this set is Harrison’s rarely-spoken-of cover of Bob Dylan’s “I Don’t Want to Do It,” which was originally featured on the soundtrack to 1985′s comedic bomb Porky’s Revenge (which should give you a good clue as to why it was little heard).
Sure, one can rail against the powers that be who oversaw the creation and production of Let It Roll and their failure to include such glaring absences as “You” off his 1975 EMI swan song Extra Texture and “Crackerbox Palace” from 1976′s diamond-in-the-rough Thirty Three & 1/3 – his first release on Dark Horse. It’s understood there are only 80 minutes on a CD, but these omissions – not to mention the exclusions of such rarities as Harrison’s working version of Ringo Starr’s “It Don’t Come Easy” or “Bangla Desh,” the 1971 charity single that spearheaded the famed concert and has only appeared on album once via 1976′s The Best of George Harrison collection – could have made this very good single-disc set into an excellent double-disc compendium.
Nonetheless, any Beatles fan, be they casual or hardcore, would benefit from adding Let It Roll: Songs by George Harrison to their CD shelves, as it is gorgeously packaged in a tastefully designed digipak with a 28-page booklet loaded with great information and amazing photos, making it one of the finer justices given to any kind of Beatle-related reissue in recent years (don’t even get me started on the John Lennon stuff). A quality George Harrison best-of has been a long, long time coming, and one can only be grateful that EMI has finally done right by this amazing man and his cherished legacy.
JamBase | Honored
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Bruce :: 09.20.09 :: Chicago
Nils, Max, Bruce :: 09.20.09 :: Chicago

























