Quantcast
Channel: 24HOURDEJAVU
Viewing all 643 articles
Browse latest View live

CJ FISH - RAINBOW 9-18-78

$
0
0
Personnel:

Country Joe McDonald
Barry Melton
Bob Hogins - Keyboards
Bob Flurie - Guitar
Harold Aceves - drums,
Peter Albin – Bass

Setlist: (Runtime about 95 minutes)

CD 1

Intro/Rock And Soul Music
Love
Flying High
Colorado Town
FUCK cheer
I Feel Like I'm Fixin' To Die
Bass Strings

CD 2

"Why Did The Chicken Cross The Road?" (joke time)
Coyote
Butchers Boy
Section 43
Save The Whales
Closer
Not So Sweet Martha Lorraine
Rock And Soul Music (reprise)

The backing band have played in Country Joe and The Fish and also with Barry Melton:

Bob Hogins and Bob Flurie played on Barry's 1977 LP We Are Like The Ocean

Harold Aceves (Quicksilver Messenger Service 1st drummer) along with Bob Hogins and Bob Flurie played on Barry's 1979 LP Level With Me also appeared in More American Graffiti as Country Joe and the Fish

Peter Albin – a member of Big Brother and The Holding Company, Played with CJ & The Fish from Feb – June 1969 and played on Here I Go Again LP. He also played with Barry from 1980s





CJ FISH - EARTH TAVERN 9-16-78

$
0
0
Earth Tavern, Portland, OR 16 September 1978
Country Joe McDonald, Barry Melton, Bob Flurie, Harold DeCevus?, Peter Albin

Set 1

Here I Go Again
Fuck Cheer/I Feel Like I'm Fixing To Die
Mojo Navigator
Section 43
Save the Whales (cut)
Rock & Soul Music
Not So Sweet Martha Lorraine

Set 2

Rock & Soul Music
Love
Flying High
Oh Jamaica
LSD
Superbird
FUCK Cheer/I Feel Like I'm Fixing to Die
Section43 (Cut)



A SOLO FISH

$
0
0


 The Fish-Barry Melton
Barry "The Fish" Melton was half of Country Joe and The Fish, of course, and he had great success as a member of that band in the 1960s. Like many 60s artists, however, he wasn't as successful in the 1970s. Nonetheless, he still had a following, and he continued to record and release albums. In 1975 or '76 United Artists Records released a Barry Melton album called The Fish , but it was only released in England.album. Since it wasn't released in America, however, it was hardly known in America, even for the most ardent fans of The Fish himself.

  • Barry Melton-guitar, vocals
  • Ray Martinez-guitar (from Monmouth, Wales)
  • Tommy Eyre-keyboards (from Sheffield--ex Joe Cocker's Grease Band)
  • Ken Whaley-bass (from Oxford--ex Help Yourself, ex-Man)
  • Dave Charles-drums (from London-ex Sam Apple Pie, ex-Help Yourself)
   
Barry Melton, The Fish 

Tracklisting / Additional Info:    
Long Way
Stranger
Jessie James
Could You Drive Forever
Mountains In Dreamland
Speed Racer
Babylon
Karma
Harbinger
Looking For A World
Marshmallow Road
Ice Cream Man
California Seacoast







POSTER ARTISTS BENEFIT

$
0
0
 Country Joe McDonald (w/ Garcia on two songs)
Gift Center Pavilion
San Francisco, CA
March 22, 1989 (Wednesday)

01. Tuning & Talk [1:32]
02. Entertainment Is My Business [3:02]
03. Janis [2:40]
04. Not So Sweet Martha Lorraine [4:54]
05. Kiss My Ass [2:46]
06. Fixin' To Die Rag [3:16]
07. Coyote [6:21]
08. Starship Ride (w/ Garcia) [4:25]
09. Clara Barton (w/ Garcia) [4:52]

Notes:
- Poster Artists Benefit. Other acts included Garcia/Kahn/Weir, Dinosaurs and Nick Gravenites and Animal Mind.
- Country Joe puts on a great little set here. Jerry's playing on Clara Barton, especially, is quite strong and this is a great song that'll stick in your head for awhile.


CJ FISH - CAROUSEL FEB 14-68

$
0
0

Country Joe And The Fish:
Carousel Ballroom,
S.F., California.
Feb 14 1968 (FM Radio Broadcast on KMPX)

Fish Cheer
I Feel Like I'm Fixing To Die Rag
LSD
Thursday
Rock Coast Blues
Masked Marauder
Death Sound Blues
Flying High
Rock & Soul Music
Tom Donahue Outro for KMPX


WIND UP TOYS

$
0
0
 The Electric Prunes
Rams Head On Stage
Annapolis, MD
May 04, 2008



d1t01 Intro Electric Prunes Wah Wah Pedal Commercial
d1t02 Long Day's Flight
d1t03 Little Olive
d1t04 The Great Banana Hoax
d1t05 I'll Give You Feedback
d1t06 Never Had It Better
d1t07 I Happen To Love You
d1t08 I Had Too Much To Dream Last Night
d1t09 Ain't It Hard
d1t10 Happy Birthday To Jay Dean
d1t11 Rosie Made Me Crazy
d1t12 Wind-Up Toys
d1t13 Circus Freak
d1t14 Hideaway
d1t15 Get Me To The World On Time


Article 2

$
0
0

 This past March this blog turned five years old. During this time the site has been shutdown three times by the blogger staff' There have been just over 1,000 posts for yours and my enjoyment. I enjoy creating the artwork for the posts that I put up. I do hope that the people who visit get some enjoyment from the shared material. I have accumulated over 50,000 music files from the artists that I feature. I try to repost or update materials as best as possible. Do not feel neglected if I do not get to a request as quickly as possible. The material posted is from bootleg sources or out of print selections. I have noticed in the past couple of months that my visitors are declining. This is probably normal because I do have a special interest in music from artists who are not mainstream or had a limited career. I will update older posts on the left column of the site . Since Megaupload's demise I have been using Mirrorcreator and it is not nearly as efficient as Mega was and I do wish there were not so many pop up windows on the link sites. But as it is that is the best that I can come up with and I will not use a premium(paid) site.
  Next week I will celebrate my 64th birthday and will continue this blog as health and time permit. Once again I thank those that communicate with me and wish I had some more dialogue with others. Thanks

WAKE UP AND SMELL THE INCENSE

$
0
0



Strawberry Alarm Clock
The Knitting Factory
Hollywood, CA
Dec 28, 2007



The Clock........

Randy Seol
George Bunnell
Steve Bartek
Gene Gunnels
Howie Anderson
Mark Weitz
Lee Freeman





Here are the tracks as listed however I am really not sure of the actual order as some are not separated in specific tracks


d1t01 Intro
d1t02 Heart Full Of Rain
d1t03 Rainy Day Mushroom Cloud
d1t04 Paxton's Back Street Carnival
d1t05 Strawberries Mean Love
d1t06 I'm So Glad
d1t07 Lose To Live
d1t08 Hummin' Happy
d1t09 Tomorrow
d1t10 Barefoot In Baltimore
d1t11 Sit With The Guru
d1t12 Birds In My Tree
d1t13 Bird Man Of Alkatrash
d1t14 Incense And Peppermints
d1t15 The World's On Fire








WEST COAST CHOCOLATE

$
0
0
The classic lineup of the Chocolate Watchband, with David Aguilar on vocals, was arguably the best garage punk band of the mid-'60s, as well as one of its most short-lived. This live reunion is therefore a most welcome addition to the band's canon. It gave the group a chance to refashion some old tunes that may have been rushed by producer Ed Cobb when they were first recorded. For example, "She Weaves a Tender Trap" seems more fully realized than the original, and it's nice to hear Aguilar, and not Don Bennett, sing "Let's Talk About Girls." But "Gone and Passes By," despite Aguilar's claims to the contrary, pales next to the original's sitarized Bo Diddley groove. The essence of garage rock was always spontaneity over fidelity, not to mention teen angst, so the idea of men in their fifties presenting pristinely recorded oldies might be alarming to purists. But there is no doubt it's great fun and the energy is contagious. The Chocolate Watchband have always owed their greatest debt to the Rolling Stones, from whom they borrowed their sneer and sound. Despite the fact that the Stones have had tours longer than the Watchband's original tenure

Chocolate Watchband
Cafe Du Nord
San Francisco, Ca
August 1, 2001

source : soundboard

01 Introduction > Instrumental
02 Gone and Passes By
03 Misty Lane
04 Are You Gonna Be There (At the Love-In)
05 It's All over Now, Baby Blue
06 No Way Out
07 So Screwed Up
08 I'm Not Like Everybody Else
09 Sweet Young Thing
10 Let's Talk About Girls
11 band introductions
12 Don't Need Your Lovin'
13 I Just Want to Make Love to You
14 I'm Movin' On



TROGGIN' ON

$
0
0
 Here is apost with a different twist to it. Last December the lead singer of the Troggs, Reg Presley. passed away at the age of 71 from a series of strokes. Being the prominant and most recognizable Trogg this left the other band members with a decision to make. Could Reg be  replaced?......Absolutely Not !!
Could the band move on without him?  They decided that they could! The band does a more than presentable job of playing their most recognizable tunes. Original band member Chris Britton, Pete Lucas, Dave Maggs  chose Chris Allen as their vocalist and have Trogged onward. Reg Presley can never be replaced but the talented boys in the band play on!
 The Troggs   Leopoldsburg June 22  2013

 101. Give it me
102. From home
103. Louie louie
104. Walking the dog
105. Night of the long grass
106. Anyway you want me
107. She looks like a woman to me
108. Strange movies
109. Little girl
110. With a girl like you
111. Love is all around
112. Wild thing
113. I can't control myself


Current members

    Chris Britton  lead guitar
    Dave Maggs -drums
    Pete Lucas  – bass guitar

   Chris Allen - lead vocals


BATTERIES NOT INCLUDED

$
0
0


THE MUSIC MACHINE featuring Sean Bonniwell

July 27, 1989
The Coconut Teaser
Hollywood, CA


01  Intro> The Sixties
02  Masculine Intuition> See See Rider> Masculine Reprise
03  Come On In
04  People In Me
05  Rude Awakening
06  Trouble> Mother Nature father Earth>Double Yellow Line
07  Hey Joe
08  Talk Talk


SNAPSHOTS IN SOUND

$
0
0


I have always been a fan of the original music that was created in the first of the psychedelic years of 1965-1968. The original nuggets LP issued in 75 or so was a great sampling of my kind of music. I went on to buy the next wave of nugget LP's that were issued.  Rhino did a great job of finding a vast collection of rare and popular garage\psychedelic music even more with it's box set on cd. However I have taken it a step further here by putting together some more of my favorites. I have intentions of putting a couple more comps as time goes by. Music from MY time as a young man and I believe it to be one of the most creative in musical history. Punk, garage, Psychedelic OH MY!
The photo image is that of Peppy Castro of the Blues Magoos in one of their electric suits.

01  Ben Franklin's Almanac - Cryan Shames
02  Girl Of The North Country - Blue Things
03  Orange Skies - Galaxies
04  No Time Like The Right Time - Blues Project
05  Your maw Said You Cried - Turtles
06  Medication - Standells
07  Do You Feel It - Young Rascals
08  Why Is a Carrot More Orange Than An Orange - Amboy Dukes
09  Hey Gyp - Soul Survivors
10  She Comes In Colors - Fever Tree
11  This Sporting Life - Ola And The Janglers
12  The Clown Died In Marvin Gardens - Beacon Street Union
13  Little Games - Yardbirds
14  Shapes Of Things - Allman Joys
15  Mystic Eyes - Them
16  Light Bulb Blues - Shadows Of Knight
17  Rollin' Machine - Seeds
18  A Question Of Temperature - Balloon Farm
19  Everybody Knows You're Not In Love - Electric Prunes
20  I Can Hear The Grass Grow - Move
21  Que Vida! - Love
22  Love Seems Doomed
23  Bottom Of The Soul - Music Machine
24  It's All Over Now Baby Blue - Chocolate Watchband



MORE SNAPSHOTS

$
0
0
 As previously mentioned here is a second set of tunes from the late great psychedelic 60's. I found some familiar ones but also a couple you may not have heard for a while. Some interesting side notes..
The Sparrow would later evole into the great Steppenwolf. It is said that Mike Bloomfield played on the Chicago Loop tune and Sons of Adam recorded the Arthur Lee penned "Feathered Fish" but it was never done by Love. Image credit to M. Schwartz

01  Tomorrow - Strawberry Alarm Clock
02  That's When Happiness Began - Grains Of sand
03  Hot Smoke And Sassafras - Bubble Puppy
04  Twisted - Sparrow
05  Someone Like Me - Shadows Of Knight
06  The White Ship - HP Lovecraft
07  Shifting Sands - West Coast Pop Art Experimental Band
08  Happenings 10 Years Time Ago - Yardbirds
09  Hole In My Shoe - Traffic
10  Hey Joe - Enemys
11  Itchycoo Park - Small Faces
12  Lost In My World - Outsiders
13  Don't Come Around - Trolls
14  Baby Let's Wait - Royal Guardsmen
15  Mr.Jones(Ballad Of A Thin Man) - Grass Roots
16  Mind Excursion - Trade Winds
17  Good Time Music - Lovin' Spoonful
18  99th Floor - Moving Sidewalks
19  I Need Somebody - ? And The Mysterians
20  Grizzly Bear - Daily Flash
21  When Will The Rain Come - Troggs
22  Flowers In The rain - Move
23  Feathered Fish - Sons Of Adam
24  Blue's Theme - Davie Allen And The Arrows


CALIFORNIA DREAMIN'

$
0
0

A small sampling of the west coast psychedelic pop that took over the music scene. there were hundreds of bands and musicians. Some made it big some disappeared after their first efforts. However this may have been one of the most creative musical times.

01  softly to me - love
02  eyes - strawberry window
03  special girl - chelsea sidecar
04  happy with you - tikis
05  rubiyat - immediate family
06  letters - new tweedy brothers
07  peaceful times - crystal set
08  sing me a rainbow - sons of champlin
09  brave new world - thorinshield
10  let's get together - dino valenti
11  all the time - tricycle
12  the last thing on my mind - vejtables
13  ain't it babe - charity shane
14  we'll meet again - byrds
15  windchimes - mad river
16  i don't care - front line assembly
17  excitation - rear exit
18  stranger in a strange land - blackburn and snow
19  hearts to cry - frumious bandersnatch
20  good times - transatlantic railroad
21  now it's over - living children
22  she's my baby - mojo men
23  you were on my mind - we five
24  west coast child of sunshine - blue cheer


DEMENTO'S DELIGHT

$
0
0

As the title does indeed suggest this is nonsense. How many of you will admit to the fact that you will catch yourself singing or humming one of these gems. during the 60's there were a rash of novelty songs that hit the airwaves.  There were artists(as Roger Miller) who virtually made a living off of this type of music. Interesting that even some of our own favorite musicians even put there hands into the genre for a couple of tunes. As we would expect a guy like Frank Zappa could prove that there could be commercial potential in the light hearted humor of a novelty song. Dr. Demento would make a career of promoting the novelty songs.Sing along if you want!!

01  let it out ( let it all hang out) - hombres
02  sarah cynthia stout would take the garbage out - shel siverstein
03  fish heads  - barnes and barnes
04  dead skunk in the middle of the road - louden wainwright
05  pencil neck geek - freddie blassie
06  king tut - steve martin
07  troglodyte - jimmie castor bunch
08  they're coming to take me away - napoleon XIV
09  may the bird of paradise - little jimmie dickens
10  ohh licky licky wah - deviled ham
11  my boomerang won't come back -charlie drake *
12  tie me kangeroo down sport - rolf harris *
13  ali baba's camel - bonzo dog band
14  you turn me on - ian whitcomb
15  king kong - jimmie castor bunch
16  jolly green giant - kingsmen
17  junk food junkie - larry groce
18  flower punk - mothers of invention
19  cows with guns - dana lyons
20  hebrew rap - frank zappa and dr. demento
21  surfin' bird - trashmen
22  100,000 turkeys - chris - t-t
23  you can't roller skate in a buffalo herd - roger miller
24  that's all folks - porky pig

* for an extra story on Harris and Drake   go here.....

      http://www.brilton.net/cms/2011/07/22/rolf-harris-vs-charlie-drake/



BUBBLES AND BAZOOKAS

$
0
0


One last posting about the nonsense music of the late sixties. The radio airwaves were filled with the sound of bubble gum pop music and was indeed very popular whether  we liked it or not. Once again I will have to admit that even I liked a couple of the tunes. The Fruitgum Company's "Indian Giver" was catchy and by today's standards would probably qualify as  very politically incorrect with it's implications about Native Americans. I do promise that I will not visit Disco and will return to our regularly programed material.  And we will forgive you if you hum or sing along to this stuff!

01  i could be so good - don and the goodtimes
02  simon says - 1910 fruitgum company
03  yummy yummy yummy - ohio espress
04  little bit of soul - music explosion
05  1 2 3 red light - 1910 fruitgum compamy
06  western union - five americans
07  keep on dancing - gentrys
08  the rapper - jaggerz
09  snoopy versus the red baron - royal guardsmen
10  rice is nice - lemon pipers
11  goody goody gumdrops - 1910 fruitgum company
12  quick joey small - kasenetz katz singing orchestral circus
13  down at lulu's - ohio express
14  bubble gun music - rock and roll dubble bubble trading card company of philadelphia
15  shake - shadows of knight
16  zip code - five americans
17  i'm gonna love you too - hullabaloos
18  kind of a drag - buckinghams
19  chewy chewy - ohio express
20  come on down to my boat - every mother's son
21  indian giver - 1910 fruitgum company
22  tale it or leave it - barbarians
23  red rubber ball - cyrkle
24 i wanna do it - family


'TWAS A BEAUTIFUL DAY

$
0
0

A selection recommended to me by Gregg(AKA Tripsicord). This comes from a German site and It was new to me so I thought I would share with all. a live recording but not any real info with it.
 

ROCK POETS

$
0
0

 Fronted by San Franciscan poet David Meltzer, the Serpent Power was a sunshiny folk-rock group, whose songs were musical translations of Meltzer's poetry. They were first noticed by Ed Denton, manager of Country Joe and the Fish, when he saw them perform at their first-ever gig, a benefit for the Telegraph Neighborhood Center. This was in November of 1966 — Denton recommended them to Vanguard Records (Country Joe's label) and by 1967 the band was signed and had released their first and only album.The Serpent Power was formed by Meltzer and his wife Tina (who sang both lead and harmony vocals), and also included Denny Ellis and David Stenson on lead guitar and bass, respectively, both of whom had gotten their start with San Francisco folksters the Grass Roots. The band became a full rock outfit with the inclusion of John Payne on organ and Clark Coolidge on drums. The album, also entitled The Serpent Power, received a somewhat limited pressing and, despite featuring some excellent examples of folk-rock, the band never got that big, known mostly within the San Francisco area. The album's last track was a raga-rock epic which included electric banjo player JP Pickens, who stayed on as a permanent member as the band entered its second incarnation.Ellis, Stenson, and Payne left shortly after The Serpent Power was recorded, replaced by Bob Cuff (who'd come over from folk-pop band the Mystery Trend), on lead guitar and Jim Moscoso on bass. Although they continued reaching in ever-more exploratory directions, the band didn't record another album, and disbanded in 1968. David and Tina Meltzer went on to record another album, Poet's Song, under their own names.
 1969: After Serpent Power, our first LP for Vanguard,  Benny Ellis (rhythm guitar) & David  Stenson (bass) quit the band.  They'd been w/ The Grass Roots & did the Vanguard recording session as a favor to mutual friend Chris Brooks. Clark Coolidge & I were the sole survivors since Tina, the lead singer, quit after hearing the first album & then performing at The Fillmore.
We had a contract for a second album & had a year to put together a new band & get our shit together.  Working out of a cave-like basement in a big office building in San Francisco — w/ mounds of dirt in various uneven slopes & ridges — Clark I began auditioning musicians for the new band.
Mostly we spent hours improvising.  We hired Bob Cuff, rhythm guitarist, who was a member of The Mystery Trend, one of the first art school art bands in SF, & Jim Moscoso, bass.  Jim was the younger brother of our friend Victor Moscoso, an artist & one of the vanguard poster & underground comic artists of the 60’s. We also re-enlisted banjoist J.P. Pickens to join in whenever he had the time. (J.P. & I had been experimenting at the Coffee Gallery of our version of free folk-music, sometimes joined on acoustic guitar by Jim Gurley (who became lead guitar for Big Brother.)
This newly formed group was invited by John Rockwell (now a NY Times cultural critic) to perform on his weekly show on KPFA-FM in Berkeley. Cuff, Coolidge, Moscoso, Meltzer, & Pickens walked into KPFA & were greeted by Daniel Moore (visionary poet, leader of The Floating Lotus Opera Company, & now Sufi teacher & storyteller in the East coast.)  He introduced us to his friend Christian who had an alto saxophone which he was in the first stages of learning how to play. They wanted to sit in. Daniel was/is one of the greatest intuitive musi­cians I've run into.  He brought his shenei (Chinese oboe) & a bunch of bells & conch shells into the studio.  It was all decidedly spontaneous & in the moment since none of us had really played together.  (Daniel & Christian were to become regular members of the band when we worked weekend gigs in North Beach clubs; Pickens wd sit in whenever he cd, developing new sounds from his amplified banjo.)
This hunk of that first confrontation is one of 2 reel-to-reel tapes recorded at KPFA that night.  I gave the other half to Jim Moscoso & suspect it's lost in Borgesville.



                                     David Meltzer

                                     Oakland, CA

                                     Autumn, 2006


1st LP Tracks:

01. Don't You Listen to Her 2:20
02. Gently, Gently 2:36
03. Open House 3:31
04. Flying Away 4:26
05. Nobody Blues 3:50
06. Up and Down 3:37
07. Sky Baby 2:32
08. Forget 3:34
09. Dope Again :47
10. Endless Tunnel 13:14

2nd LP tracks:

11. This Side 10:37
12. The Other Side 24:41
   

   

THE POET AND HIS PRINCESS

$
0
0


  Poet Song, our second Vanguard album, was written for Tina as a showcase for her intimate and warm voice. Sam suggested that I read some of my poems and double-track guitar behind them. We recorded it at Sierra Sound in Berkeley where Serpent Power was recorded. Some string players from the Oakland Philharmonic -- including violist Tom Heimberg, an old Fairfax High School buddy-- were assembled at the studio by arranger Ed Bogas. I wanted to write songs almost exclusively for Tina, since I'd dominated our first album. The songs and orchestration were to sound more like art song, the antithesis of what Serpent Power was doing in the clubs.

Vanguard seemed pleased and held an option for us to do a third album. A mutual friend Chris Brooks introduced us to Vic Briggs who had been the lead guitarist with The Animals. Vic was now producing records for Capitol and liked Poet Song tremendously but thought he could produce a better album. He asked us to make a demo-tape for him to pitch to his bosses at Capitol. 

I wrote some more songs and Tina and I put together a tape using a clunky Sony tape recorder. (We managed to double-track vocal harmonies and guitar textures but, being technologically challenged, didn't realize they had to be mixed, which was moot since we didn't have the equipment.) Nevertheless, Capitol liked what their new British producer played and they gave the green light. We left Vanguard amicably and signed with Capitol.

The instrumental tracks were cut at the Capitol Recording Studios in Hollywood. Our studio was down corridor from a big studio where Sinatra was in the process of cutting an album. Vic selected most of the musicians for the date including John Guerin on drums, Lyle Ritz on bass,  David Lindley played violin, Michael Rubini, piano. I hired bluegrass mandolinist Scott Hambly.

The string section was added at another time. (During a session break, some of the A-List Hollywood studio musicians talked about their various investments, airplanes, real estate holdings, while Scott and I reminisced about his bluegrass band, The Ridge Runners, featuring Greg Lasser on the 5-string, who was part of my band, The Snopes County Camp Followers, with Tina, Joe Edmiston on gutbucket bass.)

Our vocal tracks were recorded in Wally Heider's San Francisco studio which, at the time, was state-of-the-art and was like entering onto a set in 2001: A Space Odyssey. Our engineer had just finished a long haul working on a Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young album. We felt like we were in the big time; super-stardom was just around the corner, glimmering like Las Vegas at night.

Cover photos were taken and liner notes were written by poet Kenneth Rexroth, a founding father of the San Francisco Renaissance and Beat movement. In a couple of weeks we received a tape of the mixed-down album and played it for anybody who stumbled into our home. Then there was an odd silence. Then there was a long-distance call from Vic who broke the news. He and four or five other producers who Capitol management had hired had been let go. Why? A corporate turn-over: a new management team was brought in and canceled all of the previous management's projects. Vic was out of a job; David and Tina would not become mega-stars but they did have a very expensive home tape. The songs you're about to listen to.
by David Meltzer



     Tina & David Meltzer - Poet Song

01     I'm The Early Morning Racer (Poem)     1:39    
02    I'll Forget You     3:44    
03      The Bath (Poem)     0:33    
04      I'm A Lover     2:51    
05     Ravel Blues     4:38    
06     The Blackest Rose (Poem)     0:55    
07      It Is For You     1:50    
08      Lullaby     2:54    
09     I'm So Willing     4:15    
10     Lamentation For Hank Williams (Poem)     1:09    
11      Hymn To Love     3:18    
12      Confessin' (Poem)     2:27    
13      Pure White Place     4:34    
14     Poem For My Wife (Poem)     1:01    
15     For Tina     2:28
  
Tina & David Meltzer Green Morning

1. Heavenly City - 3:34
2. Let The Door Stay Open - 3:30
3. Hungry - 4:38
4. Luna Tune #1 - 0:43
5. Green Morning - 3:38
6. Shara - 1:40
7. Keep On Lovin' - 3:16
8. The Garden - 4:37
9. Child Ballad - 4:01
10.Luna Tune #2 - 0:53
11.The Angel - 2:45
12.Let The Light In - 1:45
13.Do You Think Your God - 5:17
14.It's Simple - 0:47
Words and Music by David Meltzer

Musicians
*Tina Meltzer - Vocals
*David Meltzer - Guitar Vocals, Harmonica
*John Guerin - Drums
*Lyle Ritz - Bass
*David Lindley - Violin
*Michael Rubini - Piano
*Scott Hambly - Mandolin


MATRIX SOLUTION

$
0
0


A name known only to hardcore devotees of the early San Francisco psychedelic scene, the Final Solution never did release a record, although they did play some gigs around that time (including one at the Fillmore), and played for a month at the Red Dog Saloon in Virginia City, NV. Their modal distorted guitars and instrumental sections bore some similarities to those used by the Great Society and other early San Francisco groups. Yet the Final Solution had a grimmer, more downcast outlook, both in their lyrics and in their droning, minor-keyed melodies.

Most of the original material performed by the Final Solution was written by lead guitarist Ernie Fosselius and bassist Bob Knickerbocker, although rhythm guitarist John Yager sang lead. They did come close to a deal with Mainstream, the Chicago label that recorded several minor Bay Area bands (and one major one, Big Brother & the Holding Company), but nothing came out. In late 1966, interestingly, drummer Jerry Slick -- formerly in the Great Society, which also included Grace Slick, his wife at the time -- joined, adding parts from Great Society tunes to some of the Final Solution's arrangements. (In particular, on their 1966 rehearsal tapes, you can hear sections of the Great Society's "Grimly Forming" and "Father" lifted virtually verbatim.) The discouraged band broke up in 1967, and Fosselius and Knickerbocker went on to work in film.

Tapes of the band, recorded in 1966 at rehearsals and live at the Matrix club in San Francisco, do survive, and here's betting that -- given the intense interest in psychedelic rock from this time and place -- they'll see the light of day before most of you reading this get lowered into the ground. Although not close to the upper echelon occupied by the best of their San Francisco peers, much of it's worthwhile, particularly their most folk-rock-aligned stuff, such as "Just Like Gold" and "Bleeding Rose." On numbers like "So Long Goodbye" there's a garage rock rush, and they get into raga-rock on songs like "If You Want," with a guitar Fosselius constructed by putting a Harmony guitar neck onto a mandolin. A version of "Bleeding Rose," recorded at rehearsals with Slick on drums, did emerge on a flexi-disc included with the first issue of the San Francisco rock fanzine Cream Puff War in 1991.
 


1. Intro
2. Tell Me Again
3. Bleeding Roses
4. If You Want
5. You Say that You Love Me
6. Got My Mojo Working
7. Time Is Here and Now
8. Bo Diddley Meets Sandy Nelson
9. Truck Drivin' Son of a Gun
10. Just Like Gold
11. Misty Mind
12. So Long Goodbye
13. America the Beautiful Part 1
14. America the Beautiful Part 2
 

Viewing all 643 articles
Browse latest View live