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Monday Musical History Day


Heather Shay

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Totally agree. Thank you. Good memories flooding back.

H

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Gary Wright - successful solo career

Luther Grosvenor - changed name to Ariel Bender and guitar success with Mott the Hoople

Greg Ridley - success with Humble Pie

Mike Kellie - worked with Joe Cocker, George Harrison Peter Framption, etc.

Henry McCullough - success with Wings

Mick Jones - success with Foreigner

Mike Harrison - successful solo career

Chris Stainton - success with Joe Cocker

 

What do all these musicians have in common?

 

SPOOKY TOOTH - one of the richest musically, unique and yet underappreciated and still rarely spoken of bands that came out of the sixties and seventies.

 

I learned of them when I stumbled over their second album, Spooky Two and I bought it because I loved the cover.

 

I placed it on a turntable at home and "Waiting for the Wind" amazed my waiting ears and I was hooked. The songs were well played, "Evil Woman" my second favorite on the album and was produced by Jim Miller, an amazing producer.

 

Through the years the band have released high quality albums, one after another and I bought them all, enjoying their artistry.

 

Why they aren't known more and didn't rise as they should have, totally baffles me.

 

If you get a chance listed to the 2 cuts I mention about as well as:

 

Cotton Growing Man

The Wrong Time

Wildfire

Things Change

Fantasy Satisfier

Higher Circles

The Mirror

That was Only Yesterday

Better By You, Better Than Me

Hangman, Hang My Shell on a Tree

 

And their version of I AM THE WALRUS.

 

And finally they even were involed in an progressive version of the Catholic Mass with electronic keyboard pioneer Pierre Henri.

 

I miss the group :(

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Born Steven Demetre Georgiou changing his name to Cat Stevens changing his name to Yusef  and finally (we think) Yusef/Cat Stevens, this musician has gone on to sell over 100 million records worldwide. He brought through with Mathew and Son once he had taken on the moniker of Cat Stevens but contracted tuberulosis and was hospitalized for months. During that time he started questioning his spitiuality having experienced the life of a rock star and he rebelled. 

He came back and wrote an incredible catalog of songs including Wild World, Peace Train, Moonshadow, The First Cut is the Deepest, Lady d'Arbanville, Longer Boats, Father and Son, Sad Lisa (My favorite). 

I remember going to a quarry to swim and sun whan I was in college and a Cat Stevens song playing. It's one of those beatiful memories. We also had Teaser and the Fire Cat tape at a discount store I worked at to demonstrate our tape decks and I played it ALL THE TIME.

Once again Cat was getting spiritually empty and changed to Islam. He was chastised after Solomon Rushdie published "The Satanic Verses" and was condemned to die for sacrilege and for 9-11.  But he had devoted his life to teaching and helping children learn and being gentle.

He made a comeback as Yusef/Cat Stevens (for name recognition) and has put out several albums and continues to tour to benefit the children. His albun "An Other Cup" is particularly excellent and deserves a listen.

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DELBERT McCLINTON

 

I bought a record that happened to have Delbert on it before I even knew who he was. John Lennon learned how to play harmonica from him because he had heard the same record and so I revisited my 45. The song was "Hey Baby" by Bruce Chanel and I fell in love with the harp playing.

The next time Delbert's name came up was when he got his hit "Giving It Up For Your Love". Again love at first hearing. 

Over the yeatrs Delbert has been active in the music business yet always under the radar. 

He is good plays with Bonnie Raitt, another musician I've dearly loved sine her second album "Give It Up" with Freebo (one of my all time favorite stage names).

It's hard to believe he has earned 4 Grammies and most people still don't know who he is. 

Besides getting a Grammy for a duet with Bonnie Raitt, "Good Man, Good Woman", he has also performing duets with Emmylou Harris and Tanya Tucker.

His songwriting placed him in the Texas Songwriters Hall of Fame and many of his songs have appeared in movies like The Blues Brothers where a cover version of the  song Emmylou Harris took up to #1 in the country charts, "Two More Bottles of Wine" and he wrote and performed his song "Weatherman" in the movie "Valentine's Day."

For a guy you've probably never heard of, I suspect you have heard his music and didn't think about who did it.

DELBERT McCLINTON - one of my unsung heroes.

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My all time favorite performer in concert is Rory Gallagher, from County Cork, Ireland. I was lucky enough to see him up cose in Toledo, Ohio and was so struck by his guitar, dobro, mandolin playing and love of blues. He must have lost 10 pounds every time he played. He was focussed entirely on the music when he played. My first band played "Tattoo'd Lady" (I sang lead)" and "Bull Frog Blues". Such a memory, prised forever. My spouse and I spent a week in Ireland and used a farm B&B about 40 miles from Cork and it never occurred to me to look up if there was any memorial to him. I later found out the town has a statue and other memorials to him and an annual festival near Cork is dedicated to him. I had to talk to a representative about a billing a couple years ago and as we talked I found out she was in Cork and talked about Rory. Luckily I still have my Cork library call.

 

image.thumb.png.0c58d9062f19e42687bb6e0f8489f0a4.png

Rory shown playing his famous strat

image.thumb.png.f1d2a5f83cf6a106e934da41082926aa.png

Rory's 1961 strat he played for most of his career.

 

 

Rory started as most guitarists at that time, playing in show bands before forming a power trio called TASTE and rising in the ranks before Cream and Hendrix became the top trios in rock. Eventually breaking up Taste and performing as Rory Gallagher. And could he play. His dedication to blues and music found him fans throughout the world. I saw him with his classic group with Gerry Mcavoy bass, Rod De'Ath drums and Lou Martin keyboards. 

 

A number of guitarists, including Alex Lifeson of Rush, Brian May of Queen, and Eric Clapton, have cited Gallagher as an influence. He was voted as guitarist of the year by Melody Maker magazine in 1972, and listed as the 57th greatest guitarist of all time by Rolling Stone magazine in 2015.

 

Brian May, lead guitarist of Queen, relates: "So these couple of kids come up, who's me and my mate, and say 'How do you get your sound Mr Gallagher?' and he sits and tells us. So I owe Rory Gallagher my sound."[83] The sound to which May refers consists of a Dallas Rangemaster Treble Booster in combination with a Vox AC30 amplifier.[84] In 2010, Gallagher was ranked No. 42 on Gibson.com's List of their Top 50 Guitarists of All Time.[85] Gallagher was also listed in Rolling Stone magazine's list of the 100 Greatest Guitarists of All Time, at 57th place.[86] In April 2014, at the time of the auction of Gallagher's Patrick Eggle "JS Berlin Legend" guitar, the BBC noted: "Eric Clapton credited him with 'getting me back into the blues.'"

 

 

Tributes

[edit]

https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/3/39/Rory-Gallagher-Grab.jpg/220px-Rory-Gallagher-Grab.jpg Headstone at St Oliver's Cemetery, Ballincollig, County Cork, Ireland

  • On 25 October 1997, a tribute sculpture to Gallagher was unveiled in the newly renamed Rory Gallagher Place (formerly St. Paul's Street Square) in his hometown of Cork. The sculptor, Geraldine Creedon, was a childhood friend of Gallagher.[87]

https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/2/26/Rory_Gallagher_Statue_-_Ballyshannon.jpg/220px-Rory_Gallagher_Statue_-_Ballyshannon.jpg A bronze statue of Gallagher in The Diamond, Ballyshannon, County Donegal

  • Rory Gallagher Corner, at Meeting House Square in Dublin's Temple Bar, is marked with a full-size bronze representation of his Stratocaster. The unveiling was attended by The Edge of U2 and the Lord Mayor of Dublin, among others.
  • In 2004, the Rory Gallagher Music Library was opened in Cork.[88]
  • In 2006, a plaque was unveiled at the Ulster Hall in Belfast.[89][90]
  • A street in Ris-Orangis, a commune in the southern suburbs of Paris, was renamed Rue Rory Gallagher.[91]
  • New York City-based Celtic rock band Black 47 paid tribute to Rory Gallagher on their 1996 release, "Green Suede Shoes". The track titled "Rory" features vocalist and guitarist Larry Kirwan delivering a tribute to Gallagher.[92]
  • Flynn Amps manufacture a Rory Gallagher signature Hawk pedal, cloned from Gallagher's 1970s pedal.[93]
  • Christy Moore released a song on his 2009 album Listen titled 'Rory is Gone', which pays tribute to Gallagher's life.
  • On 2 June 2010, a life-sized bronze statue of Gallagher, made by Scottish sculptor David Annand, was unveiled in The Diamond in the centre of Ballyshannon.[94][95] An award-winning[96] annual blues festival is held in his honour in the same town.
  • In 2015, Fender produced the Rory Gallagher Signature Stratocaster.[97]
  • In October 2016, approval was given to put up a statue of Gallagher on Bedford Street, near the Ulster Hall in central Belfast.[98]

 

 

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On 12/9/2024 at 11:29 AM, Heather Shay said:

DELBERT McCLINTON

 

I bought a record that happened to have Delbert on it before I even knew who he was. John Lennon learned how to play harmonica from him because he had heard the same record and so I revisited my 45. The song was "Hey Baby" by Bruce Chanel and I fell in love with the harp playing.

I agree with all this history of McClinton. And that it's almost a fluke he didn't become more famous. Good to read it all spelled out. Well done, Heather. The only thing I'd add was that he was a humble and great guy to talk to. I met him once when he played in town with his band, mid-70s.

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Awesome that you got to talk to him. I'm jealous.

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NICK DRAKE

 

I love rediscovered artists I was not aware of, who are excellent musicians and writers. After he was discovered in movies like "Serandipity", Nick Drake was one of those artists. I was unaware the man released 3 albums, all excellent, all distinctive and were released in the late 1950's and 1970's. I was taken aback when I heared his unique, multi- tuning efforts and lyrics and voice that sold each and every song. Even the stripped down instrumentals and/or simple lyrics on the album Pink Moon.

I couldn't get enough of this troubled artist who accidently overdoesed, but based on his psychological issues most likely would have died anyway.

Nick attended Cambridge and learned guitar and released his first album, "Five Leaves Left" (a referral to rolling papers) and John Martyn and members of The Incredible String Band joined Nick through his producer Joe Boyd to produce an amzingly delevoped first album. 

Bryter Laye, his second album included dello by John Cale (Velvet Underground) and strings, not by Paul Buckmaster (David Bowie's "Space Odsessey and early Elton John) but his friend from school who did an incredible job scoring the album with no prior experience. 

After his first 2 albums went nowhere, Drake turned inward and having felt he would be famous by this time and started using drugs extensively. His was diagnosed with serious mental issues and prescribed various medications.

He decided to record a stripped down album "Pink Moon" nearly playing everything himself and just dropping off the album to his record company with no notes, no fanfare, no nothing. Nick overdosed in 1970 (age 26 and a member of the famous 26 club).

He went unnoticed until in the 1980's all these new artists talked about him as a big influence, then a Volkswagen commercial using the song Pink Moon burst into people's hearing and his albums started selling. Add to that, movies like "The Royal Tenebaums, Serendipity and Garden State featured songs of Drake and his was finally in the spotlight he so richly deserved. Now artists all over the world try to emulate Drake and several yearly festivals and tribute concerts appear to celebrate the music of Nick Drake.

I've now read several biographies and bought all his albums and frequently list to this man from my generational who I never knew existed until the 21st century. Wow. What a find.

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5 hours ago, Heather Shay said:

Wow. What a find.

Yes. As a guitar player I heard him early on as a special musician. Glad he got his due eventually.

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One of the things that really planted this musician in my mind was that he had nearly waist lie hair and in a boating accident, he got is tangled in the boat motor and tore a large clump from his head.

I found a coopy of his "faces" album and although I wasn't crazy about his voice, I loved his guitar work.

He was born in Ft. Worth, Texas and played , recorded and cowrote songs with Donovan and Traffic, Eric Clapton, Tim Hardin, Bernie Taupin and Paul Buckmaster amoung others. And taught Joni Mitchell how to finger pick when she was still called Joni Anderson.

"His refusal to pigeonhole his music – which seamlessly melds folk, rock, jazz, funk, progressive, pop, electro, classical, and global folk traditions – to meet anyone else's expectations allowed him to retain his cult following without ever achieving the stardom that his talent seemed to merit. Bill Graham described the Texas-born musician as "the best kept secret in the music business"

He eventually decided to semi-retire and became an 

emt because he loved helping people. He still plays today and still creates great music.

Who am I talking about? Shawn Phillips. If you don't know him, check him out. Especially his album "Faces."

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The first all girl band, and in my opinion, the best all girl and one of the best OVERALL bnds of the 1970's is Fanny. The Millington sisters (Jean and June) along withNicky Barclay and Alice de Buhr kicked and I love their arrangements, especially on Hey Bulldog, Ain't the Peculiar,and "Last Night I Had a Dream.

 

Lowell George of Little Feat fame jammed with Fanny whenever he and they were in Los Angeles. And David Bowie loved the group.

 

Of course The Bangles and The Runaways said they were an influence.

 

The guitar work, especially the slide work was as good or better than any of the so-called boy bands. 

 

I'd put them up against any band of the 1970's and that's saying a lot.

 

 

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I love this band.  So talented.  Nicky's vocals on Hey Bulldog are right up there with the best! 

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I noticed the album "Song for Juli" turned fifty last year. I remember meeting Jesse Colin Young many years ago at Kent Stage in Kent, Ohio and brought my copy of "Song for Juli" to be signed. He looked inside and saw I has a copy of the photo of his daughter when she was 8 and he looked very sad. I asked him what was wrong, he mentioned that his home in Marin County California had burned down and he'd lost all those early family photographs. I gave him his daughter's photo. Wow to help out someone I'd looked up to since having loved the early Youngbloods, "Get Together", the "Elephant Mountain" album with Darknes, Darkness and Sunlight and I'd even performed a version of Sunlight in my early playing days. 

I saw Jesse again in Nelsonville, Ohio at the opera house I'd actually played at in a band of mine and it brought back memories. 

Check out some of his work. He's still at it and I admire him for that. 

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