Each year at the Frankfurt Book Fair during
the nineties I would meet up with my American friend Paul Williams who in 1966
founded Crawdaddy!, the first magazine
ever to include serious rock criticism, and in doing so invented the concept of
rock journalism. These meetings resulted in Omnibus Press publishing new UK
editions of Paul’s three Bob Dylan
Performing Artist books, and also Watching
The River Flow, a further collection of his Dylan writings, and books of
his writings on Neil Young and The Beach Boys. Paul always sent me copies of Crawdaddy! to read, and from 1994 I
nagged him to write or commission for Crawdaddy!
a decent length piece on The Who and their 4-CD box set 30 Years Of Maximum R&B, of which I
was co-producer, and The Who’s re-issued back catalogue albums, of which I was
executive producer. When it didn’t happen I thought about writing it myself,
except that generally speaking (for wholly virtuous, ethical reasons) Crawdaddy! wasn’t the kind of magazine
that commissioned record producers to write about the records they produced,
even if the producer happened to be a writer first and a record producer
second.
But what the hell... I didn’t produce 30 Years Of Maximum R&B in the sense
that most record producers produce records. I didn’t book the studio or sit there
in the control room twiddling knobs or recommending songs or making suggestions
about where the solo should go or the order in which the verses should be sung or
double-tracking the choruses or tweaking the volume on the bass. I just
compiled the tracks from the band’s back catalogue and other sources, or at
least suggested what I thought was the best selection to Pete Townshend,
arguing with him in their favour where necessary, and then commissioned and/or
wrote and then edited the text in the 76-page booklet, helped with the photo
research for same, checked over proofs of Richard Evans’ design work, and did
my best to sustain everyone’s motivation so that it came out at a time that
kept the two record labels (MCA in the US and Polydor in Europe) reasonably
happy, i.e. less than a year late. And I hadn’t written about my involvement in
this project, how it came about or what I thought about it when it was released,
or about the back catalogue re-issues, so I put pen to paper for Paul and he eventually
published the piece in Crawdaddy!,
all 12,000 words of it.
Paul
died in 2013 having suffered from dementia for a number of years, the result of
long-term injuries sustained in a cycling accident in 1995. I felt honoured to
have been published in Crawdaddy!, and
I was proud to have been Paul’s friend. As I wrote on Facebook at the time of
his death, he invented the career I chose to follow.
Over
the next few days I will post the 30
Years Of Maximum R&B piece I wrote for Crawdaddy!, the longest I ever wrote about The Who outside of the
books I did, divided up into six parts. After a good deal of thought I came up
with the title A Bargain – The Best You
Ever Had for reasons that will become clear along the way. The circulation
of Crawdaddy! was never very large so
I don’t suppose it was that widely read but my apologies if some of the text seems
a bit familiar, as some of it is reworked from other Who related writings of
mine that have already appeared as posts on Just Backdated. I tend to recycle a
bit! Bear in mind also that it was written in 1997, though I have amended it
slightly in the meantime.
4 comments:
Chris, a belated "thank you" for all the work you did on the reissues, and a pre-emptive "thank you" for the forthcoming ... reprint?
Influenced from my dad I liked The Who aged 3. But somehow while growing up I lost the track. But when I was 15 years the 30 years box set was released and luckily my father bought it. For me it was an epiphany! Since then I saw The Who seven times live. So thank you for opening my eyes & ears (again)!
'...reasonably happy, i.e. less than a year late...!' - and, in return for these posts, a very belated (and, simultaneously anticipatory) 'thankyou very much' for the 12,000 bargain words. cheers from sunny brighton
The complaints of long-time fans about record reissues and endless farewell tours have never made sense to me. The first Who album I heard was Who Are You in 1979, In 1983, the Who did their "farewell tour" and were voted our high school's #1 group in a survey we did. I couldn't go to that show, and if the Who had indeed never toured again, millions of fans my age and younger would never have been able to see the band. Are they as good without Keith and John? No. But are they still one of the most amazing live acts I've ever seen? Absolutely. As long as they're willing to go out on the road, I'll be as close to the front as I can afford. Same with record reissues and packages -- no one's forcing fans to buy them, but there are new fans all the time as well as some older ones who want to collect every version; I see no harm in putting them out if it brings new attention to the greatest rock and roll band ever!
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