“The night was clear, and the moon was yellow,
and the leaves came tumbling down.” This
morning’s iPod’s shuffle opened with Lloyd Price singing ‘Stagger Lee’, a US
number one in 1959 and a song I remember well from buying the single, a 7-inch
on HMV which I bought after playing it endlessly on that juke box at the coffee
bar in Skipton, and which I still have. This is the best known version of an
old traditional song about how on a Christmas night many many years ago in St
Louis, ‘Stagger’ Lee Shelton shot Billy Lyons for stealing his Stetson hat, certainly
a robust response but hardly justified. According to Wikipedia, over 50 singers
have covered this song, but Lloyd Price’s version takes the honours; a massive,
rollocking R&B rendering with a great honking saxophone and a fat
production that oozes good time juice. The version on my iPod comes from a
compilation album called Lemon Popsicles
& Strawberry Milkshakes, a triple CD with about 60 tracks from the sixties
that I picked up for a fiver somewhere, but I’m pretty sure the single sounded
better.
There
followed a brief snatch of John Williams playing his classical guitar, a short piece
with Spanish origins entitled ‘Llobet’. Back in, I think, 1966 I saw Williams
play his guitar in Ilkley and reported on the concert for my employers the Craven Herald & Pioneer, Skipton’s
weekly newspaper. It thus became the first concert review I ever wrote, before
any of the hundreds of rock shows that followed. I have both Williams and
Segovia on the iPod and sometimes play this kind of music on a quiet Sunday
morning, tucking into a Full English with the Observer open in front of me. Very nice. Thank you John.
Next
we reverted back in time to another traditional song, ‘Careless Love’, also
recorded by many, and my version is again the best known, by Big Joe Turner; another
terrific recording, this one taken from a Mojo
cover mount CD, The World of The Small
Faces. I often download tracks from these freebies with a slightly guilty
feeling, knowing that the performers (or their estate) are likely to get jack
shit in royalties. Most of the tracks on these CDs are almost always very old
and often by fairly obscure artists, a sure sign that no one is likely to ask
questions about copyright issues.
Try
as I did I didn’t really enjoy the album by Them Crooked Vultures, the
side-project group featuring John Paul Jones, Dave Grohl and Josh Homme, whose
song ‘Eraser’ is next on today’s menu. It’s probably my age and the creeping
realisation that bombastic riffs, no matter how well executed, are behind me
now. There’s no question that these Queens Of The Led Foo Nirvana guys have
amazing chops but I wasn’t convinced, and the supergroup concept not only seems
a bit dated now but smacks of a ‘we haven’t got anything better to do’ situation.
Next
up, drummer Dylan Howe’s take of Bowie’s ‘Weeping Wall’ from his Subterraneans album was better suited to
my morning mood, a jazzy interpretation from an album I enjoyed
a lot, thought-provoking, meandering, atmospheric and skilfully executed. ‘Weeping
Wall’ is quicker than most of its tracks with fine keyboard work from pianist
Ross Stanley.
‘Disappear’,
this version from R.E.M.’s Unplugged,
was one of the better tracks from the slightly disappointing 2001 album Reveal that pre-empted a regrettable fall
from grace for a band I continue to hold in very high regard. It was followed
by ‘Pocket Calculator’ by Kraftwerk. Over to David Buckley for an extract from
his KW book for this one: “‘Pocket Calculator’
poked fun at rock music subtly but devastatingly. Rock music was traditionally
all about the electric guitar, about neat fretwork, power chords, and the masturbatory
excesses of the solo. It was manly. On ‘Pocket Calculator’, Ralf shows
how electronica have dispelled all the sweaty guff and ludicrous posturing of
the cock rockers because the star of the show isn’t even now a real instrument.
It’s a battery-powered hand-held abacus which can sound a jingle and is
operated not played. The German-language version of the song, ‘Taschenrechner’,
carried a slightly different lyric, but was still as droll: ‘Ich bin der
Musikant mit Taschenrechner in der Hand.’ [‘I am the musician with a
pocket calculator in my hand.’] This was, as Karl Bartos remembers, a trademark
piece of lyric writing by Emil Schult: ‘Emil had a good sense of the English –
or shall I say American – language since he spent some time at high school in
the USA? He could easily come up with simple lines in German which were catchy
and witty at the same time. He contributed a great deal to the Kraftwerk
lyrics. Listen to ‘Autobahn’, ‘Trans-Europe Express’, ‘Radio-Activity’,
‘Computer World’, ‘Pocket Calculator’, ‘The Model’ – just to name a few.’”
Next
up was Robert Plant singing ‘Fortune Teller’, from the Grammy-winning Rising
Sand album he recorded in 2007 with Alison Krause. Plant offers a fairly
delicate, suspended rendition of a song I first heard sung by The Searchers I
think, way back in 1964. I have a few other versions of this song on the iPod, all
of them tougher than Robert but not necessarily as focused. There’s Benny
Spellman (the original), the Rolling Stones and nine (!) by The Who, all
different, including the 1968 studio version and the one from Leeds, of course,
which segues into ‘Tattoo’, Roger having duly credited Spellman which prompted
Keith to add: “But ours is the most important version.” I don’t know
about that but it was probably the most lucrative for its writer Allen
Toussaint, at least until Robert included it on this massive seller.
The
final song this morning was Stephen Stills singing ‘Wounded World’/’Rocky
Mountain Way’ from his Live At Shepherds
Bush album, recorded at the Empire in 2009. This album is a bit of an
acquired taste as Stephen wasn’t in the best of voice, even if he still played
his guitar as well as ever. It opened with a riff that I mistook for a few
seconds for the Stones’ ‘The Last Time’, then got into gear, and at around five
minutes segued into the Joe Walsh song which offered an even greater challenge
to Stills’ wounded voice. Tonight, just to reassure myself I think I’ll listen
to Manassas as the train heads from Waterloo back to Guildford.
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