Sunday, December 31, 2017

The Traveling Wilburys -- Volume 2 and Volume 4


The Traveling Wilburys – a band that some believe is the last great “supergroup” – released two albums: Volume 1 and Volume 3. The title of the second album was a joke. During, between and after those albums, the five members recorded together on various projects.

In attempting to create a Volume 2, I realized there was enough material for a Volume 4 as well.

The first was easy to construct. I used two Traveling Wilburys outtakes:  “Maxine” and “Like a Ship.” I added three songs from Roy Orbison’s solo album, “You Got It” and “California Blue” (both featuring Tom Petty and Jeff Lynne) and “A Love So Beautiful” (featuring Lynne and George Harrison); two songs from Petty’s solo album, “I Won’t Back Down” (featuring Lynne and Harrison) and “Zombie Zoo” (featuring Lynne and Orbison); two songs from Lynne’s solo album, “Every Little Thing” and “Lift Me Up” (both featuring Harrison); one song from Bob Dylan, “Under the Red Sky” (featuring Harrison);  and one George Harrison song, “Cheer Down” from the Lethal Weapon 2 soundtrack (featuring Lynne).

I tacked on the holiday message from George Harrison (as Nelson Wilbury) from the Winter Warnersland album as a bonus track. For the album artwork of Volume 2, I only added the word/number "Volume 2" on a picture I found on the web. 

SIDE A
1. You Got It
2. Lift Me Up
3. Like a Ship
4. Every Little Thing
5. I Won’t Back Down

SIDE B
1. Cheer Down
2. A Love So Beautiful
3. Under the Red Sun
4. Maxine
5. California Blue
6. Zombie Zoo
Bonus: Holiday message from Nelson Wilbury





For Volume 4, I took a similar tack.

The tracks include two Traveling Wilburys outtakes: “Runaway” and “Nobody’s Child.” Other tracks include two Harrison songs he recorded for a “Best of” collection, “Poor Little Girl” and “Cockamamie Business” (both featuring Lynne); a Del Shannon song, “Walk Away” (featuring Lynne and Petty); three songs from Lynne, “Stormy Weather” and “September Song” (both featuring Harrison) and “Blown Away” (co-written by Petty and featuring Shannon); one song by Petty, “Runnin’ Down a Dream” (featuring Lynne, plus Shannon in the ending message), and one mostly instrumental song by Jim Horn, “Work It Out” (written by Lynne, and featuring Lynne, Harrison and Petty). I used the original version of “Runaway” and added the remix at the end as a bonus.

Roy Orbison died in 1988, and there were rumors that Del Shannon would take his place in the group. But Shannon committed suicide in 1990. Shannon ends up featuring as lead singer on “Walk Away,” backup vocals on “Blown Away” and “Runnin’ Down a Dream,” and his song “Runaway” is covered. Plus Petty name-checks him in “Runnin’ Down a Dream.” So Shannon ended up being kind of a de facto member of the group.

Dylan is mostly a no-show on this album except for sharing lead vocals on “Nobody’s Child.” Considering both Orbison’s and Shannon’s deaths (and now Harrison’s and Petty’s as well), I think the album cover of a train wreck is appropriate. I found the old photo online, added some sepia tone and changed the words.

All tracks are available on the various solo albums and the Traveling Wilburys' box set, The Traveling Wilburys Collection, except the original version of “Runaway,” which was a non-album B-side of the band’s “She’s My Baby” single.

SIDE A
1. Poor Little Girl
2. Runaway
3. Walk Away
4. Stormy Weather
5. Runnin’ Down a Dream

SIDE B
1. Nobody’s Child
2. September Song
3. Work It Out
4. Blown Away
5. Cockamamie Business
Bonus: “Runaway” (remix)



Sunday, December 24, 2017

Tom Petty and the Heartbreakers - "Southern Accents"


Originally, the Tom Petty and the Heartbreakers album Southern Accents was to be a concept album that focused on Southern life. But after inter-band disagreements and Petty breaking his hand when he punched the wall, work on the album was stunted.

Dave Stewart of the Eurythmics was invited to take part, and he co-wrote and played on three new tracks: “Don’t Come Around Here No More,” “It Ain’t Nothing to Me” and “Make It Better (Forget About Me).” To make room for the new songs, five songs were cut: "Trailer," "Big Boss Man," "Crackin' Up," "The Image of Me" and "The Apartment Song." This resulted in the concept of the concept album to basically disappear. Band members later admitted their disappointment that the album had changed so drastically.

SIDE A
1. Rebels
2. Trailer
3. The Image of Me
4. Crackin’ Up
5. Southern Accents

SIDE B
1. The Apartment Song
2. Big Boss Man
3. Spike
4. Dogs on the Run
5. Mary’s New Car
6. The Best of Everything

While we don’t know what the final tracklist order was supposed to be, we can take the album that was released, remove the Stewart tracks, and fill in the blanks. "Trailer" was later rerecorded by Petty with his original band Mudcrutch, and he also rerecorded "The Apartment Song" for his solo album, Full Moon Fever. I stick with the originals for Southern Accents, even though "The Apartment Song" is a demo (with Stevie Nicks on backup vocals).

The result is a much better album, in my opinion, although it admittedly does not have a real pop hit like “Don’t Come Around Here No More.” Perhaps the three Stewart co-penned songs could have been released later as non-album singles (or an EP), placed on a soundtrack or expanded to be another full album. But we got what we got.

All the “missing” tracks can be found on the box set Playback.

Sunday, December 17, 2017

The Count Five's "Carburetor Dung"



The Count Five only released one album, Psychotic Reaction in 1966. The band did release a few singles afterward, but broke up in 1969. Unfortunately for the band, none of their subsequent singles came anywhere close to matching the success of "Psychotic Reaction." Later compilation albums have brought together all the band's album tracks, singles and outtakes. Using the later singles and outtakes, there's more than enough for a second album.

Rock critic Lester Bangs wrote an essay in 1972 with a fictional history of the band and listed four follow-up albums by the Count Five that never actually existed. The first of these follow-ups he titled Carburetor Dung. Now, it's doubtful the band (or the record company for that matter) would have called an album Carburetor Dung, but in a salute to Bangs, that's what we'll call this.

SIDE A
1. People Hear What I Say
2. Move It Up
3. Contrast
4. Declaration of Independence
5. You Must Believe

SIDE B
1. Hold Me Closer
2. You Can't Get Me
3. Teeny Bopper, Teeny Bopper
4. Merry-Go-Round
5. Revelation in Slow Motion

The album opens with the noisy garage rocker "People Hear What I Say." Six of the songs, "You Must Believe," Teeny Bopper, Teeny Bopper," "Merry Go Round," "Contrast," "Revelation in Slow Motion" and "Declaration of Independence" were all released as A or B sides of singles in 1967 and 1968. "Hold Me Closer" opens the second side and is a nice, and kind of surprising, cover of an Equals song.

The album cover is my creation, using existing outer space artwork. I added a picture of a carburetor as sort of a spaceship or space junk. I added titles using a Star Trek font, which seemed appropriate as the show was popular at the time. In the future, I'll also post a last EP for The Count Five: Cartesian Jetstream.

Sunday, December 10, 2017

Led Zeppelin III - Double Album Version


When recording the album Physical Graffiti, Led Zeppelin faced a dilemma. The assembled eight songs were too long for one LP. The solution was to make a double album and add a number of tracks left off previous albums.

After the recent release of remastered albums with extra tracks, I realized there were enough leftovers and outtakes from albums I-III to make III a double album also. I considered taking all the tracks and rearranging them. But in the end, I left the first two sides the same as released, and simply built sides C and D.

SIDE A
1. Immigrant Song
2. Friends
3. Celebration Day
4. Since I've Been Loving You
5. Out on the Tiles

SIDE B
1. Gallows Pole
2. Tangerine
3. That's the Way
4. Bron Yr Aur Stomp
5. Hats off to (Roy) Harper

SIDE C
1. We're Gonna Groove
2. Poor Tom
3. Jennings Farm Blues
4. Sugar Mama
5. Key to the Highway/Trouble in Mind

SIDE D
1. Baby Come on Home
2. Bron Yr Aur
3. Hey Hey What Can I Do?
4. Medley: I Feel So Bad/Travelling Riverside Blues/32-20 Blues/Diving Duck Blues/Fixin' to Die/That's All Right (Mama)

It's kind of a head-scratcher that most of these songs remained unreleased for so long. Side C kicks off with "We're Gonna Groove," followed by an outtake from III, "Poor Tom." I think having the similar "Bron Yr Aur Stomp," "Jennings Farm Blues" and "Bron Yr Aur" on three of the four sides kind of ties the album together. "Sugar Mama" picks up the pace before the side ends with the slow acoustic blues of the "Key to the Highway/Trouble in Mind" medley.

Side D kicks off with the amazing "Baby Come on Home" (an outtake from the first album). "Hey Hey What Can I Do" was a non-album B-side of the "Immigrant Song" single. Since Zeppelin ended most of their shows with a medley of old rock and blues songs, ending this album that way seems natural. Brought together, I think Sides C and D are nearly as strong as the original A and B.

All these tracks, except one, are available as either bonus tracks to the remastered albums, or on the compilation album Coda

The exception is "Bron Yr Aur" which is on Physical Graffiti. In iTunes, I replaced it on that album with "Walter's Walk." I also put "Houses of the Holy" back on the album it's named for, and replaced it on Physical Graffiti with "D'yer Mak'er."

Sunday, December 3, 2017

Elvis Presley's "Guitar Man"



Quite a big deal has been made about Elvis Presley's "lost" 1963 album, which has been packaged at least three different times. But no one ever talks about his "lost" 1968 album.

Elvis was producing three movies EVERY YEAR in the 1960s. Yikes. And all of those movies had a lot of songs, most of them pretty bad. Yet Elvis found time to continue to record music for singles, gospel music and soundtrack fillers that had nothing to do with the movies he was making. 

During studio sessions from September 1967 - January 1968, there were 11 tracks (minus soundtrack and gospel recordings) recorded that could have been used to create a pretty good LP.

SIDE A
1. Guitar Man
2. Just Call Me Lonesome
3. Singing Tree
4. Mine
5. Hi-Heel Sneakers

SIDE B
1. Too Much Monkey Business
2. You Don't Know Me
3. U.S. Male
4. I'll Remember You
5. Suppose
6. Big Boss Man

The album contains all of Elvis' later career hallmarks -- rock, pop, country, folk and many ballads. Timeline-wise, this would have been the last studio album before his comeback special. This album also has a heavy Jerry Reed influence. Reed wrote both "Guitar Man" and "U.S. Male," and played guitar on them as well as on two other tracks, "Big Boss Man" and "Too Much Monkey Business." As a result, the album has a very noticeable country rock feel throughout.

This album probably would not have done very well commercially if it had been released. Five of these songs charted as singles, but the highest, "U.S. Male," only made it to No. 28 on the Billboard Hot 100. It would take the TV special, now known as the "'68 Comeback" later in the year to make Elvis a music star again. But in retrospect, this album I think would have shown that he was still making good music before that (even if it was drowned out by the banal soundtracks).

All 11 tracks are available on the Elvis box set From Nashville to Memphis: The Complete '60s Masters. For the album cover, just a homemade touch-up job using existing artwork.