Anecdote – Jimi Hendrix at the Royal Albert Hall 1969 – The Farewell gig.

Anecdote – Jimi Hendrix at the Royal Albert Hall 1969 – The Farewell gig.

 

Jimi Hendrix and the Royal Albert Hall 1969

The Jimi Hendrix Experience was breaking up. It was tragedy. I had seen him perform twice but that wasn’t nearly enough. Now Jimi and the Experience were splitting and going their separate ways. I couldn’t believe it. Noel Redding and Mitch Mitchell were not the most brilliant and accomplished of rhythm sections but they were exciting and dynamic and the perfect foil for Jimi to play with. They added rawness, energy and gusto to the act.

Electric Ladyland, the double album masterpiece, had been released to mixed reviews. A lot of people found it hard to adapt to the longer, more drawn out tracks. They preferred the shorter more exciting tracks they had become used to on Are You Experienced and Axis Bold As Love. It took a while for people to catch up with Jimi’s genius.

But all wasn’t quite lost. There was to be one last farewell concert at the Royal Albert Hall. It was something to look forward to. All we had to do was to get hold of some tickets. Thousands of others selfishly wanted to be there as well.

There was nothing else for it. We had to queue up overnight to be sure of getting hold of some. There were a bunch of us. It seemed daft all of us queuing. Although it might have been fun. In the end Jules volunteered. We waved him off clutching money and sleeping bag. I think we were half expecting failure so it was a bit of a surprise when he returned the next day clutching tickets.

From there on it was a state of excitement as the day approached. We were expecting fireworks. The two times I had seen him before had been dynamite. I hadn’t known any act create such excitement. The whole audience went wild. And one of those was at Woburn Abbey where it was reported that the Experience were below par. They hadn’t seemed below par to me. They’d set the place alight and driven us wild.

On the day we got there early and piled in. We were up in the gallery with a great view.

The support act was New Traffic. Traffic had reformed for the gig. I loved them too and had seen them a number of times. They were brilliant and mesmeric so I was hoping for big things.

I didn’t get it. It was the worst I had ever heard them perform. They were boring. At the time I put that down to our eagerness to move on to the big thing. Probably nobody could have carried that spot. But I’ve listened to the tapes of the gig and they were definitely poor. It did not auger well. The Royal Albert Hall was not the best of venues for Rock. The sound was not good. It didn’t generate the best atmosphere.

When Jimi hit the stage everyone went haywire. Unfortunately so did the experience. Jimi was good. His playing was excellent but the whole performance was lackluster and had no fire.

I enjoyed it but did not come out singing with ecstasy like I had done before. The performance was flat.

I since listened to the tapes and seen the film. You can’t fault Jimi. I love everything he’s done. I love playing those tapes of him jamming in the studio, I love all his live gigs. I have endless hours of him. But the energy was sadly lacking from that last performance. From what should have been a brilliant memory to cherish forever it was just another good gig.

When I think of Jimi I think of those two earlier gigs.

The Birds – A British Beat Group featuring a young Ronnie Wood.

The Birds – A British Beat Group featuring a young Ronnie Wood.

 

I saw Ronnie featured on the One Show yesterday and it took me back.

Ronnie is releasing a book of his diaries from the beginning. He started off in a Beat Group called the Birds before moving on to the Faces and then the Stones.

It took me back to a small club in the town of Walton on Thames called the Walton Palais. It was where I saw my first two live bands – The Birds and the following week Them (With Van Morrison). It was the start of a life-time of gigging.

That first gig was the most magical night I can recall. The Birds were a revelation. The atmosphere was incredible and I was transported. I had never felt such excitement. I witnessed a knife-fight, sex on the stairs and one of the most pulsating evenings ever. It certainly whetted my appetite.

I wish I could say that recall seeing Ronnie but I don’t. What I recall was a bunch of thin, skinny guys up on stage with great Mod hairstyles, Cuban heeled Chelsea boots and suits who were producing the greatest sound I had ever heard. This was British Beat at its best. The chunky guitar riffs, the thumping beat and somebody was even flicking the lights on and off in time to create a rudimentary light show.

I was spellbound and smitten.

I was fourteen. They were great. I’ll never forget.

I wrote about all this and more in my book – ‘In Search of Captain Beefheart’ – It is the story of my life with Rock Music – a memoir of a search for that excitement!

Thanks Ronnie. I’ll buy that book. It might have an entry for that wondrous night.

Rock tributes to genius – Leon Rosselson

Rock tributes to genius – Leon Rosselson

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Leon Rosselson

I have a penchant for an artist who has something to say and not many people have as much to say as Leon. He likes big topics that he can get his teeth into and has a strong sense of indignation when it comes to social justice, fairness and standing up for human rights. He also has a firm grasp of British history and marries the two expertly. If you appreciate themes of historical significance in the long fight for freedom and equality like the Levellers, William Morris or the Tolpuddle Martyrs then Leon is your man. He is not one to pull the punches and enjoys telling stories.

For someone who has such a large repertoire of self-penned gems Leon is relatively unknown. That is almost scandalous. It is probably due to the fact that he is not afraid to state his ideology and it does not seem to conform to most other people’s philosophy of life. The majority prefer bland and jolly to uncomfortable and true, though it is fair to say that Leon does have a lot of lighter, humorous songs. He should be ginormous. Fortunately musicians like Billy Bragg and Roy Bailey have championed him and covered his songs like ‘The World Turned Upside Down’.

I saw Leon in a tiny Folk Club in Beverley. He received warm applause. He should have been cheered to the rafters in huge halls.

Leon is a brilliant songwriter and one of those warm human beings.

If you are liking my tributes you might like my book. You will find numerous brilliant artists you may never have heard of plus all the familiar ones. Why not find out what I’ve got to say about them?

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537 Essential Rock Albums – Tinariwen – Aman Iman – Water is Life

537 Essential Rock Albums – Tinariwen – Aman Iman – Water is Life

I love hearing what is happening with World Music – particularly when it’s plugged in and rockin’. Tinariwen are certainly plugged in.

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  1. Tinariwen – Aman Iman – Water is Life

Tinariwen come out of Algeria and Mali. They are a Tuareg dessert band playing a type of guitar based music straight out of West Africa. This was the type of African music that fed into Blues a century ago. The black slaves took it to America with them and the Blues is what later emerged.

The incredible guitar weaves its way over a complex driving beat complex with a strong vocal and female chorus.

It is like going back to visit the force behind the Blues in America yet this is thoroughly modern. Despite all the cultural layers and language the music talks and communicates directly to the heart.

These guys are real rebels who have seen it all and it shows in the music. Where they come from has seen too much war and death.

This album has a variety of styles all with that quality musicianship and slightly different rhythm to the ones we are familiar with yet it is instantly accessible. I particularly like the opening track ‘Cler Achel’ and the slow infectious ‘Soixante Trois’

An amazing album

If you are enjoying or at all enlightened by these, rather idiosyncratic, list of brilliant albums why not purchase the book and see what other undiscovered gems it might expose (along with some of the more well-known albums). You might find it well worth a fiver.

https://www.amazon.co.uk/537-Essential-Rock-Albums-first/dp/1502787407/ref=sr_1_1?s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1477524384&sr=1-1&keywords=Opher+goodwin+opher%27s

537 Essential Rock Albums – Bo Carter – Banana in Your Fruit Basket

537 Essential Rock Albums – Bo Carter – Banana in Your Fruit Basket

For me you can trace Rock right back to its roots in acoustic blues from the 1930s. Bo Carter might not be the best but he is one of the 1930s Blues singers that I greatly enjoy. His risqué Blues would have seemed quite shocking.

  1. Bo Carter – Banana in Your Fruit Basket

A lot of the Blues we have recorded was sanitised for general output. The Blues came from rural areas in Mississippi and Louisiana and was the music of the hard-working sharecropping families who worked there. It served many functions – as work-songs – to speed up the repetitive labour in the fields – as dance songs at the country barbeques – as busking songs in the streets – as songs for entertainment in the bars and brothels – and as protest and cathartic anger. I think a lot of these never saw the light of day. They were considered too dangerous to risk putting on vinyl. Life was dangerous in those days.

Bo Carter was performing back in the early 1930s and specialised in risqué acoustic Blues songs with double. His guitar playing is very highly developed rag-time style. This album, as the name suggests, is full of these type of songs. Some of them are very amusing and some highly inventive. It includes such gems as ‘My pencil won’t write no more’, ‘Pussy cat blues’, ‘Don’t mash my digger so deep’, ‘Pin in your cushion’ and ‘What kind of scent is this?’

If you are enjoying or at all enlightened by these, rather idiosyncratic, list of brilliant albums why not purchase the book and see what other undiscovered gems it might expose (along with some of the more well-known albums). You might find it well worth a fiver.

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Rock Music – What makes a great song, band or performer?

Rock Music – What makes a great song, band or performer?

What is quite clear is that it is not all about talent or ability. Some of the best Rock songs have been very basic, not requiring any great virtuosity, such as ‘Louie Louie’ by the Kingsmen.
Some artists, like Joe Satriani, are so incredibly talented and so technically proficient on the guitar that you can marvel at their skill in much the same way as you would any classical musician yet I find them uninspiring.
The best Rock guitarist I have ever seen (and I’ve had the pleasure of seeing Jimmy Page, Peter Green, Keith Cross, Pete Townsend, Eric Clapton, Rory Gallagher, Paul Kossof, Dave Gilmour and Jack White up close) without a doubt is Jimi Hendrix. Nobody come close. The sounds and melody that Jimi could squeeze out of a guitar were extraordinary. He could make it talk with his elbow better than most good guitarists could with their hands. Jimi would weave in feedback, distortion and effects to create new complex melody that was never boring.
Jimi was the consummate Rock guitarist. His limitations were the extent of his imagination. He could conjure up any sound, feeling or rhythm.
An important element of Rock music is the showmanship and ability to create excitement through the power of performance. When a band like Cream, Free, early Pink Floyd, Stiff Little Fingers, Hendrix, Lee Scratch Perry, The Who, Elvis Costello, Led Zeppelin or White Stripes let rip there was a pulse of energy that surged through the audience and created a synergy of excitement.
Some bands did not rely so much on power as the creation of a mesmerising sound that melted you away to get lost in its complexity and melody such as Traffic, Neil Young and Crosby, Stills, Nash and Young.
Sometimes that power of performance is melded with complexity to create something powerful and mesmeric. The best gigs I have ever experienced were Captain Beefheart and his Magic Band and Jimi Hendrix. Both of them merged the power and drive with complexity and skill into an unbeatable magic.
For me the words have always been an important element. When a truly gifted poet, such as Roy Harper, Leonard Cohen and Bob Dylan, entwine their poetry to music it creates something far greater than the parts. It provides another dimension that engages the intellect as well. That propels the music to greater heights that stimulates the cerebral cortex in a more consuming, and satisfying manner.
I like my Rock having content that makes me think, a social or political thread, a spiritual element, a comment or purpose.
The best acoustic guitarist I have ever seen, from a large field including Davey Graham, Leo Kottke, Bert Jansch, John Fahey, Stefan Grossman and John Renbourn, is undoubtedly Nick Harper. He crafts his incredible guitar skills to varied brilliant songs full of imagery, meaning and love.
Then there are the giants like the Beatles, Rolling Stones and Love who were simply majestic. Or the sheer exuberance of the early Blues of Robert Johnson, Son House, Elmore James, Howlin’ Wolf and Muddy Waters and Rock ‘n’ Rollers such as Chuck Berry, Bo Diddley, Elvis Presley, Little Richard and Jerry Lee Lewis.
I can take my Rock basic and raw or intellectual and profound, depending on my mood, but I like it real, not over-sanitised by the record labels, not reduced to satisfy the lowest common denominator, not processed for mass public consumption, not devoid of content for fear of offending. I want my Rock to challenge. It is not the music of the establishment. It is always the stuff of rebellion. As soon as it is adopted, clichéd or restricted it is dead!

Find out what I think the most essential 537 albums are in my book available on Amazon:

Or read about the story of my life in music:

Or the times when Rock was at its peak in the counter-culture of the sixties:

Rock music has been the backdrop to my life. It has informed my views and philosophy. I am who I am because of it!

Photography – London – Hard Rock Café – Who, Hendrix, Doors. Dylan, Bloomfield, Clapton

Photography – London – Hard Rock Café – Who, Hendrix, Doors. Dylan, Bloomfield, Clapton

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Billy Bragg and Wilco-“California Stars” from “Mermaid Avenue”

Billy Bragg & Wilco-“California Stars” from “Mermaid Avenue”

Bruce Springsteen – Badlands – lyrics that say a lot.

Bruce Springsteen – Badlands – lyrics that say a lot.

Bruce came from a working background and back in those early days he seemed to have his finger on the pulse of what makes humans tick. I was particularly taken with tracks such as Independence day and the River. They captured a truth for me. Bruce was one of those musicians whose lyrics were pure poetry.

In Badlands there was one verse that stood out for me:

‘Poor man want to be rich
Rich man want to be king
And a king ain’t satisfied
‘Til he rules everything
I want to go out tonight
I want to find out what I got’

It seemed to encapsulate the whole problem with human beings and escalation. For many people there can never be enough power or wealth. No matter how much they accrue they want more.

Even kings and billionaires are insecure about holding on to what they’ve got and constantly compare themselves to others who might just have more power or wealth. It’s a disease.

The paranoia and sociopathology of the condition corrupts.

The whole problem with the world is due to it. The inequality creates poverty, disease and war. The jealousy creates hatred.

There’s more than enough to go round. It’s a shame that the world is run for the benefit of the ‘haves’ and to the detriment of the ‘have nots’.

Bruce Springsteen summed it up for me.

Well I know what I’ve got. I’m satisfied.

Joan Baez – Sad Eyed Lady of the Lowlands

This is the most beautiful cover of this Dylan song. She interprets him so well and her voice is so beautiful