A quirky extract from the best Rock Albums of all time – 537 Essential Rock Albums – Pt. 1 The first 270 Kindle/Paperback

What are the best Rock albums of all time?

Well that’s a pretty subjective choice. Tastes vary. I compiled what I considered to be (after a life spent playing music, writing about music and attending gigs) a definitive list of essential albums. This book contains what I believe are the best of the best. These need to be in everybody’s collection!

Of course, your views will differ, but that’s part of the fun, isn’t it? This might just entice you to check out a few names you might not have heard of. I have eclectic tastes but am very particular!

Another extract:

238. Esquirita – Believe me when I say Rock ‘n’ Roll is here to stay

Eskew Reeder was a wild piano playing R&B singer from the early fifties. He started off as a gospel singer and moved into R&B where he produced the stage personality of Esquirita which involved heavy make-up, wigs and a huge piled up pompadour. He specialised in pounding piano and whooping vocals to great upbeat numbers.

It was said that Little Richard ripped off his style, looks and act. That is hard to assess because Esquirita was only brought in to record following Little Richard’s conversion and departure. At the time everyone thought that Esquirita’s style was based on Little Richard.

Whatever the truth of that there is no denying that Esquirita created a number of rockin’ tracks in a similar style to Little Richard including ‘I’m getting plenty loving’, ‘Golly Golly, Annie Mae’, ‘Rockin’ the joint’, ‘I’m Battie over Hattie’, ‘Hey Miss Lucy’ and ‘Oh baby’. They had Little Richard’s characteristic whoops, copied by the Beatles, and the gospel tinged raucous vocals, pounding piano and wailing sax.

Unfortunately Esquirita never rose to great recognition and declined into obscurity as a car-park attendant before dying of AIDS in 1986.


239. Joan Baez – Farewell Angelina

Joan Baez always was a bit of an activist even causing a few rebellious moments in High School. She started into Folk Singing in the late 50s and released her first album in 1960.

Her early albums were all traditional folk songs and she rapidly rose to prominence as the first lady of Folk because of her crystal clear vocals. She was political back then but hadn’t yet found a way to express it. That came when she met the ragamuffin Bob Dylan fresh from his adventures ion the streets and in the coffee houses of New York. Joan was knocked out by the quality of his songs and took to promoting him, getting him to come up on stage and introducing him to a wider audience. She also took to doing covers of his songs and extolling their virtues. Joan’s music and level of activism leapt forward.

Joan performed with Bob at the great civil rights march on Washington when Martin Luther King gave his wondrous speech. She went on numerous other civil rights marches and meetings and became involved in the anti-war movement and environmental issues and human rights. She always wore her heart on her sleeve and incorporated the politics into her songs and stage act. There was no doubting where Joan stood on all those issues. She was a voice of humanity, liberty, freedom and the voice of reason and intelligence. Where-ever there is injustice in the world Joan has been willing to put her time, money and voice to opposing it. If only we had a million more Joan’s we would not have such a selfish, greedy, cruel, warmongering world!

It’s hard choosing a best Joan Baez album. Her early albums were a little lightweight, her success, like ‘The Night they drove old Dixie down’ are not her best and some of her albums are a bit patchy. My favourite songs are ‘Diamonds and Rust’ and the Phil Ochs cover ‘There but for fortune’ but in the end I plumped for the album ‘Farewell Angelina’.

I think Joan was always brilliant at interpreting Bob Dylan numbers and this was one of her early albums which featured a lot of Dylan, with a Guthrie, Donovan and Seeger as well as some traditional songs. Not only that but two of the Dylan songs ‘Farewell Angelina’ and ‘Daddy you been on my mind’ had not been released by Dylan. They really shone.

The album was well produced with Joan’s guitar and voice prominent and the lyrics shining through. The passion is there and the versions of ‘A Hard Rain’s a gonna fall’ and ‘It’s all over now baby blue’ are great. It was wonderful to hear the Woody Guthrie classic ‘Ranger’s command’ and the Pete Seeger anti-war song ‘Where have all the flowers gone’ (in German).

Oh how we need that voice of sanity now as the environment is being eaten by the machine, the animals murdered, the forests cut down and the wind and waters tainted! 56% of all our wild mammals destroyed in forty years! Sing up Joan!


240. Don & Dewey – Jungle hop

Still in the wake of Little Richard the Specialty label were hunting around for an act to fill the gap and Don & Dewey flew in from nowhere. They were a versatile powerhouse of a Rock/R&B duo who created a dynamic sound and yet were also capable of more delicate numbers like ‘Pink Champagne’ and ‘I’m leaving it all up to you’.

Their act was reminiscent of the later Soul combo Sam and Dave. I’m sure Sam & Dave were more than a little influenced by the sound and act created by Don and Dewey. It is certain that Don and Dewey were certainly Soul precursors. The idea of a dual vocal attack was quite revolutionary.

Specialty gave them a hard hitting Rock backing on numbers like ‘Justine’, ‘Jungle hop’, ‘Koko Jo’, ‘Mammer Jammer’, ‘Little Sally Walker’, ‘Just a little loving’ and ‘Miss Sue’. My one concern of the numbers they chose to produce was this emphasis on jungles and monkeys. It came over to me as a slightly racist stereotype and I wondered where that had come from.

They were never very successful despite the quality and originality of their act but a few of their numbers were successfully covered. The most notable of these was ‘Farmer John’ which was a big hit for the Premiers and was covered by the Searchers and Neil Young.


241. Ronettes – Da Doo Ron Ron

Back in the late fifties and early sixties black R&B groups were all the rage. They were mainly male and had basically come out of the Doo-Wop scene. The sound was dominated by the Coasters, Drifters, Miracles, Contours, Isley Brothers and Frankie Lymon and the Teenagers. In the early sixties it was the turn of the female vocal groups to make themselves heard.

The Ronettes were really a family group with the two sisters Veronica and Estelle joining up with their cousin Nedra. They started singing together as little girls round at their grandmother’s house. They went on to dance and sing at the famous Peppermint lounge’ and then signed to the Colpix label.

They developed a cool appearance with high heels, slinky dressed and hair piled up a mile high. They oozed class.

Phil Spector was developing his Philles Label Sound in New York and stole them from Colpix. Their first few numbers were actually ascribed to the Crystals.

The first single ‘Be my Baby’ was recorded with Sonny Bono and Cher (who later became Sonny & Cher) helping out on backing vocals. It went huge and not only established the group but also that special production sound that Phil Spector had been working on.

This was the time that the Beatles were breaking and they were greatly impressed with girl bands and had covered both the Marvellettes and Cookies on their first album. Other Mersey bands, such as the Searchers with Da-Doo Ron Ron’, were also successfully covering these female R&B groups. I can remember the success of a number of these groups breaking into the charts such as the Crystals, Supremes, Shirelles and Shangri-Las. While Merseybeat had blown away all the old guard it seemed to have created a space where new acts could slip in and the female vocal groups fitted the bill.

The Ronettes second single ‘Baby I love you’ was almost as successful.

Ronnie and the girls came over to do a tour of Britain and were introduced to the Beatles and Stones. Estelle dated George Harrison and Ronnie had a romantic fling with Keith Richards.

Ronnie later married Phil Spector and he kept her secluded in his mansion.


242. Crystals – Best of

The Crystals were another of Phil Spector’s Philles Label signings. For some reason Phil Spector seemed to have the view that all the girl bands were interchangeable and, much to the annoyance of his artists, brought recordings of one group out under another groups name. The Crystals had minor hits with songs like ‘Uptown’ and ‘He hit me (and it felt like a kiss)’ and then had a bigger hit with ‘He’s a rebel’ except it hadn’t been recorded by the Crystals. Phil had got Darlene Love and the Blossoms to record it and then released it under the Crystals name! – As was their follow up single ‘He’s sure the boy I love’. That was all very weird and unethical!

However it was the real Crystals who recorded ‘Da-Doo Ron Ron’ and set the ball rolling in England. I remember the B-side was an instrumental call ‘Git-it!’ The rumour was that the girls had played the instruments and that set everyone talking in my school. The idea of these girls actually playing instruments seemed strange. How times change! – It’s not so strange now! In hindsight I’m sure that they had nothing to do with that B-side at all.

‘Da-Doo Ron Ron’ was not only a big hit but also the start of that famous Phil Spector ‘Big Wall of Sound’ production technique that created such a stir.

They released another great song with ‘Then he kissed me’. After that it all went downhill. It was obvious that Phil was besotted with Ronnie and the Ronettes and they eventually split company.


243. Sun Rockabilly – Billy Lee Riley/Sonny Burgess

There are not many compilation albums in my essential album collection but this one is a must.

Sam Philips started as a scout searching for R&BN and Blues talent for the big Chicago labels like Chess and Vee-jay. After a while he thought he could do the job himself and set up his own studio to record the local R&B and Country & Western artists. He figured that there was no point discovering them and allowing someone else to get the benefit. The result was Sun Studios in Memphis.

I visited Sun Studio a couple of times to soak in the aura that stills hangs in the air and emanates out of those walls and that wavy ceiling. When I went they had the old microphones that Elvis used to record on, a pink Cadillac parked outside and an X on the floor marking where Elvis stood when he recorded ‘That’s alright Mama’ all those years before. We all had to pretend we were Elvis! You couldn’t help yourself!

Those studios recorded some of the greatest names in the music business – Howlin’ Wolf, Elvis, Jerry Lee Lewis, Rufus Thomas and Carl Perkins. It was awesome to stand in their and breathe their molecules.

Sun Rockabilly, which came out in two volumes, did not focus so much on the major stars so much as the plethora of other relatively unsung heroes. These included Sonny Burgess, Billy Lee Riley, Malcolm Yelvington, Warren Smith, Johnny Carroll, Ray Harris, and Hayden Thompson.

Many of my favourite Rockabilly tracks were from some of the unknowns such as Billy Lee Riley’s ‘Flying Saucer Rock ‘n’ Roll’ and ‘Red hot’ and Sonny Bugess’s ‘Itchy’ or Warren Smith’s ‘Uranium Rock’ and ‘Ubangi Stomp’ or Malcolm Yelvington’s ‘Rockin’ with my baby’ or Ray Harris’s ‘Come on little Mama’. They were wild and uninhibited.

A lot of these tracks are on the Sun Compilation.

A lot of these guys ended up with a bit of a chip on their shoulder because they reckoned Sam put all his energies and best material into Elvis, Jerry Lee and Carl and neglected their careers. He probably did. But at least we have these raw rockabilly recordings. They sure as hell knock the legs off all that Pop stuff Elvis did in his latter career.


244. Little Walter – Little Walter

Little Walter Jacobs was a master Harp player. His exploits with the harmonica have been compared to what Jimi Hendrix did for the guitar. He was the harp player with the Muddy Waters band and appears on most of his big numbers for Chess.

He recorded in his own right for Checker and had some huge hits with numbers like ‘My Babe’ and the instrumental ‘Juke’. Other great tracks include ‘Mean old world’, ‘Boom boom, out go the lights’ and ‘Tell me mama’. He had a very smooth singing voice that proved very popular. His songs were covered by lots of Blues bands from the Yardbirds to Dr Feelgood.

Those were violent times in Chicago and Little Walter was an alcoholic on a short fuse; he was always getting in fights and was supposedly extremely mean and ornery. One such altercation in 1967 led to him dying later that night of a thrombosis. He did tour Europe but he was one of the guys that I regrettably never got to see perform. I loved his records though.


245. Billy Boy Arnold – I wish you would

The first Billy Boy Arnold numbers I heard were recorded by the Yardbirds on their early singles with Eric Clapton ‘I Wish you would’ and ‘I ain’t got you’. I loved those singles and it wasn’t til later when I heard Billy Boy’s versions that I found anything better. Billy Boy’s versions were richer.

He started off playing with Bo Diddley before signing to Vee-jay and doing his own stuff. He recorded some great songs including ‘She fooled me’, ‘Rockinitis’ and ‘You got me wrong’.

When the Blues dropped out of popularity in the States Billy Boy went into driving buses and then as a parole officer

537 Essential Rock Albums – Pt. 1 The first 270 eBook : Goodwin, Opher: Amazon.co.uk: Books

PS – I got slagged off for putting a few ‘best of’ in amongst them. I remain defiant. Sometimes a ‘best of’ contains all the tracks you need and the album works!

537 Essential Rock Albums – Pt. 1 The first 270 – Paperback/Kindle


537 Essential Rock Albums – Pt. 1 The first 270 eBook : Goodwin, Opher: Amazon.co.uk: Books

246. Arthur Alexander – Greatest hits

There were lots of great R&B singers in the States. They mainly recorded for the Race labels for black audiences and white kids rarely got to hear them until Alan Freed and the other Rock ‘n’ Roll Jocks opened up the market and promoted multiracial audiences and desegregation.

In Britain the good old BBC refused to play most of the Rock & Roll and R&B under the delusion that they were saving the British public from such terrible things. They considered it primitive.

Consequently the British Beat groups of the sixties had a whole seam of rich pickings to mine. They set about buying obscure singles off the merchant seamen and copying them. Nobody here had heard any of this stuff and it sounded exciting. They lapped it up.

Arthur Alexander was one of those hugely talented unheard exponents of the dark arts of R&B. His songs were mercilessly plundered.

The Beatles sang ‘Soldier of Love’ and recorded ‘Anna, (go to him)’ on their first album, Gerry & the Pacemakers did ‘You’re the reason’ and ‘A shot of rhythm and Blues’, the Rolling Stones did ‘You’d better move on’. Their versions were good but none of them had Arthur’s great rich voice and brilliant arrangements – to hear that you had to go to the real thing.


247. Miracles – cookin’ with the Miracles

Smokey Robinson and the Miracles were one of those R&B groups that started up in the late fifties. Smokey had this amazing smooth voice in a high register that made them very distinctive. The Miracles were the very first act to sign up to Berry Gordy’s Tamla Motown label in 1959.

They were an instantaneous success with their hit ‘Shop around’ in 1960. They went on to record a string of hits all with that smooth Tamla backing and Smokey’s eloquent expressive voice. These included ‘The tracks of my tears’, ‘I second that emotion’, ‘You really got a hold on me’, ‘Mickey’s Monkey’ and ‘Tears of a clown.

They were one of Motown’s biggest acts. The Beatles did a great cover version of ‘You really got a hold on me’ on their first album.


248. Deep Purple – Machine Head

Frank Zappa was playing in the Montreux Casino that Deep Purple were supposed to be recording this album. It was burnt down when a fan ignited a flare in the building. Ian Gillan wrote the lyrics to the song ‘Smoke on the water’ describing looking across the lake as the smoke from the fire lay on the water and flames shot up into the sky. ‘Smoke on the water’, with its highly memorable riff played by every aspiring Heavy Metal would-be guitarist, proved to be one of their most popular songs Deep purple ever played.

Frank Zappa took a slightly different view of the event. Everyone got out alive but he had to watch the fire consume the building and all his equipment.

Other highlights of the album are ‘Space Truckin’’, which told the story of playing concerts on different planets, and ‘Highway Star’ with its highly regarded guitar solo.

The album formed part of that genre that was going to be described as Heavy Metal. It was one of the seminal albums and along with bands like Black Sabbath started a whole genre of music typified by the heavy riff and driving bass. The style was loud, aggressive and basic. It proved to be one of the most popular and commercial forms of Rock.


249. Black Sabbath – We sold our souls for Rock ‘n’ Roll

I first saw Black Sabbath when they were at the height of their occult act in which they carried out a black art ceremony on stage. It was all very theatrical and gimmicky to me but it certainly was a spectacle in the fashion of Screaming Jay Hawkins and Alice Cooper. The horror and occult theme certainly made them stand out from the multicoloured hippies peace and love fashion. But the band were producing that heavy riffing style that was to put them, along with bands like Deep Purple, in the vanguard as pioneers of the Heavy Metal genre. The genre itself is a very loose one featuring bands as diverse as Led Zeppelin, Status Quo, Budgie and Nazareth. But what’s in a name?

The track Black Sabbath, with its bell, and heavy riff was the track that epitomised their occult phase. It suited Ozzy Osbourne to a tee.

The band originated from Birmingham England and had a lot about them. They were a lot more than just a few heavy chords. Tony Iommi, even without his finger-tips was a brilliant inventive guitarist; Geezer Butler was not only a great bassist but could write interesting lyrics, Ozzy provided the vocal power and Bill Ward drove it with his solid drum beats. Geezer’s lyrics delved into those recessive that Heavy Metal rarely dared to tread, such as anti-war, social disorder and the environment. They rapidly moved out of their horror and occult phase to extend into other areas. Unfortunately, like many of the other bands, as soon as they became successful they were inundated with huge quantities or drugs and alcohol and that, as we have so often seen, took its toll.

This album is packed with classic tracks and they all stand out and are highly memorable. ‘Paranoid’ is one of those tracks that is now considered one of the top Heavy Metal epics. ‘War pigs’ with its great sonorous crashing doomy chords the best Heavy Metal anti-war song ever.


250. Al Stewart – Love chronicles

Al Stewart used to play the same Folk and student club scene as Roy Harper in the late sixties in London so I came across him quite a lot. He was a Scottish singer who wrote intelligently about life in Bedsit land, the scene on the streets, historical themes and relationships. His songs were populated with various inadequate characters from all walks of life who were so well described that you felt you knew them. Al was portrayed in Melody Maker as a rival to Roy as they tried to manifest some sort of rivalry. They love that stuff and do it regularly – Beatles/Stones and Oasis/Blur – except on a different level.

His first album ‘Bedsitter images’ was overproduced as an attempt to break through commercially but none-the-less it went down quite well. It did not establish Al as a Pop Star.

‘Love Chronicles’ was an altogether different kettle of songs. The guitar and vocals were much more to the fore with a much more sympathetic production. There were only six songs as the title track ‘Love Chronicles’ was a twenty minute epic that was a journey through Al’s love life. It was made famous because it was the first recorded song to feature the word ‘fucking’. It was an interesting song that held your attention.

‘Life and life only’ tells the story of a public schoolmaster and his drab life, it relates the misery of a joyless marriage and sexual repression. ‘In Brooklyn’ is the story of a girl in New York and an affair with a young hippie girl. ‘Old Compton Street’ is the story of a sad Soho prostitute. ‘The Ballad of Mary Foster’ is another story this time of poor Mary who marries into a life of comfort and misery.

There is a theme to this album; it one of sexual repression and the entrapment of women marriage and by social mores.

It was an album I play a lot. Al has a good way with words and writes great songs. I much prefer this and the follow-up album ‘Zero she flies’ to the much more successful ‘Year of the cat’.

251. JJ Cale – Okie

This was JJ’s third album released in 1974. In one sense it was the same languid style of laid-back rock that characterised his previous two. It had all the same ingredients with the hypnotic repeating guitar line and JJ’s soft semi-spoken words. If it wasn’t so good it would almost be easy listening. It chugs along effortlessly yet it works.

A JJ Cale song is instantly recognisable. Nobody else does anything quite like it yet Cale seems to be able to come up with variation after variation. Seemingly there are an endless number of these guitar lines to build on and once he has got this repetitive jag he can churn it out and work round it. In many ways it works on the same principle as with the North Country Blues though the outcome is totally different.

In one sense JJ Cale would be at home as supermarket music but the quality of the music sets it apart.

I love this album because you can get lost in it. Every track is distinctive yet they all have the JJ magic. The tracks that stand out for me are ‘I Got the Same old Blues again’, ‘Cajun Moon’, ‘Ever lovin’ woman’, ‘I’ll be there (if you want me)’ and ‘Rock And Roll Records’.

252. PJ Harvey – Rid of me

The album ‘Rid of me’ crashed out of the ether into my ears in 1993. The opening track ‘Rid of me’ opened with a nice simple bass line and PJ singing delicately with a great pent-up emotion that suddenly explodes as the anguish of a jilted lover turns into fury and revenge. It felt like you were suddenly lifting the lid off that pot on the stove to find the pet bunny boiling away. It was so emotionally charged.

One thing that was obvious was that we were not dealing with any demure young genteel English rose. Polly might be English but there was no reserve. Polly let it all out in one great burst. Nothing was repressed here.

This should have been obvious after the electrifying dynamics of the explicit ‘Sheena-na-gig’ off her previous album ‘Dry’. Polly was quite willing to explore any topic with honesty and candour. Not only that but the music was raw, experimental and screaming with energy as if the electrons were being ripped off in some storm of cosmic intensity. This was raw emotion. It was quite obvious that she had thoroughly absorbed Captain Beefheart’s experimental stridency and coupled it to a Punk attitude.  ‘Legs’ picked up the theme of emotional confusion as the emotions of the jilted raged and poured out in every possible direction – ‘I might as well be dead but I could kill you instead’ – you certainly got the impression that she was capable of it. There was strength about Polly Jean.

‘Rub it til it bleeds’ was quite a provocative title. The song once again built slowly with a perverse erotic intensity.

‘Man-Size’ was again delivered with that pent-up fury. It was as if Polly was putting herself into the psyche of a chauvinistic male. There was nothing weaker about this sex. You felt that Polly was perfectly capable of covering the sexist yobs with petrol and setting them on fire.

This was one angry album. Each track had its own passion and emotional angle from ‘you leave me dry’ to ‘50Ft Queenie’.

Rarely have I been so moved by an album. The strength and intensity of the music, lyrics and emotional anguish were so raw and direct that they seared into you.

This was well beyond anything Punk had produced.

253. David Gray – A century ends

This was David’s first album. The album was delivered in a sparsely produced folk-rock style with David and acoustic guitar on some tracks and a fuller backing on others.

This was David Gray as an indie singer-songwriter doing what he wanted. It wasn’t a Simon Cowell production for the plastic ‘Britain’s got Talent’ or a studio manufactured product tailored to not upset and appeal to the lowest common denominator. Yet these songs were interesting, different and eminently accessible.

I remember despairing of music in the early 2000s and asking Roy Harper if he’d heard anything worth listening to that he thought might become big. He thought for a minute and recommended David Gray.

It was only after the huge success of ‘White Ladder’ that his past work was re-evaluated and rediscovered.

These are great songs with good lyrics. ‘Shine’ and ‘I’ll lead you upstairs’ are two of the best.