Joe Boyd: collectors choice

Michael Fremer picks favorites from the rich Joe Boyd discography

Ry Cooder Scores!

Beginning with his eponymous 1970 debut, and continuing throughout eleven Warner Brothers solo albums, Ry Cooder has demonstrated that in addition to being an extraordinary folk/blues guitarist- particularly on bottleneck, and a serviceable, though hardly distinguished vocalist, he is also a high caliber musicologist and A&R man. While Cooder’s specialty has been mining the more obscure tributaries of the rich vein of American music deposited during the Great Depression, he has also unearthed musical riches from around the world, particularly the Caribbean and Mexico.

His solo albums are sprinkled with unknown and out-of-the-way delights like Dickey Doo's "Teardrops Will Fall" and the calypso "F.D.R. In Trinidad"- as well as some better known songs like "One Meat Ball", Woody Guthrie’s "Vigilante Man" Huddie Ledbetter's "Teardrops Will Fall", The Drifter’s 1954 hit "Money Honey", and Johnny Cash’s "Hey Porter".

Once a flop, always a flop?

Song Cycle dominates the Van Dyke Parks discography the way "Citizen Kane" overshadows Orson Welles' cinematic output. That simply cannot be denied, though Welles created other outstanding films- "The Magnificent Ambersons" and "Touch Of Evil" for example.

Parks' produced Discover America and the much misunderstood Tokyo Rose—two worthwhile albums. But for both artists, the earliest works, so singular and overwhelming, rule. Parks claims his best works lay ahead. Time will tell.

Primary Category: 
Category: 
Artist: 
Van Dyke Parks
Album: 
Song Cycle
Cred Label: 
Sundazed LP 5140 180g LP
Cred Prod: 
Leonard Waronker
Cred Eng: 
Lee Herschberg
Cred Mix: 
Bruce Botnick
Cred Mast: 
Bob Irwin

Song Cycle dominates the Van Dyke Parks discography the way "Citizen Kane" overshadows Orson Welles' cinematic output. That simply cannot be denied, though Welles created other outstanding films- "The Magnificent Ambersons" and "Touch Of Evil" for example.

Monk Spins Sweetly at 45rpm's

It is difficult to grasp the date this session was recorded: December of 1956. That makes it almost 50 years old. Yet the music is as utterly fresh and full of surprises and good humor as it was in 1956. And the sound remains vibrant and full bodied as well; the highs extended and crisp, the transients sharp and clean. In fact, this double 45rpm set positively kills the Riverside original in every way: I know, because I’ve owned a copy since the mid ‘60s.

Primary Category: 
Category: 
Artist: 
Thelonious Monk
Album: 
Brilliant Corners
Cred Label: 
Analogue Productions/Riverside AJAZ 226 2 180g 45rpm mono LPs
Cred Prod: 
Orrin Keepnews and Bill Grauer
Cred Eng: 
Jack Higgins
Cred Mix: 
no mixing credit
Cred Mast: 
Kevin Gray and Steve Hoffman

It is difficult to grasp the date this session was recorded: December of 1956. That makes it almost 50 years old. Yet the music is as utterly fresh and full of surprises and good humor as it was in 1956. And the sound remains vibrant and full bodied as well; the highs extended and crisp, the transients sharp and clean. In fact, this double 45rpm set positively kills the Riverside original in every way: I know, because I’ve owned a copy since the mid ‘60s. During my first year at Cornell in 1964, either Riverside was going out of business or needed some quick cash, because the book store had what seemed like the entire Riverside catalog on sale for $1.98. I bought as many as I could afford.

Return to the Fillmore Auditorium's '60's Heyday

Friday afternoons around 4PM, after a hard week’s schooling back in 1968, my roommates and I at Cornell University engaged in a particular ritual: one of us would go into the garage behind our rented house and retrieve our well-hidden pot “stash.” The most skilled roller amongst the 4 of us would produce a doobie, and then we’d smoke away our tensions while listening to? Charles Lloyd’s Forest Flower (Atlantic SD 1473), recorded live at the 1966 Monterrey Jazz Festival.

Primary Category: 
Category: 
Artist: 
The Charles Lloyd Quartet
Album: 
Love-In
Cred Label: 
4 Men With Beards 4M119 180g LP
Cred Prod: 
George Avakian
Cred Eng: 
Wally Heider
Cred Mix: 
no mixing credit
Cred Mast: 
George Horn at Fantasy Studios

Friday afternoons around 4PM, after a hard week’s schooling back in 1968, my roommates and I at Cornell University engaged in a particular ritual: one of us would go into the garage behind our rented house and retrieve our well-hidden pot “stash.” The most skilled roller amongst the 4 of us would produce a doobie, and then we’d smoke away our tensions while listening to? Charles Lloyd’s Forest Flower (Atlantic SD 1473), recorded live at the 1966 Monterrey Jazz Festival.

Classic nails the reissue of this 1958 original

While this much-loved Blue Note lists Adderley as the group leader, this pick-up session--recorded in 1958, just before Kind of Blue--sounds, for the most part, as if Miles Davis is in control: or at least that his sensibilities at the time had deeply influenced Adderley\\'s musical thinking.While this much-loved Blue Note lists Adderley as the group leader, this pick-up session--recorded in 1958, just before Kind of Blue--sounds, for the most part, as if Miles Davis is in control: or at least that his sensibilities at the time had deeply influenced Adderley's musical thinking

Primary Category: 
Category: 
Artist: 
Cannonball Adderley
Album: 
Somethin' Else
Cred Label: 
Classic Records/Blue Note 1595, LP (avail. in mono and stereo editions
Cred Prod: 
Alfred Lion
Cred Eng: 
Rudy Van Gelder
Cred Mix: 
no mixing credit
Cred Mast: 
Bernie Grundman

While this much-loved Blue Note lists Adderley as the group leader, this pick-up session--recorded in 1958, just before Kind of Blue--sounds, for the most part, as if Miles Davis is in control: or at least that his sensibilities at the time had deeply influenced Adderley's musical thinking. With Hank Jones on piano and the rhythm section of Sam Jones and Art Blakey, whoever is in charge leads the group through a set of three standards ("Autumn Leaves," "Love For Sale," and "Dancing in the Dark") and two originals (Nat Adderley's funky "One For Daddy-O" and Davis' own "Somethin' Else").

Failer Succeeds!

For once, all of the hype is justified: Kathleen Edwards is a genuine, fully formed musical force. Failer, her debut, delivers everything one could want from a record except great sound, but that one failing will not interfere with the pleasures to be derived from this 10-song gem recorded on a shoe-string budget. The 24-year-old Canadian mid-tempo rocker/singer/songwriter has been compared to Lucinda Williams, but Neil Young backed by Crazy Horse is more apt in my book.


Primary Category: 
Category: 
Artist: 
Kathleen Edwards
Album: 
Failer
Cred Label: 
Zo&euml/Rounder Records 431 035-2, CD
Cred Prod: 
Dave Draves and Kathleen Edwards
Cred Eng: 
Dave Draves
Cred Mix: 
John Whynot
Cred Mast: 
Greg Calbi

For once, all of the hype is justified: Kathleen Edwards is a genuine, fully formed musical force. Failer, her debut, delivers everything one could want from a record except great sound, but that one failing will not interfere with the pleasures to be derived from this 10-song gem recorded on a shoe-string budget. The 24-year-old Canadian mid-tempo rocker/singer/songwriter has been compared to Lucinda Williams, but Neil Young backed by Crazy Horse is more apt in my book.

Herbie Hancock Meets Austin Powers

This odd scenic detour on Herbie Hancock's career path is well worth visiting 36 years later, both because of the intrinsic value of the music he created for the movie and because it resonates so effectively with the current interest in the "swinging '60s" popularized by (and sent-up in) the Austin Powers flicks--though on a far more cerebral plane than Powers could ever hope to reach.

Primary Category: 
Category: 
Artist: 
Herbie Hancock
Album: 
Blow-Up-Original Soundtrack
Cred Label: 
4 Men With Beards 4M122 180g LP
Cred Prod: 
Pete Spargo
Cred Eng: 
no engineering credit
Cred Mix: 
no mixing credit
Cred Mast: 
George Horn

This odd scenic detour on Herbie Hancock's career path is well worth visiting 36 years later, both because of the intrinsic value of the music he created for the movie and because it resonates so effectively with the current interest in the "swinging '60s" popularized by (and sent-up in) the Austin Powers flicks--though on a far more cerebral plane than Powers could ever hope to reach. These culturally repressed and repackaged, often dead-ended times make looking back at Blow-Up--the movie--all the more alluring for its promise of excitement, sexual liberation, and a progressive changing of the socio-sexual guard.

Ryan Adams: tired retread, or the real thing?

Being out of the record-biz hype loop has certain benefits. Until I bought this album I knew nothing about Ryan Adams other than the name and a vague notion that he was an extremely talented kid who used to front an alterna-country band called Whiskeytown. I\\'m willing to admit to being two years behind the hype curve. So be it. That Gold was issued on a nicely packaged two-LP set (as are many Lost Highway releases) put me in a positive frame of mind. I wanted to like this record and Ryan Adams both.Being out of the record-biz hype loop has certain benefits.

Primary Category: 
Category: 
Artist: 
Ryan Adams
Album: 
Gold
Cred Label: 
Lost Highway 088 170 235-1 2 120g LPs
Cred Prod: 
Ethan Johns
Cred Eng: 
No engineering credit
Cred Mix: 
No mixing credit
Cred Mast: 
No mastering credit

Being out of the record-biz hype loop has certain benefits. Until I bought this album I knew nothing about Ryan Adams other than the name and a vague notion that he was an extremely talented kid who used to front an alterna-country band called Whiskeytown. I'm willing to admit to being two years behind the hype curve. So be it. That Gold was issued on a nicely packaged two-LP set (as are many Lost Highway releases) put me in a positive frame of mind. I wanted to like this record and Ryan Adams both. But when I saw the American-flag-draped cover and Adams' contrived pose, my bullshit detector went off and it didn't stop ringing throughout the four sides of this set of well-recorded musical comfort food.

Rhino re-enters the LP market. Good idea?

Sound quality aside, the very fact that this album has been reissued by Rhino on vinyl (anonymously mastered at Capitol from the original analog tapes) is astounding. More than a dozen years ago, Rhino begin a limp-wristed "Save the LP" campaign. Predictably, it went down in flames and the company issued a 12-inch package of Rhino catalog items called (I Guess We Didn't) Save the LP containing a three-CD set in a 12-by-12 slide-out insert. Cute.

Primary Category: 
Category: 
Artist: 
T-Rex
Album: 
Electric Warrior
Cred Label: 
Reprise/Rhino 76111 180g LP/CD
Cred Prod: 
Tony Visconti
Cred Eng: 
Rik Pekkonen, Malcolm Cecil, Roy T. Baker & Martin Rushent
Cred Mix: 
no mixing credit
Cred Mast: 
Dan Hersch & Bill Inglot (CD)/no LP credit

Sound quality aside, the very fact that this album has been reissued by Rhino on vinyl (anonymously mastered at Capitol from the original analog tapes) is astounding. More than a dozen years ago, Rhino begin a limp-wristed "Save the LP" campaign. Predictably, it went down in flames and the company issued a 12-inch package of Rhino catalog items called (I Guess We Didn't) Save the LP containing a three-CD set in a 12-by-12 slide-out insert. Cute.

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