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Archive for the ‘Rock and roll history’ Category

We got it where we could

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Unlike many musicians since 1981 who had a couple of decades of MTV music videos to influence what and ‘how’ they played (and stood, and snarled, and vamped…), many blossoming young guitarists like myself in the sixties absorbed shows like the Monkees, and Where the Action Is, and Shindig, like parched earth sucks up rain. We were too young to go to clubs (hell, we were barely old enough to stay up past nine o’clock), spent hours by ourselves practicing, and then voila, there were people on TV being what (we thought) we wanted to be, and, because there weren’t no such thing as a VCR, every photon from that big ol’ tube that showed the fingering patterns of ‘real’ guitarists was sucked into our collective musician consciousness.

Everything a young musician listens to becomes part of their foundation, and as a sixth grader I was already listening to everything from the Ventures to Henry Mancini (the Peter Gunn riff may be the greatest riff of all time), and my second thought upon hearing of Davy’s death, right after saying a brief Buddhist prayer, was that If I had a guitar in my hand at that moment I could have played Last Train to Clarksville without hesitation.

Life is trippy, sad, and wonderful.

Written by thewayguy

March 2, 2012 at 4:19 pm

Big Man, Big Sad

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Big Man live

Toronto, 1984

Sure wish this wasn’t a commentary on another person I know who’s not with us anymore, but the timing of these things is beyond our control…

Clarence, gone.  I worked with him on tour and he was our neighbor for several years in Sausalito. I liked Clarence, as a guy to hang with, talk with, not just to to hang with because he was a ranking member of the music industry elite. Funny guy, not close to perfect, just like the rest of us, and one of those massive guys who moved gently through the world when he wasn’t on stage.

Over the years I’ve quoted something to many friends that he said when we talked about the death of Bill Graham, original king of concert promoters back when (it’s also included in my annual post about being on the road when John Lennon died). I was in Clarence’s condo, literally just down the slope from our backyard, and we were talking about Graham, and Clarence shook his head and said “Now what? What do we do now?”

He was lamenting that there would be no replacement. Yes, there were and will always be people who do whatever needs to be done, whether it’s concert promotion, champion quarterbacks, courageous cops, whatever, but there are a handful of people who aren’t replaceable, a package put together that can’t ever, ever be replicated.

I don’t like that we can now apply Clarence’s perspective to himself. It’s disheartening. Jesus, I’m so fortunate to have worked for and known, for a short time, the Big Man. My condolences to his family, Bruce, and especially the E Street Band.

Big Man gone.

Sucks.

Here’s a clip from YouTube that I was looking forward to including in my coming-soon web stories on my decade on the road. I never would have thought that twenty-five years ‘down the road’, I’d be able to point to my concert video work on the web. I’m certainly thankful for it now, even as I’m saddened by why I’m doing it.

This is from Toronto, 1984. I’m on the front-of-the-house camera.

Blow, Big Man, blow.

Written by thewayguy

June 19, 2011 at 10:38 pm

Pinetop remembered – stories from an old road dog

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Pinetop Perkins is gone.

He passed a couple of days ago. I’m very lucky not just for being able to say I met a blues legend, and not just because I heard him play live, but because both of those occurred in a very special way.

I met him in Chicago when Journey did Soundstage, a program created by WTTW, Chicago’s PBS station. I’m bettin’ more than few people who watch Soundstage now have no idea the show was created almost forty years ago.

It happened during what I call the Journey-in-transition phase. Infinity is released, Steve Perry is new, Greg Rollie and Aynsley Dunbar are still in the band. For as tight with the band and with Bubba (road manager) as Gonzo and I were, it’s not as if we knew how things worked across the full, inner Journey spectrum (although I’d come to know more as the years went along and my friendships grew deeper on both sides, business and band), we were, simply, roadies, so I can’t give you any background on or insights as to how they scored the gig. It’s certainly a safe assumption that the CBS/Columbia push behind the release of Infinity was huge, and no high-profile, high-visibility opportunity would be overlooked.

Soundstage occupied a very cool place on TV — good bands performing live in a studio with an audience — and it originated in Chicago, where Journey was at least as and maybe more popular than in SF. I have some very specific memories of the day:

- Walking into the studio at load-in. It’s the first time I’ve ever walked into a ‘real’ TV studio, and it’s in my hometown. The stage is up, and around the studio are set pieces that replicate the supporting structure of the “L” (“El” is probably more accurate), the elevated trains that encircle the city, so it kind of looks like the street view under the tracks. I thought it was a nice touch.

- It’s not a big space, which surprises me then, as I think it does anyone who’s never been in a studio before.

- In quick succession: Bubba walks in, he and director Ken Ehrlich meet, and Bubba, indicating the stage, says something like, “This isn’t going to work.” I know what’s happening here, because I know the band’s show, and while it may not need as sophisticated a staging as a Broadway musical, there are certainly issues about how the band sets up, the gear, stuff like that, and this is an important gig, which always means there’s a lot of time and money invested in it. Now a few of the studio crew, Ehrlich, and Bubba are huddling at the edge of the stage as Bubba’s going into what had been specifically described, and Ehrlich cuts in with something like, “Well, this is what we have, so let’s work with it,” conveying in a pretty direct fashion that things ain’t going to change. We move on.

- The studio helpers — I can’t think of any other way to describe them — are a few young men and women, freshly scrubbed, probably college educated and, looking back, most certainly very nice people with jobs they love. But, as they introduce themselves and say “and just let us know what we can do for you,” Gonzo and I look at each other and roll our eyes, because we’re roadies and they’re not, and, therefore, they get an eye roll. Hey, we weren’t assholes, we were good guys, but we were young, road-hard and close to full of ourselves…and obviously wouldn’t know how overly attitudinal we were for a couple of decades.

- Allow me to time shift: when the station’s execs and their guests arrived for the show, their attempt to appear ‘cool’ was close to laughable: blazers, open-collar dress shirts, and awesomely huge, um, I don’t know, ‘things’, medallions, I guess you can call it late ’70s bling, hanging around their neck. Again, to a roadie, well…

So, later, everything’s ready for sound check, the band comes in, and the guest musicians arrive: Albert King, Luther Allison (a great, great Chicago blues guitarist), Jerry Portnoy, and Pinetop Perkins.

Every creative profession and many professions linked to or supporting creative professions have unique, varying bonus benefits that are hard to objectively quantify, but are subjectively priceless. Most people with any level of interest in popular music have some ideas about the kind of cool things only a roadie might experience, and those things would come under descriptions of experiences shared with stagehands, film crews, and alike endeavors; you get to occasionally meet actors, or you get to travel and visit places or go on specially arranged excursions, and, of course, you get to see or experience things that only a small group of people can appreciate.

Many roadies are, like me, musicians. For us, the bonus benefits are legion. Personally, many of my greatest experiences are wrapped around sound checks. Examples (obviously I can only include a few, and with the exception of the Nils Lofgren memory I’ll throw in, these aren’t necessarily the ‘best’): meeting Journey for the first time in 1976, and watching, from only  a few feet away, as barely-out-of-his-teens Neal Schon plays his guitar in a manner I had never, ever seen or experienced before; watching Journey develop and write Separate Ways during sound checks over course of several weeks; watching Steve Smith do a call and response with a drummer from the opening band, and actually hearing Smith do patterns that couldn’t be played by any other drummer; seeing that when a band ‘works’ that things don’t always go well, and that regardless of album sales, ego, and ethics, musicians are human, just like the rest of us.

One of the great memories I have is standing on stage during sound check on the Springsteen Born in the USA tour, an arm’s length away from Nils Lofgren as he played around on his guitar, and then sat down at Roy Bittan’s grand piano and played the keys off it non-stop for ten minutes.

And then there was the sound check for Soundstage.

There’s plenty of direct experience available, from reactions of the fans to show reviews,supporting the notion that whenever you get too many extraordinary rock musicians playing live on one stage the results can be a train wreck.

Not this time. During the show itself there would be a bit of just-not-right licks during one of the jams, a teeny flaw in an otherwise great performance (nope, no need to go into the specifics of that), but the sound check was fuckin’ great. Truly. Afterwards, as I always did, if I hadn’t met some guest musician or celebrity already, I’d always introduced myself and tell them how much I admired their work. We sat around that afternoon and talked for awhile, and the guys were way, way cool. Luther was a living smile, Albert was physically huge but had a gentle vibe, and Pinetop was warm and appreciative, just the nicest guy, and happy to be playing; not just playing Soundstage, but to be playing at all, something I’ve heard from many of the greatest musicians around. Steve Smith once said to me, “I’d be happy playing in a polka band,” and he meant it.

When I read that Pinetop had died, these memories flooded my head. Amazingly, with the assistance of YouTube, I can provide you more than just the words, though: Ladies and gents, I give you a snippet of what was a great night. And aside from the music, you can dig (or wonder about) the youth and the wardrobe of the band.

Play on, Pinetop, play on.

Written by thewayguy

March 24, 2011 at 5:25 pm

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