Showing posts with label Rescued From The Budget Bin!. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Rescued From The Budget Bin!. Show all posts

Wednesday, September 28, 2022

POP-A-LOOZA: THE GREATEST RECORD EVER MADE! T. Rex, "20th Century Boy"

 

Each week, the pop culture website Pop-A-Looza shares some posts from my vast 'n' captivating Boppin' (Like The Hip Folks Do) archives, Recognizing the truth that an infinite number of tracks can each be THE greatest record ever made (as long as they take turn), this latest shared post turns the GREM! spotlight on "20th Century Boy" by T. Rex.

This T. Rex piece was prepared for inclusion in my long-threatened book The Greatest Record Ever Made! (Volume 1), but is not a part of that book's current plan. The chapter mentions an oddball 2-LP various-artists collection called Heavy Metal, which I picked up in the '70s and wrote about here

My Heavy Metal album retrospective (which is also quoted in the T. Rex chapter) was originally posted as part of my Rescued From The Budget Bin! series. The only other Rescued From The Budget Bin! piece published so far waxed blubberific over The Very Best Of The Hollies

Rescued From The Budget Bin! is one of several blog series I put under the (slightly) wider category of My LP Appreciations. The My LP Appreciations umbrella encompasses used albums in Second-Hand Sound (the Monkees' Pisces, Aquarius, Capricorn & Jones, Ltd. and Headquarters and The Birds, The Bees & The Monkees), greatest-hits sets in The Best Of Everything (Monkeemania--plainly, I like writing about the Monkees--and The Best Of The Bobby Fuller Four), perfect albums in Love At First Spin (Drop Out With The Barracudas, Mr. Tambourine Man, and Rocket To Russia), albums received as gifts in Groove Gratitude (Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band, and The White Album), a missed opportunity in The One That Got Away! (the Dave Clark Five's Glad All Over Again), and a separate admission that Beatles VI and Beatles '65 are my all-time favorite albums.

Yeah, I like a lot of stuff, including T. Rex. A Greatest Record Ever Made! celebration of T. Rex's "20th Century Boy" is the latest Boppin' Pop-A-Looza.

If you like what you see here on Boppin' (Like The Hip Folks Do), please consider supporting this blog by becoming a patron on Patreonor by visiting CC's Tip Jar. Additional products and projects are listed here.

This Is Rock 'n' Roll Radio with Dana & Carl airs Sunday nights from 9 to Midnight Eastern, on the air in Syracuse at SPARK! WSPJ 103.3 and 93.7 FM, and on the web at http://sparksyracuse.org/ You can read about our history here.

I'm on Twitter @CafarelliCarl

Wednesday, October 21, 2020

POP-A-LOOZA: Rescued From The Budget Bin! HEAVY METAL(24 ELECTRIFYING PERFORMANCES)

Each week, the pop culture website Pop-A-Looza shares some posts from my vast 'n' captivating Boppin' (Like The Hip Folks Do) archives. The latest shared post is my look back at a record I owned when I was in high school in the '70s, an oddball 2-LP compilation album called Heavy Metal.

It was, um, not a heavy metal collection.

My recollection of the Heavy Metal collection was originally posted here in 2018 as part of my Rescued From The Budget Bin! series, which celebrates records I scored outta the cheap-cheap bins at various vinyl emporiums over the years. Rescued From The Budget Bin! falls within the slightly broader category of My LP Appreciations, which also includes Love At First Spin, Groove Gratitude (A Gift Of Music), The Best Of Everything (about greatest-hits sets), and the used-record series Second-Hand Sound, plus The One That Got Away! (about records I wanted but never owned) and Lost In The Grooves (about underappreciated albums). Oh, and one discussion of my favorite Beatles album, which wasn't part of any specific series. Here are all of the other LP appreciations posted so far:

THE BARRACUDAS: Drop Out With The Barracudas

THE BEATLES: The Beatles (aka The White Album)

THE BEATLES: Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band

THE BYRDS: Mr. Tambourine Man

THE DAVE CLARK FIVE: Glad All Over Again

FOOLS FACE: Tell America

THE BOBBY FULLER FOUR: The Best Of The Bobby Fuller Four

THE HOLLIES: The Very Best Of The Hollies

THE MONKEES: Headquarters and The Birds, The Bees & The Monkees

THE MONKEES: Monkeemania

THE MONKEES: Pisces, Aquarius, Capricorn & Jones, Ltd.

THE RAMONES: Rocket To Russia

THE RAMONES: Subterranean Jungle

THE (BAY CITY) ROLLERS: Elevator

I also wrote one (1) new album review:

THE MONKEES: Good Times!

This list doesn't include any of the dozens of albums I reviewed during my twenty-year stint as a freelancer for Goldmine, though I have reprised a few of them to satisfy the content-hungry demands of a daily blog.

Heavy Metal remains the only various-artists collection to appear in My LP Appreciations. There were many such hodgepodge platters that meant a lot to me--Geef Voor New Wave, Do It Now, Times Square, Troublemakers, That Summer!, Experiments In Destiny, The History Of British Rock, and a little thing called Nuggets, among others--and I really oughtta give some of these the full-length treatment in future editions of My LP Appreciations.

But for now, we cast the Rescued From The Budget Bin! spotlight on a double-album budget set that lumped Black Sabbath, The Grateful Dead, War, Yes, and The Eagles together as an unlikely gathering of not-really-headbangers (except for Sabbath, anyway). Heavy Metal is the subject of the latest Boppin' Pop-A-Looza.

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This Is Rock 'n' Roll Radio with Dana & Carl airs Sunday nights from 9 to Midnight Eastern, on the air in Syracuse at SPARK! WSPJ 103.3 and 93.7 FM, and on the web at http://sparksyracuse.org/ You can read about our history here.


The many fine This Is Rock 'n' Roll Radio compilation albums are still available, each full of that rockin' pop sound you crave. A portion of all sales benefit our perpetually cash-strapped community radio project:


Volume 1: download

Volume 2: CD or download
Volume 3: download
Volume 4: CD or download
Waterloo Sunset--Benefit For This Is Rock 'n' Roll Radio:  CD or download

Carl's writin' a book! The Greatest Record Ever Made! (Volume 1)will contain 165 essays about 165 tracks, each one of 'em THE greatest record ever made. An infinite number of records can each be the greatest record ever made, as long as they take turns. Updated initial information can be seen here: THE GREATEST RECORD EVER MADE! (Volume 1).

Wednesday, December 18, 2019

The Eventual Return Of MY LP APPRECIATIONS



It's been a bit since I've posted any new pieces under the broad heading of My LP Appreciations. In fact, it's been more than a year since my most recent LP appreciation, a Rescued From The Budget Bin! look back at an odd 2-LP set called Heavy Metal, shared here on 11/9/18. I'll be getting back to more of My LP Appreciations in the near future. Here's a list of what we've already seen, and a glimpse at some of what we may see in the not-too-distant future.



My LP Appreciations is actually an umbrella category for a number of different series, each offering a look back at my memory of a specific record and what it meant to me. Let's review those categories.

RESCUED FROM THE BUDGET BIN!



Record stores used to have cut-out bins, overflowing with deleted albums that the labels had given up as lost causes. The cut-out LP covers had been deliberately damaged: a corner chopped off, a puncture, some sort of premeditated defacing to mark them as clearance items, as soon-to-be discarded product that had been written off, as Grade B, as "other." The cut-out bin was a record buyer's last chance to grab a record on the cheap before it slipped into the out-of-print zone. In addition to the cut-outs, there were also budget albums, produced and priced for discount sales.

Cut-outs. Budget albums. I may have purchased a few of these over the years.

The origin of My LP Appreciations! Who I am and how I came to be! Sort of. Rescued From The Budget Bin! began with a post about The Very Best Of The Hollies on March 15th of 2017, and didn't see another entry until the 2018 Heavy Metal piece mentioned a few paragraphs back. Possible future entries may discuss Nuggets, Shake Some Action by The Flamin' Groovies, Suzi Quatro, The Real Kids, and the soundtracks of That Summer! and Stardust. Some other already-published bits (and some still to come) could have just as easily been classified as Rescued From The Budget Bin!, but I chose some more specific designation instead.



LOVE AT FIRST SPIN



Love At First Spin looks back at albums that I immediately loved, from start to finish, the first time I heard them.

This category was suggested by Steve Stoeckel, and first described in an introduction posted on 3/17/17. Yep, just two days after The Hollies kicked off Rescued From The Budget Bin! The first and most popular Love At First Spin was about my favorite album of the 1980s, Drop Out With The Barracudas, posted on 3/24/17. Subsequent editions of Love At First Spin cast spotlights on Mr. Tambourine Man by The Byrds (3/31/17) and Rocket To Russia by The Ramones (4/29/17, and this blog's 500th post). Oh, there'll be more of these, possibly including The Jam's Setting Sons, Tell America by Fools Face, Mad Monster Party, and separate entries about two more Ramones LPs, Road To Ruin and It's Alive!




SECOND-HAND SOUND



Trash becomes treasure in appreciative hands. Second-Hand Sound examines used records I picked up over the years, albums that someone else discarded as unwanted or unworthy. My opinion differed from theirs.

So far, there's only been one post published in this series, a love letter to Pisces, Aquarius, Capricorn & Jones, Ltd. by The Monkees (6/1/17; yes, I posted about a Monkees record on Sgt. Pepper's 50th anniversary). Second-Hand Sound will return to Micky, Davy, Peter, and Michael for a two-in-one discussion of Headquarters and The Birds, The Bees & The Monkees. An eventual post about The Turtles' Happy Together Again could be done as a Second-Hand Sound or as The Best Of Everything, while The Velvet Underground & Nico would definitely be Second-Hound Sound.



GROOVE GRATITUDE (A GIFT OF MUSIC)



Groove Gratitude (A Gift Of Music) looks back on albums I received as gifts. A gift of music can be greater than even the gift itself or the music itself, reflecting the circumstances of who gave us the record (and why) and what it meant to us, then and now. A song can transport us back in time within a single spin. But an album that's connected to a specific someone who gave you that chance to listen and experience? That album has a story to tell.

The first published Groove Gratitude was about The Beatles and Sgt. Pepper, posted on 6/2/17, one day after the above-mentioned Pisces, Aquarius, Capricorn & Jones, Ltd. testimonial. But the series was introduced on 3/29/17, and the first post (about The White Album) was distributed privately to my paid patrons on 4/17/17, and finally made available to the public on 6/8/17. There are number of others under consideration: Armed Forces by Elvis Costello & the Attractions, Rock And Roll Over by KISS, Raspberries' Best, Live And Sleazy by The Village People, Give 'Em Enough Rope by The Clash, and Never Mind The Bollocks, Here's The Sex Pistols. Moving from LPs to CDs, I may do something about the Otis Redding boxed set Otis!, Step Up by The Flamin' Groovies, and/or Powerstance by The Fleshtones.



THE BEST OF EVERYTHING



Sometimes only the best will do. The Best Of Everything looks back on specific greatest-hits and best-of LPs and what they meant to me.

The concept of this most recent addition to My LP Appreciations was introduced on 10/3/17. The series debuted on 1/27/18 with a reverent recollection of the 3-LP Austalian import Monkeemania, and Best Of The Bobby Fuller Four followed on 4/17/18. Still to come: Big Hits (High Tide And Green Grass) by The Rolling Stones, Meaty Beaty Big And Bouncy by The Who, and The Kinks' Greatest Hits. And more.


Also within the broad category of My LP Appreciations were posts about Beatles VI and my modest bootleg collection



Some of my potential and pending subjects may shift from category to category, both within My LP Appreciations and to other series like The Everlasting First, which may be the best forum for me to discuss, say, The Velvet Underground. Some of these I'll get to, and some will never be done. I appreciate 'em all nonetheless.



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You can support this blog by becoming a patron on Patreon: Fund me, baby! 

Fans of pop music will want to check out Waterloo Sunset--Benefit For This Is Rock 'n' Roll Radio, a new pop compilation benefiting SPARK! Syracuse, the home of This Is Rock 'n' Roll Radio with Dana & CarlTIR'N'RR Allstars--Steve StoeckelBruce GordonJoel TinnelStacy CarsonEytan MirskyTeresa CowlesDan PavelichIrene Peña, Keith Klingensmith, and Rich Firestone--offer a fantastic new version of The Kinks' classic "Waterloo Sunset." That's supplemented by eleven more tracks (plus a hidden bonus track), including previously-unreleased gems from The Click BeetlesEytan MirskyPop Co-OpIrene PeñaMichael Slawter (covering The Posies), and The Anderson Council (covering XTC), a new remix of "Infinite Soul" by The Grip Weeds, and familiar TIRnRR Fave Raves by Vegas With RandolphGretchen's WheelThe Armoires, and Pacific Soul Ltd. Oh, and that mystery bonus track? It's exquisite. You need this. You're buying it from Futureman.

(And you can still get our 2017 compilation This Is Rock 'n' Roll Radio, Volume 4, on CD from Kool Kat Musik and as a download from Futureman Records.)

Hey, Carl's writin' a book! The Greatest Record Ever Made! (Volume 1) will contain 100 essays (and then some) about 100 tracks, plus two bonus instrumentals, each one of 'em THE greatest record ever made. An infinite number of records can each be the greatest record ever made, as long as they take turns. Updated initial information can be seen here: THE GREATEST RECORD EVER MADE! (Volume 1).

Friday, November 9, 2018

RESCUED FROM THE BUDGET BIN! Heavy Metal (24 Electrifying Performances)

Record stores used to have cut-out bins, overflowing with deleted albums that the labels had given up as lost causes. The cut-out LP covers had been deliberately damaged: a corner chopped off, a puncture, some sort of premeditated defacing to mark them as clearance items, as soon-to-be discarded product that had been written off, as Grade B, as "other." The cut-out bin was a record buyer's last chance to grab a record on the cheap before it slipped into the out-of-print zone. In addition to the cut-outs, there were also budget albums, produced and priced for discount sales.

Cut-outs. Budget albums. I may have purchased a few of these over the years.



VARIOUS ARTISTS: Heavy Metal (Warner Special Products, 1974)

Now that's what I call music.

Mind you, it's not what I call "heavy metal music;" while some of the acts contained in this oddball double-LP could fall within the peripheries of the genre, and Black Sabbath should qualify for sure, it would take some seriously heavy-grade '70s-style medication to alter one's perceptions to a hallucinatory fuzz sufficient to regard Van Morrison, War, The Eagles, or The Grateful Dead as a metal act. Feel free to view this peculiar marketing choice as antecedent to the GRAMMYs' eventual award to Best Heavy Metal Artist Jethro Tull.

So forget about the label; calling this "heavy metal" is delusional no matter how you look at it. But as a various-artist set of no discernible theme? Even though it includes some tracks from the '60s, Heavy Metal is 1970s rock in microcosm.

Far out.



When we think of budget-priced compilation albums in the '70s, we may think first about cheesy K-Tel, Ronco, and Adam VIII sets hawked on TV, sonically-deprived hatchet jobs cramming too many songs into too little space, sacrificing sound quality and aesthetics alike as an offering on a Me Decade altar praying to the decadent god of MORE!! I feel a little queasy even considering it. But the '70s also produced a bounty of compilations from major labels, business entities whose motives may or may not have been inherently purer than those of a Ron Popeil, but whose methodology and ability to execute were an immediate world apart.

Count the Warner Brothers empire among those major labels. By the mid '70s, that empire encompassed Warner Brothers, Atlantic, Reprise, Elektra, and Asylum, the record-label equivalent of the gathering of The Mighty Avengers (or perhaps The Justice League Of America, since Warner also owned DC Comics). Let's pound the comic-book comparison one nail further: Warner's muscle and deep vaults gave it powers and abilities far beyond those of mortal record labels. Those super powers produced Lenny Kaye's seminal '60s garage compilation Nuggets, and a long series of loss leaders that introduced deep cuts by obscure artists to legions of cash-strapped music fans. And it gave us Warner Special Products, the low-priced subsidiary imprint that concocted Heavy Metal.



I have no idea of the thought process that created Heavy Metal; if there's a definitive account of the record's genesis out there somewhere, I'd love to read it. The great and powerful internet suggests that Heavy Metal was a sequel to a 1973 four-record set called Superstars Of The 70's, and I kinda wish I'd snagged a copy of that one when I was a young teen. The lineup on Superstars Of The 70's includes Otis Redding, The Kinks, Todd Rundgren, Wilson Pickett, The Rolling Stones, Roberta Flack, Joni Mitchell, The Beach Boys, and Gordon Lightfoot, a diverse menu that whet the ol' Me Decade musical appetite. MORE!! Heavy Metal met the next stage of that insatiable demand.

Marshall Street in the '70s
I bought my copy of Heavy Metal at The Record Theatre near Syracuse University in late '76 or early '77. I was a senior in high school, sixteen-seventeen years old, and the sheer buzz of Marshall Street and the SU hill was intoxicating with possibilities for me. I loved going up there whenever I could, for lectures at Hendricks Chapel (where I saw Star Trek creator Gene Roddenberry and my favorite author, Harlan Ellison), the occasional cult film, pizza, books, fruitless flirting with co-eds, one frantic, exuberant run up the outdoor flight of stairs at Crouse College as I bellowed the theme from Rocky, and sifts through the garden of delights at The Record Theatre on Marshall Street. Good times? To this square peg kid, desperately looking for a place to belong? Yeah. Good times.

I'm not sure what specific tune or combination of tunes drew me to Heavy Metal. I'm sure I would have been interested in owning some Alice Cooper, and probably "Ramblin' Man" by The Allman Brothers Band, maybe "Ride Captain Ride" by Blues Image, and maybe the Yes or Doors tracks. My cousin Mark had hooked me a little on his Deep Purple cassettes, so it was certainly cool to claim ownership of "Smoke On The Water." I betcha I was eager to crank some Sabbath, just because.



The album opens with "Kick Out The Jams." That was the revelation for me. I'd never heard The MC5 before, never heard of The MC5 before. This was the censored version, with brothers and sisters standing in for the unexpurgated original incitement to kick out the jams, muthafuckas. I knew nothing about any of that; I just knew this track rocked, and I discovered its raucous, ragged splendor just before I discovered the concept of punk rock. Within less than a year, I would be an enthusiastic punk fan.



The mixed styles offered on Heavy Metal were A-OK with me. My first T. Rex track. My first Buffalo Springfield track (the now-rare nine-minute version of "Bluebird"). My first Jimi Hendrix, my first J. Geils Band, my first Led Zeppelin, James Gang, Uriah Heep, Faces, War, Grateful Dead. I didn't love all of it, and I still don't. But I loved the overall experience of this album, and I look back on it with great fondness.

The period spanning the winter of 1976 into the spring of 1977 was the spark of my personal rock 'n' roll crucible. I saw my first rock concert (KISS). I became a fan of The Kinks. I started reading Phonograph Record Magazine, prompting my curiosity about this "punk rock" craziness. I deepened my appreciation of The Monkees. I switched from AM radio to FM radio. I turned that collective jam-kickin' mother up. The crucible would turn its heat even higher after graduation, as I heard The Sex Pistols that summer and The Ramones, Blondie, Television, and The Runaways at college that fall. But the spark first ignited when I was still in high school.

Heavy Metal was one of the records I used to bring in to school, tunes to play during an abundance of time spent in the office of my high school literary magazine. Desolation Boulevard. Raspberries' Best. Through The Past, Darkly. History Of British Rock, Volume 2. Anything by The Beatles. Heavy Metal. Other friends brought in more records to play, and my soundtrack at 17 began to form. The crucible never sounded better.

Over a span of decades, through countless periodic purges of my record collection, every time I've been tempted to shed my copy of Heavy Metal, I've retained my sense and put it back on my LP shelf instead. I still have it. Hell, I may have it cremated with me when that time comes. And how heavy metal would that be? Kick out the jams, muthuhs and bruthuhs. Kick out the jams.



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You can support this blog by becoming a patron on Patreon: Fund me, baby! 

Our new compilation CD This Is Rock 'n' Roll Radio, Volume 4 is now available from Kool Kat Musik! 29 tracks of irresistible rockin' pop, starring Pop Co-OpRay PaulCirce Link & Christian NesmithVegas With Randolph Featuring Lannie FlowersThe SlapbacksP. HuxIrene PeñaMichael Oliver & the Sacred Band Featuring Dave MerrittThe RubinoosStepford KnivesThe Grip WeedsPopdudesRonnie DarkThe Flashcubes,Chris von SneidernThe Bottle Kids1.4.5.The SmithereensPaul Collins' BeatThe Hit SquadThe RulersThe Legal MattersMaura & the Bright LightsLisa Mychols, and Mr. Encrypto & the Cyphers. You gotta have it, so order it here. A digital download version (minus The Smithereens' track) is also available from Futureman Records.

Wednesday, January 17, 2018

Vinyl Countdown: The Relative Popularity Of MY LP APPRECIATIONS



Tomorrow marks the second anniversary of Boppin' (Like The Hip Folks Do), so I've been looking back at the relative popularity of some of my posts thus far. On Monday, we looked back at my posts about individual songs (The Greatest Record Ever Made) and posts about live concerts on Tuesday (Virtual Ticket Stub Gallery). Today, let's go to the ol' album rack for some LP appreciations.

I have five similar series bundled under the group title My LP Appreciations. Best Of Everything covers greatest-hits and best-of sets, but I have yet to actually write an entry in that series (other than a general introduction); I'll get to it, I promise! Love At First Spin was suggested by Steve Stoeckel, and it details albums I loved from start to finish from the first time I heard them; after a foreword, there have been three editions of Love At First Spin to date. Second-Hand Sound, focused on individual used LPs I plainly appreciated more than some clueless previous owner, has seen just one entry so far, but it was a popular one. There has also been but a single edition of Rescued From The Budget Bin!'s coverage of cut-outs, remainders, and cheapies. Finally, Groove Gratitude (A Gift Of Music) deals with albums I received as gifts; it was introduced here, and has seen two full-fledged entries so far.

Here are the links to all seven of My LP Appreciations, ranked from most-viewed to least-viewed.:

1. The Monkees: Pisces, Aquarius, Capricorn & Jones, Ltd.



I'm not sure that I could quite narrow down my list of great used LP purchases sufficiently to name one as my all-time # 1 greatest second-hand album. But man, that copy of The Monkees' 1967 gem Pisces, Aquarius, Capricorn & Jones, Ltd. I bought for fifty cents in '77 would have to be a contender.

2. The Hollies: The Very Best Of The Hollies



My first Hollies album. I had no idea of the world of wonder awaiting me.

3. The Barracudas: Drop Out With The Barracudas



The Barracudas' 1981 debut album Drop Out With The Barracudas isn't all that obscure--the group did chart in the UK--but it's the least-known among the albums I've examined in the My LP Appreciations essays. Whether obscure or familiar, it was my favorite album of the '80s, and the obvious choice for the inaugural Love At First Spin.

4. The Byrds: Mr. Tambourine Man




I'd nearly forgotten how much I loved The Byrds' 1965 debut.

5. The Ramones: Rocket To Russia



My first Ramones record was the 45 of "Sheena Is A Punk Rocker" (aka The Record That Changed My Life). My first Ramones album was their 1976 eponymous debut. But Rocket To Russia was likely the most important Ramones LP for me, and I bought it shortly after I'd met a girl who would wind up being pretty important to me, too.

6. The Beatles: Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band




7. The Beatles: The White Album



Given the prevailing and pervasive (and justified) popularity of The Beatles, and considering how much positive feedback I received for my two Beatles album essays, I'm shocked (Yeah, shocked. Shocked.) and stunned (Yeah, stunned. Very stunned.) that those two are the least-viewed of My LP Appreciations. Go figure. Maybe Blue Meanies are handling the stats? Granted, both of these cover a period in The Beatles' career that interests me less than what came before it; I regard The Beatles' released work from 1964 through '66 as the finest body of pop music ever done, and I've often made public note of that preference. But I love the later stuff too.



TOMORROW: Boppin' (Like The Hip Folks Do) celebrates its second birthday with an unranked listing of some of my favorite blog entries outside of My LP Appreciations. Join me! I'm here every day.

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You can support this blog by becoming a patron on Patreon: Fund me, baby! 


Our new compilation CD This Is Rock 'n' Roll Radio, Volume 4 is now available from Kool Kat Musik! 29 tracks of irresistible rockin' pop, starring Pop Co-OpRay PaulCirce Link & Christian NesmithVegas With Randolph Featuring Lannie FlowersThe SlapbacksP. HuxIrene PeñaMichael Oliver & the Sacred Band Featuring Dave MerrittThe RubinoosStepford KnivesThe Grip WeedsPopdudesRonnie DarkThe Flashcubes,Chris von SneidernThe Bottle Kids1.4.5.The SmithereensPaul Collins' BeatThe Hit SquadThe RulersThe Legal MattersMaura & the Bright LightsLisa Mychols, and Mr. Encrypto & the Cyphers. You gotta have it, so order it here. 

Wednesday, March 15, 2017

RESCUED FROM THE BUDGET BIN! The Very Best Of The Hollies

Record stores used to have cut-out bins, overflowing with deleted albums that the labels had given up as lost causes. The cut-out LP covers had been deliberately damaged: a corner chopped off, a puncture, some sort of premeditated defacing to mark them as clearance items, as soon-to-be discarded product that had been written off, as Grade B, as "other." The cut-out bin was a record buyer's last chance to grab a record on the cheap before it slipped into the out-of-print zone. In addition to the cut-outs, there were also budget albums, produced and priced for discount sales.

Cut-outs. Budget albums. I may have purchased a few of these over the years.



THE HOLLIES: The Very Best Of The Hollies (United Artists, 1975)

When I was actively and devotedly listening to AM radio in the early to mid '70s, I had a number of fave raves at any given time. Alice Cooper. Elton John. Sweet. Slade. Johnny Nash. Various former Beatles. My all-time faves from this era were the incredible hit singles by The Raspberries and Badfinger, all providing a working model of what I would later come to know as power pop. And throw one other single into that mix: "Long Cool Woman In A Black Dress" by The Hollies.



I understand that this is not an extra-popular choice, even among some Hollies fans. The track doesn't contain The Hollies' characteristic, heavenly harmonies, it doesn't soar like The Hollies' most unforgettable tracks from the '60s, and it's little more than a blatant attempt to copy the sound of Creedence Clearwater Revival, albeit with Allan Clarke's distinctive lead vocals. But I like it. I've always liked it, and I prefer it to anything that The Hollies did after that. (And yes, I mean that as a specific shot against their 1974 MOR hit ballad "The Air That I Breathe," which has never done much for me at all.)

But more importantly, "Long Cool Woman In A Black Dress" was my gateway to the magic of The Hollies. I don't think I remembered any of their '60s catalog at the time--maybe "He Ain't Heavy, He's My Brother"--though that knowledge would come in due time. By the mid '70s, I was becoming obsessed with '60s rock 'n' roll, particularly the British Invasion. That interest flowed naturally into a desire to know more about The Hollies. Oldies radio--principally oldies shows on Syracuse AM hit stations WOLF and WNDR, but also on Utica's FM rock station WOUR--hooked me on "Bus Stop," "On A Carousel," and especially "Stop, Stop, Stop," and maybe "Carrie Anne," too. And once hooked, well, I needed more.







 

When available funds permitted, I started buying records (sort of) regularly around 1976-77, in my junior and senior years in high school. I never had a lot of cash to spare, and some of what I did have I needed for comic books and Playboy. But there were a lot of discount options available in the '70s; both Economy Bookstore in Syracuse (and at Shoppingtown in DeWitt) and World Of Books in North Syracuse carried tons of used and/or stripped books and magazines, and the flea market offered table after table of dusty old comics, books, magazines, LPs and 45s. Even a little bit of cash could go a long way in feeding the collector's hunger.

I loved going to record stores, going through the bins, looking at covers, trying to find stuff I could afford (and wishing I could afford more). I think my cousin Mark explained the concept of cut-out bins, but I was already diving into them independently anyway. I don't remember the chronology of my cut-out bin purchases, but I sure remember a number of the individual records I scored.

And one of them was The Very Best Of The Hollies, a collection of some of the group's '60s sides, which I exhumed from the cut-out bin at Gerber Music in Penn Cann Mall. I was puzzled at the time that a supposed Best Of The Hollies included neither "Long Cool Woman In A Black Dress" nor "He Ain't Heavy, He's My Brother"--and nor, for that matter, "Carrie Anne"--but it seemed a good value, and a quick exchange of cash made it mine.

I only recognized a handful of songs on that LP. The rest was undiscovered. I was a pop music Magellan! A rock 'n' roll Vasco da Gama! A power pop James T. Kirk, boldly going where no one had gone before, except for the mass o' people who got there before me! Set the stereo on stun, and beam me up!



Side One opened and closed with tunes I already knew, "Bus Stop" and "Stop, Stop, Stop." In between those two tracks, The Very Best Of The Hollies served up my first-ever spins of "Here I Go Again," "I'm Alive," and the incredible "Look Through Any Window." Whoa! This was already money well-spent! Side Two commenced with another pure pop trifecta--"Pay You Back With Interest," "Just One Look," and a future Greatest Record Ever Made, "I Can't Let Go"--before hitting the familiar, welcome groove of "On A Carousel." The album closed with an anticlimactic cover of Little Richard's "Lucille" in a spot where, I tell ya, "Carrie Anne" shoulda gone instead. But no matter! This was pop music. This was The Hollies! And I was now a fan.



I eventually acquired my own copy of "Carrie Anne" on the soundtrack album to Stardust. I picked up the "Long Cool Woman In A Black Dress" 45 somewhere in there, too, and that reissue single included the sublime "Long Dark Road" as its flip. I learned about "King Midas In Reverse" and "Dear Eloise" and "Post Card" and "Yes I Will," belatedly finding out the latter song was a Hollies record before it became "I'll Be True To You" by The Monkees. Much, much later, I fell hard for The Searchers' "Have You Ever Loved Somebody" and The Everly Brothers' "So Lonely," not realizing that both were Hollies compositions. (In fact, when The Flashcubes covered "Have You Ever Loved Somebody" live and identified it as a Hollies song, I went up to bassist Gary Frenay to correct his obvious mistake. Gary rolled his eyes and patiently set me straight. Stupid fanboy....) And later still, my then-young daughter Meghan used to bop around the house, singin' along to the delightful bounce of The Hollies and "On A Carousel."



I no longer own my copy of The Very Best Of The Hollies. Space considerations and long-forgotten scrambles for rent money have restrained my natural pack-rat tendencies, so duplicate items tend to get the ol' heave-ho. I have CD reissues of many of The Hollies' individual albums, plus the wonderful, multi-disc Hollies collection Clarke, Hicks & Nash Years. On This Is Rock 'n' Roll Radio with Dana & Carl in 2010, we featured a long promotion called The Hundred Hollies Initiative, a successful effort to play at least one hundred different Hollies tracks over the course of the year; since the price for failure in this venture would have required us to play Bob Seger's execrable "Old Time Rock And Roll" as penance, we made damned sure that we played one hundred and one different Hollies songs. Can't be too safe with such dire potential consequences! Our friend Rich Firestone credits The Hundred Hollies Initiative for turning him into a bigger fan of The Hollies, so that was my chance to pay this back with interest.

For me, this all started with "Long Cool Woman In A Black Dress," and a few songs heard on oldies radio. But it manifested in earnest with a cut-out bin purchase of The Very Best Of The Hollies, a record which was ultimately more important to me than I could ever appreciate at the time. I'm alive. I can't let go. Riding along on a carousel. Watch me now, 'cause here I go again.






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