Showing posts with label reviews. Show all posts
Showing posts with label reviews. Show all posts

Wednesday, September 8, 2021

POP-A-LOOZA: The Ramones, IT'S ALIVE!

 

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 1996 review of the reissue of my favorite live album, It's Alive by the Ramones.

If you want to see a few more examples of me talking about the group I call the American Beatles, the greatest American rock 'n' roll band of all time, I've got you covered: a review of reissues of the Ramones' first four albums, a more in-depth appreciation of Rocket To Russia, a consideration of the underrated Subterranean Jungle  album, seeing the Ramones with the Runaways and the Flashcubes, a celebration of the incredible B-side "Babysitter," and inducting the Ramones into the Power Pop Hall of Fame.

That certainly is not all I've written about the Ramones, and I'm certainly not done writing about the Ramones. But right now, let's turn the spotlight on an amazing document of the fabulous Ramones in their natural on-stage habitat. HEY!  WE'RETHERAMONESANDTHISONE'SCALLED"ROCKAWAYBEACH!" 1-2-3-4!!! The Ramones' It's Alive is the subject of the latest Boppin' Pop-A-Looza.

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

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

I'm on Twitter @CafarelliCarl.

Friday, August 13, 2021

THE RAMONES: It's Alive!

My review of Sire Records' reissue of the Ramones' essential in-concert document It's Alive! appeared in the March 1, 1996 issue of Goldmine.

THE RAMONES
It's Alive!
Sire (46045)

It's about bloody time. It's Alive!, the Ramones' 1979 tour-de-force double-LP live album, has finally gotten a domestic release, a mere 16 years behind the rest of the free world. Everything that's gone wrong with this country since then, from the Iranian hostage crisis to the O. J. Simpson trial, can no doubt be attributed to Americans' lack of easy access to the one live album that could obliterate all of life's nagging little problems in a 1-2-3-4! barrage of amphetamine-laced bubblegum, fueled by punk attitude, a twisted AM pop sensibility, and a stunning use of nearly three chords.

Okay, so we're getting carried away here. But critical objectivity tends to fly out the window when it comes to the Ramones. Many still view the group as a joke, while a select few (very few) others regard the Ramones with near-religious devotion. And let there be no doubt which side of that argument this scribe favors: the Ramones rule, pal, It's Alive! is the greatest live album ever recorded, and if you don't agree, then there's something fundamentally wrong with you. Plus you've got bad breath.

Seriously, although It's Alive! may not convert many non-believers to da cause, it's a bracing, invigorating slap of Carbona-strength Hai Karate for righteous pinheads everywhere. Recorded live in London on New Year's Eve 1977, It's Alive! offers 28 faster-than-sound samples of unfiltered Ramonesness, culled from the group's first three albums.

This was also one of the last appearances of original drummer Tommy Ramone, who'd already been replaced by Marky Ramone by the time of It's Alive!'s original release. Although Marky is undeniably a (much!) more accomplished drummer than Tommy, the Ramones lost something irretrievable when Tommy left. Marky is heavier and flashier, and he's propelled the Ramones to faster and faster rhythms, but Tommy's light touch added a buoyancy that the group has been unable to replicate since.

And the band is in absolute control throughout this disc. Compare the military precision and passionate urgency of It's Alive! with the detached, throw-away performance on 1992's Blitzkrieg-by-numbers Loco Live, and there can be no doubt which disc captures Forest Hills' Finest at the peak of their in-concert skills.

Color photos from the original LP's gatefold have been changed to black-and-white for the CD insert (presumably so you can still sort of make them out in this cursed reduced format). But the sonic buzz is still there, an ephemeral thrill made timeless, preserving a fleeting moment when it really seemed possible--inevitable--that four guys from Queens could save rock 'n' roll. My fellow Americans, everything's gonna be all right now.

2021 POSTSCRIPT: my appreciation of Marky Ramone has continued to grow over the decades. What hasn't changed? It's Alive! remains my all-time favorite live album.


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

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

I'm on Twitter @CafarelliCarl.

Friday, May 29, 2020

POP-A-LOOZA: The Monkees' GOOD TIMES! (with more links than a barrel of...y'know)



Each week, the pop culture website Pop-A-Looza shares a post from my vast 'n' captivating Boppin' (Like The Hip Folks Do) archives. This week's shared post reprises my review of Good Times!, the fabulous 2016 album by The Monkees.

For the most part, I do not recall the year 2016 with any fondness. We have to say goodbye to a lot of our heroes every year, but there was something about the Grim Reaper's overzealous activity in 2016 that made the year seem even crueler than other years. The death of David Bowie in January prompted me to start a blog; the death of Prince in June made me declare, "2016 is fired." And still that damned Grim Reaper kept a-marchin', and then an Electoral College disaster in November inflicted a national disgrace that will damage us for decades. No, I'm not fond of 2016 at all.

But Good Times! would have been a highlight in any year, even one less miserable than '16. The album pleased me so much that I knew I had to review it.



I wrote a large number of reviews during the twenty-year period I freelanced for Goldmine magazine, 1986-2006 (including reviews of The Monkees' catalog reissues, and of their 1996 reunion album Justus), plus a few reviews for The Syracuse New Times, among others. Over time, I became disinterested in writing reviews, and I stopped doing them even before I finished my freelancing stint with Goldmine. Honestly, I had no intention of ever writing another review. My enthusiasm for Good Times! was far greater than my resistance to the prospect of writing one more review. Good times.

The euphoria surrounding Good Times! also drove me to write separate pieces about each of the three digital singles that preceded its release: "She Makes Me Laugh," "You Bring The Summer," and "Me & Magdalena." I wrote about Canadian radio previewing the album. After I posted my Good Times! review, I wrote a supplemental piece about its bonus tracks. We dedicated the 5/29/2016 This Is Rock 'n' Roll Radio to The Monkees and Good Times!, and I re-posted the playlist from our 3/4/2012 Davy Jones memorial show.

This was still not enough. I wanted more of The Monkees. At the end of August, as I thought about how Good Times! fit in The Monkees' overall recorded legacy, I began a four-part series imagining four-, three-, two-, and single-disc Monkees career retrospectives in the wake of Good Times!: Rows Of Houses That Are All The Same, Only True In Fairy Tales, Walking Down The Street, and Hall Of Fame. I became so convinced that The Monkees were finally going to receive their just due that I wrote an imaginary speech celebrating their induction into The Rock And Roll Hall Of Fame. That, uh, didn't happen, so I expressed my disappointment in the chuckleheads in charge of the Hall.

In between, This Is Rock 'n' Roll Radio commemorated the 50th anniversary of the debut of The Monkees TV series with 50 Years Of The Monkees. Shortly after that, when Michael Nesmith joined Micky Dolenz and Peter Tork for what was then widely presumed (incorrectly) to be his last-ever in-concert appearance as a Monkee, I offered this coda:

This past Monday was the 50th anniversary of The Monkees TV series, which debuted on NBC at 7:30 (6:30 Central) on September 12th, 1966. The series ran for just two seasons. The made-for-TV rock 'n' roll group didn't merely blur the line between fantasy and fact--they variously scuffed it, defaced it, ignored it, piddled on it, and said rude things about it. They made records. They did concert tours. They made a movie. They made a TV special. They broke up. They reunited. They transcended any reasonable expectation of what they could or couldn't be. In the words of Michael Nesmith, "We're The Monkees. That's all we've ever had to be."



In the time passed since this review was written four years ago, we lost Peter Tork in 2019, and producer Adam Schlesinger this year. Damn you, Grim Reaper. Sometimes 2020 reminds me of 2016, though I'm at least hoping for a better November this time around. Amidst this year's pandemic misery and uncertain future, The Monkees gave us a splendid new live album, The Mike & Micky Show. Good times are good things, especially in the bleakest years.

And The Monkees were the best thing about 2016. My review of their 2016 album Good Times! is this week's Boppin' Pop-A-Looza.



TIP THE BLOGGER: CC's Tip Jar!

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

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 134 essays about 134 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).


Saturday, June 2, 2018

ARTY LENIN: A Life Of Ease

My review of Arty Lenin's A Life Of Ease appeared in the April 19th, 2002 issue of Goldmine.




ARTY LENIN 
A Life Of Ease Stout (no catalog number)

Guitarist Arty Lenin, a founding member of the fab power-pop group The Flashcubes (he wrote the group's first single, "Christi Girl") and a former member of The Paul Collins Band (circa that band's 1993 From Town To Town album), steps out for his first solo album, an unassuming package of wistful pop music that's unafraid to rock but isn't ashamed to weep, either. 


A few of the songs on A Life Of Ease will already be familiar to Lenin's fans, as "The Sweetest Smell," "Cherry's World" and "When We Close Our Eyes" have all been staples of The Flashcubes' live set for years (and the latter tune is likely to be recorded by The Flashcubes for their forthcoming album). But each song makes its recorded debut here, and each still shines in Lenin's solo environment. "When We Close Our Eyes," in particular stands out as a defiant expression of vulnerability, a brilliant call-to-arms for dreamers struggling to get by in a harsh, cynical world.

(Speaking of Lenin songs The Flashcubes have done live, one regrets the omission of "Nothing Really Matters When You're Young," Lenin's other masterpiece of determined-but-resigned alienation, which would have fit right in alongside "When We Close Our Eyes." Here's hoping The Flashcubes get around to recording it soon.)

Much of the album deals, in varying degrees, with themes of alienation, of balancing vulnerability with durability. The opening track, "Mr. Acarius" (misspelled as "Acarious" in the track listings), name-checks William Faulkner's short story to set the proper tone and, more important, to instantly captivate pop fans with a breezy, catchy vibe that belies its lyrical concerns. It's followed by the sprightly, lighthearted "The Sweetest Smell," providing a study in contrasts before returning to the unsatisfied longing that lurks within the country-ish "Not Much Has Changed," cowritten by Paul Collins.

The magic of Lenin's songs is that they express feelings of longing eloquently and yet never fall prey to an oh-woe-is-me capitulation. This is partially due to the unspoken (perhaps imaginary) optimism that seems to lie beneath the surface of Lenin's lyrical alienation, but mostly it's just because the songs are pretty damn catchy. Thus does "Destiny's Plaything," a ditty about predestination and inevitability, wind up as a toe-tappin' celebration rather than a mope-a-thon. Only the standard-issue boogie strut of "Little Sister" and the bar-band workout "One And One Makes Seven" fail to distinguish themselves.

The cover of A Life of Ease shows Lenin standing in front of a yellow submarine, making it clear where the album's title originates. If it seems incongruous to consider the notion of livin' a life of ease against the backdrop of Lenin's square-peg ruminations, you've forgotten the cathartic power of pure pop, you big ol' Blue Meanie. When we close our eyes, time is so forgiving. 





2018 POSTSCRIPT: In a rare example of something I wrote having impact on...anything, this review may have influenced The Flashcubes' decision to record "Nothing Really Matters When You're Young" for their 2003 album Brilliant (which did indeed also include "When We Close Our Eyes"). Power of the press, man. "Nothing Really Matters When Your Young" was reprised last year on the group's 2-CD 40th anniversary retrospective set Flashcubes Forever.  


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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.

Tuesday, September 12, 2017

GOLDMINE Raves About THIS IS ROCK 'N' ROLL RADIO



Goldmine magazine represent!

My friend John Borack started freelancing for Goldmine in 1986, right around the same time that I did (but that's another story). Quitter that I am, I only stayed with Goldmine a mere twenty years before moving on to...well, nothing. But John's kept at it, all the while also crafting some cool books of his own, drumming with a number of cool combos, and running his own cool group Popdudes. Cool!

One of John's regular Goldmine gigs is Power Pop Plus, a series of reviews of power pop product, your one-stop shop for guidance in the realm of all that jangles and buzzes. The latest Power Pop Plus includes what can only be called a rave review of our new compilation CD This Is Rock 'n' Roll Radio, Volume 4. You should check out John's current slate o' pop reviews at Power Pop Plus to read his takes on recent releases from The Pengwins, The Naturals, Diamond Hands, Colman Gota, Alan Bernhoft, The Singles, Sitcom Neighbor, Chris Church, The Flames, The Wellingtons, The Safes, The Bye Bye Blackbirds, The Hangabouts, The On And Ons, and The Favourites, as well as that snappy thing we do, TIRnRR # 4. But I also want to preserve John's review of the glory 'n' splendor of Dana & Carl, so here 'tis:

Power Pop Plus: New Music Reviews by John M. Borack September 11, 2017

VARIOUS ARTISTS – This is Rock ‘n’ Roll Radio – Volume 4



Journalistic integrity and conflicts of interest being what they are, I suppose I should alert you straightaway to the fact that your humble scribe appears on three tracks on TiRRR4 as your humble drummer. But hey, you know what? There are 26 other tracks on this fantabulous compilation that I don’t appear on, so screw it. It’s so good that I’d actually be doing more of a disservice if I didn’t talk about than I would if I did, so I will. I mean, I am. Or something.
Anyway…the veritable bounty of delightful tracks onTiRRR4 were curated by radio hosts Carl Cafarelli and Dana Bonn, who spin records and gab about ‘em every Sunday evening in Syracuse, NY (and online, too). Most all of it is either rare/hard to find or previously unreleased, and the disc is positively crawling with great tunes from accomplished titans of the power pop genre (Rubinoos, Smithereens, Paul Collins’ Beat), indie faves (the Gripweeds, Chris von Sneidern, Lisa Mychols, P. Hux), lesser-known-but-still-cool acts (Stepford Knives, The Rulers, Michael Oliver) and Cafarelli/Bonn fave raves (the Flashcubes, Ronnie Dark, 1.4.5.).
Personal picks would be Ray Paul’s insistently rockin’ “I Need Your Love Tonight” (the best thing he’s ever done, to these ears), Pop Co-Op’s “You Don’t Love Me Anymore” (sounding like a long lost Walker Brothers track), the bubbly “I’m On Your Side” by Circe Link & Christian Nesmith, The Rulers’ “I Want My Ramones Records Back” (who wouldn’t?), Lisa Mychols’ “Almost Didn’t Happen” and The Legal Matters’ faithful take of Teenage Fanclub’s “Don’t Look Back.” But really, nothing here is less than very good, making this one of the finest pure pop compilations I’ve heard in years. Kudos to Kool Kat Musik for releasing this gem. Grade: A
(And John added in a separate note to me: Couldn't let it go without reviewing it because it's SO. DAMNED GOOD.)
In the words of The Flamin' Groovies: Thanks, John!
John's Goldmine review is the fifth TIRnRR # 4 review we've seen, and they've all been positive: Power Pop NewsAlan Haber's Pure Pop RadioStrange Things Are Happening/Thee Psychedelicatessen, and Powerpopaholic. If you see another review of TIRnRR # 4 somewhere out there, please let us know. If you know of someone who'd be interested in reviewing TIRnRR # 4, start buggin 'em now! If you know of a radio station that might be interested in initiating saturation airplay of TIRnRR # 4, feel free to pester politely. Our Convenient Collection Of TIRnRR # 4 Hype will continue to be updated as we go along.
Most importantly: BUY THE CD! Order your friends to buy the CD, too. They'll listen to you. You're cool! Just like John Borack.
You can support this blog by becoming a patron on Patreon: Fund me, baby! 

Saturday, July 8, 2017

MARK DOYLE: Out Of The Past

My review of Mark Doyle's Out Of The Past appeared in the September 7, 2001 issue of Goldmine.


Instrumental whiz Mark Doyle first achieved notoriety in the early '70s as guitarist for Jukin' Bone (formerly Free Will), a solid rock group that released some records on RCA, but never could snag the big-time brass ring. Doyle went on to a number of studio gigs, both as a producer and player; his resume includes work with Meat Loaf and New Kids On The Block, and he co-wrote a song called "Five Personalities" for The Richards (a song also on the next album by The Flashcubes). He also worked extensively with former Jukin' Bone singer Jumpin' Joe Whiting in a variety of live and studio projects, and has begun issuing solo albums, exploring and expanding his craft as a studio multi-instrumentalist.

Doyle's second solo effort, Out Of The Past, is an instrumental workout on the idea of gettin' your kicks in 1966. Doyle uses a mix of covers and original tunes to interpret the vibe of mid-to-late '60s rock 'n' roll, with roots stretching back to the '50s. Although there is only one Yardbirds cover ("Still I'm Sad"), it's the spirit of that group that most clearly pervades Out Of The Past, its tracks subtly recalling the work of Yardbirds guitar god Jeff Beck even when Doyle is playing The Doors' "Crystal Ship." For those of us less-than-enamored with Jim Morrison--a minority opinion, sure--Doyle's take can even be considered an improvement on the original.

The album opens with Doyle's cover of The Doors' "Moonlight Drive" and concludes with his take on the Tommy Edwards hit "It's All In The Game." Doyle's own title tune is both the album's simplest track and its most effective, conjuring the fuzz-tinged image of great mid '60s singles, LP tracks, and B-sides with remarkable, delightful efficiency. A medley of The Rolling Stones' "Paint It, Black" with The Beatles' "Eleanor Rigby" works far better than you'd expect, and Doyle's version of The Beatles' "Tomorrow Never Knows" simply soars. Alongside these rock nuggets, Doyle eclectically places covers of  The Jazz Crusaders' "Young Rabbits" and Nat King Cole's "The Lonely One," plus a version of Cream's "Politician"--jeez, try to find that mix of artists within a single radio format!

But, you know, such a mix might have been conceivable circa '66, when Top 40 radio regularly played The Count V and Frank Sinatra on the same station. Out Of The Past offers a heady, accomplished tribute to that time, and succeeds as one talented artist's reinterpretation of what an exciting era it was.

Out Of The Past is but one of many fine recordings available directly from Mark at markdoyle.com. The above-mentioned recording of The Richards' "Five Personalities" is available on the compilation CD This Is Rock 'n' Roll Radio, Volume 3, and The Flashcubes' version was released on their 2001 album Brilliant.

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

Thursday, May 18, 2017

THE FLASHCUBES: Sportin' Wood

I don't remember writing this review of The Flashcubes' 2012 album Sportin' Wood: The Flashcubes Play The Songs Of Roy Wood, but I stumbled across it this morning and figured it needed an audience. The album went on to win the SAMMY (Syracuse Area Music Award) for Best Rock Album, and The Flashcubes were inducted into the SAMMYS Hall Of Fame in 2014. I just saw them play a live set in Rochester on Record Store Day this year, and I'm looking forward to their big 40th anniversary show at Funk 'N Waffles in Syracuse on September 1st. My all-time favorite Flashcubes song, "No Promise," will appear in a remixed version of the original 4-track on our own forthcoming compilation CD, This Is Rock 'n' Roll Radio, Volume 4.




The Flashcubes' new album, Sportin' Wood: The Flashcubes Play The Songs Of Roy Wood, is a tribute album in the truest sense. Rather than a self-aggrandizing set of covers that tries to distance itself from its original inspiration, or a slavish stack of pale imitations that make you long to hear the original instead, Sportin' Wood finds the magic, incandescent balance between spark and flame. It makes sense: an underrated but legendary power pop group takes on songs written by an underrated but legendary pop genius, and everyone wins. Roy Wood fans will delight in hearing The Flashcubes salute their hero's work in fine fashion; Flashcubes fans will be thrilled to hear a new 'Cubes album that's as irresistible as they always are. And anyone not yet familiar with either Roy Wood or The Flashcubes will find themselves an eager fan of both. Brilliant move.

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Thursday, May 4, 2017

THE SUPERS: Spklanng!

My review of Spklanng! by The Supers appeared in the May 4th, 2001 issue of Golldmine. My apologies for the weird formatting (the result of cutting and pasting from another website).


The Supers

Spklanng!

Permanent Press (PPCD 52716)

Man, if one of these tunes doesn't get played on the radio, then there's
simply no damned hope for pop music anymore. It's an unfortunate fact of
life nowadays that the vision of pop music championed by fans of melodic
rock n' roll is rarely actually popular. Reviled by smug critics who
wouldn't know a decent hook if it roughed 'em up and left 'em for dead and
ignored by an indifferent public that simply doesn't know, pure pop has
become, incongruously, a cult taste. It's being played to an insular
audience that can't fathom why this stuff isn't as massively popular as its
proud POP! label implies it should be. It means that a lot of fine pop
records, eminently worthy of a wider audience, remain largely unheard by all
but a discerning few of the faithful.

Here's hoping The Supers break out of that whole thing. On the band's
debut album Spklanng!, the Toronto-based group shows an easy command of
classic pop style, without seeming the least bit retro. Originally issued in
Canada last year (the U.S. version differs by two tracks) , the deceptively
mild-mannered Spklanng! fights a never-ending battle for truth , justice and
the rockin' -pop way. At the risk of belaboring the comic-book analogy, it
must be said that The Supers' efforts border on the heroic.

The lead-off track, "Secret," is tailor-made for contemporary hit
radio:while that could certainly be interpreted as a slam, given CHR's
current penchant for bland boy "bands," "Secret" is a perfectly inviting,
mid-tempo gem that merits some serious mainstream airplay. "Turn," "I Don't
Want to Sleep" and "A Stitch in Time" are similarly radio-ready, with
"Turn", in particular adding considerable oomph to the mix. "So Many Crooks,
" "Luck and Skill" and "Pill", while perhaps not ideal singles, add to the
overall vibe of a pleasant, engaging record that anyone with a fondness for
hooks 'n' harmonies would want to investigate.

Spklanng! does threaten to drag a bit in the middle, as the back-to-back
play of "Only You" and "1+1=3" slows the proceedings down to a sleepwalk.
But even "Only You" has a subtle undercurrent of buoyancy that lifts it
above Backstreet Boys status. It's enough to restore your faith in pop
music. Maybe it's even enough to restore the pop to popular music. Get these
guys on the radio, where they belong.

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Saturday, April 22, 2017

PAUL REVERE & THE RAIDERS: Midnight Ride, Goin' To Memphis, Hard 'N' Heavy (With Marshmallow), and Alias Pink Puzz

My review of these Paul Revere & the Raiders reissues originally appeared in the November 3rd, 2000 issue of Goldmine.






PAUL REVERE & THE RAIDERS

Midnight Ride
Sundazed (SC 6135)
Goin' To Memphis
Sundazed (SC 6136)
Hard 'N' Heavy (With Marshmallow)
Sundazed (SC 6137)
Alias Pink Puzz
Sundazed (SC 6138)

This well-received series of Paul Revere & the Raiders reissues, courtesy of the good folks at Sundazed, continues with four more titles, each supplemented by non-LP bonus tracks. The label's previous Raiders reissues--Just Like Us!, Spirit Of '67, Revolution!, and Something Happening--have already proven Sundazed to be a more than worthy curator of the Raiders' legacy, and these new additions prove it all over again.

Paul Revere & the Raiders were, undeniably, a singles act. The most potent doses of Raiders magic were generally reserved for seven-inch slabs o' vinyl, designed to be played back at 45 rpm over teeny-weeny AM radio speakers. Most casual rock 'n' roll fans would be perfectly happy with just a decent collection of the Raiders' singles and would never have the merest inclination to dig more deeply into the Raiders' canon.

But--and this is not nearly as recognized as it oughtta be--the Raiders were also more than just a singles band, Maybe it was the funny uniforms or the TV exposure or the group image that seemed more goofy 'n' grinning than surly 'n' snarling, but the Raiders are too rarely credited as the kickass, punk-tinged rock 'n' roll band they really were.

Imagine if the December's Children/Aftermath-era Rolling Stones had been the house band on a daily Dick Clark pop TV show, and you can conjure up an approximation of the Raiders' dichotomy (though even that example fails to take into account singer Mark Lindsay's accomplishment as a rock 'n' roll singer to rival Mick Jagger and as the sort of charismatic, swoon-friendly pop star that Jagger may have never been interested in being). Paul Revere & the Raiders cut some truly awesome singles, among the best ever made; they also, almost incidentally, made some pretty damn good albums.

The Midnight Ride album from 1966 was the Raiders' third album, but the first to spotlight original songs rather than covers. It was also the final album by the Raiders lineup made famous on Dick Clark's Where The Action Is! TV series: singer/sax player Mark Lindsay, keyboardist Paul Revere, bassist Phil "Fang" Volk, guitarist Drake Levin, and drummer Mike "Smitty" Smith. The original liner notes billed it as "an American Rubber Soul," and while it fell far short of that particular goal, it was nonetheless a solid effort. The Sundazed disc renders a previous CD reissue by Sony permanently irrelevant, as Sundazed adds bonus tracks, improved mastering, and interesting liner note essays from Volk and Levin.

Although only two of the tunes on Midnight Ride come from outside songwriters, it must be conceded that those are also the two best tracks. Barry Mann and Cynthia Weil's "Kicks" gave the Raiders their first Top 10 hit (# 4), and it remains an eternally compelling single and the greatest anti-drug record of all time. Tommy Boyce and Bobby Hart's "I'm Not Your Stepping Stone," though it would ultimately become better known as a Monkees song, is as cantankerous and captivating a rock 'n' roll swagger as you're ever likely to find. (The Monkees' version came out shortly after Midnight Ride, effectively ending the Raiders' plan to release it as the follow-up single to "Kicks.")

That said, most of the original Raiders tunes on Midnight Ride are still several cuts above mere chopped liver, particularly Smith and Levin's "There's Always Tomorrow" (boppin' pop with a barely discernible country tinge), Lindsay and Revere's "There She Goes," and a remake of Lindsay and Revere's "Louie, Go Home" (not as raucous as the group's 1964 non-LP single version but subtler, more hypnotic, and arguably [to say the least--we're in the minority here!] better.)

"All I Really Need Is You" is reminiscent of a cross between The Yardbirds and The Monkees, and "Take A Look At Yourself" benefits from a dynamic guitar hook. Even the instrumental "Melody For An Unknown Girl"--replete with a Tiger Beat-demographic spoken intro from teen heartthrob Lindsay--is amiably sweet and agreeable. "Little Girl In The Fourth Row," on the other hand, is the sort of unexceptional ballad that would eventually become the hallmark of your standard Partridge Family album track.

Bonus tracks on Midnight Ride include "Shake It Up," a no-frills jam that was originally the non-LP B-side of "Kicks," an Italian language version of "Little Girl In The Fourth Row," and both sides of a Chevrolet promo 45, "SS 396"/"Corvair Baby."

Goin' To Memphis is an anomaly among Raiders albums. Although credited as a Raiders album, this is just Lindsay and producer Chips Moman's house band at American Recording Studios in Memphis, doing a mix of soul covers and new songs in a similar Memphis soul vein. By this time (1968), of course, it wasn't unusual for Lindsay (who'd become the Raiders' producer, following the departure of original producer Terry Melcher) to create Raiders records in the studio with whomever was available, whether it was the actual Raiders band or not. Still, this album stands apart from other Raiders albums, with Moman clearly calling the shots and Lindsay in a supporting role.

And it ain't bad. Although Lindsay is neither Sam nor Dave, his "Soul Man" is at least credible, and his take on The Fantastic Johnny C's hit "Boogaloo Down Broadway" is likewise agreeable. If the mere notion of Lindsay attempting to sing soul music gives you warts...well, it's unlikely that anything said here is going to change your opinion. But Lindsay is convincing as a Memphis soul man, on a par with Alex Chilton (Moman also produced Chilton's work with The Box Tops), if not quite Wilson Pickett. Freddy Weller's "Cry On My Shoulder" and Lindsay's "Goin' To Memphis" are appropriately soulful highlights, and the rockin' "Peace Of Mind" is included in both LP and mono single versions.

(The other bonus tracks are "Go Get It" and "How Can I Help You," two previously unissued Lindsay tunes from the Memphis sessions, the latter of which absolutely should have been included on the original LP. And Lindsay's liner-note essay reveals that the album's cover was done by the Hanna-Barbera cartoon studio, at a time when a Raiders TV cartoon series was apparently under consideration. This is roughly the same time that the H-B studio was negotiating with bubblegum kingpins Kasenetz & Katz for a Capt. Groovy And His Bubblegum Army cartoon show. Though neither the Raiders nor Capt. Groovy would ever find a Saturday morning cartoon berth, it's interesting to note that Hanna-Barbera was so actively looking to come up with an effective answer to rival studio Filmation's multimedia success with The Archies.)

The title of Hard 'N' Heavy (With Marshmallow) pokes fun at the Raiders' image, while delivering a confident set of rock 'n' roll music that largely belies that image. The sprightly pop tunes "Mr. Sun, Mr. Moon" and "Cinderella Sunshine" (each heard here in both LP and single versions) and some goofy between-song tomfoolery satisfy the sweet 'n' sticky requirements; the bulk of the album is, if not quite hard 'n' heavy, nonetheless cocksure, swaggering, aggressive, and solid as the Rock of freaking Gibraltar.

"Time After Time," "Ride On My Shoulder," and "Out On The Road" offer a consistent Stonesy groove, with the two former tunes mixing in equal parts Southern California-style pop, and the latter overtly referencing a string of Raiders singles. "Trishalana" is a ballad that could have fit on the Stones' Aftermath album, and the whole package adds up to a head-shakin' album that is a decidedly underrated part of the Raiders' legacy. Bonus tracks include a previously unissued vocal version of "Theme From It's Happening," the original version of the Pontiac promo "Judge GTO Breakaway" (based on "Time After Time"), and an unlisted commercial for a Mattel doll called "Swingy," sung to the tune of "Mr. Sun, Mr. Moon."

Finally, the story of Alias Pink Puzz is legendary among Raiders fans. Reportedly fed up with (ahem) "hipper" FM radio stations snubbing Raiders records because of the group's perceived teeny-bopper image, the group's people released a copy of the song "Let Me!" to an influential L.A. FM DJ, telling him it was a demo by a new underground group, Pink Puzz, freshly signed to Columbia. (Years later, another Columbia-associated act, The Rollers--nee The Bay City Rollers--tried a similar trick with its 1981 album Ricochet.) The on-air buzz for the Puzz was as hot as hot could be, but only for about a day; when the ruse was discovered, the humor-challenged DJ once again consigned the Raiders permanently to the discard bin.

"Let Me!," a raucous explosion of primal horniness, is the most incendiary-sounding track on Alias Pink Puzz, an album that otherwise strays much farther from the Raiders' usual Rolling Stones template; only "Down In Amsterdam" seems remotely Stonesy, while "The Original Handy Man" is earthy, Memphis-bred soul, and the rest of the album is largely concerned with a more ethereal sound and feel. It succeeds admirably on its own terms--the 5:29 "I Don't Know" is positively sway-worthy--while sounding like no other Paul Revere & the Raiders album up to that point.

In fact, Alias Pink Puzz was the final original album credited to Paul Revere & the Raiders; by the end of the '60s, the name seemed a quaint relic of a bygone period in pop music, both a mere half-decade old and a million years gone in the self-consciously hip milieu of 1970. And the just-plain Raiders they became. (The CD adds the single version of "Let Me!," plus demo versions of "Too Much Talk" and "Get Out Of My Mind," and an alternate version of "I Don't Know." There are also a couple of radio ads for the album.)

Now, Sundazed needs to rescue Here They Come! from Sony's clutches, and to get its mitts on the Indian Reservation and Country Wine albums, and maybe even a collection of the pre-Columbia single sides. Lindsay himself has already reissued the 1970 Collage album, though a more widely-available version of that would be welcome, too. For liberty! For justice! For Paul Revere & the Raiders!

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