Thursday, June 15, 2017

Iron Maiden Concert-- 6/13/2017--in Nashville, TN

Iron Maiden, and opening act Ghost, entertained Nashville on Tuesday night (and I was present).  Ghost opened the show, with a roughly 45 minute set, playing the following songs:
  1. Square Hammer  


The whole Satan "Schtick" was a bit much.  I wasn't really offended, because I couldn't understand most of what was being said.  I just thought the costumes and make-up were silly, more than cool.  There was a moment when the lead singer was asking the crowd if they would sing along....Lead Singer: "will you sing the song with us"........Crowd: "YESSS!!!".......Lead Singer:  "Will you sing the song for Satan".........Crowd: "?".........Lead Singer: "That one not so much, huh?"

The Ghost music was good.  It had a pretty good groove, I thought the bass player and the drummer were particularly good.  After a few songs though, It felt sort of repetitive, and I actually felt myself getting bored by the 5th or 6th song.  (This may be down to the fact that I was there to see Iron Maiden and didn't really know much about Ghost.  A co-worker made the comment that she had seen Ghost in person and they scared the $%#@ out of her.  I wasn't scared, just ready for them to wrap it up, so Iron Maiden could have the stage.)






After roughly 45 minutes of breaking down the Ghost set and putting up the Iron Maiden stage...the real show began.  Iron Maiden played a total of 15 songs, they are as follows:

If Eternity Should Fail
Speed of Light
Wrathchild
Children of the Damned
Death or Glory
The Red and the Black
The Trooper
Powerslave
The Great Unknown
The Book of Souls
Fear of the Dark
Iron Maiden

Encore:
The Number of the Beast
Blood Brothers
Wasted Years








Iron Maiden may be getting older, but they can still put on a great show.  Bruce had the crowd eating out of his hand all night and the musicianship and vocals were spot on, and top notch all night.  Nicko's drumming being a stand out for me.  The dancing of Dave and Janick could use a little work though (Janick jumping around in a fit of hyper activity and Dave was doing some weird two-step waltz thing).



Adrian Smith has always been a favorite guitarist of mine and it was great to see him in person and watch him play his solos to perfection.  Steve Harris did the Steve thing, he looked and acted exactly like every video clip I have ever seen of Maiden.  Steve is an amazing bassist.

Overall I thought it was a great show. 










Friday, June 2, 2017





The return of Mike Mesaros! 


After 12 years away, Mike returned to play a gig with his old band The Smithereens.  The Smithereens were one of the GREAT bands of the 1980's and 1990's, they have been active as a band for more than 30 years and still have the power to excite an audience.  Mike left in the mid 2000's to "raise his kids"....adding that "it just didn't make sense for me to be going on the road anymore."


Mike plans to play at least four shows with the band this year and there is talk of doing some new recording...possibly for a new album.  (As a Smithereens fan, I hope that is true.)


If you have never listened to the Smithereens, do yourself a favor and download some of their music.  Any of their albums are worthy, but Especially for You, Green Thoughts and Blow Up (my personal favorite) seem to be the stand-outs.  They recorded an excellent version of Tommy, that I still enjoy listening to. 


WELCOME BACK MIKE!!!

Sunday, April 9, 2017

"Take it All" recorded by Badfinger, written by Pete Ham

"Take it All"
By Pete Ham
Recorded by Badfinger for their album Straight Up 1971

In a way, the sun has shone on me
Makes it easy to make it hard
Take an inch, take a yard, take it all
I don't need it at all
Any day, the sun could shine on you
Makes it silly to make it bad
Take it good, take it glad, take it all
CHORUS:
Don't you know there's a stronger thing keeping us together
Don't you know there's a song to sing
Sing on, let the feeling take you high
[organ solo (Pete Ham)]
CHORUS
Any day, the sun will shine on you
Makes it silly to take it bad
Make it good, take it glad, take it all
I don't need it at all
I don't want it at all
No, no, no.

The story behind the song:  At the Concert for Bangladesh, organized by Ex-Beatle George Harrison, Pete was asked to sing "Here Comes the Sun" as a duet with George.  Supposedly, this did not sit well with Joey Molland, Badfinger's other guitarist/singer. There has been some speculation that "Take it All" was written by Pete as a response to Joey's jealous teasing about the event. 


Pete Ham was a kind and gentle soul, and in reading the lyrics he seems to be making a plea to his friend that everything is cool.  Joey has stated in multiple interviews that he and Pete always got along and rarely, if ever, fought.
Joey Molland is a very talented singer/guitarist who wrote and recorded many great songs while a member of Badfinger.  Joey is the last of the classic Badfinger line-up still alive.  Joey continues to make music and tour to this day.


Badfinger's history is a very sad and tragic story.


Thursday, March 23, 2017

Top 5 albums---Bottom 5 albums of Paul McCartney

I have been a fan of Paul McCartney for almost 40 years.  I first heard "Let 'em In" when I was about 8 years old, and from then on I was hooked.




In honor of the Flowers in the Dirt re-release Friday, I thought I would list MY favorite McCartney albums and my least favorite McCartney albums........even though the least favorite do have a few shining moments......It's Paul, even when he's off he's still better than most.


(These choices are NOT based on critical reviews, or ideas that other people think I should have...these are my opinions.....most of you will have different opinions.....what are your top 5, what are your bottom five?)




Starting with the TOP 5:


1. Flaming Pie
Jeff Lynne produced this truly outstanding album.  Steve Miller helps out on several songs, Ringo Starr adds drums to a number of tracks, and even Jeff Lynne jumps in to play some guitar. 
Favorite Tracks: The World Tonight, If You Wanna, Young Boy, Calico Skies...all of them...GREAT Record.







2. Band on the Run
Paul McCartney produced this album, credited to Wings...although, at this point Wings consisted of only 3 members, Paul, Linda and the steadfast Denny Laine.  Paul and Denny performed most of the music, with Linda adding back-up vocals.  Paul decided to record in Lagos, Nigeria....Henry McCullough, lead guitar, had been thinking about quitting...and chose to leave the group rather than travel to Nigeria.  Drummer Denny Seiwell also chose to leave the group rather than make the trip to Africa. Wings arrived in Africa to a studio that wasn't finished and strict warnings not to be out after dark....Paul and Linda, ignoring the advice about being out after dark, were mugged and faced a very scary situation that could have ended with their murders. Paul soldiered on, with Denny Laine's help, and created Wings' most enduring album.
Favorite Track: Band on the Run, Jet, No Words, Helen wheels and Nineteen Hundred and Eighty Five.






3. Flowers in the Dirt

Paul McCartney in the late 1980's decided it was time to tour again.  He wanted to have a good solid album, with songs that he could play on tour.  He called on friends Elvis Costello and David Gilmour for a little assistance making this fine album.  Costello helped out with the writing and Dave lent his guitar skills to the song "We Got Married".  Paul also put a new band together featuring Linda, Hammish Stuart (Average White Band), Robby McIntosh (The Pretenders), Paul "Wix" Wickens and Chris Witten.  The results are a good solid album, with many enjoyable songs.
Favorite Tracks: My Brave Face, Rough Ride, You Want Her Too, Don't be Careless Love, Figure of Eight and How Many People.






4. Off the Ground
Some people refer to this as Flowers in the Dirt part 2.  It was created by the same band around the same time and was toured worldwide.  The only new player, was drummer Blair Cunningham (The Pretenders).  Chris Witten decided to move on to another project.  There are some excellent songs here.  I was able to see Paul in Atlanta during the tour for this album and the show was great.
Favorite Tracks: Off the Ground, Get out of My Way, Mistress and Maid, Peace in the Neighborhood and Looking for Changes.




5. Run Devil Run



The title was taken from a drugstore Paul was passing in Atlanta, Ga.  This is essentially an oldies album, with a few originals thrown in.  This was Paul's first album after the death of his wife Linda.  Instead of doing a sad I can't get out of bed type album , he chose to do something upbeat.  Again getting help from friends, including Dave Gilmour-who played lead guitar on the album and Ian Paice (of Deep Purple fame) adding drums, Paul gives us  a very up tempo and exciting album.  One of the songs  included in the set was a song Linda liked, called Lonesome Town, which was a hit for Ricky Nelson in 1958. Paul and the group played songs from the album live at the Cavern Club.
Favorite Tracks:  No Other Baby, Run Devil Run, Brown Eyed Handsome Man, What it Is, and I Got  Stung.





MY LEAST Favorite Paul McCartney Albums.


In reverse order (My least favorite album will be listed last at #1)

5. Wings Wild Life- The most repeated complaint---the album was rushed.  It was recorded in two weeks and sent out....Bip Bop and Mumbo....drivel..........you were in the Beatles man!

4. Pipes of Peace- Tug of War left overs. 

3. Driving Rain-Working with a new band, mourning his departed wife and celebrating new love....didn't care much for most of the songs

2. Memory Almost Full-Nostalgia filled.....The end of the end is just depressing. 

1. Kisses on the Bottom-BLEH!!! I hated this album. One of the worst albums I've ever listened to.  My Valentine, with Eric Clapton on guitar is the only track I will even listen to from this ill-advised train wreck.  (If you want to hear Cole Porter songs, etc...try Ringo's album Sentimental Journey, it is much more satisfying...the songs are sung the way they were intended to be sung.) 

Paul,
No more jazz.....EVER.

Thanks.












Wednesday, March 22, 2017

Brit Floyd

If you are a fan of Pink Floyd---you will enjoy the Brit Floyd Show.  They play Pink Floyd music note for note, and the vocalists are pretty darn close to sounding like Dave and Roger.  I have seen them twice.  I was in the audience for the show in Chattanooga, TN yesterday and they were absolutely amazing. 

Not only did Brit Floyd sound fantastic the light show was incredible. 



The ladies who add backing vocals were also very good.  Angela Cervantes (pictured) did the solo for "Great Gig in the Sky" and was given a standing ovation.....which she very much deserved.  I was really blown away by her performance.
Damian Darlington is the Musical director and guitarist/vocalist.  He played some amazing solos.
 
 Angela again.
 




Ian Cattell, plays bass guitar and takes turns with Damian on lead vocals.  Great bass playing awesome vocals.


 
 
This is truly an outstanding show, by a group of very talented individuals.  I highly recommend.
 

Tuesday, June 10, 2014

Top 5 music movies

I realize that everybody has different taste in music and movies.  Many people would argue with these choices, but these are my favorites ranked in order 1-5, starting at the top.  These are movies about music or built around music.  These are not documentaries or concert films...we will get to those soon.  No reviews, just a list.  

#1--THIS IS SPINAL TAP


















#2--THAT THING YOU DO!














#3--A MIGHTY WIND














#4--A HARD DAY'S NIGHT














#5--THE RUTLES: "ALL YOU NEED IS CASH"















Sunday, June 8, 2014

25 Dollar Rock Band

A friend of mine sent me the above picture in a text message.  It was followed by the statement "Choose your five and then let me know who you chose....so I can blast your list."  Ahhh friends.  I have no idea of the origin of the this list, it's one of those things people pass around the internet for fun.

Here are the five I chose:

Neil Peart-10
Dave Gilmour-7
John Paul Jones-1 
Bono-3
Tony Iommi-4

Who would you choose?



Saturday, June 7, 2014

GREATEST ROCK SONGS EVER!!!!!

50 Greatest Rock Songs Ever

Planet Rock---Greatest Rock Songs Ever

Rolling Stone--Greatest Rock Songs Ever

The links above are but a few, I'm sure there are many other lists out there that proclaim they have the "Greatest Rock Songs Ever".  The truth is....everybody has differing opinions( and different taste in music), so everybody would have a different greatest rock songs list.

My "list" changes often, but as of right now...today....June 7, 2014...the following would be included in my top ten GREATEST ROCK SONGS EVER list.....................(in no particular order)


  • "Childhood's End"-Pink Floyd
  • "Baba O'Riley"-The Who
  • "The Spirit of Radio"-Rush
  • "You Shook Me All Night Long"-AC/DC
  • "Guns on the Roof"-The Clash
  • "Gypsy Eyes"-Jimi Hendrix
  • "All Day and All of the Night"-The Kinks
  • "Out on the Tiles"-Led Zeppelin
  • "Jumpin' Jack Flash-The Rolling Stones
  • "Seven Seas of Rhye"-Queen
Alternates...
"Daytripper"-The Beatles
"Peace Frog"-The Doors
"Vertigo"-U2
"Paranoid"-Black Sabbath










Tuesday, June 12, 2012

Putting the Beatles Back together...Just for Fun.

I have been putting the Beatles solo songs together into "Beatles Albums" since I was a teenager.  Time wasted?  Maybe, but I just wanted more Beatles.  I know other fans have done the same.  For Christmas 2011 My wife gave me a book called Let's Put the Beatles Back Together Again 1970-2010  (below).  I read it and was fascinated by it.  I didn't always agree with how the author put the songs together......so I did my own.  I created 10 Albums using Beatles Solo material (I have shared my 10 albums in the Blog entries that follow). 

The Book:


Book Description


October 1, 2010
 
Indispensable for any discerning Beatles fan, this book shows that beyond the 1960s lie four decades of Beatles masterworks waiting to be discovered and savored. How so? In the tradition of White Album individuation, the Beatles can be said to have carried on from 1970 right through 2010. Take only the best of John, Paul, George and Ringo from that era, thoughtfully assemble it into Beatles format album-sets and you basically have what the Beatles would have produced had they stayed intact. Simply imagine that a new manager quickly replacing Allen Klein had convinced them that, though they had become ill-disposed to recording together, they should still release together after recording more-or-less separately (as on much of the White Album and on numerous Beatles tracks starting with Yesterday). The resulting listening experience proves an extraordinary and worthy extension of the bona fide Beatles' works. The author has painstakingly put together and tweaked such sets over several years. In this book he offers a rationale for retrospectively superimposing upon the Beatles an alternate history that could plausibly have generated the sets as real-life products. And he provides juicy backgrounders for all the selected tracks. These tracks can be downloaded individually from online music providers and skimmed from solo-years best-of CDs, so as to create one's own Beatles Releasing Collective (BRC) sets on CD-Rs or iPod playlists--either duplicating the author's sets or customizing them to personal taste. For Beatles fans, it's an upbeat and relatively inexpensive hobby for trying economic times, not to mention a way to wrest control of the second half of the Beatles' legacy from the suits. It's worth it. Don't wait decades for it to dawn on record executives that this is what comes next. It's the natural and indispensible sequel to the digital re-masterings of the 1960s Beatles works released Sept. 9, 2009, those constituting a quantum leap in listenability. And we have had a great year of listening. But now it's time to move the whole Beatles experience further along that long and winding road. Because, with all due deference to one of the 20th century's greatest artists, the dream lived on, past the death of Lennon, even past that of George Harrison. It was never over. [Note on new 'Stripped Down' version of 'Double Fantasy': Make this your source for 'I'm Losing You', 'Cleanup Time', '(Just Like) Starting Over' and 'Beautiful Boy'. Implement appropriate fade-outs and transfer to 'MoonDogs' set. Peeling away several layers of over-production improves these tracks substantially.]

Editorial Reviews

Review

“This is the most oddly compelling music book I have read in years, and if you have even a small interest in the Beatles or music from 1970 on, you owe it to yourself to get it. If you are a fan, run, don’t walk. It’s that interesting.
The author conducts a nearly 500-page thought experiment: he imagines an alternative history after 1969 in which the Beatles didn’t stay together, but didn’t exactly split up either. They agreed to release the best of their solo efforts under the Beatles banner. So what he does, essentially, is kill off the weak stuff and the material that just wasn’t very ‘Beatle-y’ and turns what’s left into a series of Beatles albums.
He makes a compelling argument for why a) this isn’t such a stretch b) doing it his way restores the post-breakup material to a place of honor.
I got the book late yesterday and stayed up way too late reading.
[Y]ou can do everything he does yourself, provided you have the music in your library. What I like best about it, so far, is that he finishes the Beatles story as it should have been finished--and even though his conceit is fanciful, his approach is solidly grounded in reality.
Highly, highly recommended.”
--
New York State’s WWNY-TV news director Scott Atkinson

“[A Beatles 1970-2010] is what Walker has created, and I agree with him, that you’ll rarely listen to the individual solo albums again. I have a full set of his suggested compilations and they are superb. I suggest that you follow this train of thought, get into the background of each solo track, album and songwriter, and then make your own ‘Beatles’ albums. It’s well worth it. Go on, dig out your back catalogues and Put the Beatles Back Together Again.”
--
British Beatles Fan Club Magazine (David Bedford, author of Liddypool)

"[I]t's a pleasure to welcome [a Beatles book] that doesn't tread in the footsteps of what's gone before...[W]hat Walker is proposing...works well...He is both a good writer and a good researcher..."
--BBC Radio Merseyside's Spencer Leigh

"Very interesting new concept based on...the treasure trove of music from the solo Beatles."
-- 'The Fest for Beatles Fans' Mark Lapidos

"The author makes the Beatles breakup a way to revise their catalog...He puts a new spin on [the breakup]...The premise of the book is to replace Allen Klein (which will certainly get the book fans for that reason alone)...Walker's logic behind the [resulting] new albums makes for a 'what if' scenario that creates, at the least, something to consider. "
--Beatles Examiner's Steve Marinucci

“Wow, I’m really impressed. It’s so big and smart and well written...a very great unadulterated pleasure...[Walker’s] really done it.”
--‘Toronto Today Magazine’ editor-in-chief Eric McMillan

About the Author

Pop-culture analyst Jeff Walker's work has appeared in the Globe and Mail, the Toronto Star, the Financial Times of Canada, Frank, Piranha, Skeptical Inquirer, B.C Skeptic, Free Inquiry, Books in Canada, NeWest, Liberty, Humanist in Canada, Penthouse and Saturday Night. He has also written for the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation's 'Ideas' and for a pop-music radio station. He previously published The Ayn Rand Cult (Chicago: Open Court, 1999), favorably reviewed in newspapers, magazines and online zines in the the U.S., Canada, Germany and the U.K. The author resides in Toronto, Canada, with his spouse and their two children.
 
 
 

#1 "Real Love"

Album Title: Real Love


Lead Singer:
Paul: 2, 6, 9 (Instrumental-Paul's Song), 10, 12, 14
John: 1, 4, 5, 7, 11, 16
George: 3, 15
Ringo: 8, 13

#2 "Another Day"

Album Title: Another Day


Lead Singer:
Paul: 4, 6, 9, 11, 13, 17
John: 1, 3, 8, 10, 12, 16
George: 2, 7, 15
Ringo: 5, 14