Archive for October 3rd, 2014
“The Who Hits 50!”
Roger Daltrey and Pete Townshend, the last men standing of the original Who, have confirmed that they won’t be spending their 50th anniversary lying down. The Who will be embarking on a celebratory jaunt, The Who Hits 50, beginning in November in Glasgow, and will be releasing a double-disc retrospective to tie in with the tour. The new compilation is set for U.K. release on October 27 and U.S. release one day later on October 28.
The Who Hits 50 follows such past Who anthologies as 2002’s The Ultimate Collection, a 35-track collection on 2 CDs, 2004’s 20-song Then and Now, and 2009’s Greatest Hits with 19 songs. This set is more expansive than The Ultimate Collection, offering two CDs packed with 42 songs including the premiere release of “Be Lucky,” the band’s first recording since 2006’s studio album Endless Wire. The set begins in 1964 with the single A-side “Zoot Suit” from Daltrey, Townshend, John Entwistle and Keith Moon as The High Numbers, and other than “Be Lucky,” concludes with “It’s Not Enough” from Endless Wire. In between, the collection features songs from every one of the band’s studio albums plus various singles, tracks from compilations and a live recording from 1970’s seminal Live at Leeds. You can expect the standard fare with “Pinball Wizard,” “My Generation,” “Anyway, Anyhow, Anywhere,” “Bargain,” “Baba O’Riley,” “Won’t Get Fooled Again” and “Who Are You” plus comparatively deeper cuts like The Who’s 1967 non-LP single of The Rolling Stones’ “The Last Time,” the Entwistle-penned “Trick of the Light” from Who Are You, and the band’s final U.K. Top 40 single, “Athena” from It’s Hard.
Roger Daltrey told Rolling Stone earlier this year that the band is likely to return to the studio to cut more music; however, he believes the anniversary tour could be The Who’s final large-scale outing. The vocalist was quoted as confessing, “We intend to go on doing music until we drop, but we have to be realistic about our age…The touring is incredibly grinding on the body and we have to draw a line in the sand somewhere. This will be the last old-fashioned, big tour.”
After the jump, we have the complete track listing for you with discography, plus pre-order links! Read the rest of this entry »
Good Vibes: Gary Burton’s First Albums Collected On “Conception”
Since his introduction in 1961 on RCA Victor as The New Vibe Man in Town, vibraphonist Gary Burton has carved out one of the most prolific careers in jazz. Today, seven-time Grammy recipient Burton is recognized as one of the pioneers of jazz fusion as well as an innovative stylist (with his four-mallet technique rather than the more typical two-mallet) and an influential educator. Following his 1961 debut, Burton made some fascinating, embryonic records – like The Groovy Sound of Music, a set dedicated to the Rodgers and Hammerstein tunes from the Broadway musical – and Tennessee Firebird, with a couple of Bob Dylan covers. But he hit his (first) stride in 1967, launching a new quartet to explore fresh avenues in jazz. He was joined by bassist Steve Swallow, drummer Roy Haynes (shortly replaced by Bobby Moses) and perhaps his most key collaborator, guitarist Larry Coryell. Coryell’s rock guitar proved the perfect foil for Burton’s vibes on early fusion albums like 1967’s Duster (with Haynes), Lofty Fake Anagram (with Moses) and 1968’s In Concert, which received its first-ever CD release outside of Japan in 2012 from Cherry Red’s FiveFour imprint. Now, another Cherry Red label, él, has a 2-CD slipcased set dedicated to the early works of Burton containing four full albums and other selections.
Gary Burton: Conception brings together Burton’s first two albums as a leader, The New Vibe Man in Town and 1962’s Who is Gary Burton? in a package with two full albums on which he served as a sideman: Hank Garland and the All-Stars’ Jazz Winds from a New Direction and The Nashville All-Stars’ After the Riot at Newport (both 1960). Conception also includes five songs from Garland’s Subtle Swing and one single track, pianist Floyd Cramer’s “Last Date” featuring Burton in the band.
It may be surprising to some that a jazz eminence like Burton came up through the ranks of Chet Atkins’ Nashville Sound. Jazz Winds from a New Direction was recorded in August 1960, teaming guitar great Garland (who recorded with Elvis Presley, Patsy Cline, Roy Orbison and so many others) with Joe Benjamin on bass, The Dave Brubeck Quartet’s Joe Morello on drums and young Gary Burton on vibes. Garland knew Burton from one month earlier, when the remaining performances at the Newport Folk Festival on the Fourth of July, 1960, were cancelled as a result of unruly audience behavior. The story has it that RCA rounded up the available musicians and ushered them into a rented mansion to jam on the album that became After the Riot at Newport, credited to The Nashville All-Stars. Burton was in good company: with Boots Randolph (alto saxophone), Floyd Cramer (piano), Garland and Chet Atkins (guitars), Brenton Banks (violin), Bob Moore (bass) and Buddy Harman (drums). Newport Jazz Festival founder George Wein penned the liner notes for the album, writing, in part: “To me, the highlights of the album are the wonderful violin of Brenton Banks, the swinging guitar of Hank Garland, and the brilliant work of a 17-year old vibraphonist from Princeton, Indiana, Gary Burton, whom you will be sure to hear a lot in the future.”
Needless to say, Wein’s prediction about Burton was right. Just six days after the August 23, 1960 recording of Jazz Winds, Garland called Burton back to join Bob Moore (bass), Bill Pursell (piano) and Doug Kirkham (drums) to record the album that became Subtle Swing – a portion of which is included on Conceptions. (It originally was intended as a demonstration record for SESAC, the music publishers’ service organization.) It wasn’t long before Chet Atkins, the legendary Nashville guitarist, producer and RCA’s Nashville overseer, signed Burton to his first recording contract.
We have more after the jump, including the complete track listing and order links! Read the rest of this entry »