Total Pageviews

Showing posts with label United Artists Records. Show all posts
Showing posts with label United Artists Records. Show all posts

Monday, September 3, 2018

Canned Heat - "On The Road Again" b/w "Time Was" 7" 45 rpm Single, 1968 (United Artists Records)


I spent my late childhood and teenage years in Topanga Canyon, and one of the bands that were attracted to that area of the world was Canned Heat.  On one level, a blues band that had a student like obsession with the blues and its culture.  Then again, a song like "On The Road Again," mainly written by founding member Alan (Al) Wilson, who wasn't usually their lead singer, and based on a blues song by Floyd Jones.  It's a stunning and extraordinary record.

For one, it's a very intimate and almost a quiet recording.  Wilson's vocals are closed mike and its eerie in its sound of loneliness and despair.  A happy-go-lucky its ain't.  The other unique aspect of the song is that there is something like a drone string instrument that runs through the entire song.  Researching the record, I found its a tambura, which is an instrument from Central Asia.  It seems that the original version by Floyd Jones also had a drone sounding instrument on his release as well.

Minimal arrangement plus the drone is an interesting relationship within the song, and also its depressive tone makes "On The Road Again" a very unique record of its time and place.  Alan Wilson died a few years later in Topanga Canyon, where they found his body in a sleeping bag by a tree outside his home.

Sunday, August 12, 2018

The Ventures - "Pops in Japan" 2 x Vinyl, LP, Album, Japan, 1980 (United Artists Records Japan)


If for nothing else The Ventures brought the electric guitar to Japan.  To this day, The Ventures (or whoever is left of the band) still do yearly tours of Japan, and it is one of the significant areas of the world to complete your Ventures vinyl collection.  Other then that, The Ventures made two albums for the Japanese market covering Japanese pop songs and Enka, which is similar to the blues, but in Japanese.  These sad Japanese pop ballads have a natural relationship with the electric guitar.  For the Westerner, it's a cool combination.  For my wife, who is Japanese she may find it kitsch.  Since I'm writing this review, I will say it's fine art.

The liner notes are all in Japanese, and I suspect that side one & 2 of this double set was released as it is sometime either in the 70s or 60s.   It is also better than the second disc, which has keyboards and has a late 70s vibe in its recording.  Still, a remarkable document.  I have heard songs or singles that is devoted to the Japanese market, but it's rare to listen to a whole album by a Western band dedicated to the Japanese songcraft and hits.  The Ventures play their twang guitar sound, but it fits in perfectly with the Japanese melodies.  Also, I must note that side one is all original songs by The Ventures focusing on a Japanese 60s pop sound.  The rest of the double-album set are cover songs.

It took me years to find a vinyl version of this album, even in Japan, it's hard to find. I found this perfectly beautiful edition at Counterpoint Music and Books.   It was the last thing I expected to see in a shop.   The Ventures generally are not my favorite instrumental band.  For instance, I prefer The Shadows, and I think it comes to the Jet Harris bass and the Hank Marvin guitar. Still, one has to acknowledge the importance of The Ventures, and the little-known knowledge that they had a massive impact on Japanese pop music and aesthetics.  Before The Beatles, the other fab four, The Ventures, came and stole the hearts of future Japanese guitarists.