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RIP – Sky SaxonAuthor: Lindsay Hutton
June 25, 2009 @ 5:35 pm
A One way ticket to Kicksville…Author: Lindsay Hutton
May 31, 2009 @ 10:22 am
I’ve been off the air for a few days and during that time Miriam Linna launched Kicksville 66. A wonderful thing and from there you can exit to Nortonville! Lennart Persson – RIPAuthor: Lindsay Hutton
@ 10:17 am
Of course, until recently – I figured there would be many more. He recently launched a website to collect the many strands of his professorial work and did me the honour of asking me to contribute to that. Lennart was the Dean of all cool things and always a staunch keeper of the rock’n’roll flame. I spoke to him just after sending him a copy of Barney’s Tom Waits book. He’d been looking forward to reading it and I hope that doing so, in some way, took his mind off what was happening. Another thing we shared was being fully signed up members of the Annika Norlin fan club. This guy’s taste was impeccable. All the way. We had hoped that he’d make it out here to Kiltland this summer for a return bout of the Glesgae culture with his tag team companion Mr Hägred. Before fate dealt this mortal blow, he should have been in London with Mr Ulf having watched Nick Lowe’s stonking Albert Hall performance. It’s a cruel reality indeed that takes him from us just the day before. Actually, if it wasn’t for Ulf then I probably wouldn’t have met LP anyway. I should mention a bunch of other stuff like Music and Konst, The Nomads, etc. but the technology precludes all that right now Lennart was a fella that made a difference. He set a high standard that so many are just not capable of. Myself included. In addition to all this, he has a family and I can’t even begin to understand the depth of their sorrow. His wife Bera, his kids and the grandkids and I didn’t know this until yesterday but his mother is still with us. My thoughts are very much with them at this rotten time. At least he’s not suffering and if I know LP, he’s probably looking up Lux and Joey right now. So long pal. You may have left the theatre but you will never leave our hearts and minds. Not ever. Lennart Persson – a “God Only Knows” guy if ever there was one. Photo by Avy Carroll – Mr Hägred and LP in The Elvis Booth. Blitzkrieg Bop (redux)Author: Lindsay Hutton
May 2, 2009 @ 1:23 pm
Have a wee listen to Iain Smith’s take on “Blitzkrieg Bop”. An understated triumph. Going to see the Zim at the Playhouse in Edinburgh tomorrow and I’m marking my expectations even lower after the reports. Maybe I’ll share the outcome when it all goes down. Did you ever hear of Carl Sigman?Author: Lindsay Hutton
April 15, 2009 @ 2:20 pm
I hadn’t until recently until Marty Thau hooked me up with a copy of “Carl Sigman Songs”. A 3 cd set of material he wrote over a long, illustrious career. This has been put together by his sons to celebrate their father and they’ve got a lot to be proud of. I’ve been digging this stuff for weeks now. Always escaping back to it when I’d simply had enough of the countless mp3’s I get sent by acts that quite simply aren’t up to the task of writing anything approaching a real song, let alone perform one. Maybe that’s a bit harsh but once you’ve tasted the primo stuff and all that…
How does this grab you? “Pennsylvania 6-5000” (Glen Miller), “It’s Square But It Rocks” (Count Basie), Buena Sera (Louis Prima), the theme to Robin Hood (The Richard Greene TV show), “Ebb Tide” (Sinatra/The Platters), the fantastic “The Day That The Rains Came Down” (Jane Morgan), “It’s A Marshmallow World” (Darlene Love) and “It’s All In The Game (The Four Tops) to take but the tip of the proverbial iceberg.
When he passed away, in September 2000, he was 91 years old. I guess they call that a good innings. What a legacy to leave. Irrespective of things not being like they used to be in some kind of rose-tinted rear view mirror, this consistent quality of work is surely a benchmark. I can’t even begin to tell you how captivated I am by these songs. The fact that they capture an era that came before anybody could pastiche, or beat the life out of a song in the name of authenticity.
Things weren’t sullied by bean counters or would be experts. This was a job of work. And that job was to write songs and record them. Did they think they would last? Probably not, but so much of this mans work has entered the dimension of “the standard”. He kicked off his career in 1936 when he co-wrote “Just Remember” with Johnny Mercer. From 1940, he penned words and music of songs that were covered by artists as diverse as Aretha Franklin, Elvis, Louis Armstrong and Dean Martin. Relative youngsters are probably familiar with “Enjoy Yourself (It’s Later Than You Think)” by The Specials? Mr Sigman came up with that one in 1950.
When all is said and done, and the production is laid on thick with a dirty great trowel – it all comes back to the songs and this man is responsible for a shed load of the greatest ever written. Carl Sigman had the chops and his work will just go on forever. There’s not much coming out in today’s crop that will stand this test of time. I’ll cut out now, before I start to sound too much like my granny.
“Majorsongs… one of the top US music catalogues” might just be an understatement.
(Sincere thanks to Michael and Randy Sigman for kindly acquainting me with their dad’s work) Some Blogs of Note…Author: Lindsay Hutton
April 11, 2009 @ 3:37 pm
… that hopefully you haven’t seen. Some great reading and some great writing: These should keep you away from the DIY or whatever this holiday weekend… So Many Records…Author: Lindsay Hutton
April 5, 2009 @ 7:43 am
So Many Records, So Little Time Maybe you know about this resource already but if you don’t then you’re in for a treat. Pop of all shapes and sizes with the crackle intact! Introducing Adiam DymottAuthor: Lindsay Hutton
April 3, 2009 @ 4:59 pm
“Adiam Dymott” is the album I’ve eagerly awaited since I first heard a song called “Memory Loss” last summer. The condition of the same name that I intermittently suffer from started way earlier. Kicking off with “John Denver” it’s evident that this expectation has not been in vain. Ten nuggets of loud, crunchy pop magic crossed with a spiritual hip hop persuasion await anybody who enters here. Each and every cut is wilfully commercial. Taken individually, it’s actually ten one-sided singles backed up ready for take off. I imagine that you’re already familiar with “Miss You”. Ms Dymott has taken that classic Roxy Music swagger, added a heady dose of shake appeal and delivered something undeniable. There’s an upbeat twist to the relatively downbeat subject matter of the song titles. “Today Was Just a Downer” will make yours anything but. The percussive attack of “Black Cloud” (maybe some mad mental Indian chief?) is phenomenal. Imagine the finer elements of Exile on Main Street and think of how they might have benefitted from a Wall of Sound treatment. When the bright white lights hit the audience at the point of guitar ignition then pandemonium will ensue. I hope to be right down the front at just such a stramash before very long. “Holiday Inn” (not the Stereo Total song) closes things with an almost Auld Lang Syne meets Sam Cooke refrain with a big rolling BCR (Bay City Rollers – you got a problem with that?) anthemic guitar lollup. Runrig vs Sigue Sigue Sputnik even. It takes the pace down a notch and fires up the emotional quotient. Absolutely fecking beautiful. There could well be tears, depending on how liquored up any given crowd gets. Of joy, natch. Rock’n'Roll TouristAuthor: Lindsay Hutton
March 28, 2009 @ 4:28 pm
I heard Graham on the Janice Forsyth show this morning and this sounds like a hoot. http://www.myspace.com/grahamforbes “why rock music was invented by a wee Glasgow plumber and a big tuechter farmer” sounds like it would be worth the price of entry alone. Graham was (is?) a member of The Incredible String Band. Dean and Britta bring Warhol to Dunfermline!Author: Lindsay Hutton
March 26, 2009 @ 6:44 pm
Dean Wareham and Britta Phillips will be performing the UK premiere of Dean & Britta: 13 Most Beautiful … Songs for Andy Warhol’s Screen Tests …in Scotland
Not in London. Not in Glasgow. Not in Edinburgh. The venue for this event is Carnegie Hall in Dunfermline, Fife.
Home of The Skids, Suicide played there twice with The Clash and Elvis Costello respectively. Nazareth and Fay Rezillo also hail from there. How do you think she got her name? For those overseas, “fae” means from in these here parts.
Quite a coup for this prestigious venue, the small capacity will make this an incredibly intimate event, you better grab those tickets fast, I’ll post link details soon so please stay tuned. A way more attractive proposition than standing in some field watching last year’s thing jump through hoops for a mucho paycheck.
“13” is a multi-media presentation where Dean and Britta perform onstage with their band while the Warhol films are projected overhead.
A project jointly commissioned by the Andy Warhol Museum and Pittsburgh Cultural Trust for the Pittsburgh International Festival of Firsts 2008.
Wednesday 8 July 2009, Doors @ 8pm
Tickets £18 (full) £13 (concessions)
Available now from http://www.ticketweb.co.uk/ or via 01383 602 302…
Superior class entertainment that offers sophisticated pop thrills in terms of art and music. If you’re not familiar with Dean and Britta’s music that’s perfectly OK, there are a couple of links below to take care of that.
The recent Warhol exhibit in Edinburgh broke visitor records and this will undoubtedly be a hot ticket. Don’t let the art crowd grab them all.
So there you have it, Fife or France, what’s it gonna be? This is certain to be the most exciting night in the kingdom since Ben Vaughn played The Path Tavern in Kirkcaldy.
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