Friday, July 26, 2024

"The Rykodisc Bonus Tracks": THE WEEKEND MIX

 


Back in the early days of the compact disc, when all that was available were classical music CDs and for some reason the Alien Sex Fiend catalogue, any news of a major artist getting their records upgraded to CD was big news. So needless to say, when Rykodisc got the rights to David Bowie's RCA catalogue, I almost plotzed. There had been inferior U.K. pressings of some his albums, but Ryko was going all in with mastering and bonus tracks. 

Many years and six reissue campaigns later, Bowie's "era boxes" in the wake of his death, purported to be the final word, except, even the "Re:Call" discs included with each volume, extras that were supposed to gather all stray tracks, remixes, b-sides, etc., failed to do so. Many of those Ryko bonus tracks were missing. 

I hadn't heard many of them in years, so I made a playlist for myself and that's what we have for this Weekend Mix.

My mix isn't complete either, as there are just too many, and I didn't see a need to add single edits or live versions. I tried collecting just the missing tracks, give or take for playback sake.

TRACKLIST:
1984/Dodo
Candidate (demo)
Look Back In Anger 1988
After Today
I Pray, Ole
It's Hard To Be A Saint In The City
Abulmajid
Some Are
The Supermen (alt. version)
All Saints
Space Oddity 1979
Heroes (Aphex Twin Remix)
Growin' Up


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Wednesday, July 24, 2024

Pierce

Just about everybody has come on board now. Nancy Pelosi finally endorsed Kamala Harris on Monday. (Barack Obama, for reasons known only to himself, remains in that rarefied region above grubby political reality where he seems most comfortable.) All of the Squad. All of the rumored vice-presidential candidates. Many of the money men, and a whopping parade of small donors. It’s taken a little more than a day. Democrats just don’t do stuff like this. The only harshers of the mellow are the “open convention” types, who have been deprived of the West Wing cosplay of their dreams, and the Republicans, who have completely lost whatever was left of their minds. 

As to the former, Aaron Sorkin has taken back his weird endorsement of Mitt Romney, which doesn’t necessarily mean I was wrong to suspect that he got the opinion editors of The New York Times drunk when he sold them that idea. And the GOP? Well, Speaker Mike Johnson is out there threatening lawsuits that are transparently meritless even by Republican standards (and yes, I’m aware of the various walking land mines salted throughout the federal judiciary) and demanding that the president resign because he, Speaker Moses, says so. But there’s no better example of GOP panic than the fact that Stephen Miller, onetime second runner-up in his town’s Josef Goebbels Lookalike Contest, has become every first grader who ever lost a game of Chutes and Ladders. 

From the Daily Beast: “They held a primary!” Miller squealed in response. “People—they had ballots! They filled out circles that went to the voting booths! They spent money on advertisements, and as President Trump said, the Republican Party spent tens of millions of dollars running against Joe Biden. Now they’ve just woke up one morning and said: ‘Never mind, we’re canceling the entire primary, we’re getting rid of our candidate, and we’re pretending the election has never even happened and we’re gonna let donors handpick a new nominee.... They’re publicly admitting that they are an oligarchy.... This is as full-frontal an attack on American democracy as we’ve ever seen in the history of America’s major political parties.” “It’s no fairrrrrrrrrrrr! Daaaadddddyyyyy!” 

Much of the praise directed at President Biden since his withdrawal has cited the extraordinary patriotism and selflessness of the act, all of it deserved. But let’s not overlook how deftly the president played the politics of this unique situation. He timed his withdrawal—and Vice President Harris’s ascension—perfectly. By dividing the announcement and his endorsement of Harris into separate stories, he guaranteed at least two days of glowing coverage to boost the new ticket, during which time the money could start rolling in, which became yet another day of solid free media. However, when this is all over in the fall, the Democrats will need a serious self-examination of how it all went down. The weeks of intramural sniping at Biden that culminated in his withdrawal is no less unforgivable just because it came to a soft landing with everybody happy. The party needs to look closely at who it allows to exercise that kind of power over this important decision. Joe Biden isn’t going to be around forever to do the right thing.

A Tribute To Jesse Malin


 

In May of 2023, New York punk icon and humanitarian Jesse Malin, suffered a rare spinal stroke which has left him paralyzed from the waist down. It is a sad and devastating story and it shouldn't happen to anyone. But as one friend put it, "It really shouldn't happen to Jesse."

Malin has been determined to sing, dance and walk again, and after a year of grueling rehabilitation, some progress has been made. There is still a long road ahead, but Jesse Malin's heart has helped him to the point where he will be performing two shows at NYC's Beacon Theatre on December 1st and 2nd, with some heavy friends that include Lucinda Williams, Rickie Lee Jones, J Mascis, Tommy Stinson and Jakob Dylan.

But first, September 20th sees the release of "Silver Patron Saints," a 3 LP tribute to Malin and his songs, with one of the most impressive rosters I have ever seen. All proceeds from sales of this amazing record will go to Jesse's Sweet Relief fund

Just look at this lineup:

JESSE MALIN SILVER PATRON SAINTS: THE SONGS OF JESSE MALIN  

Track Listing

1. Prisoners oOf Paradise (feat. Bleachers) 
2. Oh Sheena (feat. Counting Crows) 
3. She Don’t Love Me Now (feat. Bruce Springsteen)
4. Black Haired Girl (feat. Billie Joe Armstrong)
5. Brooklyn (feat. Dinosaur Jr.)
6. About You (feat. Frank Turner) 
7. Turn Up the Mains  (feat. Alison Mosshart, Wayne Kramer, Tom Morello, Steven Van Zandt, Mike Watt & Joey C.)
8. Room 13 (feat. Lucinda Williams and Elvis Costello)
9. Don’t Let Them Take You Down (Beautiful Day) (feat. The Wallflowers)
10. The Way We Used to Roll (feat. Spoon) 
11. Shane (feat. Rocky O’Riordan) 
12. In the Modern World (feat. Butch Walker) 
13. High Lonesome (feat. Susanna Hoffs) 
14. Greener Pastures (feat. Graham Parker)
15. Meet Me At The End of the World (feat. Alejandro Escovedo) 
16. Death Star (feat. The Hold Steady) 
17. Riding on the Subway (feat. Tommy Stinson and Ruby Stinson)
18. St. Mark's Sunset (feat. The Walker Roaders)
19. Dead On (feat. Ian Hunter) 
20. Almost Grown  (feat. Danny Clinch and Christopher Thorn with Daniel Donato's Cosmic Country) 21.       Shining Down (feat. Aaron Lee Tasjan) 
22. When You’re Young (feat. Low Cut Connie) 
23. All The Way From Moscow (feat. Willie Nile) 
24. No Way Out (feat. Rancid) 
25. You Know It’s Dark When Atheists Start to Pray (feat. Gogol Bordello)
26. God Is Dead (feat. Agnostic Front) 
27. Frankie (feat. Murphy’s Law)

You can and SHOULD preorder the vinyl HERE!

Tuesday, July 23, 2024

Lovin' Darlene

 


From 1967, here are The Blossoms featuring Darlene Love, a few years gone from Phil Spector and in the hands of producer Lou Adler, and another b-side. This one is "Cry Like A Baby." The A-side "Wonderful" is a solid track that did not chart. I wonder if "Cry Like A Baby" had been the plug track, things would have been different. I think there's more to it. "Cry Like A Baby" doesn't have an immediate hook to hang on to or that easily identifiable girl group sound, but I think it's a fantastic arrangement. I really dig this record.

Monday, July 22, 2024

Have A Very Merry Clayton



Six years before screaming "Rape! Murder!" on a Rolling Stones record, Merry Clayton released a few singles for the Capitol label. The first was "Nothing Left To Do But Cry," a song written by David Gates. But it's b-side is the killer. "Usher Boy" is a blast of girl group bliss, written by Shalom Giskan, better known as Kenny Young who along with Artie Resnick wrote a much bigger hit, "Under The Boardwalk" for The Drifters one year later.

This record just slays me, in a Darlene Love meets The Ramones kind of way.

I was going to make this Girl Group Week, as I discovered a few other gems I wanted to share, but decided against it. Some of you may not care for the girl group sound and I didn't want to put you off by announcing a week's worth of this stuff. But for those who may love it as much as I do, I've got at least one more post coming where I'll double up.

For now, check out Miss Merry Clayton.

Sunday, July 21, 2024

Songs Of The Week, 2024: 7/13-7/19

 


Stick Out Your Tongue- Elvis Costello & The Roots
What We All Want- Gang Of Four
Cracked Actor- David Bowie
Sinner Man- Peter Tosh
Don't Let Go- The Orlons
Water Pump- Bongo Herman
End Title- David Shire

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Stick Out Your Tongue- Elvis Costello & The Roots
(If memory serves, I liked this collaboration more than most of you. After a long lay off, it sounded even better to me. Not just this track, but the whole record.)

What We All Want- Gang Of Four
(From their second album, something about the riff and the drumming feels like a LZ "Physical Graffiti" demo...at least that's what made me love it in 1981.)

Cracked Actor- David Bowie

(Mick Ronson!)

Sinner Man- Peter Tosh

(Very early Peter Tosh, right around the time of the first Wailing Wailers album in '66. A great arrangement. Let it play.)

Don't Let Go- The Orlons

(I first heard this on a Jeff Lynne solo album, unaware of the earlier hit by Roy Hamilton. I thought Lynne's cover was better, but then I recently discovered this version by the Orlons, which beats both.)

Water Pump- Bongo Herman

(Yes, two reggae tracks in one mix. Oh no!)

End Title- David Shire
(The 70's gave us some of the greatest films of all time, and I might add, some of the greatest film scores. Isaac Hayes, Lalo Schifrin, Jerry Goldsmith and this end title by David Shire from 1974's "Taking Of Pelham 1-2-3." I think this really cooks.)

Saturday, July 20, 2024

BW's Saturday #28