The pandemic has led me to some pretty obscure little corners in my LP collection. I have a few boxes in a storage room of indeterminate origin.
So I find this record in an old box.
The Stores. The Chores. The Mainstream. The Oddball. The Serious. The Goofy. The Awesome. The Not So Awesome. 45's. 33's. The 'What Were They Thinking.' Stories from the Store. Observations from my armchair.
The correct answer is that you shouldn’t. We’re all entitled to our opinions. Develop your own. I try to be sane and rational, but that may change with the level of caffeine intake. I’m just telling my stories in the hopes they may amuse and/or inform others. And... I Confess... I'm showing off my bitchen collection a bit.
The pandemic has led me to some pretty obscure little corners in my LP collection. I have a few boxes in a storage room of indeterminate origin.
So I find this record in an old box.
Jimmy Page was an accomplished studio guy in the '60's. He played with the likes of The Kinks, The Rolling Stones, Donavan, Petula Clark and Johnny Hallyday.
In 1968 he joined The Yardbirds which then featured Jeff Beck on lead guitar. The two guitar lineup was brief. Beck left the band leaving Page as the sole guitarist. The Page only output was limited to one album (Little Games) and a tour. After the tour, Page was the only remaining member of the band and recruited Plant, Jones and Bonham to fill in for some gig obligations. The rest, as they say, is history.
After Led Zeppelin was firmly established, Epic records decided to release a live album of the 1968 tour.
The Yardbirds - Live Yardbirds Featuring Jimmy Page (Epic 1971)
The record was quickly deleted as Page and Zeppelin's management took exception to the prominent featuring of Page in the title. It was released again in 1976 by Columbia Special Products and faced swift legal threats. I found my CSP pressing long ago in a cutout bin (shrink wrap still intact).
In my humble opinion, they were probably more upset by the inclusion of the track I'm Confused which is an early take on Zeppelin's Dazed and Confused. Although it's painfully obvious singer Keith Relf is no Robert Plant. A few years later he would die in true Spinal Tap fashion while playing electric guitar in the bathtub.
Liner notes by Lenny Kaye - of the Patti Smith Group.
The recording itself is OK for a 1968 live album and has some stunning moments that scream Led Zeppelin. It's marred, however, by the obtrusive audience noise dubbed in from other sources. During the quieter moments the audience is just yacking. Pay attention people, this is history.
Since I haven't posted for quite some time, there are quite a few musicians who passed on. Some are household names. Some are unheralded side men who deserve some mention. One such side man is Ivan Kral - lead guitarist for the original Patti Smith Group.
So here's Patti's first album to commemorate Ivan.
Patti Smith - Horses (Arista 1975)
I got this at time of release - note the white 'Horses'
Even though the record was credited to Patti alone, she truly treated this as a band release. The musicians are prominently featured on the back cover. These four stayed with her until Patti's semi-retirement to be a mom after marrying Fred Smith from the MC5.
I've been working from home for over a year. In October, I started a new gig that has kept me quite involved. I'm still working from home most of the time. Unfortunately, my home office also doubles and my blog port.
At the end of a long week, I tend not to gravitate to the same 'puter screen I've been staring at for five days.
Today - for some reason - I think I feel like it again. Unless things change there may be posts in the near future.
How meta - Here's a picture of my actual workspace with this very post being prepared.