Showing posts with label compilation. Show all posts
Showing posts with label compilation. Show all posts

August 11, 2016

Rockaphilly!


The two volumes of Rockaphilly released in the UK on Rollercoaster Records in 1978 and 1980 collect recordings from 1954-1965 on Philadelphia's Arcade Records and show a pretty rich music scene in and around Philly at the time, even referring to the city as "the East Coast's own Little Nashvillle." Well... maybe, but besides the great music, there are some historically interesting artifacts including the original version of Rock Around the Clock, later covered by Bill Haley. Many of the artists revolved in the Haley orbit and various permutations of the Comets show up under different names (but no Joey Welz here). And Al Rex's topical Hydrogen Bomb: "It's a big loud noise and you're real gone.... bomb bomb, the hydrogen bomb...."

All the tracks featured on Rockaphilly are taken from the archives of Arcade Records, a small Philadelphia label launched in the early 50s by the late Jack Howard to cater for a local demand for hillbilly, novelty, and later rock 'n' roll material.
Howard was an ardent country music fan who ran a printing shop in Philadelphia during the late 1940s. A well-intentioned but slightly deluded man, Howard sought a business involvement with the artists whose music he loved and in 1948, in partnership with a more opportunistic businessman named James Myers, he launched Cowboy Records, for which Bill Haley made his first solo recordings. The venture proved unsuccessful however and after a two year lapse during which Howard acted as a part-time manager to the nascent Haley, Howard launched a new label, Arcade, named after the Arcade Music Center, a record shop which Howard ran in Philly's Kensington area.
Taking his artists from local hoedowns, hillbilly radio stations and nightclubs, local sales while modest in scale, were sufficient to encourage a series of intermittent releases which stretched well into the sixties. ...
Jack fancied himself as a star-maker but in truth, apart from Bill Haley, most of the artists he launched--all solid, dependable stalwarts, did not provide Jack with the reflected glory he so earnestly craved. However we must be grateful that he did make the effort to record the wealth of local talent which existed in Pennsylvania during the late 40s and early 50s.
 





March 11, 2013

NUCLEAR Platters ................... ....The Unofficial CONELRAD Sequel



When the folks at CONELRAD put together Atomic Platters collecting the songs from the early Cold War up to about 1965, I was already hankering for a sequel that went up through my childhood and high school years to the end of the Cold War. Atomic Platters includes over 100 novelty numbers, and radio spots, as well as serious religious and secular warnings about the end of the world. There was a kooky euphoria about the Bomb, at least for the few years the US was alone with it. Atomic war fell out of fashion in the early 70s, but came back in a darker way in punk and new wave. The tone of the music changed along with popular attitudes toward nuclear power, losing much of it's lightheartedness (but not all) after Three Mile Island, Reagan, and Chernobyl scared the Breznev out of people. My family evacuated when TMI started melting in 1979 and I grew up with the lingering feeling that a nuclear war was imminent. I wasn't alone.

Atomic Platters covers music of the "Golden Age" of the cold war, that is, before the kids who grew up with the Bomb started writing the music and driving the counterculture. Jeff Nuttall, in his 1968 book Bomb Culture, describes this shift in attitude and the "generation gap," which continued to widen and reach its musical crescendo in the 1980s as the Doomsday Clock ticked closer to Midnight.
What way we made in 1945 and in the following years depended largely on our age, for right at that point, at the point of the dropping of the bombs on Hiroshima and Nagasaki, the generations became divided in a very crucial way. 
The people who had passed puberty at the time of the bomb found that they were incapable of conceiving of life without a future. Their patterns of habit had formed, the steady job, the pension, the mortgage, the insurance policy, personal savings, support and respect for the protection of the law, all the paraphernalia of constructive, secure family life. ...To look the danger in the eye might wreck the chances of that ultimate total security their deepest selves had contrived, death by H-bomb. 
The people who had not yet reached puberty at the time of the bomb were incapable of conceiving of life with a future. They might not have had any direct preoccupation with the bomb. This depended largely on their sophistication. But they never knew a sense of future. 
...Dad was a liar. He lied about the war and he lied about sex. He lied about the bomb and he lied about the future. He lived his life on an elaborate system of pretence that had been going on for hun­dreds of years. The so-called 'generation gap' started then and has been increasing ever since.
In Apocalypse Jukebox, David Janssen and Edward Whitelock mark Eve of Destruction as the song that
sucked out any sense of humor--or hope for that matter ... In twenty short years, the popular mood regarding the atom bomb had changed radically. By August 1965, Barry McGuire's song erased both God and hope from the atomic equation. The treatment of atomic power and nuclear weapons in American popular music would hereafter be characterized by mistrust, dread, and fatalism. 
The horrid zombie dancers in McGuire's Hullabaloo video (see below) alone could have inspired a torrent of punk violence. The songs that follow certainly have loads of that mistrust and dread. But many of them bring that old sense of humor back in a blacker, more subtle way. Or, like the Dickies, Eve of De-Ster-Uction, just spoof the whole god-awful mess.

My Nuclear Platters sequel is run through the Tapewrecks filter omitting a many of the big commercial hits and sappier protest songs (and a shitload of metal). The audio tracks included are some of my favorites, out of print, and bands from around my hometown downwind from Three Mile Island, Pennsylvania, and others that are rare, weird, or particularly stupid.

[TMI] denotes a song about or inspired by the Three Mile Island accident. [I've since found hundreds of TMI songs and documented them on Radioactive Releases.]

1963-1967: IT IS 12 MINUTES TO MIDNIGHT
A Hard Rain's A-Gonna Fall / Talkin' World War III Blues - Bob Dylan (1963)
Fidel Castro - Skatalites (Jamaica 1964)
Eve of Destruction - Barry McGuire (1965)
Kill for Peace - The Fugs
The Russian Spy and I - The Regents (1966)
Commie Lies - Janet Greene 
That's the Bag I'm In - Fred Neil 
Monk Time - The Monks
I Come and Stand at Every Door - The Byrds
My Little Red Book / Mushroom Clouds - Love
7 and 7 Is - Love
Transparent Radiation - The Red Crayola (1967)
That's the Bag I'm In - The Fabs
War Sucks - The Red Crayola
1968: IT IS 7 MINUTES TO MIDNIGHT
Last Day on Earth - The Velvet Haze (1968)
Draft Morning - The Byrds
1969-1971: IT IS 10 MINUTES TO MIDNIGHT
Running Gun Blues - David Bowie (1970)
Apeman - The Kinks
O Apocalipse - The Pop's (Brazil 1971)
1972-1973: IT IS 12 MINUTES TO MIDNIGHT
Political Science - Randy Neuman (1972)
Search and Destroy - Iggy & the Stooges (1973)
1974-1980: IT IS 9 MINUTES TO MIDNIGHT
Final Solution / 30 Seconds Over Tokyo / Search and Destroy - Rocket from the Tombs (1974)
Cyclotron - The Electric Eels (1975)
Geiger Counter / Radio-Activity - Kraftwerk
Final Solution / 30 Seconds Over Tokyo - Pere Ubu (1976)
Rocket U.S.A. - Suicide
Holidays in the Sun - Sex Pistols 
Chinese Radiation - Pere Ubu (1977)
Havana Affair/Commando - Ramones
Cold Wars - The Rezillos
Eve of Destruction - The Feelies
Contact in Red Square - Blondie 
Hiroshima Mon Amour - Ultravox
Flamethrower Love - The Dead Boys
Love and Peace (H-Bomb) - Eater
We Got the Neutron Bomb - The Weirdos (1978)
No Nuclear War - Peter Tosh
Bomb Scare - The H-Bombs
Armagideon Time - Willi Williams
Eve of Destruction - The Dickies
Your Love Is Like A Nuclear Waste - Tuff Darts
I Wanna Start a War - The Warm Jets (Philadelphia)
The Dead Dreams of a Cold War Kid - Hawklords
War Zone - The Dead Boys
Panic in the World - Be-Bop Deluxe
'A' Bomb in Wardour Street - The Jam
The A-Bomb Woke Me Up - The Swimming Pool Q's (1979)
I Found That Essence Rare - Gang of Four
Atomic - Blondie
Kill the Poor - Dead Kennedys 
Nuclear Device - The Stranglers
Yellowcake uf6 - The Stranglers
Secret Agent Man - Devo
Atom Age - Bill Nelson's Red Noise
Top Secret Man / Peace - Plastics (Japan)
Life During Wartime - Talking Heads
Save For the Sky - The Dead Milkmen
(Potter County Was Made By the Hand of God, But the Devil Made) Three Mile Island - Al Shade (Potter Co., PA)TMI
Three Mile Island - Joseph Aronesty TMI
Three Mile Island - The Tyme-Aires (Etters, PA)TMI
Radiation - Richie Gerber TMI
Three Mile Island - Fred Small TMI
Radiation Funk - Maxwell (PA)TMI
Face the Fire - Dan Fogelberg TMI
Three Mile Smile - Aerosmith TMI
Three Mile Island Blues - Alan Fox TMI
Goodbye T.M.I. - Gary Punch & the Outriders (York Co., PA)TMI
No More Nukes - Roger Matura & the Niss Puk Band (Germany)TMI
London Calling / Clampdown - The Clash TMI
Shut 'Em Down - Gil Scott Heron TMI
The Meltdown - Root Boy Slim & the Sex Change Band TMI
1980: IT IS 7 MINUTES TO MIDNIGHT
World War III - Root Boy Slim & the Sex Change Band (DC)
Atomic Love - The Late Teens (Carlisle, PA)TMI
Three Mile Island / Call to Arms - Arcade (central PA)TMI
Who Will Close Pandora's Box - Fred & the Jupiter Gypsies TMI
Critical Mass / System Failure - The Nuclear Regulatory Commission TMI
Three Mile Island - Jorge Santana TMI
TMI - Reesa & the Rooters (Philadelphia)TMI
Who's Gonna Win the War? b/w Nuclear Toy - Hawkwind TMI
Paranoid Chant / Joe MacArthy's Ghost - Minutemen 
Generals and Majors / Living Through Another Cuba - XTC
Man at C&A - The Specials
Stop the World - The Clash
Armagideon Time - The Clash
Nagasaki Nightmare - Crass 
Cold War - Devo
Ivan Meets GI Joe / Washington Bullets / Charlie Don't Surf - The Clash
Enola Gay - OMD
1981-1983: IT IS 4 MINUTES TO MIDNIGHT
If the World is Coming to an End - The Dead Milkmen (1981)
She's a Bomb - The Dead Milkmen
A Minute Closer to Death - The Dead Milkmen
What Future? - The Proteens
Susquehanna Meltdown - Fly By Night TMI
Beautiful World - Devo
Los fusilitos - Los Torogoces de Morazan (El Salvador Libre)
Some Other Time - X
Radio Free Europe - REM
The Third World War / Nuclear Spy - S.I.B. (Italy)
World War 9 - Billy Synth (Harrisburg, PA)
Nuclear War - Sun Ra (1982)
European War - The Cleaners from Venus
Radioactive Kid - The Meteors
Sleeping Snakes - Translator
Der Kommissar - Falco
Straight To Hell / Atom Tan  - The Clash
Kill a Commie - Gang Green
Nuclear War - The Bodies (Lancaster PA)
Radioactive Chocolate - MDC (1983)TMI
Radioactive Baby - The Turn Ups (Harrisburg, PA)TMI
Deadly Skies - Husker Du
Dream Told By Moto - Minutemen
Radio Activity - Royal Cash
Central Nuclear - Vulpes
Before You Push the Button - Joe Jack Talcum (Philadelphia)
Nagasaki Neuter - Slickee Boys 
A Sense of Belonging - Television Personalities
Two Tribes - Frankie Goes to Hollywood 
You'll Never Know - Primitons
1984-1987: IT IS 3 MINUTES TO MIDNIGHT
Dancing With Tears In My Eyes - Ultravox (1984)
Three Mile Island - Pinkard and Bowden TMI
This World Over - XTC
I Hope You Get Drafted - The Dicks
Hopeless - Briggs Beall (Lancaster, PA)
Doomsday - Discharge
Vietnam / West Germany / Untitled Song for Latin America - Minutemen
Eve of Destruction - Johnny Thunders
Hallowed Ground - The Violent Femmes
Kinky Sex Makes the World Go Round - Dead Kennedys
100 Million People Dead - Butthole Surfers
World War III - Grandmaster Melle Mel
Nucular Rat - Kenny Gross (Lancaster, PA)
Hammer to Fall - Queen
Headin' for Armageddon - Joey Welz (Lancaster, PA)
Two Minutes to Midnight - Iron Maiden
Uranium Rock - The Cramps
World Destruction - Time Zone
Caustic Future / Khadafy's No Worse Than Reagan - Combat Hamsters (Lancaster, PA 1985)
Reagan Blues - Hasil Adkins
Song No. 15 - Ornamental Wigwam (Philadelphia)
Party at Ground Zero - Fishbone
Violence Is Golden / Bells Are Ringing - The Real Gone (Lancaster, PA)
Right Wing Pigeons - The Dead Milkmen (Philadelphia)
The Viet Cong Live Next Door - The Left
Emergency - Nobody's Fools (Lancaster, PA)
Nuclear War / Radiation Sickness / Mr. Softee Theme - Nuclear Assault (1986)
Christmas at Ground Zero - Weird Al Yankovic
MAD - Tons of Nuns (Philadelphia)
Flamethrower Love - Kirk & the Jerks (Lancaster, PA)
Bombs Aren't Cool - Li'l Rodney C and KK Rockwell
The Future's So Bright I Gotta Wear Shades - Timbuk 3 
Atom Bomb Baby - The Scientists
How I Learned to Love the Bomb - Television Personalities
Binded World Radiation - Hellsent (Lancaster, PA)
It's the End of the World as We Know It (and I Feel Fine) - REM (1987)
1988-1990: IT IS 6 MINUTES TO MIDNIGHT
Geiger Counter - The Legendary Stardust Cowboy (1989)
End of the World - The Original Sins
Sweathearts - Camper Van Beethoven

1991-1994: IT IS 6 MINUTES TO MIDNIGHT
Atomic Power - Uncle Tupelo (1992)


...

Thanks to contributions from Tom Casetta, Ed Whitelock, Scott Lubic, Bryan Rutt, Mic Rage, Christian Dayton Osgood, and Rustle Noonetwisting

Tom Casetta's Listen Up! radio program on G-Town Radio. Tom's interview with Ed Whitelock is essential, as is Janssen and Whitelock's book, Apocalypse Jukebox: The End of the World in American Popular Music.

CONELRAD
NUCLEAR WAR and Lancaster County - Tapewrecks
Radioactive Releases...The Music of Three Mile Island - Tapewrecks
Garage Hangover
Freedom Has No Bounds
Vinyl Meltdown on York, PA's Bona Fide Records
On Jeff Nuttall's Bomb Culture - The Generalist
In the 80's: Songs About Nuclear War
Bulletin of Atomic Scientists: Doomsday Clock timeline

2012-2014: IT IS 5 MINUTES TO MIDNIGHT

January 20, 2013

The Story of Red Buckets............... .....(Philadelphia 1982-85)




I wonder what's on your mind
Look around and see

What it does to me

...Richard Mason was a high school kid in Boston when he formed his band Insteps and recorded his first songs sounding much like the early Cure, but I’ll save that for a later story.... Red Buckets, began at University of Pennsylvania around 1982, and eventually brought Richard and the band into the context of Crazy Rhythms-era Feelies, the Hoboken music scene at Maxwell’s, Dream Syndicate passing through, and the proto-Yo La Tengo record machine....  a key part of that little corner of the world that I only learned about recently....

Kris and Richard with Mark Tanzer (drums)
Kristen Yiengst: I started the band with my boyfriend at the time and a few friends. We needed a guitar player and the singer said, "there's this guy who checks IDs outside one of the dorms who says he plays guitar and seems pretty cool." Richard came in to audition, and my life took a turn. It was heaven; especially the early days - listening to records in our crummy West Philly apartments until all hours of the night feverishly drinking in as much inspiration as we could, writing and practicing every single night, scouring flea markets putting together our look - it was fast, furious and fun.

Palmyra Delran: I met Kris & Richard at WKDU radio station in Philly around '82/'83. They walked in the studio with such a cool look - sort of Velvets/Dylan vibe - and huge presence. We started yakking and struck up a friendship, & when I began going to their shows, I totally fell in love with their music.

Something Else Again from the compilation "I'd Rather Be in Philadelphia" (1983) 

Cordy Swope: I played guitar in Red Buckets from June-December of 1982, and played on the Something Else Again session, which was actually recorded in Boston after a show in Kenmore Square. I left to form Ruin in Philadelphia. I saw Richard once or twice over the years. He always had a small interior world he lived in for such a large talent. As his songwriting attests, Richard was a genius.

Palmyra: They were offered a gig at Folk City opening for 10,000 Maniacs (I think I'm remembering this correctly), but were between drummers. They said that I should play drums for that one gig, which at that point I hadn't played drums at all. We did a rehearsal or two, then Richard handed me a concertina & said I should play that too. There I was, playing two different instruments that I'd never played before, but in a weird way, it worked. Richard was very persuasive and had such a strong vision.

Michael Carlucci: I first heard Red Buckets when Ward 8 (pre-Winter Hours) played with them at Maxwell's in 1983. I was taken with them almost immediately. During their set Steve Fallon told me they were looking for a new guitarist and drummer. So Stan (Demeski) and I approached them after their set and made arrangements to rehearse with them. Richard sent rehearsal tapes of their songs for us to learn for a show we were to perform with them in Philadelphia in two weeks. We had one two hour rehearsal just before the show. I had a cheat sheet on the side of the stage with the chords for each song. The performance was praised in the Aquarian Weekly. Shortly after, we recorded a two-song demo of Jane September and Cover Your Eyes which we used to book shows.

Kristen: I am still surprised at the reception we received from people that we admired and were actually fans of. Ira Kaplan's initial support gave us our first big boost. Steve Fallon championed us and more opportunities opened up. And then being able to play with talented musicians like Stanley, Michael, Glenn, Dave and Rob took the music to places I never imagined possible when we first started. It was incredible.

Glenn Mercer: The first time I heard the Red Buckets was in the early 80's when the Trypes were playing a show at Folk City in NYC. It was part of the Music For Dozens series put together by Ira Kaplan and Michael Hill. The Red Buckets were the opening band and I remember that they seemed to share many of the same influences as us: mid 60's, Velvets, Byrds, Love etc. I liked them a lot and they stuck out as one of the few opening bands that actually fit together with, and were a compliment to, our sound. I don't remember hearing much of them in the next year or so, mostly because I was busy with the various bands I played in (the Feelies were also starting up again at this point.)

Stan Demeski: I guess my memories and relationship with Red Buckets starts at the same show Glenn is referring to. I think it was the Dream Syndicate who headlined. I remember how "Jane September" sounded a lot like "Tell Me When It's Over.” Ira Kaplan was an early supporter and Kris and Richard were good at networking. So we met and became friendly. I was always looking for playing opportunities back then so I gave them the "if you ever need a drummer" offer. It seemed like the 2nd guitar player was just a temp and the drummer wanted out of music so shortly afterwards my friend Mike Carlucci and I filled those spots. This lineup lasted, maybe, 6 months?

I remember playing Maxwell's once and Philadelphia twice. I was still in college and playing in about 7 bands at the time. Kris and Richard wanted a bigger commitment (mostly they wanted to split rehearsals between Philly and NJ), I refused and was handed my walking papers. I was fine with it and we stayed friends. I continued going to see them when they played locally. That line up that followed my departure seemed to be the best lineup of the band.

Michael: Stan left shortly after we recorded the [Jane September] demo to pursue a career with the Feelies and Trypes. Enter Rob Winfelder who would be my traveling companion as we traveled in two separate vehicles from Boston to Philly. We opened for the likes of True West, Green On Red, Chesterfield Kings, Dream Syndicate, Go-Between and REM. Maxwell's would become our home base and our rehearsal space. Ira Kaplan at the time was Maxwell's soundman. He took an immediate liking to the band. I can still see his big wide grin while we performed. Glenn Mercer, Rob Norris and Glenn Morrow would often turn up at our shows. Steve Fallon offered to put out an LP on his Coyote label. So we began recording demos with Danny Amis (of the Raybeats) on his Fostex 4-track. We recorded two songs Washboard and "Whistling."

Rob Winfelder: I was the drummer for about a year or a bit more. I knew them from the Philly scene. It was not exactly the type of music that I personally wanted to pursue. But they were in a jam and they had something really good going on, and they are really nice folks. I did not want to see them stuck. Got to see a whole lot of Hoboken and Boston.

Michael: We played a couple more shows in New York at Danceteria and CBGB's. Right around then Richard was becoming increasingly difficult to work with as he became more controlling and attempting to work out guitar parts for me which didn't work for me. I became less interested and left the band after our show at Danceteria and put all my energy into my own band Winter Hours.

Glenn: I got to know Richard a bit when we were hanging out at Maxwell's in Hoboken. He seemed to have a strong drive to make Red Buckets a success and often appeared frustrated in his pursuit. Shortly after this, I had heard that Michael and Stan had stopped playing with them. Then, Richard approached me and asked if I would be interested in playing with the Red Buckets. He also asked Dave (Weckerman) to join on drums.

Dave and I went to a few rehearsals at Maxwell's, and everything seemed ok at first. Soon, however, Richard started to get more demanding about the guitar parts and it became less fun. I remember that he wanted to play a cover of a Nick Drake song and asked me to copy a guitar phrase precisely as it was on the record. I've never really saw the reason to copy records note-for-note and have always preferred to put my own spin on cover songs. I remember both of us getting frustrated at the rehearsal and I think we wrapped it up early. A week or two went by and I got a call from Richard (who still lived in Penn.) asking me to drive out to his place to rehearse. I explained that it was too short notice and it was also starting to snow. Richard then spent the next 10 minutes trying to persuade me to change my mind by saying how much he felt like playing at that moment. He really sounded like he was disappointed that I had let him down. Needless to say, we never played together again.

Rob: Richard, Kris, and Michael were really nice folks. I am very glad I had that experience with them. One of the first shows I played with them was in Boston and we were driving from Philly. I didn't know them very well so I asked my good friend Palmyra Delran to come with us. Zero notice, she grabbed a toothbrush and came with us. We all had a blast.

Stan: Of course, that version of the band ended after maybe a year? And a year or two later Kris and Richard called me and asked me to play on some demos at Water Music in Hoboken. I was pretty happy with the results and very flattered to have been asked to do it.

Kristen: ...practice tapes of sessions with Michael and Stanley from when we tried to get it back together sound just sublime. But no one else ever got to hear those new songs we were working on.

Glenn: I didn't mind that things never worked out, as I soon became more and more focused on the Feelies. Perhaps that was the real reason, rather than musical differences, that prevented the situation from going forward. I ran into Richard and Kris now and then at various Feelies shows and it was always nice seeing them again. Then, after a while we lost contact and I began to hear stories of Richard's problems with substance abuse and I wondered what impact his musical frustrations contributed to his lifestyle, and vice-versa.

I wonder what's on your mind

I think I'll throw it all away

Rob: Their music had a very sentimental feeling to it. Almost a sadness to it. When I say it was not the type of music I wanted to pursue it is only because my passion is creating harder more aggressive music. But that does not mean I didn't enjoy listening to their music. I did, very much infact. Hahaha my mohawk didn't really fit with the image either. They made me use a sizzle cymbal for crying out loud. Richard knew I hated it. He would bring it to gigs with him and he would have the same look on his face every time he handed it to me. That type of "sorry I know you hate this but I am handing it to you anyway" type of look. Their music had a real honest sounding sentimental quality to it that I did not want to see go away.

Stan: Around 1986 The Feelies started doing the rehearse/record/tour cycle and that cut off most of my outside activities, although I kept in touch mostly with Kris over the years. At the end of The Feelies (1991) we revived the Kris/Richard/Mike and me lineup. We only rehearsed but I was really enjoying the new material we were working on. It was like Television and Richard Thompson playing together. Some health problems were becoming evident with certain band members and then Dean asked me to record with and eventually join Luna. Which led to another 4 1/2 years of the rehearse/record/tour cycle, and my losing touch with Kris and Richard.

Palmyra: I sort of lost touch with them a little in the late 80's because of my own musical endeavors, but re-connected with Kris around 1992 to ask if she would fill in playing bass with the Friggs when we were in between bass players (payback, I guess). She agreed to play, and although I knew it wasn't really her thing musically, she went with it & we always had such a blast. We've stayed in touch ever since, and I count her as one of my dearest friends.

Michael: Richard was one of the finest songwriters I've ever worked with, but he was his own worst enemy, sabotaging his relationships with musicians he came into contact with. In 1992 I received a call from Richard asking me if I'd like to get together to play with him again. I jumped at the opportunity. His new songs were better than ever. We made a few basement tape recordings, but sadly, due to both of our problems with substance abuse it never got off the ground. Richard moved back to Boston where I never heard from him again until Ira Kaplan contacted me with the sad news of Richard's passing.

I think I'll throw it all away

Glenn: Even though I was aware of his problems, I was surprised when I heard of his passing and saddened by the thought of another unfulfilled end to a very promising beginning.

Dave “Bass” Brown: I always thought Richard should do a solo LP and approached him about it when I started some labels. I tracked him down at his dad’s house and wrote him a letter. He wrote back and we were seriously talking about recording something. I put it on the back burner and a few years went by, then I called his house and his dad told Me that Richard had passed on. It wasn’t drugs like everyone thought. It was due to complications with Richard being a diabetic.

Stan: I'm not sure when I heard that Richard had died but all I could (and can) think is, "what a waste." And how lucky I was to get to play in so many great music situations. I still keep in touch with Kris and I'm still happy that I got to be a member and contributor to Kris and Richard's band and music.

Michael: In December 2004 we held a memorial show at Maxwell's. The line-up beside myself would include Kris Yiengst, Stan Demeski, Glenn Mercer and Ira Kaplan as the core band with guests Rob Winfelder, Rob Norris, Sean Eden and Palmyra Delran. Out of this the band East of Venus with Glenn, Rob Norris, Stan and myself was formed.

Glenn: When Michael decided to put together a memorial show for Richard, I didn't hesitate at all and I found the event to be a fitting, and ultimately positive undertaking (in that it put me back in touch with a few musician friends) that led to the start of another band, East Of Venus, with Stan, Michael and Rob Norris (former member of the Bongos.)

Guy Ewald: …It was great hearing Red Buckets' repertoire again; it really stood the test of time. They had a sort of Urban Folk-Rock sound (say, VU & TV meets Fairport) and did wonderful covers of Nick Drake's 'Which Will' and Sandy Denny's 'It'll Take A Long Time.' Their own songs were so good that most people thought those [cover] tunes were band originals (pretty obscure back in 1983... Nick Drake hadn't started hawking VW's yet). But even with the underground superstar lineup the Tribute Night only drew about 25 people to Maxwell's on a Thursday night.

Palmyra: The tribute to Richard night at Maxwell's was so bittersweet. I played acoustic guitar on Jane September, and was thrilled to share the stage with all these great musicians. Yet, the evening was a sad finale/tribute to an incredibly talented & tortured soul.

Rob: Richard’s lyrics were simple and honest and sweet, but is conversations thrived on biting sarcasm. It was a real contrast. He loved to make people laugh by just being as bitter as possible about almost everything. He was always a total gentlemen to me. What a funny guy. Missed.

Michael: Richard was an amazing talent with tremendous wit and a huge ego to match and low self esteem, so that he didn't take criticism well. He had a well tuned ear and a sharp eye for graphics. A few of the flyers he designed in a folk art style for some of our shows back in the days when cut and paste was with scissors and glue. My only regret, that we never got to make a record together. I do however have enough songs to perhaps record an album "The Songs of Richard Mason" with a bunch of friends.

Palmyra: I would love to see a reissue of the old Red Buckets recordings, or if Michael's idea of "The Songs of Richard Mason" can come to fruition some day. Their music always felt so special.

And if dreams come back to me
I'll pretend that I don't see
I'll just cover my eyes and stare

It'll surely come

Here it comes again



Kristen: Looking back I don't know how I could have ever thought it could last. It became hell, and certain things still haunt me. But I am grateful for the experience, and the people I met along the way.

...I am thrilled that people are still thinking about the band.

Thanks to all the members of Red Buckets and friends who contributed:
Michael Bennet of Lost Barbecue and The Dupont Circles was the first I ever heard of Red Buckets and it was his idea to do a post on them.
Dave “Bass” Brown of Insteps, the Young Snakes, Negative FX, and the Lyres; runs some or all of Moulty/Distortions/Funkadelphia Records. Is a Red Buckets vinyl reissue in our future?
Michael Carlucci sent in the Red Buckets demo tracks and photos included here. He formed Winter Hours; now plays with East of Venus. They have two Red Buckets covers posted here and may include Jane September on their upcoming album. 
Palmyra Delran played a Moe Tucker drum kit in Das Yahoos and Pink Slip Daddy and plays guitar in The Friggs and her solo outfit
Stan Demeski of The Feelies, The Trypes, Luna, and East of Venus. 
Guy Ewald recorded some of Red Buckets Maxwell's shows and posted key info on Steve Hoffman Music Forum that got things rolling.
Glenn Mercer of The Feelies, The Trypes, and East of Venus. 
Cordy Swope of Ruin
Rob Winfelder of Live Not On Evil just released a new album on Creep Records.
Kristen Yiengst played with The Friggs and Mean Reds and is VP of Creative Services at Def Jam/Island Records. "Working on album covers is another childhood dream come true. I've been very lucky."

June 10, 2012

Frack Rock! ...Barclay Records.... ................... Eastern PA 1961-69

The Royal Cavaliers
These two comps from the coal region are appropriately fractured at the magic year, 1966, when sonic forces converged and, for me, the best music of that decade bubbled to the surface. Kids could buy cheap Silvertone or Harmony electric guitars at the department store and start a band in their parents' garage in a newly buit subdivision. Buddy Holly, the twist, surf music, and the British invasion showed they didn't need professional songwriters or string arrangements to have a hit song. They could cover one, or write their own, and the local AM station would pipe the record over a 500-mile radius and make it a regional hit. Radio deejays sponsored dances in high school gyms that your band could play at. 1966, the drug culture was just catching on and psychedelia was emerging, but hadn't gotten too stupid, and probably hadn't reached Orwigsburg yet anyway. And with a little sinister fuzztone and organ, the kids didn't necessarily have to do drugs to sound like they did.

Clay Barclay ran one of those hometown record producer/engineer/publisher all-in-one operations that did so much to drive the vast body of American music that flew under the radar. He apparently even ran WKBA as a 10-watt pirate radio station out of his parent's house! The Eastern PA comps pull together a great snapshot of that place and time. These are my favorite tracks, but you can still buy the full CDs at the BOMP Store.

Eastern PA Rock 1961-1965
The Mistics WKBA countdown Orwigsburg radio
The Triumphs - Triumph's Theme 
The Triumphs - Don't Ask Me Why Buddy Holly lives!
The Jaguars - Unfair to Me
Chuck Barr and the Playboys - Twist With Me Check out all the local high school shout-outs.
Chuck Barr and the Playboys - Espaniel Bob Wills meets The Ventures at Taco Bell
Chuck Barr and the Playboys - Sky Blue Pink
The Mistics - WKBA jingle
The Ramrods - War Party
The Ramrods - Blue Steel David Lynch meets Waikiki Beach in coal country?

Eastern PA Rock 1966 - 1969
The Sidewinders - Not Again A nasty girl-cruncher along the lines of The Rats' Revenge
The Lords - Sweet Words A little calypso for the frat boys
The Newluvs - Be My Girl A cool organ-cruncher
The Royal Cavaliers - I'll Try Again Super primitive adolescents
Pat Farrell and the Believers - Bad Woman With a fuzz bass from the 80s-goth/psych time machine
The Ethics - A Letter to Kathy Last song at the Minersville High School dance


Clay Barclay is still recording bands at Cyberacoustics Laboratory in Louisville, Kentucky. Check out the Barclay Sound Wagon!

May 27, 2012

The Impossible Years.................. ...80's Teen Soundtrack... .....................(Philadelphia 1980-88)

With two college radio stations in Lancaster, PA we heard some pretty good music for a small town. Those airwaves helped to rescue me from my Journey and Foreigner 8-track tapes with a similar type of ultra convenient, but crappy-sounding technology known as the NAB cartridge. "Carts" were most often used, and reused for public service announcements and station IDs, but occasionally the music director would throw some top-played songs on a cart, and we were fortunate enough to have Flower Girl and Attraction Gear on regular rotation at WIXQ. I never saw The Impossible Years play, but these two songs were part of my personal teenage soundtrack. That was in 1985 when I went out and bought a brown/yellow/green paisley shirt at the Water Street Rescue Mission. My mom called it "that ugly shirt," but I wore it for years.


9:45 

Todd Shuster:
We started playing in March of 1978 as The Jags. It was the classic story of hearing the New York and English bands of 1977 and being inspired to play music again. We played local clubs opening for a lot of the bands (X, Mumps, Cramps, Suicide, etc.) that passed through Philadelphia. A year later, when we heard a single by an English band also called The Jags, we decided on the name The Impossible Years....
By 1980, we had a new bass player and the band was: [Me] on vocals and guitar, Howard Luberski on bass and Seth Schweitzer on drums....     ...The 8-track Denise and She's No Fun demos feature Tony Marsico, who was our bass player before Howard joined us.  Tony went on to play bass for Bob Dylan, Neil Young, Roger Daltrey, The Cruzados and Matthew Sweet.  Howard, who was Tony's friend, started playing bass for us after Tony left for L.A. 
We self-released a single... Baby Baby.... The b-side was a different version of "She's No Fun," but I prefer the version above. ...Within a few years, we were included on two compilation records: I'd Rather Be In Philadelphia and Bomp Records', Battle Of The Garages V II....

Jay Schwartz (vintage film collector and IYs manager):
...I was managing a rock band in the early 1980s and was working at a live music nightclub. I had earlier bought several [film] reels of Soundies, with music from the 1940s. I thought they were the most amazing thing I had seen at that point. Sometime in 1982 or 1983, this was just around the time MTV had started, I had this idea-let's show these films before the band I was managing played. They were called The Impossible Years; I borrowed their name from a 1960s teen movie. So I said that we would advertise that we would have "pre-rock videos from the Impossible Archives" just to make people come to the show and get some extra publicity attached to the band. 
Another occasional band gimmick I thought of was to hang up all of these one-sheet posters for drive-in movies as a stage backdrop. I remember people shouting loudly during the Soundies screening, "This sucks, let's rock 'n roll!"  ...I brought this white sheet and hung it from the top of the lighting pole using Bulldog clips, so I could yank it off quickly before the band would start. I imagined this very fast and dramatic transition from film to live band, with them hitting the first note as soon as the screen was pulled down, but they were still tuning up, and the moment was lost....
Todd:
...We went into a 16-track studio and came out with a five-song tape, four of which we hated (the recordings, not the songs). This was the one we all liked.   Love Me A Kiss 
We had recorded a three-song cassette at a local 8-track studio. When we were approached by the people who wanted to release I’d Rather Be In Philadelphia, we gave them Flower Girl from the cassette. 
The Battle of the Garages is a longer story. We were fooling around one night and made an effect-laden over-the-top version of Attraction Gear on our TEAC 3340 reel to reel four-track. Our manager sent it to Greg Shaw, who we didn’t know, but knew of. He liked it, asked that we rerecord it for the next Battle of the Garages comp. We did and he included it on V. II.
When Attraction Gear got a great review in Sounds, we were contacted by Dan Treacy of Television Personalities. He told us that he was starting a new label called Dreamworld Records and he wished for us to be his first release. Scenes We'd Like To See (Dreamworld 001) was a four-song E.P. that was released in 1983....   
...The recording of Attraction Gear on the EP is one of the few times that we were all very happy and proud with the results of a studio recording. That's one of the reasons we switched to working with our own 4-track.
4-track demo:
Lovely/Lonely
The Girl I Always Seem To Get
It's a Drag
I Agree was the first song Todd wrote for the Jags in 1978, recorded by The Impossible Years in the 80s, released on Todd's solo album in the 90s, and rerecorded by Todd in 2010.
...We continued to play until 1988, at which time, I began recording songs on my four-track. In 1997, I released 20 of those demos as a CD entitled: My Report Card, a theme that pokes fun at my current status as a teacher.

Thanks to Todd Shuster for sharing these tracks! Most of the quotes are from ModPopPunk ArchivesFramework: The Journal of Cinema and Media (Jay Schwartz), and Cloudberry Cake Proselytism V. 3 (Great interview with Todd). And thanks to Tom Casetta, Rustle Noonetwisting, and others for making and playing those Impossible Years carts over and over again at WIXQ!


Jay Schwartz is still operating The Secret Cinema, the Philadelphia area's premiere floating repertory series.

Hear The Jags on tapewrecks and see Todd's videos and his solo work.

Todd has recorded a new cover for the next installment of the 10-volume Television Personalities tribute on The Beautiful Music. Stay tuned!

April 7, 2012

"A Steamin' Stew of Mutant Spew" - The Deadly Spawn Compilation

  
Somewhere outside you here a cry
A new commotion in the sky
A new generation's shouting out loud
I'm born in the USA and that makes me proud
Well skip the flag and all that
Cause being a fungus is where it's at
We'll be glad to ruin your perfect lawn
With the fungus from our spawn








The Velvet Monkeys
In 1985 we were getting fed a healthy diet of neogarage and psych from the grownups (Bill & Carl) over at the Web of Sound record store. ...The Scientists, The Nomads, The Lime Spiders, The Chesterfield Kings, The Hoodoo Gurus.... The Real Gone was slurping it up and recorded a live demo for Bill and Carl that found its way into the hands of Rick Noll, creator of York, PA's Bona Fide Records. Rick apparently liked it enough to include us on his followup to The Train To Disaster compilation if we re-recorded a song or two. So we borrowed a 4-track machine from friend and local punker Ray Rhythm, and laid down Bells Are Ringing, one of Dave's post-Vietnam era social protest songs.

Many of the bands, including ours, had already broken up and/or were playing with some combination of The Left and The Skeptics before the record even came out in 1986, but it sure caught a moment in time. The A-side had all the big(ger)-name acts, or at least the bands that made an appearance on another compilation by that time. We made it onto the flunky B-side, but we were in dang-good company nonetheless. Where The Train to Disaster was a strange disjointed mess, in the best way possible, The Deadly Spawn was a solid batch of songs from some not-so-solid bands.


A-Side
The Brood
The Velvet Monkeys - Rock Party (Washington DC) All we want is your girlfriend's love!
Monster Rock - She Lied (Frederick, MD) - members of The Left and The Skeptics.
The Brood - Writing on the Wall (Portland, Me)
Thee Fourgiven
The Creeping Pumpkins - Better Off Without You (Pompton Lakes, NJ)
Thee Fourgiven - The Wrong Side Of Your Mind (Hollywood, CA)
Liquid Generation - I Love You (Seattle, WA)
The Dusters
The Dusters - Everytime (Frederick/Hagerstown, MD) Another Left/Skeptics project. They opened the Hasil Adkins show in Lancaster that year.
The Skeptics
The Skeptics - Legend of the Headless Surfer (Frederick, MD) from the Worry Beads cassette. Drummer Stephen Blickenstaff also did the monstrous cover art and the cover of the Cramps Bad Music for Bad People.

The Real Gone
B-Side
The Subterraneans - Hammer of Love (Frederick, MD)
The Real Gone - Bells Are Ringing (Lancaster, PA)
Mutant Drone - Harvest Time (Richmond, VA)
Scattered Limbs - Walk Without Me (York, PA) made their only public appearance with James "Rebel" O'Leary at his birthday party at the local Goodwill.
No King - Restless Soul (Washington DC/Hoboken, NJ) featuring Rudi Protrudi of Tina Peel and The Fuzztones on harp.
The Turnups - Egypto-Tek (Harrisburg, PA) One of Central PA's first punk bands, circa 1980, with and without Billy Synth.

FlexiDisc
The Voodoo Love Gods - Bad Seed (Hagerstown, MD) Another Left spinoff featuring one of the Subterraneans
The Stump Wizards - I Don't Want You Anymore (Camp Hill, PA) Hear their first cassette here.

Added to the Dutch/German pressing on Resonance Records:
The Broken Jug - Son of a Gun (West Germany)