Sunday, June 28, 2015

Vinyl Lives, Record Stores are Helping Lead the Way


                                                                              



 Warm Analog Grooves

&

 The Resurgence of Vinyl

 

I’ve been a vinyl freak for most of my life. It all started when my older brother brought home groovy 45’s like Take A Look (My Friend) by the Bossmen, East Side Story by Bob Seger & the Last Heard and 96 Tears by Question Mark & the Mysterians. I liked Question Mark the best because he lived on the 800 block of Howard Street next door to my cousin Sally Rork.  She arranged a meeting between my idol and my brother and me. It was a prophecy and a promise for better things to come. Question Mark told us to buy all his 45’s so we did. We bought “I Need Somebody” “Can’t Get Enough of You Baby”,” Girl (You Captivate Me),” and  “Do Something To Me.” I then turned my attention to The Bossmen (On The Road, Baby Boy), Terry Knight & the Pack (Mister, You’re A Better Man Than I), the Excels (California on My Mind) and Bob Seger’s Heavy Music, salacious boner rock & roll. I was coming of age. The first albums I bought were “The Beatles 65 and the “Beach Boys Today.” They were Christmas gifts for my mother. She seemed really delighted my largesse. As I continued my quest for everything vinyl I bought albums by the Frost, The Beatles, Bob Seger System, the Dave Clark 5, the Tremeloes and the Beatles…loved those fabulous harmonies and that insistent big beat. I had it bad and though the seventies, eighties and the new millennium I collected thousands of albums from record stores, mail order catalogs, and garage sales. I bought so many albums from Who Put the Bomp, a mail order magazine that I had a first name relationship with the owner Greg Shaw. He was a true believer and so was I. But then I would get the itch and I would sell all that beautiful vinyl and start all over again, only to repeat this agony like a modern Sisyphus pushing the boulder up the mountain. I continued this pattern of behavior many times until I settled into a comfortable relationship with eBay for the long haul, purchasing back my last big collection until I was suitably embarrassed. My story is not dissimilar to anyone who loves music. To this day I do not regret a single moment in my quest for vinyl. It’s a hunger that cannot be quenched.

Fred Reif has been in the trenches and witnessed the guerilla warfare of the record collecting industry. He had his own store in Saginaw before he moved over to Ann Arbor to run Schoolkids records. He has bought and sold countless record collections in his time and he’s pretty savvy about how this industry appeals to teenagers as well as aging baby boomers. He scratches his head about the new age collectors buying habits. Recently Fred watched it happen in Frankenmuth where teenagers would buy albums by Kiss, Neil Diamond, Barbara Streisand, Willie Nelson as well as the Beatles and Jefferson Airplane. The younger generation is building their own collections, buying the easy ones first before diving into the more expensive collectable albums (and 45’s). At this stage in their collecting hobby they are primarily picking up the hits. The aging baby boomers are getting rid of the records, rock & roll became rock! Fred realizes that vinyl gets only a small percentage of the sales something like 2% to 6%. In the past few months Jazz recordings are so stalled out those classical recordings are doing better. The 55 and 65 year old demographic is still buying vinyl, but they are not playing the records. Fred listens primarily to Caribbean music but he sells lots of Rock & Roll and Blues 78’s. He sells on eBay but it’s a mixed bag, “It’s harder to sell on eBay because they raised their fees. I used to get 50 free ads a month, now it’s only 20 free ads, plus I’m charged 10% for the sale and 10%for the charge on shipping.” To Fred eBay is trying to get rid of the smaller dealer and Record Store Day promotes vinyl, it’s a free ad for record stores – like Sweetest Day. “I buy obscure stuff and I go to thrift stores everyday, says Fred, I buy collections, most are junk but if I’m lucky I’ll get my money back. I like 45’s the most, that’s all we needed to have, travelling bands would come into town the popularity of one song, like Incense & Peppermints.”
                                                                       
 
A long time connoisseur of vinyl requested anonymity. But his voice is heard loud and clear. “This is an energizing time period in the last three years, 50% of my sales are high school and college kids. In the 90’s Jack White pushed vinyl and it promoted interest in other records.”  By 2000 eBay changed this for the next 5-10 years.  Now people want to buy things. “Stores are seeing teens buy regular LPs like Hall & Oates and John Mellencamp. The classic stuff by the Beatles, Pink Floyd, Led Zeppelin and Rush are gone, you can hardly find them anywhere (for a reasonable price). Young collectors want the original package. They want to hear the pops and clicks in the music.” In the last 15 years vinyl has been dumped, destroyed and thrown away. Millions of records ended up in the landfills. However on the other side of that equation were the grandparents of the new age collectors are giving their collections to their grandchildren or they would take their parents records and the parents didn’t care. Vinyl became HOT again! Now you see stores pop up from Flint and Frankenmuth to Detroit, New York, Los Angeles and even Brazil. For my anonymous connoisseur the lust for vinyl is growing, “kids buy vinyl, they have to take care of it, clean it and put it on the turntable,  it’s a whole vinyl experience, vinyl is something that you physically own but once it’s gone, it cannot be replaced. Music is a personal thing. Preserve your vinyl!”
                                                                     


I contacted Jordan Pries from Electric Kitsch to get his view on the resurgence of vinyl. “Vinyl …it’s almost new again. Their parents got rid of their collections so their children grew up with CD’s and downloads. So it’s almost a new format again.” Pries cites the White Stripes and the Black Keys who were total vinyl heads, to the resurgence of record collecting. “Young people liked those bands and the bands pushed vinyl, it’s like a new way of approaching music. It’s not like reading a great book which is a different media, with the ascendance of the internet music became a something you download, not something you hold and place on a turntable. They could release one song at almost no cost for a physical format. For Pries there is more than music at stake, art work, credits and cool liner notes would be lost. Pries sees younger people buying newer records that aren’t cheap. “They will pay $15-30 dollars and it’s mostly newer music from artists like Arctic Monkeys, Black Keys, Amy Winehouse and Lana Delray. Some teens and adults will buy a record a week.” Reissues and Box sets have been very popular lately especially with classic rockers like Led Zeppelin, Beatles and Pink Floyd.  Jordan recalls his early days of collecting. “Tuesdays were usually the release date. We used to get in line at midnight to get the latest releases such as The Battle of Los Angeles by Rage Against the Machine or Pantera’s The Great southern Trend Kill.” Pries cites industry sales figures for vinyl – 3 million last year; 9.6 million this year so far and should reach 16 million! It should double production.   United Pressing is pressing hundreds of thousands of discs. A buyer from Wichita Kansas found 13 record pressing machines. He will now have capacity to produce huge quantities of vinyl LPs. For Jordan Pries record collecting is personal, “My dad was a record collector and he gave me his collection of classic rock & roll albums that included Del Shannon, The Byrds, The Beatles and Pentangle. My dad was also a musician; he played the organ and was in a popular band called the Coachmen. They released two 45’s on the Target label out of Wisconsin, Girl in the Wind and Hey Bulldog.” Pries cites Jack White and his Third Man Records for bringing some sanity to record collecting. “He wants record stores to survive. They will sell to stores like mine so I can sell LPs cheaper.”

                                                                  


In December of 1974 Bill and Judy Wegner opened Records & Tapes Galore. At that time the industry sold vinyl albums and 8 track tapes and cassettes were starting to gain a following. Bill Wegner explains, “We sold a lot of albums, several thousands. We had a one stop distributer who would get all the labels like Capitol, CBS, Warner Brothers and RCA. For a small store we did really well. They pushed hard and always had promos to give away. A particular rack jobber had an old beat up car, he was a bit frumpy and looked like Peter Falk.” Bill had an open invitation to take anything the man offered even if it was the latest, hot off the presses LPs from major artists like Deep Purple or Joe Walsh. The idea was that Bill would play the freebies in the store to promote sales. Bill’s business was booming though the seventies and eighties but it slowed down in the nineties. “CDs came out in 1984, Bill recalls, and it just exploded. RCA promoted CDs as the perfect sound forever…but it was actually the imperfect sound forever.” This led to a mass exodus of from vinyl, people got junked their turntables and bought CD players. Bill recalls, “At one point the industry jettisoned vinyl altogether. By the 1990’s very few albums were being produced and in the mid-nineties LPs ceased production except for a few boutique labels. In 2015 album sales have exploded again and companies are having difficulty keeping up with the demand. It is a marriage of technology and art.”

Bill admits that he sold a ton of CDs during a brief renaissance that emerged in 2010/11. “It is a tribute to several movies that had prominent roles for DJ’s and kids got interested and the DJ became a focal point. He would play the music loudly and use two turntables that could allow the DJ to mix one song into another. Discotheques were prominent and the DJ was the hero. Vinyl was featured in these films, it took the place of the record shop.” Bill has his pulse on the action, he knows that kids have MP3’s but highs and lows are chopped off . Bill says, “Its music but not all of the music.” There is no doubt that kids got into their father’s vinyl collection. It was like tasting forbidden fruit. The kids learned by watching dad dust off the vinyl, hold it  carefully on the edges and set the needle down on the grooves…heaven! Bill is knows that people from one era have an affinity for music from their time, makes sense. Bill reports that older folks are energized by the resurgence. “The LPs that are coming out now are 2/3 new releases and 1/3 reissues,” says Bill, “Is it a fad or will it sustain and grow. It’s hard to tell.”

“I love music and records do have power for me, it involves me more and compels me to drop my newspaper and listen intently to those beautiful sounds”

Peace & Love

Bo White

 

 

Jashae Slaughter is Back!

                                                                 

                                                                                


                                                                      
The Legend of Xero

Jashae Slaughter is Back!

 

On the way from someplace else I stumbled upon a young man with vision, he was spiritual looking deeper into his soul and the soul of man. He knew instinctively that the music in his mind was taking him deeper inside himself, discovering the internal cervices that allowed him to roam so freely within his cage, well knowing that he was in sacred hallows. His search for the divine led Jashae to music as music is the food of love. It was his doorway for his passion. His numinous mind led him to a deeply felt experience. It changed his life and he was able to breach the cage, find his inner smile; accept and let go unburdened by the weight of previous experiences. At this point I was getting to know Jashae but within a blink of an eye, I lost him. He yearned to be close yet to be free. His task was to seek deep moral choices and merge with others. What is good and true is experienced as love and his heart reached out to that which is beauty. And suddenly he returned. It was worth the wait.

 Jashae tells the story

My Last Few Years

For the last few years, I've been chasing fame in every part of Michigan except my home.  I left Saginaw in search of a new life and traveled to many other towns and cities, performing for Churches, Festivals, and Youth Groups. During those years I also recorded 3 Albums, and and EP.  I am currently working on my next album entitled "Ascension: The Creative Power of the Imagination" with 1 song released in audio format and Music Video.

I decided to take some time off in 2014 so that I could focus on my family and move back home to Saginaw.  Now that I am back home, I've been exploring new ways of sharing my music and story, but instead of trying to spread it throughout the world, I've been focusing on my city and Church.  I believe that I have gifts that cam help people and I really want to change the world, the best way i know how, starting here at home.

 

Recording and Production

My latest release, "Love You Much (Ironseed Dubsmix)" is a composition I came up with while experimenting with dubstep last year.  I briefly changed my name to The Immortal Ironseed before re-assuming the Mantle of XERO once again, hence the sub-name of the song. 

The song features a House/Trance EDM framework, with elements of American Dubstep, as well as a Dubstep "solo" where rock songs might normally feature a guitar solo.  I also scrambled some snippets of various Gregorian Chants to create the haunting background vocals featured throughout the song.  I wanted the song to be both hauntingly beautiful, yet fearsome like a wolf lurking in the fog.

After I found a good working formula, I enlisted the help of Marquis Smith (Marq 9/11), a fellow producer and engineer, to help me polish the sound of the song.  He really brought it to life in the Mixing and Mastering.  This was all put together over about 3 months.  We finished the song in April of this year and started getting ready to promote.

 

Song Background

Search or hearts so that we will not be idle.
That is the thought that always came to mind whenever I worshiped to this song back in 2008. It was one of my dreams to become a worship leader at The International House of Prayer in Kansas City (ihop kc) and to meet Derek Loux and Misty Edwards. Today Derek is no longer with us, but his words live on through his music. Even though I never got the chance to meet him, his songs were a big part of my spiritual development as a young man.
This song is part of my continuing journey into spiritual enlightenment and maturity. My version includes all of the prominent genres that I hold dear, plus a few strokes of Gregorian Chants & American Dubstep. I hope that you enjoy it.

Promotion and Hosting

Listener may preview the song in it's entirety on Youtube, and on Soundcloud, and Bandcamp once it releases this Saturday. It will also be available on iTunes, Amazon, and other digital markets.

 

Lyrics

(Verse 1)
Show me the distance
that You reached with love to me
Show me the depth of sin,
my hopeless depravity
Show me Your patience
given time and time again
Show me the ignorance
that I was drowning in

(Verse 2)
Show me the devilish way
I pushed You from my mind
Dark ingratitude
displayed time after time
Heaven's only Son
hung bloody on a tree
The Father crushed You
on the cross to set me free

(chorus)
I will Love You Much
give my body, soul and blood
I've been forgiven much,
Count me worthy to drink Your cup

Open my eyes to the mysteries of heaven
Of infinite crimes, I've been forgiven


Credits
released 13 June 2015
Original Song/Lyrics by Derek Loux from the album "Paper Religion"
© 2007 Forerunner Worship (Admin. by Music Services, Inc.)
Composition by J. Slaughter

Produced by J. Slaughter

Mixed and Mastered by Marq 9/11 for Northern Exposure Music



Jashae Slaughter,


TLoX on Facebook

TLoX on Google Plus

 

 

Our Greatest Bands Series - The Burdons

                                                                              
                                                                               

The Greatest Bands Series

The Burdons

I first encountered the Burdon’s at the Fordney Hotel in November 1982. I was out with my brother-in-law just to have a few beers and unwind, we both had children that we adored and our wives seemed to understand. I was busy working at White’s Bar. My schedule was taxing 50 to 60 hours, six to seven days a week, with at least one night shift. With that grind I simply forgot about music, didn’t pay any attention to the local scene and I wasn’t tuned into the latest trends or new wave bands that were punked up and rocking, keeping music alive. But on the cold December night the Burdon’s awakened me from a frothy ennui, and reignited my love for real rock & roll. These dudes took no prisoners and they wrote their own songs and road tested those little chestnuts until they were ripe for the picking, I recalled Go Steady (She does everything a good girl should), Heartbeat (Time won’t hurt you anymore) and Right Back To Me (you can tell by her clothes, she knows just where she’s goin’). Those original songs blended perfectly with their well-placed covers, from the Monkees hit song Last Train to Clarksville (an anti-war song hidden within the musical borders of Boyce and Hart) to My Bonnie (Beatle’s version). I was so out of touch that when the Burdon’s rocked hard on “What I like About You,” I thought it was their composition. When I finally heard the Romantics original version I knew the Burdons gave it more energy and more attitude. To this day I prefer Jim Davenport’s punked up sound blast.

It all started in Junior High School when Jim Davenport and his best friend Paul Schultz started jamming together, helping each other fingering chords and bending strings. Like so many other aspiring musicians, they were deeply inspired by the Beatles and other sixties icons. They were a quick copy and at age 15 they were working in local bars and developing that signature Burdon’s sound. Both were fine singers; Paul finding his voice and emulating his heroes John Lennon and John Fogerty. Scott Causley lived around the block and was a well-seasoned drummer with vice grip sense of rhythm and a jackhammer backbeat. By the time he met Jim and Paul, he was ready for a change and instinctively knew that something remarkable was about to occur. The key to the lock was Davenport’s older brother David, at the time he was living in San Diego where he recorded with a band called Streetlife. He then became a member of one of San Diego’s most acclaimed bands, Claude Coma and the I.V.s. They recorded an album called Art of Sin. It seemed as if they were on their way to a bright future. Instead the band broke up in 1982 and David came back to Michigan. The Burdon’s classic lineup was formed and continued to prosper through the eighties.

It was not always easy or safe. After a gig in Detroit, two gun wielding bandits forced their way into the van, forced the band members into the rear of the vehicle and drove around the city, terrorizing the band and threatening to kill them. One of the men drove along six mile road while the other one crouched between the front seats, pointing the gun at the roadie Jeff Todd. The driver told the other one “just pop him.” They even stopped at a gas station, one got the gas, the other put a pillow over the gun and cautioned the band to look straight ahead. It ended after 30 minutes when the gunmen ordered them out of the van. All told the thieves made off with the van, the band’s clothes, $300 in cash and credit cards and over $15,000 in equipment. Despite all the hardship, the band performed with borrowed clothes and equipment the next night at Traxx, a great Detroit club. The show must go on and lessons were learned. Resilience was the clarion call.

The band did it the old fashioned way through relentless gigging and a Beatlesque camaraderie that sustained them even in their darkest hours. They took on venues big or small. At the height of their popularity they would transverse the state several times over They did gigs at Delta College Commons, Klumps in Harbor Beach, The Good Times Bar on Midland Street, Blue Water Inn in Sanilac, Brentwood in Caro, Casa Del Ray in Bay City, the Friendly Bar in Alpena as well as several other gigs in Mt Pleasant, Saginaw (The Banana Tree), Kalamazoo. The pay was pretty good ranging from $200 to $600 with a variance for an extended stay of three or so nights. It was good money at the time. The Burdon’s eponymously titled album was released in 1984. The band worked hard in promoting the disc. Several stations that received the album in a limited random shipment added The Burdons to their playlists, over 50 radio stations got onboard to launch the disc including stations in New York, Minnesota, Missouri, Nebraska, New Hampshire, New Jersey, Oregon and Pennsylvania.

Chris Bentley from KTEQ opined, “This album is really going to move.”

Tim Hyde of station KUSF exclaimed, “Great album, Great band.”

John Cloud of KUOR said, “I just got off the phone with Brian at WLBS and told him all about it. I think it’s great!”

CMJ Futures, “They have a great knack for composition.”

U.S. Rock, “When they crank up a rockabilly rhythm and shout I wanna wanna go Steady with You.” It’s hard not to smile.

The Burdons were called “a national group just waiting to happen.” It seemed like conscious dream drifting to an inevitable end, they will get the contract with a well-connected manager who knows the ropes. They will become the toppermost of the poppermost just like the Beatles. The Burdon’s daytime and nighttime dreams would allow this almost impossible wish to come true. It’s like dreaming they are smoking some incredible Columbian and waking up with a natural high. They were so close to stardom. Maybe there was too much salt in the cookies and the promise lost its sheen. It seems to me that the Burdons needed to grow and change to become who they are today. It comes with a price that always involves some losing, leaving and letting go

So, what happened…

The Burdon’s Interview


When did you kind of discover that you really liked music?

This is Paul, this is Paul talking. My first recollection of it, I’m still in the crib, and I remember the song. It was a song that was given to my dad for a birthday present and back in the day, we had the victrola in the living room. And they had me in the baby room, and I could, and the door was just cracked open a little bit. There was a party going on, and there were people. I guess I didn’t know what it was, you know.

But there was a lot of activity, and it kept me awake. I keep hearing this song over and over and over, and it woke me, you know. I’m looking around in this kind of semi-lit room, and I could hear this song, “Singing The Blues,” over and over and over. I guess it was Guy Mitchell.

So that came out in 1956 and the next thing for me was the Beatles. I had nothing to compare the Beatles’ sound to, but I know when I heard the Beatles on AM radio, my sister’s radio there was something magnetic about that which scared me. I would literally hide. I could hear it, but I would hide from it. There was something about it.


What about you, Jim?


We had the old Zenith stereo two sections. One section was a turntable and a speaker, and the next section was just a speaker. I remember looking at the section with the turntable that had the tubes, and I used to stare into it and I would imagine I saw an orchestra. (Laughter) It was Harry Belafonte, Harry Belafonte nonstop. I remember just staring at that. My dad and my mom, too, both enjoyed music so that was my very first recollection of just being fascinated with music. My dad played mandolin and my mother played harmonica and guitar, and I had a brother that was in a rock band back in 1964, ’65 called the Vibrations. They were pretty popular in the area.

I had music all around me, it was always there. I had a desire to learn it, to do it. One of my older brothers had a guitar. He didn’t really play very well, but I knew that you could turn the guitar into something that made music. The thing that really pushed me wasn’t anybody or an individual. I just wanted to have a band. I wanted to put on shows for everybody, and before I was 10 years old, I had my first band. We really didn’t do songs quite yet, but almost.  My buddy Gregg Billett was an original member. So Gregg and I would have a new name for a band every week and put a new show on, the only song we ever did was, “Hey, Joe.” I wanted to be an entertainer.


And you, Paul?


In my world, it was, Christmastime. I had an electric banjo, a push-button banjo that played,diddle-diddle-diddle chords. I remember my brother, Joel pushed me out in the middle of the living room with all the relatives around, and I’m out there with this little electric banjo, and I’m making up songs. I remember people saying, “That was nice, Paul,” and clapping a little bit. I remember that, and I remember a little drum set I got at Christmas, you know, kid’s drum set, and boy I liked banging on that baby.

He played pots and pans (Jim).

(Paul) I remember taking a piece of tape on the guitar neck and starting off E or F, you know, bars, depending upon what you were

doing, F chords, bar chords and listing what the bar chords would be. I wrote them all out on the neck. I remember that. It was the first big deal. I didn’t have anybody.

(Jim) Drums was my first instrument, I could just only play drums. It was natural. Nobody showed me. I played drums, guitar, and we had a bass player, piano, too. We always had a piano in the house. Nobody taught me. We had a chord dictionary. I figured out chords with my fingers, and then I learned songs.


So what was your first professional band, the big band before the Burdons?


(Jim) It was the Birds. I’ll tell you, this is how it happened. We entered a song-writing contest on WHNN. WHNN was in Bay City at that time on Tuscola Road and we had to get a tape in. Paul and I always wrote and recorded songs. He was the principle songwriter and he was really good at it. We would write at his house, in the basement that we had set up. He taught me how to do all this stuff. And we had reel-to-reel which helped us learn to write songs.

We had to get our demo tape in, that night to get it postmarked the next morning; otherwise we wouldn’t make it in time. I had Paul on the phone, I had the tape and I’m looking at my journals and I misspelled the word “Bird” several times. I would say things like, “I feel like I’m a burdon.”So that’s it, I wrote it down there and I put a dot in the middle of the “O.” We were going to tell people it was supposed to be an “E,” you know, but nobody ever asked. So that’s how we became the Burdons


(Jim) We’d go over to the Garber Junior High and play during lunch hour for those kids. Bill was on the drums, and I’m playing the guitar on “Sister Golden Hair.” I remember that. People still come up to me today and tell me about that song. The lady that was in charge of the choir at Garber, let us have our own space to bring our equipment in and practice. Every lunch hour, instead of going to lunch, we’d go in there and jam. I’m going to tell you what, though, if there ever was a mentor later on, that lady pushed us, and whenever there’s any kind of a show at Garber, she wanted us there. Her name is Pat Ankney. She helped us, pushed us man. She gave us the room at the school though we were never in choir or band.

(Paul)I remember getting out of classes just because we were going to do a show, some show we had been involved in. We’d get out of class, and the teacher would say, “Yeah okay, go ahead.”  Between seventh grade and eighth grade, we were locked. We just kept going on and on and on. We would rehearse in the summertime at my parents’ house in the basement and record our stuff.


So, let’s get into the Burdons. Did you have a manager?


(Jim) No. We didn’t get one until the AT&N mini-album. It was Eric Burch. He came onboard when we won a song-writing radio contest. So we had an opportunity to record our songs. Eric Burch was the DJ that was coordinating all this. He hooked up with us. We partied, partied, partied. He did get us in this Christian studio to do the recording.

We had to re-record the song that won it. So we got in there and I did bass and drums. Eric booked a couple of showcase gigs that he wanted the band to do, one was in Mt. Pleasant. It was an outside horseracing track at the Mt. Pleasant County Fairground. So we had a band. We needed a drummer because I was going to switch over to bass, so we auditioned drummers. Scott Causley was somebody that we always knew in the neighborhood. He was a couple of years older than us. We gave him a call to come over. Paul and I were in the basement getting ready and suddenly we hear the door open and Eric was falling down the stairs. He was the last guy we auditioned. We said, “Eric, you’ve got a sense of humor,” and everybody else was ready to go … with Gregg Billett and the three of us, we were like spark plugs going off, just like this (snapping sound).

We would build off each other, and so when Greg died, that was gone. Jim was going, “Do you think we should play the bass?” “Yeah, if you wanted to, you know. That means we’ve got to get a drummer.” “Yeah, okay.” So Scott came into the picture like that, and he was a spark plug. He was way more seasoned than us. He’s the one that really got us to really think about playing out because Jim and I we were pretty content just writing stuff in the basement, writing music and then once in a while go out and do something. We really didn’t want to go hard core to the bar scene, but Scott got into it and he said that we should play out more, so he got us thinking seriously about that. The premise was to make our songs better because we were doing all originals. We were a three-piece at this point


And then your brother Dave came in.


Yeah, he was out in San Diego making records and gigging quite a bit.

There was a lot of influence there for the band, and then Dave got into it.  He was more like a PR guy for us. He recorded for Delta Records. And he talked to Gary Gersh from Deppen Records, and we had Big Rock Records, that was ours.


 So you had this label. It seemed like you David were taking on the roles as a Manager in the band.

Actually both Dave and I were managing the band because we lived in the same house. Dave and I did all the phone work, lining everything up. And making sure all the dates were good and all that. It was a lot of work. We made an agreement between Fred Barrett and the Burdons for the sum of $300 a month for a period of three months if he Barrett agreed to the promotion. We met with him because we were trying to find somebody who could handle us. We wanted to get up to the next level. We were getting’ tired of it. I didn’t want to do it anymore because it was hard to please everyone. I was into girlfriends and

 It’s hard to please girlfriends, and when you got the barking in your ear, you need a manager to deal with this shit. I’m not sure exactly how we hooked up with Fred Barrett, but we sat down with him and I guess we agreed to let him handle us. All he ever did was get our name put into the Detroit Free Press a couple times and then he’d tell us what to wear. I remember having at least two or three meetings with him and by the third meeting we were telling him he’s puking. We gave him albums to deliver to Camelot Music. This is Geffen Records which is huge. I mean we’re talking ’85. We sent stuff out. We contacted departments everywhere. Invariably they’d say “Keep in touch. Keep us informed of all your new products.”

 No one ever got in touch.


 (PAUL)And before that stuff, Jim and I sent off tapes and Chrysalis Records were interested in us before the Burdons. Now they got paid. You know, we’re not PR people. That’s like Jim saying, “Let somebody else handle it. Yeah, and quite honestly the quality of the product that we were sending out was not…it wasn’t a finished product. It was just giving them an idea of what was coming at them. They would say, “Send us more.” Then nothing…it happened, it moved so quickly

We’re talking like ’79, ’80.


You were the songwriters. Can you talk about the creative process, how you worked on the songs, managed the harmonies, tempo etc?


(PAUL)Well for me, it was like any person writing or creating something. You have the music, maybe a couple of words, or maybe you have

words, lyrics and some music, or maybe you have the whole thing. So you come into these practices, and so, “I was playing the guitar and got this little riff going, but I’m hung up on this part.” Then Jim would listen to it, and he’d come up with a part, and I think we were throwing stuff around like that. He’d come in with something and it needed a guitar phrase or it needed something added to it. That’s what really took place, if it needed a lyric, Jim would come up with it.

We were just shooting it back and forth. We didn’t get all hung up. If it didn’t fit, it didn’t fit. It’s like building something. If you put the wrong things together and it doesn’t work right or it doesn’t fit quite right, try again.


You were the lead guitarist. What did you cut with your leads? How did that go for you?


I’m not a lead guitarist, but I never really wanted to play lead. I like rhythm, but then I also like John Fogarty did stuff, you know that kind of stuff. And so that just happened. I didn’t really plan to play lead, but it just happened. I’ve always felt that we needed a lead guitar player. We tried to get lead guitar players, but it didn’t pan out because our songs were somewhat of a nice, simple laid-out stuff, and these other guitar people would come in and they’d lay in some friggin’ triplets and just overkill the tune. Keep it simple and sweet or make it kind of a neat little, catchy tune… garage pop.


You had great hooks. Who sang the harmonies?


(Paul)I think that all happened by accident and a lot of people wonder about that too because I don’t know how this just happened but the guitar that I was playing was two and a half step lower, E flat, okay? That’s a half step lower and the next thing you know, everybody’s singing together, all singing and harmonizing, building chords, so I left that idea alone. That’s where the Burdons played, a half-step down.


(Jim)Yeah, that’s where we always played, it’s easier on the voice and its better. Now that we’re getting older, it’s really working out good.

David played. Dave would be on the black keys because back in the day you didn’t have the transposing button. Dave would play everything dep, dep, dep. It was all in flats and sharps and it happened by accident. We didn’t sit down and go, “Well, we need to get singing, get everything together.” It just happened. It happened because we loved to sing. (Jim) I got to say this. I was a shitty singer. I mean, my brother, Dave, is a good singer, Paul’s a great singer. When we first started out, I sounded like a fog horn. Flat, flat, flat.  When we sing harmonies, Dave and Paul, really hold it down and Scott and I just voiced ourselves in.

Dave was trained like a choir boy building chords with his voice. When he came in and added more to it as far as the structure of the chord. Harmonizing fine-tuned it for us… it was just knowing. For us, Dave brought that in. We were doing it, but we didn’t really know the mechanics, the rules…“well, we can throw this note in there, it’ll add another little dimension to it.” We’d play these notes, and Dave would say, “Jim, you hit this one and Scott’s going to hit this one.”


 I have your album totally like it. How were Sales?

I think, four thousand or so.

We went to any private stores they were in. Anybody that had a store, they were there. Camelot or the chains were harder to break into. I don’t know if they ever got those albums. I’m not sure.

See, we were, about 4,000 albums, that was money, but who knows? We didn’t have a manager. We weren’t businessmen. So we probably made some money but then we had to spend it, to live on. You got to remember now, the Burdons turned into a business. We became a legitimate, legal partnership in 1983. Now we went up a notch, see, when that became a business. Joe Bonk was our lawyer and he put that together. We even had to talk about when the band was done, who gets to use the name.


 (Jim) We get robbed in Detroit. We don’t have any equipment left because they stole everything except for a guitar. Let’s get a loan to buy new equipment and make a record. So we were getting a loan. We had to form a partnership and get a tax ID because we had to claim our cars, houses, wives, kids. They’re on the friggin’ loan, so then we had expenses. We ended up with the Schools Employee Credit Union, now it’s Sunrise Credit Union. And mind you the interest rate was quite high back in them days, about 13%. That was pretty good, hey? So the money went to pay back the loan.

I bought the record when it came out for $12.93. What were your favorite songs? Was there a particular standout for you?


(Jim and Paul)I liked them all.

(Paul) There’s not a tune I didn’t like. What’s the one tune…“Going Away.” I thought, “Well, it’s not really finished, but it’s kind of a cool tune.”

(Jim) My favorite songs were “Good Times,” “Heartbeat.”

(Paul)… James got that one. He wrote that one way before The Burdons.


Did you start putting out a second album? Did you get to go back in the studio?


Yeah, we did. We hooked up with Henry Weck, the gentleman from Brownsville Station. He had a studio down in Ann Arbor, A Square Records. We went down there and started working on the next record.

We had everything in the can. The guy that financed it owned the Castaways in Bay City. Something happened in his family and he backed out. They’re sitting down there. We had to give those tapes back.

We don’t own them. The studio owns them because nothing was ever paid. I don’t remember all those songs on here. We did a couple covers.


Did you tour?


Yes, it’d get real expensive. We just played a lot. That’s all we did. We were all over. We did Kalamazoo and over to the west side. I’ll have to look. We gigged down in Kentucky. We were in a tough spot getting  agencies to work together because when we planned this little tour our record would be out. This agency would book us and that agency would book us and another agency would book us, and then we’d have a gap. We would have a week to wait, and we’re going to starve to death. We we’ve got to stay some place. It was always hard to put everything together. Back in those days, it seemed like the agencies didn’t really like each other because it was a roadblock!

We’d always built in the cost. We got smarter as we got older. We’d ask for a PA so we didn’t have to drag ours. We want to be able to stay at a motel on your wallet, not ours.

Well back in those days nobody cared about where you stayed or how you were going to get back home or how you were going to get to the next night or whatever. I said, “Well, we can’t do that because, you know, it’ll kill us.” We ended up with places to stay, you know. “I’ll sleep in your car.”

It was a great ride!


The Burdons continue to perform in and around mid-Michigan to a loyal fan base that fondly remember the days and times of this incredible band. The Burdons created a musical tapestry of power pop and melodic punk, melding influences and daring to take chances with unpopular genres. There tasty originals always promised a good time. They dared to sing covers like Last Train to Clarksville, The Letter, and I’m a Believer. They took you home and made you like it!  Never kissing the Donkey’s ass…too often!








Kneaded & Thrown

                                                           
                                                                             



Roscoe Selley

Kneaded and Thrown

Roscoe Selley is one of those fortunate souls who actually believe in the power of music to bring love and peace into the mix of this crazy world. Just ask Madeline Albright, former Secretary of state for the hairy palmed, love doctor himself President Bill Clinton. Selley was 32 years old before he played one note in public. His father played campfire harp when the family took camping trips to fake wilderness roads. It struck a chord for young Roscoe who managed to mess with the harmonica when he was just a whippersnapper. He wasn’t serious about it but it filled a need, memories function well in that regard; and it was Robert Barkley’s radio show out of Central Michigan that inspired Roscoe to find out what the buzz was all about. He learned about Little Walter, Junior Wells and other prominent bluesmen. He was a true music lover who listened to James Taylor, Jackson Browne and Paul Simon before he dedicated his emerging interest in the blues. He developed his craft by playing in bars and clubs, learning funky blues, rock & roll and folk music.  He was a member of Blues Controversy, an incredible horn-based band with incredible lead singers, first with Sharrie Williams and then with Caitlin Berry. When that came to an untimely end, Roscoe joined forces with Michael and Scott Robertson, a three piece with incredible harmonies that eventually added bass player Keith Carolan and a full time drummer. The result was breathtaking. They called themselves Maybe August. They developed a back lot storyline that included actress Halle Berry. I bought it hook line and sinker (not) but others did and the rumor gained a little steam until it dissipated in the mist. After two incredible albums the mighty Maybe August called it quits; a sign of the time. I grieved the loss as it was symptomatic of the entire scene in Mid-Michigan. So I was excited when heard that Roscoe was in the studio.

Here’s my take on it…

Kneaded and Thrown might just  be the best album of the season. The music is full of earthy resonance, splitting genres and roasting chestnuts. Selley has a cast of the usual suspects from ragamuffins and straight up turnaround buskers who helped bridge the creative process through debate and compromise. The harmonies are honest, a little sloppy but that’s the charm. It’s not a pro-tooled piece of belly button fluff. It’s like when Danko and Manuel squeaked out the harmonies on The Weight. This disc is a gospel of truth, aging, love and regret. It’s real and wistful without being trite or maudlin. I love Roscoe Selley for all this and more.

 He’s found his voice.

Carpenter opens the disc. Selley’s melancholy harp is accompanied by Michael Robertson’s guitar. It gently caresses the lyrics;

All of my choices/have narrowed down here/all of these voices in my ear.

Roscoe has found his true voice. It’s not so pretty but its nuance and worn. It recalls the Beau Brummel’s Sal Valentino singing “Long Walking Down to Misery.”

Roscoe asks a spiritual question;

I didn’t ask for this/I don’t know what it means/Am I a spirit or a man.

Robertson’s supple guitar and Selley’s harp passages ring out a contemplative conversation that no one will hear.

What I Was Given resonates with an acoustic parade of phrasings that introduce Selley’s backlot memories; it may be that melancholia may be an honest appraisal for a reasonable man. Selley’s wistful harp sets the tone and Mike Thomas’ organ enriches the sonic landscape

There will never be and ending to this struggle

There is no ending to this live, our love

This growing up is never going to end

Truth is I’d do it all again

 

Hey, Amy aka “Everybody has a Story of Pain”

Selley’s lyrics carry some ambivalence. It’s like a Catholic confessional that wasn’t heard or absolved causing imperfect connections. Close harmonies give it a cool nuance that scaffolds the mixed emotions

Hey Amy, I know you’ve been hurt…Hey Amy – we’ll make it work

Ask me any question – I won’t lie…never needed an alibi

You know I’m in all the way/If you let us survive/

If you let me be who I am/Amy I can be your guy

Turned is the most personal song Selley has released to date. It is a signature theme about childhood’s end and adolescent rebellion, a developmental paradox in which we push away our parents at the time we need them the most. Our fear is that growing up means selling out; instead it’s a middle path and rapproachment is around the corner to offer a hand of love. Roscoe nailed the conflict and the necessary losses that are required; a cool accapella opening segued to Roscoe’s big full bodied harp playing and masterful unison singing from the band

 

Everybody’s course was easy to see /get married/have kids/make a family

Spend your life working for the Dow Company – But that never was for me

Feeling like a lucky man

Cause I turned…

 

 

Home is the anchor to this collection. It has everything from cool country pickin’ and some incredible fiddle work from Andy Rogers. Selley knows full well people who sacrificed for the sale of their art and it becomes a commodity to be co-opted, pre-empted and recycled. The lyrics reveal a personal truth;

 

I’ve been handled like clay/I’ve been kneaded, I’ve been thrown

No I’m molded/into a fragile grace

I long to go home/But the people are all gone

And Home is much more than a place

 

For Selley the regrets ebb and flow like a bottle pushed by the strength of a wave and a lonely truth prevails…the older I get, the less I know. It is the true measure of our wisdom!

 

 

7am begs the question why were we born if we aren’t forever? Out of an entire disc of incredible music and lyrical honesty, this song is a testimony to enduring friendship and love. This songs is tribute to Selley’s dear friend Chris Michalek who died unexpectedly of a cerebral hemorrhage. The lyrics are simply stunning;

 

7am…and dark as dark can be

Now is forever for me/one brilliant flash

Then eternity

All I am ever going to be

Peace, Peace

 

Recoil jumped out with feedback and an ominous minor chord from Robertson and a Guess Who turnaround (similar to the bridge on American Woman).This song has an-anti war vibe;

 

I only did what I was trained to do

And people said I was a hero

Didn’t know that I’d been wound too

By the recoil...

 

In a Little While brings this disc full circle. Roscoe opens the track with a melancholy harp tones with Robertson joining in with some sweet economical notations, exceptional restraint wherein less is more. This is a quiet song and Roscoe is singing as if he’s sitting on the couch with a few good friends. Selley is a  master of his craft. I’ve never heard such sad beauty. The music is the perfect accompaniment to the lyrics;

There is so little time/and no certain path

To get it right/ to make it last

Wish it didn’t go so fast…

So little time

 

 Amen, imperfect beauty,  an incredible album