Sunday, December 6, 2015

366 Days at the Drive-In: Day 67


The Date: December 6
The Movie: Gimme Shelter (1970)
What Is It?: Calling this genuinely disturbing and rather frightening document of an outdoor Rock festival gone horribly wrong the anti-Woodstock is an understatement. Even though music isn’t really the point of Gimme Shelter, there’s still a lot of great Rolling Stones music—not that that’s any consolation.
Why Today?: On this day in 1969, the Altamont Free Concert took place on California’s Altamont Speedway.

Saturday, December 5, 2015

Review: The End's 'From Beginning to End...'


Like most of the Stones (and their fans and their critics), Bill Wyman never had much nice to say about his band’s psychedelic period, yet the archetypal rhythm and blues bassist enjoyed his most distinguished role during the acid era. That was when he wrote and sang his only composition to be included on a Rolling Stones album and released as a single in the U.S. and masterminded the delightfully trippy LP Introspection by UK combo The End.

Unlike Their Satanic Majesties Request, a bizarre record that tends to get lambasted because it strayed so far from the Stones’ usual rock and blues formula (though not by your adoring writer, which should already be known by regular Psychobabble readers), Introspection is a highly approachable album with tight pop structures, big hooks, and sweet harmonies. Like Satanic, it is a splendid showcase for the magical Mellotron.  Unfortunately, noncommittal management kept this record so perfectly tuned into psychedelia’s too brief reign from being released until 1969. During that year, when getting “back to the roots” was rock’s chief cry (aided and abetted by the Stones’ own Beggars Banquet), Introspection surely sounded out-of-touch and flopped, but to my psychedelia-leaning ears, it knocks out a lot of the classics of that era. Personally, I prefer to spin enchanting tracks like “Cardboard Watch”, “What Does It Feel Like?”, “Shades of Orange”, and “Under the Rainbow” to admittedly great LPs like Led Zeppelin, The Velvet Underground, and Five Leaves Left, and that’s saying a hell of a lot.

However, The End’s career did not begin and end with Introspection, nor did their work with Wyman. Despite my adoration of that album, I’ve never dived into anything else the band did, though I don’t feel like I deserve too much blame for that since that material was only released on three out-of-print LPs by Tenth Planet Records in the nineties. Edsel Record’s new From Beginning to End… collects those three albums on CD for the first time along with Introspection and its bonus single mixes of “Loving Sacred Loving” and “Shades of Orange”. There’s In the Beginning…, a collection of early singles and outtakes, Retrospection, a comp of Introspection outtakes, and The Last Word, which was intended to be The End’s final album before they morphed into the heavier Tucky Buzzard in the seventies.

While none of these discs are as successful as Introspection, they each reveal something interesting about the band. In the Beginning… finds The End trying out various approaches in search of a sound: Unit 4 + 2-style mainstream pop, bubblegum soul, and more driving rock-soul in the Who/Small Faces mode. Not surprisingly, the latter approach is the best, though Wyman even produces the cheesier tracks with the wall-of-noise overdrive of a Shel Talmy record. The use of saxophone and the surprising number of original compositions shows that The End were determined to stand out.

A more consistent listen is Retrospection, though it’s clear why a lot of these songs didn’t make the cut. Too many sound too much like other tracks already on Introspection, while poor vocals torpedo a nice Procol Harum-esque tune called “Tears Will Be the Only Answer”. An attempt to turn Los Bravos’ “Black Is Black” into an acid rock dirge is a failure, but “Mister Man” is really good, and would have been a preferable replacement for the cornball version of Larry Williams’s “She Said Yeah” that is the only total misfire on Introspection. This disc also includes four bonus tracks that weren’t on the Tenth Planet record. They are mostly slight, though the lyrically stunted but spectacularly titled “Stones in My Banana” prevails with ass-shaking rhythm and mind-melting feedback.

The Last Word finds The End transitioning from the cuddly pop-psych of Introspection toward the grander seventies rock of Tucky Buzzard with much more purpose than they displayed on that sub-Vanilla Fudge version of “Black Is Black”. The material is very good, if not quite on the Introspection level. Though the generic instrumental “Smarty Pants” is disposable, there are no “She Said Yeah” style embarrassments. It’s a shame this stuff had to sit in the vaults for 25 years plus another 20 before reaching a audience beyond Ugly Things-reading vinyl cultists, but I guess the fact that it’s all available now on From Beginning to End… takes care of that.

366 Days at the Drive-In: Day 66


The Date: December 5
The Movie: The Girl Can’t Help It (1956)
What Is It?: Former Looney Tunes animator Frank Tashlin makes a live-action Looney Tunes cartoon starring live-action cartoon Jayne Mansfield. Little Richard, Eddie Cochran, Fat Domino, and The Treniers make the floorboards quake with a seismic blast of Rock & Roll in the days when Rock & Roll was still a tiny, little baby.
Why Today?: On this day in 1932, Little Richard is born.

Friday, December 4, 2015

366 Days at the Drive-In: Day 65


The Date: December 4
The Movie: Candyman (1992)
What Is It?: Bernard Rose and Cliver Barker provide a less-than-sweet antidote to the usual slasher bullshit with a plot rich in back story, a sympathetic and elegant monster, and scenes of grisly horror set in broad daylight. Tony Todd becomes an instant horror icon as the title character.
Why Today?: On this day in 1954, Tony Todd is born.

Thursday, December 3, 2015

366 Days at the Drive-In: Day 64


The Date: December 3
The Movie: Black Sabbath (1963)
What Is It?: Mario Bava saturates his horror portmanteau with comic book color and Boris Karloff’s looming presence. However, it is the Karloff-free “The Drop of Water” that truly terrorizes.
Why Today?: On this day in 1948, Ozzy Osbourne is bourne.

Wednesday, December 2, 2015

366 Days at the Drive-In: Day 63


The Date: December 2
The Movie: The Shining (1980)
What Is It?: No amount of Stephen King’s whining can make Stanley Kubrick’s hotel-sized horror less iconic or enjoyable. Ghosts, cabin fever, anger, and tumblers of imaginary scotch send Jack Nicholson into an axe-swinging fit of redrum.
Why Today?: December 2nd is the day the redrum shit hits the fan in King’s novel.

Tuesday, December 1, 2015

366 Days at the Drive-In: Day 62


The Date: December 1

The Movie: An American Werewolf in London (1981)

What Is It?: Griffin Dunne and David Naughton are backpacking in England. Dunne gets eaten by a werewolf; turns into a slowly decomposing ghost. Naughton only gets bitten, fools around with Jenny Agutter, listens to Creedence, dreams about the Muppets, and stars in cinema’s most spectacular werewolf transformation scene. Clearly, he’s ahead.

Why Today?: On this day in 1885, Dr. Pepper is first served in Waco, Texas.

Monday, November 30, 2015

Review: 'The Jam: About the Young Idea'


There aren’t a lot of artists who can claim they inspired an entire musical movement, at least not after the sixties when The Beatles, Beach Boys, Dylan, James Brown, Hendrix, The Who, and quite a few others each marched through the decade followed by a parade of pretenders. The Jam are one of the few late-seventies bands that can claim they got a movement going when their power-pop spin on punk and Mod style inspired a ton of British groups to pick up Rickenbackers and look sharp. Those who weren’t as musically inclined just became the kinds of life-long, pop-as-lifestyle fans usually reserved for boring traveling acts like The Grateful Dead. So it’s fitting that fans get a good deal of screen time in the recent Sky TV documentary The Jam: About the Young Idea. This emphasis on the people who love Paul Weller, Bruce Foxton, and Rick Buckler is what distinguishes Bob Smeaton’s film from the usual by-numbers rock doc. The presence of fans such as fellow famous-guy Martin Freeman; Derek D’Souza, who ended up photographing the band professionally; Keiko Egawa, a fan who essentially moved from Japan to London so she could see The Jam live; and Dave Pottinger, a kid barely in his twenties whose blog continues the Jam-worship for a new generation—and somehow maintains his cool when he gets to interview Weller— is the heart and soul of About the Young Idea.

Weller, Foxton, and Buckler are also in attendance to walk us through their band’s history in more typical fashion, though there are also some nicely distinctive moments when the film’s stars are on screen, like when Weller and founding member Steve Brookes pull out their acoustic guitars to jam on some Everly Brothers and Larry Williams tunes. Long time fans probably won’t learn anything new, and any post break-up frictions are ignored (Foxton and Weller supposedly didn’t speak for twenty years after Weller quit the band at the height of their success), but they will certainly appreciate spending 90 minutes with their favorite band now-and-then (via classic archival stage and video footage). Most of all they should appreciate seeing themselves reflected on screen by a diverse lot of Jam fanatics.

Eagle Rock Entertainment’s new blu-ray of The Jam: About the Young Idea supplements the main feature with additional interview footage that finds Weller, Foxton, and Buckler visiting their boyhood homes; full performances by Weller and Brookes; and Pottinger’s complete interview with Weller. More essentially there are full-length performance clips from London’s Rainbow and NYC’s Ritz only seen in brief clips in the movie. The video is pretty blurry, but the audio is full-blooded. The big bonus on this set is an extra DVD featuring The Jam’s full performance on Germany’s Rockpalast in support of Sound Affects. The video is fairly rough but better than the bonus clips on the blu-ray and the audio is similarly excellent. So is the main attraction, who give a vital, intense performance. You may find yourself putting this extra feature into heavier rotation than the documentary it supports.

366 Days at the Drive-In: Day 61


The Date: November 30
The Movie: Dragonslayer (1981)
What Is It?: Complex and elegiac fantasy about a callow young man who must complete a journey for an old wizard so he can vanquish a virgin-eating dragon during a solar eclipse. The hilariously named Vermithrax Pejorative is the single greatest realization of a dragon on film.
Why Today?: On this day in 3340 BC, a solar eclipse is recorded in stone for the very first time at the Megalithic Monument in Ireland.

Sunday, November 29, 2015

366 Days at the Drive-In: Day 60


The Date: November 29
The Movie: Suspicion (1941)
What Is It?: Alfred Hitchcock’s kooky noir flummoxes expectations by casting Cary Grant as a potential creep who may be plotting to moider perpetually anxious Joan Fontaine. That glowing glass of milk is certainly suspicious…
Why Today?: On this day in 1986, Cary Grant dies.
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