Sunday, April 28, 2013

King Harvest: "Dancing in the Moonlight" (1973)


This a  very keyboard oriented happy song from the '70's. The Wurlitzer electric piano is right up front on this one.  In fact, King Harvest had three keyboard players in the band, all of whom had been doing session work prior to forming the band.Ron Altback, Sherman Kelly and Davy ‘Doc’ Robinson(all on keyboards), plus Ed Tuleja (guitar), Tony Cahill (bass), Rod Novak (saxophone) and David Montgomery (drums).

According to the band's MySpace page, King Harvest formed in 1970 after four Cornell students met in Ithaca. They would go to Paris. and rode the circuit, even opening for B.B. King. They released "Dancing in the Moonlight" in Europe and it Flopped. They came back to New York and got a contract with a small label called Perception. The first cut released was "Dancing in the Moonlight" which some say was written by Altback and Robinson, but other sources say it was written by Sherman Kelly, the brother of a one time drummer in the band and himself a member of a previous iteration of the band. The soulful pop entry rose to to #13 in the U.S., and stayed on the charts for 20 weeks. They would never really chart again with the exception of "A Little Bit of Magic", which hit #91 the same year. To hear it, you would assume it would be a nice flip side to "Dancing in the Moonlight."They would disband mid-decade.

In 1976, the Beach Boys members Mike Love and Carl Wilson helped them get a record deal with A & M, but no hits came out of the effort.

We get it almost every night
When that moon is big and bright
It's a supernatural delight
Everybody's dancin' in the moonlight

Everybody here is out of sight
They don't bark, and they don't bite
They keep things loose, they keep 'em tight
Everybody was dancin' in the moonlight

Dancin' in the moonlight
Everybody's feelin' warm and bright
It's such a fine and natural sight
Everybody's dancin' in the moonlight

No fewer than 17 bands would cover this song. Of these, the British band Toploader covered the song and it reached #7 on the English charts in 2000. The version has the same happy, party and we're all friends feel, and again, keyboards are integral to the song. No evidence of it having been released in the U.S. We are submitting it as well for your consideration.

Liza Minelli covered the song in 1973 and it is as schmaltzy as you might expect. Good luck getting through that version!



Tuesday, April 23, 2013

Boyce Avenue: "Locked Out of Heaven" (2013)


You would have to have been living in a cave to not be aware of the  Bruno Mars (Peter Gene Hernandez) version of "Locked Out of Heaven". The recording, part of his latest release called  Unorthodox Jukebox, is a great album with a startling number of diverse offerings. The lead single from the album, "Locked Out of Heaven" has reached number one in the US Billboard Hot 100 and Canada and the top ten in several countries worldwide. The album's second single, "When I Was Your Man", has reached the top ten of fifteen countries, including number one on the Billboard Hot 100.
In researching "Locked Out of Heaven", we stumbled upon this beautifly stripped down acoustic cover version performed by Boyce Avenue. Since you can go anywhere on the net and read about Bruno Mars, let's talk about this band.
Boyce Avenue, consists of the three brothers, Alejandro, Fabian, and Daniel Manzano. The brothers first came together as a band in 2004 when Alejandro (lead vocals, guitar, piano), Fabian (guitar, vocals), and their older brother Daniel (bass, percussion, vocals) reconnected after pursuing their respective educational goals. Daniel graduated from Harvard, then joined his other two brothers who were attending the University of Florida. They started playing arounf Gainsville and wrote original music. They would go on to record videos which helped the band get traction via YouTube. Several albums are available through their site, Itunes or Amazon. A new album is expected soon. They have played some great venues in the United States and have a large international following. 

Some of the first few videos they posted included acoustic versions of songs such as Justin Timberlake’s “LoveStoned”, Rihanna’s “Umbrella”, and Coldplay’s “Viva la Vida”, among many others. The videos resonated instantly with YouTube viewers. And to date, the band has over 300,000,000 views on YouTube and over 700,000 subscribers to their channel, making theirs one of the most frequented channels worldwide on YouTube.
From their own website: Early on, the band wanted to set itself apart from other acts that had achieved success online by taking its music straight to the people, live. Believing firmly in the strength of their online fans, and in its music, the band booked a stand-alone show in New York City in January of 2009, for their first ever performance in the city. Surprising label and industry folks alike, the show – perceived by others as a gamble – was an enormous sellout and success. Since then, the band has been steadily touring the world over with similar results.
Here is the Bruno Mars original, followed by the acoustic version by Boyce Avenue:
  

Saturday, April 20, 2013

Bizarre Song Spotlight: Sadler and Young-"Dominique" (1966)


No, this does not count as a Song of the Week, but it may well factor in the 2013 Worst Song Ever category.

HOW I HEARD IT

I have CD's, flash drives and radio in the car. As always, I encourage staff to flip any rock they can find to discover something worth featuring on this blog. My flash drive was corrupted, I was tired of my cd's in the car and it was a tough day with lots of traffic going home. I went with the radio search button and came upon WKTZ, which apparently has been "proudly broadcasting beautiful music in Jacksonville, Florida".Well I'm cool with that, something for everyone and so forth.

The first song was "Mack the Knife". Hey, no problem there, a classic. Second song was a violin arrangement of "Maxwell's Silver Hammer", O.K., fine. I still wanted to kill the guy driving in front of me but this WAS calming. Then what I think was a Jerry Vale version of " Up, Up and Away" came on. Hysterical! If you made me listen to it several times in interrogation, I would crack. My finger was on the preset when...

WHAT I THOUGHT I WAS HEARING
 
I heard the singer doing a sultry version of "Dominique"

I heard the singer doing "Dominique," which, upon hearing the version by "The Singing Nun" is normally a license to slam your car into a tree, but I was in tight traffic (for Jacksonville) at that point. I almost thought it had a Hawaiian quality to it so I hung. Maybe a ukulele might come in. After the first verse, someone harmonizing started singing "Nobody Knows the Trouble I've Seen" in a Barry White voice? Oh no, it doesn't stop there, the guy keeps singing "Dominique" as the other bottom voice goes into "Down By the Riverside," "When the Saints Go Marching In", etc. Wow...


I played this song for staff member Suzi Suarez, who promptly got into her car and drove right through the garage door without opening it. Haven't seen her for days...but hey, listen for yourself. Please ask some one you know to hide your keys first.



SO WHO ARE THESE GUYS AND WHY THIS SONG?

According to Allmusic.com: One sang in French, the other in English, and that, in a nutshell, was easy listening vocal duo Sandler and Young's gimmick. Although they didn't approach every number that way, it became the formula for which they were best known...  and a delightful French version of Johnny Cymbal's "Mr. Bass Man." (which we listened to as well, causing Mike Yasich to stick a fork in his ear). Back to Allmusic.com... Sandler & Young may have been a pair of hopelessly square lounge singers, but for a while they mined a vein of light intellectual pop that provided them with a successful album career.

Perhaps all this comes as a Civil Rights Act tribute. The song actually charted on the easy-listening list in 1966. Also, Dominique means "Lord" in French and was perhaps a base for the spirituals sung in the background.

We think their greatest hits album would make a wonderful gift for someone you want to weird out.

Sunday, April 14, 2013

Eddie Cochran: Twenty Flight Rock (1957)


Eddie Cochran (Ray Rdward Cocharn) was born in Albert Lea Minnesota in 1938, but always said he was from Oklahoma (his parents were from there). As a kid, like many other rock stars, he would learn guitar by playing along with the radio. He moved to California and dropped out of high school to perform professionally.
He connected with Hank Cochran(not related) and began to record and write, but his first break came in the movies.

Eddie had co- written a song with Nelda Fairchild called "Twenty Flight Rock". He was asked to perform the song in a movie called "The Girl Can't Help It". This would lead to another movie appearance and his only album released during his lifetime called "Singin' to My Baby".

He would go on to write and perform some highly regarded and influential songs like "Summertime Blues" and "C'mon Everybody". Both are great songs that charted, but we like Twenty Flight Rock and a must have Cochran song. The amped up rockabilly piece tells the story of a frustrated teen who is "too tired to rock" once he climbs up to her 20th floor apartment, all because the elevator doesn't work:

When she calls me up on the telephone
Said c'mon over honey, I'm all alone
I said baby, you're mighty sweet
But I'm in the bed with a achin' feet
This went on for a couple of days
But I couldn't stay away

So I walked one, two flight, three flight, four
Five, six, seven flight, eight flight more
Up on the twelfth I'm ready to drag
Fifteenth floor I started to sag
Get to the top, I'm too tired to rock


Says guitar legend Brian Setzer, who would play Eddie Cochran in the movie "La Bamba":
“Eddie Cochran. He’s my biggest inspiration, when I saw a picture of him I said, ‘I want to look like that guy,’ then when I heard his music, ‘I want to pattern myself after this guy.’ I wanted to sound like him and look like him and it evolved from there."


Eddie was great friends with Buddy Holly and The Big Bopper  (Jiles Perry "J.P. Richardson)who would both die together in a plane crash. Eddie became obsessed with his own death, thought his number was up and wanted to quit traveling. The road was the only way to earn money so he toured England in 1960. He along with his fiancee and Gene Vincent, hopped into a cab driven by someone named George Martin (hmmm).
Martin blew a tire at high speed and the ensuing crash killed Eddie.


The number of people and bands who covered Eddie Cochran's songs are too numerous to mention here. One example, (other than The Who doing "Summertime Blues") was Paul McCartney. When asked by John Lennon to play something for him, he played "Twenty Flight Rock". This would lead to his joining The Quarrymen, later to become the Beatles...

The first version is from his single released on the Liberty label. The second is from the movie mentioned previously called "The Girl Can't Help it".