TuneIn
Wednesday, June 19, 2019
Monday, June 17, 2019
Big Planet Noise Show #153 Airs Tonight!
Big Planet Noise airs TONIGHT – 8pm/7c – on WFMU's Rock 'n Soul Ichiban! ALABAMA JUKEBOX. On a trip down south, I wound buying a small batch of records from an older gent, in a mighty ruff part of town. He'd once been an operator and had TONS of 45s (familiar & forgotten) in an old shed out back. After digging through thousands of filthy/destroyed records, I wound up buying several dozen of the cleanest and/or most interesting. I've hosed off the dust and grime – and that's what we're playing for you tonight. So, it'd prob be best to put the Stroh's on ice now, grab a bucket of fried chicken, and fire up the Rock-Ola Capri. This will be BIG FUN – and we'll be back to the usual stuff next week!
listen/playlist/chat: http://wfmu.org/playlists/shows/86490
Posted by Gina Bacon at 9:45 AM 0 comments
Friday, June 14, 2019
I'm Hip To Your Game: some productions of Richard Pegue
The Norvells: As I Walk Alone
The Norvells: Without You
Little Ben & The Cheers: (I'm Not Ready To) Settle Down
Renaldo Domino: Nevermore
Bull & The Matadors: If You Decide
Renald Domino: Not Too Cool To Cry
Renald Domino: I'm Hip To Your Game
Renald Domino: I'm Getting Nearer To Your Love
The Extensions: Your Heart Belongs To Me
The Voices: Forever Is A Long, Long Time
Jackie Bee: It's A Possibility
The Hallelujah Chorus: I've Got To Find A Way
South Suburban Electric Strings: (Pisces) Sign Of The Zodiac
Sidney Barnes: Ember Furniture ad
South Shore Commission: Shadows
Renaldo Domino: Let Me Come Within
The Brothers & Sisters: Nobody Is Gonna Turn Us 'Round
playlist inspired by Bob Abrahamian’s interview of Richard Pegue (“Sitting In The Park,” WHPK, 8-15-04)
bonus:
South Shore Commission: Right On Brother (pt. 1)
Jackie Bee: I Am Gonna Get Even With You
Renaldo Domino: Don't Go Away
Renaldo Domino: I'll Get You Back
Renaldo Domino: Just Say The Word
Renaldo Domino: Two Years, Four Days
LISTEN NOW!
Posted by Phil X. Milstein as The Silent DJ at 11:04 AM 0 comments
Wednesday, June 12, 2019
Monday, June 10, 2019
Big Planet Noise Show #152 Airs Tonight!
Big Planet Noise is on the air Tonight-8pm/7c – on WFMU's Rock 'n' Soul Ichiban! We're goin' to the movies! No high-concept here – just a really great mixed-batch of wax culled from the teen-flix of the day: surfers, skiers, hot-rodders, girl-watchers, guy-snatchers, and, god-knows, bikinis absolutely everywhere... TONIGHT!!! JOIN US!!!
listen/chat/playlist: wfmu.org/playlists/shows/86313
Posted by Gina Bacon at 12:29 PM 0 comments
Sunday, June 9, 2019
The Real Nitty Gritty is moving to DJ Roulette -- on WFMU's Rock-N-Soul ICHIBAN
The Real Nitty Gritty is MOVING! just down the block to DJ ROULETTE on WFMU's Rock-N-Soul ICHBAN! We'll be on monthly Sundays at 11:00 AM ET. Debut episode on June 30. Watch this page for more updates, and you can listen to all of our shows from the past 4 years any old time in the WFMU archives: http://wfmu.org/playlists/RG
Posted by Nitty Gritty Tania at 7:21 PM 0 comments
Always in our hearts....
Tune in to the Whig Out Sunday 8pm (right after the Real Nitty Gritty) we play tribute to our buddy Jeff Walls and the great Roky Erickson and we play a plethora of new releases plus lots of our (and yours) fave 60's brain burners. Listen here: http://wfmu.org/playlists/shows/86350
Posted by GirlGroupGirl at 5:15 AM 0 comments
Thursday, June 6, 2019
Monday, June 3, 2019
Big Planet Noise Show #151 Airs Tonight!!
Surfboards, skateboards, skis & slicks!!!
It's all that and more TONIGHT on Big Planet Noise as we blast big-fave 45rpm summer-sounds!!! TONIGHT! 8pm/7c on WFMU’S Rock ’n’ Soul Ichiban!!! Wax up your board!!!
listen/chat/playlist: http://wfmu.org/playlists/shows/86213
Posted by Gina Bacon at 10:21 AM 0 comments
Sunday, June 2, 2019
Joe Meek : an Ichiban Hero
This documentary was on the Ichiban stream Sunday 2 June 2019. You can listen to the archive here : http://wfmu.org/playlists/shows/86214
BED : Tornados - Jungle Fever
Thanks for tuning in to this special edition of the Whig
Out, Joe Meek, an Ichiban Hero. Thanks to Richard and Glynis for their support
and for letting me sit in today and to my friend Kieron for his helpful advice.
I'm going to play some Ichiban favorites that you'll recognize, as well as some
tracks that may be new to you. I don't claim to be an expert on Joe Meek, but
I'll do my best to tell his story in the next hour.
MUSIC : John Leyton - Johnny Remember Me
BED : Moontrekkers - Night of the Vampire
Why is Joe Meek an
Ichiban hero ?
Joe Meek was an English recording engineer and record
producer, mainly active in the early 60s. He was a one-man revolution, an
outsider and innovator, he did everything his own way, refusing to be controlled
by the powerful major labels, producing his own hits and leasing recordings to
the majors on his own terms.
Chapter 1 : Recording
techniques
When Joe arrived on the scene in the late 50s, the
particularly staid British recording establishment, who were still wearing
white lab coats, viewed their job as accurately capturing a live performance.
Joe had a different perspective, fueled by boundless creative talent and
imagination.
He pioneered, in England, techniques literally considered
wrong by major British recording studios.
CLIP : Kerridge Lansdowne
When Meek's innovative ideas were rejected at Lansdowne, he
quit his job and opened his own studio in an apartment above a London
leather-goods shop.
CLIP : Screaming Lord Sutch broom incident
MUSIC : Screaming Lord Sutch & The Savages - She's
Fallen In Love With The Monster Man
BED : Cherry Wainer - Cerveza
At 304 Holloway Road, Joe conceived a new way to make hit
records with recordings that jumped out of the speakers on crappy radios and
record players, creating extraordinary, unique pop recordings that would catch
peoples' ears.
CLIP : Jonathan King kick drum recording
Joe Meek was a pioneer in using the recording studio as an
instrument, creating sounds without the restrictions of a live performance.
choosing non-standard microphones
close miking
overloading devices and pushing signals into the red for
distortion
using massive compression and limiting
taking direct input from the bass
natural echo
tape echo
spring reverb
flanging
overdubbing and layering
speeding up vocals or the whole tape
…not to mention wild sound effects, often using unexpected
techniques like repeatedly dropping a toilet chain into an old biscuit tin,
which you can hear in this song.
MUSIC : David John & The Mood - Bring It To Jerome
BED : Freddie Starr and the Midnighters - Peter Gunn
Locomotion
Ironically, by the time of his death, Joe's recording
techniques had become standard for recording rock music. However, his approach
frustrated some performers, who weren't able to get the sound of the records when
they played live. To record Have I the Right by the Honeycombs, he had people
stamp out the beat on the wooden stairs of the studio and recorded that noise
with five microphones he had fixed to the banisters with bicycle clips. It
reached #1 on the British charts in August 1964 and sold over 2 million copies
worldwide.
MUSIC : Honeycombs - Have I the Right
Chapter 2 : Independence,
the outsider
BED : Outlaws - Sioux Serenade
Joe kept his independence and control by making his own
recordings in his own studio and licensing them to the big labels, so that he
profited from their pressing facilities and distribution networks. Because he
was making hits, the majors were obliged to work with him, but the relationship
remained tense and they considered him a threat.
CLIP : Meek watch them like a hawk
There were UK indie labels in this period but not to the vast
extent found in the US at that time. In any case, Joe was targeting the
mainstream, much like the bigger indies in the US.
He even started his own label, Triumph, but lack of access
to big pressing plants meant that his first potential hit could not be produced
rapidly in large quantities, putting the brakes on what might have been a #1 record.
SONG : Michael Cox - Angela Jones
BED : Fabulous Flee-Rakkers - Green Jeans
Johnny Remember Me by John Leyton, which we heard earlier,
was another story of Joe's combat with the establishment. BBC radio blacklisted
the record, but Meek found a way around them, getting the song performed on a
popular TV series. The record hit #1 in the UK in August 1961, sold 500,000
copies and became "Record of the Year".
This made his reputation, as well as Telstar, by the
Tornados, which was the first single by a British band to reach number one on
the U.S. charts in December 1962. It was written and produced by Joe Meek, and
featured his wild production techniques as well as a clavioline, a mutant
keyboard instrument.
In 1963 he produced the film "Live it Up"
featuring many of his top artists in order to promote their records.
Joe was always an outsider, in terms of business and in
terms of production, but also in terms of content. His Tribute To Buddy Holly came
from holding seances, Johnny Remember Me concerns the afterlife and connected
with the trend in death discs. we'll talk shortly about his sexual politics
and in particular the track Do You Come Here Often.
MUSIC : Outlaws - Shake with Me
Chapter 3 : His
unique vision and style
BED : Saints - Wipe Out
Joe had an instinctive, commercial ear.
He also had a vision of a market where teenagers were buying
records made for them, rather than the boring adult records that dominated
sales.
He tried everything, including so-called death discs, poppy
ballads, space age pop, girl group sounds, surf, jazz and country. He had a
roster of bands that he produced and recorded, including Screaming Lord Sutch, and
he did his own A&R.
His innovative recording techniques meant that his records
sounded like no one else's.
MUSIC : Neil Christian and the Crusaders - Big Beat Drum
BED : Original Checkmates - the Spy
Fueled by his vision, plus amphetamines, Joe Meek took a
manic approach to recording and production. From 1960 to 1966 he produced about
700 recordings. He composed and wrote lyrics for about 250 of them. Between 62
and 65, he released 141 records, 24 of which made the British top 40.
But after his death in 1967, 4,000 more hours of music were
salvaged in his studio by Cliff Cooper of the Millionaires, who bought them for
300 pounds sterling.
Joe Meek's records are marked RGM sound recording, for
(Robert George Meek), or Meeksville
Sound after his 1964 split with his financial associate "Major"
Banks.
MUSIC : Glenda Collins - This Little Girl's Gone Rockin
MUSIC : Danny Rivers and the Rivermen - Movin' In
Chapter 4 : Sexual
politics
BED/MUSIC : Tornados - Do You Come Here Often
In the early 60s, homosexuality was still illegal in the UK,
as it was, by the way, in almost every state in the US, and persecution and
criminal prosecution were very real threats to Joe Meek.
CLIP : Goddard arrest
'Have I the Right?' by the Honeycombs, a summer hit in 1964,
can easily be interpreted as a strong statement concerning the suppression of
his right to express his sexuality.
CLIP : Pink pressure
Living daily with this oppression, Joe came up with an even
more remarkable statement of sexual politics on a Tornados B-side from 1966, which
proved that Columbia records literally hadn't listened to what they were
putting out - if they had, it would have been instantly rejected.
After a long stretch of an instrumental track, 'Do You Come
Here Often?' includes a conversation between two men in a gay bar.
John Savage, in an essay in the Guardian, calls a it a true
slice of queer life, and an extraordinary achievement.
Chapter 5 : Emotional
and mental issues, spiritualism and the occult, financial problems, loss of
relevance, increasing use of drugs, paranoia
BED : Spooks - The Spook Walks
Joe had always been spooky: obsessed with other worlds,
graveyards and spiritualism. He claimed to be in regular contact with Buddy
Holly through the spirit world
CLIP : Goddard seance
The forces working against Joe Meek gathered speed. As John
Savage puts it, Jekyll overtook Hyde [sic], as his money troubles and declining fame
caused him to increase his pill intake and to dabble further in the occult. He
was initially slow to recognize the arrival of British beat and the changes in
the music market and had to catch up. He was beaten up and his car was
vandalized. He was threatened by gangsters who wanted to take over the
Tornados' management. His emotional and sexual orientation was illegal. A
copyright dispute froze royalties from Telstar. His paranoia seemed
increasingly justified.
MUSIC : Millionaires - Wishing Well
BED : Packabeats - Theme From The Traitors
Joe bought out his partner, "Major" Banks, and
found himself with huge debts and no financial expertise.
It seems generally agreed that Joe suffered from bipolar
disorder and schizophrenia. He also abused speed, leaving symptoms of
amphetamine psychosis, and took downers as well.
MUSIC : Jason Eddie and The Centremen - Singing The Blues
Joe's long-standing paranoia intensified. He was convinced
that competitors were spying on him, he tore off the wallpaper searching for
hidden microphones.
CLIP : Sutch bug
There are many stories of violent incidents at the studio,
including throwing Tom Jones down the stairs, and I know what you're thinking,
that isn't really a bad idea.
CLIP : Clem Cattini Phil Spector
By mid-1966, Joe's mental state was worsening and he was in
a downward spiral.
Some people say that he had a progressive loss of relevance
with the arrival of British beat, and that he could not adapt to the new bands,
which had their own material and their own sound. However, this next set should
prove that Joe finally picked up on the trends and was perfectly able to make
great beat records while adding his unique touch. We can only guess what he
could have potentially achieved.
MUSIC : Paul & Ritchie & The Crying Shames - Come On
Back
MUSIC : Buzz - You're Holding Me Down
MUSIC : Blue Rondos - Baby I Go For You
MUSIC : Riot Squad - I Take It That We're Through
MUSIC : Syndicats - Crawdaddy Simone
Chapter 6 Death
BED : Joe Meek & The Blue Men ― Love Dance Of The Saroos
On February 2 1967, Joe Meek burst into a friend's house all
dressed in black, saying he was possessed. The next morning, the 18th
anniversary of Buddy Holly's death, he blasted his landlady with a shotgun
before turning it on himself.
CLIP : Pink shooting
Within a few months, the British law on homosexuality had
been struck down and the Telstar copyright trial had finished, releasing most
of the royalties.
---
Thanks for listening to Joe Meek, an Ichiban Hero. I'm Jon. Keep it tuned to WFMU's Rock 'n' Soul Ichiban.
MUSIC : Cryin Shames - Please Stay
ON LINE
recording Dracula's Daughter with Screaming Lord Sutch https://youtu.be/CG7rUWrCn4c
Dracula's Daughter clip with Screaming Lord Sutch https://youtu.be/ocS-Nx5ihSs
Excellent article by Jon Savage https://www.theguardian.com/music/2006/nov/12/popandrock28
Live It Up movie (1963) promoting Heinz and other Joe Meek
acts https://youtu.be/bJKP5aFhrNk
A Life in the Death of Joe Meek - forthcoming documentary -
promo clip https://youtu.be/VxdTq67MRdE
The Strange Story of Joe Meek TV documentary (Arena, 1991) https://youtu.be/0nMSJrfDN44
The Joe Meek Page detailed biographic site http://www.joemeekpage.info/essay_E.htm
Joe Meek Masters of Pop: Melody Makers short documentary https://youtu.be/1PZ_PxAT-mg
Telstar: The Joe Meek Story feature docu-drama 2008 full
movie https://youtu.be/od94Gcg9McI
Joe Meek's Bold Techniques - book promo clip - https://youtu.be/_QepdppzYQg
Joe Meek Society http://www.joemeeksociety.org/
Wikipedia https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Joe_Meek
BOOKS
Joe Meek's Bold Techniques
The Legendary Joe Meek: The Telstar Man
Posted by Jon von at 9:02 PM 0 comments
We Sell Soul -- The Real Nitty Gritty -- Tonight at 7:00
We Sell Soul -- New episode, old records, tonight on The Real Nitty Gritty at 7:00 ET on WFMU's Rock 'n' Soul Ichiban: savage R&B, greasy rockabilly, gutbucket blues, gruesome garage, sweaty soul, & sleazy instrotrash platters. Then stay tuned for The Whig Out at 8:00! Tune in here: http://wfmu.org/playlists/RG
Posted by Nitty Gritty Tania at 1:00 PM 0 comments
Gin & Orange Show #3 Airs Today!
THIS MORNING!!! Gin & Orange show #3 airs on WFMU’s Rock ’n’ Soul Ichiban – 11am/10c!!! Have a brunch cocktail with me, Brother Jack McDuff, Lou Donaldson, Joe Cuba, Trudy Pitts, The Meters, Melvin Sparks and many others!!! Live chatroom and real-time playlist!!! C'mon!!!
listen/chat/playlist: wfmu.org/playlists/shows/86204
Posted by Gina Bacon at 9:12 AM 0 comments
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)