Tag Archive | "grammy"

Bob Dylan gets religion in the “gospel years” part 4


Get Caught Up: Part 1 | Part 2 | Part 3 | Bonus: Bob Dylan Price Guide
Bob Dylan

Saved, the followup album to Slow Train Coming, was largely panned by critics as a lackluster effort. Bob Dylan himself was reportedly not pleased with Saved and asked his label, Columbia, if he could rerecord it. Columbia said no.

‘Saved’ or savaged?

The reviews were atrocious, setting the stage for the remainder of the tour. Audiences knew what to expect now and arrived at each concert with their ammunition already stored, “filthy mouth stuff” as Dylan oddly described it, although he seemed to remain calm throughout. Just one live recording, from Tempe, Ariz., sees the image crack a little.

“Hmmm. Pretty rude bunch tonight, huh? You all know how to be real rude. You know about the spirit of the Antichrist? Does anyone here know about that? Ah, the spirit of the Antichrist is loose right now  … You talk to your teachers about what I said. I’m sure you’re paying a lot of money for your education, so you’d better get one.”

Later in the show, he told the audience that if they wanted to see some rock ’n’ roll so bad, they ought to go and watch Kiss. They, he spat, “could rock ’n’ roll all the way down to the pit”  — the pit, of course, being the fiery expanses of hell that he believed awaited all non-believers, and which flavored many of the unrecorded songs that featured in the live show. They would also become the heart of his next album, Saved.

Work on Saved began in February 1980.  Returning to Muscle Shoals Studios with the same band that had accompanied him on tour, Dylan set to work with the record already fully formed in his mind.

Arrangements had been nailed down on the road, and lyrical inflections, too, across a crop of songs that could, with so much rehearsal behind them, have blazed with the righteous rage that obviously inspired them. Instead, they sounded lackluster and tired, like a football team playing one final charity game at the end of a long and exhausting season. Just two days separated the final show of the tour, in Charleston on Feb. 9, from the first day in the studio; prior to that, the only break the band had had since rehearsals began in October was a few days off over Christmas.

Tempers were taut, and the musicians were tired, but the songs were even more drained. Compare the finished album, recorded in four days, Feb. 11- 15, 1980, with live versions of the same songs recorded early in the tour and made available via the miracle of bootlegging.

If you don’t like the contents of Saved, the concert versions are not going to change your mind. But at least they sound fresh and excitable, and the stately, piano-led version of “Pressing On” with which Dylan (himself the pianist) closed the shows has a gentle beauty that is at least admirable. By the time they got to Sheffield, Ala., and closed the studio doors on the outside world, however, they were exhausted, and it shows.

Nine songs were recorded, usually nailed in three or four takes — only “Covenant Woman” seemed to cause them any problems, as it rattled to nine takes, and Dylan discographer Clinton Heylin speaks for most listeners when he sighs, “I find it hard to believe that all nine outtakes … are as lacking in passion as the released take, even if Dylan had clearly let go of the leash of this gorgeous love song somewhere down the line.”

Dylan himself was unhappy with Saved and apparently asked his label, Columbia, if he could rerecord it. He had done so with Blood On The Tracks, after all, and the label was rewarded with a masterpiece. This time, however, they said no. The record would be released on schedule, as the next tour got underway in early April, and if Slow Train Coming had received a rocky reception, this new set was to be savaged without mercy.

Nothing about Saved was worth saving, was the popular vote; it was, quite simply, the worst album Bob Dylan had ever made.  Even the utterly unexpected award of a Grammy for the last album’s title track, in the Best Male Rock Vocal Performance category, could not camouflage the fact that Dylan had finally slipped from the pedestal that he had occupied for two decades now. And if there was still some hope that somebody, somewhere, could find value in his new direction, that slipped out of the door the moment tickets went on sale for the latest tour.

Remembering how badly burned they were by the Slow Train Coming tour, and doubting whether Dylan had revised his set list since then, the fan club simply stayed at home. Dylan toured, and his audience didn’t care.

The aftermath

Saved, too, bombed, and Dylan’s personal stock was lower than it had ever been before. It seems strange to look back today and remember how so many heads nodded sagely in agreement when Keith Richards (among others) suggested that Dylan’s Christian conversion was a marketing ploy — “the prophet of profit,” the Rolling Stone called him, and oh, how we smirked.

In fact, it can (and has) been argued that Dylan effectively destroyed himself as a commercial force with the two albums and two tours that ushered him into the 1980s.  “It was a … disaster from which Dylan has never fully recovered,” wrote Clinton Heylin in “Bob Dylan: The Recording Sessions” in 1994. “He has not had a Top Ten album in the U.S. since.”

Of course, Dylan would recover. Successive albums through the rest of the 1980s saw him return to secular themes as early as 1981’s Shot Of Love — the last of his overtly Christian records, but not a bad album despite boasting the ugliest cover of any record in his canon.

You could hear the evangelical spark fading as the album played on. Biographers have struggled to place a definitive date on the moment when Dylan passed out of his born-again phase, but the fact that he did became increasingly apparent as the decade rolled on, and the fire and brimstone of Saved was replaced by the piss and vinegar of old.

By the end of the decade and the release of Oh Mercy, the events of 10 years earlier had effectively been erased from the collective memory.

Slow Train Coming and Saved still sit on the shelves, though, and every so often their reputation — one a Grammy winner, the other a career-killer — does encourage the curious listener to blow the cobwebs off the covers and give them another spin. Three decades can repair a lot of damage, after all; and a lot of history has happened since the end of the 1970s.

But Slow Train Coming and Saved, oddly, remain inviolate to any of those changes. The shock that they engendered is still as raw and rich as it ever was, and the lyrical punch is still as discomforting as it was the first time the average Dylan fan felt it, regardless of their own faith (a lot of Christian Dylan fans were shocked as well, remember).

And that might be the reason why Slow Train Coming, at least, still percolates around the back of one’s mind. It’s been a long time since Dylan, or any other major artist come to that, has released an album that physically and emotionally shocked his audience. Slow Train Coming might well be the last one that really did it.

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Tour News: The Grateful Dead announce 2009 arena dates


After months of fan speculation bolstered by an October 2008 performance at the “Change Rocks” concert/rally for Barack Obama in State College, Pa., and three recent viral internet videos with band interviews and performance footage, the Grateful Dead have officially announced tour dates for 2009. This marks the band’s first trek since 2004’s “Wave That Flag” tour.
 
Kicking off April 12 in Greensboro, N.C., and wrapping May 10 near San Francisco, the tour will encompass 19 shows — all to be performed as “An Evening With” — in 16 cities. Pre-sale tickets go on sale Jan. 13 and nationwide beginning Jan. 23. All of the concerts are set for indoor arenas except for the final show at Shoreline Amphitheatre in Mountain View, Calif.
 
Original Dead members Bob Weir, Phil Lesh, Bill Kreutzmann and Mickey Hart will be joined by keyboardist Jeff Chimenti and Allman Brothers Band/Gov’t Mule guitarist Warren Haynes, both of whom played with the band at the “Change Rocks” concert.

The group first formed with lead guitarist Jerry Garcia as the Grateful Dead in 1965 and are legendary for their live performances.  The Grammy-winning Rock And Roll Hall Of Fame group always toured relentlessly, allowing their “Dead Head” fans to tape and trade their exploratory, free-flowing concerts.

“We’ve got some unfinished business,” says guitarist/singer Bob Weir. “Everybody has a whole new bag of tricks; we have the body of material we worked up over the years and we have a mind meld going on here and it would be a sin to let that just wither and die.”

Drummer Mickey Hart added, “A mind meld is a terrible thing to waste.”

Bassist Phil Lesh says, “For me, it’s the question mark that’s really pulling me in…what’s gonna happen? When you walk out on the stage the possibilities are infinite every time. The musical possibilities are infinite: there is no end to it, there’s no back wall and there’s no ceiling, there’s no floor. It’s infinite and therefore you can still explore it till the day that you die.” 

Drummer Bill Kreutzmann says, “I get goosebumps just thinking about the possibilities.”
 
Seeds of the idea of touring again were first planted in February 2008 when Hart, Lesh and Weir played a “Dead Heads For Obama” show at the Warfield in their native San Francisco, and in 2008, Weir, Kreutzmann and Hart performed at a post-inauguration event for Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi.
 
Always sonic and technological adventurers, The Grateful Dead formed in San Francisco’s electric Haight-Ashbury neighborhood in the mid-1960s, combining their love of bluegrass, country, electric rock and jazz to create one of the most iconic repertoires in rock music. By touring continuously and never relying on radio hits or latest trends, the Dead and Dead Heads created an unparalleled bond. Fans were turned on to the group by live bootlegs and word of mouth, with many following the band on the road for whole tours. 

Ready to catch a show? Dates, cities and venues for the 2009 tour include:

April 12 — Greensboro, N.C., Greensboro Coliseum
April 14 — Washington, D.C., Verizon Center
April 15 — Charlottesville, Va., John Paul Jones Arena
April 17 — Albany, N.Y., Times Union Center
April 18 — Worcester, Mass., DCU Center
April 19 — Worcester, Mass., DCU Center
April 21 — Buffalo, N.Y., HSBC Arena
April 22 — Wilkes-Barre, Pa., Wachovia Arena @ Casey Plaza
April 24 — Uniondale, N.Y., Nassau Coliseum
April 25 — New York, Madison Square Garden

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Weaving through Carole King's 'Tapestry'


On April 15, the Epic/Ode/Legacy record label, a division of Sony BMG Music Entertainment, released Carole King’s 1971 landmark Tapestry album, the Legacy Edition, which includes such classic recordings “It’s Too Late,” “I Feel the Earth Move” and “You’ve Got a Friend,” alongside a second CD of live Tapestry performances by the singer/songwriter/pianist.

Tapestry was produced by Ode Records label owner Lou Adler, with engineer Hank Cicalo at the board, in California at A&M Studios in Hollywood. It spent 15 weeks at #1, garnered four Grammy awards, including: Album of the Year; Best Pop Vocal Performance (Female) Record of the Year, “It’s Too Late;” and Song of the Year, “You’ve Got a Friend.” Producer Quincy Jones was a 1972 Grammy recepient for an arrangement on his own LP of King’s “Smackwater Jack.”

The album resided fulltime on the charts for six years, generating more than 24 million in sales worldwide, making it one of the most successful discs of all-time. 
The 2008 model finally offers a chance to experience Carole King in “unplugged” recital. The second CD in the deluxe package finally realizes Adler’s decades-long dream concept, as it marries a newly remastered version of the classic 12-song album with a second CD containing previously unreleased, live piano-voice concert versions of songs from the album (in the same order) recorded in 1973 (Boston; Columbia, Maryland; and New York’s Central Park), and 1976 (San Francisco Opera House).  “Tapestry Live” underscores, as Adler knew before anybody when he signed King to Ode, that Carole King had an instinctive grasp of the job she was born to do. 

With the live portion of the package, King has reimagined her monumental 1971 iconic effort, employing a new and different set of vocal and piano musical muscles to her proven soul-bearing copyrights inhabiting the concert stage. The unwinding drama built around King’s grand Steinway refurbished visions are displayed in a live setting.

When Tapestry hit the record bins in 1971, the melodic and sonic impact was not lost on Todd Rundgren, Elton John, the band Traffic in 1972, or, at the time, two music publishing staff songwriters, Walter Becker and Donald Fagen, who would soon form Steely Dan.

The lasting consequence of Tapestry streamed to post-Vietnam artists, such as Jeff Morrison, Tom Johnson, Tori Amos, Ben Folds, Fiona Apple, Vanessa Carlton, Rufus Wainwright, Norah Jones, Alicia Keys, Kate Nash and Duffy, who craft pop music analogous to King — all owe a musical and psychic debt to this subject-specific collection of life-altering (and affirming) audio excursions. 

As recording artist/actress Reba McEntire proclaims, “I had Tapestry like everyone else in the world did, and it was a huge influence on me.”

In 1995, a plethora of musical artists re-recorded the original numbers for a tribute album, Tapestry Revisited: A Tribute to Carole King, and in 2003, a second CD salute, A New Tapestry — Carole King Tribute, was minted.  

When asked to comment about the impact of Tapestry, King, in a 2008 Epic/Ode/Legacy Records communication, responded, “I feel honored that Tapestry has made a difference in small ways and large ways in peoples’ lives around the world. It’s been a major part of my life, too,” she adds. “As a songwriter, I’m so happy that the songs have held up for all of these years. As a performer, I’m still enjoying playing them live, most recently on my ‘Living Room Tour.’”

Adler first met King in 1961, when he helmed the Sunset Boulevard West Coast office for Aldon Music. King and Gerry Goffin, h

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