Music Monday: July 31, 2023

Hi, everyone. Welcome to another edition of Music Monday.

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(Image found online.  Original source unknown.)

Such heartbreaking news last week to learn that former Eagles co-founder, bassist, singer and songwriter Randy Meisner died at age 77. The band was one of my favorite groups when I was growing up but all the fighting really soured me on them. It also bothered Meisner, too, as it was reportedly the main reason for his departure from the group in September 1977, six years after they formed. That and because the band was freezing him out due to his reluctance to be in the spotlight, which never sat well with his ego-driven fame-hungry bandmates and fellow co-founders, Glenn Frey and Don Henley.

Meisner was the one member I always adored. His harmonies were pristine & beautiful, plus his vocals on “Take It To The Limit” (which was the band’s first million-seller, according to a Twitter post by the Rock & Roll Hall Of Fame) and today’s song are my top favorite moments by the band. And the latter was written solely by him, a feat one of the primary antagonists for the group-Henley-never accomplished.

Before The Eagles, Meisner did session work for James Taylor and Waylon Jennings in addition to playing with Poco and Rick Nelson’s Stone Canyon Band. After he left the Eagles Meisner released three solo albums, had a few bands of his own including Randy Meisner & the Silverados and The Roberts-Meisner Band, while continuing to play on various tours until 2008. He also contributed to records by Linda Ronstadt, Danny O’Keefe, Dan Fogelberg and Richard Marx, amongst others.

Reportedly Meisner was not invited to participate in the 1994 “Hell Freezes Over” tour indicating that both group’s dictators-Frey and Henley-were still harboring resentment over their former bassist’s decision to quit the band 17 years earlier. In 1999 Meisner supposedly asked to take part in the group’s New Year’s Eve show & was refused. Even in the statement on the band’s website about Meisner’s death, they fail to list his contributions as a songwriter, only his roles as a bassist and vocalist. With Frey out of the picture since his death in 2016, this puts the onus clearly on Il Duce, a/k/a Henley. (In the group’s 2013 documentary, he and and Frey made it clear they seized their self-appointed leadership roles using the philosophy that a band is not a democracy but rather an entity requiring leadership. So they ran the show-period. But it made an already bad situation even worse because both men were constantly fighting with each other, too.) 

Randy Meisner on stage circa 1970’s. (Image found online.  Original source unknown.)

It is not only passive agressive but ironic since Henley is the only founding member who failed to write any of the group’s songs entirely on his own. And after a review of his five solo studio albums, only one track-a filler one at that-on 1984’s Building the Perfect Beast is credited solely to Henley. Despite how famous he became in the group and as a solo artist, I find his need to constantly cause trouble-whether within the band, against his record company, by attacking YouTube’s practices or whomever annoyed him the day before-to be quite distasteful. Add to that Meisner revealed in an interview in 2000 that he & Bernie Leadon (another co-founder) were initially left out of the financial profits for the band’s “Greatest Hits” record. Both men had to formally pursue their share which was not only ridiculous but essentially fraudulent. It left me feeling nothing but disgust for Henley, a singer & musician I once truly admired, especially for his efforts in establishing The Walden Woods Project.

But he or anyone else who might have tried could not stop Meisner’s prescence with the rest of the group at their induction into the Rock & Roll Hall Of Fame in 1998. And the man who replaced him-Timothy B. Schmit-was all class in his tribute to Meisner that night, recognizing that his predecessor was the man in the “trenches” with the band. Meanwhile, Frey and Henley stayed as far away as possible from where Mesiner was standing. Then Frey rewrote the narrative about the band’s well documented reputation on fighting (including the petty vicious ones between he and Henley) and said the members got along fine, they just disagreed (read: disagreed with him and Henley). And those members who dared to question the two dictators were eventually dismissed and/or robbed of their rightful profits: Leadon, Meisner and Don Felder, who joined the band in 1974. No wonder the two in charge are known as oppressors.

When I went on my first road trip to Vermont in October 2005, I somehow forgot to include my Hotel California cd in my music stash. Within 24 hours I started to have withdrawals. I needed to hear today’s song so badly that I actually went to a record store (remember those?) to buy another copy of it. I listened to this track so much it was as if Meisner was in the car with me. Well, he was but you know what I mean.

His final years were sadly riddled with both physical and mental challenges, but Meisner was one of the good ones. It was all about the music for him, not the fame or the spotlight. And that should have been respected. Rest in peace, Randy. You will be missed.

Right or wrong, what’s done is done
It’s only moments that you borrow
But the thoughts will linger on of the lady and her song
When the sun comes up tomorrow
“.

Randall Herman Meisner: March 8, 1946-July 26, 2023.

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Randy Meisner circa 1970’s. (Image found online.  Original source unknown.)

The Eagles: “Try and Love Again” (1976, written by Randy Meisner).

Stay safe and well.

Music Monday: July 24, 2023

Hi, everyone. Welcome to another triple play edition of Music Monday.

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(Image found online.  Original source unknown.)

Last Friday we lost the man arguably considered to be the greatest crooner who ever was. And yes, even the Chairman Of The Board-Frank Sinatra-called Tony Bennett “the best singer in the business”. Anthony Dominick Benedetto died July 21, 2023 at the age of 96. A native New Yorker born in Astoria, Queens on August 3, 1926, Bennett was probably the greatest champion for the Great American Songbook and many of the most iconic jazz tunes in history. He sang & recorded with everyone from Sinatra, Ella Fitzgerald, Louie Armstrong, Count Basie, Paul McCartney, Elton John, James Taylor, Diana Krall, k.d. lang, Bono and countless others. Bennett’s death closes out one of the longest, most prolific, most important & most beautiful chapters of American music we will ever see again. Thank you, Tony, for every single note.

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Tony Bennett circa 1950. (Image found online.  Original source unknown.)

The woman Bennett considered the greatest singer he ever heard held her last U.S. concert 55 years ago on July 20, 1968. Judy Garland headlined the show, held at JFK Stadium in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania which also featured Count Basie and Jackie Wilson. She performed about 20 songs, leaving everyone in attendance clamoring for more.

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Judy Garland circa 1947. (Image found online.  Original source unknown.)

This month also marks the 75th birthday for Yusuf Islam f/k/a Cat Stevens. Born Steven Demetre Georgiou on July 21, 1948 in London, England, he began his professional musical career in 1967 with the release of his debut album, Matthew and Son. Aside from a 17 year respite between 1978 and 1995 while he devoted himself to religion and his family, Islam’s career spans over five decades. He remains one of the most beloved and inspirational artists of the 1970’s.

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Yusuf Islam in 2014 at his Rock & Roll Hall Of Fame induction ceremony in Brooklyn, NY (picture by me).

Tony Bennett: “When Will The Bells Ring For Me” (1990, written by Charles DeForest).

Judy Garland: “Over The Rainbow” (1939, written by Harold Arlen and Edgar Yipsel “Yip” Harburg).

Yusuf Islam f/k/a Cat Stevens: “Trouble” (1970, written by Cat Stevens n/k/a Yusuf Islam).

Stay safe and well.

Music Monday: July 17, 2023

Hi, everyone. Welcome to another edition of Music Monday.

(Image found online.  Original source unknown.)

It is hard for me to understand that today’s song was actually a demo for another singer. The fact that people did not automatically realize the sheer beauty, power, depth, passion and intensity of Otis Redding’s voice the minute they heard it is unfathomable to me. If ever there was clear tangible evidence that God exists in my world, it is because of Otis Redding.

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Otis Redding circa June 1967. (Image found online.  Original source unknown.)

Otis Redding: “You Left the Water Running” (1966, written by Oscar Franks, Rick Hall and Dan Penn).

Stay safe and well.

Music Monday: July 10, 2023

Hi, everyone. Welcome to another edition of Music Monday.

Bruce quote 2023

(Image found online.  Original source unknown.)

If you have been lucky enough to see the latest commercial for Bleu de Chanel with actor Timothee Chalamet, then you know it features one of the most hauntingly beautiful songs of the last six decades by the English band, The Moody Blues.

They formed in 1964 but the track was written by Justin Hayward who joined two years later as the band’s lead vocalist, lead guitarist and primary composer. He wrote the song when he was only 19 years old while the group was on tour in Belgium. His credits include about two dozen of the band’s songs including three others I love, “Tuesday Afternoon”, “Question” and “The Story In Your Eyes”.

Today’s song is an elegant testament to how well a fusion of an incredibly gifted rock band worked with a more formal sound courtesy of The London Festival Orchestra. Add to that Hayward’s polished vocals to his moving and eloquent lyrics, Ray Thomas’s flute arrangement and a remarkable production by Tony Clarke and the song had everything necessary to become the impeccable recording it is.

This band is another that somehow stays on my periphery. And each time I hear one of their unmistakable songs, I ask myself why they did not play a more central role in my musical world. But today’s track illustrates how unforgettable they are in any era.

Beauty I’d always missed
With these eyes before
Just what the truth is
I can’t say anymore
“.

Gazing at people
Some hand in hand
Just what I’m going through
They can’t understand
“.

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Top: The Moody Blues at Amsterdam Airport Schiphol in 1970 (L to R): Mike Pinder, Graeme Edge, Justin Hayward, Ray Thomas, John Lodge. Bottom: Justin Hayward circa 2015. (Images found online.  Original sources unknown.)

The Moody Blues: “Nights In White Satin” (1967, written by Justin Hayward).

Stay safe and well.

Music Monday: July 3, 2023

Hi, everyone. Welcome to another edition of Music Monday.

(Image found online.  Original source unknown.)

Happy birthday, America. Let freedom continue to ring.

As our great country turns 247 years old, let’s mark the occassion with two takes on the holiday. The first is a not so traditional but unbelievably fabulous rendition of a song celebrating this great land of ours by one of its greatest treasures.

O beautiful for spacious skies
For amber waves of grain
For purple mountain majesties
Above the fruited plain
America! America!
God shed His grace on thee,
And crown thy good with brotherhood
From sea to shining sea
“.

Ray Charles circa 1968. (Image found online.  Original source unknown.)

And for a fun take, let’s join one of America’s favorite sons in his “boardwalk life” with a stop at a “little seaside bar” to hear one of “Madame Marie’s” fortunes before she gets busted.

Sandy the fireworks are hailin’ over little Eden tonight
Forcin’ a light into all those stony faces left stranded on this fourth of July
Down in town the circuit’s full of switchblade lovers so fast, so shiny, so sharp
As the wizards play down on Pinball Way on the boardwalk way past dark
“.

Bruce Springsteen circa 1985. (Image found online.  Original source unknown.)

Ray Charles: “America The Beautiful” (1976, lyrics written by Katharine Lee Bates, music written by Samuel A. Ward).

Bruce Springsteen: “4th of July, Asbury Park (Sandy)” (1973, written by Bruce Springsteen).

Stay safe & well.