Visualizzazione post con etichetta MGM. Mostra tutti i post
Visualizzazione post con etichetta MGM. Mostra tutti i post

lunedì 3 marzo 2014

Capitan Vinile e l’intimo scomparso



Eccovi tutti lì in fila, voi bavosi onanisti vinilici!
Tutti in fila davanti ai cancelli di qualche iper-vinylmania per cercare una bella edizione del vostro arcinoto album preferito dei Pink Floyd.
A cercare la solita specificissima Charisma, i soliti gatefold dei Genesis, i più consunti album Parlophone etichetta giallo/nera.

Tutti lì in fila

venerdì 18 novembre 2011

The House of the Rising Sun - Discography and Videography


DISCOGRAFIA SELEZIONATA DA:  

The House of the Rising Sun - The Animals

                      

45’s
The House Of The Rising Sun/Talkin' Bout You  (Columbia DB 7301) 1964 (UK)
The House Of The Rising Sun/Talkin' Bout You  (MGM K 13264) 1964 (USA)
The House Of The Rising Sun/Talkin' Bout You  (Columbia SCMQ 1802) 1964 (Italia)





33’s   
The Animals (Columbia 33SX 1669) 1964 (UK)
The Animals (MGM E-264) 1964 (USA)
Ristampati in CD nel 1997 (CD - EMI)

CD
The Complete Animals (EMI 7946132) 1997 (Compilation 2CD)
The Best of the Animals (1997 EMI 6406) 1997 (Compilation)

giovedì 17 novembre 2011

The Marshall In The House Of The Rising Sun - The Animals


The House Of The Rising Sun


"House Of The Rising Sun", that old story of New Orleans’ joint and its world of misery and depravity, had always been a delicacy. Many had sung it, bending from time to time to their musical needs. Nina Simone ("At The Village Gate", 1962) had made it a nightly jazzy atmosphere, and listening to it, seems to see the spread of smoke in the room. Woody Guthrie did not betray the storytelling’s popular spirit: an all narrative cut, like a crime news in the fifth page. The old bluesman Josh White, from a first recording even in 1942, had built a twilight and dilated epic, like a Chandler’s page, using a vocal line suspended on long vowels and an arrangement with piano and trumpet of grim charm.

Is with this version in the head, says bassist Chas Chandler, that The Animals entered in the studio, in February of 1964, to record the song. The RnB band from Newcastle had already released an adaptation of a folk number, Baby, Let Me Take You Home (derived from "Baby, Let Me Follow You Down," already on Dylan's debut), but this time the things would have been different. Alan Price, keyboardist and musical leader, had set up a fighting and rampant arrangement, all played on the warm tone of his organ, the dark voice of Eric Burdon and the undeniable working –class style of all the combo. Difficult, however, to think that the group did not know the version just recorded by Dylan (again on his debut LP, in 1962), whose descending guitar line is full taken by Price’s keyboard.
The song is opened by a western arpeggio by Vestine, before being led, in the first two stanzas, by the crescendo controlled but dramatic of the singer, who comes to a climax with real pathos ("And the only time he's satisfied Is When He's on a drunk"); Price then, in the song’s barycentre, unleashes the best organ solo of the era: symmetrical, concise: perfect. The music start again, but the crescendo is repeated in the last two stanzas, in which even Vestine's guitar becomes more insistent to support the last declamation of a truly visceral Burdon. At the end it turned out a song of more than 4 minutes, an eternity for that era. So much that in EMI they were doubtful of a song they thought long and perhaps boring; incredibly Mickie Most, producer of the band and a true artist of the fade-outs at 2'30'', believed in the song that was well distributed both in England and America, albeit with some "cut".
"House of the Rising Sun" jumped on “top of the pop” on July 7, and remained there for a week before giving way to the Stones’new release. In America was again No. 1. It was undeniably a rock song, rampant, rhythmic, yet serious, even dramatic, steeped in realism, different from the standards of the era who sent fifteen into raptures. It was the first rock hit to take whole home from the popular heritage of the old white American, to which were devoted folk giants as Guthry or Pete Seeger, who had nothing to do with the '60s British charts, far more inspired by the blues. And of this Blues were disciples the Animals: twisting with their electric charge a piece of an old folk singer, had found success, but the song will remain unique in their catalog, much more generous with references to the black music.

All this was the prelude of what would have happened exactly one year after in Los Angeles January 1965, when a group of novice twentys, who called themselves the Byrds, entered in the studio to cut a traditional, "Mr.Tambourine Man”...               (to be continued...)


The House Of The Rising Sun

House Of The Rising Sun”, quella vecchia storia del bordello di New Orleans e del suo mondo di miseria e depravazione, era sempre stata un boccone prelibato. L’avevano cantata in tanti, piegandola di volta in volta alle proprie esigenze musicali. Nina Simone (“At The Village Gate”, 1962) ne aveva fatto un jazz d’atmosfera notturna e, ad ascoltarla, sembra di vedere le volute di fumo spandersi nella sala. Woody Guthrie non aveva tradito lo spirito popolare del cantastorie: un’esecuzione tutta narrativa, da colonna di cronaca in quinta pagina. Il vecchio bluesman Josh White, a partire da una prima incisione addirittura nel 1942, ci aveva costruito dentro un’epica crepuscolare e dilatata come una pagina di Chandler, utilizzando una linea di canto sospesa su vocali lunghissime e un arrangiamento con pianoforte e tromba dal fascino sinistro. 

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