Monday, August 6, 2012


It's Not Music It's History
Aqualung
This song deals with our reaction to the homeless population. Jethro Tull vocalist and flute player Ian Anderson wrote the song and called it "a guilt-ridden song of confusion about how you deal with beggars, the homeless." Elaborating in the 40th anniversary reissue of the album, he said, "It's about our reaction, of guilt, distaste, awkwardness and confusion, all these things that we feel when we're confronted with the reality of the homeless. You see someone who's clearly in desperate need of some help, whether it's a few coins or the contents of your wallet, and you blank them out. The more you live in that business-driven, commercially-driven lifestyle, you can just cease to see them.

In this song, Aqualung is a homeless man with poor hygiene. Ian Anderson wrote it about a character he made up based on actual photographs of transient men. Ian's wife at the time, Jennie, was an amateur photographer and had brought the pictures for Ian to look at. Many of the lyrics are Ian describing the men in the pictures.
Jennie also wrote a few lyrics to go with the pictures, which earned her a songwriting credit, so she receives half the royalties from the song. She and Anderson divorced in 1974.

This is Jethro Tull's most famous song, but it was not released as a single. Ian Anderson told us why: "Because it was too long, it was too episodic, it starts off with a loud guitar riff and then goes into rather more laid back acoustic stuff. Led Zeppelin at the time, you know, they didn't release any singles. It was album tracks. And radio sharply divided between AM radio, which played the 3-minute pop hits, and FM radio where they played what they called deep cuts. You would go into a album and play the obscure, the longer, the more convoluted songs in that period of more developmental rock music. But that day is not really with us anymore, whether it be classic rock stations that do play some of that music, but they are thin on the ground, and they too know that they've got to keep it short and sharp and cheerful, and provide the blue blanket of familiar sounding music and get onto the next set of commercial breaks, because that's what pays the radio station costs of being on the air. So pragmatic rules apply."

An "Aqualung" is a portable breathing apparatus for divers. Anderson envisioned the homeless man getting that nickname because of breathing problems. He got the idea from watching a TV show called Sea Hunt, where there was a lot of heavy underwater breathing, and where the main character wore an Aqualung. What Anderson didn't know is that Aqualung was a brand name, and the Aqualung Corporation of North America took legal action after the album came out. The case was eventually dropped, but the threat of a lawsuit was troubling to Anderson. For more about the Aqualung and how it relates to diving, check it out in Song Images.

The album cover was a watercolor painting of the character Aqualung created by the artist Burton Silverman. Jethro Tull's manager Terry Ellis commissioned him after seeing his work in Time magazine. Burton took some photos of Ian Anderson wearing his old overcoat before he painted the cover, and the resulting work looked a lot like a haggard version of Ian, who was not pleased with the painting. Despite Anderson's objections, the cover became an iconic image in Rock, but it also resulted in another lawsuit over where the image could be used - Burton felt the band didn't have the rights to use it on T-shirts and other promotional materials.

The unusual audio effect you hear in this song is called "telephone burbles" where you remove all frequencies except for a narrow band around the 1,000 hertz mark. This is to reproduce the sound of a telephone. As Ian Anderson told us: "It's also like when you're addressing a crowd through a megaphone. Or even perhaps the tinny sound of a voice trumpet, which is a non-active megaphone. It's a form of address. It's the sound that woke up young pilots in 1941 and sent them into the skies to battle the Hun. This is the sound of the Tannoy, the calling to arms of young men going up in their Hurricanes and Spitfires. It's something that's very much part of the blood of an Englishman."

Like most songs on the album, this one has a cold ending. That's because Anderson knew he would have to perform these songs on stage, where he liked to have a definitive ending to a song rather than a fade out.

Tuesday, May 18, 2010

The $65 Corvette by Ed Kilbourne


THE $65 CORVETTE


ONE MORNING WHILE READING THE PAPERS, IN SEARCH OF A NEW SET OF WHEELS
THE CLASSIFIEDS HAD A MOST CURIOUS AD IN THEIR LISTING FOR AUTOMOBILES
I READ WITH SUSPICIOUS AMUSEMENT, WHAT SEEMED LIKE A WILD STROKE OF LUCK
CORVETTE STINGRAY IT READ, LOW MILEAGE THE AD SAID, '83 MODEL, $65 BUCKS

WELL I WAS USED TO MY NEWSPAPER'S TYPOS, BUT I CALLED UP THE NUMBER STRAIGHTWAY WHAT RESPONSE HAVE YOU HAD TO YOUR CLASSIFIED AD, SHE SAID NONE, YOU'RE MY FIRST CALL TODAY
I SAID THERE'S BEEN A MISTAKE IN THE PAPER, THEY PRINTED YOUR PRICE WRONG SOMEHOW OH NO, REPLIED SHE, THEY CHECKED THAT WITH ME, I SAID DON'T SELL THAT CAR, I'M LEAVING NOW

SHE LIVED IN A PART OF THE CITY, THAT FOLKS LIKE ME ONLY PASS THROUGH AIRLINE CAPTAINS, BANK PRESIDENTS AND LAWYERS ARE THE RESIDENTS & THE HOUSES ARE MASSIVE & NEW AS I TURNED UP HER HALF MILE LONG DRIVE WAY, THERE IN THE HEAT OF THE DAY IN THE BRIGHT SUNLIGHT GLEAMED THE CAR OF MY DREAMS, JUST $65 DOLLARS AWAY

THE UPOLSTRY WAS DONE IN WHITE LEATHER, IT HAD A 487 V-8 GULL WING-SPAN DOORS, HURST FOUR ON THE FLOOR AND THE 10-SPEAKER TAPE DECK WAS GREAT IT HAD CHROME ON THE CHROME ON THE FENDERS, AND AN AERODYNAMIC DESIGN IT HAD A BAR, A TV, BUT WHAT WAS BOGGLING TO ME WAS FOR $65 BUCKS IT WAS MINE

I THOUGHT THAT THIS WOMAN MUST BE CRAZY, TO BE SELLING THIS CAR AT THAT PRICE BUT AS SHE WALKED DOWN THE LANE SHE SEEMED PERFECTLY SANE, \SHE WAS CHARMING AND REALLY QUITE NICE ND SHE SMILED WITH COMPLETE SATISFACTION, AS SHE HANDED ME THE TITLE AND THE KEYS I SAID I'VE JUST GOT TO KNOW WHY YOU'VE LET THIS THING GO, WHAT'S WRONG WITH THE CAR TELL ME PLEASE

SHE SAID I'LL BE 60 NEXT THURSDAY, I'VE LIVED HERE WITH MY HUSBAND EARL AFTER 30 YEARS WED, WITHOUT A WORD SAID, HE LEFT ME FOR A YOUNG TEENAGE GIRL BUT WITH HIS CREDIT CARDS HERE ON THE TABLE, I KNEW THAT HE WOULDN'T GET FAR AND LAST MONTH FROM FLORIDA HE, SENT A WIRE TO ME, SAID I NEED MONEY, DEAR, SELL THE CAR!

Singing Around The Campfire

What goes together better than
marshmallows, chocolate and graham crackers?
Guitars and campfires?

Sunday, May 16, 2010

Huddie Leadbetter (Leadbelly)

The Real Story of Huddie Leadbetter 1889 - 1949

It was in the Louisiana State Penitentiary in July 1933 that Huddie met folklorist John Lomax and his son Alan who were touring the south for the Library of Congress, collecting unwritten ballads and folk songs using the newly available recording technology. The Lomaxes had discovered that Southern prisons were among the best places to collect work songs, ballads and spirituals and Leadbelly, as he now called himself, was a particular find.  Over the next few days the Lomaxes recorded hundreds of songs. When they returned in the summer of 1934 for more recordings Leadbelly told them of his pardon in Texas. As Alan Lomax tells it, "We agreed to make a record of his petition on the other side of one of his favorite ballads, 'Goodnight Irene'. I took the record to Governor Allen on July 1. On August 1 Leadbelly got his pardon. On September 1 I was sitting in a hotel in Texas when I felt a tap on my shoulder. I looked up and there was Leadbelly with his guitar, his knife, and a sugar bag packed with all his earthly belongings. He said, 'Boss, you got me out of jail and now I've come to be your man'" He was not a blues singer in the traditional sense; he also sang spirituals, pop, field and prison hollers, cowboy and childrens songs, dance tunes and folk ballads, and of course his own topical compositions. It has been said his repertoire was at least 500 songs.  That many of his songs carried a blues spirit can be traced back to his days with Blind Lemon Jefferson, but his greatest contribution to American music was in the folk field. Leadbelly classics such as "Goodnight Irene," "The Midnight Special," "Rock Island Line", "Cotton Fields," and "Bring Me a Little Water, Sylvie" all contain black folk elements that many prewar bluesmen shunned, at least in the recording studio. He never saw any commercial success during his lifetime. Not until after his death did a broader public come to know his songs and the amazing story of his life.  He has inflenced artists such as Woody Guthrie, Pete Seeger, The Weavers, Brownie McGee, Sonny Terry, Bob Dylan, Joe Cainen and many others. Leadbelly's 65 years sometimes reads like a work of fiction

                     Midnight Special
 
Well you wake up in the morning, hear the ding dong ring,

You go a-marching to the table, see the same damn thing

Well, it's on a one table, knife, a fork and a pan,

And if you say anything about it, you're in trouble with the man

Let the midnight special, shine her light on me

Let the midnight special, shine her ever-loving light on me

                        Alabama Bound

I'm Alabama bound  --- I'm Alabama bound

And if the train don't stop and turn around

I'm Alabama bound

                           Goodnight Irene
D                                 A7
Asked your mother for you
                                               D
She told me that you was too young
                                                  G
I wish, dear Lord, that I'd never seen your face
D               A                   D
I'm sorry you ever was born.

CHORUS:
D                A7
Irene, Goodnight
                    D
Irene, Good night
                                     G
Goodnight, Irene, Good night, Irene
D               A              D
I'll see you in my dreams.

Saturday, May 15, 2010

Friday, May 14, 2010

Life Is Good

This is proof that God created us in His image - shall we not live in wonder and with praise

Thursday, March 11, 2010

FYI Basics


A passion that lasts a lifetime.

My favorite folk song... ALL-
seriously!
    I never met a folk song I didn't like
    Well, I'm not a big fan of the 
    Unicorn Song or Puff Dragon...        
       Other than those two I'm a folk junkie. 



You name a topic and I can name a song!
       It's scary how many songs I know!

What's your favorite folk song?
    
My guitars... Takamine, Yamaha, Rogue
    What brand guitar do you play?

My favorite place to play guitar... campfire
    Where do you best like to play?