Showing posts with label Beach Boys. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Beach Boys. Show all posts

August 30, 2021

20,000 vinyl LPs 304: John Phillips (John, the Wolf King of L.A.)

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vinyl LP back cover detail 
back cover photo by Tom Gundelfinger 
detail photo of cover by Styrous®


Today is the birthday of John Phillips, the leader of the vocal group The Mamas and the Papas, and one of the chief organizers of the 1967 Monterey Pop Festival. He was born on August 30, 1935, in Parris Island, South Carolina.       
       
He only had five studio albums with The Mamas and the Papas but those albums have some of the great pop songs of the era. When he went solo, he only produced two albums. The first one, John Phillips (John, the Wolf King of L.A.), was a knockout! It is on my The Viewfinder 'desert island' vinyl LP list (link below).        




It is mostly a quiet, laid back kind of album with songs that are wonderful. Some of the tunes have a country feel to them with a Pedal Steel Guitar played by Buddy Emmons and Red Rhodes helping that feeling along.        




As usual I have favorite songs; Topanga Canyon is at the top. To me Topanga Canyon is VERY much a California song with the gentle feeling of a sunny afternoon in LA. It is one of the laid back tunes but it has a bouncy, gentle beat with bass played by Joe Osborn and a beautiful back up chorus with Darlene Love, Fanita James and Jean King that make it a good song to listen to (lyrics link below).           
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

vinyl LP back cover detail 
back cover photos by Tom Gundelfinger 
detail photos by Styrous®



Mississippi a close second to Topanga. It is the most upbeat song on the album with an infectious beat that makes your feet move (lyrics link below).               





John Phillips grew up in Alexandria, Virginia. From 1942 to 1946, he attended Linton Hall Military School in Bristow, Virginia. According to his autobiography, he "hated the place," citing "inspections," and "beatings," and recalls that "nuns used to watch us take showers." He formed a musical group of teenage boys, who sang doo-wop songs. He traveled to New York to gain a record contract in the early 1960s. His first band, The Journeymen, was a folk trio, with Scott McKenzie and Dick Weissman. Phillips wrote San Francisco (Be Sure to Wear Flowers in Your Hair) in 1967 for former bandmate Scott McKenzie.       
 
He  was the primary songwriter and musical arranger of the Mamas and the Papas. Their hits were California Dreamin', Monday, Monday, I Saw Her Again, Creeque Alley, and 12:30 (Young Girls Are Coming to the Canyon).       
 
Phillips helped promote the Monterey International Pop Music Festival held June 16 to 18, 1967, in Monterey, California; he performed with the Mamas and the Papas, as part of the event as well. The festival was planned in just seven weeks, and was developed as a way to validate rock music as an art form in the way jazz and folk were regarded. It was the first major pop-rock music event in history. He also co-produced the film Monterey Pop (1968) with the group's producer Lou Adler.        

Phillips released his first solo album John, the Wolf King of L.A. in 1970 but it was not commercially successful, although Mississippi was a minor hit, and Phillips began to withdraw from the limelight as his use of narcotics increased.       

With Terry Melcher, Mike Love, and former Journeyman colleague Scott McKenzie, he co-wrote the number-one single for the Beach Boys, Kokomo.       

On March 18, 2001, Phillips died of heart failure in Los Angeles at the age of 65, days after completing recording sessions for a new album.       
 
On June 25, 2019, The New York Times Magazine listed John Phillips among hundreds of artists whose material was reportedly destroyed in the 2008 Universal fire (link  below).             





Tracklist:

Side 1:

A1 - April Anne - 3:21
A2 - Topanga Canyon - 3:52
A3 - Malibu People - 3:37
A4 - Someone's Sleeping - 2:41
A5 - Drum - 3:35

Side 2:

B1 - Captain - 3:20
B2 - Let It Bleed, Genevieve - 2:52
B3 - Down The Beach - 2:50
B4 - Mississippi - 3:36
B5 - Holland Tunnel - 3:25

Companies, etc.



Credits:

    Bass Guitar – Joe Osborn
    Design, Photography By – Tom Gundelfinger
    Dobro, Lead Guitar – James Burton
    Drums – Hal Blaine
    Engineer – Chuck Britz
    Engineer [Assitant] – Winston Wong
    Fiddle – Gordon Terry
    Guitar, Harmonica – David Cohen, Dr. Hord*, John Phillips
    Keyboards – Larry Knechtel
    Liner Notes – G.W.*
    Pedal Steel Guitar [Steel] – Buddy Emmons, Red Rhodes
    Producer – Lou Adler
    Vocals [Voices] – Darlene Love, Fanita James, Jean King
    Written-By – J. Phillips*

Notes:

 
 
Barcode and Other Identifiers

    Matrix / Runout (Hand etched): DS 50077 - A
    Matrix / Runout (Hand etched): DS 50077 - B
 
John Phillips – John Phillips
Label:  ABC/Dunhill Records – DS 50077, Warlok (2) – DS 50077
Format: Vinyl, LP, Album
Country: US
Released: 1970
Genre: Rock
Style: Pop Rock
 
   
         
Viewfinder links:        
         
2008 Universal fire              
Hal Blaine        
David Cohen               
Buddy Emmons       
Larry Knechtel         
Darlene Love          
The Mamas & the Papas         
Terry Melcher         
Joe Osborn    
John Phillips         
Red Rhodes        
Gordon Terry          
Dick Weissman       
        
Net links:        
        
The Guardian ~ King of the wild frontier        
NY Times ~ obit        
        
YouTube links:        
         
April Anne     
Captain              
Down The Beach           
Drum            
Holland Tunnel               
Let It Bleed, Genevieve        
Malibu People       
Mississippi            
Someone's Sleeping        
Topanga Canyon        
      
Complete album       

John Phillips ~    
     How The Mamas & the Papas were born!        
       
        
         
        
        
        
Styrous® ~  Monday, August 30, 2021       
       














January 3, 2018

20,000 Vinyl LPs 122: The Halibuts ~ Halibut Beach in 3D

The Halibuts ~ Halibut Beach, 3D vinyl LP album cover detail
front cover artwork: Marty Korth
detail photo by Styrous®


It's a new year so I'm going New Wave. Don't ask me what one has to do with the other. Halibut Beach was one of my "album cover" purchases. As I have always been fascinated by Stereoscopy of any kind, the cover is the only reason I bought it (link below).     


The Halibuts ~ Halibut Beach, 3D vinyl LP album cover 
front cover artwork: Marty Korth
photo by Styrous®


When I got it home, plopped Beach on the turntable and played it for the first time I was delightfully surprised. It turned out to be a surf punk group; which I should have known just from the gnarly (does anyone ever use that term anymore?) graphics on the cover.        


The Halibuts ~ Halibut Beach, 3D vinyl LP album back cover
cover artwork: Marty Korth
photo by Styrous®


The music is awsome instrumental surf music reminiscent of the 1960's groups such as Dick Dale & his Del-Tones, who developed the surf sound from instrumental rock and whose hit, Let's Go Trippin' (1961) launched the surf music craze. There were the Surfaris with their hit, Wipe Out; The Chantays with Pipeline; The Astronauts, from Boulder, Colorado; and The Trashmen, from Minneapolis, Minnesota, who reached number 4 with Surfin' Bird in 1964.       
        
The Rivieras, from South Bend, Indiana, who reached number 5 in 1964 with California Sun, the Beach Boys, Jan and Dean, etc. are included in this group, however, Dale is quoted on such groups: "They were surfing sounds [with] surfing lyrics. In other words, the music wasn't surfing music. The words made them surfing songs. ... That was the difference ... the real surfing music is instrumental."    



The Halibuts ~ Halibut Beach, 3D vinyl LP album back cover details
back cover artwork: Marty Korth
detail photos by Styrous®
 


As usual I have a favorite from the album which is Exodus 5-0. It is a cover of the title song from the film, Exodus, an epic film on the founding of the modern State of Israel. It was made by Alpha and Carlyle Productions and distributed by United Artists. Produced and directed by Otto Preminger, the film was based on the 1958 novel Exodus by Leon Uris. The screenplay was written by Dalton Trumbo. The music was written by Ernest Gold.    




Another favorite of mine is Malibu Run. It has a ska feeling to it that is reminiscent of One Step Beyond by Madness which was a cover of the song written by Jamaican ska singer Prince Buster.        

The Halibuts did a cover of one of my all-time favorite songs, Istanbul. It is not on the Beach album but it is just too good to pass up. Originally titled, Istanbul (Not Constantinople), it is a 1953 novelty song, with lyrics by Jimmy Kennedy and music by Nat Simon. Written on the 500th anniversary of the fall of Constantinople to the Ottomans, the lyrics humorously refer to the official 1930 renaming of the city of Constantinople to Istanbul. The song's original release certified as a gold record.   

The Residents took the tune to the very edge of madness with a very weird and surreal video that is a trip in every sense of the word (YouTube lik below).      

Istanbul was originally recorded by the Canadian vocal quartet The Four Lads on August 12, 1953. This recording was released by Columbia Records as catalog number 40082. It first reached the Billboard magazine charts on October 24, 1953, and it peaked at #10. It was the group's first gold record. The Halibuts version is a knockout!            



The Halibuts ~ Halibut Beach, 3D vinyl LP album back cover details
back cover artwork: Marty Korth
detail photos by Styrous®



I couldn't find much info on the group nor any of members other than bassist Pete Curry. He was with Kaos, a punk rock band from Los Angeles, California that was formed in late 1979 and disbanded in 1981. He still performs with Los Straitjackets, a Nashville based band known primarily for performing instrumental surf music. Members include guitarists Eddie Angel, Danny Amis (formerly of the Raybeats), drummer  L. J. "Jimmy" Lester and Curry.    

Curry was with The Chocolate Watchband, not to be confused with British band The Chocolate Watch Band. The Watchband was a 1960's American garage-rock band. Formed in Los Altos, California, in 1965, their use of distorted-psychedelic-style guitar made them one of the heavier bands of the period.     

The Watchband was signed to Tower Records in 1966 and released their first single, Sweet Young Thing, in 1967. Later in the year, the band released their debut album, No Way Out. Though the album was nationally unsuccessful, the band became a frequent attraction in San Jose and the San Francisco Bay Area. In 1968, their second album, The Inner Mystique, was released and included the band's most popular song, a cover version of I'm Not Like Everybody Else. By 1969, the band released their final album, One Step Beyond, however it was not as highly regarded as their past work, and the band broke up in 1970.         

Pete Curry was also with  The Deoras and The Neanderthals led by Johnny Rabb. Both of the groups still perform.         


The Halibuts ~ Halibut Beach, 3D vinyl LP album back cover details
back cover artwork: Marty Korth
detail photos by Styrous®




The Halibuts ~ Halibut Beach, 3D vinyl LP labels
detail photos by Styrous®



Of course, you couldn't do much about viewing the album cover without 3D glasses, which was included with the album.       

The Halibuts ~ Halibut Beach
3D vinyl LP album cover & 3D glasses
front cover artwork: Marty Korth
photo by Styrous®









Tracklist:

Side 1:

A1 - Mr. Mysterioso, written by R. Johnson*
   
A2 - Halibut Stomp, written by J. Lyou*, R. Johnson*
   
A3 - Jetstream, written by M. Meena
   
A4 - Little Old Ladies Seldom Cutback, written by D. Torrence*, J. Berry*
   
A5 - Deathwave, written by R. Johnson*
   
A6 - Exodus 5-0, written by E. Gold*

Side 2:
   
B1 - Malibu Run, written by R. Holden*
   
B2 - Monster Surfing Time, written by J. South*
   
B3 - Hanky Panky, written by E. Greenwich*, J. Barry*
   
B4 - Church Key, written by D. Darnold*
   
B5 - Surf Rider, written by N. Edwards*
   
Companies, etc.

    Distributed By – Rhino Records (2)

Credits:

    Bass – Kevin Daley (2)    Drums – Randy Haskins, Rich Hutter
    Guitar – P.W. Curry*, Rick Johnson (7)
    Keyboards – Bruce Paddy
    Artwork – Cheryll Lynn (tracks: Back), Marty Korth (tracks: Front)
    Engineer – P.W. Curry* (tracks: A1-B3)

Notes:

Tracks A1-B3 recorded at Willie's Garage. Tracks B4, B5, recorded live at The Music Machine, Los Angeles, July 7, 1983.
Album cover is in 3D, glasses included.
     
The Halibuts ‎– Halibut BeachLabel: What Records? ‎– W12-2407
Format: Vinyl, LP, Album
Country: US
Released: 1984
Genre: Rock
Style: Surf

             
             
Viewfinder links:    
           
Stereogram ~ Sonic & Visual 3D          
3D Vinyl LPs & 45 RPMs         
The Residents        
     
Net links:    
           
The Halibuts Discography      
LA Times ~ Halibuts Riding Wave of Surfer Popularity       
The Beach Reporter ~  The Halibuts reunite in San Pedro
Surf Guitar History ~ The Halibuts -- Halibut Rick???     
In Music We Trust ~ The Halibuts: Life On The Bottom         
     
YouTube links:    
           
The Halibuts ~           
        Exodus 5-0
        Malibu Run
        Monster Surfing Tim     
        The Halibuts Surf Band Reunion, 25.10.1986 
        Istanbul   
The Residents ~ Istanbul        
Stevie Ray Vaughan & Dick Dale ~ Pipeline      
The Surfaris ~ Wipe Out    
The Chantays ~ Pipeline
The Trashmen - Surfin Bird
The Astronauts ~ Firewater     
The Chocolate Watchband ~ Sweet Young Thing         
      
     
     
Styrous® ~  Wednesday, January 3, 2018



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