Showing posts with label Bob Ezrin. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Bob Ezrin. Show all posts

July 30, 2018

1,001 LaserDiscs 3: Alice Cooper Trashes the World LaserDisc

     front cover
   
   
photos by 

      

     
Alice Cooper Trashes the World is a live concert video by Alice Cooper. The concert was filmed in Birmingham, England, in December 1989, during Cooper's tour in support of his commercially successful album Trash.      
           

     back cover

Alice Cooper was born Vincent Damon Furnier on February 4, 1948, in Detroit, Michigan. He is an American singer, songwriter, and actor whose career spans over fifty years. His stage shows feature guillotines, electric chairs, fake blood, deadly snakes, baby dolls, and dueling swords, Cooper is considered by music journalists and peers alike to be "The Godfather of Shock Rock". He has drawn equally from horror films, vaudeville, and garage rock to pioneer a macabre and theatrical brand of rock designed to shock people. Cooper has experimented with a number of musical styles, including art rock, hard rock, heavy metal, new wave, glam metal, and industrial rock.        


     back cover details


Originating in Phoenix, Arizona, in the late 1960s after he moved from Detroit, Michigan, "Alice Cooper" was originally a band consisting of Furnier on vocals and harmonica, Glen Buxton on lead guitar, Michael Bruce on rhythm guitar, Dennis Dunaway on bass guitar, and Neal Smith on drums. They called the group, Nazz, but in 1968, the band learned that Todd Rundgren (link below) also had a band called Nazz, and found themselves in need of another stage name. Furnier also believed that the group needed a gimmick to succeed, and that other bands were not exploiting the showmanship potential of the stage. The legend is that the name "Alice Cooper" came from a session with a Ouija board, largely chosen because it sounded innocuous and wholesome, in humorous contrast to the band's image and music. However, in an interview with Mark Radcliffe on the Radcliffe and Maconie show on BBC Radio 2 on 30 November 2009, Alice described the incident with the ouija board as an urban legend: "We literally got that whole story about the witch thing the way you guys got it. It was like just pure urban legend. I heard about the witch thing probably the same day you did, but it was a great story. "Alice Cooper" was a character on Mayberry R.F.D. (played by Alice Ghostley) at the time (I like the legend better!).



The original Alice Cooper band released its first album, Pretties for You, in 1969. It was produced by Frank Zappa (link below) on Straight Records. Pretties was a critical and commercial failure, briefly appearing on the Billboard Top 200, and none of its songs have ever been played live by Cooper since the release of the band's breakthrough album Love It to Death.        
  





Alice Cooper's "shock rock" reputation apparently developed almost by accident at first. An unrehearsed stage routine involving Cooper, a feather pillow, and a live chicken garnered attention from the press; the band decided to capitalize on the tabloid sensationalism, creating in the process a new subgenre, shock rock. Cooper claims that the infamous "Chicken Incident" at the Toronto Rock and Roll Revival concert in September 1969 was an accident. A chicken somehow made its way onto the stage into the feathers of a feather pillow they would open during Cooper's performance, and not having any experience around farm animals, Cooper presumed that, because the chicken had wings, it would be able to fly. He picked it up and threw it out over the crowd, expecting it to fly away. The chicken instead plummeted into the first few rows occupied by wheelchair users, who reportedly proceeded to tear the bird to pieces. The next day the incident made the front page of national newspapers, and Zappa phoned Cooper and asked if the story, which reported that he had bitten off the chicken's head and drunk its blood on stage, was true. Cooper denied the rumor, whereupon Zappa told him, "Well, whatever you do, don't tell anyone you didn't do it.         





Despite the publicity from the chicken incident, the band's second album, Easy Action, produced by David Briggs and released in June 1970, fared even worse than its predecessor, entirely failing to dent the Billboard Top 200. Around this time, fed up with Californians' indifference to their act, they relocated to Pontiac, Michigan, where their bizarre stage act was much better received by Midwestern crowds accustomed to the proto punk styles of local bands such as the Stooges and the MC5. Despite this, Cooper still managed to receive a cream pie in the face when performing at the Cincinnati Pop Festival. Michigan would remain their steady home base until 1972. "L.A. just didn’t get it," Cooper stated. "They were all on the wrong drug for us. They were on acid and we were basically drinking beer. We fit much more in Detroit than we did anywhere else."     

Alice Cooper appeared at the Woodstock-esque Strawberry Fields Festival near Toronto, Ontario, in August 1970. The band's mix of glam and increasingly violent stage theatrics stood out in stark contrast to the bearded, denim-clad hippie bands of the time. As Cooper himself stated: "We were into fun, sex, death and money when everybody was into peace and love. We wanted to see what was next. It turned out we were next, and we drove a stake through the heart of the Love Generation."  
        




In autumn 1970, the Alice Cooper group teamed with producer Bob Ezrin for the recording of their third album, Love It to Death. This was the final album in their Straight Records contract and the band's last chance to create a hit. That first success came with the single I'm Eighteen, released in November 1970, which reached number 21 on the Billboard Hot 100 in early 1971. Not long after the album's release in January 1971, Warner Bros. Records purchased Alice Cooper's contract from Straight and re-issued the album, giving the group a higher level of promotion.        

Love It proved to be their breakthrough album, reaching number 35 on the U.S. Billboard 200 album charts. It would be the first of eleven Alice Cooper group and solo albums produced by Ezrin, who is widely seen as being pivotal in helping to create and develop the band's definitive sound.    
       
 


The group's 1971 Love It tour featured a stage show involving mock fights and gothic torture modes being imposed on Cooper, climaxing in a staged execution by electric chair, with the band sporting tight, sequined, color-contrasting glam rock-style costumes made by prominent rock-fashion designer Cindy Dunaway (sister of band member Neal Smith, and wife of band member Dennis Dunaway). Cooper's androgynous stage role had developed to present a villainous side, portraying a potential threat to modern society. The success of the band's single and album, and their tour of 1971, which included their first tour of Europe (audience members reportedly included Elton John and a pre-Ziggy David Bowie), provided enough encouragement for Warner Bros. to offer the band a new multi-album contract.      
           
        


Their follow-up album Killer, released in late 1971, continued the commercial success of Love It to Death and included further single success with Under My Wheels, Be My Lover in early 1972, and Halo of Flies, which became a Top 10 hit in the Netherlands in 1972. Thematically, Killer expanded on the villainous side of Cooper's androgynous stage role, with its music becoming the soundtrack to the group's morality-based stage show, which by then featured a boa constrictor hugging Cooper on-stage, the murderous axe chopping of bloodied baby dolls, and execution by hanging at the gallows.        

For me, Killer was their absolutely best album. There is not a single song on the album that I do not like (link below).    
    


The summer of 1972 saw the release of the single School's Out. It went Top 10 in the USA and to number 1 in the UK, and remains a staple on classic rock radio to this day. The album School's Out reached No. 2 on the US charts and sold over a million copies. 

With Cooper's on-stage androgynous persona completely replaced with brattiness and machismo, the band solidified their success with subsequent tours in the United States and Europe, and won over devoted fans in droves while at the same time horrifying parents and outraging the social establishment. In the United Kingdom, Mary Whitehouse, a Christian morality campaigner, persuaded the BBC to ban the video for School's Out, although her campaign did not prevent the single also reaching number one in the UK. Cooper sent her a bunch of flowers in gratitude for the publicity. Meanwhile, British Labour Member of Parliament Leo Abse petitioned Home Secretary Reginald Maudling to have the group banned altogether from performing in the country.                    






In February 1973, Billion Dollar Babies was released worldwide and became the band's most commercially successful album, reaching No. 1 in both the US and UK. Elected, a late-1972 Top 10 UK hit from the album, which inspired one of the first MTV-style story-line promo videos ever made for a song (three years before Queen's promotional video for Bohemian Rhapsody), was followed by two more UK Top 10 singles, Hello Hooray and No More Mr. Nice Guy, the latter of which was the last UK single from the album; it reached No. 25 in the US. The title track, featuring guest vocals by Donovan, was also a US hit single.             

Their 1973 US tour broke box-office records previously set by the Rolling Stones and raised rock theatrics to new heights; the multi-level stage show by then featured numerous special effects, including Billion Dollar Bills, decapitated baby dolls and mannequins, a dental psychosis scene complete with dancing teeth, and the ultimate execution prop and highlight of the show: the guillotine. The guillotine and other stage effects were designed for the band by magician James Randi, who appeared on stage during some of the shows as executioner. The Alice Cooper group had now reached its peak and it was among the most visible and successful acts in the industry.     




Muscle of Love, released at the end of 1973, was to be the last studio album from the classic lineup, and marked Alice Cooper's last UK Top 20 single of the 1970s with Teenage Lament '74. An unsolicited theme song was recorded for the James Bond movie The Man with the Golden Gun, but a different song of the same name by Lulu was chosen instead. By 1974, the Muscle of Love album still had not matched the top-charting success of its predecessor, and the band began to have constant disagreements. For various reasons, the members agreed to take what was expected to be a temporary hiatus. "Everyone decided they needed a rest from one another", said manager Shep Gordon at the time. "A lot of pressure had built up, but it's nothing that can't be dealt with. Everybody still gets together and talks."        






Furnier had adopted the band's name as his own name in the 1970s and began a solo career with the 1975 concept album Welcome to My Nightmare. To avoid legal complications over ownership of the group name, "Alice Cooper" had by then become the singer's new legal name. Speaking on the subject of Alice Cooper continuing as a solo project as opposed to the band it once was, Cooper stated in 1975, "It got very basically down to the fact that we had drawn as much as we could out of each other. After ten years, we got pretty dry together." Manager Gordon added, "What had started in a sense as a pipe-dream became an overwhelming burden".                          






Track listing

  1. "Trash"
  2. "Billion Dollar Babies"
  3. "I'm Eighteen"
  4. "I'm Your Gun"
  5. "Desperado"
  6. "House of Fire"
  7. "No More Mr. Nice Guy"
  8. "This Maniac's in Love with You"
  9. "Steven"
  10. "Welcome to My Nightmare"
  11. "Ballad of Dwight Fry"
  12. "Gutter Cats Vs The Jets"
  13. "Only Women Bleed"
  14. "I Love the Dead"
  15. "Poison"
  16. "Muscle of Love"
  17. "Spark in the Dark"
  18. "Bed of Nails"
  19. "School's Out"
  20. "Under My Wheels"
  21. End credits - "Only My Heart Talkin'"

The band

    

     
Viewfinder link:      
        
        
Net links:      
        
Alice Cooper website        
Nights with Alice Cooper          
Sick Things UK      
Rock & Roll Hall of Fame ~ Alice Cooper           
        
YouTube links:      
        
Alice Cooper Trashes the World videos       
        
  

     
Alice Cooper Trashes the World LaserDisc is for sale on eBay 
     
     
   
     
    
Styrous® ~ Sunday, July 29, 2018       


     










     

April 16, 2014

101 Reel-to-Reel Tapes 58: Alice Cooper ~ Killer





 Alice Cooper ~ Killer!







In addition to my 20,000 Vinyl LP collection I'm selling, I have reel-to-reel, pre-recorded tapes for sale as well (see links below). If interested, contact me by email please, not by a comment.

~ ~ ~

Killer was the fourth studio album by Alice Cooper but it was the first album I heard by the group and it remained my favorite of all the many great albums they produced; it was released in late 1971 and I must have heard it in 1972. I was blown away when I heard it; there had never been anything like it. Marilyn Manson was only two years old when it was released.


 
reel-to-reel tape box
photo by Pete Turner
boa constrictor - Kachina
album design - Alice Cooper
  photo of tape box by Styrous®




Under My Wheels opens the album in classic hard-rock, dance provoking fashion. I love the way it rocks out and makes it impossible to sit still. 

Be My Lover follows with a pretty much down to earth rock 'n roll tune that has a slight touch of Mae West I've always loved. It has a nice guitar and drums ending.





reel-to-reel tape box back
album design - Alice Cooper
photo of tape box by Styrous®



Halo of Flies comes galloping in with a great mutiple-guitars intro that has just a touch of a Spanish feeling.  Then at thirty seconds hits an annoying morse code-like, staccato sound that is quite nice. The inro goes on for a minute & a half before it gets down to the business at hand. It's an 8 1/2 minute excursion into far off lands and adventures that evnetually goes in to a sensational string-synth instrumental section that rocks along with a sensational drum solo by . According to Cooper's liner notes in the compilation The Definitive Alice Cooper, it was an attempt by the band to prove that they could perform King Crimson-like progressive rock suites, and was supposedly about a spy organisation.  The whole gang joins in and builds to an incredible final! A truly violent and beautiful ode that could apply to (it seems to me) the Viet Nam War; after all, we were still ass-deep in it at the time (lyrics below).

Upon its single release in 1973, the song became a top 10 hit in the Netherlands and charted in Belgium. The single release featured the B-side Under My Wheels, which had already been released as a single two years prior.

The noise rock band Halo of Flies named themselves after this song. Jello Biafra and The Melvins covered the song on their release Sieg Howdy!, while Haunted Garage covered it for the 1993 Cooper tribute Welcome to Our Nightmare.

What a great song!





reel-to-reel tape back detail
detail photo by Styrous®





Desperado is a tribute to Jim Morrison, according to Cooper. "Jim was a drinking buddy and an early supporter of the band who really meant a lot to us."  The song starts with a gentle and quiet guitar and voice intro, there are beautiful strings during the slow instrumental breaks. It does not ever really break loose, which is a nice change.

You Drive Me Nervous has some interesting airplane, dive-bombing sounding guitar riffs that are pretty cool. Yeah, Yeah, Yeah is a good ol' rock 'n roll song with a harmonica a little over mid-way the tune that pretty much wails. Great dance song.




reel-to-reel tape back detail
detail photo by Styrous®





Killer is a monumental classic of great Rock music. A seven minute tour de force workout that is fantastic! It starts with an "Oh, Too Cool" strolling beat that has this neat doppler guitar work.  A moderately fast beat propels the song to some pretty interesting displays of quitar work. It slowly builds to a climax then slows down to an incredibly slow and trippy section with whispers and sounds of agony in the background.

During performances of the song, Cooper would stage a ritual hanging during this very slow section which uses a drum roll and an organ plays while a priest chants Extreme Unctions. Quite a bit of theater for the time; you have to see it for the ending (link to the Unofficial video below). I loved it.

A killer song!





reel-to-reel tape back detail
detail photo by Styrous®





Alice Cooper was born Vincent Damon Furnier on February 4, 1948, in Detroit, Michigan, and moved to Phoenix with his family.  The Alice Cooper band formed while they were in high school in Phoenix, and was discovered in 1969 by Frank Zappa in Los Angeles, where he signed them to his record label.

The band originally consisted of Furnier on vocals and harmonica, lead guitarist Glen Buxton, Michael Bruce on rhythm guitar, Dennis Dunaway on bass guitar, and drummer Neal Smith. The original Alice Cooper band broke into the international music mainstream with the 1971 hit I'm Eighteen from the album Love It to Death, which was followed by the even bigger single "School's Out" in 1972. The band reached their commercial peak with the 1973 album Billion Dollar Babies.

Furnier adopted the band's name as his own name in the 1970s and began a solo career with the 1975 concept album Welcome to My Nightmare.





photo by Styrous®



His stage shows feature guillotines, electric chairs, fake blood, boa constrictors, and baby dolls, he is considered by fans and peers to be "The Godfather of Shock Rock"; Cooper has drew from horror movies, vaudeville, and garage rock to pioneer a grandly theatrical and macabre brand of rock designed to shock.

Cooper has experimented with a number of musical styles, including conceptual rock, art rock, hard rock, heavy metal, New Wave, pop rock, experimental rock and industrial rock

The Rolling Stone Album Guide has called him the world's most "beloved heavy metal entertainer". He is credited with helping to shape the sound and look of heavy metal, and has been described as the artist who "first introduced horror imagery to rock'n'roll, and whose stagecraft and showmanship have permanently transformed the genre"





reel-to-reel tape detail
detail photo by Styrous®





On December 15, 2010, it was announced Cooper and his former band would be inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame. The official Rock and Roll Hall of Fame induction ceremony took place March 14, 2011 where Cooper was inducted by fellow horror-rocker Rob Zombie

In 2011 he released Welcome 2 My Nightmare, his 19th album as a solo artist, and his 26th album in total. 

Alice Cooper performing live during
Halloween Night of Horror at
London Wembley Arena
on 28 October, 2012



Alice CooperHalo Of Flies lyrics

I've got the answers
To all of your questions
If you've got the money
To pay me in gold

I will be living
In old Monte Carlo
And you will be reading
The secrets of soul

Daggers and contacts
And bright shiny limos
I've got a watch
That turns into a lifeboat

Glimmering nightgowns
And poisonous cobras
Silencer under the heel of my shoe

The elegance of China
They sent her to lie here on her back
But as she deeply moves me
She'd rather shoot me in my tracks

And while a Middle Asian lady
She really came as no surprise
But I still did destroy her
And I will smash
Halo of flies

I crossed the ocean
Where no one could see
And I put a time-bomb
In your submarine
Goodbye to old friends
The secret's in hand
With full ream of papers
And counterfeit plans
You never will understand

Copyright: Lyrics © BMG RIGHTS MANAGEMENT US, LLC

Songwriters: ALICE COOPER, NEAL SMITH, DENNIS DUNAWAY, GLEN BUXTON, MICHAEL BRUCE




Alice Cooper ~ Killer
reel-to-reel tape label detail
detail photo by Styrous®


Track listing:

Side One:

1 - Under My Wheels (Michael Bruce, Dennis Dunaway, Bob Ezrin) - 2:51
2 - Be My Lover (Bruce) - 3:21
3 - Halo of Flies (Alice Cooper, Glen Buxton, Bruce, Dunaway, Neal Smith) - 8:22
4 - Desperado (Cooper, Bruce) - 3:30

Side Two:

1 - You Drive Me Nervous (Cooper, Bruce, Ezrin) - 2:28
2 - Yeah, Yeah, Yeah (Cooper, Bruce) - 3:39
3 - Dead Babies (Cooper, Buxton, Bruce, Dunaway, Smith) - 5:44
4 - Killer (Bruce, Dunaway) - 6:57


Personnel:





Net links:

Alice Cooper discography



Alice Cooper ~ Killer reel-to-reel tape on eBay

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