Showing posts with label Jeff Lynne. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Jeff Lynne. Show all posts

December 30, 2021

45 RPMs 68: Del Shannon ~ Runaway & Max Crook's Musitron

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photo by Styrous®
    
 
Today, December 30th is the birthday of Del Shannon who ran away with the Billboard Hot 100 song, Runaway, sixty years ago in 1961. It was written by Shannon and keyboardist Max Crook and became a major international hit. It was No. 472 on the 2010 version of the Rolling Stone list of the 500 Greatest Songs of All Time.                  
 
I was snagged by the song from the first time I heard it. How could you not? The great guitar, piano & bass intro and that squeaky synthesizer played durng the instrumental break by Crook, “The Man From The Musitron", and Shannon's falsetto, totally weird and wonderful!              


Del Shannon - 1963
photographer unknown

 
In 1957, Crook built a monophonic synthesizer, which he called the Musitron, out of a clavioline heavily enhanced with additional resistors, television tubes, and parts from household appliances, old amplifiers, and reel-to-reel tape machines. He was unable to patent the Musitron because most of its components were previously patented products.                

 date & photographer unknown
 
 
When their first recording session for Big Top Records in New York City had ended in failure, their manager Ollie McLaughlin persuaded them to rewrite and re-record an earlier song they had written, Little Runaway, to highlight Crook's unique instrumental sound. On January 21, 1961, they recorded Runaway at the Bell Sound recording studios, with Harry Balk as producer, Fred Weinberg as audio engineer and also session musicians on several sections: session musician Al Caiola on guitar, Moe Wechsler on piano, and Crook playing the central Musitron break. Other musicians on the record included Milt Hinton on bass, and Joe Marshall on drums. Bill Ramall, who was the arranger for the session, also played baritone sax. Al Casamenti and Bucky Pizzarelli were also on guitar (Pizzarelli died last year from COVID-19).         
 
 
 date & photographer unknown 

 
After recording in A minor, producer Balk sped up the recording to pitch just below a B-flat minor. Runaway was released in February 1961 and was immediately successful. On April 10 of that year, Shannon appeared on the Dick Clark American Bandstand, helping to catapult it to the number one spot on the Billboard Hot 100, where it remained for four weeks. Two months later, it reached number one on the UK's Record Retailer chart, spending three weeks in that position. On the Billboard Hot R&B Sides, Runaway peaked at number three.                
 
The song was ranked No. 5 on Billboard's end of year "Hot 100 for 1961 – Top Sides of the Year" and No. 9 on the Cash Box "Top 100 Chart Hits of 1961"            
 
Elvis Presley covered the song live at The International Hotel, Las Vegas, Nevada, at Midnight on August 24, 1969. His version is not as interesting as Shannon's (link below)!           
 
 
Elvis Presley - 1969
 photographer unknown
 
 
My favorite song by Tom Petty & The Heartbreakers refers to Runaway in the 1989 tune Petty wrote with Jeff Lynne, Runnin' Down a Dream from his first solo album Full Moon Fever and featured in the 1998 film, Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas which starred Johnny Depp.         
 
 
 
There are many songs by the title Runaway, none of which have anything to do with the Shannon version but are interesting in one way or another. Aurora has a "New Wave" treatment that is mellow and beautiful in spite of the rather downer lyrics but the one I have found fascinating and quite well done is the rap song by Kanye West, but beware, the lyrics are a bit explicit (links below).      

Del Shannon was inducted into the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame by Art Alexakis, singer-songwriter and guitarist of the rock band Everclear in 1999.     
 
Del Shannon was born in Coopersville, Michigan, on Dec. 30, 1939. He began playing guitar as a teen-ager and took his stage name from a friend, Mark Shannon. He learned to play the ukulele and guitar and listened to country-and-western music by artists such as Hank Williams, Hank Snow, and Lefty Frizzell. There are some great images of Shannon's life on the History of Rock website (link below).
 
Shannon committed suicide by a self-inflicted gunshot wound in his Santa Clarita, California, home on February 8, 1990 (link below). A .22-caliber rifle with no note was found next to Shannon's body in the den. He was 50 years old. Shannon’s widow would later file a high-profile lawsuit against Eli Lilly, the manufacturer of the antidepressant Prozac, which Shannon had begun taking shortly before his suicide. That suit was eventually dropped, but the case brought early attention to the still-unresolved question of the possible connection between suicidal ideation and SSRIs, the class of drugs to which Prozac belongs.        




  45 RPM record
photo by Styrous®
 


        
Tracklist:

Side 1:

A - Runaway - 2:20

Side 2:

B - Jody - 2:20

Companies, etc.

    Published By – Vicki Music, Inc.
    Published By – McLaughlin Publishing Co.
    Record Company – EmBee (2)
    Record Company – Bigtop Records, Inc.
    Lacquer Cut at – Bell Sound Studios

 Credits:
 
      Written-By Shannon*, Crook*
 
Notes:

Vicki Music, Inc. BMI
McLaughlin Pub. Co. - BMI

Barcode and Other Identifiers
        
        
    Rights Society: BMI
    Matrix / Runout (A-side label): BG-1181
    Matrix / Runout (B-side label): BG-1182
    Matrix / Runout (A-Side Runout Etching): BellSound 45-BG-1181-2 2 BT
    Matrix / Runout (B-Side Runout Etching): BellSound 45-BG-1182-2 2 BT
        
        
        
        
Viewfinder links:       
         
Aurora           
Al Caiola         
Al Casamenti         
Dick Clark       
Max Crook          
Milt Hinton         
Jeff Lynne          
Tom Petty        
Bucky Pizzarelli        
Elvis Presley        
Kanye West       
Hank Williams         
     
Net links:       
         
History of Rock & Roll ~ Del Shannon      
Rock & Roll Hall of Fame ~ Del Shannon         
Ultimate Classic Rock & Culture ~ The Life & Death of Del Shannon 
Undiscover Music ~ Shannon Tribute    
     
YouTube links:      
         
Aurora - Runaway           
Tom Petty ~          
     Runnin' Down a Dream          
     Runnin' Down a Dream (film version)          
     Runnin' Down a Dream (live) (1991)        
Elvis Presley ~ Runaway          
Del Shannon ~    
     Runaway        
     Runaway (live)        
Kanye West ~   
     Runaway      
     Runaway lyrics      
        
         
        
        
Del Shannon - 1950 
photographer unknown

        
         
        
        
Styrous® ~ Thursday, December 30, 2021   







      

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

March 1, 2021

Jeff Lynne articles/mentions

  ~        
      
Electric Light Orchestra (ELO) ~   
      A New World Record     
   
    
mentions:
Del Shannon ~ Runaway           
      
     
     
     
      
     
Jeff Lynne - 1968   
photographer unknown     
      
     
      
     
      
     
      
     
      
     
      
     
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

April 30, 2014

101 Reel-to-Reel Tapes 63: ELO (Electric Light Orchestra) ~ A New World Record







ELO (Electric Light Orchestra)
A New World Record






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 link below). If interested, contact me by email please, not by a comment. 

~ ~ ~

The Electric Light Orchestra (ELO) was a once in a lifetime experience to see and hear in concert. I remember seeing the group at the Oakland Arena (this was before Oaklnnd started naming it after various corporations) during The Big Night tour in 1978. I bought the souvenir program from the concert.

I have A New World Record, the reel-to-reel tape, as well as the program up for sale on eBay. Links to the eBay postings and the program below.

A New World Record is the sixth studio album by Electric Light Orchestra (ELO); it was released in 1976. The intro to the album, Tightrope, snags you and the album keeps you locked into the journey it takes and doesn't let go until the final song, Shangri-La, has finished.



Electric Light Orchestra ~ A New World Record
reel-to-reel tape box cover
photo by Styrous®



From the book, Unexpected Messages

The tour, dubbed "A New World Record Tour Of America" toured North America only, running from October 1976 to April of 1977 with a break in December. The reason the tour was only in North America can probably be attributed to the band's high success rate in the USA. If so, it's somewhat ironic given that late in 1976 Livin' Thing was ELO's breakout hit in England. The book, Unexpected Messages, states that it was a 40 city tour, but as the book only mentions the second leg of the tour (January to April 1977), it is unclear if the 40 cities was for the entire tour or the second leg only.

Another explanation for the tour being only in North America (and brief compared to previous tours) could be simply due to scheduling issues. The band may have had the tour booked without consideration for when an album was to be released, thus the timing was that the A New World Record tour only happened in North America.



Electric Light Orchestra ~ A New World Record
reel-to-reel tape box cover detail
detail photo by Styrous®





As in previous shows, Mik Kaminski and Hugh McDowell performed solo violin and cello performances during the show. Mik performed a self-written and unnamed solo piece which merged with the drums, bass and keyboards joining in on a modern arrangement of the traditional Jewish folk song Hava Nagila. Hugh performed his own self-written and unnamed solo piece which similarly merged with bass, drums and guitar joining in for a modern arrangement of the traditional Hungarian folk song Csárdás and more of Hugh's self-written piece. This information is drawn from the one an only bootleg recording of a performance from the A New World Record tour, so it is also possible that the performance varied from show to show. 

Beyond these small bits and one bootlegged performance from New York City's Madison Square Garden on February 11, 1977, very little else is known about this tour.





Electric Light Orchestra ~ A New World Record
reel-to-reel tape box cover detail
detail photo by Styrous®




The band's frontman Jeff Lynne regards his own songwriting at this point to have reached a new high.
"The songs started to flow and most of them came quickly to me. To have all those hits, it was just ...I mean amazing really. Going from doing okay for probably three or four years to suddenly being in the big time, it was a strange but great thing."
– Jeff Lynne 2006; A New World Record remaster
ELO spent a staggering 225 weeks in the singles charts and 393 weeks in the album charts, worldwide sales were in excess of 100million records, in the UK they had 27 top 20 hits and 11 top 10 albums, including two number ones – Discovery and Time.








The band and crew on the tour were:
Jeff Lynne: vocals, guitar
Bev Bevan: drums
Richard Tandy: keyboards
Kelly Groucutt: bass, vocals
Mik Kaminski: violin
Melvyn Gale: cello
Don Arden: Business and personal management
Dave Arden: Business and personal management
Sharon Arden: Tour manager

Other crew is uncertain, although probably Jake Commander, Brian Jones and Phil Copestake were involved as engineers or technician as they were known to be good friends with the band and involved in most of their tours.




Electric Light Orchestra ~ A New World Record

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





Tightrope, recorded in 1976 at Musicland, Munich, West Germany), has a dramatic and spacey but reverent feeling intro with its orchestral (real strings, not synthesizers) sound and chorus. It goes into a bouncy but delightful and grand tune that is truly wonderful.




Electric Light Orchestra ~ A New World Record

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






Telephone Line became their "biggest single success in the US and was their first UK gold award for a single. With ELO's continuing success in America it seemed obvious to Lynne to use an American ring tone during the song.

Writer/guitarist, Lynne explained:

"To get the sound on the beginning, you know, the American telephone sound, we phoned from England to America to a number that we know nobody would be at, to just listen to it for a while. On the Moog we recreated the sound exactly by tuning the oscillators to the same notes as the ringing of the phone."

The song charted in the Top Ten in both the UK and the US, peaking at number 8 in the UK and number 7 in the US. The tune was on the Hot 100 for 23 weeks, nearly a full month longer on that chart than any other ELO tune. In 1977, the song would reach number 1 in New Zealand and Canada. As was the norm, many ELO singles were issued in different colors, but the US version of this single was the only green single ELO issued. It became the band's first single to achieve Gold sales figures.

It opens with the typical telephone sounds of the day with vocoder processed vocal at the start by Lynn. It goes into a slow, dreamy ballad about loneliness and and possibly lost love.







Rockaria! opens with a short but beautiful soprano (Mary Thomas) intro that is glorious, then the song bursts into a delightfully ambitious romp with the soprano making an appearance throughout the song. To me, it has a sort of Little Richard feeling to the rhythm.

Thomas flubbed the first take of the introduction by starting the vocal too early. However, Lynne elected to use the take (complete with her interjection, "Oops!") anyway (later pressings of the album are missing this part). During live performances, the 'aria' was provided by the band's bassist Kelly Groucutt, illustrating his wide-ranging vocal talents.








Mission (A World Record) is about an alien who has been charged to watch over us poor earthlings; he watches and does nothing other than observe. A slow, dreamy melody that strolls along wondering about life in general.

Livin' Thing has a great, gypsy-sounding violin intro that is beautiful. The gypsy violin returns from time to time.

Above the Clouds opens with a male vocal with a blues feeling and goes into a moderate tempo, syncopated, staccato tune that is fascinating. It has a theremin which adds a very nice touch.

Shangri-La, the final track from the abum, is a slow, dreamy and lovely melody and the longest on the album. Once again, the voice of the soprano (Mary Thomas) makes its appearance. The steel guitar intro is reminisant of the 1959 song, Sleep Walk by Santo & Johnny Farina.

Rockaria!  and Shangri-La are my favorite songs from A New World Record.






Track listing

All songs written by Jeff Lynne.

Side one:

    "Tightrope" – 5:03
    "Telephone Line" – 4:38
    "Rockaria!" – 3:12
    "Mission (A World Record)" – 4:25

Side two:

    "So Fine" – 3:54
    "Livin' Thing" – 3:31
    "Above the Clouds" – 2:16
    "Do Ya" – 3:43
    "Shangri-La" – 5:32


Personnel:


Additional personnel:




Recorded on July 1976 at Musicland Studios, Munich 
Released on 11 September 1976 (UK)
Released on 12 September 1976 (US)

Label: Jet, United Artists- 1R1 6588

Producer: Jeff Lynne


Music videos on YouTube:

Tightrope
Telephone Line
(live)
Rockaria!

Rockaria! (original recording with "Oops!" mistake}
Mission (A World Record) 
So Fine
Livin' Thing
(live 1977)
Above the Clouds
Do Ya
(live)
Shangri-La 







ELO 1987 World Wide Tour souvenir program 

ELO program on eBay
 
reel-to-reel tapes on eBay 



Styrous® ~ Wednesday, April 30, 2014
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