Circa
’72: Rockets and Dreams
1 Toad Away Firesign Theatre 1:06
2 Garden Party Rick Nelson 3:37
3 Pure and Easy Pete Townshend 5:28
4 If the Shoe Fits Leon Russell 2:13
5 A Child in These Hills Jackson Browne 3:52
7 Ventura Highway America 3:01
8 Sheraton Gibson Pete Townshend 2:31
9 From the Beginning Emerson, Lake & Palmer 3:39
10 Send In The Clowns Glynis Johns 3:10
11 One Monkey Don’t
Stop No Show Part 1 Honey Cone 3:37
12 Same Situation Joni Mitchell 2:36
13 Learn How To Fall Paul Simon 2:33
14 Sail Away Randy Newman 2:44
15 Hypnotized Fleetwood Mac 4:41
16 Phil Carl Reiner 1:01
17 Ancient Poetry and 1:48
18 Fig Leaf Mel Brooks 1:15
19 Right Place Wrong Time Doctor John 2:42
20 Superstition Stevie 4:24
21 Big Brother Wonder 3:27
22 Freddie’s Dead Curtis Mayfield 3:11
23 The Dirty Jobs The 4:09
24 Helpless Dancer Who 2:16
25 Beethoven piano sonata # 8, Op. 13 in C minor “Pathétique”
Stephen Bishop (Kovacevich) 1972 2nd movement excerpt 1:10
26 Rock Me on the Water Jackson Browne 4:15
27 Magic Mirror, Leon Russell 4:35
28 Hope for Mankind Carl and Mel 0:26
(note: some links below may be broken...)
1 Toad Away Firesign Theatre 1:06
2 Garden Party Rick Nelson 3:37
3 Pure and Easy Pete Townshend 5:28
4 If the Shoe Fits Leon Russell 2:13
5 A Child in These Hills Jackson Browne 3:52
7 Ventura Highway America 3:01
8 Sheraton Gibson Pete Townshend 2:31
9 From the Beginning Emerson, Lake & Palmer 3:39
10 Send In The Clowns Glynis Johns 3:10
11 One Monkey Don’t
Stop No Show Part 1 Honey Cone 3:37
12 Same Situation Joni Mitchell 2:36
13 Learn How To Fall Paul Simon 2:33
14 Sail Away Randy Newman 2:44
15 Hypnotized Fleetwood Mac 4:41
16 Phil Carl Reiner 1:01
17 Ancient Poetry and 1:48
18 Fig Leaf Mel Brooks 1:15
19 Right Place Wrong Time Doctor John 2:42
20 Superstition Stevie 4:24
21 Big Brother Wonder 3:27
22 Freddie’s Dead Curtis Mayfield 3:11
23 The Dirty Jobs The 4:09
24 Helpless Dancer Who 2:16
25 Beethoven piano sonata # 8, Op. 13 in C minor “Pathétique”
Stephen Bishop (Kovacevich) 1972 2nd movement excerpt 1:10
26 Rock Me on the Water Jackson Browne 4:15
27 Magic Mirror, Leon Russell 4:35
28 Hope for Mankind Carl and Mel 0:26
(note: some links below may be broken...)
Circa '72 CD Notes (albums
are from ‘72 unless specifically mentioned as being from ’73).
Pure and Easy and Sheraton Gibson are on Pete Townshend's solo album Who Came First. Steven and I bought a copy of
the album when we lived at the Riverhouse in the summer of 1973, but that copy
disappeared long ago. I bought a used copy in 2002 at Jupiter Records, a local
record store in Austin
that has now also disappeared or else moved to Burnet Road .
The big hit on Leon Russell's '72 album Carney was Tightrope, with Masquerade being a close
second, but only as recorded by other singers.
I'd planned to use (and tried to use) Tightrope on this CD, but
the only songs that seemed to fit were If The Shoe Fits and Magic Mirror. I bought a used copy of Carney in 2003 at
Been Around Records in Little Rock , owned by my
former Hendrix College classmate John Harris.
Toad Away is
the opening track on Firesign Theatre's Dear Friends album. Firesign Theatre, or some remnant of it, is still in
business, having released an album called Bride of Firesign in 2002. Garden
Party is on Rick Nelson's album
Garden Party. I bought both these
albums used at Half-Price Books in Austin .
History question: What 1950s TV show was Ricky Nelson in?
A
Child in These Hills and Rock Me on the Water are from Jackson Browne’s album
Saturate Before Using eponymous first album.
The fill-in selection, the missing number 6 above, is a
brief excerpt from Sir Edward Elgar’s Pomp and Circumstance March No. 1 in D
major, recorded in 1991, as best I can tell.
The CD I recorded it from is a 1997 compilation called Elgar: The
Ultimate Collection. I used this
selection to cover over my mistake of not reversing the turntable platter far
enough when I cued up Ventura Highway, which made the first guitar note of that
song off-key. And because I graduated from high school in '72.
Ventura
Highway is the opening song on America’s second album, Homecoming. Well, I’m pretty sure it’s their second
album. Not nearly as popular as their
first album, which included the song everyone at first thought was being sung
by Neil Young: A Horse With No Name.
From
the Beginning was written by Greg Lake, and is on Emerson, Lake and Palmer’s
album Trilogy. Lake is the vocalist and
guitar player on this album and was formerly a vocalist, bassist and
co-songwriter with King Crimson. Keith
Emerson plays keyboards and Carl Palmer is the percussionist. I didn't start this song from the beginning. I was trying to get it cued up while Sheraton Gibson was playing, spinning the ELP LP rapidly backwards with the needle in the groove and listening in the headphones for the beginning of the track, indicated by the backwards speeded-up noise turning to silence. That happened just as Sheraton Gibson was ending. I positioned the fader on the mixer so that both sources were "live" and hit the switch to start From the Beginning. I didn't realize I had only turned the record back to the pause after the guitar intro on that song, so the guitar intro is left out. But I like it the way it turned out. Such are the thrills of segueing.
Send in the Clowns was written by Stephen Sondheim for
the Broadway musical A Little Night Music, based on the 1956 Ingmar Bergman
movie Smiles of a Summer Night. The
music and lyrics are © 1973. The song
was later performed and recorded by numerous singers including Frank Sinatra
and Judy Collins. Sondheim himself, in
an interview related to a 2002 revival of the play, said the song’s lyrics have
a somewhat manipulative quality. This
recording is from the original Broadway cast album, with Glynis Johns playing
the female lead of Desirée. From the
album’s liner notes, written by William Evans:
“Fredrik makes his way to
Desirée’s bedroom, where she reveals her
true reason for inviting him—her hope that they might be able to revive their
love permanently. But Fredrik, unable to
give up his child bride, walks out, leaving Desirée alone (SEND
IN THE CLOWNS).
“Meanwhile, Anne and Fredrika scour the grounds
for Hendrik. Anne finds him as he is
suicidally rigging up a noose. Realizing
it is Hendrik she loves, not ‘poor old Fredrik,’ Anne decides to run off with
him.
“Petra, the maid, having made love with Madame
Armfeldt’s butler, Frid (George Lee Andrews), expresses her sense of romance in
terms of the practical and real (THE MILLER’S SON).
“Fredrik finds himself being consoled by Charlotte
about the loss of his son and wife. The
Count spots Fredrik and Charlotte embracing.
He storms out of the house to challenge Fredrik to a game of Russian
roulette. They go off to the summer
pavilion, a shot is heard, and the Count returns with Fredrik slung over his
shoulder. Fredrik has ‘merely grazed his
ear.’ The Count orders Charlotte to pack
their bags. At last, Desirée and Fredrik
realize that they are meant to be together (Reprise of SEND
IN THE CLOWNS).
“The comedy ended, Madame Armfeldt tells her
granddaughter that the night has already smiled twice, once for the young and
once for the fools. ‘The smile for the
fools was particularly broad tonight.’
To the accompaniment of the NIGHT WALTZ, the lovers dance through
the silver birches as the night smiles down for the third and final time (FINALE).”
I
recorded One Monkey Don’t Stop No Show Part 1 and Freddie’s Dead
from the CD Soul Train: 1972, which also has Michael Jackson singing Ben (a
song about a rat, from the movie of the same name). Everybody Plays the Fool, by The Main
Ingredient, is on Soul Train: 1972, too.
I was certain I was going to use this song on my Circa ’72 CD, but it
didn’t seem to fit after all. Instead I
used two other songs: One Monkey Don’t Stop No Show Part I is one of them; Same
Situation, from Joni Mitchell’s Court and Spark album, is the other. The songs
on Court and Spark are © 1973.
There are several different songs with the title One Monkey Don't Stop No Show. Two that I know of are Joe Tex's version, and there's Big Maybelle's version on The Oxford American - Southern Music CD #15 Featuring The Music Of Tennessee. That still doesn't explain the Part I designation in Honey Cone's song.
Learn
How to Fall is one of the lesser-known songs on Paul Simon’s 1973 album There
Goes Rhymin’ Simon. Better-known songs
from the album are Kodachrome, American Tune (I almost used it—the theme
certainly runs throughout my CD) and Loves Me Like a Rock.
Sail
Away is from the album of the same name.
A couple of other fairly well known songs on this Randy Newman album are
Political Science and You Can Leave Your Hat On.
Hypnotized
is from Fleetwood Mac’s 1973 album Mystery to Me. The members of the group at that time (as listed inside the album cover) were Mick Fleetwood, percussion; John McVie,
bass; Bob Welch, guitars, vocals; Bob Weston, lead guitar, slide; Christine
McVie, keyboards, vocals. Like most of
the songs on the album, Hypnotized was written by Bob Welch. The album was “Produced by Martin Birch and
Fleetwood Mac. Recorded on the Rolling
Stones Mobile Unit. Mixed at Advison, London."
Phil,
Ancient Poetry, Fig Leaf and Hope for Mankind are from the album 2000 and
Thirteen, an edited version of Mel Brooks’ and Carl Reiner’s conversational
performance in front of a live audience of
“over 150 friends and associates” at The Burbank Studios in Los Angeles
on August 25, 1973. Brooks and Reiner
introduced The 2000 Year Old Man to the world in about 1960 on their TV variety
show. (When Reiner refers to Brooks
“living through two centuries” he means two millennia, but I didn’t even notice
the mistake until I’d heard the conversation several times—until I was making
the CD, actually.) Including the track
Hope for Mankind on my CD was something I hadn’t planned. I used it simply because there was a little
time still available on the CD. I used
the turntable on/off switch at the very end to slow down and stop the turntable rather than
to start it as I’d done so many times during this project.
Dr.
John’s song Right Place Wrong Time is from the CD Soul Train: 1973. Superstition and Big Brother are on Stevie
Wonder’s Talking Book album. The
beginning of Big Brother is already mixed with the end of Superstition on the
album, so this cool-sounding mix is not one I can claim for myself.
Also
ready-mixed are The Dirty Jobs and Helpless Dancer on The Who’s 1973 double
album Quadrophenia. Like Tommy,
Quadrophenia is a rock opera. Unlike the
deaf, dumb and blind boy in Tommy, Jimmy in Quadrophenia is an
all-too-typical-teenager struggling with allegiances: parents vs. friends, home vs. escape, taking
a demeaning job vs. fighting in the streets, love vs. hate in his relationship
with the opposite sex; and throughout it all, of course, being supremely
concerned with wearing the right clothes and having the right look.
Here’s the first paragraph of Jimmy’s long
description of his messed-up life, included as part of the liner notes of the
album, © 1973 by Pete Townshend: “I had
to go to this psychiatrist every week.
Every Monday. He never really
knew what was wrong with me. He said I
wasn’t mad or anything. He said there’s
no such thing as madness. I told him he
should try standing in a queue at Brentford football ground on a Saturday
morning. I thought it might change his
mind. My dad put it another way. He said I changed like the weather. One minute I’d be a tearaway, next minute all
soppy and swoony over some bird.
Schizophrenia, he called it. Nutty,
my mum called it.” At the end of this
imaginative narrative, there is this disclaimer:
“No one in this story is meant to represent anyone either living or
dead, particularly the Mum and Dad. Our
Mums and Dads are all very nice and live in bungalows which we bought for them
in the Outer Hebrides.”
When
I was buying a blank journal book at the Capitol Bookstore on Louisiana Street
in downtown Little Rock in October 1982, the adagio movement from Beethoven’s Pathetique
piano sonata began playing on the public radio station. I didn’t know what it was at the time, but
the girl behind the counter said, “Oh, I love this!” After that I loved it too. What we were hearing was the beginning of
Adventures in Good Music, a radio program hosted by Karl Haas that opens and closes with the first minute or so of the Pathetique’s 2nd
movement. I haven’t heard a version I
like better than the one I put on the CD, and of course I wanted one recorded
in ’72 or ‘73. See the pre-notes
for a description of where I got the album.
The sound quality in the final version on the Circa ’72 CD is lacking,
but I finally decided that’s the way it should be.
_____________________________
The main reason I made these tapes and CDs is that I enjoy the process of
mixing the ending of one song with the beginning of another. In the
summer of 1984 I bought the mixer I still use (a small DJ mixer from Radio
Shack) and made a cassette tape I called the Peace Links Planetarium
Tape. The idea was that people would simply listen to the songs and think
about what was being said. Listening too often takes a back seat to
watching and looking, which are necessary for survival but can lead to a
superficial viewpoint of complex issues. The information from the eyes
gets in the way of information from the ears. Like the Peace Links tape,
the tapes and CDs in the Circa 69-72 project are meant as anti-videos, to be listened
to for whatever effect might be produced.
Unlike the Peace Links tape, which I envisioned being played for seated
audiences at the University of Arkansas at Little Rock’s planetarium, the Circa
69-72 music is meant for dancing and healing,
as well as thinking and feeling.
When I recorded the first side of the
Circa '69 tape, in September 1999, I had just moved to Columbia, South Carolina.
I was living in a dorm room without a roommate in the graduate student wing of
a big dorm on the University campus. I was far away from friends and family, so
the historical connection was important to me for that reason. But I also
had the feeling that history was about to recycle itself in a very undesirable
way, particularly with regard to the war in Vietnam.
I intended to make only the
1969 tape, but after making the second side of it in March of 2000, I realized
there were a lot of relevant songs from 1970, 71 and 72. So sometime in
the year 2000 I decided to continue making and sending out recordings for each
year through 1972. The '69 tape has a few songs from a year or so earlier
on it, and I found when I started trying to make the '72 CD that I wanted to
include songs from '73 also. Thus the need for the "circa"
designation in those titles.
I was in high school from the late summer of
1969 until May 1972, worked as a copy editor and reporter during the summer of
1972, and did my first stint at Hendrix College in the ’72-’73 school
year. I also started doing taping for
TAPES in 1972—see Circa
’72 pre-notes. The years 1969
through 1973 roughly correspond to the ill-fated reign of Richard Nixon as
president (under threat of impeachment, he resigned in August 1974), the end of
the reign of longtime FBI-chief/secret-drag-queen J. Edgar Hoover (he died in
1972), and the soul-searching that went on in America during the height of the
Vietnam War and during the Watergate years. And on the arts scene side of the human
inequality: Louis Armstrong died in
1971, Pablo Picasso died in 1973.
The years 1969 through 1972
are the only years people have visited the moon (so far as we know), and the
moon is only the first step in the exploration of space by humans. Unexpected developments in space flight
propulsion are needed before space exploration becomes commonplace, but it now
seems possible that private enterprise may send people to the moon in the not
too distant future.
The biggest interest for me in
making these recordings is the combined problems of war and love. These
are ever-present, worldwide issues, but they were at the top of the list of
major themes in the United States during the late sixties and early
seventies. They were also major issues in my life back then. For
the U.S. and for me personally these are once again very problematic issues,
mainly how to avoid or shorten wars and therefore avoid unnecessary killing and
injustices, and how to put love into practice in everyday life.
August of 2001: my reel-to-reel tape deck playing the '71 master tape during the making of a '71 cassette tape. I was living in an apartment in Columbia, South Carolina at the time, with a fellow forty-something physics grad student named Ivan from Bulgaria .
I first visited Columbia in August 1972, with my brother Steven and our friend George Baker. We had dropped off David Calkins (PBHS class of '69, and The Citadel class of '72) in Charleston and spent the night there after an approximately 15 hour drive from Pine Bluff. Pat Calkins, my best male friend in high school, was living in Columbia and the trip's purpose was to drop off David for a friend's wedding in Charleston and to visit Pat. After we had dropped David off and picked up Pat, we camped out for several days in the Smoky Mountains, around Gatlinburg, Knoxville, and Asheville.
Then during the Thanksgiving holiday of 1973, Pat, Steven, I camped out in the Asheville, North Carolina area. Our first stop, after we got tired of driving on I-40, was Cedars of Lebanon state park in Tennessee. Once we got near Asheville, we asked about places to camp when we stopped at a country store. The old men there mentioned a place called the "Bear Waller." In trying to find it, we drove Steven's little Datsun pickup up a dirt road on the side of a mountain and found a vacant, open old log cabin with a fireplace in it and a pond out front. We stayed there with a nice fire going for two nights. The man and woman who owned the property showed up on the second day in a car with a Florida license, but they were friendly and didn't tell us to leave, and didn't stick around very long either. Maybe they were afraid of us?
Update: Pat reminded me that the couple, who showed up in a green Plymouth station wagon with a little dog or two if I remember correctly, had recently bought the property, so that was very likely their first time to see it. They were apologetic to us for disturbing us Pat says.
Also Pat reminded me that I had my banjo, which I'd bought for $35 from a girl at Hendrix who was from North Carolina. I was learning to play Rocky Foggy Mountain Breakdown at that time by slowing the record down to 16-rpm's and using the notation for the song from Pete Seeger's banjo book. No, I didn't have the record player on the trip--it was at the house trailer Mike Oldner and I were living in as sophomore students at Hendrix that semester.
But I had not learned to play worth a damn by Thanksgiving of that year, and Steven, who could play the guitar quite well by then, wasn't too happy to have me trying to play stuff on the banjo, as I recall. Brothers (and sisters) can be peeved with each other for other, unknown, reasons, too. I may have resented his guitar playing ability, who knows? I do remember he played Neil Young's song Sugar Mountain the first night we were on the road, in our tent at the Cedars of Lebanon State Park. That was the first time I'd heard the song. That evening was a memorable and very pleasant moment in time. "Oh to live on Sugar Mountain. . . ."