Showing posts with label Brian Jones. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Brian Jones. Show all posts

Sunday, 15 January 2023

Brian Jones statue to the Rolling Stones founder - a Cheltenham town statue to Brian is overdue! - No Brian Jones, no Rolling Stones!

 

Brian Jones - Rolling Stones founder
A statue in Cheltenham to him is long overdue!
A statue with Brian with his Vox Guitar (Above) is overdue!

This is a call to arms of sorts, but around 60 years after the Rolling Stones broke onto the music scene, the time is now overdue to honour the late Rolling Stones founder Brian Jones with a statue in his home town of Cheltenham.

This talented multi-instrumentalist is one of the most recognisable stars from the 1960's and his untimely death in 1969 should not result in the end of this great musical talent's presence. A musical legacy on video and on record keeps his memory alive but more is needed!

If Liverpool can have the Beatles in statue form, then Cheltenham must have Brian Jones. I can think of no better image to use for this statue than Brian playing his iconic white Vox teardrop guitar, used on the Top of the Pops clip of 'This can be the last time', perhaps even including the famous Vox amplifier that Brian used in that tribute. 

This was Brian's golden era and how many of us would like to remember him.

The early Rolling Stones music up to 1969 used the multitude of musical talent Brian was able to contribute to the music through the many instruments he played from Banjo, Recorder, Harmonica, Marimba, guitar, sitar, harpsichord, piano - to name just a selection.

In my view no Brian Jones, no Rolling Stones.

Friday, 23 September 2016

Brian Jones - the visionary founder of the Rolling Stones - will we see his like again?

Brian Jones at left with Gretsch 6118 guitar, Rolling Stones 1964

Its a sad thing to reflect on, but will we see the like of ground breaking bands from the 1960's who are now all but retired from the scene?

In those days, these musicians did an apprenticeship of sorts, playing along to records, learning new material and playing techniques. The post war late 1950's had seen American Rock n Roll come in and the British youth wanted a piece of that.

The half-arsed musical art form of skiffle, a sort of acceptable cod attempt at trad American music, was acceptable to a largely square older generation. The young Elvis, gyrating movements et al, were not, nor were leather jacketed creatures aping Gene Vincent.

To the old guard, they were a temptation, a route to trouble. The scenario would repeat itself 20 years later when Punk Rock erupted.

Turn on the radio these days and you get a studio perfect manufactured pop act, the days of the group that evolved and morphed into a credible musical ensemble, often via the pub circuit are pretty much over.

YouTube and the Internet have killed it off with wall to wall mediocrity. In the old days, a band played in a pub, if they chose the right pub where the record company scouts, the A&R men trawled, they might get somewhere, get signed or get good advice.

From that process, the most marketable would get a studio tryout and perhaps a recording contract. Now, it is likely  that a viral youtube performance gets them a deal. The problem often comes with the 'difficult' second album, 'difficult' because the act has little talent.

Once the crowd stops screaming and the mayhem subsides, the reality is that even autotune vocals can't hide the one dimensionality. And they're gone in moments.

Television shows finding 'new talent' expose it and a year or so later, the new talent is gone, never to be heard of again.

Back to the early 60's and people like Keith Richards, Brian Jones, Eric Clapton for example were all trawling the obscure records bins for obscure records, in their case, real old down home American blues, recorded by the original artists.

It is ironic that the 'British Invasion' of the USA in the early 1960's actually raised awareness of the largely 'forgotten' black music performers of the Blues genre.

Without the British Invasion, who would have created the Monkees? A sort of Americanised version of the Dave Clark 5 or the Beatles but with a television scripted kids TV series?

But moving on from the Blues, the Rolling Stones explored multi-instrumentalism. Brian Jones was at the vanguard of this evolution, introducing Harpsicord, Sitar, Recorder and Marimba into the music.

One wonders what he could have gone onto achieve had not drugs and an early death ended the promise of his abilities?

Having Mick Jagger freed up to be a main vocalist gave the band a freedom that the others in the music scene, bar Cliff Richard could not enjoy, his Shadows as backing band and band in their own right gave Cliff the option of backing music.

The arrangements of the early pop even to the 1980's was well thought out, nowadays it is mostly musical wallpaper, delivering a sausage factory lyric that the performer never had a hand on nor did their band mates, who may not even be playing on the record.

Today is all about image. The music is not the most important thing, money is the driver, but with the traditional avenues of music play feeling the demand of demand media, what you want, when you want it, then we may slowly drown in manufactured, musical mediocrity. Sadly.

Even the pubs with music licences are dwindling, the pub clientele has changed and a modern media rich world with content vies for our attention.

At least we have through the internet, the videos of the old bands, a reminder of how it was in the heady days of the 60's.

Wednesday, 3 August 2016

Yesterday's papers - The Rolling Stones - The Brian Jones years

Brian Jones with Gretsch 6118 Anniversary guitar, with the Rolling Stones circa 1964 

In about 1984 I came across the Rolling Stones album Rolled Gold, it was quite interesting to hear the tracks on there which spanned the early career of the Stones.

They were playing around the Richmond area in the years just prior to me being born, an area  rich with talent from the The Yardbirds, Jeff Beck, Jimmy Page, Eric Clapton, to name but a few who had come out of the Kingston Art School.

As many will know, Brian Jones started the Rolling Stones group and the Ealing Jazz club was an early venue where Mick Jagger and Keith Richards saw the bare bones of the group.

Brian Jones, a musical prodigy from Cheltenham, in Gloucestershire was running under the stage name of Elmo Lewis, likely in homage to the Mississippi Delta and not the Richmond upon Thames Delta where much local talent displayed its wares at the Craw Daddy Club, Eel Pie island, the Klooks Kleek Klub and other sundry and savoury venues!

The Ealing venue was run by Alexis Korner and a man named Cyril and it provided an alternative music venue to showcase the underground music scene of the Blues as opposed to the current top ten line-up music. Other performers like Long John Baldry made appearances there, likely to be seen and signed by a new breed of pop impresario and manager, people such as Georgio Gomelski.

 In 1963, the Top Ten was fairly well dominated by Cliff Richard (and / or / with his backing group The Shadows, charters in their own right with instrumental guitar music), The (early) Beatles and a host of lightweight poppy smooth and marketable teen market stars.

Recently I came across the Stones on an Ipod album and listened to their own compositions from 1963-1969. Having moved on from  re-interpreting  Buddy Holly, Chuck Berry and other waxings from the Brian Jones audio library, the group started to expand the library of their own self-penned output.

I found listening to these early tracks, how good a sound could be made with what is essentially by today's standards, 'primitive' equipment. Aside from guitars which are still produced today in the same model versions, the imaginative use of instruments such as the Marimba, Harpsichord, Vibes and Recorder were avant garde to say the least.

Listening to the remastered tracks, one can hear more separation in the mix of instruments and this really does show the quality of vision and musical ideas that were evolving to create the unique montage of sounds, being able to hear more than before.

The arrangements of the songs were imaginative and not just bashed out 12, 16 or 24 bar themes. The spectrum of Brian Jones's talents as a multi-instrumentalist are evident and brought to the fore in this early work.

However badly this ended for Brian, it is a slice of musical history and the Rolling Stones to me IS essentially something from 1963-69 of the Brian Jones era. No Rolling Stones 1960's pop video is complete without Brian Jones in it.

Brian Jones was a great talent and that was sadly lost to chemical excesses and a conveniently placed swimming pool, a matter that has never been satisfactorily explained.

He should be missed as a great talent, with a great untapped potential.





Wednesday, 20 July 2016

Guitar reviews for you - Gretsch guitars and famous players

                                                                       
    
     
Mike Nesmith with Gretsch Viking in a promotional photo

In 1966, the Monkees, the 'manufactured' pop group hit the US TV screens with their zany show called 'The Monkees.' Mike Nesmith is playing a Gretsch Viking guitar in this posed promotional photograph.


The official Gretsch 'Monkees' edition signature guitar

             Mike Nesmith with Gretsch 12 string on the 'Pleasant Valley Sunday' video

John Lennon with 6120DC on the Paperback Writer sessions
Brian Setzer with new Green Sparkle 6120 Hot Rod
Early Brian Setzer photo with original 6120
Another Brian, Brian Jones with a 6118 Anniversary with the Rolling Stones
Eddie Cochran with his modified 6120, now a Gretsch signature model

Eddie Cochran in a coloured photo by Alan Hawkins on his last tour 1960
Emanuela Hutter from the group Hillbilly Moon Explosion with a Gibson 295
That's better, Emanuela with a suitable Gretsch this time
Eric Clapton in 1964 with the Yardbirds and his 6120DC
Joe Walsh of the Eagles with a White Falcon
Pete Townshend with a 6120 given to him by Joe Walsh on Top of the Pops
he broke it, but it was rebuilt
with a Duo Jet

Mark Knopfler enjoying some Chet picking on a 6120
Not a Gretsch but Chet and Mark with Chet's signature guitars
Chet Atkins without whom there would be no 6120


Just a selection of famous Gretsch guitar players!












Tuesday, 12 July 2016

Guitar reviews for you the Gretsch 6118 Anniversary model in Green



Gretsch 6118 Anniversary model 2010



Those of you who find Western Orange a bit harsh on the eye can indeed look to an alternative to the Gretsch 6120, the 6118 Anniversary model originally introduced around 1958 by Gretsch. The 6118 was aimed at those who wanted something basically less expensive than the 6120.


Up for review here is a lovely 6118 made in 2010. The guitar is in two tone green colour scheme, the top is a lovely mint green colour and the back is a Cadillac Green which has a smoky 'greyness' to it, not a hard green like British Racing Green as a comparison.

The obvious differences to the 6120 are the unbound fretboard and headstock and on the original 1958 examples, only one pickup was fitted, although some guitars were later factory modified or modified by their owners over the years.

By no means is this a poor relation of a 6120. It is a super looking guitar, has an Ebony fingerboard and the unbound board seems to be no issue, it seems to suit the colour scheme. The guitar has a space control bridge fitted which is a bridge I particularly like.

The guitar is fitted out with chrome hardware from the 58 onwards era and has the 1959 style V Bigsby B6C, with the flat swing out handle. The machine heads are the open back Waverley type but look quality and are nice in action, although I tend to prefer the Grover sealed 18:1 type of unit.

A chromed plate on the headstock face states it is a Gretsch Anniversary model, the overly is a black material and the inlay style of text used on the Gretsch name can vary from the rounded shape letters to the squarer type of font, I have observed on the professional series guitars.

Pickups are High Sensitive Filtertrons which are standard output and give a great sound, the tone is derived from a tone switch circuitry set up as found on the 58 onwards guitars, depending on which part of the year a 58 was made in.

Build quality and finish are superb, faultless in fact. The Japanese makers - Dyna Gakki, Fuji-Gen and Terada are all top line manufacturers and there is not a stray glue blob anywhere inside this guitar as with any of the Professional series guitars these producers make.

Playing wise, the guitar is superb and gives a great spectrum of sound from jazz and country through to hard driving playing. Of course the open f-holes and hollow body does preclude it from high gain distortion playing!

The guitar comes with a nice quality hard case, often these are made by TKL in Canada. A more expensive 'Cowboy' replica case is available as an aftermarket alternative.

So what about price? The standard 6118 is about £2650 new as a guide with a secondhand one from £1300 to £1800 depending on age. Usual price is around £1500.

The 6118 Japan Anniversary is a great guitar and you would find it a very versatile guitar that is also striking looking. Buy one before they get out of reach. Gretsch guitars are harder to find new and secondhand and I personally would choose one anytime I was looking for a hollow body archtop, there are other imitators out there, but why not own the Gretsch name to start with?