Warps, Budget Ultrasonic Cleaning and Surface Dust: An Introduction I buy a lot of used records and encounter some “challenged” copies in the process. This is hardly deliberate but comes with the territory: sometimes, the records are purchased in “lots” or more often, over the Internet, where physical inspection is impractical if not impossible. Even new, sealed records have problems. (Older “sealed” records can be the riskiest in my estimation- a complete unknown and if too tightly shrink-wrapped, are prone to warps over time). But, through a combination of... Read More
Early Tull on Vinyl
In connection with the Ian Anderson interview, I spent a fair amount of time listening to the early Jethro Tull albums. My focus was that transitional period when the band morphed from the blues into something that straddled hard rock, folk and then emerging “progressive” sounds – a path traced from This Was, to Stand Up, Benefit and Aqualung. Since I had already done an extensive vinyl shoot-out of different Aqualung pressings over the summer of 2015, I thought I might add my thoughts on some of the other early Tull pressings to coincide with the Anderson... Read More
Hooker ‘n Heat by Rebecca Davis
Hooker ‘n Heat by Rebecca Davis Known for their musical dedication to primal electric blues, 1960s stalwarts Canned Heat are also noteworthy for their support of actual blues men. In various settings, they frequently provided musical backing – and commercial connections – for the elders who had inspired them artistically. Canned Heat founder Alan “Blind Owl” Wilson had started his recording career this way, accompanying Delta legend Son House on his 1965 “comeback” for Columbia. Guitarist Henry Vestine had been involved in the rediscovery of Skip James, and... Read More
Interview with Skip Taylor
Skip Taylor, who managed Canned Heat during the band’s classic era, produced the albums discussed here and is still working with them today, was gracious enough to share some insights. Skip’s story is itself the stuff of legend, as you will see: How did you get involved with Canned Heat? Skip: When I joined the band as manager, and eventually got involved in producing their records, I knew nothing about the blues; I was a rock music guy; the band was really detached from the modern rock scene for the most part, except for Bob Hite, who worked in a record store,... Read More
The Many Sides of Chet Atkins
Inspired by my recent discussion with Guy Van Duser and his life-long admiration of Chet Atkins, I not only bought a copy of A Session with Chet Atkins, but also dug into my collection and found a number of great Atkins records I hadn’t listened to in years. I thought it might be fun to pull these out and have a listen. This is hardly an exhaustive overview of Atkins’ recorded output, but more of a casual stroll through some memorable recordings that I happen to own. First up is the Session album: Holy smokes, Chester! I never expected this old mono record to sound this... Read More
Get Yourself a New Broom: Chatting with Guy Van Duser
Guy Van Duser/Billy Novick- Get Yourself a New Broom (And Sweep Those Blues Away) This album, by Guy Van Duser and Billy Novick, was released on Rounder Records in late 1979. I played it years ago for a music industry colleague, who turned to me after listening to the track, “I’m Coming, Virginia,” and said: “I just had this weird ‘sense memory’- something that I hadn’t thought of since I was a kid. That clarinet sounded so real, I could smell the wax we used on the instrument.” This record is that good. (And for those who like “audiophile” quality... Read More
National Recording Registry- Hoodoo Man Blues
When I think of the Chicago blues, particularly the era of the “electric blues,” I usually think of the legendary performers on the Chess label, most of whom are dead and gone, the label now operating as part of the Universal Music Group. A few small labels, like Alligator Records, which started in 1971, Earwig Music (founded in Chicago in 1978 by Michael Franks) and Red Lightnin,’ established in the UK in 1968, have catalogs of older blues recordings or distribute “contemporary blues.” But Delmark Records, founded in St. Louis in 1953, and based in Chicago since 1958, is not... Read More
“Are You Experienced”—The Jimi Hendrix Experience (1967)
“Are You Experienced”—The Jimi Hendrix Experience (1967) Added to the National Registry: 2005 Essay by Bill Hart (Text of Essay Published in National Recording Registry of the Library of Congress)* Link to Essay as it appears in the National Recording Registry Some reviewers of “Are You Experienced” at the time of its release recognized that Jimi Hendrix was changing the very language of popular music. But the significance of this album is probably even greater today, almost 50 years after its original release: the record and its individual tracks are enormously... Read More
A Sidebar: Black Sabbath on Vertigo
Any discussion of the Vertigo Swirl label would be incomplete without some mention of the early Black Sabbath albums since they are, from today’s vantage point, probably the best known band to have signed with the label and are often the entry point for many who are buying Vertigo Swirls today. Sabbath’s first four albums, including Paranoid and Master of Reality, were first issued on Vertigo in the UK and a number of other countries (but notably, not the United States, where the band had signed to Warner Bros.). For those venturing into the sometimes deep... Read More