YOU KNOW I don’t think the full Significance of Let it Bleed has dawned yet on any of us. The album was released about four months ago; we got it green and appetizing, it ripened quickly into prime yellow and as it moved through time, acquired the characteristic rich brown brocade textures of old age. […]
Tag: music and arts
The Bead Game
VERY FEW rock groups, and even fewer American ones, manage to make music that is not only complex in its musical structure but at the same time retains the visceral, frantic dynamism that one associates with true rock&roll.; The Bead Game is one of the finest rock-groups in he country precisely because its music is […]
Bob Dylan Revisited
IN ANY attempt to understand Bob Dylan’s works, one ought to consider his music, his lyrics and his singing style separately, since each of these three elements has different history in the development of his art. Their conjunction–in the various stages of each’s evolution–is responsible for both the wide variety of Dylan’s musical output, and […]
Outlaw Blues
IN THE ANNALS of rock and roll writing Paul Williams, who was spawned and bred in our very own Cambridge, Mass., holds a special place. The story is of how he dropped out of Swarthmore three years ago to single-handedly set up his own magazine of rock, Crawdaddy!, and went on to establish it briefly […]
Poor Bitos
IN THE FIRST breath of the play the stained glass windows light up, eerie and striking, their patterns pop, untrite and yet faithful to the spirit of the cathedral and religious scenes that one has come to expect from the medium. The stage is floor level, jutting on three sides into the audience and consisting […]
The Miami Pop Festival: Silver Linings Galore in the Faint Cloud Over Rock
My first night on Miami Beach I found myself in a grunjy teen-age hangout semi-filled with its regulars. Music from a tape-recorder on a table in the center of the room with a huge lampshade hanging right over, filled with a disturbingly weak bulb. The music was unmentionable top-40 staple. The girl in rapacious charge […]
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New Rock Concert
THE PROGRAM aptly billed it as a “New Rock” concert. Peter Ivers, fresh from New York, has put together a strain of music incorporating jazz and blues with the sugar-coating of a rock-beat to stir our minds a bit, drenched as they are in the winter gloom. The set-up on stage consisted of bassoon (dig […]
The Beatles
DEEP IN THE winter of 1965 the Beatles released an album titled Beatles for Sale that contained such songs as “I’m a Loser,” “Baby’s in Black,” “Mr. Moonlight.” They were nice songs all and strikingly performed as usual, but that album left one with the distinct feeling that the Beatles` were treading water, that they […]
The Jeff Beck Group
It’s always very tense before a show starts — for the performers, doubts about another road audience, for the crowd, the tightness of anticipation. Preparations continue in the last minutes on amps and mics and lights. In a blue-carpeted backroom deep within the Boston Tea Party, the Jeff Beck Group kicks around a squishy soccer […]
Hey Revolution
JOHN LENNON claims that the Beatles’ songs do not carry any messages and says he resents people who try to interpret them in that way. Neverheless, his latest song, ‘Revolution’, is so explicily and brutally to the point that one cannot help but sense a morning in it–and be painfully startled by this particular message. […]