“Achmed” (1969) – Heads, Hands and Feet * Written by Tony Colton and Ray Smith * LP: Home from Home (The Missing Album) * Produced by Tony Colton * Label: Pucka
Here’s a short but punchy trifle from the underappreciated supergroup Heads, Hands and Feet’s posthumously released Home from Home (The Missing Album) (1995). It was actually the second album recorded by their earlier incarnation, Poet and the One Man Band. MGM/Verve, who released that group’s debut, ended up shelving this follow up, after which the newly re-christened quintet considered using it for their own debut on Capitol, opting instead to record something new. Both incarnations of the band included chicken pickin’ guitarist Albert Lee, so he usually gave their songs his instrumental signature. This one, though, is all about Pat Donaldson, a tall, mutton-chopped bassist who went on to become a fixture on the British folk rock scene. His foundational groove on this will certainly be sampled someday and turned into a powerhouse dance/rap track. Also featured: politically incorrect faux-Arabic that mostly references cuisine. Future “cockney rock” practitioner Chas Hodges ended up taking Donaldson’s place shortly after this was recorded.
“Gary Gilmore’s Eyes” (1977) – The Adverts
“Gary Gilmore’s Eyes” (1977) – The Adverts * Written by T.V. Smith * 45: “Gary Gilmore’s Eyes” / “Bored Teenagers” * Produced by the Adverts and Larry Wallis * Label: Anchor
Music journalist Mikal Gilmore is the younger brother of the infamous spree killer who demanded execution by firing squad, thereby reinstating the death penalty in 1977. In his memoir Shot to the Heart, Mikal writes of his own days immediately following the execution: “I …spent many nights lost in the dark glory of punk rock. I liked the way the music tried to make its listeners accommodate the reality of a merciless world. One of the best punk songs of the period was by a British band, the Adverts. It was called ‘Gary Gilmore’s Eyes.’ What would it be like, the song asked, to see the world through Gary Gilmore’s dead eyes? Would you see through the eyes of somebody who wanted to kill the world, and then kill himself?”
“Będziesz panią w moim piekle” (1970) – Romuald i Roman
“Będziesz panią w moim piekle” (1970) – Romuald i Roman * Written by Andrzej Kuryło and Roman Runowicz * LP: Z Archiwum Polskiego Radia, Vol. 5 (2007)
In the late ’60s, Polish rock pioneers Romuald Piasecki and Roman Runowicza formed a band named after themselves and got some quick traction. Someone in the paisley underground ’80s ought to have covered this folk-rock brooder, the title of which translates to “You Should Be in My Hell.” Strangely, only two facts testify of this song’s very existence: 1) Its appearance in several fall 1970 issues of Billboard‘s “Hits of the World” charts as a Polish Top 5 single, and 2) A YouTube video of the song (linked below). Was it ever actually released as a single? It appears on the recent compilation of radio recordings pictured here, but shows up nowhere in any online discographies. So maybe it charted in Poland only on the basis of airplay. A few years after this, the group would reorganize itself as the legendary band Nurt, who would also record a version of this song.
“Bish Bash Bosh” (1974) – The Jook
“Bish Bash Bosh” (1974) – The Jook * Written by Ralf Kimmet * 45: “Bish Bash Bosh” / “Crazy Kids” * Produced by John Burgess * Label: RCA Victor
“Bish Bash Bosh” was the final A-side by the Jook, a glam-era singles band that branched off of John’s Children (who included Marc Bolan) and broke up when two members left to join Sparks. The Jook apparently inspired the Bay City Rollers, who mastered the fashion, if not their models’ manner of bedroom-eyes musical assurance. Here’s Jook drummer Chris Townson, quoted in Wired Up: Glam, Proto Punk and Bubblegum: “We were playing in Scotland and this rather scruffy long-haired bunch, who looked like we did a year previously, came in after the gig and said what a fantastic show it was and how impressed they were with the image. Not two months later, even less, we saw these same guys and they’d patched it up with lots of tartan and everything. It was essentially the Jook image…. [and] bloody irritating when you go somewhere and they say, ‘You look like the Bay City Rollers.’ I think I came close to punching many people.”
“Manifiesto” (1973) – Victor Jara
“Manifiesto” (1973) – Victor Jara * Written and produced by Victor Jara * LP (Mexico): Manifiesto * Label: Discos Pueblo
“Manifiesto” by Chile’s Victor Jara became the title track to an album assembled after military thugs from the Pinochet dictatorship arrested, tortured and murdered him in September 1973. Jara had intended the song to appear, along with six other tracks he’d already recorded and others yet to be recorded, on an album called Tiempos que cambian (times that change). Listening to this with the knowledge that we’d lose him so soon after its creation still makes one’s skin tingle. It would have the same effect without that knowledge, though. “I don’t sing just to sing,” go the lyrics. “I sing because the guitar makes sense and has a reason… The song that is brave will always remain a new song.” Only in summer 2016 did Pedro Barrientos, the army officer who murdered Jara and who had escaped to Florida in the late 1980s, face a trial. The jury found him guilty, moving his eventual extradition to Chile a few steps closer.
“Buzeqesh Goca” (1994) – Laver Bariu
“Buzeqesh Goca” (1994) – Lavier Bariu * Trad. * Produced by Ben Mandelson and Kim Burton * CD: Songs from the City of Roses (1998) * Label: Globe Style
The late Albanian clarinetist Laver Bariu got first class treatment on this 1998 CD (recorded live to digital in 1994) called Songs from the City of Roses by Globestyle, back when that label actively bird-dogged music from all corners. UK musician and scholar Ben Mandelson, along with ethnomusicologist Kim Burton, recorded Bariu in Përmet, near the Greek border, capturing a bandleader with decades of hard work and discipline under his belt, rallying his men forward with his cascading melody lines. “Buzeqesh Goca” means “smile, Goca” (the name of a girl – rhymes with ‘boats-ah’), and will make you want to pick up any instrument nearby to try and play along. In 1978 Bariu appeared in a black and white Albanian film called Gjeneral Gramofoni, which is set in the 1930s.
“Oud Solo” (1966) – The John Berberian Ensemble
Born in New York City to Armenian immigrant parents, oud master John Berberian introduced the fascinating sounds of his heritage to many an American ear during the 1960s. His music’s immediate danceability, too, didn’t compromise any of its authority. What ever happened to the once-prolific Berberian, whose prodigious output appeared on labels like MGM, Roulette, and Verve? Nothing dramatic. He still makes music, but he simply allowed his life to diversify in other directions.
“One Bad Apple” (1971) – The Osmonds
“One Bad Apple” (1971) – The Osmonds * Written by George Jackson * 45: “One Bad Apple” / “He Ain’t Heavy…He’s My Brother” * LP The Osmonds * Produced by Rick Hall * Label: MGM
In his Soul Country: Making Music and Making Race in the American South (pp. 118-124), Charles L. Hughes writes that the Osmonds’ “One Bad Apple” was as “controversial as any piece of U.S. popular culture.” This was because its successful mimicry of the Jackson 5 sound came off to some as participation “in the white rip-off of black cultural resources.” Its inclusion in soul station playlists, too, seemed to fly in the face of “soul’s extramusical meaning.” Hughes points out that the single can also be seen as a model specimen for the “racial and stylistic crisscrossing” going on at the FAME studios in Muscle Shoals, Alabama. The record was, after all, the product of a white producer (Rick Hall) and a black songwriter (George Jackson) who had been recommended to Hall by another white producer (Billy Sherrill). The record’s multiracial Fame Gang studio musicians backed five white young men singing in a black idiom for a label run by a conservative white man (Mike Curb). In spite of any controversy, the song would launch ongoing successes for everyone involved, and lives on as a cheerful signifier of seventies youth. An Osmonds cartoon created in 1972 used the song for its opening sequence.
“Should I Stay or Should I Go” (1982) – The Clash
“Should I Stay or Should I Go” (1982) – The Clash * Written and produced by the Clash * 45: “Should I Stay or Should I Go” / “Cool Confusion” (b-sides varied after first issue) * LP: Combat Rock * Label: CBS (UK)/Epic (US)
Heavy rotation inconsequence (falling short of the Top 40 in its day) that nonetheless became consequential, managing to maintain, in the present, the don’t-give-a-f*ck attitude that first hooked teenage boys in the early eighties. The song became an instant staple among non-metal garage band kids who never looked as serious as the Ayn Rand characters on the single’s European picture sleeve. Oddly enough, the Big Boy restaurant franchise resisted using the song during its 1984 “Should He Stay or Should He Go” mascot campaign, although TV-stink finally did get all over it when a 1992 Levi’s commercial propelled it to #1 in the UK. The song remains a lawsuit candidate for its reliance on John’s Children’s “Let Me Know,” which probably lifted from the Spencer Davis Group’s “High Time Baby,” which probably lifted from the Righteous Brothers’ “Little Latin Lupe Lu.”
“Studená Koupel” (1982) – Marsyas
Named after the Greek mythological figure who challenged Apollo to a flute contest, the Czech folk-rock group Marsyas’s debut LP appeared in 1978 and they’ve recorded a few live reunion albums in recent years. Their second album (Kousek Přízně from 1982), contains a soothing, organic cover version of Emerson, Lake and Palmer’s “From the Beginning” that sounds as though Crosby, Stills, and Nash could have consulted on the vocal arrangement. From what I gather, the words’ meanings are quite different from the original, with the title translating to “cold bath.”