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January 16, 2009

RINGO STARR CHIPS MOMAN SEND Pete Drake Video Message PLUS Moman Pickets Memphis Commercial Appeal Over Ringo Defamation [1987]


RINGO STARR CHIPS MOMAN send Pete Drake video message PLUS Moman Pickets Commercial Appeal Over Ringo Defamation [1987]


this little gem was found unmarked by a wonderful Memphis videographer, and lo and behold, through persistent viewing through reams of b-roll, i discovered this never-before-seen personal video message from Ringo Starr and Chips Moman to Pete Drake, wishing him the best for an unnamed award circa 1987. [Ringo and Chips were in Memphis preparing to record Ringo's Memphis album, which would soon be aborted and end in legal problems.]

 Pete-Drake-770.jpg

the 'Pete' Ringo refers to, regarding finding country tapes in his car, is indeed, Pete Drake, who was the Nashville record producer responsible for convincing Ringo to cut a country record in Nashville with Nashville players, all on the basis of his coincidental discovery of Ringo's country music collection, discovered while picking him up at the airport. [their record became Beaucoup of Blues, winning more than a few top 10s, as well as critical accolades.]
 "HIS NAME IS PETE Drake. He got the brilliant idea one time to make his steel guitar talk and he actually does it, right now, with a beautiful song, Forever."


You may also recall from a few previous posts, Pete Drake's own otherworldly contributions as top session man and inventor of the talking steel guitar [eg. Forever], played with his talkbox, connected to his pedal steel guitar.

Born in Augusta, Georgia in 1932, the son of a Pentecostal preacher, Pete Drake worked as a record producer and sought-after session musician in the ’60s in country music mecca Nashville, Tennessee (it's his pedal steel guitar you can hear on Charlie Rich’s Behind Closed Doors and Bob Dylan's Lay Lady Lay).
However, he is also one of the little-known heroes in the history and development of the voice synthesizer most commonly known as the Vocoder, as outlined in Dave Tompkins' beautiful and meticulous 2011 history of said voice-altering tool, How To Wreck A Nice Beach.
Drake was not the first to modulate a steel guitar sound with the human voice. That honour goes to Alvino Rey and his wife Luise in 1939, who used a carbon microphone placed against the throat (a prototype version of the Sonovox).

But Drake successfully modified and updated the technique, hooking an eight-inch paper-cone speaker-driver and funnel to his guitar amp, the guitar sound travelling to Drake's mouth via a clear plastic tube on the end of the funnel.
Drake first used the device on Roger Miller's 1963 hit, Lock, Stock And Teardrops before recording three albums worth of "talking steel guitar" records between 1964 and 1965.
George Harrison was a fan. Drake's talking pedal steel appears on All Things Must Pass and the Nashville producer's skills were subsequently employed on Ringo’s 1970 C&W tribute, Beaucoups Of Blues.
Oh, and in in case you were wondering who was responsible for Pete Frampton picking up the voice box for his mega-million selling double live album, Frampton Comes Alive, well that would be Pete Drake. But don't hold that against him. The man was an innovator.
Just listen to him here in the studio with George, Ringo and Phil Spector during the ATMP sessions and tell me that you're not hearing the sonic birth of Roger Troutman's Golden Throat Talk Box.



the remainder of the clips document the shitstorm that a Memphis commercial appeal writer caused when she denigrated Starr in one of her columns just as the famous Beatle was arriving to give the dying Memphis music scene a shot in the arm, causing Chips in disgust [Memphis musician and studio genius from the '60s and '70s] to picket in front of the CA's office.
tpa


Video sent by mrjyn
 


In 1987, after the The Commercial Appeal ran a column about Ringo Starr, whose album Moman was producing, Moman fought back.

The Commercial Appeal column disparaged Starr (saying "the aging Beatle was yesterday's news...least talented of all the Beatles").

Moman retaliated by staging a protest in front of the newspaper's offices.

Despite recording, Starr eventually abandoned the project and sued Moman to stop the album's release.

One place he doesn't visit is Memphis. "I've stayed away," says Moman, in an easy drawl.

MOMAN AND STAX:

Moman and Jim Stewart hit it off, and decided to join forces to start what would become Satellite, and eventually, Stax Records. Moman played a pivotal role in Stax's development. He recorded the label's initial hits, and turned Stax from a white country music company into a Soul label.

Stewart and Estelle Axton brought that to an end in 1962. Axton and Stewart suggested Moman was seeking credits and money he didn't deserve.

MOMAN'S AMERICAN SOUND STUDIOS:

A few thousand dollars was enough to start at 827 Thomas--American Sound Studios.
Moman struggled producing & playing guitar @ Muscle Shoals, writing songs with Dan Penn [Dark End of the Street]...

The studio hit its stride when Moman wooed members of Hi Records and Phillips to form American Studios group: Reggie Young, Gene Chrisman, Bobby Wood, Bobby Emmons, Mike Leech and Tommy Cogbill. A succession of hits like the Box Tops' ("The Letter"), and, most famously, Elvis Presley's ("Suspicious Minds") brought fame.

Between 1967 and 1972, American cut 122 chart records.


thanks to the original poster for this unusual and obscure document, and i'll try and backtrack to let you know who it was, as there are many more very rare Memphis video artifacts contained on his channel.

Twin Peaks [TV Show Opening Theme 1990 David Lynch]

The story begins with the murder of Laura Palmer, a teen aged girl who lived in the quiet town of Twin Peaks, near the US - Canadian borders. Everyone seems surprised and devastated by the girl's murder, and the town's sherif welcomes the help of FBI agent Dale Cooper, who comes to investigate the case. As Cooper begins his search for Laura's killer, the town's secrets are gradually exposed. This is definitely not an average quiet town, it seems as everyone has something big to hide. At nights, agent Cooper sees strange visions of Laura and other mysterious people, visions that tell him that something big is happening here, something far more evil than a single murder case. David Lynch, Kyle MacLachlan, Michael Ontkean, Dana Ashbrook, Lara Flynn Boyle, Sherilyn Fenn, Piper Laurie, Joan Chen, Sheryl Lee

Fantasy Island [TV Show Opening Theme: Season One 1978]

Fantasy Island TV Show Opening Theme Season One Ricardo Montalban ... Mr. Roarke (37 episodes, 1978-1984)
Hervé Villechaize ... Tattoo

1975 Chrysler Cordoba [RM]

Ricardo Montalbán - Chihuahua Choo Choo [R.I.P.]

Ricardo Montalbán singing his classic Chihuahua Choo Choo.

This Emmy Award winning actor is famous for his roles as Mr. Roarke on TV's Fantasy Island and as Khan on the original 1960s Star Trek television program. He also was recognized with a Lifetime Achievement Award in 1993 from the Screen Actors Guild.

He is honoured with a star on the Los Angeles' Hollywood Walk of Fame and The Ricardo Montalbán Theatre on Vine Street is named in his honour.

Singing can definitely be added to his credits as well.

Merrell Fankhauser + Bill Dodd + Dick Lee: Ballad of Fapardokly

Merrell Fankhauser, Bill Dodd, Dick Lee, Ballad of Fapardokly

If ever a reissue could make Merrell Fankhauser a household name, this is it! This scarce classic is nothing less than a moody, mysterious, eclectic junket to all charted depots of the inner psyche, along with several stops completely off the map. Wonderful and intriguing.

Merrell, Bill, and Dick get together after forty years for this interview and new song "Ballad of Fapardokly" for a new album.

The Cyrkle「The Minx」

AA: Je m'appelle 'X' et je suis alcoolique: BY BILL WILSON [8 VIDEES]


We believe, and so suggested a few years ago, that the action of alcohol on these chronic alcoholics is a manifestation of an allergy; that the phenomenon of craving is limited to this class and NEVER occurs in the average temperate drinker. pxxvi The Doctor's Opinion, Big Book


Delivered at the first international conference of Alcoholics Anonymous at Cleveland, Ohio in 1950
---- My good friends in AA and of AA.

I feel I would be very remiss if I didn't take this opportunity to welcome you here to Cleveland not only to this meeting but those that have already transpired. I hope very much that the presence of so many people and the words that you have heard will prove an inspiration to you - not only to you, but may you be able to impart that inspiration to the boys and girls back home who were not fortunate enough to be able to come.
In other words, we hope that your visit here has been both enjoyable and profitable. I get a big thrill out of looking over a vast sea of faces like this with a feeling that possibly some small thing that I did a number of years ago, played an infinitely small part in making this meeting possible. I also get quite a thrill when I think that we all had the same problem. We all did the same things. We all get the same results in proportion to our zeal and enthusiasm and stick-to-primitiveness. If you will pardon the injection of a personal note at this time, let me say that I have been in bed five of the last seven months and my strength hasn't returned as I would like, so my remarks of necessity will be very brief.
But there are two or three things that flashed into my mind on which it would be fitting to lay a little emphasis; one is the simplicity of our Program. Let's not louse it all up with Freudian complexes and things that are interesting to the scientific mind, but have very little to do with our actual AA work.

Our 12 Steps, when simmered down to the last, resolve themselves into the words love and service.
We understand what love is and we understand what service is. So let's bear those two things in mind. Let us also remember to guard that erring member - the tongue, and if we must use it, let's use it with kindness and consideration and tolerance.
And one more thing; none of us would be here today if somebody hadn't taken time to explain things to us, to give us a little pat on the back, to take us to a meeting or two, to have done numerous little kind and thoughtful acts in our behalf. So let us never get the degree of smug complacency so that we're not willing to extend or attempt to, that help which has been so beneficial to us, to our less fortunate brothers. Bill Wilson - Singleness of Purpose 1957 ---





What Is A.A.?

Alcoholics Anonymous is an international fellowship of men and women who have had a drinking problem.
It is nonprofessional, self-supporting, multiracial, apolitical, and available almost everywhere.
There are no age or education requirements. Membership is open to anyone who wants to do something about his or her drinking problem.
Singleness of Purpose and Problems Other Than Alcohol
Some professionals refer to alcoholism and drug addiction as “substance abuse” or “chemical dependency.” Nonalcoholics are, therefore, sometimes introduced to A.A. and encouraged to attend A.A. meetings. Anyone may attend open A.A. meetings, but only those with a drinking problem may attend closed meetings. A renowned psychiatrist, who served as a nonalcoholic trustee of the A.A. General Service Board, made the following statement: “Singleness of purpose is essential to the effective treatment of alcoholism. The reason for such exaggerated focus is to overcome denial. The denial associated with alcoholism is cunning, baffling, and powerful and affects the patient, helper, and the community. Unless alcoholism is kept relentlessly in the foreground, other issues will usurp everybody’s attention.” What Does A.A. Do?
1. A.A. members share their experience with anyone seeking help with a drinking problem; they give person-to-person service or "sponsorship" to the alcoholic coming to A.A. from any source. 2. The A.A. program, set forth in our Twelve Steps, offers the alcoholic a way to develop a satisfying life without alcohol



Henrietta Seiberling is the lady who introduced Bill Wilson to Dr. Bob Smith. May, 1972 In the spring of 1971, the newspapers reported the passing of Bill Wilson of New York City, who was one of the two co-founders of Alcoholics Anonymous. The other co-founder, Dr Robert Smith of Akron, Ohio, had passed on some years earlier. Shortly after Bill's death, the Akron Alcoholics groups asked my mother Henrietta Seiberling, to speak at the annual "Founders Day" meeting in Akron, which is attended by members of Alcoholics Anonymous from all over the world.

She lives in New York and did not feel up to traveling, so they asked me to speak in her place. I agreed to speak but felt that it would mean most to them to hear some of her own words, so I called her on the telephone and asked her to tell me about the origins of Alcoholics Anonymous so that I could make sure my remarks were accurate. I made a tape recording of the conversation and played part of it at the 1971 Founders Day meeting, which was held in the gymnasium at the University of Akron with a couple of thousand people present. The first meeting of Bob and Bill, described in the attached transcript, took place in the summer of 1935 in Henrietta's house in Akron, which was the Gatehouse of Stan Hywet Hall, then my family's estate, now the property of Stan Hywet Hall Foundation. Henrietta was not an alcoholic. She was a Vasser college graduate and a housewife with three teenage children. She, like Bob and Bill, would be deeply disturbed by any inference that she or they possessed any extraordinary virtues or talents. On the contrary, they would all emphasize the power of ordinary people to change their lives and the lives of others through the kind of spiritual discipline so successfully exemplified in Alcoholics Anonymous. I am happy to make this transcript available to persons who are sincerely interested in learning more about Alcoholics Anonymous and its message. It is a way of sharing some of the insight's which made and still make Alcoholics Anonymous a vital force in people's lives. I ask only that the transcript be held in the spirit in which it is offered and not used for publicity or in an effort to magnify any individual. John F. Seiberling



This is the only known video of the co-founders together most likely taken in the 1940's.


TRUST GOD, CLEAN HOUSE, HELP OTHERS



1. We admitted we were powerless over alcohol -- that our lives had become unmanageable.
2. Came to believe that a Power greater than ourselves could restore us to sanity.
3. Made a decision to turn our will and our lives over to the care of God as we understood Him.
4. Made a searching and fearless moral inventory of ourselves.
5. Admitted to God, to ourselves, and to another human being the exact nature of our wrongs.
6. Were entirely ready to have God remove all these defects of character.

7. Humbly asked Him to remove our shortcomings.
8. Made a list of all persons we had harmed, and became willing to make amends to them all.
9. Made direct amends to such people wherever possible, except when to do so would injure them or others.
10. Continued to take personal inventory and when we were wrong promptly admitted it.
11. Sought through prayer and meditation to improve our conscious contact with God as w e understood Him, praying only for knowledge of His will for us and the power to carry that out.
12. Having had a spiritual awakening as the result of these steps, we tried to carry this message to alcoholics, and to practice these principles in all our affairs



Je m'appelle X et je suis alcoolique



January 15, 2009

STOCKSHOLM FJORTIS !

Band members speak about black metal scene

Norwegian Black Metal [DOC. Norwegian Television - 2003]



Norwegian Black Metal [DOC.]
Band members speak about black metal scene


Featuring:


Darkthrone

Satyricon

Mayhem

Emperor

Dimmu Borgir

Norwegian television 2003


Lindsay Lohan out of rehab

Hello, I'm Rebecca Field with a UPI entertainment update on this Monday, July 16, 2007.

Actress Lindsay Lohan is reportedly out of rehab. People magazine says she completed her 45 days at the treatment facility in southern California. Her rep says Lohan has decided to wear an alcohol monitoring bracelet so there are no questions about her sobriety while she's out at parties and clubs. Her rep added that she's doing great.

"Harry Potter" is casting a spell on U.S. box offices. The fifth installment of the wizard tales, "Harry Potter and the Order of Phoenix" was number one this weekend. It bought in more than 77 million in ticket sales. The film has made more than 140 million total in the U.S. since its release last Wednesday. "Transformers" fell to the second spot and the animated film "Ratatouille" is in third.

Actress Rebecca Romijn and actor Jerry O'Connell have tied the knot. Romijn's rep tells People magazine the couple married Saturday. It was reportedly a small intimate ceremony at their home in Los Angeles. The two met in Las Vegas in 2004 when Romijn was working on a documentary there. They were engaged the year after. This is the actress' second marriage and O'Connell's first.

Millions of people are listening to Prince's new album for free. The singer partnered with a British newspaper to pass out his new release "Planet Earth" to about 3 million of the paper's subscribers. The marketing technique reportedly angered music stores and his own label, but Prince refused to apologize. The singer apparently wanted to reach more fans in the UK. His last album only sold 80,000 copies there.

Showtime Network and Steven Spielberg are apparently teaming up for a new comedy series. Plans are in the works for a show called "The United States of Tara"...to be produced by Spielberg's Dreamworks TV. It's apparently about a woman with a multiple personality disorder. There's no word on the cast yet but Showtime's president says they're getting close to making decisions. Production for the pilot is set to start in the fall.

That's all for now. Go to upi.com for all the day's news and updates. Thanks for watching.

Amy Winehouse - Rehab [Official music video]

Drug Rehab Telephone

This video was made to help people overcome drug and alcohol addiction

Amy Winehouse + Elvis: Rehab [ pictures]

A hibachi Amy Whorehouse's great and uncomfortably pictures video: able song, Elvis's pictures (some of them probably Photostatted by someone) and me singing over a backtrack that I found here at YouTube as a karaoke.
It is a tribute to both the KING (who wasn't an alcohol aficionado, by the way) and Ms AW, one of the greatest talents of these years, in my opinion.
These are the lyrics (I've adapted them just a little bit for my singing):

They tried to make me go to rehab
Uh, I said no,no,no
Yes, I've been black, but when I come back
You'll know,know,know
I ain't got the time
And if my woman thinks I'm fine
Just try to make me go to rehab
Ah, I won't go,go,go

I'd rather be at home with Ray
I ain't got seventy days
'Cause there's nothing
There's nothing you can teach me
That I can't learn from Elvis or Hathaway

I didn't get a bloody class
But I know we don't come in a shot glass

They tried to make me go to rehab
But I said no,no,no
Yes, I've been black, but when I come back
You'll know,know,know
I ain't got the time
And if my woman thinks I'm fine
Just try to make me go to rehab
Uh, I won't go,go,go

The lady said "why bayou think you're here?"
I said: I got no idea...
I said: I'm gonna,I'm gonna loose my baby,
So I always keep a little bottle near me.
She said "I just think you're depressed"
I said: Kiss me here, baby
And go rest.

They tried to make me go to rehab
But I said no,no,no
Yes, I've been black, but when I come back
You'll know,know,know

I don't ever want to drink again
I just, oh, Lord, I need a friend
I'm not going to spend ten weeks
Have everyone think I'm on the mend

And it's not just my pride
It's just 'til these tears have dried

They tried to make me go to rehab
Uh, I said no,no,no
Yearly, I've been black, but when I come back
You'll know,know,know
I ain't got the time
And if my woman thinks I'm fine
Just try to make me go to rehab
Well, I won't go,go,go

CHIPS MOMAN + MEMPHIS+ RINGO STARR + PETE DRAKE + COMMERCIAL APPEAL PROTEST [1987]

"I've stayed away,"
Chips Moman says of Memphis.
"I have no desire to ever be back there."
Tami Chappell Special to The Commercial Appeal


RINGO STARR + CHIPS MOMAN: Pete Drake - 1987 + PROTEST
Video sent by mrjyn

RINGO STARR + CHIPS MOMAN SEND A VIDEO MESSAGE TO Pete Drake CONGRATULATING HIM ON AN AWARD, 1987 + MOMAN'S COMMERCIAL APPEAL PROTEST OVER Ringo STARR SLANDER:
In 1987, after the The Commercial Appeal ran a column about Ringo Starr, whose album Moman was producing, Moman fought back.

The Commercial Appeal column disparaged Starr (saying "the aging Beatle was yesterday's news...least talented of all the Beatles"). Moman retaliated by staging a protest in front of the newspaper's offices.

Despite recording, Starr eventually abandoned the project and sued Moman to stop the album's release.

One place he doesn't visit is Memphis. "I've stayed away," says Moman, in an easy drawl.

MOMAN AND STAX:

Moman and Jim Stewart hit it off, and decided to join forces to start what would become Satellite, and eventually, Stax Records. Moman played a pivotal role in Stax's development. He recorded the label's initial hits, and turned Stax from a white country music company into a Soul label.
Stewart and Estelle Axton brought that to an end in 1962. Axton and Stewart suggested Moman was seeking credits and money he didn't deserve.

MOMAN'S AMERICAN SOUND STUDIOS:
A few thousand dollars was enough to start at 827 Thomas--American Sound Studios.
Moman struggled producing & playing guitar @ Muscle Shoals, writing songs with Dan Penn [Dark End of the Street]...

The studio hit its stride when Moman wooed members of Hi Records and Phillips to form American Studios group:Reggie Young, Gene Chrisman, Bobby Wood, Bobby Emmons, Mike Leech and Tommy Cogbill. A succession of hits like the Box Tops' ("The Letter"), and, most famously, Elvis Presley's ("Suspicious Minds")brought fame.
Between 1967 and 1972, American cut 122 chart records.

Chips
Moman:

missing man of

Memphis music

This is not a sob story or a tale of woe, or a plea for pity or praise. But for Lincoln "Chips" Moman it's about respect -- respect earned, but not given.

In music, few men could claim more or finer achievements. A gifted rockabilly guitarist and band leader in the 1950s, Moman went on to become one of the architects of Stax Records and author of some of the most enduring songs in the history of rhythm-and-blues and country music -- from "Dark End of the Street" to "Luckenbach Texas (Back to the Basics of Love)." Besides Sam Phillips, he was the only man to effectively produce Elvis Presley -- helping midwife The King's creative rebirth in 1969. And it was Moman who helped build and shape American Sound Studios and its house band -- generating the most prolific run of chart hits ever.

 Chips Moman helped start Stax Records, then American Sound Studios, which cut 122 chart hits  from 1967 to 1972 --  an unparalleled  achievement.

Chips Moman helped start Stax Records, then American Sound Studios, which cut 122 chart hits from 1967 to 1972 -- an unparalleled achievement.

In 1985,  Moman (right) produced Roy Orbison, Jerry Lee Lewis, Carl Perkins and Johnny Cash  for the "Class Of '55"  project.

In 1985, Moman (right) produced Roy Orbison, Jerry Lee Lewis, Carl Perkins and Johnny Cash for the "Class Of '55" project.

Moman, now semi-retired and living in LaGrange, Ga., still writes songs occasionally. "I write 'em," he says, "but I just leave 'em laying there."

Moman, now semi-retired and living in LaGrange, Ga., still writes songs occasionally. "I write 'em," he says, "but I just leave 'em laying there."

 Moman staged  a protest in front of The Commercial Appeal in  1987, after the newspaper ran a less-than-flattering column about Ringo Starr, whose album Moman was producing.

Moman staged a protest in front of The Commercial Appeal in 1987, after the newspaper ran a less-than-flattering column about Ringo Starr, whose album Moman was producing.


Yet, for the last two decades, Chips Moman has been a cipher, a ghost, the missing man of Memphis music. Much of that is his own doing, of course. Sensitive and highly strung, Moman left Memphis twice -- once in the '70s and again in the '80s -- under acrimonious circumstances.

Still, for a town that values its musical history, Moman has been curiously consigned to footnote status. You'll find little mention of him or the American Studios band in the Rock 'N' Soul Museum or the Stax Museum of American Soul Music, and their names were all but absent from the city-sponsored year-long musical celebrations of 2004 and 2007.

The 71-year-old Moman has been back living in LaGrange, Ga., where he was born, for the past decade. Though semi-retired, he still makes his way to Nashville for the odd session or to get together with friends. But one place he doesn't visit is Memphis. "I've stayed away," says Moman, in an easy drawl. "I have no desire to ever be back there. I don't know, man. It's really kind of hard to talk about, 'cause a lot of things that went on there hurt me tremendously."

Moman couldn't possibly have anticipated either the triumph or the trials he would face when he first hitchhiked from LaGrange to Memphis as a 14-year-old back in 1951. "I never knew I'd be in the music business," he says. "I never gave it any thought. But I'd been playing guitar since I was a child."

His eventual "discovery" seems like a story lifted from an old Hollywood script. Sitting in a local drugstore, strumming away on a six-string, he was spotted by Sun rockabilly star

Warren Smith. "He asked me if I wanted a job," says Moman, who played his first gig backing Smith at an Arkansas club on a bill that included Carl Perkins and Roy Orbison. "That's how I went into the business."

Moman quickly became a hotshot local guitarist, and joined up with brothers Johnny and Dorsey Burnette. He traveled with them for sessions in California at the famed Gold Star Recording Studios. Moman watched and studied noted engineer Stan Ross behind the board. "And from what I'd learned in California, I decided to take that experience and put it to work in Memphis," he says.

His chance came when he was called to do a session at a tiny garage studio in Brunswick, Tenn., owned by Jim Stewart. Moman and Stewart hit it off, and decided to join forces to start what would become Satellite, and eventually, Stax Records.

"I found that old theater (on McLemore), and the rent was only $50 a month. Went back and told Jim Stewart that and we rented it and built it out. That was the start of Stax. The rest is what happened."

What happened has been the subject of some controversy and debate over the years. Certainly, Moman played a pivotal role in Stax's development. He was the one who recorded the label's initial hits by Carla Thomas, Rufus Thomas and William Bell; helped develop "Last Night," the song that would become The Mar-Keys' smash; and was the one who was musically predisposed to turning Stax from a white country music company into a black R&B label in the first place.

But a rancorous split with Stewart and his sister and co-owner, Estelle Axton, in 1962 brought all that to an abrupt end. As music historians Rob Bowman and Peter Guralnick have detailed, recriminations flew: Moman said he'd been cheated out of profits and ownership, while Axton and Stewart suggested Moman was seeking credits and money he didn't deserve.

More than four decades later, anger about his ouster at Stax still lingers in Moman's voice.

"Sometimes you can get hurt bad enough that you don't forget it," he says. "What happened to me at Stax caused me to lose my house. I lost everything that I had. I remember that year ... for Thanksgiving, my wife and child, all we had was a box of corn flakes and some milk. You don't forget those kinds of things."

Eventually, Moman threatened to sue Stax and negotiated a few thousand dollars in settlement. It was enough -- along with the help of a couple of partners -- to start up a new place at 827 Thomas called American Sound Studios.

For a couple of years, Moman struggled, producing the odd track, but mostly made his living playing guitar on sessions down in Muscle Shoals (for the likes of Aretha Franklin and Wilson Pickett, among others) and co-writing songs -- often with Dan Penn -- like the immortal "Dark End of the Street" and "Do Right Woman, Do Right Man."

In 1965, things got rolling at American, with the arrival of local teen garage band The Gentrys, who cut a million-selling smash called "Keep on Dancing."

"They were just kids, and I wasn't much more" says Moman. "But that got me started to the point where I could afford to hire a secretary."

The secretary Moman hired, Sandy Posey, would be his next protégé, and she would go on to record the Top 20 Grammy-nominated hit "Born A Woman." "After that, people started calling me to produce records," says Moman.

The studio hit its stride when Moman wooed members of the staff bands at Hi Records and Phillips to form the American Studios group: guitarist Reggie Young, drummer Gene Chrisman, pianist Bobby Wood, organist Bobby Emmons and bassists Mike Leech and Tommy Cogbill. That unit, mostly with Moman at the helm, would help sire a succession of hits for artists like the Box Tops ("The Letter"), Dusty Springfield ("Son of a Preacher Man"), Neil Diamond ("Sweet Caroline), B.J. Thomas ("Hooked on a Feeling"), Bobby Womack ("Fly Me To The Moon") and, most famously, Elvis Presley ("Suspicious Minds").

"We were working night and day," Bobby Wood recalls of the period. "Sometimes we'd be doing Elvis at night and somebody like Neil Diamond during the day. I remember B.J. Thomas was in for his second album after 'Hooked on a Feeling,' and I didn't know he'd already had a No. 1 record. That's how hard we were working -- we didn't even listen to the radio."

Between 1967 and 1972, American would cut 122 chart records -- a still unmatched achievement. And yet, despite those gaudy numbers, few people seemed to give Moman or the band its due. He was particularly irked after the band was completely passed over for some local music awards in the early-'70s.

"The thing is, Chips wasn't one to come out and say, 'Well I need my recognition.' He wouldn't do that," says his friend and longtime Memphis music industry vet Herb O'Mell. "Those guys were not self promoters in any way and never tried to be. Whereas -- and I'm not saying anything bad -- the Stax people, they promoted themselves. The American people wrote their songs, made their records and went on to the next thing."

But Moman was particularly sensitive to slights, both real and perceived, after his experience with Stax. A lack of recognition within Memphis -- from the press, from fellow musicians, from the city fathers -- for what he and American had contributed musically and economically almost overshadowed his success.

"I've heard him say that many times," says Reggie Young. "And really, if you looked at it, here we were, and we've cut a hundred-something chart records, but yet there would be a mediocre Hi record or a Stax record that would get the press. In our little circle we'd come up with all kind of scenarios as to why we're not in the paper on Sunday or whatever. I guess they had better PR than we did."

The lack of attention -- and a gradual downturn in session work -- was enough of an issue that Moman was thinking of leaving town. "I figured if Memphis don't think no more of us than that, we can do what we do anywhere," says Moman.

Although Moman says City Council members pleaded with him to stay -- he was putting money into the city coffers, after all -- in 1972 he closed up shop in Memphis and headed to Atlanta to start a new studio, taking most of the American band with him.

His tenure in Atlanta was short-lived, however. After encountering problems with the new record label he'd set up, Moman decided to get out of the music business entirely.

"I was planning to go to Australia and become a bush pilot. But I decided to visit some friends in Nashville before I left," says Moman. "While I was there, I wrote a hit song for B.J. Thomas ("[Hey Won't You Play] Another Somebody Done Somebody Wrong Song") that became record of the year. So I stayed."

Moman would spend the next dozen years in Nashville, where he would dominate the country field -- writing hits and producing albums by Willie Nelson, Waylon Jennings, Tammy Wynette and Ronnie Millsap.

Despite his success in Music City, in 1985, Moman was lured back to Memphis. Then-Mayor Dick Hackett and First Tennessee bank chairman Ron Terry, eager to re-energize a Memphis music industry that had been stagnant since the demise of Stax in 1975, offered Moman a studio site and financial incentives to return to town.

"I had a lot of people telling me not to do it," Moman says. "But it was kind of an honor to have them ask me to come back. And so I did. But things didn't go well."

At first, Moman was hailed as a potential savior of the city's music. He quickly recorded the high-profile Class of '55 album featuring Jerry Lee Lewis, Johnny Cash, Carl Perkins and Roy Orbison.

But then an album with Ringo Starr, in particular, was plagued by problems. After The Commercial Appeal ran a column mildly disparaging Starr (saying the "aging Beatle is yesterday's news"), Moman staged a bizarre protest in front of the newspaper's offices. Despite doing some recording, Starr eventually abandoned the project and sued Moman to stop the album's release.

In the end, Moman decided, "Fixing the music business in town wasn't going to happen overnight, like everyone wanted it to," and he returned to Nashville, where he resumed his success for another decade before heading off to semi-retirement in Georgia.

Moman's reclusive nature and lingering bitterness about Memphis have come with a price: His achievements, and those of the American band, have been marginalized in the city's musical history.

In the last two decades, Moman and the American band have repeatedly been passed over for industry awards and honors -- in fact, their only institutional recognition came last year in Nashville, where the band was among the inaugural inductees to the Musicians Hall of Fame and Museum.

Like the original Stax studio, the building housing American was demolished in 1990; today, in its place is a parking lot. There's no plaque or marker to note what was once there.

Herb O'Mell says part of the problem is that no one has served as custodian of American's legacy. "The people from Stax and Sun, they remained here, and they became the officers and took over the (Grammys) and all the award things, and they just kinda left Chips and American out," says O'Mell. "There's nobody here saying 'American, American, American,' the way Deanie Parker has done for Stax or Knox Phillips has done for Sun. That is, unless you talk to someone like Marty Lacker."

Lacker, a longtime music industry veteran, Elvis confidante -- he helped bring Presley to American in 1969 -- and friend of Moman's, has, for the past year, been campaigning privately with both the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame and The Recording Academy, the group that governs the Grammys, to get Moman and the American band some long-overdue recognition.

It's a task made more difficult by the fact that Moman and American weren't identified with a single label or style, as were other house bands that have been honored, such as Stax's Booker T. & the MGs or Motown's Funk Brothers.

"Chips says he doesn't give a damn now if they do anything. But I know deep down inside he does," Lacker says. "Especially, with the local Grammy chapter -- it's nothing but politics there. Most of the (American band) guys are from here. They don't have anything against Memphis. It's just that nobody has said, 'Y'all did good.'"

Memphis Grammy chapter executive director Jon Hornyak says Moman and the American band have been on the list for the chapter's bi-annual Recording Academy Honors the past two times. Other sources confirm that their names have previously been submitted to the national Grammy body for consideration for Trustee's and Lifetime Achievement awards -- but, so far, nothing has happened.

"There are a lot of great people out there, and some get more attention than others, and it's not always clear why," says Hornyak. "I don't think a lot of people are aware of the things Chips had accomplished and all the things that he had his fingers in."

Whether anyone ever recognizes it, Moman says his greatest joy comes from what he and the American band achieved. "We still get together and play once a year. And every once in a while we'll book a session and everyone comes, and we're like we always were," says Moman. "They're like my family. We've stayed together 40 years. That's my proudest accomplishment."

As for the fate of his and the American band's legacy, Moman says he doesn't really expect anything to change.

"And I got no hard feelings about it. ... Well, I can't say that," he admits. "Obviously, I do. I don't know what it is with us and Memphis, or why it's turned out this way. But if you happen to find the answer, I'd appreciate you letting me know."

Masterpieces of the Prado Museum in Google Earth

The Prado Museum's Masterpieces in ultra high resolution.

DOLLY PARTON + BOY GEORGE [DUET]: Your Kisses Are Charity

ジョニー・B (ELVIS JOHNNY B. GOODE Karaoke-pon)

Stomu Yamashta - Beauty (1977 AUDIO: BUT WHEN YOU FIND SY ANYWHERE YOU POST IT...IT'S KINDA MELLOW]

From the album "Go Too" (1977).

★ 刑事ヨロシク: LION SLEEPS TONIGHT [JAP. PUNKY STAGE PRODUCTION]★

☆1982 TBS TV 刑事ヨロシク 主題歌:朝倉紀幸&GANG [ライオンは起きている]
★出演者:ビートたけし 岸本加世子 梅宮辰夫 ケーシー高峰 本間優二 三好鉄生 藤田弓子 川上麻衣子 菅井きん 及川ヒロオ 安岡力也 戸川純 秋野暢子 山田邦子 斉藤洋介 奈美悦子 高山佳子 風見りつ子 たかだみゆき 風祭ゆき 大林真由美 加藤直美 西田由美

★虚無僧グループ:矢沢しげる トニー吉沢 ミッキー岡野 金崎翔一 ジャンボ杉田

★協力:東京ロカビリークラブ ミスタースリムカンパニー

この胸のときめきを (opening~ジョニーB・グッド)

JAP. SCHOOLGIRL FIELDTRIP MOVIE WITH JOHNNY B. GOODE SOUNDTRACK OPENING

Black Sabbath: Killing Yourself to Live [California Jam Speedway 1974]

Black Sabbath Performing Killing Your Self To Live At California Jam Speedway 1974

BLACK WIDOW - Sacrifice [live 1970 (expurgated extract)]

The last 20 minutes from the show are not suitable for YouTube - you'll really have to buy the DVD. This short extract includes parts of Clive's flute solo - immediately after that begins the "naughty" part which I can't show here - sorry!

Slade in Flame "The Undertakers"

Clip from SLADE's "Flame" movie, this is probably where spinal tap got the idea from, or at least the same story, which obviously came from Screamin' Lord Sutch's stage act.

Here's Noddy (Stoker) singing with rival band The Undertakers doing a Screaming Lord Such thing..."Flame" allthough made in the early 70's was really a document of the realities of mid 60's band life. Check out their manager who is soooo Don Arden.

Small Fakers Tribute Band [Carnaby Street Plaque Unveiling: Don Arden ACCEPTS with Speech]

8th sept from carnaby street at unveiling of a plaque to Don Arden and the Small Faces

Alan Price - O Lucky Man! [eponymous film]

Cut from the start of the classic film of the same name

Liza with a Z - Bye Bye Blackbird

Ol' Dirty Bastard - Shimmy Shimmy Ya / Brooklyn Zoo [Live **RARE**]

RIP Ol'Dirty you're missed everyday....

Ringo Starr - Drowning In The Sea Of Love [1977]

Clip original de la chanson "Drowning In The Sea Of Love", parue en 1977 sur l'album "Ringo The 4th"

George Harrison: This Song [German ZDF TV "Disco '77" - 5th February, 1977]


George Harrison mimes "This Song" on the German ZDF TV music show "Disco '77".
Broadcast: 5th February 1977.

George Harrison and Friends attend White House luncheon with President Gerald Ford's Son [Billy Preston + Ravi Shankar et.al. - 1974]



13th December 1974

George Harrison accepts invitation of
President Gerald Ford's son, Jack,
and attends lunch at
White House

Chatting with President Ford are (from left to right)

Harry Harrison (George's dad)

Billy Preston

George Harrison

Gerald Ford

Jack Ford

Ravi Shankar

Tom Scott


Music:
"Mãya Love"
by
George Harrison

The Who - Relay [1973]

The Who performing "Relay" in 1973

Grateful Dead - Shakedown Street [3/28/81 Essen, Germany]

Shakedown. Great closeups of JG's fingers during solos for you pickers. Weir sounds great. And boogie with Phil!
Cant fit the whole thing into 10mins.

The Spinners: Rubberband Man [Burt Sugarman's Midnight Special 1976]

The Spinners perform "Rubberband Man" on Burt Sugarmans Midnight Special 1976

John Entwistle Shoots Gold Record Trap at his Estate: Success Story [The Kids Are Alright]

SMALL FACES and P.P. Arnold: Tin Soldier (02 March, 1968 (Boutton Rouge Belgium TV)


Rare TV-Performance by The Small Faces and P.P. Arnold broadcast 02.March 1968 Boutton Rouge (Belgium TV)! For all young and old mods who loves these guys...

Pussycat - Mississippi

"Pussycat" was a Dutch country and pop music group driven by the three Kowalczyk sisters: Tonny, Betty and Marianne. Other members of the band were Lou Wille, Tonny's husband, Theo Wetzels, Theo Coumans and John Theunissen. The three girls had been telephone operators in Limburg while John and the two Theos were in a group called Scum. Lou Wille played in a group called "Ricky Rendall and His Centurions" until he married Tonny and created the group "Sweet Reaction" that eventually became 'Pussycat'

Pussycat - Smile [finally, my pussycat post from earlier is answered...phew!]

"Pussycat" was a Dutch country and pop music group driven by the three Kowalczyk sisters: Tonny, Betty and Marianne. Other members of the band were Lou Wille, Tonny's husband, Theo Wetzels, Theo Coumans and John Theunissen. The three girls had been telephone operators in Limburg while John and the two Theos were in a group called Scum. Lou Wille played in a group called "Ricky Rendall and His Centurions" until he married Tonny and created the group "Sweet Reaction" that eventually became 'Pussycat'

Shirley Bassey - Big Spender

Smokie - Living Next Door To Alice

"Living Next Door to Alice" is a song co-written by Nicky Chinn and Mike Chapman. Originally released by the Australian vocal harmony trio New World in 1972, the song charted at # 35 on the Australian chart. The song later became a worldwide hit for the band Smokie.

Smokie version

In November 1976, the English glam rock band Smokie released their version of the song. That song charted at No. 5 on the UK chart and, in March 1977, reached No. 26 on the Billboard Hot 100. It was a Number One hit in The Netherlands....

Smokie are an English glam rock band from Bradford who found success in Europe in the 1970s....

Shirley Bassey - Going Going Gone

Dame Shirley Veronica Bassey DBE (born 8 January 1937, Cardiff, Wales) is a Welsh singer. She performed the theme songs to the James Bond films Goldfinger (1964), Diamonds Are Forever (1971), and Moonraker (1979). She is the only singer to have recorded more than one James Bond theme song. Bassey is an international artist who has accumulated 20 silver discs for sales in Britain, Europe and the Middle East; fifty-plus gold discs for international record sales; and countless greatest-hits collections including one gold and two platinum. Her Top 10 albums include Shirley; Something; Something Else; Never, Never, Never and 2007's Get the Party Started.

Ennio Morricone - Cinema Paradiso [SOUNDTRACK PERFORMED LIVE]

Ennio Morricone, Grand Official of OMRI (born November 10, 1928), is an acclaimed Italian Academy Award-winning composer. He has composed and arranged scores for more than 500 film and television productions. Morricone wrote the characteristic soundtracks of Sergio Leone's spaghetti westerns A Fistful of Dollars (1964), For a Few Dollars More (1965), The Good, the Bad and the Ugly (1966), Once Upon a Time in the West (1968), The Great Silence, and My Name Is Nobody (1973). His more recent compositions include the scores for The Thing (1982), Once Upon A Time In America (1984), The Mission (1986), The Untouchables (1987), Cinema Paradiso (1988), Lolita (1997),The Legend of 1900 (1998), Malèna (2000), Mission to Mars (2000) and Fateless (2005). Ennio Morricone has won five Anthony Asquith Awards for Film Music by BAFTA in 19791992. He has been nominated for five Academy Awards for Best Music, Original Score in 19792001, winning none of them. Morricone received the Honorary Academy Award in 2007 "for his magnificent and multifaceted contributions to the art of film music". He was the second composer to receive this award after its introduction....

Dire Straits [Documentário: 24 Heures Canal + Francia]

AL STEWART-SONG ON THE RADIO (live)

THE PRETTY THINGS: ROSALYN

THE SMALL FACES: HERE COMES THE NICE [BEST AMPHETAMINE SONG]

Ronnie Lane R.I.P. [CLIPS: SMALL FACES + PETE TOWNSHEND + MEHER BABA + WIVES MOURN Ronnie Lane's Passing]


An excerpt of a TV special from England on the great Ronnie Lane.
Thanks to Eel Pie, Meher Baba film Archive MEFA and Pete Townshend

Don Arden's Hello Hollywood: World's Largest Stage Show



In 1978, the largest show ever produced on-stage came to Reno and the world. Don Arden's Hello Hollywood, Hello featured a landing 737 jet, a massive earthquake, three-story waterfall, levitating space dome complete with aliens and an eerily beautiful Space Queen, not to mention a cast of 150 singers and dancers on a massive 1 acre sized stage! Hello Hollywood, Hello ran for nearly 13 years. It was seen by more than six million people. During its run, more than 600 different entertainers appeared in the show and featured such celebrity headliners as Carol Channing, Susanne Summers, Carol Lawrence and many more! Over seven million dollars was spent on the scenery and the 1,273 costumes. The producer, Don Arden, was considered the king of all show spectaculars. The dancers were hand-picked by Miss Bluebell herself Margaret Kelly - the grand dame of showgirls who first met Don Arden at the Lido in Paris.
The amazing sets were constructed off location, primarily in Las Vegas and Los Angeles. They were then re-assembled in Reno. It was a large operation with carpenters and assistants hired for weeks of assembly work.The San Francisco earthquake struck the grand stage nightly. The skyline was created out of boards and hinges, and to the accompaniment of fireworks, smoke and plenty of screams from the cast, the skyline trembled and fell — simulating the earthquake of 1906.
Also figuring prominently in the show was a Donn Arden staple, the grand staircase! There singers descended night after night, crooning love songs to the elaborately coifed showgirls.

ANDREW LOOG OLDHMAM + DON ARDEN + SMALL FACES: (Tell Me) Have You Ever Seen Me [IN STUDIO INTERVIEW] + Sharon Osbourne


Andrew Loog Oldham and Don Arden [interviewed]
Small Faces [IBC studio, recording]
(Tell Me) Have You Ever Seen Me



24 July 2007

Sharon Osbourne is today mourning the death of her father, known throughout the music world as 'The Al Capone of Pop'.

Don Arden, a pop manager known for his notoriously tough reputation that turned him into one of the most successful managers of his generation, died on Saturday at the age of 81.


Sharon Osbourne and father

Sharon Osbourne and her father Don Arden

He has been familiar to most modern day audiences as the father of TV star Sharon.

However, he is also known for building the careers of 1960s and 70s rock bands such as the Small Faces, Electric Light Orchestra and Black Sabbath - who were led by Sharon's husband Ozzy Osbourne.

Don Arden

Rock band manager Don Arden was known as the Al Capone of Pop

His reputation as one of the toughest men in the business put to shame most of the hell-raising antics of the acts that he managed.

Most famously he was the man who terrorised fellow manger Robert Stigwood by dangling him out of a fourth floor window for daring to steal one of his acts.

The incident soon became part of showbusiness legend, with Arden even speculating that it would be immortalised of his gravestone.

He clearly enjoyed playing up to his legend as a tough operator, even being known to stub his lighted cigar into the forehead of another rival, Clifford Davis.

Arden appeared to be proud of his unorthodox tactics, declaring happily on one occasion that "the people I scare are going to have to look over their shoulders for the rest of their lives".

However, he never enjoyed quite the same level of respect with his daughter Sharon. He filed a $1million law suit against her after she tried to break the recording contract of her husband Ozzy Osbourne, whom Arden continued to manage after Black Sabbath.

The pair only spoke for the first time in 20 years when they were reunited in 2001, when Arden enjoyed a walk-on role in Sharon's reality TV show, The Osbournes.

Arden, born Harry Levy in Cheetham Hill, Manchester, in 1926 was the son of a raincoat maker. His father, Lazarus was said to have wanted his son to join him in the profession.

However, Arden had always targeted a career in showbusiness as he grew up, and turned to management in the mid 1950s after failing to succeed as a comedian.

Before his death he moved between his homes in Beverly Hills and Surrey.

His wife predeceased him and he is survived by a son in addition to his daughter Sharon.

Harry "The Hipster" Gibson [SOUNDIE]

A cool little soundie with Harry "The Hipster" Gibson and some Lindy Hop'n hep cats in zoot suits!