Tuesday, November 19, 2013

"Sales" update

Hey, I see that as of 19 November, 50 of You Out There have grabbed free copies of my 20-page detailed playlist of mostly-overlooked 1979-1981 music, RECORD STORE DAZE. And that's flattering.
But only three of you have grabbed copies of the 190-page record-store memoir that goes with it, GUARANTEED GREAT MUSIC! (And I know who all three of you are!)
Thanx for snapping up the playlist. Really. I was happy to put it out there for free. But I'm also hoping the playlist intrigues you enough to buy GGM, which I think is the more important part. And it's easily worth $2.99.
I'll be working with Amazon/Kindle to offer some Christmas freebie deals on GGM for those of You Out There who are as broke as I am. But I'm really hoping you can't wait that long.
Remember that every $3 you spend on these works of art goes to support a really good cause -- my fast-approaching Retirement.
My thanks in advance....
Coming up soon -- a review of Split Enz's excellent overlooked 1981 album WAIATA....

Friday, November 15, 2013

That's NOT on my playlist!

Hey Out There, music fans! I see that so far (as of 17 November) 39 of you have scooped-up copies of my 20-page 1979-81 "great forgotten music" playlist RECORD STORE DAZE since it's available for FREE right now at Amazon.com's Kindle Store. And that's flattering.
But only 3(?) folks have bought the actual BOOK, my record-store memoir from Back In The Day, GUARANTEED GREAT MUSIC!, which is still available for a measly $2.99. And I happen to think it's worth a lot more. But maybe I'll have a Christmas Deal coming up for those of you Out There who are as broke as I am....
Stay tuned....

Meanwhile, now that it's too late to change -- don't get me started about the hoops me and the good folks at Amazon/Kindle have jumped through together to make these books happen -- I've had some time to think about some items that AREN'T on that long, detailed playlist, but should be. There's a few of them that just sort of slipped past me. Most of them you can live your life without, but a few are definitely worth hearing -- and are identified below with a *. This update is also available to you free, right here (whatta guy!).
Split Enz -- TRUE COLORS: *Poor Boy, *I Hope I Never, I Got You.
20/20 -- LOOK OUT!: *A Girl Like You, *American Dream.
Congress of Wonders -- *REVOLTING.
Hawks -- (FIRST ALBUM). Their "Let Me In" is a gorgeous chimey-guitar classic that IS included in my playlist....
Robert Fripp, etc. -- THE LEAGUE OF GENTLEMEN.
Gary Numan and Tubeway Army -- REPLICAS. The English #1 "Are Friends Electric?" that leads this album off is included in the playlist....
Michael Nesmith -- INFINITE RIDER ON THE BIG DOGMA. Can't remember a thing about it except for that silly song about "Sunset Sam." And I think all the songs have one-word titles....
New England -- WALKING WILD, EXPLORER SUITE. The arty title song of EXPLORER SUITE is included on the playlist, but I get by with the old 45-rpm single just fine....
Rainbow -- DIFFICULT TO CURE.
Russ Ballard -- BARNET DOGS.
Snail -- FLOW.
The last half of these are albums we played only a couple times in the store, and some of them I can barely remember. However....
Split Enz's TRUE COLORS has a couple real classics on it, along with the almost-hit "I Got You." "Poor Boy" is a terrific, spacey, funny love song about the best kind of Close Encounter -- and along with the great vocals and silly lyrics it has some great spacey, eerie, sci-fi sound effects. It's wonderful, and you'll be singing along with the one-line choruses before the song's over. "I Hope I Never" is a melodramatic lump-in-the-throat masterpiece, and one of the few slow ballads the Enz ever did. I'll have a review of the Enz's great overlooked 1981 album WAIATA coming up soon....
20/20's "A Girl Like You" is a moody, bouncy piece of "power pop" with great group vocals, and "American Dream" is more of the same high quality, only artier and more abstract.
If you love the Firesign Theater, you'll at least like Congress of Wonders. They're really silly, and REVOLTING features a hilarious STAR TREK satire, among other things words can hardly describe....
Rockin' Bobby Fripp's LEAGUE OF GENTLEMEN has some nice angular guitar sounds, as you might expect -- this time presented in a sort-of New Wave/dance-rock format. But it also includes Fripp's usual fripperies and subcontextual messages. I bought it at the time -- Fripp was my God back then -- but I don't think I played it more than twice. Course I'm more open-minded now....
I think that's about it for the additions, for now. These will all be included in an eventual updated version of the playlist -- and I'll be sure to get them in there if this all becomes a "real" book you can put on your bookshelf -- which is what I've been working toward all along.
I guess this is what happens when you try to write a book -- after a certain point it becomes so big you can't SEE the little details too clearly anymore....
I'm a perfectionist. Sorry for the lapses.

Not in The Book:
There's also a few minor details I somehow left out of GUARANTEED GREAT MUSIC! that I've now had 10 days to remember. Maybe I should have sat on the book and let it "cool off" for another month. Here's a few of those minor details that have since come back to me:
* Me and most of the friends I mention hanging-out with in the book were graduates of Meridian High School in Meridian, Idaho, just west of Boise -- all of us graduated between 1976 and 1978. I was a member of the Class of '77, myself....
* The trailer court that it seemed like we ALL ended up living in sooner or later was the Wheel Inn Mobile Manor on Meridian's east side. It's still there. When we all graduated, there were about 2,500 people living in Meridian -- now it's over 35,000....
* At one point in 1982 when there were NO JOBS in Boise, my friend Bob suggested we apply for a government loan and open our own used book and record store. Now I wish that we HAD. Bob was not the best at handling money, and in the depressed economy back then -- not unlike today -- we probably would have gone down the tubes in a matter of months. But it's been a dream of mine ever since....
* Bob once also suggested that we escape the no-jobs no-future of Boise in 1982 and go somewhere "more enlightened" -- Salt Lake City, for instance. Bob, if you're out there, I don't know about the "more enlightened" part, but escape still seems like a pretty good idea....
* Back in my record store days I used to buy music and books before I ever bought food -- or even gas for the car. I'm not sure if I ever actually came out and SAID THAT clearly in the book, though I'm pretty sure the feeling is there. It took me a few years to get into my thick head that you can't EAT music and books....
...There's a few other things that somehow didn't get into the book, but they're gonna need a little more room to explain, so I'll save them for later....

COMING SOON: Reviews of "one-sided classics" by The Records, New England, Spider, Red Rider, Tarney/Spencer Band, and more -- plus reviews of great forgotten albums by Glass Moon, Sky, Group 87, The Headboys, The Jam, The Rollers, Camel, Split Enz, Squeeze, Bruce Cockburn, Sally Oldfield, Judie Tzuke, Charlie Dore, Grace Slick, and many more....
Thanks for reading, and score a copy of GUARANTEED GREAT MUSIC!, would ya?

Wednesday, November 13, 2013

The Shoes: PRESENT TENSE

...But before we get to THAT....
The 20-page playlist/discography that goes along with my record-store e-book memoir GUARANTEED GREAT MUSIC! is now available at Amazon.com's Kindle Store -- it's called RECORD STORE DAZE, and I'm trying to set it up so that if you grab a copy between Nov. 14th and 18th it'll be FREE! The least I can do, since it's just a LONG, detailed list of (mostly) overlooked great music from the late '70s and early '80s....
This is all depending on if I haven't confused the Kindle folks, who have been wonderful to me. Anyway, that's the plan. I'll have more on this soon....

Now then: The Shoes' PRESENT TENSE (Elektra Records, 1979) is one of the great overlooked "power pop" albums of that era, mostly breathy broken-hearted love songs with lots of chiming, jangling guitars.
The Shoes were a quartet from Zion, Illinois -- the three Murphy brothers and a friend -- and almost every one of the dozen songs they do on PRESENT TENSE is a winner.
Course I'm mostly a sucker for the breathy, chimey stuff -- the one that sucked me in was the first single, the should-have-been hit "Too Late," which has great singalong choruses and those jangling guitars that hook in immediately.
Other greats include "In My Arms Again," the dreamy and resigned "Every Girl," the rockin' "Now and Then," the rockin' opener "Tomorrow Night," the laid-back "Listen," and another rocker, the closing "I Don't Wanna Hear It."
Every one of these has hooks that will GRAB ya, great group vocals, lotsa great guitar work .. they all should have been hits.
Even the songs where the hooks don't kick in as fast work pretty well. If you prefer stuff more upbeat, you might get sucked-in by "Somebody Has What I Had" or the spare, basic "I Don't Miss You," or "Hanging Around With You." Even the really dreamy stuff like "Your Very Eyes" works. Just some songs work better than others, to me -- are more immediately catchy.
These guys were even ambitious -- "Three Times" is a four-minute three-part suite, combining the various phases of a love story: "See Me," "Say It," and the wrapper-upper "Listen."
Recorded at The Manor in England and produced by Mike Stone, PRESENT TENSE should have been a big hit. But the sounds were a little out of time for 1979 -- this wasn't a disco record, and it certainly wasn't very heavy. Most of us who worked at The Musicworks bought copies -- especially those of us who were suckers for good pop music. But we couldn't turn the public on to The Shoes. God knows we tried -- we played the album to death in the store....
A couple years later, the fledgling MTV played a couple of Shoes videos -- I remember seeing the video for "Too Late" on the channel -- but by then the album was out-of-print and had already had one run through the cut-out bins. We sold a couple more copies of the album as cutouts, but the album never caught-on like it should have. Too bad -- it was high-quality stuff.
The Shoes had one more album released on Elektra, TONGUE TWISTER, one or two others on small indie labels as the '80s unrolled, and then another album STOLEN WISHES came out around '89 with the group reduced to a trio. Their first album, 1978's BLACK VINYL SHOES, recorded in their garage (apparently) and released on their own Black Vinyl label, is rated a garage classic by some fans.
There's also at least one Shoes best-of on CD out there -- also on the Black Vinyl label.
PRESENT TENSE is a forgotten classic, whether you prefer the dreamy side or the more rockin' stuff.

Tuesday, November 12, 2013

So, how'd it happen?

I never would have thought of writing a record-store memoir if I hadn't read Brian W. Aldiss's THE BRIGHTFOUNT DIARIES, which is all about Aldiss's experiences working in an Oxford, England bookstore in the 1950s.
Even though BRIGHTFOUNT masqueraded as a novel, it was clearly a memoir, as Aldiss explains in his much-later autobiography BURY MY HEART AT W.H. SMITH'S. Aldiss didn't even keep himself out of his lightly-fictionalized bookstore -- the sales clerk who narrates the novel has the last name of Aldiss!
BRIGHTFOUNT was light and pleasant and enjoyable enough, even though nothing Heavily Dramatic happened in it. And as soon as I finished reading it, a big light bulb went on over my head. And I said "Well, hell, I can write a book where Nothing Much Happens, too...." And a couple of days later I got started, just in time for my birthday. Aldiss made writing a book look easy.
The words seemed to pour out. I'd been sitting on all these record-store stories for 35 years and I'd never even THOUGHT of writing a book about them. After a couple of days I had 10,000 words. After three weeks I was 30,000 words into the book -- halfway through. Every time I thought I was running out of memories, more stuff came back to me, as clearly as if it happened last week. I started making notes each day, so I wouldn't forget anything.
At one point I woke up at 2 a.m. and stumbled to the laptop to write down a scene that had popped into my head in my sleep -- it was like I was being ordered to get it written before I forgot it all.
Incidents ended up in the book that I haven't thought about in 35 years. Stuff that I have never written about anywhere before and that I never told anyone ended up in the book. As a memory exercise, it was a pretty interesting experience. I haven't been forced awake in the middle of the night to write something in a LONG time.
Only in one place did I have to reconstruct an incident that I couldn't remember -- that in fact I have NO MEMORY OF, though I have journals from back in the day that should have helped remind me. Everything else in the book comes from experiences I had and that others lived through with me -- and it was as easy to write as any newspaper story or blog post I've ever written. Way easier, in fact.
About halfway through writing GGM, I read Linda Lou's memoir BASTARD HUSBAND: A LOVE STORY, which I recommend -- Linda's book showed me how someone else handled a memoir, and gave me some guidance on structure and pacing and privacy issues. Plus, her book was funny as hell.
(Sometimes I wonder how memoirs ever get written, considering some of the material they grapple with -- Linda's book is about how her marriage fell apart, and despite that, there's a big laugh on almost every page. And Linda later advised me to "Just go for it!" and get GGM published on Kindle -- without her nudging, I'd probably still be hesitating....)
Maybe half a dozen sections of GGM were first written and published in much shorter form on my blog, TAD's Back-Up Plan. I shamelessly recycled those and expanded them and tossed them into the book. And I posted three more short sections of the book at The Back-Up Plan as I pulled it together.
I stopped writing when memories and incidents stopped coming to me. Then I let the book "cool off" for awhile as I slowly read through it twice and proofread it. When nothing new popped into my head after three weeks, then I thought maybe it was OK to publish.
And naturally, since it's now too late to correct, since the publication date I've thought of a couple very minor little details I could have squoze-into the book, and a couple albums we played a few times in the record store that I could have squoze into the playlist/discography. Nothing earth-shaking, though.
And that's it. Now I'm shamelessly publicizing the book every way I know how, getting ahold of old friends who lived through those times with me, and notifying newspaper co-workers of mine over the years who I think might enjoy reading it.
Next time we'll start looking at some of the music from that period that I still love and still listen to.
GGM is dedicated to all the people who lived through those times with me, all of whom are mentioned in the book. And to Leona Fitzgerald-Spencer, who gave me a warm, quiet, comfortable place where I could write it....

Hi there!

Welcome. My record-store memoir GUARANTEED GREAT MUSIC! was published as an e-book on Nov. 11, 2013, and is available now at Amazon.com's Kindle Store for $2.99.
The book is a close-up look at my experiences working for Boise, Idaho's four-store Musicworks record-store chain from 1979 through the end of 1981, and includes some funny record-store stories; portraits of the smart, clever, funny music fanatics I worked with; reminiscences about Good Times from Back In The Day; and stories about the good friends I hung-out with and all the stuff we were all going through back then.
I think it works pretty well as a nostalgia piece. I definitely think it's worth $2.99.

This blog is intended to celebrate the mostly-overlooked music of that time -- so much really good stuff was overlooked back in those days when Disco ruled the radio, New Wave was on the way up, and those of us who worked at The Musicworks couldn't GIVE AWAY copies of the first U2 album.
So I'll be focusing a lot on mostly-overlooked late-'70s/early-'80s musical acts like the Shoes, the Records, New England, the Tarney/Spencer Band, Group 87, Sky, Manfred Mann's Earth Band, 1994:, Holly and the Italians, Red Rider, Judie Tzuke, Sally Oldfield, Bruce Cockburn, Golden Earring, and tons more.
Now that the book has been published, I'll probably be mentioning some things I FORGOT to get into the book, and some music I somehow forgot to squeeze into the accompanying playlist/discography, RECORD STORE DAZE, which is due to be e-published in the next day or so.
Right this second, I'm just hoping people can find the book, that they read and enjoy it, and that my old friends from Back In The Day aren't too offended by seeing some of the things they did 35 years ago put on display like this. Hey, I exposed myself in public, too. In fact, I exposed myself WAY MORE...
Welcome aboard, and I'll be back soon with more....