Monday, 20 November 2017

...the Young brothers single-handedly shaped the sound of a continent...see the sound continue so faithfully through Airbourne...

Is 2017 the year that just keeps taking? I had a very mixed weekend, all Aussie related.

Saturday was a tough one, I was in the pub watching England vs Australia in the Rugby when I had a message from my wife that Malcolm Young had died. Now I have been a huge fan of AC/DC over the years, I have every album, most on vinyl, including the Aussie imports that have different covers and were released under "Albert" rather than "Atlantic". I wasn't such a big fan of their later output but AC/DC and Thin Lizzy were the first rock bands that I truly loved and they both hold a very special place in my heart.
"Powerage" was the first AC/DC album that I really liked. I first heard it in the very early '80's and still think it may be their finest moment. It is a rock hard and uncompromising album, darker than the earlier albums and what was to follow. It has monsters like "Riff Raff", "Gimme a Bullet", "Sin City", "Kicked in the Teeth", "What's Next to the Moon", "Gone Shootin" and my all time favourite AC/DC song, "Down Payment Blues". People may argue that "Let There be Rock" or "Highway to Hell" or "Back in Black" are better albums but this monolithic slab of rock hard greatness, is my choice and it showcases the relaxed, unflinching backline that kept the band together, the unholy trinity of Phil Rudd, Cliff Williams and the great Malcolm Young.
Malcolm died on Saturday and whilst he had been ill, his death, so shortly after his older brother George, is a shock. He was the lynch pin for AC/DC, the leader, the coolness, the talisman. It was his inconspicuousness that set him apart, he did what he did, he wasn't the frontman, he wasn't the lead guitarist but this was his band, his songs and his life's work. I don't mean to detract from Angus, it was his show and he co-wrote the songs with his brother and I can't imagine what he must be going through but Malcolm was the unsung hero.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=l482T0yNkeo

On the chorus, watch as Malcolm and Cliff step up to the mic and then step back, giving centre stage to Angus and Bon but they looked so cool doing it and you know that without them, this all falls apart, they are the rock upon which the music stands, the firmest of foundations and that is why AC/DC are such an enduring and great rock and roll band, they built the songs on the strongest of foundations, the rhythm guitar of Malcolm Young. He was superb and I was amazed that they managed to continue after he left band, due to ill health. It always seemed inconceivable that the band could continue without Malcolm or Angus.

So, onto Sunday and I went to see Airbourne play in Oxford, a birthday present from a friend. Airbourne being an Aussie band and knowing that Joel O' Keeffe is a huge AC/DC fan, I wondered what the tribute would be. We had a double header, a tribute to Lemmy and Malcolm,  nice touch but then they interspersed some AC/DC songs in one of their own, as a tribute to Malcolm as well and that was a bit special.
Airbourne are the natural successor to AC/DC, they a hard rock comic book writ large and it would be plagiarism were it not for the fact that they are just so good. They have lifted moves, style, energy and so much that made AC/DC great and made it their own, and somehow it all feels 100% natural, as if we are looking at the heirs to the throne, new rock royalty, no airs and graces.



They make it look so easy but you can bet that a lot of work has gone into their show. It is energetic to a degree that you won't see a live band work this hard, ever. The songs are stompers, you want to stamp your feet and bang your head, you want to scream the chorus back at them and the backline is identical to AC/DC, no fuss, leaving the centre stage to Joel.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KjKaYp-J9_4
Not from last night but it does give an idea on what they are about.

As I have said before, this band would've changed my life if I was 14 years old but then AC/DC beat them to it. It was a hellishly hot gig, a sold out show on a Sunday night, people packed like sardines, a mix of old and young but every face was ready to be assaulted. Rock music is so primeval, it is the beat of the heart and once you see that, you can't unsee it, it stays with you and it will become your life, it will be filled with solitary moments, of being the only one but it will also have moments where you are in a room with a few hundred like minded people and the common love means you are in a a room full of friends, you don't get that anywhere else, except, maybe with family...rockers bond, it is what we do. My youngest daughter has online friends with people she met at various gigs and and they meet at the next one. Rock was always about family and looking out for each other, it does sometimes get forgotten in the machismo of certain moments but there are arseholes in all walks of life but last night was one of the few where it was a hall that was chatty and purely there to have a good time and the band responded, they worked hard and got the best from us as we got the best from them and today I wake up with a smile on my face.

Malcolm Young is a big loss for Rock but Airbourne will make sure that the legacy of AC/DC lives on because AC/DC became Australia's greatest sons of rock, the first to break the mould and make something uniquely Australian that we know where the sound comes from at even a brief listen. From AC/DC to Rose Tattoo, the Angels, Airbourne, Screaming Jets, the Cassanovas, Rollerball and many others, AC/DC were the first and greatest but their sound lives on, the Young brothers single-handedly shaped the sound of a continent in the way that no other band has ever done before and to see the sound continue so faithfully through Airbourne, energy and honesty intact, is truly incredible.

Thursday, 9 November 2017

...feeling fragile and mortal...

The last two years have left me feeling extremely fragile and mortal. I know that I won't live forever but this is the first time that I have felt an ending of things. A pessimistic way of looking at this would be to calculate how many more 8th of November's I have left, another 20? More? Less? That's 20 more Summers, Christmas', Birthdays etc. That's a number you can count down from. I am not a pessimist but I am feeling that way at the moment. I put it down to the number of deaths in rock and not the approach and overtaking of my 50th year a week back.

I took the week of my birthday off and unfortunately had a cold and I hadn't mentioned that I injured my knee a few months ago and have not been able to run and have struggled to walk on some days but I decided that on my birthday, in the morning I would go for a walk for a few hours. It was a beautiful sunny morning and so I went to Stubbings Wood near Tring. I went there on my last birthday and it was a glorious misty morning then so to see it in the late Autumn in sunlight would be a good contrast. My plan was to walk for a couple of hours and then get an early lunch at a cafe in Tring...it didn't work out that way. Here is the account in WhatsApp messages to my wife and daughters.

My Wife:




My eldest daughter:





My youngest daughter:


I eventually made it back to my car at 1.21pm, 2hr and 21 minutes after my planned finish. My phone ran out at around 12.30 so I had no maps to guide me and my legs and feet were hurting, luckily I had bought food and drink with me but I can honestly say, of all the times I have been lost, and they are numerous, this was properly lost. I didn't get my special lunch and time was so tight once I got home, that I didn't have any time to play my new guitar...


That is a Godin Acousticaster, as thin as an electric but with a resonant tone that means it can be played unplugged, as an acoustic but it has a great neck, is cut away, strings bend easily so it is effectively an acoustic electric as well as a semi acoustic. A dream guitar and I am relearning "Reelin' in the Years" as I've not played that in more than 10 years.

Anyway, still feeling fragile and mortal but I am now over 50 and that is an achievement, even if it is luck more than any form of skill! I am seeing the Doctor on Friday morning to try and get my knee sorted (that's how bad it is!) and Christmas is looming large but I am excited about it. I have 2 more gigs lined up before the end of the year, Airbourne and Ginger's birthday bash on 16th Dec with my youngest daughter, my wife and some close friends and I think my wife is seeing Adam Ant on 21st Dec, probably with our youngest.

In so many ways this has been a difficult year, I've struggled with it and seen the death of so many of my heroes but I am ending this year feeling that it hasn't been a bad year, there are those things that hurt, but doesn't every year have those? 2012, a great year but Malachi died in 2012, but his death didn't mean that the other 365 days (leap year) were filled with sorrow. Life goes on and you do often wonder how, but we are resilient beings, we were born to survive and thrive under all conditions. We live in a World of forever starvation, poverty and plague and yet still manage to live out our lives to a reasonable age and relative happiness (in First World Countries). I feel mortal and know that the bulk of my life is behind me, the glory days of youth and the days of being responsible for my children full time, of being in the prime of life. My joints are failing, my eyesight isn't great and years of musical abuse has put paid to my hearing but all those gigs, all those years of a World in constant motion, all the technology that has come into being in my lifetime, all the people I have met and the places I have seen, life is a wonderful thing and I do tend to forget that from time to time. Here's to the next x amount of years and I intend to fully enjoy them!


Monday, 6 November 2017

Tom Petty, Walter Becker and Dave Hlubeck...

It's a difficult time really, so many of the people that I idolised have died and it cuts everytime. I was a huge Tom Petty fan back in the late '80's but wasn't so keen on his solo output although I did buy everything up to "The Great Wide Open" (including the Travelling Wilbury's albums). My first CD was his eponymous debut CD with the over played but never over listened "American Girl" on. I did see him live once and the first half of the show was dedicated to the newer fans and was his first 2 albums without the Heartbreakers but the second half was for the diehards, far more fun, far more rebellious and far more comfortable for me, a slice of Southern pie done in the way that only Tom Petty and the Heartbreakers could do it. They were different to the other Southern bands, overlooked but easily as good. I did have a resurgence a few months back, re-appreciating how good a band they were, "Dogs on the Run", "Rebels", Jammin Me", "Let Me Up (I've had enough)" and so many other great songs and those songs are from just 2 of his mid 80's albums.
His death was a real shock as he still seemed so young and vital. He always appeared to be so laid back but there was a something of the rebel hidden in his music, something of the South that ran through everything he did, not the racist, bigoted side, more the romantic outlaw side, a western made of music. As with all the musicians I am saying goodbye to, the greatest tribute is their own work and words, here is Tom's tribute to Tom Petty:

American Girl
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=b2nbHpF7-qk

Rebels:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6RN7lv9Xn2I

Baby's a Rock n Roller:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DcF1zru_dGk

This brings me on to the 2 deaths that were overshadowed by the great Tom Petty, the first is Walter Becker and I shudder to think how many people will ask "Who?" When I started playing guitar, one of the first songs that I asked to learn, was "Reelin' in the Years" by Steely Dan and Walter Becker was one of the founding members of Steely Dan, an interesting, original and sometimes difficult band to listen to, they challenged the boundaries of rock and in the process wrote a whole lot of songs that you will know, "Rikki don't lose that number" and "Do it again" to name a couple.

Reelin in the Years:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=N-2QzJzqtK0

Isn't it just a guitar heroes song?

Lastly Dave Hlubeck of Molly Hatchet died. Molly Hatchet were a full on Southern boogie band, I have 4 or 5 of their albums, nothing recent but they were just so Southern, Southern like Lynyrd Skynyrd but more boogie, they paid homage to the Allman Brothers with a superb cover of "Dreams I'll never see" but it was with their own boogie magic that they created the wizardry:

Flirtin with Disaster:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ojXYCZMAwVc

Boogie No More:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-E6XVHzpAQM

I am struggling with the last 2 years, music is such a large part of my life, to see the soundtrack to my life play out with so many of the people that helped with those memories falling by the wayside, people that wrote a song for me that encapsulated a moment in time and all I have to do is listen to it to remember a moment that has long passed, the people, the colours, the sounds, the places, distant pasts and now they are tinged with more sadness. The songs are my memory and it is probably the best epitaph to anyone, that their life in music has a very real meaning to someone and I, in turn, have passed that on to my children, their memories will be tied in music too, Tom Petty, Steely Dan and Molly Hatchet are already tied in the memories of my youngest daughter.