It's been pointed out that my earlier post about Tom Jones gave him a bit of an easy ride, since his brilliant autobiography manages to have no mention at all of sex with hundreds of groupies and paints a picture of a lifelong happy marriage based on true love.Which seems slightly odd.
Whatever the truth is, Jones looks unlikely to supply it now. I apologise for my naivety.
Monday, 14 November 2016
Saturday, 12 November 2016
That's The Way To Say Goodbye
Russ Payne and Unison Bends shared the bill with Leonard Cohen at the weekend – courtesy of DJ Paul Mansell and Marlow FM radio. Paul – who has a John-Peelish quality about him – invited us to play a 'live' set from our new album 'Liquor and Iron' on his eclectic Magic Bus show.
But with Cohen having just departed, it was inevitable that Paul would lace the programme with some of his greatest songs So we kind of alternated.
When Paul took some time to enlarge on the genesis of the Cohen classic 'Suzanne', I was inevitably reminded of my first year at university in London; I lived in a hall of residence with cardboard-thin walls and a neighbour who had just one album, 'The Songs Of Leonard Cohen', which he played through the night. I more or less knew 'Suzanne' off by heart.
On the odd occasions when I saw my Cohen-obsessed fellow student, he looked wan and miserable. Perhaps no great surprise there. Cohen at that time had a reputation for being relentlessly doomy, but he went on to show he was at his best when combining darkness with light, and gloom with a wicked humour. At that, he proved to be the master.
Wednesday, 9 November 2016
Jones The Storyteller
If you think of Tom Jones, you probably think of him as a singer. Having just read his autobiography, 'Over The Top And Back', I now think of him as a great storyteller.
It doesn't read like a ghostwritten account but like the man himself recounting his remarkable life in a completely authentic voice.
He also shows incredible self-awareness, detailing his faults, failures and mistakes as well as his often unbelievable turns of good fortune.
It's also worth mentioning that he seems to have enormous respect for drummers (appreciating how they can make or break the sound of a band) and for songwriters.
As Bill Haley once said, Jones "out-Elvised Elvis". And he also lived to tell the tale – brilliantly.
Monday, 7 November 2016
Things Have Not Changed
As Beyonce and Bruce skip to the side of Clinton, and Ted Nugent grabs his crotch for Trump, it's refreshing that there is no likelihood of Bob "I've lived through a lot of presidents" Dylan getting involved with any of them.
It's best put by Andrew Kirell in his look at Dylan's refusal to be goaded into taking sides in a Rolling Stone interview that spent an inordinate amount of time asking him about Barack Obama.
Kirell writes: "His reluctance to play the game should serve as inspiration for those of us who feel disillusioned with a two-party system that has become, at its core, a competition amongst used car salesmen.
"Platitudes are exchanged, harsh words are spewed, the promise of 'reform' is parroted over and over again, but nothing ever really changes. And if it does, it’s not because some politician in a big office made it so. Dylan understands that."
It's best put by Andrew Kirell in his look at Dylan's refusal to be goaded into taking sides in a Rolling Stone interview that spent an inordinate amount of time asking him about Barack Obama.
Kirell writes: "His reluctance to play the game should serve as inspiration for those of us who feel disillusioned with a two-party system that has become, at its core, a competition amongst used car salesmen.
"Platitudes are exchanged, harsh words are spewed, the promise of 'reform' is parroted over and over again, but nothing ever really changes. And if it does, it’s not because some politician in a big office made it so. Dylan understands that."
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