The Greentown Jazz Band

And there it was:

greentown jazz band
Greentown Jazz Band – 1st album

The finest music experiences I’ve ever had, and I’ve had hundreds of thousands of them, were listening to the Greentown Jazz Band.  Finding their first album on vinyl – in the most obscure, unlikely location, a novelties shop in Ashland, OR – was like winning the billion dollar powerball for me. Because it was inexplicable.

“90% of everything is crap,” but the Greentown Jazz Band are not just in the 10%, they are in the 1% of Dixieland Jazz Bands.  Featuring Borut Bučar – the best clarinet player I’ve ever heard!

No one knows or talks about this band, they are my secret, and a major part of my life. I once made great effort to go to a show they were doing in Sacramento, at Cal Expo, just so I could purchase their 1st album on CD from the merch table.  My cassette was wearing out, and I didn’t have turntables back then.  I finally get to the table, breathless (I’m not kidding), and the guy tells me they sold the last one 15 minutes ago. Fuuuuuck.

My first time seeing the band was when I was 14 or 15, so it would have been 1982-83? It was at an Italian restaurant in Old Sacramento. I was typically angsty back then and not in a good mood that day. I recall having a bad headache as we got there and had dinner. Because we were there early, we got a great table in front of the band, and when dinner was over, they started to play.

Years later, when I fooled around with acid, e, and the like. I had many powerful and blissfully positive experiences. But nothing since then has matched what I felt that night, listening to this amazing music. My headache lifted, mood brightened and energy heightened, and all due to a couple woodwind instruments. A clarinet and sax. Oh how they wailed, loud and clear and beautiful, twisting and stretching, taking us up and then down and then higher.

And when we thought we had just heard the most amazing song ever (and by we I mean the entire crowded restaurant. It had filled up and the applause was deafening), they started up a new one. I don’t even know how to describe it ore.

I made sure to see them next time they came to the Sacramento Jazz Festival. They we on an outdoor stage in the early evening, and while not as intense an experience as the restaurant, it was still the best music I heard the entire festival. I went backstage after the show and shook Borut Bucar’s hand, telling him how impressed I was, and he quickly smiled and thanked me and moved on.

That was the last time I saw the Greentown Jazz Band or Bucar again. I had a cassette of their first and second albums. The 2nd album always seemed wrong to me, in some way I can’t define. I lost it long ago and never digitized it. The 1st album, on the other hand, is a priceless possession, one of the few cassettes I have kept. It was one of the first things I digitized and turned into CD and mp3, when that technology became available. But I never did have them on vinyl.

Fast forward many years, and I’m doing some crate digging while on vacation.  Ashland has a really good record store, owned by a guy who has done it a long time and knows the biz well.  I spent a lot of time there and thought I was done shopping for the day, but Sandy told me there were used records at a store down the street.  So I walk over, and it’s a novelties place with t-shirts everywhere and tons of crippy-crap, but there were about ten crates of cheap used, just like Sandy said.

I hate crates on the bottoms of shelves, where I have to squat to go through them.  My back and legs get tired quickly.  I found a few things, but not much.  I almost passed on going through the last few crates. Sandy was ready to go.

But I love crate digging, and the pleasure overrides the pain and nagging. So I dug through them, flip, flip, flip. flip, flip, flip, flip, flip, flip, flip, flip…

And there it was… ask Sandy sometime how I reacted, she’ll laugh and tell you, and I’ll be embarrassed.

Passion – The Flirts

 

passion the flirts
Thrifty is an Aries too

This score reminded me of the line by Darryl of Storage Wars, “You never know when you’re going to find something big…”, referring to a excellent treasure in the most unlikely of sources.  I found this treasure at the tail end of digging at two different stores. I was tired, and the second store had a really long aisle packed with records, too many for me to ever go through at one time.  I almost missed the shopping cart at the end of the aisle.  This was likely the new additions.

A bunch of 80s-90s movie soundtracks in really good condition, and I should have bought Backdraft, because it contains the Theme to Iron Chef.  Shoulda, coulda, woulda.  But screw Backdraft, one of the very last flips was this.  Passion by the Flirts!  And it was in mint condition!

Of great interest to the highly fanatical group known as Pet Shop Boys collectors, this single was produced by Bobby “O” Orlando, who not only influenced the boys with this track – one of Neil Tennant and Chris Lowe’s favorites – but went on to produce their first singles before they replaced him with Stephen Hague (who really kicked it up a notch, sorry Bobby).  Few have heard the original version of West End Girls produced by Bobby “O”, and finding that in a thrift store would be a “shit your pants” moment.

discogs.com – Passion Flirts

The Johnny Mann Singers

 

johnny-mann-singers-6-covers
Man, oh Mann.

Man, I love the Johnny Mann Singers.  Ba-dum-cha!  The track “Lemon Tree” is one of the catchiest, craziest pieces of music I have ever heard.  I am so in awe of this track I am going to teach myself how to edit videos in iMovie so I can upload “Lemon Tree” to youtube for you to enjoy.  I’ve been humming, singing and thinking this song for weeks now.  In bed, in the shower, the office, etc.  You know.

You know that thing they did in the 60s, where acapella groups would sing a hip, slick, smooth, boo-boo-boo-ba-ba-ba-da… bah-bah-bah-boo-boo-ba-ba-de-dah!  You would hear it in movies like Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid.  That’s the sound of the Johnny Mann Singers.

I’m a fan of The Association, and my favorite track by them, “Never My Love” sounds to me like the Johnny Mann singers could be doing the backup vocals. I know I’m probably wrong, but who knows, it would be possible given the music studio structure back then. In a few days I get in the mail a vinyl of the Mann Singers album with their version of “Never My Love”, and I can’t wait to compare.  (Update: the Johnny Mann version is highly disappointing.  It sounds like a 45rpm record played at 33, really sluggish tempo.  It could be them though, bears further research).

discogs.com – Johnny Mann Singers

Love is Blue

love-is-blue-6-covers
Claudine you slay them all

I’ve loved this track my entire life.  I would probably put it in my top 5 favorite songs.  So it was a “now it all makes sense” moment when I learned recently that “Love is Blue” was #1 on the charts for five weeks leading up to my entering the world March 1968.  So I’ve loved this track for my entire life plus, and buy every record I find with it. There are more than you might think!

Good luck finding the first disc below (top left) in a thrift store.  But I’ve seen the Paul Muriat #1 version with equally lovely cheesecake cover a few times.  The 101 Strings was a great find for me, and Johnny Mann had one of his best tracks with it.  Claudine Longet’s version is nicely done, but not my favorite, which would be the 101 Strings.  An “eyes bug out” moment and a three category match: 101 Strings, Love is Blue and Cheesecake.

I’ve picked up all of these for $3 or less each, except for the first one, which I am hoping to find someday!

discogs.com – Love is Blue

Wikipedia – Love is Blue

The Resurgence of Vinyl – part 1

Last year 2015, a turntable was Amazon’s best selling audio product during the Xmas season.  No, it was not this one:

turntables1-500px

But one of these:

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Looks good to me.

But I have mixed feelings about vinyl’s slowly growing popularity.  I’ve enjoyed the dirt cheap pricings of valued selections, and now all of a sudden I see people asking $900 for a Roger Waters solo album.  If St Vinnies ever raises prices to $3 or more for vinyl, I’ll shit my pants.

–to be continued

Claudine Longet

Married to Andy Williams, backed by top LA producers and session musicians, the albums of Claudine Longet are a delight.  They are easily found alongside her hubby’s albums in thrift stores everywhere.

Claudine Longet 4 Covers

It looks as though love and life in the fast lane took it’s toll on Claudine.  The cover to We’ve Only Just Begun was taken soon after her separation (and eventual divorce) from Andy Williams, and near the end of her career.  A fascinating but sad story: she was found guilty in 1976 of negligent homicide of her boyfriend, but sentenced to only 30 days in jail, and has spent the rest of her years in relative solitude.

Sandy was the first to play her music via itunes, and I was dismissive for many years. But that was mainly because she only played the “Happy Talk” mp3 that was too happy even for me.  But a glorious $0.10 sale at Goodwill allowed me to pick up a couple of her early albums (Claudine, The Look of Love), and I was surprised to hear a few excellent tracks in the mix.

Claudine’s records fall into another collector category: they feature the Wrecking Crew.  Being married to Andy Williams gave Claudine access to the best of everything in terms of music production.  Tracks like “Sunrise Sunset”, “Man in a Raincoat”, “How Insensitive” and my favorite version of “Both Sides Now” are glorious works of music.  But each album has it’s fair share of stinkers and hits.

She is no longer a household name, though I’m guessing she would have kept a bit more in the public eye if it were not for her legal problems. We’ve all seen her on tv in the Peter Sellers movie The Party, and her album cover for Colours is iconic.  Yes, I have the hots for Claudine Longet.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Claudine_Longet

http://www.discogs.com/artist/Claudine-Longet

 

$0.10 for 101 Strings – part 1

101strings 1st album
These guys rocked.

I don’t know why we walked into the Goodwill store in the summer of 2014, but I remember the sale they had going on.  All used vinyl was $0.10 each.  Ten for a dollar! Nom! Nom! we went to town scarfing up the rotting old relics of bygone musical generations.  It didn’t matter if we knew the records or not, or what condition they were in – if anything seemed even remotely desirable or interesting, we added it to the stack.  This is how a new obsession began.

–to be continued…