“Baby I Love You”

I understand from a semi-reliable source, that she, not Yoko was the love of John Lennon’s life. The reason that they never consummated their relationship was because Ronnie insisted that they respect each other’s partners and she did not want sex before marriage.

Keith Richards was smitten with her from 1964 when The Stones supported The Ronettes on tour. “Keith always sends me flowers” said Ronnie. And don’t forget it was Keef who inducted them into the Rock ‘n’ Roll Hall of Fame!

After the horrific marriage that robbed her of her career, Bruce Springsteen and the E Street band were so determined to help Ronnie and get her back on stage, that they played on and produced an album for her. Bruce and Ronnie both guested with Southside Johnny and the Asbury Jukes on a subsequent tour. There is audio available of Ronnie singing on Bruce and The E Street Band’s live cover of “Be My Baby.”

Joey Ramone reportedly wanted to be just like Ronnie, hence The Ramones brilliant cover of “Baby I love You” on which he stays faithful to Ronnie’s phrasing in a heartfelt tribute.

Cher, Margo Price, Joan Jett, Debbie Harry and Susanna Hoffs have all professed their love and admiration. And then, although they never met, Ronnie heard Amy Winehouse namecheck her as the inspiration for her sound and her look. Ronnie’s reaction was that she knew then that her career had been worthwhile.

Damn right Veronica Greenfield was special. We won’t see her like again!

Image ©️Art Zelin as far as I can tell!

“Su-Wei Style”

The best tennis player you’ve never heard of! Probably.

She is one of the highest ranked women’s doubles players in the world and now at age 33, is regularly beating top 10 players in singles matches at major tournaments including Naomi Osaka, Angie Kerber, Karolina Pliskova and Caroline Wozniacki.

So why then have you never heard of her?

Hsieh Su-Wei is from Taiwan and does not fit the image that the Western media often feels most comfortable with. She is not from the production line of hard hitting, baseline, blonde, blue eyed women players that started with Anna Kournikova and ended up at “Princess” Genie Bouchard!

So why is she remarkable? She hasn’t won a major or been anywhere near number one in the world, at least in singles.

Su-Wei has a fiercely individual personality and a playing style that is totally unique. She has the most creative shots that I have ever seen; going for spins, slices, drop shots and lobs that other players have never even dreamed of! But from Su-wei’s racket they frequently appear in those players nightmares, as Maria Sharapova confessed after they faced each other in junior matches.

Out of necessity, Su-Wei uses unpredictable combinations of shots at often unplayable angles to inspire her competitiveness as she lacks the strength, power and weight in her game that other players lean on. She says of herself: “Look at my arms, they’re like noodles!” For reference Su-Wei is a little over 5 feet 6 inches tall and weighs 57 kilograms. Sharapova is 6 feet 2 inches and Serena Williams throws her 70 kilogram physique into her power game.

In contrast, Su-Wei puts two weapons to work: 1. A ferocious, tenacious athleticism and fitness in defence. She will run down shots that others simply give up on and 2. An array of incredible shot making, executing two handed shots on both wings, or switching from right handed to left handed and back again. In victory she often leaves much more highly ranked players frustrated and open mouthed at her audacious creations. Check out her shot galleries on YouTube to see for yourself.

But her creativity doesn’t stop there, it provides the key to her independent and endearing personality.

Hsieh attracted the attention of the British media after a spectacular and unexpected win in the third round at Wimbledon in 2018, where she beat current World No.1 Simona Halep. Inevitably, in the after match interview she was asked whether she had worked out a game plan with her coach. Her reply was priceless:

“Yes of course, but as usual I completely forgot what it was. So I just played Su-Wei style!” The crowd laughed nearly as much as Su-Wei herself.

Her quirky approach also stretches to her nutrition. She does not subscribe to the excessively controlled and ascetic diet advocated by other athletes. On the contrary, wherever she plays she will enthusiastically tuck into large quantities of the local cuisine. The evidence is right there in her Instagram feed. I have a feeling that Hsieh Su-Wei enjoys life!

If you have any interest in tennis (or sport in general) then I strongly recommend you make the effort to watch one of Su-Wei’s matches. You will see tennis shots that I guarantee you haven’t seen before, her athleticism and determination and often her sense of fun. I promise that you will be entertained. And in victory Su-Wei will deploy her 1000 watt mega smile that will light up the stadium and cement this unique athlete’s place in your heart!

I love Roger, Simona Halep, Venus, Delpo and Andy Murray, but Hsieh Su-Wei is right up there in my affections and may even be my favourite tennis player. She proves that professional sport is best consumed when it’s entertaining and fun. She also proves that success does not require you to be like anyone else.

Fuck Self-Help Gurus

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This morning I saw an advertisement for a book which conflated “happiness” with “mental health” and it made me angry! Because surely if “mental health” exists at all, it’s about experiencing the full range of human emotions appropriately as you live a worthwhile life?

If you find you are sad, scared, ashamed or angry this is not a “mental health issue” it’s a normal reaction to life events.

Just this last week I’ve experienced a little pure happiness, deep sadness, some fear and at times I’ve been angry too. This is not my mental illness, I haven’t been depressed for a couple of  weeks. But it did set me thinking about the crap that a large number of social media users spew about happiness and mental health daily.

So….

If you need to know about living with mental illness and “mental health” forget all the quack “think positive and you will become anything you want” charlatans and speak to someone who knows. Like someone with a mental illness maybe?

Or alternatively just keep giving your money to the “self help gurus” who lets face it, have a vested interest in keeping you feeling bad about yourself. Because you can be “ANYTHING” remember?

But instead of wishing to be something/anything else. Take honest personal inventory, take stock of what you are good at and not so good at and accept the hand that you have been dealt. Then focus on your strengths and play to them with all the skills that you can muster and develop.

Live true to your values, accept who and where you are in life! Your actual life, not the bogus fantasy promulgated to make you feel bad.

Contribute all the good stuff that you can create, in as many ways as you can manage. Do good work at your job, take care of your friends and/or family, take care of yourself, find a contribution to something outside of yourself, develop a creative outlet.

Don’t be “anything.” Be you!

In contributing good stuff: work, time, fun, attention, love, creativity, help, humour, charity, kindness, insight, communication, you are giving to something or someone outside of yourself. Some won’t appreciate it and you really don’t need them weighing you down as you try to grow and develop.

Most however, do enjoy someone who takes the time to contribute and those worth anything give back! They give: help, feedback, support, appreciation, time, encouragement, a cup of coffee or even as I found today, a hug or two!

And those things you can absorb into your self esteem. By investing in yourself and your contribution you are bringing unique value to peoples lives. And to those that matter that’s precious and you can quietly say “I did that.”

Or you can buy another “self help” book, give more money to someone who probably has enough and feel bad that you still aren’t a billionaire or a ballet dancer. Or an otter! (Insert other adorable furry creature to taste)

 

“It’s only Rock ‘n Roll”

#NoFilterTour Ricoh Arena Coventry. 2nd June 2018.

The Stones have always aimed for “tight but loose” walking a thin line between triumph and disaster, too often becoming sloppy and indulgent. This, my third Stones gig, saw them tighter and more focused than they’ve ever been live. Only twice did a song seem to be getting away from them.

They brought an energy and attack that would shame many bands half their age, played a set jam full of hits with blues, country and out and out Rock ‘n’ Roll, all with huge swagger!

It’s a crime that Darryl Jones is still only a salaried employee, he is the perfect compliment to Charlie’s precision in keeping the rest somewhere near the time signature.

Charlie, the birthday boy, played brilliantly on a tiny kit and can still detonate a depth charge at 77 years old!

Ronnie Wood played a huge range of eclectic guitars, conjuring blistering solos from each, like his life depends on it. Maybe it does?

Mick has finally decided to actually SING in arenas, rather than the awful bellowing he did for 30 years! He also played more harmonica than at any other Stones show I’ve seen and he’s really rather good at it! He also covered every inch of the huge stage and runways. How is he that fit?

They were supported by excellent backing singers, keyboardists and horns. But singer Sasha Allen in another time would be a solo star.

And then there’s Keef. Sharing in jokes with Charlie, Darryl and Ronnie. And doing his best to ignore Mick.

Breaking all the rules but still capable of playing great blues solos. Beaming often at the joy of playing live and seemingly sharing our disbelief that he is still around.

Simply the greatest rhythm guitar player and coolest man in the world!

If you’ve ever loved The Stones. Go and see them while you still can.

We can be heroes….

At 14 I was an avid reader of Melody Maker, a weekly source of much inspiration and inky fingertips. In 1975 I was constantly confronted with the image accompanying this piece, marking relentless promotion for an album which seemed not to have a title, except for “Daryl Hall and John Oates.” I had no idea who they were?

And who was that blond on the album cover?

It’s worth noting that I was deep into my Heavy Rock phase; my life had recently been changed by the “meisterwerk” that was “Physical Graffiti” and hence I was engulfed a “proto-mancrush” with another blond, vocal pyrotechnician. I was no stranger to these feelings as the “veteran” of unrequited passions for Dave Davies of the Kinks, Marc Bolan and David Bowie to name just three. Forty years later I am still prone, but not ready to totally embrace the dramatic “lifestyle change.”

When I approached “The Silver Album” I must admit my hopes were crushed a little on discovering the immaculately conceived and performed “white soul”, Rhythm and Blues music contained within.

Where the hell were the blazing guitar solos?

Eventually, the subtlety and delicacy of the mellifluous “Sara Smile” seduced my ears, wore me down and my brain finally accepted that there were never going to be any face melting guitars as I explored this (for me) new genre and new act.

And the hits kept on coming. The peerlessly plaintive “She’s Gone”, “Rich Girl”, “Kiss on My List”, “You Make My Dreams”, “Private Eyes”, “Maneater”, “One on One”, “Out of Touch”. Most artists would kill for such a run of amazing records.

I was overwhelmed by the sheer genius of the song writing, the production values and dammit just the sheer joy of great melodies that made you want to dance.

It’s worth noting that by now The Clash and The Ramones had been added to my personal canon of great bands and yet, here I was, a 24-year-old Daryl Hall and John Oates fan!

I can only explain it in these terms: A great single is, and has always been an artform; just as much as a perfectly conceived album. Maybe more so?

But I’ve missed the most important song.

From the start, I couldn’t understand how a white man could possibly have given us a bassline so immaculately funky, from somewhere in his Korg keyboard and his head. It was a perfect slice of disco-soul; the first hit by a white artist to use such heavy programming of electronically synthesised sounds. A lyric so timely and “street” it could conceivably have come from Prince and it was indubitably a killer dance track.

I hated dance music, but I was playing “I Can’t Go For That” endlessly and falling for Daryl Hall. I’m so sorry Barbara!

The production had space and delicacy, every quicksilver flourish had its place and then there were the lush, layered, overdubbed harmonies and that lead vocal! Always compelling, insistent and demanding with a devastating command of pitch, phrasing and effortless passaggio from tenor to falsetto.

Daryl Hall’s credits on this song include Keyboards, Synthesizers, Roland Cr-78 drum machine, lead vocals, backing vocals, co-production and one third of the lyric writing credits with John Oates and Sara Allen. Yes, she of “Sara Smile” fame

Then I saw them on TV. Or rather I watched him.

He played guitar, he played keyboards, he joked with the other musicians and the audience and boy did he sing. There were the hits obviously, but on “You’ve Lost That Loving Feeling” and “Every Time You Go Away” (yes Daryl wrote that as well!) he was breath-taking. Pushing his voice to heights that demonstrated that studio work restricted rather than enhanced your appreciation of his amazing “instrument.” Daryl was tall, blond, had amazing cheek bones and an ability to push his voice to a soulful, counter tenor breaking point that put me in mind of Marvin Gaye. He was that good!

But at the back of my mind, as I sat rapt on my couch I thought: “Daryl you might pay for this later.”

Take the time machine forward 30 years or so to last Saturday night. Pressure. 42 years after seeing that silver album cover I was going to be in the same room as my hero. Pressure. I was taking my best friend to the gig for his birthday present. More pressure. And Daryl Hall is also 42 years older. Too much pressure?

First let me say that Daryl Hall and John Oates were occasionally brilliant, giving shimmering glimpses of the hits and time served performance. They started with songs that made you say: “I didn’t expect this so early” it’s the confidence that comes with THAT back catalogue. And the hits kept coming.

Let’s start with the things that Daryl and John couldn’t help. The O2 is a cavernous space and not easy to turn into a dance club. It was a “seated event” and that always robs some of the joy of live music. Then there is the age of the audience, including me. During the first number we stood up to dance. But after five minutes or so much of the audience seemed glad they had a seat. Reluctantly and feeling increasingly self-conscious, I sat down.

Then the questions started to form: Why was the sound so muddy? The lights and the backdrop were expensively compelling, so how come I didn’t hear a cymbal or a snare drum in nearly 90 minutes? Unusually, the audio quality for support act Chris Isaak was impeccable.

There were too many guitar solos (yes, it’s still me writing) and a saxophone player who has been with them for 32 years and seems to think he is the star. He’s not!

Daryl seemed in turns; distracted, annoyed with his monitors, confused and in addressing the audience his charisma deserted him. Even I was struggling.

The birthday boy wondered aloud: “Is he pissed?” And then there was “I Can’t Go for That.”

In contrast to the spacious, fleet footed elegance of the recorded track, this guaranteed dance floor filler was reduced to a confusing “lounge jazz” mess! Had they decided to experiment with the arrangement on the night? Maybe they couldn’t hear the rhythm section either? Where was the insistent, addictive bassline? And where was Daryl’s voice?

I can’t delay it any longer, let’s reckon with the inevitable conclusion. I would estimate that Daryl has lost 40-50% of his vocal range. Worse than that, he has lost the part where all the magic happened. The part that made your hair stand up. The tenor is still there because he sang almost all the first verses perfectly, but then the cracks started to appear. The falsetto is ragged but still there. It’s the soulful counter-tenor soar into alto that is no more.

The pyrotechnics don’t work any longer. What we were witnessing was a great artist struggling and frustrated that his gift had given up giving! 

It is possible that Daryl Hall was ill, I don’t think he was pissed. But surely, if they don’t want to retire they could employ some killer backing singers? Re-arrange the songs to allow him to sing in a comfortable register? Sack the sound guy?

Or better still, don’t charge £85 for a performance of this standard, lasting only 80 minutes!

Live music is often a transcendent joy but on this occasion for me, there was a lot of sadness and “that loving feeling” was “gone, gone, gone.” Woe is me.

There is no joy in seeing your heroes grow old and crumble, but at least we have the majestic array of killer hits to provide comfort and remind us of better times past.

As I wrangle my sadness and disappointment, I will give the last words to the ever logical birthday boy Tony Moyle:

“At least we’ve checked them off the list!”

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“Gotta Roll Me”

If Keef had accepted a knighthood I probably wouldn’t be writing this.

You know all about the Rolling Stones: their age, the corporate sponsorship, hugely ridiculous tours, meagre and poor quality album output, mannered and shouty “singing” from Jagger etc.

It’s all become more than a little embarrassing!

But in 1972, the band were by turns cool, sinister and dangerous. Having fled from the suffocating attentions of the British establishment and survived Altamont, they were holed up in the now legendary Nellcôte villa in Villefranche-sur-Mer. Mick kept his distance of course, living in Paris with new bride Bianca, a move foreshadowing the greater distance to come.

It is often said that the period from ’69 to ’72 saw the Stones release their finest works. The excellent “Let it Bleed” and “Sticky Fingers” were followed by the sleazy “Exile on Main Street.” A sizeable chunk of “Exile” was recorded in the Nellcôte basement accompanied by The Rolling Stones mobile studio, Gram Parsons, William S. Burroughs and a deadly quantity of heroin.

It’s worth pausing to ask: “How bad must Parsons behaviour have been for Keef to tell him to leave?”

In the midst of the debauchery, Richards was ascendant. Jagger’s dilettantism, ennui and frustration at his writing partner’s habits meant that Keef took charge.  And in the dead of night in the basement den, he and Mick Taylor experimented with rhythm, opiates, genre and weaving dual lead guitars into one coherent groove.

This song emerges like smoke from the needle and the spoon, the slinky guitar intro quickly sees Keef settle into one of his most iconic riffs; equal parts swing, blues, swagger and Chuck Berry. But always 100% Rock ‘n’ Roll!

The swing is usually attributed to the Watts/Wyman rhythm section. Except of course the bass here is in Taylor’s accomplished hands and there is debate about who’s on drums. The consensus is that Charlie plays most of it, but the complex, funked up coda is driven by Jimmy Miller, trebling up on his production and partying duties.

I spite of the debate, everyone knows that in this band the rhythm section just follows Keef anyway!

Before we arrive at the coda, we get the crowning moment of the song; Richards’ inimitable, circling lead playing, accompanied by blasts of call and “gotta roll me” response vocals. The drums, bass and piano zone out, leaving this hypnotic hook of a guitar figure standing like the only sentient soul at the party.

Playing all the lead, Keef then peels off a solo. A blistering yet restrained surge, channeling Chuck Berry again. It even sounds like was played on an ES 335 (Google it baka!) despite the vision of that iconic, black ’72 Telecaster custom in our memories and imaginations. Well mine anyway!

The mercurial wizard has said many times though: “Give me any guitar and in five minutes it will just sound like me!”

And so to the vocals. Having thrown some rocks in Jagger’s general direction earlier, this is a great vocal performance. Delivered intravenously into a surging wave of “backing vocals” resulting in sing along voodoo poetry. But Mick has subsequently claimed that “they used the wrong mix” on this track.

Oh just shut it! Clyde King, Vanetta Fields and Keef himself make you sound good!

In a rare moment of humility Jagger does credit the Nellcôte housekeeper for inspiring the lyrics. Their conversation about her love for the “Tumbling Dice” delivers the drawled tale of “rank outsiders” in verses streaming in gambling slang. Everyone has been “at sixes and sevens and nines” at some point?

So do it now, go listen, I’m watching!

Enjoy this thrillingly louche groove and try not to get sucked in to it’s world. If Joe Perry did then your resistance is futile! And if this song doesn’t get you moving, you’re not playing it loud enough. Or you’re already dead!

“Can’t you see the deuce is still wild?”

On iTunes

On Wikipedia

On YouTube

Guitar

“This boy has learned to fail”

Of course you’ve never heard of them. They are from Northern Ireland and are barely what the witless and hit-less call a “one hit wonder.” Appreciation often takes time.

“Broken Land” starts with a simple keyboard motif that could be ascribed to any number of Synthpop hits. Like this one wasn’t.

Is that a hint of Uilleann Pipes? Well I did mention their origin, the band’s later career was destined to explore the plentiful mines of Irish Folk music. But wait.

A simple, dramatic piano figure, bass and drums come in to drive the song home with sonic authority, just the right side of bombast. Well they do if you have the volume high enough? Of course you do, it’s a sign of your commitment.

Next up we have Terry Sharpe’s plaintive and strident, yet vulnerable and slightly fragile vocals, pining lyrics as dystopian and emotional as sixth form poetry. But I choose to hear them as honest and pained; conjuring a universally sentimental notion that in spite of one’s best efforts, things have most certainly not gone as planned.

It is a beautiful confection. Anthemic, melodic and essentially Celtic. The cinematic soundscape makes it easy to forgive the some of the less subtle studio effects: Aphex aural exciter anyone? Go to google any time you like!

So where do I stand with this song? It has accompanied me through many phases of my exploration, come to me in times of need and I can find hope in it’s soaring melody and poetry. Played many times on the radio in 1988, I suggest that people weren’t ready to listen. Not created to be popular, not playing to masses, it’s a personal song and I hear love in it’s creation.

Are you ready?

The Adventures created a timeless classic that is as precious as it is neglected. Don’t make the same mistake!

“I see a broken land.”

On iTunes

On Wikipedia

On YouTube

 

 

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