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The Birth of Rock!

October 6, 2015 by Mehdi 'Eddy' Hassan Leave a Comment

It was in the beginning of the 1960’s, when ‘Electric Blues’ (orphaned and looked down upon child) that survived in the ghettos of America, found a new home in Britain. Within few years it evolved into a tsunami of sound that came crashing back on the American shores. It tore down all barriers and converted generations of Americans into Rock Lovers.

It further spread to the other continents, and even decade after decades its strength increased. It spawned Psychedelic Rock, Art Rock, Hard Rock, Heavy Metal, and yet many more to come…

Songs to listen to:

Smoke Stack Lightening

Hoochie Coochie Man

The Stone’s Age

There is a strange attraction between the blues and Britain, and this very chemistry essentially provided the birth bed for Rock music. It was plain Blues music that thawed out the emotional permafrost of 1950’s Britain. There was many blues bands in 1960’s UK music scene, from ‘John Mayall’s Blues breakers’ to ‘The Yardbirds’ but the best appreciation came from ‘The Rolling Stones’, formed in 1962, the band took its name from a classic Muddy Water’s song.

The Stones (as they are called in modern times) were initially satisfied by just doing blues covers, but the story changed when they opted for their own version of the blues music. They mixed British pop art ideas with the American Rhythm ‘n’ Blues, and the offspring (though still heavily laden with Blues undertones) was the sound and concept of Rock to come.

Satisfaction

 

The Rise of the Guitar Gods

Soon the number of Blues influenced bands increased, especially in the cities of London, Liverpool and New Castles. Bands like The Animals, The Who combined into the ruckus and the loudness of their acts was eventually heard in America.

To American audience the music produced by these British Bands was as surprising as it was revealing. They were awestruck as they saw young brats from Britain consuming the vibes of the Blues and reproducing it in the frenzied shape of Rock.

The most striking were the iconic use of the electric guitar. A boy in America would not have imagined how ‘sexy’ a guitar player would look (and become) before he saw the likes of Pete Townsend or Eric Clapton or Jeff Beck.

Who Generation

When it comes to picking a pioneer, a band that could be depicted as the first to sound ‘Non Bluesy’, then none other fits the bill better than ‘The Who’ an uncompromising, loud and aggressive band from London.

The Who’s high octane performances gave rock a harder edge, they were the first out and out rock band, as the energy that resonated in their live performances was never heard or experienced before. The music of The Who also defined that the unified attack of bass guitar and drums was a necessity for the ‘Rock Sound’. The rebellion of The Who started off with their song ‘My Generation’, the voice that it gave to the anger and frustration of the contemporary youth turned it into an emblem.

One clear sign of The Who’s pivotal status in Rock is the fact that while ‘The Who’ took it out into the streets; where the youth would be, other bands were playing their songs sitting on stools in pubs…

With The Who rock music had an element of real danger, as they gave a completely new meaning to rock performance. They showed how a three piece Rock band should look and sound. Their total mastery of stage and somewhat destructive tendencies inspired generations of Rock performers.

My Generation

Art and Psychedelia

While The Rolling Stones added their sexual swagger and pop art ideas to the Blues and The Who exploded through the R ’n’ B barrier with their dominant stage synergy, Pink Floyd emerged with their psychedelic art rock.

Formed in 1966, Pink Floyd took Rock into a new direction of endless possibilities; they introduced social problems and self-searching individual concepts into main stream music. For the first time in its early development, Rock music wasn’t just an outlet for excessive energy and cheap thrills.

Although their charismatic lead singer and song writer Syd Barret left the band in its inception (c 1968) Pink Floyd went on with their experimental ways. They developed a sound following as an underground band and then went on to become a worldwide phenomenon with their album ‘The Dark Side of the Moon’.

Echoes

Time

Dark, Loud n Heavy!

There is often talk about luck or chance; how it sets things in motion. Rock music has plenty of such moments: from Jimi Hendrix’s visit and incessant rise in Britain to the formation and rise of the Black Sabbath; the most prestigious and yet controversial band in the history of Rock.

In 1965, while working in a metal factory in Birmingham, budding guitar player Toni Iommi accidently cut the tips off his fret board hand. Fate might have been working against him but Iommi didn’t give up, he made artificial finger tips with melted plastic bottles and painstakingly modified his guitar playing.

To accommodate the loss of strength in his fingers, he slackened the guitar strings and hence introduced the notorious de-tuned heavy sound into the realm of Rock.

Black Sabbath was formed in 1968, the founding four members; Bill Ward on drums, Geezer Butler on Bass, Toni Iommi on guitars, and the young lunatic Ozzy Osborne, all  had the sound of heavy pounding machines of Birmingham’s metal factory embedded in their subconscious, the resulting dark, heavy and menacing band sound (topped by Iommi’s de-tuned guitar) was positively inevitable.

Although all the music pundits hated Black Sabbath from the day one, they started a new era in Rock with their first (self-titled album) and it is no wonder that their music is still inspiring new age rockers with the same zeal.

Black Sabbath

Iron Man

 

Filed Under: Blog and News Tagged With: birth of rock, Black Sabbath, Eric Clapton, hoochie coochie man, iron man, Jeff Beck, my generation, ozzy osborne, Rock, satisfaction, smoke stack lightning, syd barret, the animals, the rolling stones, the whopete townsend, toni iomi

If there’s a band we want to see in the UK…

February 3, 2015 by Mehdi 'Eddy' Hassan

I would be unfair to cradle Slow Burning Car in just one big creative embrace. They have a wide spectrum of vibes emanating out of their musical instruments.

Slow Burning Car - The Scattering Vol.2I developed this ‘discourse’ especially listening to their latest album ‘Assumption’. The output is varying in sounds from RnB to Heavy Metal. Some songs play like ‘Red Hot Chili Pepper’ and some appear to have fallen out of Robert Plant’s retro Led Zeppelin closet.

When the song ‘Tread Not on Me’ started, I had to check whether I had put on Eric Clapton’s playlist by mistake! The further surprise was: when the bridge part of the same song brought the blazing ‘Sex Pistols’ back into my ears; bizarre is the right word for it.

Slow Burning Car is: Troy Spiropoulos who handles Lead and backing vocals, as well the bass guitar (also stints with keyboards, sound effects etc.) Troy’s songwriting aspirations come from mythology/theology to the reality of life and common observations. The guitarist Duc ‘Jimmy’ Le is not only an established sound engineer, but he also has an impressive brand of hand-crafted effect pedals assigned to his name. Last but not the least is the drummer Mike Zimmerman; his open hi-hat floundering quite obviously hints at greats like John Bonham and Buddy Rich (hence the Zeppelin like feel in some of their songs).

Slow Burning Car - AssumptionThe music produced by this dynamic trio can be called ‘Experimental’, but this is the third studio album by Slow Burning Cars, so I would stick with the ‘Progressive’ element. To name a few from the past albums, the song ‘Fabien’s Stroll’ from their second album ‘The Scattering – Vol.2’, gave me some goose bumps. Its eerie, it’s psychedelic, and it is much more enchanting than any other (ballad) songs they produced. My second pick would be ‘The Scorpio Complex’ for its raw n inclusive psychedelic experimentation; it sounds as if the whole band got into a minivan and recoded it live….

From a creative perspective, their previous albums (Blow Back and The Scattering) are more colorful, while Assumptions has a straighter to ‘Alternative Rock’ approach. It is noticeable that the band is finally settling down for a ‘Sound’. It is also evident that, as a band, Slow Burning Car had been more focused on the ‘Live Sound’ rather than their studio outputs.

There is one unique quality emerging out of their experimentations: they have a different (yet classical) touch in their ballads, so my analysis (suggestion) would be, to hear them focusing on the ballads and more on singer-songwriter genre than their efforts to please a live crowd with piercing and grungy acts.
Slow Burning Car is doing circuit around Los Angles, California, while also touring Europe (UK).

Peace and Love, in the troubling times!

Links
Slow Burning Car’s Official Website

Filed Under: Reviews Tagged With: alternative rock, Ballads, Bass Guitar, Blow Back, Buddy Rich, California, Classical, creative, Duc ‘Jimmy’ Le, Eric Clapton, Experimental, Fabien’s Stroll, Grungy, guitarist, heavy metal, John Bonham, keyboards, Led Zeppelin, Live Sound, Los Angeles, Mike Zimmerman, mythology, new music, Progressive, psychedelic, Red Hot Chilli Pepper, review, reviews, RnB, Robert Plant, Sex Pistols, Slow burning car, sound effects, The Scattering, The Scattering Vol.2, The Scorpio Complex, theology, Tread not on me, Troy Spiropoulos, UK, Zeppelin

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