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Lost & Found |
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Judy Collins was one of the major
interpretive folksingers of the '60s.
A child prodigy at classical piano. |
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Forty-one years ago, on this very day—April 26—Stephen Stills was at a recording session for his then girlfriend, singer Judy Collins.
Stills and Collins, as is well known, had an on-and-off relationship during the 1960s, with Stills having played back-up guitar on at least one of Collins’ albums (1968’s Who Knows Where The Time Goes). |
After the recording session with Collins, Stills booked a studio, slipped $100 to a sound engineer and asked him to “just roll the tape”, and proceeded to play a set solo. Just Stills singing and playing his guitar.
This was a year when Stills’ old band, Buffalo Springfield, had just broken up and his new one, Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young, was yet to be formed.
The master tape he recorded was left in the studio and was almost discarded when the studio was being dismantled in 1978.
That was when Joe Colasurdo, a musician, found those tapes and heard them on a by-then rare reel-to-reel tape machine. When Colasurdo realised what he’d stumbled upon, he tried to get them to Stills. It took him 25 years to finally be able to reach Stills.
Then, in 2007, those recordings were released as an album Just Roll Tape.
Although I’d head about that album a couple of years back, I’d never got around to listening to it.
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When finally I did get around to doing that recently, I found early (probably, the first) versions of songs that subsequently became some of Stills’ best. Suite Judy Blue Eyes, one of several songs that were inspired by his intense relationship with Collins, is there. As is Helplessly Hoping, So Begins The Task (recorded later for his album Manassas) and Know You Got To Run (which was recorded as Everybody I Love You on CSNY’s Déjà Vu album). Raw and naked, these versions make Just Roll Tape a collector’s item, particularly if you like Stephen Stills style of singing and his guitar work.
Like the lost Stills’ tapes that resurfaced, there’s another story about how three other musicians lost a recording before it was found years later. The Pizza Tapes, released in 2000, is an album that was recorded by David Grisman (mandolin), Jerry Garcia (guitar, vocals) and Tony Rice (guitar). Back in 1993, just two years before Garcia died, the three recorded a session but a pizza delivery boy stole the tapes. Later, bootlegged versions started surfacing till seven years later Grisman released the album officially. The album, which is likely one of the last collaborations between Grisman and Garcia, has 20 tracks, including a cover of Bob Dylan’s Knockin’ On Heaven’s Door and one of Miles Davis’ So What. Very collectible!
If you’re thinking Download Central has regressed into being a sepia-tinted, nostalgia-laden, oh-those-were-the-days kind of column this time, banish the thought. Last week, I encountered a few bands and sounds that I must share. I was listening to Radiohead’s Thom Yorke guest DJ-ing on a podcast. Yorke was playing tracks from bands that he loves and whose music he blasts at home.
One of them was a band called Liars, a three-piece that originated in the US but later moved to Berlin. A tad experimental, but worth checking out. The track Yorke played was from an album called Drum’s Not Dead. With pounding drums, drone-like guitar and falsetto vocals, Liars grow on you. After Liars, Yorke played another (this time truly German) band from Berlin, Modeselektor.
They’re an electronic duo that makes a kind of dance music mated with hip-hop, which I learnt is classified as Eurocrunk. I’d recommend it for drunken weekends. In contrast, another electronic duo, the British band, Autechre, which Yorke also played on the podcast from their 1998 album, LP5, was kinder on the ear and mind.
I’m not a huge fan of electronic bands but listening to Yorke’s playlist gave me an insight into what influences his band, Radiohead. If you look at their discography, you’ll find that around 2000, when they released Kid A and then, in the following year, Amnesiac, the band began experimenting with electronic and jazz influences.
I’ve downloaded many more podcasts where musicians guest DJ episodes like Portishead, Randy Newman, Lily Allen and even Anoushka Shankar.
Haven’t heard them all yet but it could be an interesting insight into what the pros like to listen to, wouldn’t it?
Sanjoy Narayan is Editor-in-chief of Hindustan Times |
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Judy Collins'
Amazing Grace
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downloadctrl@gmail.com |
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I have been reading your column with a great deal of interest and particularly liked the one written two weeks ago on world music.
I also recommend Ibrahim Ferrer and his album Mi Sueno. Ibrahim is no longer alive but his music is awesome. Do give it some ear.
- Sanjay Sharma
All these bands that you present out of nowhere to us, are quite good. They help us in revisiting old 60s and 70s with all that blues and soft rock.
So please, dont be so excessive in that. We all like your collection, but a survey of the present will be more appreciated.
Something on Death metal or on the Indian rock scenario will be great! Keep up the good work..
- Aniket Jawale
Actually I keep reading about all the bands and rockstars and popstars as I'm a real fan of music and love to know about new bands and people.
I really love this band you must have heard the name Jonas Brothers.
I really love this trio and i think just a weeks ago, there was an article on three-membered bands, but I really felt bad as there was nothing at all written about them.
I really want something about them to come in the newspapers along with some pictures so that I can stick them in my scrap book...
- Rowena Williams
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