Saturday, June 14, 2025

Praise Behemoth!



Pere Ubu - Prison of the Senses


I'm back after my Oops I Posted It Before I Knew WTF I Was Doing mess from the other day with yet another, completely different visionary artiste of our epoch. This time I may not even alter it six times after I put it up!

Today we have the birthday of a truly singular figure -- no, not that fascist, self-worshiping, illiterate asswipe -- who sadly passed a little bit ago and whose 72nd birthday would have been today.

This guy, though. Of all the music to have come from Northeast Ohio in the 1970s, is there anything as viscerally weird and unique as Pere Ubu? I almost hope not.

The whole Cleveland scene back then was of Biblical proportions... and Rocket from the Tombs did beget Pere Ubu, and The Numbers Band did declare "We're all DEVO!". And all rejoiced Tin Huey-ly.

When Ubu first Ubu'd in the second half of the 1970s, there was nothing on the planet like them. If they were to approach a record company today, they would likely be escorted out by security, if they were lucky.

Lucky for us, back then it was almost the stranger the better, so true and unalloyed visionaries such as David Thomas -- born this day in 1953 -- were able to break through and drop their tonnage of truth upon us all.

When he was in Rocket from the Tombs he was called Crocus Behemoth, but when he started Pere Ubu he reverted to his real name, which made it seem all the more different and unusual in a way.

As charismatic and uncompromising as any figure ever produced by Rock music, there is no way to describe what he was up to, other than to say his mind was like an antenna that picked up the post-industrial realities of America, and he spent many decades in full-on broadcast mode.

Like some sort of unleashed and obese shaman of Urban Angst, he pattered and preached his grand gospel of the glorious American Dystopia across decades of seminal, galvanizing performances both in and out of Ubu.

He must have appeared possessed by demons to the Ubu-uninitiated, but to people who love Art and Music he was like a Power Spot on legs, oozing a completely individual presence all his own.

Like I said, if he tried to get over these days he'd likely be escorted out and you'd catch him performing in one of those YouTube bodycam footage clips -- face down on the concrete somewhere -- but thankfully for us, he came up at a time where almost anything went artistically. So he wasn't even that uncommercial in the context of 1978 or whatever.

He participated in and even helmed a gazillion other projects since back then, but he always maintained at least one foot in Pere Ubu his entire performing career, which lasted until the very end of his life.

The vast majority of Ubootlegs are legitimately issued and are gathered here on their Bandcamp page. Their performances for National Public Radio have never been issued as far as I know, so I have dressed these up in nice clothing for your 390 degree dose of stimulated stereo today, to honor DT's life and passing.

Taken together, these offer as great an introduction into the oeuvre of this one-of-a-kind band as any concert I can think of.


Pere Ubu
Mountain Stage
Culture Center Theater
Charleston, West Virginia USA
10.6.1991 & 12.21.2017

01 introduction
02 Street Waves
03 Goodnight Irene
04 Caligari's Mirror
05 Nevada
06 Over the Moon
07 Life of Riley
08 Busman's Honeymoon
09 Oh Catherine
10 Cry, Cry, Cry
11 introduction
12 Slow Walkin' Daddy
13 Breathe
14 Monkey Bizness
15 Carnival
16 Howl
17 Prison of the Senses

Total time: 1:00:16

Tracks 01-10: 10.6.1991
David Thomas - vocals
Jim Jones - guitar
Eric Drew Feldman - keyboards
Tony Maimone - bass
Scott Krauss - drums

Tracks 11-17: 12.21.2017
David Thomas - vocals
Robert Wheeler - synthesizers & theremin
Kristof Han - lap steel guitar
Michele Temple - bass & vocals
Gary Siperko - guitar
Steve Mehlman - drums & vocals

the MC for both segments is Larry Croce

320/48k audio streamed from the NPR website @ npr.org
converted to 16/44 CD Audio, edited, denoised, tracked & slightly remastered by EN, June 2025
366 MB FLAC/link is below with other show

Pere Ubu
Anthem
National Public Radio studios
Washington, DC USA
March 1999
originally aired 3.13.1999

01 Anthem introduction
02 David Thomas introduction
03 SAD.TXT
04 talk 1
05 Highwaterville
06 talk 2
07 Urban Landscape
08 explanation of "Ubu Roi" & talk 3
09 Mirror Man excerpt
10 talk 4 incl. Mr. Wheeler excerpt
11 Worlds In Collision
12 talk 5
13 Fly's Eye
14 talk 6
15 Wasteland

Total time: 47:43

David Thomas - vocals
Tom Herman - guitar & vocals
Steve Mehlman - drums
Robert Wheeler - theremin, keyboards & vocals
Michele Temple - bass & vocals

combination of 2 low gen (possibly master) off-air FM captures -- likely to cassette -- of the original 1999 NPR broadcast
retracked, edited and very slightly remastered by EN, June 2025

I shall return next weekend with some sustenance to start off the Endless Summer in the proper tropical perspective -- this, in honor of a recently departed summertime icon -- so you'll want to get your 'boards all waxed and ready for that, because I saw the forecast and Surf's Up.

All in good time. For now we'll let the good times roll through like the clock atop Cleveland's Terminal Tower, giving due thanks and praises to David Thomas and his pet project Pere Ubu for 50 years of telling it -- and speaksinging, screeching, babbling, and often wordlessly vocalizing it in ways that might terrify your grandmother -- like it was and is for us all.--J.


6.14.1953 - 4.23.2025
that's the prison of the senses

Wednesday, June 11, 2025

Pretty Things: The Beats of Bernard Purdie



Pretty Purdie - Heavy Soul Slinger


Sorry to be flogging the mixtape compilation compendia angle twice in a row, but I got on another of my little manic binges, and you, fair reader, are the beneficiary. I try to make commonly social-life-destroying traits -- like my obvious predilection towards compulsive, obsessive mania -- work for some reasonably arguable iteration of the common good. It sure beats contemptuously harassing strangers with moonhead conspiracies only the person saying them and the people they're trying to feel accepted by believe on social media all day anyway.

It's astonishing that no one ever got obsessed or manically motivated enough to attempt what I'm about to drop here, but then to get the rights to all these different songs, by all these different artists, on who knows how many labels owned by who knows who would take every lawyer on Earth working 16 hour days for who knows how long to crack.

You also have to take into account that today's birthday battery brahmin -- and it's no lie whatsoever to name him the most recorded drummer in history -- has, at some point or another in the last 60 years, taken credit for approximately 93% of the drum tracks on all the recorded music of those long and fruitful decades.

What takes it to an even more surreal level is that he may, in fact, have played on 93% of the recorded music of the last 60 years. Some people, rare as they are, distinguish themselves by their ability to live up to their own hype. Few, but some.

Bernard Purdie -- nickname: "Pretty" -- is most firmly in this pantheon of people that exist beyond the heavyweight class of their art, in a realm only a handful of humans get to claim.
The most sampled drummer in Hip-Hop history -- and likely the most recorded in the annals of all music, since recording technology was invented -- his records will never be approached, much less broken. They will, however, be danced to by people whose great-grandparents aren't even born yet.

I've wanted to cover him on here since I started, back when wild beasts roamed an Earth covered in red plankton, but I could identify no ROIO or show or whatnot that I felt really did justice to his essence, galactically broad and integral to the arc of the history of this stuff as it is.

Beginning in the mid-1960s, he has formed the engine that has driven so many tracks on so many radios, and ushered folks onto so many dancefloors that, were I to try to list every session and single and album on which he's appeared, I would literally be here typing until time ended.

The timekeeper of more timeless tunes than anyone ever to grip sticks, I was vexed for years on how to make a thing that might capture what stands him as a central figure in all of modern music. That is until I found this other (yes it's tremendous) blog, and the double CD, deep-cut Pretty Purdie put-together its proprietor has up on his page.

As I sometimes get into doing, once I saw what he had assembled -- I exaggerate not when I say that he made, really, as good and as thoughtful a mixtape as someone can make -- my first instinct was to reassemble its all-mp3 playlist, track for track, in a lossless audio format immediately.

That proved sticky with a couple of his more obscure-yet-essential selections, but I got it together for both volumes of his creation.

That's where the legendary mania kicked in.

And then, I wake up days later and I'm sitting there, having to make 93 of the cornerstone tracks of modern music the same damn volume level. By hand. Gosh, my arm hurts... but not as much of a hurt as Bernard "Pretty" Purdie -- in the conversation for Single Greatest Drummer in all species history -- puts on the skins in this merely 6 1/2 hours of badass backbeating, Purdie Shuffling mayhem. Which really could be a physical boxset some day, were all the attorneys in this Milky Way Sector gathered to the purpose.


Bernard "Pretty" Purdie
Pretty Things: The Beats of Bernard Purdie
1966-1980

CD1: The Bernard Purdie Collection, vol. 1
01 Bernard Purdie – Soul Drums (1968)
02 The Five Stairsteps – O-o-h Child (1970)
03 Tim Rose – Hey Joe (1967)
04 King Curtis – Whole Lotta Love (1971)
05 Shirley Scott & The Soul Saxes – You (1968)
06 Aretha Franklin – Rock Steady (1972)
07 Nina Simone – Real Real (1967)
08 John Lee Hooker – I Don’t Wanna Go to Vietnam (1968)
09 Bama The Village Poet – I Got Soul (1972)
10 Gil Scott-Heron – The Needle’s Eye (1971)
11 Esther Phillips – Sweet Touch of Love (1972)
12 David Newman – Captain Buckles (1971)
13 Margie Joseph – Touch Your Woman (1973)
14 Roberta Flack – Sunday and Sister Jones (1971)
15 Wayne Davis – I Like the Things About Me that I Once Despised (1973)
16 Donal Leace - Country Road (1972)
17 Gabor Szabó  – Paint It Black (1966)
18 Leon Thomas – Let’s Go Down to Lucy's (1972)
19 Ralfi Pagan – La Vida (1975)
20 Brother Jack McDuff – A Change Is Gonna Come (1966)

CD2: The Bernard Purdie Collection, vol. 2
01 Cornell Dupree – Teasin’ (1974)
02 Joe Cocker – I Get Mad (1974)
03 Robert Palmer – How Much Fun (1974)
04 Steely Dan – Deacon Blues (1977)
05 Cat Stevens – 100 I Dream (1973)
06 Grady Tate – Sack Full of Dreams (1969)
07 Dusty Springfield – In the Winter (1974)
08 Cheryl Lynn – You’re the One (1978)
09 Roy Ayers – Melody Maker (1978)
10 Herbie Mann – What’s Going On (1971)
11 Quincy Jones – Oh Happy Day (1969)
12 Letta Mbulu – Music Man (1976)
13 Joe Bataan – I’m No Stranger (1972)
14 Freddie McCoy – Funk Drops (1966)
15 Marion Williams – Wicked Messenger (1971)
16 Ronnie Foster – Sweet Revival (1973)
17 Hummingbird – Fire and Brimstone (1976)
18 Hall & Oates – I’m Just a Kid (Don’t Make Me Feel Like a Man) (1973)
19 Gene Ammons – Feeling Good (1969)
20 Mongo Santamaria – Baby What You Want Me to Do (1968)

CD3: The Bernard Purdie Collection, vol. 3
01 introduction of BP
02 Bernard Purdie - Hap'nin' (1973)
03 Steely Dan - Babylon Sisters (1980)
04 Gary Burton - Vibrafinger (1970)
05 King Curtis - Soul Serenade (1971)
06 Albert Ayler - Sun Watcher (1969)
07 Boogaloo Joe Jones - Right On (1970)
08 Daryl Hall & John Oates - She’s Gone (1973)
09 Felix Pappalardi - Sunshine of Your Love (1979)
10 Larry Coryell - Morning Sickness (1969)
11 Charles Kynard - Odds On (1970)
12 Richie Havens - Headkeeper (1974)
13 Garland Jeffreys - Harlem Bound (1973)
14 Les McCann & Eddie Harris - Shorty Rides Again (edit) (1971)
15 Aretha Franklin - Until You Come Back to Me (That's What I'm Gonna Do) (1974)
16 Miles Davis - Red China Blues (1974)

CD4: The Bernard Purdie Collection, vol. 4
01 Buddy Terry - Lean On Me (Lean On Him) (1972)
02 The Soul Finders - Respect (1967)
03 Richard "Groove" Holmes - Flyjack (1975)
04 The Last Poets - Ho Chi Minh (1977)
05 Arif Mardin - Street Scene: Strollin' (1974)
06 Rusty Bryant - Ga Gang Gang Goong (1973)
07 Carla Thomas - Where Do I Go? (1969)
08 Al Kooper - Magic In My Socks (1969)
09 Sonny Phillips - Sure 'Nuff, Sure 'Nuff (1969)
10 Gary McFarland - 80 Miles an Hour Through Beer-Can Country (excerpt) (1969)
11 The Insect Trust - Hoboken Saturday Night (1970)
12 Houston Person - The Houston Express (1971)
13 Harlem River Drive - Idle Hands (1971)
14 Dakota Staton - Let It Be Me (1972)
15 Dizzy Gillespie - Soul Kiss (1970)
16 Hank Crawford - Baby, I Love You (1969)
17 Phil Upchurch - Muscle Soul (1968)
18 King Curtis - Memphis Soul Stew (1969)

CD5: The Bernard Purdie Collection, vol. 5
01 Herbie Hancock - Wiggle-Waggle (1969)
02 Pee Wee Ellis - Fort Apache (1977)
03 Jackie Lomax - Lost (1972)
04 Johnny "Hammond" Smith - Purdie Dirty (1969)
05 Roberta Flack & Donny Hathaway - Where Is the Love (1972)
06 Randy Brecker - The Vamp (1970)
07 Melvin Bliss - Synthetic Substitution (1973)
08 Gil Scott-Heron - The Revolution Will Not Be Televised (1971)
09 The Five Stairsteps - Dear Prudence (1970)
10 Ben E. King - What Is Soul? (1967)
11 Jimmy McGriff - The Bird Wave (1970)
12 Roy Ayers' Ubiquity - The Boogie Back (1974)
13 Solomon Burke - When She Touches Me (Nothing Else Matters) (1968)
14 Tim Moore - I Can Almost See the Light (1974)
15 Wilson Pickett - Deborah (1968)
16 Yusef Lateef - Livingston Playground (1969)
17 Louis Armstrong - Give Peace a Chance (1970)
18 James Brown - It's a Man's Man's Man's World (1966)
19 Steely Dan - Home At Last (1977)
20 Pretty Purdie - Heavy Soul Slinger (1972)

Total time: 6:36:15

imaginary box set containing 93 iconic grooves of The Maestro, Bernard "Pretty" Purdie
volumes 1 & 2 originally conceived, selected and sequenced 
by Any Major Dude with Half a Heart, whose excellent page can be found right here
reconstructed losslessly and remastered by EN, June 2025
volumes 3-5 selected, sequenced, edited and remastered by EN, June 2025
2.36 GB FLAC/direct link


So we see that the sonic revolution of our musical epoch may not have been televised, but it certainly was recorded pretty substantially... and for a whole lot of the time that the tape was rolling, "Pretty" Purdie was perched upon the drum throne like a potentate of propulsion. I just hope he's truly on all of these myriad tracks, but AMD and I researched it all as thoroughly as boys with a high-speed internet box and the will to know the truth can, so we should be good here. (((EDIT: I had to change four of the songs -- after I chiseled it out through further research that BP probably doesn't play on them -- so I switched them for ones that were certainly him!)))

Born this day in 1939, Bernard Purdie is 86 today, and he is still alive and sticking, thank Providence and his continuing good health. I will return in a few days with another unquantifiably influential figure, but today is all about looking -- and sounding -- as "Pretty" as can be, and I hope my (and Any Major Dude's, major kudos and thanx to him) compendium of crunch will assist everyone in cele-vibrating at their very best!--J.

Friday, June 06, 2025

Emerald Cooks: Grant Green 90

 

Grant Green - We've Only Just Begun


I'm a little late because I couldn't sleep, but I'll smash this up here just under the midnight deadline in honor of a milestone birthday I just can't miss.

Today's b'day guy ought need no introductions at all, as he is one of the most shit-hot guitar players of this or any other lifetime.

Probably the guitarist most associated with Jazz Funk or Soul Jazz or whatever it's called this week, he brought the octave and eighth note styles of Wes Montgomery into the Soul Train line.

His late Sixties and Seventies LPs are biblical in their Funk Proportions. Many feature the legendary New Orleans native Idris Muhammad, laying down beats and grooves so filthy they are likely punishable by death in Wahabbi Islam.

Grant Green -- acknowledged alpha and omega of modern Soul Jazz guitar -- didn't live very long, and the record business had no hesitation in making sure his talents were always stalked by his addictions.

One label even started paying him in heroin, thinking they were cutting out the middleman.

He passed away all too young at just 43 of a heart attack after a gig, during a tour his doctors advised would kill him if he did it.

The most sampled guitarist in Hip-Hop history, his subtle influence will permeate the firmament as long as it's Funky.

Which will be forever, as long as there are humans to Bop Gun funkatize the galaxy anyways.

There aren't any ROIOs of Grant Green because, let's face it, he was mightily fucked up a lot of the time and was not, as a Jazz cat, being followed by The King Biscuit Flower Hour mobile truck everywhere he laid his case.

However, I do have this wild mixtape of him in my phone for decades, or at least as long as there have been these phone devices that have big storage for music, so I pulled it out and modified it to top out at a full 3CD, 4-hour funkfest for the benefit of the ears and hips of anyone unfortunate enough to never have heard this most electrifying axe wielder.


Grant Green
Walk In the Night
Grant Green's Greatest Grooves
1967-1979

01 Farid
02 Nighttime In the Switching Yard
03 We've Only Just Begun
04 Sookie Sookie
05 California Green
06 Mozart Symphony #40 In G Minor, K550, 1st Movement
07 The Main Attraction (edit)
08 The Final Comedown
09 Love On a Two Way Street
10 Patches
11 Traveling to Get to Doc
12 Vulcan Princess
13 I Don't Want Nobody to Give Me Nothing (Open Up The Door, I'll Get It Myself)/Cold Sweat
14 Jan Jan
15 Iron City
16 Down Here On the Ground
17 High-Heel Sneakers (edit)
18 Ease Back
19 In the Middle
20 It's Your Thing
21 Future Feature
22 Let the Music Take Your Mind
23 Upshot
24 Hey Western Union Man
25 Walk In the Night
26 Never Can Say Goodbye
27 Battle Scene
28 Cease the Bombing
29 The Windjammer
30 One More Chance
31 Fancy Free (single edit remix)
32 Ain't It Funky Now
33 Flood In Franklin Park

Total time: 2:39:11
disc breaks go after Tracks 12 & 23

compendium of the guitar god's golden grooviest
selected, edited, sequenced, remuxed & remastered by EN, June 2025
1.37 GB FLAC/direct link


As per usual, I constructed a few unique edits and even used the AI stemsplit thingy to create a previously-nonexistent remix of one of GG's signature cover tunes, which features a frenetically melodious guitar solo that's had lesser players tossing their instruments off rooftops in pure frustration ever since he played it.

But then, the very toppermost musical practitioners are the rare birds that can do just that: to wring profound and direct emotional results out of technical mastery, as Grant Green -- born this day in 1935 and gone way too soon from the physical world -- was born to do.--J.


6.6.1935 - 1.31.1979