Welcome to the 200th episode of the “I’m In Love With That Song” Podcast. To mark the occasion, we’re celebrating the 75th anniversary of the Fender Precision Bass: the bass guitar that would revolutionize the role of the bass in all forms of popular music– Rock, Jazz, R&B, Country and beyond.

On this episode, I’m joined by Joe Branton (host of the “Guitar Nerds” podcast) to delve into the rich history of the electric bass, particularly the Fender Precision, which would have a profound impact on all the music we love.

Join us for this special milestone episode as we celebrate the legacy of the electric bass guitar and the vibrant community of bass players who continue to push the boundaries of music. Whether you’re a seasoned musician or a casual listener, this episode offers insights and stories that will resonate with anyone who appreciates the art of music.

WATCH THE VIDEO EPISODE HERE:

TRANSCRIPT:

Brad Page: Welcome once again to the I’m in Love with That Song podcast. I’m your host, Brad Page. We’re here on the Pantheon Podcast Network to bring you the 200th episode of this show. That’s right, this is our 200th edition of the I’m in Love with That Song podcast. So, of course, I thought we should do something a little different, something a little special for this auspicious occasion.

2026 also happens to be the 75th anniversary of the Fender Precision Bass guitar. That’s the instrument that would revolutionize the performance and the role of the bass in popular music. So, I thought we could celebrate our 200th episode with a salute to the bass guitar.

And if we’re going to feature the bass guitar, then we should have an expert join us on the show. And I can think of no one better to talk bass with than the marvelous Mr. Joe Branton. Joe is the bass player for the band Polymath, a fascinating prog-rock band from the UK, and he’s also the host of the Guitar Nerds podcast—an absolutely fantastic podcast that I am a huge fan of. Joe is well-versed in the history of the Fender Precision Bass and bass guitar in general, so he was the perfect guest for this show.

And to make this 200th episode even more special, I’m doing a video version of this show. It’s the first time ever. I will admit, Joe and I do get a little more geeky than I usually do on this podcast, but if you watch the video, you can see pictures and examples of what we’re talking about. So, anyone can follow along with this conversation; you don’t need to be a musician.

So, turn up the bottom end, and let’s rediscover the history of the bass guitar.

Brad Page: All right, Joe Branton, thank you so much for joining me here on the I’m in Love with That Song podcast to talk about the history of the Fender Precision Bass and electric bass in general.

Joe Branton: Well, thank you very much for having me, Brad. It’s an honor to be on your podcast, on the 200th episode, no less.

Brad Page: Yeah, well, thanks for coming on. So, the electric bass kind of had a lot of false starts. It really—the whole reason for its existence, really back in the day, was volume, right? Because it was an instrument that was very difficult to hear over drums and horns and all that stuff on the classic big band stage. Prior to that, we had what we called the double bass, right? Which most people would be familiar with. That’s the stand-up bass, an acoustic bass.

Joe Branton: Upright bass, yeah.

Brad Page: Right, upright bass. That was developed around the 1500s, I think. And it wasn’t until the 50s that we had a successful electric bass. But to get us there, Gibson had experimented with an electric upright bass in the 1920s. 1930s, Rickenbacker sold electric basses. There were a couple of other companies, but they just—they were not successful.

Joe Branton: Did you ever see the “Foot Bass”?

Brad Page: The Foot Bass? No, tell me about the Foot Bass.

Joe Branton: Imagine the body of an upright bass—so just that oversized cello, upright bass—sitting upright. Attached to it, maybe 10 or 15 foot pedals, all with strings attached to it. The idea was—it was invented in, I think, the late 40s, early 50s by a fellow who was in a one-man band. And the idea was to bring some of that, like a halfway house. I just remember that being at the time… and I know that’s not the electric bass, but those early 50s… they hadn’t decided yet how bands were going to work out, and that’s why it’s so amazing what ended up happening with the electric bass.

Brad Page: Right. And just all of this stuff—guitars and amplifiers—this was really the kind of the “Wild West” in terms of innovation and discovery and a lot of crazy inventions and a lot of failures to get us to the successes that we’re all super familiar with now.

One of the ones that fascinated me was a guy named Everett Hull, who invented a microphone that you would mount inside the stand-up bass on the peg. You know, you have the peg that sticks out of the bottom…

Joe Branton: Yeah, yeah.

Brad Page: …and that extends inside the instrument. And he created a microphone that would mount on that. And that was called the “Ampeg.” And that’s where we get the name of a brand that still exists today, Ampeg. But that’s how it literally started—with an “amp on a peg.”

Joe Branton: Oh, I love that story. I did not know that! That’s fantastic. That makes so much more sense now, and I love it.

Brad Page: Yeah, it’s great!

But none of these things were particularly successful until Fender—Leo Fender—comes out with the bass that he calls the Fender Precision in, I believe, October of 1951. Does that sound right?

Joe Branton: That’s right.

Brad Page: Let’s talk about why they called it the “Precision” in the first place.

Joe Branton: Well, it’s the first time that a bass had been fretted. Bass was not a fretted instrument prior to Leo Fender in 1951. I think it’s amazing. The electric guitar is something other people were really messing with; it kind of already existed by the time Leo Fender’s doing the Telecaster or the Broadcaster. All of those things are already there. He just made a really cool one, and then a load of really cool ones for various companies. But for bass, he actually invented a new type of instrument that changed how music was recorded. Bass was not fretted until October of 1951.

Brad Page: Yeah, that’s so important. A.) the fact that it’s the first fretted bass, and B.) the fact that it’s a bass that you played like a guitar. Because a lot of those earlier inventions that we just kind of talked through, those were primarily based on the stand-up model versus a bass that you would play like a guitar. And that was pretty revolutionary and fairly controversial at the time, too, because there were a lot of detractors who felt that it wasn’t, quote-unquote, a “real” bass because you didn’t play it standing up and it had frets and all of those things. So there was initial resistance to that.

Joe Branton: Yeah, it was an established instrument. Upright bass was established. That’s what the bass players did. So people who were trained upright bass players didn’t want to play electric bass. It didn’t work out so well; you only play with three fingers on an upright, so moving to a guitar style was tricky. And other companies didn’t buy into it. You mentioned Ampeg—Ampeg were still making upright basses until the early 70s. And you think of Ampeg… they were making basses that could be used as both. 1953, two years after Fender released the Precision Bass, Gibson is still there going, “I don’t think this is going to work,” and they released the EB-1, one of my favorite basses. The EB-1, a solid-body violin bass—looks like a Hofner bass, dear listener, but it’s actually solid. It can be played in this quirky modern way like a guitar, or it comes with a telescopic tailpiece so you can play it like an upright, meaning you get the precision of the frets, which they liked the idea of, but they’re like, “But bass players, you don’t want to relearn. Why not play upright?”

Brad Page: Right, exactly. So it was a really innovative move for Fender to come out with the Precision in 1951, and it took a little while to catch on. The original Fender Precision looked a little different than the one people may be familiar with today. It was actually based on the Telecaster design, but it was a double-cut, ash body, 20-fret maple neck, single-coil pickup, a 34-inch scale length—which was something that I understand took some development. I believe they tried 30, 32, 36-inch before they settled on the 34-inch. And if I remember correctly, it retailed for around $199 US dollars, which was still a lot of money back then. I think that equates to about $1,800 in today’s money.

Joe Branton: Really? Wow.

Brad Page: Yeah, so not an inexpensive proposition.

Joe Branton: The 34-inch scale that Fender went for is extra interesting as well, because, whilst today that is the industry standard—99% of electric basses are going to be a 34-inch scale—at the time, no one went with this. Not one company went with this for years. Everyone messed around with a 30-inch scale, like Burns were doing it right into the 60s, Gibson… what you call the “short scale” bass. That was the scale that the competition almost universally went with. Fender were the only ones going 34, and at that time for the bulk of the 50s… not really until that 1957 body switch for Fender where it became the Precision Bass we know today, not until then did other companies start catching on and mimicking the 34-inch scale. It was a complete anomaly.

Brad Page: It’s amazing that so many of the things that Fender settled on became the industry standard. He just got it right the first time.

Some of the early pioneers of playing the electric bass… there was a guy named Joel Price, who was a country player. Bob Manners, who played with Liberace, believe it or not, who had a TV show at the time in the U.S. So people would see the Fender bass on TV; that was good exposure for it.

Lionel Hampton, the jazz player, had a couple of key bass players in his band: Roy Johnson initially and then Monk Montgomery, who was the brother of legendary jazz guitarist Wes Montgomery. Monk Montgomery is one of the first pioneers of playing the electric bass under Lionel Hampton’s guidance or influence.

One of the first rock records to feature the electric bass was a band called The Treniers—a guy named Shifty Henry.

Joe Branton: Such a good name. That is pure 50s right there.

Brad Page: Played on a song called “Rock-a-Beatin’ Boogie” from 1953.

One of the, I think, forgotten pioneers of the electric bass was actually a woman named Joan Anderson, who played with a country band called Bill Peer and his Melody Boys and Girls, which also featured Patsy Cline before she went solo. It’s interesting; there were a couple of women playing electric bass very early on, written out of history unfortunately, as these things tend to happen.

You mentioned the Gibson EB-1, that’s their first stab at the electric bass, right, 1953?

Joe Branton: That’s right, yeah.

Brad Page: The Hofner bass comes out in 1956.

Joe Branton: Yeah, and again, another bass with a 30-inch scale. See, no one is going with Fender’s 34-inch scale at this point in time. It’s wild to think that it didn’t catch on, not really until the dawn of the 60s did people start copying it.

Brad Page: There was a British trade embargo against a lot of U.S. products from 1951 to 1959 that cut off your access to a lot of American brands, including the electric bass. So that was kind of Hofner’s “in,” I think, to the British market. They really didn’t have competition from Fender.

Joe Branton: Yeah, Hofner and Framus… Burns, for the UK companies, these were the things that we were playing. Rapier as a smaller brand that were existing over here. But yeah, those were the things people were playing. The P-Bass definitely took its time over here. I don’t think British music was especially exposed to it, really, until the 60s when you saw those trade embargos go away. But then you also saw the birth of soul, so you had like Stax and Motown Records. And then you’ve got Donald “Duck” Dunn, you’ve got James Jamerson… those two guys alone, they are like the P-Bass players. They’re the people that bring it to this whole new level. They essentially defined an entire genre by the sound of a Precision Bass with flat-wound strings. And I think at that point, probably more universally, it became accepted as the industry standard.

Brad Page: Right, right. And we’ll talk more about those guys as we get further along. I believe the first recorded electric bass solo was by a British band, The Shadows. Jet Harris, a song called “Nivram.”

Joe Branton: But he’d have been playing a Burns, one of his famous signature Shadows basses.

Brad Page: Right, that would have been 1961. Jet Harris was voted the NME Readers’ Poll number one solo instrumentalist in 1962, which is interesting for a bass player, right?

Joe Branton: Wow, that’s impressive.

Brad Page: Of course, around that time you started to have some of the things like what they would call the “Tic-Tac” bass that you’d hear on Duane Eddy songs like “Rebel Rouser.”

Joe Branton: The Bass VI, so you know, that sort of early 60s… of course, Gretsch had already introduced their version of the Bass VI by then, but the Fender Bass VI turned up in the 60s. Leo was always trying to work out where the bass would sit.

Brad Page: Yeah, let’s step back a little bit and talk a little bit more about the Precision Bass. In ’54, they introduced the contoured body, a little bit of a design change. I think that’s when the sunburst came out and the white pickup. And then in ’57… ’57, I believe, is when really the definitive look of what we think of when we think of a Precision today with that very distinctive pickup, the bridge, a different pickguard, larger headstock—all of that came about in ’57, I believe.

Joe Branton: That’s right. ’57 is when we got that. We didn’t get rosewood boards, though, until a little later, so we’re still on maple boards at that point. ’59, I think, for rosewood. So sort of ’57… that’s really quintessential: two-tone sunburst (not three-tone yet), gold anodized plate, great big baseball bat maple neck, and the new headstock. And that, of course, is, I guess, what we think of as a Precision Bass today. They moved away from that single-coil pickup towards the split-humbucking pickup.

Brad Page: Right. And then in March of 1960, they introduced the Jazz Bass, which I know you’re a big fan of the Jazz Bass. Why don’t you maybe explain to people what the difference is between a Precision and a Jazz Bass?

Joe Branton: Yeah, I guess they do look kind of similar from a layman’s perspective. The Jazz Bass was great because it was the first time Leo Fender really listened to people and listened to what people wanted from an instrument. The necks on P-Basses were obviously big and fat, so he decided to make a Jazz Bass neck very slender. It has a really aggressive taper, so the strings are very close together at the nut. The idea was making it more comfortable to play, faster to play. And instead of just having one pickup bang in the middle of the body—that’s what the P-Bass has, that split humbucker—you’ve got two single coils: one in the middle of the body (so you can still make a Jazz Bass sound like a P-Bass), but then you’ve got one wedged closer to the bridge. Two volume controls, so you can blend between them, and that’s when we really got those kind of honkier sounds coming out of bass. And certainly, I would say the 80s is defined by bridge pickups on Jazz Basses and that sort of thing. The body was different; it was offset to mimic the other instruments coming out at the time, the Jazzmaster, the Jaguar. Fender were going through their “offset Beach Boys” phase.

Brad Page: Yeah, define “offset” for the folks at home.

Joe Branton: Oh, of course. So, probably a slightly angled body. Rather than it being straight as you look at it standing up, think of it as being slightly off-kilter and extended in the lower bout and the upper horn.

Brad Page: Now you play both a P-Bass and a Jazz Bass. I know you’ve owned many basses over the years. What’s your personal preference?

Joe Branton: Oh… it’s… I have a Jazz Bass that, you know, I definitely end up using probably more than any other instrument. It’s probably been on more records I’ve ever recorded and done a few more tours than anything else. I love the versatility of a Jazz Bass; having those two pickups is fantastic. But I would never, ever choose it as my favorite. My favorite thing is a very, very simple Precision Bass with flat-wounds. If you just want to sound fantastic, then a P-Bass is the answer. And there is no world where I would ever choose a Jazz Bass over a P-Bass. If you asked me what was the best bass, it’s obviously a Precision Bass. Everything about a P-Bass seems to be spot on. He just got it right. That was the thing; he just got it right.

Brad Page: In ’61, Gibson introduced the EB-3, which is kind of now… was that short scale or long scale? I forget.

Joe Branton: Short scale. They did, at this time, for the first time ever, introduce a Fender-scale bass, so they introduced the EB-3L as well, but not initially. You can get very few 60s EB-3Ls; they more commonly appeared in the 70s. But of course, the EB-3, dear listener, was on an SG-type body shape—so a really small body—so the problem was when they started using 34-inch scale necks, the neck dive was horrendous. You would snap that bass in half as soon as you let go of it.

Brad Page: Yeah, neck-heavy, so once you let go of the neck, it would immediately drop to the ground. The Gibson Thunderbird comes out in ’63, and that’s a long scale, full scale, however you want to refer to it.

Joe Branton: Yeah, that’s right. Fantastic, fantastic bass.

Brad Page: Yeah, oh, I love them. And they just look super cool.

Joe Branton: They do. I can’t pull them off. You can’t wear them up high because they’re so wide. So, difficult for me, but I do love them objectively.

Brad Page: In ’65, Fender is purchased by CBS, which kind of changes things, and eventually, the CBS-era Fenders kind of have a bad rap, right?

Joe Branton: Yeah, yeah, they do. They weren’t the same. But I mean, they’re still fantastic instruments. It’s one of those things I think there’s more in the rumor than there is in the fact.

Brad Page: I would agree. I’ve owned a few 70s Fenders and Gibsons, and I think they’re perfectly great guitars.

In 1966, Ampeg released the AUB-1, which I believe was the first electric fretless.

Joe Branton: Yeah, I didn’t know that. First electric fretless… it is such a great, great bass.

Brad Page: Now, do you play fretless much?

Joe Branton: I do, yeah. Probably about a quarter of the time. I love it. I play upright as well; I’m trying to play upright more this year—I started lessons on that. I’d really like to play upright more. But I do have a couple of fretlesses. I always record bits and pieces on records. I love it as a more expressive instrument than a fretted bass. It’s just… you’ve got to find the right track where it’s applicable, I guess. The AUB-1 bass was incredible. The fact that it was… if you’ve never seen one, dear listener, it’s a solid bass with f-holes, like you get on a cello or an upright bass, but they go the whole way through the body. Which just looks amazing. They’re incredibly cool-looking, hard to come by, and expensive.

Brad Page: Yeah. Once we get into the 70s, then we start to see an explosion of kind of more… I don’t know if I would necessarily call them “boutiquey,” but more kind of customized, custom-type basses. Alembic in 1971… what were some of your favorite oddball 70s basses?

Joe Branton: Well, the 70s is a wonderful time because Japan steps into the ring in the 70s and kind of takes a little bit of that American dominance of the music instrument manufacturers. Sure, they take the bulk of the 70s to really get it right—the 80s is where Japan comes alive—but throughout the 70s you start to see kind of more things: Ibanez becomes a pretty big player; certainly towards the late 70s you get the Roadster, the Roadstar, the Musician. These are all fantastic basses, most of which offered fretted or fretless. They also started exploring things like ebony wood for fretboards, as well as using maple, which is great on fretless instruments. Stuff like that was fantastic. I think also a brand that we didn’t mention in the 60s, you had Silvertone, Danelectro, making fantastic Sears catalog guitars. Affordable but incredible in their own right, and they were doing their own thing on the bass front as well. But yeah, in the 70s, what would be my favorite sort of type of bass? It’s still so dominated by Fender at this point. The Fender Precision Bass is still absolutely king.

Brad Page: It’s the one to beat, right?

Joe Branton: Yeah, exactly. The problem is towards the late 70s, active circuitry arrives. And this will come into play more in the 80s, but people kind of fall out of love towards the end of the 70s with that classic Fender bass tone. They want something more aggressive, more sparkly, more clear, more clinical. And so they start cutting huge holes in the back of their, by today’s standards, very expensive vintage Fender basses, putting batteries and active preamps in them, and throwing away their, sort of now sought-after, original Fender pickups.

Brad Page: Right. And you’ve got, like we mentioned, Alembic. You look at some of those basses and they have six knobs and five switches and all kinds of extra stuff on there.

Joe Branton: This is it. This is it. And it becomes standard in the 80s. We start seeing active circuitry, so having a preamp where you’d have bass, middle, and treble controlled on the bass itself becomes kind of a standard. By this point, the Precision Bass and the Jazz Bass are sort of “old hat.” It’s why people were modifying them so much. They didn’t have—that time period didn’t look as lovingly back at the 50s and 60s as we do now. Bass gear was “old tech” to be discarded or modified.

Brad Page: It’s interesting how, you know, the closer we are to something, we tend to undervalue it as opposed to once something gets to be 20 years old, and that’s constantly rolling, right? Like now instruments and amps and stuff from the 90s are now, quote-unquote, “vintage.”

Joe Branton: The other big brand, I guess, that came into play, who really brought in an instrument that was a frontrunner along with Gibson, along with Fender, is Yamaha with the Broad Bass, or BB as they’re more commonly known. That occurred at this time, which was very much a Fender-style instrument. This used the same pickups—it was a PJ split, so you got a Jazz pickup and a Precision Bass pickup in the bulk of them. So it did a bit of both. The body shape is very similar, although original in its own right, and it’s a 34-inch scale, similar headstock tuners in the same place. This was Yamaha stepping in and offering something that was along the same lines as a Precision and a Jazz, but with that incredible Japanese build quality that was occurring around the 70s and 80s.

Brad Page: Yeah, a lot of those brands started out making exact copies that sort of got them in some legal trouble, right? But that was kind of their… they were doing knock-offs and then eventually evolved into coming up with their own designs and innovations, and some of those are some of the best instruments you can get from the time and still to this day, in a lot of ways, I think undervalued or underappreciated.

Joe Branton: Yeah, there are still a few things that I think you can… less and less… older things that maybe have… that you can pick up for a reasonable price that people haven’t quite caught on to the fact that they’re really good. What happens is that you get priced out of the 60s stuff. And so then those CBS-era Fenders that you poo-pooed 10 years ago, now suddenly they become desirable just because the sheer fact that nobody can afford those 60s models. Everything goes up in price and you find yourself priced out, and so you start to look at things like Ibanez and Yamaha and stuff that really people weren’t so attracted to. Now those things have value, too.

You look at one of the best brands for high-quality Fender copies—and this, dear listener, is if you’re not aware of them, this is a brand to look out for: Tokai. And what Tokai were turning out throughout the 80s was absolutely incredible, in both guitar and basses, in both Gibson copies and Fender copies. But their “Jazz Sound” bass was their Jazz Bass and their “Hard Puncher” was their Precision Bass, and they are every bit the quality that Fender were putting out at that time. But until recently, you could pick up a good old Tokai for the best part of probably about 500 quid over here, probably about $700 over your way. But now we’re seeing them go for 1,100 pounds, so that’s $1,500, $1,600 U.S. I assume it’s probably maybe a bit cheaper for you just because of proximity to Japan, but still, they’re no longer the cheap way in, so to speak. They’ll cost you real money now, too.

Brad Page: I used to play a few Fernandes guitars back in the 80s that, again, were great Fender knock-offs that in many cases played as good, if not better.

Joe Branton: Well, you know, look at Green Day. Billie Joe Armstrong, the guitarist from Green Day, his guitar that made their first few records is a Fernandes Strat copy. That speaks volumes for that brand. They were great.

Brad Page: Yeah. We also see the first five-strings in the 70s. So, innovation continues.

Joe Branton: That’s interesting. Five-string, I guess, started to become people wanting a low B. I’ve always favored a high C on a five-string. I like it that way around, but low B, I guess, became very popular. Certainly that worked moving forward because heavier genres, metal bands, they wanted those lower tunings. Five-string is perfect for that. It was also great for soul and anything like that that just needed that sort of low register.

Brad Page: As we get into the 80s, we see on one hand, a company like Steinberger who kind of reinvents the bass…

Joe Branton: I love him. Ned Steinberger—what an absolute hero. Few people can claim to have offered more original, working ideas and design to the electric guitar and bass. I think the man is an absolute genius. I’ve loved everything he’s ever done.

Brad Page: I mean, you can go to the NAMM show every year and find all kinds of crazy inventions, but so few of them catch on. But what he did actually, multiple times, has stuck around. They were innovations that were valuable and influential. And of course, the headless bass is probably the thing that most people identify with him.

Joe Branton: Small rectangular body, headless bass. He was exploring carbon fiber as a material. That in itself was revolutionary at the time. Two-way truss rods, I think he was the first for that. But the guy was an absolute genius; all the stuff was fantastic. Of course, Steinberger later got bought by Gibson, and the instruments became a little cheaper, made out of wood. They still had the essence, but he went on to found NS Design instead, which is his company to today.

Brad Page: And on kind of the other side of that, Fender launches the Squier brand in 1982, which is kind of their budget or entry, beginner, however you want to say it. But that made a true Fender-style guitar available at a price point for beginners, which… we always need people coming into the business and picking up guitar for the first time.

Joe Branton: Yeah, it was great. That was a real change for Fender because obviously Squier were introduced to combat Japan’s sort of lawsuit-era instruments coming from Tokai and Fernandez and people like that. Squier was made in Japan at the time initially, and the idea was that they would have those entry-level instruments to kind of have a company owned by Fender so Fender can make the money from the knock-offs rather than not making the money from them. But Squier’s still out there today and actually making some great instruments today. I would recommend a Squier Strat or Tele or P-Bass or whatever to anyone who’s looking to get started. They’re fantastic.

Brad Page: As time goes on, there’s sort of less and less new ground to explore, but there are still people doing some innovative things. What are some of your favorite things that you’ve seen in the last couple of decades?

Joe Branton: Well, one of the things that I thought was kind of the, I guess, a movement that I think was one of the most innovative was, in many ways, the least innovative because it was looking back. For the first time over the last 20 years or so, we’ve started to get the concept of reissues, which is fantastic for someone like me who loves traditional stuff and I’m not really into sort of modern concepts, fan frets, vaulted, whatnots. Like Ned Steinberger is as far as I go. Everything that happened after that… it’s too modern for me. But past this point, we got all these brands releasing stuff that looked like the old things, but maybe took away some of those weirder quirks, so they’d have working truss rods, the pickups wouldn’t be microphonic, maybe they’ve refined the neck a little bit so it’s actually comfortable to play—lots of little things like that.

And it was great seeing… I love brands like… we talked about the Ampeg bass earlier. Eastwood– fantastic brand for making affordable guitars inspired by old instruments. They do a version of the Ampeg bass. You couldn’t pick up an AUB-1 probably for less than maybe 8,000 pounds at the moment, certainly not over here. But you can, for about 600 quid, get the Eastwood copy. And I think that’s wonderful that people have access to that. And you had other brands like Vintage doing a similar thing. Squier introduced their “Classic Vibe” range, which meant that they were doing things not 100% accurate to specific years of Fender’s past, but general copies of stuff that sort of existed back then.

Brad Page: Just capturing the feel and, as they say, the “vibe” of those vintage instruments.

Joe Branton: Exactly, exactly. So for me, I love that that’s become a thing. More than lots of people have looked forward; there are lots of brands doing really creative modern stuff. There’s a brand called Meta Basses—unfortunately named just before Facebook rebranded, so difficult to search for them now. But they’re a little French company and they make instruments out of carbon fiber. Their shapes are so elegant and interesting and the build quality is so extremely high. I love things like that; I think they’re really interesting.

Brad Page: Let’s talk—and you touched on it earlier—but let’s talk about some of the important ambassadors of the bass over the years. Of course, James Jamerson, Motown legend, hugely influential across almost all genres in that his technique and style really influenced so many people that it influences people today who don’t even know that they’re influenced by James Jamerson, right? So many great bass parts. “For Once in My Life” is one of my favorites from James Jamerson.

Joe Branton: Yeah, absolutely. And I think you can’t speak about Jamerson without talking about Duck Dunn. In many ways, they were… I often think of them only probably in my head, but like as these two nemeses of Stax versus Motown. Like early soul and R&B, they were just so different, but so similar in the same at the same time. I love Booker T. and the M.G.’s; I love everything they’ve ever done. And hearing the Stax records that Dunn played on and the Motown records that Jamerson played on, they just brought this vibe, this ability to groove but also solo on the bass, which was so uncommon at the time. They brought like a mojo, just a coolness to the bass guitar that probably hadn’t existed before those two men.

Brad Page: Duck Dunn is very much a groove player. Not fancy, not a lot of fills and things like that, but just the groove is what he was all about. Just always in the pocket. Jamerson had all of that, but he also had the flourish, you know? He was a little bit more fancy, if you will. And then you have guys like Bob Babbitt, who was kind of the number two chair at Motown, who played on a lot of those records too. Jamerson gets so much of the credit—well deserved—but you also had Bob Babbitt playing as well. And at Stax, originally you had a guy named Louis Steinberg, who was there before Duck Dunn, who played on a lot of that early stuff as well. And then you’ve got players like Carol Kaye in the Wrecking Crew out in LA. That’s hugely influential.

Joe Branton: Absolutely. Yeah, that time period really we started seeing the first “bass heroes,” I guess.

Brad Page: Yeah, in all using the electric bass still at a time when I think studios in particular were more inclined to go to the upright bass. The electric bass I think was adopted quicker for live performance just because it was so much easier to cart around and more sturdy and more reliable, right? Like a travel instrument at that time rather than it being a serious one. Right, I think that’s how a lot of particularly studio guys looked at it like, “Okay, you can play your electric bass live, but when we’re in the studio, we’ll do a stand-up bass.” But Carol Kaye, Jamerson, Duck Dunn—people like that really brought… and there is a very distinct sound and feel to an electric bass that you don’t get from the stand-up that became the defining sound of particularly soul music, but rock as well. And then you’ve got Paul McCartney, who’s hugely influenced by James Jamerson, but kind of develops his own sound that becomes incredibly influential and is my personal favorite bass player. I love McCartney’s stuff.

Joe Branton: Yeah, he’s incredible. His melody work’s amazing. If you ever look at… I studied The Beatles at college when I was studying bass there, and it’s so funny seeing any of Paul McCartney’s basslines. The guitarist would get their music and it would be a couple of pages because, you know, it’s a verse and a chorus looped. But Paul McCartney just played a different thing the whole way through. There were no repeats; they are full compositions. He’s not playing the same thing every chorus or every verse; he’s walking with the melodies. Everything about it was just a unique way of looking at the bass as an instrument.

But I think we talk about it versus the double bass. Early Precision Bass was designed—early bass and the Precision Bass—they wanted it to emulate the upright. Flat-wound strings emulated the sound of an upright bass.

Brad Page: You had the mutes, right?

Joe Branton: Exactly. They weren’t even on springs on originals; they were just stuck in the bridge plate of P-Basses. The foam was just in there. The idea was you would only ever want that sound, and that was the sound. And it wasn’t really until 1966 when John Entwistle helped Rotosound develop round-wound strings. Round-wound strings for bass did not exist until then. And so you didn’t get that driven, rock and roll P-Bass tone. And who’d have thought those two things would meld so well together—a Precision Bass and round-wound strings? Before then, it’s kind of been a different sounding instrument. And that one change changed everything. And then the P-Bass became a rock and roll instrument, not a great alternative for a double bass if you’re traveling, but a great rock and roll instrument.

Brad Page: An instrument in and of itself, right? Unique. Exactly. Yeah, and Entwistle, I mean, is another one of my favorite bass players—just a monster player and very influential and his use of like bi-amping and things like that really had of his time with a lot of that stuff.

Joe Branton: Totally, totally. And he had Fender make him a slab-body Precision Bass. So the slab body of the original ’51, but with the appointments of a modern P-Bass, so the split humbucking pickup and the modern headstock. He had Fender make him one of those, which was the bass that he put the first sets of round-wounds on. That was the first instrument that got round-wounds. It was a P-Bass, not anything else, because he’s not especially known for P-Basses—he’s known for lots of weird things—but it was a P-Bass that he designed round-wounds for.

And you mentioned him, I think of Entwistle, Chris Squire, but then around this time you start getting these incredible sort of lead bass players thanks to round-wounds. And for me, the number one who was a P-Bass player with round-wounds who just played into a big stack—it was always driven and he just used the dynamics of his right hand for, you know, to keep things less driven sometimes—was John Wetton, the original bass player of King Crimson. Vocalist and bass player, everything he did was incredible. I think he brought King Crimson alive for me. All his lines are just incredibly interesting. And a lot of the time, Robert Fripp’s actually doing just weird stuff in the background, and so much of early Crimson is John Wetton soloing, doing lead lines, improvising. And so much of that improvisation is kept on the records, whether it’s in time or not, and I love him for that. I think he was brilliant.

Brad Page: It’s funny; he’s mostly, I think, people think of him as the vocalist, right? And he doesn’t get listed among the great bass players as often.

Joe Branton: Just go and listen to “Starless.” If you want to hear an incredible bass solo, go listen to “Starless.” That is John Wetton at his absolute best. And that’s a P-Bass.

Brad Page: Then you have the funk revolution where Larry Graham and the whole pop and slap kind of thing… Bootsy Collins, all of that stuff.

Joe Branton: Jazz Basses definitely become more popular around this time because they suit that style a little more. Still some P’s, totally, but like a lot of those players, you know, Larry Graham, Bootsy Collins, they were on Jazzes.

Brad Page: Who are some of your other favorite bass players? People who you think, particularly maybe ones that don’t get enough recognition, who would you like to call out?

Joe Branton: My favorite bass player is a really obvious one, you know, for anyone who’s ever listened to my podcast, but it is Juan Alderete from The Mars Volta and Racer X as well. But he’s done countless other projects as well; he’s the bass player on most of Omar Rodríguez-López’s solo albums and a lot of his solo bands as well, which I think is where Juan does his best work. He had his own solo project called Vato Negro which you can barely find anywhere to listen to, but I think for interesting tones because he messes around a lot with effects, but also just for great lines, an incredible groove, and an ability to pin down the fundamentals of a band. When you’ve got a guitarist going crazy like Omar, the drummers that they worked with are normally very sort of crazy, chops drummers, and you’ve just got Juan Alderete there absolutely holding down the fundamentals and still keeping it interesting.

He was selling off a lot of his basses last year. He was actually, he was very sadly in a bike accident a few years ago and he was in a coma for a while. When he came out of that, he’s now cognitively impaired, and he was selling a lot of his bass collection in order to raise money for the continued sort of care that he now needs, which is very sad to have such an incredible bass legend have that occur to. But I managed to buy one of his fretless basses that he’d played on… it was actually, he sold a couple of basses that were on some of my favorite records and I didn’t quite get in quick enough to get some of those, which was a shame, but I did get his fretless Nordstrand Acinonyx, which is something he’d used. It was the first one made because Nordstrand made the fretless version of that bass for Juan because he was largely a fretless player. So it’s the first one of those. So I’m very happy to own… you know, he’s probably my biggest bass hero. So getting to own a bass owned and played by that man… that’s not something a lot of people get to do, so I’m very grateful for that.

Brad Page: Yeah, that’s fantastic.

Summing up sort of the history of bass, where do you think we’re going?

Joe Branton: Well, I think the great thing about bass is it still continues to look back as much as it looks forward. I think we have wonderful new innovations: active circuitry, fan frets, everything else that’s extended range, everything else that’s coming out. And that’s great; I love that modern people can get involved in bass in that regard. But it’s really nice to see there’s still loads of companies making great versions of the originals and those classic 50s and 60s basses that we revere so much. So I am just enjoying the… there seems to be a really good jazz and soul revival at the moment, and I’m seeing so many great melodic bass players playing old P-Basses or short scales with flat-wounds doing just really gorgeous, interesting melody work. So I’m really happy that that’s where bass seems to be going as an ensemble instrument that can offer a little bit more. So I hope that continues to be the case.

Brad Page: And in terms of where you are going in the future, of course, the Guitar Nerds podcast—one of my all-time favorite podcasts—that’s still rolling. Where’s the easiest place for people to find that?

Joe Branton: Well, yes, I mean, you can listen to the Guitar Nerds podcast wherever you get your podcasts, dear listener. So it’s available on all the streaming platforms. Don’t listen on Spotify—listen elsewhere, it’s much better. But you can listen to that wherever you get your podcast. You can check out any of the other stuff we do over on Instagram or Facebook. You can find us on Patreon, and there’s even a Discord if you want to get super nerdy.

Brad Page: And your band Polymath? Do you have new material coming out? I know you’ve got a tour coming up this spring in the UK or Europe?

Joe Branton: Yeah, that’s right. We’re doing—we’ve got about three weeks in Europe and the UK, and we’ve got a new album coming out around then that’s being put out by an American record label called The Lasers Edge, who are this fantastic prog label. We were really happy to get picked up by them, actually. So they’re putting out our new album, Something Deeply Hidden. But yeah, that’s—it’s a great record for interesting instrumental prog that’s largely inspired by like Ethiopian jazz. But heavy-ish.

Brad Page: All right, Joe Branton, it’s a pleasure to talk to you, to have you on the podcast. Thank you so much for coming on and sharing your bass expertise with us.

Joe Branton: It’s been wonderful to be on the podcast. Thanks so much, Brad. It’s been a lot of fun talking about the best bass in the world: the Fender Precision Bass.

Brad Page: Yes, sir. Thank you, Joe. Take care.

Brad Page: There you go. That’s our celebration of the bass guitar and our 200th episode. Thanks to Joe Branton for joining us for this episode. If you’re a guitar player or a bass player and you’ve never listened to the Guitar Nerds podcast, please make sure you do; I highly recommend it.

This podcast will be back in about two weeks with another new episode. You can catch up on all of our previous shows on our website, Lovethatsongpodcast.com, or find us in your favorite podcast app. If you’d like to support the show, the best thing you can do is to tell someone about it. Share it with your friends and family. The word-of-mouth support from people like you is worth more than any advertising or sponsorship, so thank you.

Let’s close out this episode with something from Joe Branton’s band, Polymath. This is the title cut from their current EP; it’s a track called “The Halting Problem.” And I will see you next time.

ADDITIONAL RESOURCES:

Fender Precision Bass:
https://www.fender.com

Joe Branton:
https://www.instagram.com/yoseph900

Guitar Nerds Podcast
https://www.guitarnerds.net

Polymath
https://www.poly-math.net

Alembic:
https://www.alembicguitars.com/

Ampeg
https://www.ampeg.com

Gibson:
https://www.gibson.com/collections/shop-all-gibson-bass-guitars

Hofner basses:
https://www.hofner.com/en/

Ibanez
https://www.ibanez.com

Meta Guitars:
https://metaguitars.fr/basses/

Rickenbacker
https://www.rickenbacker.com

Squier bass guitars:
https://www.fender.com/collections/squier-electric-basses

Tokai:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/T%C5%8Dkai_Gakki

Yamaha:
https://usa.yamaha.com/products/musical_instruments/guitars_basses/index.html

As Mardi Gras approaches, what better way to celebrate than by diving into the rich musical heritage of one of New Orleans’ favorite sons? In this week’s episode, we explore one of the city’s most iconic musicians, Dr. John, and his classic track, “I Walk on Gilded Splinters“. Released in 1968, this song is a perfect example of the unique blend of voodoo culture and psychedelic sound that characterizes Dr. John’s early work.

I Walk on Gilded Splinters” is a mesmerizing track that runs over seven and a half minutes long, inviting listeners into a hypnotic soundscape and creates an immersive atmosphere that reflects the voodoo rituals Dr. John was inspired by. The lyrics are steeped in Creole culture, featuring references to voodoo spirits and the vibrant life of New Orleans.

So, whether you’re preparing for Mardi Gras festivities or simply curious about this spellbinding track, tune in to this episode and immerse yourself in the captivating world of Dr. John, The Night Tripper.

“I Walk On Guilded Splinters” – John Creaux [Mac Rebennack] Copyright 1967 Warner-Tamerlane Publishing Corp and Skull Music

TRANSCRIPT:

Welcome back to the “I’m In Love With That Song” podcast, part of the Pantheon family of podcasts. I’m Brad Page, your host and each episode, I dive into my record collection and come up with one of my favorite songs for us to explore here on the podcast. Don’t worry if you’re not a musician, because we don’t get deep into music theory or technical jargon here. We’re just gonna listen closely to discover what makes these songs great.

This is Mardi Gras season this year, Mardi Gras is coming up in a few days. So I thought this year, we’d celebrate by exploring one of my favorite songs by New Orleans’ favorite son, Dr. John, from his very first album back in 1968– a classic track called “I Walk On Guilded Splinters”.  

Malcolm “Mac” Rebennak Jr. was born in New Orleans in November 1941. He grew up with music all around him, a musical family in a music musical city. It’s no surprise he fell in love with the local music scene. Mac initially picked up the guitar, because there were so many great piano players in New Orleans that he figured he’d have a better chance getting gigs if he was a guitar player.

He started working young. He was about 12 years old when he started playing gigs, and soon he was playing on sessions in the studio. Working with older musicians was a great learning experience, but he also picked up some pretty bad habits. By the time he was in his teens, he was using heroin.

He did a lot of session work for Cosimo Matasa, the legendary producer. And Mac was writing songs too.

On Christmas Eve 1961, Mac tried to break up a fight. But when a gun went off, Mac almost lost a finger on his left hand. Until it healed, he couldn’t really play guitar, so he switched to playing piano– the instrument he’d eventually become famous for.

Many of the New Orleans musicians Mac had been working with ended up in Los Angeles, playing on sessions with the legendary Wrecking Crew. After a short stint in Angola prison, Mac followed them to LA and started doing a lot of session work himself. He played on tons of records during this period, but frankly, he didn’t like most of the songs he was playing on. He just didn’t care much for pop music at all.

It was around this time that he came up with the character of “Dr. John”. He based his Dr. John Persona on a real-life character named Bayou John Montaigne, who supposedly taught voodoo to Marie Laveau.

So, he created this figure of “Dr. John, The Night Tripper” voodoo doctor, with a whole theatrical stage presentation, mixing voodoo ritual, stage magic, Mardi Gras spectacle, and of course, performed by authentic New Orleans musicians.

He assembled the former New Orleans musicians now living in LA, and they cut an album steeped in the sounds and rhythms of New Orleans, but with its own unique approach, bordering on psychedelic. Some of the songs were versions of old traditional numbers, others were new compositions. Some were based on actual voodoo ceremonial melodies. The album was given the name “Gris Gris”, a kind of a ritual object, a lucky charm or totem, and it was released in January 1968. It still remains one of the most mysterious, spooky records I’ve ever heard.

It was produced by Harold Batiste and performed by Dr. John on vocals, keyboards and percussion; Harold Batiste on bass and clarinet and percussion, Richard “Dr. Ditmus” Washington also on percussion; Bob West on bass, John Boudreaux on drums; Plas Johnson on saxophone; Louis Boulden on flute; Steve Mann on slide guitar and banjo; Dr. McLean on guitar and mandolin, Mo Pedido on congas and Dave Dixon, Jesse Hill, Ronnie Baron, Johnny Jones, Prince, Ella Johnson, Shirley Goodman, Sonny Race Durden and Tammy Lynn on backing vocals.

One quick note before we get started: this song at over seven and a half minutes long, is longer than most of the songs we cover on this show. And much of it is about setting a mood, creating an atmosphere. So there are some long stretches, but we’ll work our way through it. It’ll be worth it, because this is such a great track.

It begins with the bass guitar, some percussion and, quieter in the mix, an acoustic guitar played with a slide. And all of this is primarily in the left channel.

And Dr. John is going to join in with the first verse. You know it’s him right away. Even back then on his very first album, he had one of the most distinctive voices you’ll ever hear.

The song is steeped in New Orleans voodoo culture. Dr. John based it on a song he had heard sung by voodoo practitioners. And so we’ll hear a lot of voodoo terms and vocabulary, along with that Cajun French unfamiliar to many of us outside of Louisiana. Let’s hear the doctor’s vocal track.

In the lyrics, he mentions “Le Grand Zombie”, which is a reference to a powerful serpent spirit. Serpents are believed to hold unspoken knowledge, and voodoo devotees communicate with the spirit world through them. You also hear him refer to “The King of the Zulu”. King of the Zulu is the central figure in the Mardi Gras parade. And as for the song title, “Gilded Splinters”, according to some, gilded splinters are the points of a planet, related to astrology. However, Dr. John himself said that in the original song, they sung of “gilded splendors”, but he changed it to “splinters” because he just liked the sound, and the visual, of gilded splinters.

The chant like vocals of the backing singers are panned to the right channel. The stereo mix of this track is somewhat unusual, with all of the instruments panned either hard left or hard right. The only thing in the center is Dr. John’s lead vocal. So, in the left channel, you’ve got the traditional drum kit, the congas, bass guitar, acoustic guitar, a couple of saxophones. Then in the right channel, you have the backing vocals, snapping fingers and hand claps, and a talking drum. More on that in a bit.

The backing vocals are followed by that melody played on a soprano saxophone and doubled on the bass guitar. The melody reminds me of a snake charmer, like you’d hear in one of those old movies.

Now, I used to think they’re singing “Till I burn up” during that part. But what they’re actually singing is “Tell Alberta”. Dr. John had spent two years in prison when he was young on a drug charge.  Apparently, whether it was the prison he was in or a story he was told about another prison, one of the jail blocks was named “Alberta”. And sometimes the inmates would pass information, send signals between blocks, by calling out and echoing the message from block to block. And you can visualize that just by listening to the performance. Dr. John calls out, “Tell Alberta”. And then the backing singers repeat the message, one by one, and we can hear it as the message travels further down the line.

I like how he stutters as he says he can make you stutter, emphasizing the point.

Next, as they chant the chorus, they preface it with some unfamiliar phrases to those of us outside of Creole culture. The expressions “con boonay”, “kili” and “con con” are actually Creole terms for grilled corn, coffee and molasses. It may seem odd to be singing about food in a song like this, but, as in many cultures, preparing and eating food is part of ritual and celebration.

And another iteration of the “Tell Alberta” call.

Here, he references Coco Robicheaux, a character from New Orleans legend: a child abducted by a werewolf. There was a well-known Louisiana musician who adopted the name Coco Robicheaux, and supposedly he was a friend of Dr. John’s. But most likely, in the context of this song, it’s referring to that old legend, not to a contemporary musician.

He’s inviting you down to his soiree. You, your mammy, your cousin. Bring the whole family.

The backing singers get louder in the right channel as Dr. John vamps over the top. Notice the baritone sax in the left channel, playing low droning notes.

The repetition of the chant and the groove. This is essentially a one-chord song, a drone, and at a somewhat slow pace; the track clocks in at around 90 beats per minute. The combination of the tempo, the drone and the repetition make this song quite hypnotic. The song has been referred to as “voodoo psychedelia” and you can certainly feel that.

Most of the instruments are playing repeated patterns, but the talking drum in the right channel is pretty freely improvising, I think.  The talking drum is a West African instrument, sort of hourglass-shaped, with drum heads on both ends. You change the pitch of the drum by squeezing it in the middle. It’s an instrument that dates back to the 18th century.

There’s an electric guitar in here now, playing a simple accent chord.

We we’re about five minutes deep into this track, and here it takes a bit of a break for a conga solo, which is still primarily in the left channel.

Then the “Tell Alberta” call and response returns. And here, with only the percussion playing, you can really hear the spatial presence of the vocals. Dr. John is front and center as if we’re in the cell block with him. And as he calls out, we can hear the next voices echo his call, each one sounding a little further away as the call is relayed throughout the prison. It’s like a mini audio play.

And the chorus chant returns, as does the snake charmer melody. And then the band chimes back in.

For the last minute or so of the track, it doesn’t fade out in the traditional sense. The band gets quieter, and maybe more distant, as the vocals are first reduced to a whisper, and eventually just wordless vocalizations, whistles, grunts, noises. The song doesn’t end so much as it dissipates like smoke.

Dr. John, The Night Tripper – “I Walk On Guilded Splinters”

The album was not commercially successful when it was released; it didn’t make the charts in the US or the UK, but over time it has earned a reputation as an essential, important album, frequently turning up on lists of the greatest albums of all time. It’s a one-of-a-kind album in terms of the songs on it and the way it sounds. There is simply nothing else like this album.

Dr. John, Mac Rebennack, would go on to have a long career. He recorded a ton of albums. Many of them, I think, are classic. He lived with heroin addiction for decades. It’s a miracle he survived, really. But in 1989, he finally got clean.

He consistently released albums from the late ’60s up through 2014. He had a little bit of a renaissance in 2012 when he recorded an album with Dan Auerbach of The Black Keys called “Locked Down”.

On June 6, 2019, Mac Rebennak passed away from a heart attack. He was 77 years old.

I hope you enjoyed this taste of New Orleans, Creole culture and a little voodoo on the side. New episodes of this podcast are released on the 1st and the 15th of every month, so the next edition will be heading your way soon. Until then, there are almost 200 other episodes of this show waiting for you to discover, so feel free to check out any of those past episodes on our website, lovethatsongpodcast.com, or find them on your favorite podcast app. Communicate with us on Facebook, or send an email to lovethatsongpodcast@gmail.com.

And if you’d like to support the show, the best thing you can do is to tell a friend about it– Share it with your friends and family. The more listeners, the better.

However you choose to celebrate Mardi Gras this year, please do it safely.  And on behalf of everyone on the Pantheon Podcast Network, “Laissez les bons temps rouler”. Now, go get some gumbo and crank up some Dr. John.

In this episode, we pay homage to the legendary Curtis Mayfield, a pivotal figure often overlooked in discussions about the great artists of the ’60s and ’70s. Join us as we explore his poignant track “Hard Times” from the album There’s No Place Like America Today. We delve into the rich history of his career, from his early days with The Impressions to his groundbreaking solo work that tackled social and political issues head-on.

We uncover the intricate layers of this slow-burning groove, highlighting the subtle interplay of instruments and the emotional depth of Mayfield’s lyrics. As we navigate through the song’s haunting themes of love, fear, and societal struggles, you’ll gain a deeper appreciation for Mayfield’s artistry and the timeless relevance of his message. Tune in for an insightful journey into the life and music of a true musical genius.

“Hard Times” – Curtis Mayfield Copyright 1975 Comad Music Co. BMI

TRANSCRIPT:

People, get ready– The “I’m In Love With That Song” Podcast is coming! My name is Brad Page, thanks for joining me here on the Pantheon Podcast Network. Each episode of this show, I pick one of my favorite songs and we take the time to listen– really listen– to uncover little elements, those special moments that turn a good song into a great one. Musical expertise is not a prerequisite here; you don’t have to know anything about music theory or understand a lot of technical jargon. We’re just going to put our ears to work and discover what’s been right there all along.

On this edition of the podcast, we’re going to be exploring a track by one of the most important figures in music history. When people list the important black artists of the 60’s and 70’s, you often hear musical geniuses like Stevie Wonder, Marvin Gaye, Sly Stone, Michael Jackson and Prince… but there’s one name that often gets overlooked: Curtis Mayfield.

Well, on this episode, we’re going to pay tribute to this musical genius by listening to Curtis Mayfield and a song called “Hard Times”.

Curtis Mayfield was born in Chicago in June 1942. When he was around 8 years old, he stumbled across a guitar shoved in the back of a closet and that was it. He’d already been singing in church and noodling around on piano, but man, when he found that guitar, he really fell in love. It set the direction for the rest of his life, really.

When he played piano, he liked to use the black keys, which meant that he was mostly playing in the key of F#. So when he taught himself to play guitar– and he was entirely self-taught– he transferred that to the guitar, and created his own F# tuning on guitar, which gave him a sound unlike anyone else.

He dropped out of school when he was 16 and joined a local group called The Roosters. Eventually they changed their name to The Impressions. Their first hit was “For Your Precious Love” in 1958, featuring the vocals of Jerry Butler, the band leader.

That taste of success was enough to inspire Butler to go solo, so he left and Curtis took over The Impressions. In 1961, with Curtis at the helm, The Impressions had a hit with “Gypsy Woman”. Their next big hit was in 1963 with “It’s All Right”.

Under Mayfield’s direction, they developed their unique harmonies centered around Mayfield’s falsetto vocals, as exemplified with their 1964 hit “I’m So Proud”.

But Curtis had more on his mind beyond love and romance. Not that there’s anything wrong with that, but Curtis Mayfield was a black man living in America in the 1960’s, and he wasn’t just a witness to what was going on– he was part of it. He was living it. And he had things to say.

For all that was great about Motown, they stayed decidedly away from politics; and Stax Records, even though they were integrated and in that sense, more progressive than most, they largely avoided the subject at the time. The fact that they were located in Memphis probably meant it was safer if they didn’t.

But Curtis had no such reservations. They released “Keep On Pushing” in 1964, one of the first pop songs to directly address civil rights.

That was followed by “People Get Ready” in 1965. By any measure, one of the most significant singles ever released. It reached number three on the R&B charts, number 14 on the Top 100 chart. Martin Luther King considered it the unofficial anthem of the civil rights movement. It’s been covered dozens of times, by everyone from The Staple Singers to Bob Dylan, from Bob Marley to Rod Stewart and Jeff Beck. It’s a song that still inspires today.

“People Get Ready” was also the first time that Mayfield’s guitar was prominently featured on a track.

Curtis continued to write songs addressing the social and political environment, particularly from the black perspective. His lyrics could be pointed, but the music was always subtle, gentle and encouraging. He might have been angry– God knows there’s plenty to be angry about– but the music was rarely delivered in anger.

In 1968, he launched his own record label with manager Eddie Thomas called Curom Records. Finally, he was able to control his own recording and publishing, something very few artists, black or white, were able to do. In 1968, he released his first solo album, simply titled “Curtis”, in 1970. It is a great record, including at least two classics: “Move On Up” and “Don’t Worry If There’s A Hell Below, We’re All Going To Go”. Listen to the fuzz bass on this track.

Two more albums followed in 1971, and then in 1972, he got the job to create the soundtrack to “Superfly”.

Mayfield’s soundtrack is simply iconic. Along with Isaac Hayes’ “Shaft”, it defined the sound of this era of filmmaking. The thing is, Curtis wasn’t really a fan of the movie, at least not the message. Where the film “Superfly” in some ways glorifies drug dealers, Curtis wanted none of that; he was not interested in promoting that. So, with the “Superfly” soundtrack, you have these songs that are, in essence, commenting on the actions and the characters in the film, with Curtis giving his point of view, which often is in opposition to the images on the screen. It all makes for, I think, one of the most interesting and unique soundtracks ever recorded. Along with the title cut, the album also features a few other classics like “Pusher Man” and “Freddy’s Dead”.

The success of the “Superfly” album, and the album literally outsold the movie, that success ushered in a second career for Mayfield, writing and recording for films, and he would release a handful of other soundtracks, working with Gladys Knight, the Staples Singers and Aretha Franklin.

And he would continue recording solo albums. “Back To Whe World” came out in 1973, “Sweet Exorcist” and “Got To Find A Way” in 1974, and 1975’s “There’s No Place Like America Today”. That’s the album we’re visiting on this episode.

“There’s No Place Like America Today” was Mayfield’s seventh studio album. Curtis was wrestling with his own depression, not to mention the troubling situations in America at the time… I guess some things never change. This is Mayfield’s State of the Union album, and it’s sobering. Death, poverty, sadness all make their way into these songs, but so does love and romance, faith and hope.  Its ‘one of my favorite Curtis Mayfield albums… in fact, maybe it is my favorite.

The song we’re digging into in this episode is “Hard Times”. It’s the second-to-last song on the album.

The album was produced by Curtis, and features Gary Thompson and Phil Upchurch on guitars, Rich Tufo on keyboards, Harold Dessent on woodwinds, Joseph “Lucky” Scott on bass, Quinton Joseph on drums, Henry Gibson on percussion, and Curtis Mayfield on vocals, guitar and keyboards.

“Hard Times”, like all of the songs on the album, was written by Curtis Mayfield. And like most of the tracks on this album, it’s a slow burn. Doesn’t come on strong, but the groove is insistent. The song kicks off with a single hit on the hi-hat and then the band launches into the groove.

Let’s explore this groove a little bit. Let’s start with the bass, drums and percussion. You can hear that the drums are recorded quite dry, not much for reverb or room sound on them. And that makes for a very intimate and maybe even a little claustrophobic sound.

Now let’s hear the guitars. I’m just making a guess here, but I think we’re hearing Curtis and Gary Thompson on rhythm guitars and it’s Phil Upchurch playing some lead lines in the left channel, using a wah-wah pedal to get that classic sound.

Alright, lets go back to the top.

At this point, there’s a subtle shift in the groove, and the guitar solo comes a little more forward. Focus on those tasty licks.

That leads us to the first verse. You’ll hear multiple vocals; all the voices are Curtis overdubbed.

I really like that little instrumental break there. Here comes the second verse, and Curtis is really laying it out here. You can feel his depression and paranoia in these lyrics. “I’m afraid to come outside; although I’m filled with love I’m afraid they’ll hurt my pride, so I play the part I feel they want of me, and I’ll pull the shades so I won’t see them seeing me.”

Nice guitar lick there. There’s more tasty guitar playing coming up. It’s in the left channel, but let’s see if we can bring it to the center and up the volume a bit.

That brings us to the third and final verse. Just a classic Curtis Mayfield vocal on this track. You can really feel the emotion in his voice.

For this chorus, let’s hear what the band is doing underneath the vocals. The interplay between the bass and the drums, it’s great.

Let’s pick it up from there through the chorus.

And the track will slowly fade out. Riding out on the groove.

Curtis Mayfield – “Hard Times”

As I said at the beginning, when people mention the important black artists of the late 60’s and 70’s, it’s usually names like James Brown, Stevie Wonder, Aretha Franklin, Prince; Curtis Mayfield is often left off the list, but he stands toe-to-toe with any of the important artists of that period.

Curtis would continue to release albums through the 70’s and the 80’s, as well as doing concert tours… and it was at a concert in Brooklyn, New York, on August 13, 1990– an outdoor show at Wingate Field,– when a storm was brewing. And just as Curtis’s name was announced and he headed for the stage, a massive gust of wind hit the lighting trusses. Lights came crashing down, injuring half a dozen people. And Curtis, Curtis was struck in the back of his neck, breaking his third, fourth and fifth vertebrae. Curtis was permanently paralyzed from the neck down. He’d never play guitar again. He was 48 years old.

Being paralyzed made breathing difficult, which made it almost impossible for him to sing. But Curtis didn’t give up. In 1996, six years after the accident, he released one final album titled “New World Order”. Recording it was painstaking and arduous. He discovered that if he laid on his back, gravity would help him to exhale, just enough to be able to sing one line at a time.

And so slowly, a line at a time, he was able to record his vocals for this last album.

Curtis’ health declined, and in December 1999, the day after Christmas, Curtis passed away. He was 57.

Rolling Stone magazine referred to him as “the gentle genius”. That’s as good as any way to describe the great Curtis Mayfield.

I hope you enjoyed this edition of the podcast. As always, we’ll be back in about two weeks with another new episode. All of our previous shows are available on our website, and we’re creeping up on 200 episodes, so there’s plenty of them to be discovered. You can listen on the website, lovethatsongpodcast.com, or find the shows on your favorite podcast app.

You can keep in touch with us on Facebook, just look for the “I’m In Love With That Song” podcast and you’ll find us there. Or send an email to lovethatsongpodcast@gmail.com.

Support the show by sharing it with your friends and family. And if you’d like to go one step further, then head over to oldglory.com and buy a t-shirt or some band merch from your favorite artist. Old Glory has tons of great stuff, and if you use our discount code, lovethatsong, you’ll save 15% and you’ll be supporting this show. That’s oldglory.com,  Discount code is lovethatsong– get some cool merch, save some money, and support the show. Thanks.

On behalf of Pantheon Podcasts, where fans belong, I thank everyone for listening. Now it’s time for you to rediscover some of the great Curtis Mayfield records. So go listen, and I’ll meet you back here next time.

Dive into the world of Blue Oyster Cult with our latest episode, where we explore their fan-favorite track, “Transmaniacon MC” from their debut album. Discover the band’s history, the creative minds behind their lyrics, and the unique sound that defined them as the “Thinking Man’s Heavy Metal Band.” Curious about the story behind their enigmatic lyrics? Tune in now.

“Transmaniacon MC” – Sandy Pearlman, Albert Bouchard, Donald Roeser, Eric Bloom Copyright 1972 Sony/ATV Tunes, LLC

TRANSCRIPT:

Welcome back, all you veterans of the Psychic Wars, this is the “I’m In Love With That Song” podcast and I’m your host, Brad Page. Thanks for joining me here on the Pantheon Podcast Network, where each episode, I pick a song from my extensive library of favorites and we listen to it together, listening for all the little moments, those special touches that make it a great song. No musical knowledge or experience is ever required here. This is a show for everybody– all you need is a love for music and you’ll be right at home here.

On this edition of the podcast, we’re gonna climb into our hard-rockin’ Wayback Machine and set the dial for 1972, and explore a track from the debut album of the band that was known as the “Thinking Man’s Heavy Metal Band.” This is Blue Oyster Cult with “Transmaniacon MC.”

This is our second time visiting Blue Oyster Cult; we covered their classic track “Don’t Fear the Reaper” on one of our Halloween episodes a while back, I believe that was episode number 90. It’s one of my favorite episodes of the podcast, actually, so if you haven’t heard that one, go back and listen to it. It’s a good one.

The band that would become Blue Oyster Cult came together in New York in the late 60’s. Albert Bouchard was a multi-instrumentalist, but it was as a drummer that he first hooked up with a guitarist named Donald Roeser. They formed a band called Soft White Underbelly. Soon after, Alan Lanier joined them on Keyboards, and they also made two other key connections, Sandy Perlman and Richard Meltzer. Meltzer was a music critic and a writer who would write lyrics and poems that would become some of the classic Blue Oyster Cult songs. Perlman also wrote a ton of lyrics for the band, and he would also become their manager and record producer.

Along with Meltzer and Perlman, other literary figures would contribute lyrics, including Michael Moorcock and the great Patti Smith. It’s the contribution of these writers that earned Blue Oyster Cult the reputation as the “Thinking Man’s Metal Band”. Of course, at this point, they weren’t quite Blue Oyster Cult just yet.

Still working under the name Soft White Underbelly, with bassist Andy Winters and a lead vocalist named Les Bronstein, they recorded an album for Elektra Records. But that album was never released. Eventually, Eric Bloom was brought in to replace Bronstein on vocals and guitar. And the final piece of the puzzle came into place when Albert’s brother Joe Bouchard replaced Winters on bass.

A few more band name changes happened too. They were the Stock Forest Group for a while, and the Santos Sisters… and another recording session took place again for Elektra Records, but that also failed to be released. This was a band that was at a dead end.

Up until this time, their sound was more of a jammy, psychedelic, San Francisco, almost Grateful Dead kind of thing. But by 1971, change was necessary.

Murray Krugman was a project manager and an A & R guy at Columbia Records. Capitol Records was having success with Grand Funk Railroad, and Black Sabbath was making a lot of waves over at Warner Bros. And Columbia, well, they wanted a piece of that action. They were looking for a band that would be Columbia’s answer to Black Sabbath.

Murray Krugman told the band, if they could work up some new material that was dark and mysterious and heavy, then he could get them a record deal at Columbia. So, along with another name change– Perlman was the one who came up with the name Blue Oyster Cult– they retooled their sound into a harder rock sound. Really, it’s not nearly as heavy as Black Sabbath, but it rocked hard enough. And with their enigmatic foreboding lyrics, Columbia Records signed them up.

The first Blue Oyster Cult album, simply titled “Blue Oyster Cult”, was released in January 1972. It was produced by Sandy Pearlman, Murray Krugman and David Lucas.

“Transmaniacon MC” would be the first sound the world would ever hear from Blue Oyster Cult. It’s the song that opens the the album: Side one, track one. It features Donald Roeser on lead guitar; Perlman would give Roser the nickname “Buck Dharma”, and that nickname has stuck right up till today. Alan Lanier is on keyboards, Albert Bouchard on drums, Joe Bouchard on bass, and Eric Bloom on rhythm guitar and lead vocal. The song was written by Eric Bloom, Albert Bouchard, Donald Roser and Sandy Perlman.

The lyrics are pretty much all Perlman. It’s one of his sci fi conspiracy epics. He loved that kind of thing. He envisioned a story where the disastrous Rolling Stones concert in Altamont, California in 1969 was masterminded by a secretive evil motorcycle club called the “Transmaniacon MC”.  MC stood for Motorcycle club. In Perlman’s story, the Transmaniacon MC were behind the violence and murder at that show. And this song was supposed to be their theme song. It was their club song, the song that they would sing before they rode off to create more chaos and terror.

Like all great hard rock songs, the track kicks off with a great guitar riff. Let’s hear the guitar and the bass.

Notice on the second half of the riff that the bass doubles the guitar part. After playing that riff twice, they launch into the verse riff.

Let’s go back to the top and play it through.

Here’s where Eric Bloom comes in with the first verse. His voice is kind of punky here. As time went on, he developed a lot as a vocalist, but here he still got some of that garage-rock edge.

You can hear the reference to Altamont there as Sandy. Pearlman’s lyrics paint the picture of this fictional motorcycle gang out for violence. Remember that this track was released in January ’72, recorded sometime in 1971; the Altamont concert was in December of ‘69. So the memory of this tragedy was still fresh when the song was written and recorded.

They return to that chromatic riff and then begin the second verse. Let’s listen to what Alan Lanier is doing on the keyboards here underneath this verse. It’s mixed fairly low in the final mix, but he’s got both an organ part and a piano part going on here. So let’s hear some of that.

Okay, now let’s go back and hear that in context of the full second verse.

I want to go back and listen to what the Bouchard brothers, Joe on bass and Albert on drums, are playing during the chorus.

After the chorus, they return to the riff. And then there’s a guitar break courtesy of Buck Dharma.

Nice little bass guitar fill there from Joe Bouchard. Let’s pick it up. Leading into the third verse.

Here, they’re going to pull back, bring the dynamics down before the big conclusion.

Let’s go back and listen to Alan Lanier’s piano part in the right channel.

And now let’s back it up and hear that again in the mix.

And they return to the intro riff.

What’s Eric Bloom saying? There’s well, I can isolate it for you, but I’m not sure it’s gonna make much more sense. Something about a “wheelie”, I guess. Let’s play it through to the end.

Blue Oyster Cult – “Transmaniacon MC”

This was the first of a long run of Blue Oyster Cult albums, and of course they evolved over the years. For some fans, those first three albums are considered their best. Of those three, my personal favorite is the third album, “Secret Treaties”. But I also like a lot of their mid-period stuff and it’s hard to deny how great the “Agents of Fortune” album is; that’s one of my favorites.

Alan Lanier passed away in 2013, but at the time of this recording, the other original members are still with us, and there’s a version of Blue Oyster Cult that’s still out on the road today.

Thanks for hanging in there with me for this edition of the “I’m In Love With That Song” podcast. New episodes of this show come out on the 1st and the 15th of every month, so I’ll meet you back here soon. You can catch up on all the previous episodes of this show on our website, lovethatsongpodcast.com, or listen to them on your favorite podcast app. We’re on Spotify, Apple, Google, Amazon, PocketCast, iHeartRadio… ou can listen to us everywhere fine podcasts can be found.  And while you’re there, please leave us a nice review.

If you’d like to support this show, please spread the word about it and share it with your friends and family, because recommendations from listeners like you are the number one way podcasts like this grow.

You can also support this show by buying a T shirt or some band merch from oldglory.com. They carry official band merch from all your favorite artists, and if you use our discount code lovethatsong, you’re going to save 15% and you’ll be helping to support this podcast. That’s oldglory.com with the discount code LoveThatSong. Thanks.

 Once again. I am Brad Page, and this is the Pantheon Podcast Network where fans belong. Now go explore that great catalog of Blue Oyster Cult, and join us again next time here on the “I’m In Love With That Song” podcast.

Join us as we kick off 2026 with a celebration of one of America’s most electrifying party bands, The J. Geils Band! This episode dives deep into the infectious “(Ain’t Nothin’ But A) House Party,” a party anthem that perfectly encapsulates the essence of a good time. We explore the band’s origins, looking at how the J. Geils Band blended classic R&B with Rock, creating a legacy that resonates through their catalog. We’ll reflect on the band’s rise to fame, and the bittersweet nature of their journey, culminating in their eventual split after achieving commercial success. Whether you’re a lifelong fan or new to the band, this episode is a perfect way to celebrate the spirit of the J. Geils Band and the joy of their music.

“(Ain’t Nothin’ But A) House Party” – Dal Sharh & Joseph Thomas Copyright 1967 Clairlyn – Dandelion Music BMI

TRANSCRIPT:

Whether you’re doing the Southside Shuffle or the Detroit Breakdown, you’ve danced your way right into the “I’m In Love With That Song” podcast. I’m your host, Brad Page, and right here on the Pantheon Podcast Network, each episode of this show I pick one of my favorite songs and we look at it from top to bottom, right to left and inside out, as we try to get a better understanding of what makes a great song work. No musical expertise required here– all you gotta do is listen.

This is our first episode of 2026, so what better way to ring in the new year than with a party? A house party to be exact. And what better way to do that than with America’s all-time greatest party band, the legendary J. Geils Band with “(Ain’t Nothin’ But A) House Party.”

John Warren Geils Jr. Was born in New York City in February 1946. He grew up in New Jersey and eventually landed at the Worcester Polytechnic Institute in Worcester, Massachusetts, studying mechanical engineering. But he was already playing plenty of guitar by then. He played trumpet as a kid, but eventually switched to guitar, inspired by the Butterfield Blues Band, Muddy Waters and Buddy Guy. In Worcester, he met Danny Klein, a bass player, and a harmonica player named Richard Salwitz, who became better known as “Magic Dick”. They dropped out of college in 1967 and moved to Boston.

Another New York transplant was Peter Wolf. Peter Walter Blankfield was born in New York in March of 1946, attended the High School of Music and Art, and then moved to Boston to attend the School of the Museum of Fine arts. In 1964, he founded a band called The Hallucinations, which included Stephen Jo Bladd on drums. Wolf also had a gig on a local FM radio station, WBCN; If you grew up around Boston, or anywhere in New England, you know those call letters. Well, that’s where Wolf worked the all-night shift as a DJ, where he called himself “Woofa Goofa”.

Eventually, Wolf and Bladd joined with Geils, Klein and Magic Dick. And then, when keyboardist Seth Justman joined the band, that was the final piece to fall into place, and the new J. Geils Band became one of the hottest tickets in town. They signed with Atlantic Records in 1970 and released their first album, self-titled, that same year.

That album was followed by “The Morning After” in 1971. That record includes their version of “Looking For A Love”, which was originally recorded by The Valentines featuring Bobby Womack.

This was the magic of the J. Geils Band: They played classic R&B, but with a rockin’ edge that made these songs their own. Many kids growing up in this era didn’t even know that these were covers; their first exposure to these songs was from the J. Geils versions. They opened a lot of doors and a lot of ears.

This was also a bit of a problem though, because by the mid-70s, radio– which was still the number one way fans discovered new music– radio was becoming tightly formatted, and the J Geils Band was sometimes considered “too white for the black kids” and “too black for the white kids”. So stupid, but that’s how radio could be.

In 1972, they released their first live album, a killer single disc live record called “Live – Full House” that, though it only peaked at number 54 on the charts, it is one of the greatest live records of all time. The band is on fire here, tearing through a brilliant set of some of their best tunes, including Magic Dick’s harmonica horkout, “Whamma Jamma” and a smoking version of “First I Look At The Purse”.

Then in 1973, they released their third studio album, “Bloodshot”, which includes a number of J. Geils classics, including “Give It To Me”. It was their first single to crack the top 20, and it made “Bloodshot” their breakthrough album.

“Bloodshot” also included a little song called “Ain’t Nothing But A) House Party”. And that’s the track we’re gonna be looking at today.  It’s the song that opens the album– side one, track one. And it really gets things started.

The song was written by Del Shah and Joseph Thomas, and originally released as a single by The showstoppers in 1969. Here’s a little bit of that version.

The J. Geils version begins with J. Geils’ guitar part, doubled and panned hard left and right. A cow bell also joins in in the right channel.

The band joins in with Stephen Jo Bladd on drums, Danny Klein on bass and Seth Justman on the organ. And you can hear Seth Justman has added a piano part in the right channel. Peter Wolf comes in with the lead vocals for the first verse. And you can hear Magic Dick playing a simple, sparse harmonica part in the left channel.

Stepen Jo Bladd plays the first part of the verse with a beat on the tom toms. Let’s listen to that, along with Danny Klein’s bass.

For the next part of the verse, he shifts to the snare and hi-hat.

As they hit the chorus, Magic Dick is blowing long sustained notes on his harp in the right channel.

Let’s bring up Peter Wolf’s vocals for the second verse.

I believe it’s Seth Justman joining him on vocals here.

And now it’s time for Magic Dick to really play that harp. And he’s good. His harmonica sound and style was a big part of the J Geils’ sound, a critical element.

Seth Justman is doubling the harmonica part on the organ.

Now it’s J Geils turn. Big guitar solos weren’t really a huge part of the J Geils Band. You kinda get the feeling that Geils himself was pretty content to just lay back and be part of the band. But he would step up front and take a solo now and then.

Before we move on, let’s go back and listen to what the bass and the drums were doing, because this is a pretty great groove here.

And that brings us to a shortened third verse.

And now there’s a little bit of a breakdown here, It’s a classic move.  Primarily bass and drums, with Seth Justman adding some low notes on the piano.

And of course you gotta have a cowbell in there.

Sounds to me like they’ve added some conga drums in there.

They are really building up the energy to a frenetic level here.

That is a really great scream from Peter Wolf there. Let’s see where we can bring that up in the mix.

The J. Geils Band – “(Ain’t Nothin’ But A) House Party

The J. Geils Band would continue to make some great records; “Nightmares…”, “Hotline”, “Sanctuary” and “Love Stinks” are particular favorites of mine. And then, in 1981, they released “Freeze Frame”, and that album was a smash.

Finally, with their tenth studio album, they had their first number one album. They finally reached the top… and then they split up. Peter Wolf was gone and the band limped on with one more album, and then they were gone.

This is one of those things that always baffles me– how a band can slog it out, year after year, through all the hard times, and then as soon as they make it, they fall apart. Whether it’s egos or whatever, you would think that it’s in everyone’s best interest to hold it together for at least another couple of years, or records. But nope. All that hard work, years of logging the miles, and as soon as they make it to the top, they self-destruct.

But the J. Geils Band gave us a dozen albums; many of them are quite good, and a few are true classics. That will have to be enough.

J. Geils passed away in 2017. He was 71 at the time he died. He was living in Groton, Massachusetts… that’s the town that I went to high school in.

The rest of the members of the band are still with us today. Peter Wolf has put out some really good solo records, and last year, he released his autobiography, which is a good read. I recommend it.

I hope you enjoyed this edition of the podcast. We’ll be back in two weeks with another new episode. ‘Till then, you can get caught up with all of our previous episodes on our website lovethatsongpodcast.com or just find the show on your favorite podcast app.

If you’d like to support the show, the best thing you can do is to just tell a friend about the show. Share this podcast with your friends and family, because that helps us to grow the audience.

You can also support the show by going to oldglory.com and buying some band merch, like, a cool T-shirt. They have a ton of great stuff there, and if you use our discount code LoveThatSong, you’ll save 15% while you’re helping to support this podcast. So please, that’s oldglory.com with the discount code LoveThatSong. Take advantage of it. Thanks.

That’ll wrap up this episode. On behalf of everyone here on the Pantheon Podcast Network– where fans belong– I thank you for listening. Now, go dig out all your old J. Geils albums and crank ‘em up, starting with “(Ain’t Nothing But A) House Party”.

RESOURCES:

J. Geils Band
Official Website

Peter Wolf
Official Website

The Butterfield Blues Band
Wikipedia

Muddy Waters
Wikipedia

Buddy Guy
Official Website

The Showstoppers
Wikipedia

Seth Justman
Wikipedia

Magic Dick
Wikipedia

Bloodshot (Album)
Wikipedia

Our special Bonus Holiday Episode for 2025 features a song that should be a Christmas staple– a brilliant power-pop gem from Doug Powell called “God Bless Us All“. Originally written for Ringo Starr’s 1999 Christmas album but didn’t make the cut, this is a lost Christmas classic that deserves to be a holiday favorite.

“God Bless Us All” Doug Powell – Copyright 2006 Muse Sickle Productions

In this episode, we welcome back author Gillian Garr to discuss her new book, “Tom Petty: The Life and Music“. We’ll take a look at the fascinating career of one of rock’s most beloved figures. From Petty’s early encounter with Elvis Presley to the eventual rise of The Heartbreakers, this episode is packed with anecdotes and insights that shed light on Petty’s enduring legacy.

Gillian shares stories about Petty’s struggles with record labels, his creative partnerships, and the pivotal moments that defined his career. We discuss the making of iconic albums like “Damn The Torpedoes” and “Wildflowers”, as well as the challenges he faced, including battles with addiction and the pressures of fame. With a mix of nostalgia and admiration, this episode is a heartfelt tribute to Tom Petty’s music and the impact he had on fans and fellow musicians alike.

Pick up Gillian’s book here:
https://www.amazon.com/s?k=tom+petty+the+life+and+music

TRANSCRIPT:

Greetings, all you rebels, refugees and heartbreakers. Thanks for joining me for another episode of the “I’m In Love With That Song” podcast, coming to you on the Pantheon Podcast Network. I’m your host, Brad Page.

Tom Petty is a big favorite here on the show– in fact, we first covered him way back on Episode 2 of this podcast. I’m a big fan of Tom, and the Heartbreakers too, as a band. Mike Campbell is one of my favorite guitarists of all time. So, when I heard that author Gillian Gaar has a new book out, celebrating the life and music of Tom Petty, I wanted to get her back on the show to talk about Tom and his remarkable career. You may remember Gillian from her appearance on this podcast, about eight months ago, when she joined me to talk about the 50th anniversary of Queen’s “Night at the Opera” album. It’s a pleasure to have her back this time to talk about the late, great Tom Petty.

Here’s my conversation with Gillian Gaar:

Brad Page: Well, Gillian Gaar, thanks for coming back on the podcast. And you’ve got a brand new book that’s out now. It’s out for the holidays– Hint, hint, folks, go pick it up. Perfect Christmas gift for any Tom Petty fan out there. This is a great package, great new book, “Tom Petty: The Life and Music”. And Gillian’s here to talk with me about the fascinating career of Tom Petty. He’s one of my favorite songwriters. There’s really great stuff in here of the whole band, the Heartbreakers, as well as Tom. I just had a great time reading the book.

Gillian Gaar: Oh, good.

Brad Page: Yeah. So, let’s start talking about Tom Petty. One of the most formative things about him, which I don’t know that I knew this before I read the book, is that Tom had actually seen Elvis Presley at a very young age, and that kind of set the stage for him for his future career in a lot of ways.

Gillian Gaar: Yeah, I had no idea he had a close encounter with Elvis either. And I’ve written a lot about Elvis, so that was interesting. And, yeah, it came before Tom was really that interested in rock music as well. I mean, what’s interesting about that encounter is that it wasn’t a concert; he was watching Elvis on a film set. But he was just kind of dazzled by, I suppose you’d say, the accoutrements of show business and what that was like. Elvis had come back from the army and was focusing on making films. And his film “Follow That Dream”, which is about a family of homesteaders, was set in Florida. And one of Tom’s relatives worked as local crew on film shoots. So he was working on this film shooting, so he asked Tom, who’s, you know, like 10, would he want to come and meet Elvis? And he said,  “well, sure”. And so he was, he was brought to the film set, they were filming on location. So then all the Cadillacs pull up with his entourage, the Memphis Mafia guys, and the anticipation’s building, and then Elvis comes and yeah, he was just really impressed by that moment of the girls shrieking and waving their album covers that they want to get signed.

Brad Page: Right.

Gillian Gaar: And fans would break past the barricades and you know, in and try and hug Elvis. So, oh, shop ruined, got to do it again. And Tom was just dazzled by this whole experience. And yeah, he talked a bit to Elvis, got to shake his hand and all that. And when he gets home that night, his friend who lives next door just wants to know all that information, every bit of detail, you know, about what happened. And Tom ended up trading a slingshot to his friend for a box of 45s, which included some Elvis 45s.

Brad Page: And then of course, like so many people of that era, kind of the next big thing was seeing the Beatles on Ed Sullivan. And that was a life-changing experience for him.

Gillian Gaar: Yeah, I mean I was watching too… though I didn’t, you know, end up in a rock band later.  But we were all one of those 73 million people watching that night.

Gillian Gaar: It’s almost a universal thing for a whole generation of– and more– of musicians, that launching off spot. And Tom was one of them.

Gillian Gaar: I thought, though, in Tom’s case, you know, there he is watching the Beatles at 13 or so and just think, if you could have told him that in 20-some years he was going to be making a record with George Harrison, think how flabbergasted he would have been.

Brad Page: I know, right?

Gillian Gaar: He wouldn’t have believed you.

Brad Page: It’s incredible, I mean, how many of those 73 million that watched that show got that to that point? It’s really something.

So he forms– he has a couple of bands, but the first one that really kind of comes together and does anything is a band called Mudcrutch. And that’s where Tom meets Benmont Tench and Mike Campbell, who become kind of his left- and right-hands through the rest of his career.

Gillian Gaar: Yeah, yeah, Mike Campbell in particular was always brought on with every project, solo as well as the band projects.

Brad Page: And Mudcrutch has some success. They go out to California, they get signed to Shelter Records. But it kind of falls apart, right?

Gillian Gaar: Yeah, it fell apart pretty quickly. They had all the Hollywood dreams, but I mean admittedly the single they put out was not that strong, either. I mean, I think it got some okay reviews in Billboard, but it didn’t take off. And the record label seemed to lose interest in them pretty quickly. Well, they dropped them– except for Tom. They hung onto to Tom because they recognized that he had the talent. He should probably be the main focus.

Brad Page: Right. They could see the potential. And he was actually doing some work as a songwriter; I think you mention in the book that he had a very short period where they were teaming him up with some LA studio musicians, and that really didn’t work for him. He’s a band guy and so he ends up kind of slowly but surely bringing in the members of the Heartbreakers, including those guys that came from Mudcrutch and they form this new band, The Heartbreakers.

Gillian Gaar: Yeah, and you think about Mudcrutch, that was just the band named Mudcrutch, it was not Tom Petty and the Mudcrutchers or something. And his subsequent band, he thought of in those terms as well. They weren’t going to name it Tom Petty and the Heartbreakers or Tom Petty and the such and such, but, one, it made sense. He was the one that had the contract with the record company.

Brad Page: Mhm.

Gillian Gaar: So he was kind of bringing them on as sort of his side musicians, except he wanted them to be a band and not just side musicians. So yeah, I think it was also at the label’s instigation that it became Tom Petty and The Heartbreakers.

Brad Page: So Tom Petty and The Heartbreakers officially make their first album, and it comes out to, you know, it got some good reviews but it didn’t really do very much. And this is another thing I always thought was a really fascinating little aspect of the Tom Petty story, is that there’s this one guy, a promotions guy named John Scott, who almost single-handedly breaks the song “Breakdown” as a single. And it just shows you that there’s always these unsung heroes behind the scenes. John Scott really was an important figure in getting the Heartbreakers really going, getting their career going.

Gillian Gaar: Yeah, it’s interesting to think about what if he hadn’t been there.

Brad Page: Right.

Gillian Gaar: You know, then maybe we wouldn’t have heard of the Heartbreakers. Because, as you say, the album got some good reviews, but it didn’t zoom up the charts and sell a million copies or anything. So, you know, kind of a lukewarm success, and they might not have progressed further.

Brad Page: John Scott heard something in the song “Breakdown” and started to get it on the radio. And before you know it, it’s a, it’s a minor hit, but it gets them going.

Brad Page: And then their second record, “You’re Gonna Get It”, which is, I think, a much stronger record than the first one, has some great tracks on it. “Listen to Her Heart”’s one of my favorites.

Gillian Gaar: Yeah, yeah. That’s the one with the cocaine line in it, isn’t it?  Right, yeah, that. got him in a bit of trouble because he referenced cocaine, even though it wasn’t really a positive reference. It’s more of a bribe than anything.

Brad Page: It sort of sets a precedent for Tom, that he would not change it. He was not going to budge on that. And that remained an element of his personality and his career through the rest of his life.

Gillian Gaar: That’s true, that’s true. Very much so.

Gillian Gaar: I remember he said they wanted him to change to champagne, and his argument was, you know, you can get cheap champagne in the store. That’s not much of a special thing to offer someone. Well, logically, that makes sense.

Brad Page: And then as they go into their third album,  and it’s a convoluted story, but Shelter Records was distributed by ABC, or a subsidiary of ABC Records, and ABC Records gets purchased by MCA at the time, one of the large record conglomerates. And Tom doesn’t like the fact that his contract is essentially, he’s sort of owned by people that he never signed a deal with.

Gillian Gaar: Right, right.

Brad Page: And so he’s fighting against this contract, and eventually to get out of it, he declares bankruptcy.

Gillian Gaar: Yeah, that was a pretty clever move.

Brad Page: On his part it was, but incredibly risky, too. And you know, in the meantime, he’s not getting paid, and the band’s not getting paid. And you know, they’re trying to get this third record off the ground.

Your first two records could be so-so, but by the time you get to the third record, you really, it was kind of a make-or-break kind of thing, and you got to start having legitimate hits if your career is going to continue. And so he’s in this very precarious place, where the first two records, they did okay, but nobody was beating down the doors to release Tom Petty records. And now he’s in a contractual dispute with his record label. Usually you almost always lose when you’re an artist in that perspective. Somehow, he’s obstinate and persistent enough that he pulls it out.

And so, amongst all of this precarious situation, Tom Petty and the Heartbreakers end up releasing their third album, “Damn The Torpedoes”, which still to this day is my favorite Tom Petty record. I think this is a fantastic record. It’s as close to a perfect record as Tom Petty ever got. I think it’s so great.

Gillian Gaar: Yeah, that’s a record, you just, you remembered seeing it everywhere. Not just hearing it everywhere, but yeah, I remember Tower Records and they would have the, those huge blow ups of the album covers, and that was there. I mean, that was probably the first Tom Petty record I really noticed. Because of that, because of seeing that everywhere.

Brad Page: Yeah, it was, it was exactly what he needed. It was a big hit record. It had a number of singles on it.

Just so many great songs on this record. I’m a huge fan. And that’s 1979, Tom Petty and “Damn The Torpedoes”.

That’s followed up by a record called “Hard Promises”. And we’re smack-dab into another controversy, because the record label, now having had a big success with “Damn The Torpedoes”, decides that they want to release this new album at a brand-new price point of $9.98. And Tom will not have it.

The average record price at the time was $8.98. And so he goes into a whole big fight with the record company about not releasing this record at a dollar more. It’s gotta be $8.98, to the point where he was almost gonna name the album “$8.98”.

Gillian Gaar: Yeah. They called that “superstar pricing”. That was the surge pricing of its day.

Brad Page: Yes. Yeah. And it’s fascinating that, you know, he went from struggling with those first two records, had one big record, and suddenly now he’s a superstar, right? And they think they can charge a dollar more per record, which, you know, in those days, it was a big deal. $9.98 was a lot of money for a record back then.

Gillian Gaar: Yeah.

Brad Page: Of course, now we pay literally four times that for vinyl these days. But, yeah. And a number of great songs on the “Hard Promises” record. “The Waiting” is probably my favorite track from that one.

Brad Page: And then Tom seems to be everywhere, because he has this huge hit with Stevie Nick, “Stop Dragging My Heart Around”. And he just seemed to be, like, on the radio all the time. Between his solo career and this song with Stevie, it was, you could almost guarantee: turn on the radio and there’ll be something by Tom Petty on.

Gillian Gaar: Yeah. It did seem like that kind of a third little golden era for him. I think it kind of harmed radio play in some instances, though, you know. Well, we got the Stevie Nicks song on. Why Do we need to play the Heartbreakers kind of thing.

Brad Page: Yeah. And I think “Hard Promises” did have a dip in sales compared to “Damn The Torpedoes”. And you could chalk some of that up to a little bit of over-saturation, maybe? And the fact that he’s almost competing with himself by having this song out with Stevie, because that was technically a Stevie Nicks song.

Gillian Gaar: Yeah. Yeah. It wasn’t on their on his album.

Brad Page: Correct, yeah. 1982, they released their fifth album, “Long After Dark”, which features another huge Tom Pety hit, “You Got Lucky”. That’s such a great song.

Gillian Gaar: Yeah.

Brad Page: I mean, he’s just racking up the hits at this point. And this is kind of a decisive moment for the Heartbreakers, because this is the last album for a while that they record with bass player Ron Blair. He was one of the original members, and he kind of gets fed up with the whole thing, and he leaves the band. So The Heartbreakers suffer their first casualty at this point, and they bring in a guy named Howie Epstein to play bass for them.

Gillian Gaar: Yeah, it’s interesting that sometimes when they get their big break and they’re famous now, that it doesn’t always sit well with everyone. You think it would. You think, “Oh, yes, this is what we’ve been striving for”. And the musician themselves probably thought that, too. But then the constant touring… there are different kinds of pressures when you’re a success than when you’re trying to be a success. But then he missed the band and came back later. Seems like he was able to do that.

Brad Page: Right? Well, we’ll get to that, too. But, Mike Campbell talks about this in his book, that at some point early on, the management or whatever came to them and basically said in, you know, in no uncertain terms, that Tom is the star and you guys are hired hands, and it’s not an equal split. So, “We love you guys, you’re a great band. But make no mistake, Tom is where the money is.” And the guys in the band kind of had to live with that. And Mike Campbell seems to have rolled with those punches, but I think that’s when things started chafing with Stan Lynch, who was the drummer.

Gillian Gaar: Yeah. Yeah. I think also, as The Heartbreaker’s career progresses, they’re working with Tom, but then there are longer breaks between the albums, and those other players like Mike Campbell, they go off and they work with other performers, too. So they’re developing kind of their own identity and their own career as well. In addition, you know, Tom’s the focus, The Heartbreakers are the focus. But then they start adding other things in there themselves, and I think that helped. But Mike, he seems to have been the savviest in learning how to negotiate that. I think he’s told this, yeah, you’re the side man, but he thinks, “Okay, how can I use this to my best advantage? How do I make this really work for me?” I think that’s the attitude he took.

Brad Page: Right.

Gillian Gaar: And I think that explains a lot to how Tom always turned to him when he was doing new projects. Sometimes, in starting an album, Mike would be the only person he’d bring in at first.

Brad Page: Right, right.

In 1985, they make this– to me, it’s sort of the odd album in Tom’s whole career– the “Southern Accents” record. Not my personal favorite record, but it’s a really interesting record, just because it’s a real departure, I think.

Gillian Gaar: Well, that’s one where he starts working with Dave Stewart.

Brad Page: Yes.

Gillian Gaar: So, see, it starts off as more of a Southern accent, and then Dave Stewart gets in there, so it’s kind of less of an accent. And there are some songs that were going to be on the album that were dropped, and they appear as B sides and, oh, they’ve come out on probably some of the many box sets they’ve done. And really, those songs would have fit better with the whole “Southern Accents” theme.

Brad Page: Yeah, it’s kind of a schizophrenic record because, like you said, he has this idea of kind of revisiting his– because, you know, he grew up in Florida, and he kind of wants to revisit his Southern roots. And so he starts heading down that vein and they cut a bunch of tracks, and then he starts to work with Dave Stewart from the Eurythmics, who is not Southern at all, and takes the rest of the record in a whole different direction. And you get things like, you know, “Don’t Come Around Here No More”, which was a big hit, but that sounds nothing like any connection to Southern rock or whatever. It’s a strange record.

Gillian Gaar: Yeah. I mean, I think some of his bandmates were frustrated with that, too, and not that keen on working with Dave Stewart at first, though obviously, they got over that and produced a, you know, ended up turning out a good album.

Brad Page: It was a really successful record, but still, you know, when I look back at his records, this one always seems to me to be the odd one out. But people do love that record.

We start to see him get involved in, well, he does Live Aid, but he also gets involved in Farm Aid, the initial launch of Farm Aid. He and The Heartbreakers, they tour as Bob Dylan’s backup band, essentially, which was pretty fascinating.

Gillian Gaar: Yeah. Oh, they really liked doing that. I mean, again, that generational thing. Bob had a huge influence on people, but yeah, through their work on Live Aid. You know, I love how it came together.

Brad Page: Yeah, you tell the story in the book how they didn’t really even know what they were getting into. Their manager, it seems like essentially just booked them for Live Aid and they said, “Okay”. And they were halfway across the country or whatever. And it was, “All right, you guys, you got to get up and get on this plane and fly to Pennsylvania” or whatever. “We’ll do this gig”. And then they show up and it’s Live Aid, and they’re like, wow!

Gillian Gaar: Yeah, there’s this massive audience and oh, by the way, you’ve got like a worldwide audience of so many millions.

Brad Page: Right. Not only a stadium packed full, but you’re being literally broadcast around the world. So, you know, “better be good”

Gillian Gaar: “ Relax. Have a good time.” “Oh, okay.”

Brad Page: And so, yeah, working with Dylan, of course, that sets us up for some things that come down the road. But almost immediate impact from that is they work on their next record, which is “Let Me Up, I’ve Had Enough”, comes out in 1987 and that features at least one co-write with Bob Dylan.

Brad Page: So there was a lasting relationship established between Tom and Dylan. I think “Let Me Up, I’ve Had Enough” is an underappreciated Heartbreakers record. It’s one of my favorites. I think this record deserves a little bit more love than it typically gets.

Gillian Gaar: Well, it’s got a great title for one thing. I’ve always liked that aspect about it.

Brad Page: Right.

Gillian Gaar: But then, you know, that’s kind of the problem when you put out a lot of albums.

Brad Page: There’s an ebb and flow of everyone’s career, right? There was certainly more to come from Tom Petty, but the same year, 1987, just a really frightening experience: his house burns down. Luckily, his instruments are safe. But you know, he and his, not just him, but I mean, he’s married with two daughters. I think he had both of his daughters at this point, right?

Gillian Gaar: Yeah, but one of them was at a friend’s home. So it was only one daughter that had to go through that. But, you know, they lost all their stuff, and think how traumatizing that would be.

Brad Page: All your photo albums, I mean all of that kind of stuff goes up in flames, literally. And then it turns out to be a case of arson, which is even more frightening. It wasn’t accidental, somebody set his house on fire.

Gillian Gaar: Yeah. And it’s still unsolved to this day, so we don’t know who it was or why they did it. So, you know, he had to live with that for the rest of his life.

Brad Page: Yes. And he’s a public figure, and you can only imagine, like, the thoughts that go through your head now, you know, that it becomes very real, the danger of being a public figure. And now you’re out on the road, literally in front of the thousands of people every night, and what could happen. Scary.

Gillian Gaar: Yeah. Yeah.

Brad Page: Talk about the downsides of fame that you don’t think about when you’re coming up and you’re just, you’re dying to be a rock star, and then you get there and you realize there’s a whole dark underside of it. And Tom certainly lived through some of that.

A year later– the Traveling Wilburys, which is the supergroup of all supergroups, right?

Gillian Gaar: Yeah. Oh, I think so.

Brad Page: And it all starts because George Harrison basically needs a B-side, which is the most throwaway beginning to one of the most incredible supergroups of all time! And George Harrison writes this song, “Handle With Care”, that is tailor-made for, it ust shows what a great songwriter George Harrison was. Because there’s a moment in that song for each of those vocalists to kind of do what they do best. Of course, the record company heard it and said, “oh, this is way too good for a B-side!”

And Tom follows that up with the “Full Moon Fever” album in 1989, his first solo album, produced by Jeff Lynne, so that relationship continues out of the Traveling Wilburys. It’s a hugely successful record. Big hits off this record. And of course, Mike Campbell is there through the whole thing. Still his right hand man. Indispensable, I think.

Gillian Gaar: Oh, yeah, yeah, definitely. That was such a partnership. I think about how Mike just must still miss him so much.

Brad Page: I know. What a team. Just great songwriters. And Mike Campbell is one of my all-time favorite guitar players, because he always plays the right thing– the exact right thing that’s necessary, even if it’s only one note. He never overplays. He always finds something interesting to play. Just a great, great player and a great songwriter. And yeah, one of my favorite musicians, Mike Campbell.

Gillian Gaar: But that’s the one that the record company didn’t like initially, isn’t it?

Brad Page: Which surprised me because it was such a huge record!

Brad Page: “We don’t hear any hits.”

Gillian Gaar: Right. And literally half the record was hits! You know sometimes record companies, they don’t know anything more than we do. Nobody really knows what makes a hit.

Gillian Gaar: Yeah. If they did know, then every record put out there would be a hit, right?

Brad Page: Yeah. Jeff Lynne also produces the next Heartbreakers record, which is “Into the Great Wide Open” in 1991.

Brad Page: And now, when did Stan lynch, the drummer, leave the band?

Gillian Gaar: It was when they were recording the tracks for the “Greatest Hits” album. That was the last session he did with them. He just, he always comes across as a kind of prickly character. He was the one who seemed the most resentful about, you know, this whole sideman thing and that Tom would go off and work on his solo things and “Who’s this Dave Stewart guy”, etc. And yeah, he was unhappy during the recording of the new songs for “Greatest Hits” and that was just kind of it for him. He didn’t, he seemed to feel that he wasn’t being appreciated enough, so he just left.

Brad Page: Interestingly, Stan was replaced by a drummer named Steve Ferrone, who was a journeyman player, but I grew to love him from his work in the Average White Band, which is a band that I am really fond of. I love the Average White Band and he’s a really funky drummer, very different kind of drummer than Stan, but seemed to fit right in with the Heartbreakers and was a mainstay of the band, right up until the end. Steve Ferrone.

And Tom, in 1994, releases his second solo album, “Wildflowers”, which has gone on to be a big fan favorite. A real classic record. They released that deluxe box set version of it.

Gillian Gaar: The band members that worked on that album consider it a highlight of Tom’s career, he did himself. And, it was natural it would get this sort of deluxe box treatment. I don’t know if any other album in his catalog has received that, you know, because they put out a lot of extra stuff, here have been other box sets…

Brad Page: Yeah, it was like a 5 LP set, I believe.

Gillian Gaar: Yeah, just on the one album.

Brad Page: It does have a more intimate feel than you get from a typical Heartbreakers record.

Brad Page: 1996. This is another kind of oddball record in their catalog, a soundtrack album called “She’s The One”, which the movie didn’t really do anything, and I think the record really didn’t do too much.

Gillian Gaar: Yeah, Tom seemed to have pretty mixed feelings about it, ultimately. One thing that definitely harmed the record’s chances was that it’s all completed, but then they decide to delay the release of the movie, but for some reason they don’t delay the release of the soundtrack. So they put the soundtrack out months before the movie, which makes no sense to me. Yeah, you know, they put it in the soundtrack section, which was not where a Tom Petty fan is necessarily going to look for the latest Tom Petty album.

Brad Page: Yeah, exactly.

Gillian Gaar: And he himself seemed to feel conflicted about even working on the project. Like, he agreed and then I think he regretted it. First it said it was going to have other musicians doing their own tracks, but then he would have to reach out to them, and he didn’t like doing that. So then he would write everything, and that just became a hassle, too. So, not one of his most best-realized projects, though they did revamp it somewhat. I think it was recorded around “Wildflowers”, but he didn’t really want to mix it up too much. So some of those songs ended up on the “Wildflowers” reissue. And they reworked the soundtrack completely and I think even gave it a new title.

Brad Page: Uh, and this is also, it gets into a pretty uncomfortable time for him that he really didn’t like talking about very much… but he had a serious drug addiction at that time.

Gillian Gaar: Yeah. Not just drugs, but heroin. And I don’t think I knew this until researching and reading about him for this. Well, of course, he kept it under wraps, and he wasn’t collapsing in public or anything like that. But, you know, even his friends were surprised.

Brad Page: Right.

Gillian Gaar: To hear that. “Heroin? You’re using heroin?” I mean, if he’d, say, become a drunk or something…

Brad Page: Like heroin, that can kill you pretty quickly. Luckily, he pulled himself together, but you get the feeling it was a really, really rough time for him. Of course, he was going through a divorce at that time, too, right.

Gillian Gaar: Yeah. Yeah, and not an entirely amicable divorce.  So you have that weighing on you as well. I remember this friend of mine in an obituary she was writing for Lane Staley, she said, “No one starts using heroin thinking they’re going to be an addict.”

Brad Page: Right.

Gillian Gaar: And, you know, they generally end up that way. “Oh, I can handle this”. Well, then six months later, “Oh, gee, I guess I was wrong about that.” And I could see also for someone in his case, or his situation rather, that it would be easy to fall into because he’s not going to have the problems of someone that doesn’t have the money. He does. You know, he doesn’t have to go out and break into people’s homes to steal their stereos and computers to get money for his habit, right? He could take care of that easily. And so I think that, you know, that’s another barrier removed.

Brad Page: Yeah. It becomes too easy.

Gillian Gaar: Yeah. And, well, if you know, the music industry, it’s kind of full of leeches, too. There’s more than enough people that are happy to provide you with whatever you might think you want.

Brad Page: Sure.

Gillian Gaar: Yeah. I was surprised to learn about that. But, you know, good on him for getting out of it. Not everyone does.

Brad Page: And I’m sure it was… again, he didn’t really like talking about it, because I don’t think he wanted to glamorize it. He was, I think, ashamed.

Gillian Gaar: Yeah, you definitely get that sense. A lot of shame. But I think his story with it is a cautionary tale.

Brad Page: Yes.

Gillian Gaar: I don’t see how anyone could read what he went through and think that sounded at all glamorous, because it doesn’t. You know, he was just isolated in this new home, in a kind of rural setting, and not doing anything except taking drugs and nodding off. Oh, yeah, that sounds like fun, doesn’t it? So, yeah, I definitely think it’s more of a cautionary tale and not glamorous at all.

Brad Page: I do respect the fact that he wasn’t trying to cash in on it in any way. I think it would have been probably beneficial for some people for him to maybe have talked a little bit more openly about it, but at the same time, he didn’t make a spectacle of himself about it and hang his dirty laundry out for everyone to see. But, you know, these are such personal things you can’t fault anyone for however they feel like they have to deal with it. The reality is, thank God, he did deal with it, and by 1999, he was pretty much cleaned up.

The Heartbreakers release a new album called “Echo” in 1999. Produced by Rick Rubin, right?

Gillian Gaar: Yeah. Yeah.

Brad Page: That seems to have been a very difficult record to make. I think they had, again, working with an outside producer, there’s pluses and minuses to that. I think towards the end, Tom wasn’t super happy with Rick Rubin. I guess he left at the end to go work on a Red Hot Chili Peppers record, and kind of left Tom drifting in the wind there to finish up the record. But I think this probably started when he was, either still had his drug issues or he was working hard to get out of it, but that all was part of it, right? And made for kind of a difficult recording of that record.

And it’s the last record they make with bass player Howie Epstein, because Howie also had a serious drug problem, and they ended up having to let him go.

Gillian Gaar: And then he died not long after that.

Brad Page: Right, right. So, I mean, on one hand you have Tom, who’s able to make it through, and his fellow bandmate, who’s not so lucky.

Gillian Gaar: Yeah.

Brad Page: And it could have gone either way, really.

Gillian Gaar: Yeah. That must have been quite a sobering moment for him. You know, “there but for the grace of God go I” type of thing.

Brad Page: Yeah. We do have some great songs on that “Echo” record, though. I’m a big fan of the song “Swingin’”.

Gillian Gaar: Yeah. Yeah.

Brad Page: Ron Blair, the original bass player, he comes back. You know, it’s getting the old gang back together again. He could have probably had any bass player he wanted, but he brings in Ron Blair.

Gillian Gaar: Well, you mentioned earlier about how Tom liked working with these musicians regularly, even on solo projects, because it was a comfort level type of thing. And I think that’s one reason that Ron was able to be integrated back into the band so readily. Because, yeah, they had to get a new bass player and you could see that’s always a bit of a hassle. And so when they knew he was interested, I mean, it must have seemed perfect because here’s a guy who worked with them and up to a certain point, you know, was familiar with everything the Heartbreakers had done. Hadn’t played on the recent stuff, but he was a guy who I think they saw, he can get back in the groove pretty quickly.

Brad Page: Talk about “The Last DJ” album, which comes out in 2002. That’s the record that Ron Blair returns for. And that’s kind of a concept album, which is another interesting turn for Tom. But he was just so frustrated with the state of commercial radio that he just comes up with this whole concept record, basically lambasting the radio biz.

Gillian Gaar: Yeah, it’s like this attack on consumerism that I enjoy quite a lot.

Brad Page: Yeah, I like that record a lot. And of course, you know, there were radio stations that refused to play it, and real petty stuff– no pun intended– real petty behavior. But I think it’s a strong record and, I mean, he makes his case pretty well.

Brad Page: 2006, Tom records his third and final solo album, a record called “Highway Companion”. And to me, this is the really forgotten or overlooked record in his career. It wasn’t as popular as the other records. It’s probably one of the least selling– I’m guessing, but I think it’s probably one of the lowest-selling records of the career.

Gillian Gaar: Yeah, you know, I’m looking, certainly among the solo albums; the other two solo albums went platinum, but “Highway Companion” just went gold, so yeah, that means lower sales.

Brad Page: Yeah, I’m not sure why that is. I think it’s a perfectly fine record. There’s quite a bit of stuff on that that I like. Maybe the solo thing just kind of ran its course, I don’t know. But it always seems to be the record that people forget about.

Brad Page: 2007. A real left turn: He reassembles Mudcrutch. And they put out an album. And he plays bass, because that was his original role in the band; he was the bass player, not the guitar player. And you just get the feeling that he just, on a whim, just said, you know what, I want to get the old guys, the really old guys, back together and just have some fun.

Gillian Gaar: Yeah, that really came out of left field.

Brad Page: Yeah.

Gillian Gaar: If you were trying to predict what Tom Petty was going to do next in his career, bringing back Mudcrutch to not only play some shows, but release an album…

Brad Page: They ended up releasing two albums, actually. Yeah.

Gillian Gaar: Two! Well, again, that’s just his love of music there. It is kind of like a Wilburys type of thing.

Brad Page: That’s a level of fame– where you can go back to your high school band, get them back together and actually get records put out. Not everyone can do that.

Gillian Gaar: Yes.

Brad Page: Also in 2007, we finally get an officially released documentary, the Running Down a Dream documentary, which is like three hours long.

Brad Page: Yeah.

Brad Page: Well worth watching. One of my favorite rock docs.

Gillian Gaar: And you know, Peter Bogdanovich, too, a noted film director, not known for putting out musical films. Kind of unusual choice.

Brad Page: I got the feeling from reading your book that he didn’t even really know much about Tom Petty.

Gillian Gaar: No, that’s also another interesting aspect about that. I mean, he came from a very different world, the film world. Best known for his work in the 70s, I think, with the  Last Picture Show, and Paper Moon and what’s Up Doc. Yeah, so, that just shows it’s an interesting choice. I think at first he was even a little surprised, like, “Why do you want me?” But then he got to know Tom and liked him quite a bit.

Brad Page: Yeah, yeah. He comes out of it being a Tom Petty fan, but he didn’t go into it that way. But I think that lends a certain, um, maybe an objectivity to that documentary? And a curiosity, kind of a mix of both of those things, right? That he’s not smitten, like a fan film.

Gillian Gaar: Yeah.

Brad Page: But he’s also, there’s a curiosity about it that if you knew everything there was to know about Tom Petty, a die-hard fan, you might not ask some of those questions.

In 2010, The Heartbreakers released the “Mojo” album, which is one of my favorite records of their later period. Post 1990’s records, that’s my favorite. There’s some really hard rocking tracks on that record; there’s one track where I think they give Led Zeppelin a run for their money.

Gillian Gaar: That’s one thing about the whole breadth of his music. Just the sort of range in styles. I mean, they were always a rock band, but they really did seem to have the most fun when they were rocking out like that.

Brad Page: Yeah.

Gillian Gaar: And they probably didn’t do it often enough.

Brad Page: And that was followed in 2014 by “Hypnotic Eye”, which would turn out to be the last Tom Petty and The Heartbreakers album.

Gillian Gaar: And that was his first number one album, which is, you know, kind of surprising.

Brad Page: Yeah.

Gillian Gaar I guess his only number one album certainly during his lifetime.

Brad Page: Which is an odd fact for someone that successful, right? You would have thought they would have had number one albums. He’s had, of course, big hits, but the albums always fell a little short of hitting number one, until “Hypnotic Eye” all the way in 2014.

Gillian Gaar: Like “Mojo” and “Damn The Torpedoes”, they both reached number two, but yeah, not quite the peak.

Brad Page: Yep. I remember “Hypnotic Eye” getting a lot of really great reviews. So right up until the end, critics loved him; obviously, fans loved him, because it hit number one. But if you gotta go, going out on a high point like that, it says something.

Gillian Gaar: Yeah, yeah.

Brad Page: They performed their last show on September 25, 2017.  During that tour, Tom had had an injury.

Brad Page: At least the account I had read was that he fell and he had a hairline fracture and he thought he could just deal with it later. But over time, you know, it became more of a full-on break.

Brad Page: Yeah, because he’s on stage, he’s on the road and you know, he’s a trooper. He doesn’t want to cancel the shows, he wants to go out and play and do his thing, do what he does best. And so he stupidly, really– but we’re all prone to these kind of things– he decides just to grin and bear it. And he’s going on stage every night, which is a physical thing, you know, you’re on stage, you’re stomping around, you can’t help but rock out, right?

Gillian Gaar: Yeah.

Brad Page: He’s putting more and more pressure on that hip. He’s not a young man anymore. And it keeps getting worse and worse. And so he starts self-medicating, always a dangerous thing to do when you’re, you have a history of addiction, because again, like you were saying, no one goes into taking heroin thinking that they want to be an addict. I’m sure he’s going into this thinking, “I’m just trying to take care of this pain. I can handle it. Hell, I kicked heroin, I can do it.”

Gillian Gaar: Yeah, yeah.

Brad Page: And ends up just a couple of weeks after the Tour’s over, on October 2, 2017, he just takes the wrong mix of medications… and he’s gone.

Gillian Gaar: When they released the toxicology report, he was taking prescription fentanyl, but he was also taking non-prescription fentanyl. And you were saying self-medication is a dangerous thing, and I mean, it’s kind of doubly dangerous if you’re taking prescribed drugs too.

Brad Page: Right?

Gillian Gaar: You’re taking prescribed drugs, you’re adding things on top of that. And if your doctor doesn’t know that you’re doing that, that can set up a lot of dangerous interactions. So I mean, clearly he was doing that to deal with the pain. When you’re taking all these different kind of substances, then, yeah, it’s like a roll of the dice every time you do that. It’s a gamble, it’s a roll of the dice. And he unfortunately lost that day.

Brad Page: Yeah.

Gillian Gaar: I gotta say, I gotta say the one thing that’s kind of doubly frustrating is that the issue was not that serious. And of course, in retrospect, we say, “Well, he should have canceled the tour. The fans would certainly have come to see him after recovery.” But you know, he needed hip surgery. And, yes, there’s a risk with every surgery, but it’s very common and the risk is relatively low. So, it was just a relatively simple thing to take care of. So that’s, I must admit, as I’m writing that part, I’m thinking, why didn’t you just have the hip surgery?

Brad Page: I know you just think, “Oh, Tom, why were you so stupid?” But you get the feeling he was, obviously, he was a stubborn guy, for better or worse. It served him well in his career. Until it didn’t.

Gillian Gaar: Yeah. I mean, it was sad to read things from his bandmates on that last tour who would kind of help him get on stage and could see that he was in a lot of pain.

Brad Page: Yeah.

Gillian Gaar: Uh, and saying, “Are you going to be okay?” And he’d say, “Just get me on that stage.”

Brad Page: Yeah. And it’s the “show must go on” mentality that so many artists have. And it’s an admirable thing, but all things being said, I think we would all rather still have Tom Petty today.

Gillian Gaar: Yeah. Yeah.

Brad Page: But, yeah, And I remember hearing the news and what a shock it was.

Gillian Gaar: Well, yeah, that was another thing that just seemed to come out of nowhere.

Brad Page: Yeah.

Gillian Gaar: Because, you know, there was no serious illness. There wasn’t any obvious drug problem. And he just finished this successful tour that had gotten the usual strong reviews. And then I think it was just about a week, two weeks later, “Oh, he died”.

Brad Page: Yeah.

Gillian Gaar: “What? Something’s wrong with this picture.”

Brad Page: Yeah,  it’s one of the… you just don’t, you don’t believe it. It’s so hard to fathom. Such a shame. A huge loss for the music business.

It’s an incredible catalog of music. I’m a huge fan of so much of it. I really enjoyed the book, Gillian, you did a great job of putting this story, just telling this story. It’s just a fun read. And the photos are great, the layout of the book is great, the package is great. They did another great job with the slipcover and everything on this book. It’s beautiful.

Like I said at the beginning, if you’re a Tom Petty fan, or if someone in your life is a Tom Petty fan, and you’re looking for a Christmas gift, look no further. This book is great. It’s an excellent gift. It’s going right up on my shelf with my collection of books. I’m happy to have it.

Gillian, thanks so much for joining me again on another episode of the “I’m In Love With That Song” podcast. Always a pleasure to have you on.

Gillian Gaar: Well, it’s fun to be here.

Brad Page: Well, thanks again, Gillian. I appreciate it. Always a pleasure. Have a great holiday.

Gillian Gaar: You too. And everyone listening!

Brad Page: And that’s a wrap on this episode of the “I’m In Love With That Song” podcast. Thanks so much for joining us. Just a few notes before I sign off:

#1: Don’t forget to subscribe or follow the show so that you never miss an episode. And please share the show with your family and friends.

#2: Share your thoughts and your opinions on our Facebook page. Just look for the “I’m In Love With That Song” podcast, you’ll find us there. Or you can send an email to lovethatsongpodcast@gmail.com

#3: If you’d like to support the show, head on over to oldglory.com and buy a T-shirt or some merch from your favorite bands. They have tons of stuff in stock, including some Tom Petty stuff. And you can use our discount code lovethatsong to get 15% off. That’s oldglory.com with the discount code lovethatsong .

And finally, #4, pick up a copy of Gillian’s book. It’s called “Tom Petty: the Life and Music”, and it can be found on Amazon or fine bookstores anywhere. Go get it. You won’t regret it.

Thanks for listening. Hope to see you again on the next episode.

RESOURCES:

Gillian Garr
https://www.quarto.com/authors/Gillian-G.-Gaar/

Tom Petty
https://www.tompetty.com

Traveling Wilburys
https://www.travelingwilburys.com

Tom Petty & The Heartbreakers (album)
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tom_Petty_and_the_Heartbreakers_(album)

You’re Gonna Get It! (album)
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/You%27re_Gonna_Get_It!

Damn the Torpedoes (album)
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Damn_the_Torpedoes_(album)

Hard Promises (album)
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hard_Promises

Long After Dark (album)
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Long_After_Dark

Southern Accents (album)
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Southern_Accents

Let Me Up (I’ve Had Enough) (album)
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Let_Me_Up_(I%27ve_Had_Enough)

Into The Great Wide Open (album)
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Into_the_Great_Wide_Open

Greatest Hits (album)
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Greatest_Hits_(Tom_Petty_album)

Wildflowers (album)
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wildflowers_(Tom_Petty_album)

She’s The One (album)
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Songs_and_Music_from_%22She%27s_the_One%22

Echo (album)
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Echo_(Tom_Petty_and_the_Heartbreakers_album)

The Last DJ (album)
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Last_DJ

Highway Companion (album)
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Highway_Companion

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

Mojo (album)
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mojo_(Tom_Petty_and_the_Heartbreakers_album)

Hypnotic Eye (album)
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hypnotic_Eye

with Stevie Nicks: Stop Draggin’ My Heart Around
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stop_Draggin%27_My_Heart_Around

Released in 1979, “Message in a Bottle” was the opening track on The Police’s second album, Regatta de Blanc. The song features the signature sounds of the band: Sting’s evocative vocals and bass, Andy Summers’ intricate guitar work, and Stuart Copeland’s dynamic drumming. But what exactly makes this song resonate with so many listeners, even decades later? Listen to this episode and we’ll find out.

“Message In A Bottle” (Sting) Copyright 1979 G.M. Sumner, published by Magnetic Publishing Ltd and Administered by EMI Blackwood Music in the USA and Canada

Take advantage of our discount code lovethatsong and save 15% off t-shirts & merch from your favorite bands at OldGlory.com!

TRANSCRIPT:

Sending out an SOS over the Pantheon Podcast network– it’s time for another edition of the “I’m in Love With That Song” Podcast. My name is Brad Page, and I’m the host of this modest podcast, where each episode we examine a different song, hand-picked from my library of favorite songs. We’ll put the song under the microscope and take a close look at all the elements that make the song work– discovering where the magic comes from. No musical expertise is required here; amateurs and professionals, players and fans, and first-time listeners all are welcome here.

This time around, we’re traveling to 1979 and setting our sights on one of the most important bands of the era. Andy Summers, Stuart Copeland, and Gordon Sumner, who you probably know as Sting: Three very different personalities who came together as The Police and recorded a long list of classic tracks, including this one… a Song called “Message In A Bottle”.

In 1976, Stuart Copeland was playing drums for Curved Air, a progressive rock band, and during a tour of England, he met a bass player named Gordon Sumner, who was a semi-pro musician playing in a local jazz band; he worked as a teacher for his day job. Sumner used to wear a black and yellow striped shirt on stage, which earned him the nickname “Sting” from his fellow bandmates.

The two of them decided to form a band and were joined by a guitarist named Henry Padovani. They played some gigs and in May 1977 released a single called “Fallout”.

That would be the only recording of the Police with Henry Padovani. Sting and Copeland had been working in a side project called Strontium 90, which featured Mike Howlett of the band Gong, and a guitar player named Andy Summers. Summers was ten years older than Sting and Copeland, and had played with The Animals, Kevin Ayers and Dantalian’s Chariot. Now, go back and listen to our “Rubble” episode if you want to learn more about Dantalian’s Chariot.

But Andy Summers had a lot of experience and definitely made an impression with his guitar playing, and he was asked to join the band. The police only played two gigs as a four-piece, and then Padovani was fired, and the famous trio was in: Copeland, Summers and Sting.

In February 1978, the band was offered a spot in a Wrigley’s Gum commercial under the condition that they dye their hair blonde. Apparently, that made them look more “punk”. They were a struggling band, desperate for money, so they said, “sure”. And that’s how the police got their distinctive look– those three blond heads. They did end up filming that commercial, but it was never aired.

Stewart’s older brother, Miles Copeland, was an executive in the music biz and got them a deal with A&M Records. On a shoestring budget, they recorded their first album, “Outlandos d’Amour”.

But the band was not a hit right out of the box. When “Roxanne” was first released as a single in the UK, it didn’t chart. The second single, “Can’t Stand Losing You” did better. But the third single, “So Lonely”, that didn’t chart either.

But in February 1979, “Roxanne” was released as a single in the US and it managed to make it to number 32, which in turn caused it to be reissued as a single in the UK. And this time it made it up to number twelve.

The band came to America in 1979 and famously drove themselves and their equipment all around the country on tour in a little Ford Econoline van. About as unglamorous as it gets. But stardom was on the horizon.

By October 1979, they released their second album, “Regatta de Blanc”, recorded earlier that year on another tight budget. This time, though, that was intentional. They had made enough money off of the first album to cover the cost of the second album, as long as they did it cheaply enough, which meant that they could do it all on their own without any record company interference.

The first single released from the album was “Message In A Bottle”. It’s also the song that opens the album– side one, track one. The song was written by Sting, and features Sting on lead vocal and bass, Andy Summers on guitar and Stuart Copeland on drums.

The song kicks off with the drums and some guitars. Let’s focus on those guitars for a minute. What I’m hearing is two guitar parts, one on the left and one on the right. But they both have a heavy amount of chorus effect on them, which thickens them up and can actually make it sound like more than one guitar. So now let’s just hear the guitar that’s on the left channel. And here’s the one on the right. They sound pretty similar when you listen to them separately, but put them back in stereo, panned left and right, and it really sounds three-dimensional.

Okay, so after that intro, there’s a quick drum fill that brings us right into the first verse. Let’s hear what Stuart Copeland is doing on the drums during the verse.

And that brings us to what I would call the pre-chorus. There’s some layered vocals here, along with an organ that’s pretty low in the mix. Listen for that.

That organ is just kind of holding down a drone or what’s sometimes called a “pedal tone”. Again, it’s really low in the mix. This is one of those things that’s kind of meant to be more felt than heard. But let’s bring that to the front and also listen to those overdubbed vocals.

Let’s hear just sting’s lead vocal.

Listening to that, I’m actually surprised at how restrained it is. He’s singing that pretty softly compared to the energy level of the rest of the parts. And I particularly like that gentle “yeah” at the end of “Message In A Bottle”.

Sounds like Sting clucks his tongue there. Let’s back that up and hear that again.

Just a couple of tasty guitar licks there from Andy Summers. Theres also a few simple but well-placed tom hits that lead us into the next verse.

Copeland is playing something completely different on the drums on this verse than he was in the first verse. So let’s hear a little of that.

That brings us to another pre-chorus. This time, that organ is a little bit more to the front. There’s some more guitar licks there, way in the background, almost inaudible. Let’s bring those front and center.

I gotta admit, I never even noticed those were there before. So let’s back it up and listen to the final mix again. And now that we know those guitar licks are there, let’s see if they pop out to us any better now.

Now, these licks are a lot more noticeable. We haven’t really listened to Sting’s bass part yet, and he’s no slouch on the bass, so let’s hear a little of that.

And now let’s bring in Stuart Copeland’s drum part. His work on the hi-hat is especially great.

And meanwhile, to counterbalance all of that, Andy Summers is playing some lush chords, drenched in that chorus effect. Andy also gets in some more of those guitar licks in the background here. So let’s isolate those.

Now let’s put that all back together and hear the final mix.

I like that extra guitar chord flourish at the end there. It’s almost kind of spacey and dreamy for a few seconds there.

And that brings us into the last verse. Let’s hear the vocal.

Fantastic drumming here by Stuart Copeland. Let’s go back and just listen to that.

They’re multitracking the vocals here, and now they’ve added harmony to the vocal.

More Andy Summers guitar. We’ll listen to that.

Do you ever notice at the very end of the fade, sting does something a little different with the vocal? Maybe it’s a mistake. Let’s see if we can crank that up and hear it a little better.

The Police – “Message In A Bottle”

The Police would go on to release three more albums, total of five albums– studio albums– in their career. It’s a relatively small catalog, but every one of those albums is a classic.

They split in 1986. They did one reunion tour in 2007, but otherwise, they focused on their solo career. I suppose it’s possible there could be another reunion, but I wouldn’t hold my breath. They gave us five great albums and establish a sound that still resonates and inspires today. Thats more than most. Thats enough.

Thanks for tuning in to this edition of the “I’m In Love With That Song” Podcast. I’ll be back in approximately two weeks with another new episode. If you’d like to support the show, head on over to oldglory.com and buy a t-shirt or two. They have a bunch of Police shirts, along with all the other bands that you love. And if you use our discount code, “lovethatsong”, you’ll get 15% off, and we get a little kickback. So it’s a “win-win”, as the corporate weasels like to say.

And please tell a friend about this show, because your recommendations really do help to spread the word.

You can find all of our previous episodes on our website, lovethatsongpodcast.com, and you can communicate with us on Facebook. If you’d like to find more podcasts like this, check out the Pantheon Podcast network. Its home to a ton of other music related podcasts.

Well, thanks for being a part of this show, and for listening to this episode on “Message In A Bottle” by the Police.

On the latest episode of our podcast, we take a fascinating journey into the world of music trends and data with Chris Dalla Riva, author of “Uncharted Territory: What Numbers Tell Us About the Biggest Hit Songs and Ourselves.” This episode is a must-listen for anyone who has ever been curious about the stories behind the hit songs and the charts that track their popularity.

This episode is a treasure trove of insights for music lovers and anyone interested in the intricate relationship between data and pop culture. Chris Dala Riva’s “Uncharted Territory” serves as a compelling guide to understanding the numbers behind the music we love. Tune in now to discover what the charts reveal about ourselves and the biggest hits!

GET YOUR COPY OF THE BOOK HERE (Highly Recommended!):
https://www.amazon.com/Uncharted-Territory-Numbers-Biggest-Ourselves/dp/B0F78P8RZN/

Chris Dalla Riva’s newsletter “Can’t Get Much Higher” can be found here:
https://www.cantgetmuchhigher.com/

Take advantage of our discount code lovethatsong and save 15% off t-shirts & merch from your favorite bands at OldGlory.com!

TRANSCRIPT:

Welcome back to the “I’m In Love with That Song” podcast on the Pantheon Podcast Network. I’m your host, Brad Page, and this time we’re going to take a step back from looking at an individual song and take a look at the charts, and the data behind them, and what that tells us about ourselves.

On this episode, I’m joined by Chris Dalla Riva. He’s a musician, he works for the streaming service Audiomack, and he is an author with a brand new book– it’s out right now– called “Uncharted Territory”. This is a nice, long conversation, so let’s jump right into my discussion with Chris about his new book.

Brad Page: Well, Chris Dalla Riva, thanks for joining me here on the “I’m In Love with That Song” podcast. Your new book is called “Uncharted Territory: What the Numbers Tell Us About the Biggest Hit Songs and Ourselves”. And it’s really kind of using data to understand pop songs.

I will say at the outset, I am not a chart person; the charts rarely reflect what I’m listening to. But that being said, I found the book really fun and pretty fascinating, and a great read. So it’s a pleasure to have you on the show and to talk about these particular songs– which your book focuses on all of the songs that hit number one on the Billboard Hot 100, right?

Chris Dalla Riva: Yep. Yeah, that’s Billboard’s pop chart, effectively.

Brad Page: Right. The overall “master of all charts”, right, for Billboard beginning from the very first official chart in 1958, correct?

Chris Dalla Riva: Yep. The Hot 100 started in August 1958.

Brad Page: And you go up until almost ‘til today. I mean, obviously, you have to stop writing the book at some point.  And the book is available on November 13th, you said hitting the streets November 13th, 2025?

Chris Dalla Riva: Yes, November 13th. I’m excited to get it out there.

Brad Page: Yeah, well, congratulations on getting the book published. I recommend it to everyone who listens to the podcast.

So, starting in 1958, what was the first song to top the Billboard charts in 1958?

Chris Dalla Riva: The first was Ricky Nelson’s “Poor Little Fool”, which I always sort of joke is it sounds like a song from 1958; you know, it has a little jangling guitar and it’s a short little love song, but at the same time I feel like it’s indicative of many other things that were to come. You know, songs about lost love is probably the top topic for any number one song in the history of the charts, still common today. And Ricky Nelson himself was a television star on his family’s television show. And many pop stars today, from Sabrina Carpenter to Olivia Rodrigo, also started on television. So it’s cool that it was the first number one hit for those reasons.

Brad Page: Yeah. And it’s kind of interesting how that trend continues through the years, right?

Chris Dalla Riva: Yeah. And that’s the stuff that, I love tracing trends that are just weird things that happen in a particular moment. But I also love the stuff that weaves through time and can connect people of today to the stars of 60 years ago. Because in one sense, so much has changed; in another, sort of the same thing over and over again.

Brad Page: Right. Tthat’s so interesting. Getting back to the earliest days of the charts, one of the things that we see a lot in those days is the teen tragedy songs.

Chris Dalla Riva: Yes.

Brad Page: And probably “Leader of The Pack” is, that would be my pick, is probably the greatest of the teen tragedy songs. Let’s talk about that one for a little bit.

Chris Dalla Riva: Yeah, I think, I say in the book that I think “Leader of The Pack” is the teenage tragedy song to end all teenage tragedy songs.

Chris Dalla Riva: It’s like a movie playing out in your ears. And by the Shangri La’s, who I also think are just a tremendously underrated girl group from the 60s. Actually, the motivating factor for writing this book was me starting to listen to all these number one hits and hearing teenage tragedy songs come up sort of again and again in those early years, which for those who don’t know this was a sort of strange trend in the late 50s, early 60s where the topic of the song was two teenagers in love. Typically there’s an accident where one of them dies, usually involving a car. And then, you know, the other one says they’ll reunite again someday. And everything from Mark Denning’s “Teen Angel” to The Shangri La’s to Pat Boone’s “Moody River”.  And that trend did die out right around the mid-60s.  In a way, the Shangri La’s “Leader of The Pack” was the apex of the genre and also like the end of the genre popularly.

Brad Page: Yeah. I always kind of wonder, when you have a song like that, that like you said, it’s the ultimate teen tragedy song… like, where do you go after that? Everything else after that kind of becomes a pale imitation. Can’t top that one.

Chris Dalla Riva: Yeah, the only, the only more grandiose take I think is “Bat Out of Hell” by Meatloaf, which was like Jim Steinman’s ode to the teenage tragedy song. And as with all Meatloaf songs, it’s 10 minutes long and completely over the top. Yeah, there’s really nothing much more to say after “Leader of The Pack”.

Brad Page: Some of the other trends that we see, that you kind of trace through the book, just interesting things like fade-outs–  songs that fade out.

Chris Dalla Riva: Yeah. I also write a newsletter, and once a month people write in questions and I answer them. And someone literally just yesterday wrote in and said when they listened to oldies radio, a lot of the songs fade out. And he was like, “I feel like I almost never hear a pop song on the radio these days that has a fade-out”. And this is an absolutely correct observation. It’s not like there’s no fade-outs anymore. But in the 50s, 60s and 70s, the fade-out was the top way to end a song.

Brad Page: Right.

Chris Dalla Riva: And what I discuss in the book is with a lot of these things, it’s connected to the technology at the time. There are limits to how much sound can be held without degrading on, um, a 45 or a vinyl single.

Brad Page: Mhm.

Chris Dalla Riva: So if you, if your song was running too long, you could put the longer version on the album, but on the single you would just fade it out. So that’s really connected to the technology at the time. And at the same time, radio was very, very focused on short three-minute song. So same deal. If you’re the Animals and you have a five-minute version of “House of the Rising Sun”, sure, put it on the full length. But for the single, for the radio, you faded out during the solo at like 3 minutes and 5 seconds. So I love that trend, because as you point out, it seems sort of like a silly observation like, “Oh, that’s funny, there used to be more fade-outs”, but it’s really indicative of the technology we were using to record at that time and the way we were listening to music at that time. We sort of see that again and again throughout the book, Right?

Brad Page: Yeah. Those are the kind of things that really interest me. There’s the statistic about it, but then there’s the “why” behind it. One of the first things like that, that really jumped out at me, is one of the things that I love in any great song– are hand claps.

Chris Dalla Riva: Oh, yeah.

Brad Page: And just how something so simple as the sound of humans clapping along to a beat can really add an element of joy to a song. You know, you don’t typically do it on a sad song or a slow song, but you get some of the greatest pop songs in history, particularly Motown, and they’re riddled with these wonderful hand claps that just make you want to join in, right?

Chris Dalla Riva: Totally. And that’s what I found interesting is, you know, the Motown sound and all of the imitators that Motown inspired loved hand claps. And it does make a lot of the 60s pop feel incredibly joyful. But what’s interesting was that some of those Motown songs are. They’re upbeat, but they’re sort of sad. You know, “Where Did Our Love Go” by the Supremes or “Baby Love”.

Chris Dalla Riva: These songs, the lyrical topics aren’t upbeat, but the hand claps and the arrangement really make them feel like, you know, you should be smiling while you’re singing along. And I think hand claps are a way, as you said, feel like the audience can or the listeners are part of the song. You know, anyone can clap for the most part.

Brad Page: Right. It’s the simplest way to encourage any kind of audience participation because you don’t have to know the lyrics, you don’t have to have heard the song before. You just have to have some basic sense of rhythm to be able to clap in time. And you can become part of the song, and you can join in, and you can participate.

Chris Dalla Riva: Yeah, I mean, once Barry Gordy and the people at Motown got going, they really. They really figured out the formula for what makes an enjoyable three minutes of popular music. And hand claps definitely seem to be part of that formula. And like I said, that’s. There are charts and graphs in the book, and I use numbers in a certain way. But the thing that always motivates me is I– as the name of your podcast– I love falling in love with a song, and I love just feeling it course through my veins. And “Where Did Our Love Go” is a perfect example of a song like that. It’s just so fresh.

Brad Page: One of the other things that you kind of explore in the book is, I guess what I would call the Kennedy-Beatles effect. Let’s talk a little bit about that, and kind of your take on that– the idea that partly why the Beatles captured America, the youth of America, was the assassination of President Kennedy just shortly before they broke in America. But you’re kind of skeptical of that.

Chris Dalla Riva: Yeah, this is something that I’d heard. You know, there are so many stories and myths about the Beatles that you hear when you’re growing up and you’re learning the Beatles story. And this was one that I had come across. And the timeline sort of lines up. Kennedy’s assassinated, November 22, 1963, I believe “I Want To Hold Your Hand” is released in the US Just after that. The Beatles end up on the Ed Sullivan show in 2-6-64. And then that’s, that’s Beatlemania. That’s the beginning of the British Invasion.

And you’ll read passages that basically say, America was very sad, of course, after the assassination of JFK. And then suddenly, these four smiling British boys show up with really peppy pop music. And it lifted America from this societal depression.

It’s a good story, but it doesn’t exactly line up. Like I said, the timeline sort of works. But there was already growing interest in the Beatles before Kennedy was assassinated. You start seeing news reports on major news networks covering them at, like, the beginning of November. And there had been Beatles records released in the US at small. On small labels previously, but they really did not have that marketing push that a new act needs. And “I Want To Hold Your Hand”, released by Capitol Records, finally had much more money behind it. And again, it came out right after Kennedy was assassinated. So of course there was a bit more interest. But like I said, at the same time, even newspapers and television networks started covering the Beatles in early November 1963. So it just sort of happens that Kennedy is assassinated in the middle of that and makes it look like it’s a perfect connection between Kennedy’s assassination and the Beatles rise. But really it’s just, it sort of just happened at the same time. I’m sure there was some sort of connection there, but it’s not as strong.

Brad Page: I don’t think it’s entirely a coincidence, but it’s like so many things– rarely in life is there one thing, one cause of something. There’s usually a bunch of other things in the stew that are all interacting and affecting things. And I think the general mood of the culture, post Kennedy assassination is part of it, but it’s… it’s certainly not like, “Well, if Kennedy hadn’t been assassinated, the Beatles never would have been big”. You know, I think that’s completely, you know what I mean?

Chris Dalla Riva: And that’s, that’s sort of the point that I try to get across is that, like, the Beatles were going to come to America whether Kennedy was killed or not. It’s possible that his assassination maybe gave them some sort of boost in popularity that set off the whole chain of dominoes that led to, you know, Beatlemania and whatnot. But the Beatles I don’t think would have been some obscure British band had Kennedy served out his term.

Brad Page: Another area that you explore a little bit in the book is, I guess what we’d call “literary lyrics”, and a song that you call out is “Ode To Billy Joe” by Bobby Gentry.

Chris Dalla Riva: There’s this idea that I would always come across is that the late 60s, something was going on in general, just in the music space, but specifically with lyrics. I mean, you get songs like “Mr. Tambourine Man” and “The Sound of Silence” that clearly have a more literary feel than your pop songs at the beginning of the decade. At the same time, you get a bunch of pop songs that are responding to external events. “Eve of Destruction” by Barry Maguire comes to mind. Or “People Got to Be Free” by the Rascals, “Respect” by Aretha Franklin, even something like “Harper Valley PTA”. So something was clearly in the air. And “Ode To Billy Joe”, for me, is the perfect representation of a song that I think only could have topped the charts in the late 1960s, when there was clearly this literary flavor to some popular lyrics. As I point out, of course, not every song. You know, Herb Alpert was still incredibly popular at the time– no disrespect to him, but, you know, those aren’t lyrics you’re picking apart in your English class. But “Ode To Billy Joe” is like this very complicated narrative that you would almost think could not work in a popular song. And at the same time, it has a perfect string arrangement. It’s an incredible vocal by Bobby Gentry, and it just illustrates, again, just lyrical trends that I don’t think could have happened at any other time. It’s a. It’s a perfect song in my opinion, another song I would say that I love.

Brad Page: I think one of the things that we forget is that at that time in the 60s, you know, the Beatles were big, but they weren’t necessarily big with everybody initially, right? You had the college crowd, which is not an insignificant purchasing audience. There was much, you know, folk music was kind of the hip thing to that crowd. And pop music. And what we would think of rock and roll as kind of, you know, more of sort of the Chuck Berry kind of thing was not what a lot of those college kids were listening to. They were getting into, it’s the scene that Dylan, of course, would come out of. But all of those acts, from Joan Baez on, that was what was cool if you were listening, if you were a college kid in those days listening to music, you weren’t probably listening to the Beatles so much until things started crossfeeding each other, right?

And then Dylan gets inspired by the Beatles, the Beatles get inspired by Dylan. They’re writing better lyrics. You’ve got a band like the Byrds that meld the two things together. And then you start seeing that these things can be hit records. Peter, Paul and Mary take kind of a more pop approach to Dylan, and have a big hit with “Blowing in the Wind”. But initially, I think– at least my take on it– when I look back, kind of what I see is there’s always kind of a division in a way; of like, if you are a freshman in college, sophomore in college in that era, you probably were looking a little askance at Herman’s Hermits and the British Invasion stuff, and kind of lumping the Beatles in with that, in a way.

Chris Dalla Riva: Yeah. And one thing I really liked about listening to every number one hit is that you get a taste for all of these different things that were popular at the same time. Because it’s really easy to look at the 60s. And to your point, just think that, oh, everyone was listening to this very highbrow, popular, folksy music. When at the same time, you have other British Invasion bands. Herman’s Hermits is a perfect example. That’s not the most sophisticated music, which was also popular at the time. But I think you’re totally right that by the end of the decade, you really have a crossover between a lot of these different crowds into the mainstream. And it leads to, I think, some of the most interesting popular lyrics that you hear in the 20th century.

Brad Page: Absolutely. And the kind of lyrics that you never heard seven, eight, ten years before that.

I mean, I think Chuck Berry– there’s a lot of things you can say about Chuck Berry, but I think as a lyricist, I think he’s one of the great rock and roll lyricists. But it’s a completely different thing than what you would later see, you know, Lennon writing or of course Dylan. The lyrics really changed a lot once you get into the 60s and, you know, pop music got smarter.

Chris Dalla Riva: Yeah. I mean, there’s… I don’t know if this is an apocryphal story, but apparently when Chuck Berry wrote Johnny B. Goode, one of the opening lines is, “There lived a country boy”, supposedly was supposed to be “There lived a colored boy named Johnny B. Goode”. And the record label was like, “Nah, that’s not gonna work”. I feel like if that song were released at the end of the 60s, you would probably have had that more socially aware lyric. Because there were so many popular songs that were clearly socially conscious in a way that they weren’t, like you said, not just in the 50s, I mean, four or five years earlier. It’s a rapid change.

Brad Page: Yeah. Yeah. Just the difference between, say, 1964 and 1967.

Chris Dalla Riva: Yes.

Brad Page: You know, just a few years difference. But you just listen to the music from on either side of those dates, and it’s very, very different. Yeah. And you know, Chuck Berry songs like “Brown Eyed Handsome Man” are very coded in their racial references, but you don’t have to scratch too deep to kind of see what he’s, what he’s saying there. But it wouldn’t be too much longer than you could say what you actually wanted to say– You could be Curtis Mayfield in writing those kind of songs.

Chris Dalla Riva: Yeah.

Brad Page: Just a few years later.

Chris Dalla Riva: Exactly.

Brad Page: And another thing that you highlight in the book that I really found interesting, something that I kind of mulled over but I never really put my finger on it quite the way you did, is something you call “multiple discovery”. Can you talk about that for a bit?

Chris Dalla Riva: Yeah, this is, I think, another thread that sort of runs through the book. And this is not a, it’s not a musical idea, it’s just this idea that we often think of invention as the brilliant man or woman shows up and they discover gravity, like Sir Isaac Newton or what have you… or the law of gravity– I don’t know, I’m not a physicist.

Brad Page: Yeah.

Chris Dalla Riva: But there’s this alternate idea that usually ideas are sort of bubbling at the time, and we see people come up with the same thing sort of right around the same time in similar places. One of the example, really famous examples of this that I mentioned in the book is again, Sir Isaac Newton and this guy Leibniz both happen to create calculus, like, literally right around the same time. And you would think calculus is a really complicated math. How did two people stumble into this at the same time?

And this is something you sort of see over and over again, is that the time was ripe for a discovery. There were all those things that led up to it, and there were people, of course, looking into the same thing. There are occasionally times when something is invented or discovered and it’s just pulled out of thin air and nobody was close to it. But I try to apply this idea to music, and I don’t say it to, like, disparage artists that we give tons of credit, like Dylan or the Beatles, but it creates a much simpler story when you can be like, The Beatles showed up and suddenly everyone was doing more stuff in the studio, or artists started writing their own songs. When history is usually more complicated than that. There’s usually a bunch of people who are starting to explore these ideas at the same time. So I try to frame it as artists writing and producing their own songs was a multiple discovery of sorts. You know, I’m applying a scientific idea to an artistic area, but I think it sort of applies.

Brad Page: Yeah, for sure. And there’s a podcaster named Andrew Hickey who does a show called “The History of Rock Music In 500 Songs”– fantastic podcast…

Chris Dalla Riva: Yeah, that’s tremendous.

Brad Page: …and he’s great, and one thing he always says– it comes up on almost every episode– is “There is no first anything”, meaning that, like, something simple, like “what was the first song to have a distorted guitar on it?” Well, there’s dozens of examples because, like you say, there’s always things bubbling up at the same time, and somebody in New York could be applying the same record technique as someone in LA, completely unknown to each other. It just sort of happens, it’s something strangely in the air, in the ether at the time, and things just kind of come up.

So really identifying the first of anything is virtually impossible, because there’s always something that’s, well, almost the same thing, or very close to it, that was happening around the same time. And it’s usually the one who gets the hit record is the one who gets to write history, so to speak. You know what I mean?

And it’s no diss on Dylan or the Beatles to say that they weren’t exactly the first… You know, the Beatles didn’t really invent those haircuts.

Chris Dalla Riva: No.

Brad Page: But they were able to take that look and present it in a way that worked. I mean, to me, the person who’s, I always think, is kind of the greatest at that kind of thing, was Bowie. Because a lot of the things that Bowie became famous for, and the changes that he went through… like, he was not the first glam artist. He was not the first artist to go to Germany and do the “Low”/”Heroes”, period kind of music. You know what I mean? He wasn’t the first guy to do that white soul singer kind of thing. But he was always able to take that inspiration and figure out, “how do I make that work for me?” And many times did it better than anyone else.

But he didn’t necessarily create out of thin air any of those trends. But somehow, he was able to take those trends and master them in a way and present them to an audience in a successful way to make him— and not just once, but to do it multiple times over his lifetime. To me, that’s the genius of Bowie: Not that he invented glam, but that he was able to take it and make it work in such a successful way.

Chris Dalla Riva: There are so many artists like that, they can take a sound and distill it in a way that nobody else can, even if they didn’t create it. I think that’s also an example of genius, which, you know, part f genius is inventing something, part of it is perfecting it.

Brad Page: Right. Let’s jump ahead a little bit into the 70s and talk about Disco. And one of the songs that you called out to me to kind of highlight is “Hot Stuff” by Donna Summer. So let’s talk about that.

Chris Dalla Riva: Yeah, When I talk about the book, people are always like, “Oh, did you discover any music that you didn’t think you’d like that you did?” My go-to answer is always disco. Because I had the perception of disco as being this silly, you know, Dance music from the 70s, almost cartoonish. And there are some disco songs that are like that. But there’s really a lot of great stuff that came out of the disco movement. And “Hot Stuff” is a great song. Donna Summer.

Donna Summer and Giorgio Moroder made a ton of great music during the mid to late 70s. And part of the way I talk about, or the reason I bring up “Hot Stuff” is in a discussion around genre. There is a long history of genre being tied to race. Genre is very tied up with race. And I feel like when you look at, say, classic rock radio today, it’s heavily dominated by white artists of that era. Even though there are black stars from that time who were making music with guitars that could very easily fit on classic rock radio. And I point to “Hot Stuff” by Donna Summer because it has a searing guitar solo… yes, you know, it’s got that disco beat, but they’re really rocking that song in the same way that the Stones were rocking the disco beat on like, “Miss You”, and “Miss You” is something you’ll hear on every classic rock station.

I’ve suggested this online that “Hot Stuff” could be heard on a classic rock station, and the reactions I get are always crazy. But it’s just a good illustration of how our perception of genre is not always tied to what the music sounds like. It’s tied to who the artist is, what they look like, who is typically thought of as listening to that music. And there’s a lot of stuff, I think in the disco world, a lot of women who made music around that time who were making rock or rock adjacent music, but we don’t think of it that way.

Brad Page: You could take that song and take the disco beat out of it, put a little bit of heavier drums in it… You wouldn’t have to change it that much to, like you say, make it a straight on classic rock song. It’s. It’s got that riff, you know, that works on heavy guitar.

At the same time, you’ve got a song like “Another Brick in the Wall” by Pink Floyd, which has a disco beat, right? “Miss You” by the Stones… Had those artists been black and played those exact same songs, they wouldn’t have gotten played on rock radio, simply because of this artificial racial thing that we layer on top of the music. Right?

Chris Dalla Riva: Yeah. That has always fascinated me, and I feel like another good example, And this isn’t, this is less about race, but I’ve always thought that the song “Tragedy” by the Bee Gees, which was a number one in the late 70s, has like a metal riff, but it’s obviously performed as a disco song, and I’m always looking for someone to cover it as a metal song!

Brad Page: You called out one song as having predicted the future, and that was “Set Adrift On Memory Bliss” by PM Dawn. So talk about that one.

Chris Dalla Riva: Yeah, bold claim from me here. I write about this in Chapter Nine of the book. I wasn’t familiar with this song before I heard it. It’s an interesting hip hop song from the early 90s, but it’s more in the alternative hip hop space. If you’re familiar with A Tribe Called Quest, I feel like it’s a little bit closer to that than something like NWA or even MC Hammer, some other artists that were popular at that time. And I say it predicted the future for two reasons: One, because it was the first number one hit under Billboard’s new system called SoundScan. Previously, Billboard tracked their charts just by calling up record stores and being like, “Hey, what’s selling?” Which was obviously a valid way to create a chart, but not the most accurate way.

Brad Page: Yeah, and lent itself to a lot of… maybe corruption is too strong a word, but certainly manipulation.

Chris Dalla Riva: Yes. And even if you’re not actually, even if no one’s actively trying to manipulate things, there’s still just biases that are going to creep in because, you know, humans make mistakes. But under this new system, it was an accurate reading of what were people actually purchasing when they scanned a barcode. That data was sent to Nielsen, who ran SoundScan and ultimately trickled into Billboard. So “Set Adrift On Memory Bliss” was the first number one under this new paradigm. And what was really interesting was when Billboard flipped the switch, the charts sort of changed overnight. A lot of pop stars and rock stars from the late 80s were no longer on the charts, and it was more dominated by hip hop, country music, and alternative rock. So it seemed like the charts were being manipulated in a certain way. And I say this song predicted the future because it was symbolic of how hip hop was going to be the dominant cultural force for the next few decades. But at the same time, there are things about the song that I think predict the future too, in the sense that, again, it’s a hip hop song. Hip hop’s about to become much more popular.

PM Dawn’s a black duo. And what we also see after the SoundScan change is that there are many more black artists on the charts. And of course, there were black stars before 1991, but again, it was the same thing. And black artists in the past had complained about this, that Billboard wasn’t surveying the record stores where black listeners would go purchase music. So symbolic of that shift too.

And I sort of joke that “Set Adrift On Memory Bliss” has the word “damn” in it. You know, not the most explicit of explicit words. But with the rise of hip hop, we see more explicit content in lyrics because hip hop is a much more lyrical genre than anything that had come before it.

So I say that it predicts the future because of just the happenstance that it was the first number one under this new paradigm, but also because of who the artists were, what kind of music they were making, what they looked like, what they were saying. It was an early example of many things that were to come throughout the 90s and 2000s. And plus, like I said, it’s more of a melodic hip hop style. And that would become popular in like the 2010s. So it was sort of a precursor to that too.

Brad Page: You mention, and this is another thing that kind of really interests me in the book, it’s something I’ve thought about a lot too, is the role of context in how you absorb a song. You know, is it a song that’s suited for a bar or an arena? Is it a song you associate with being in your car, or listening to in your living room, and how that affects how you take in a song?

Chris Dalla Riva: Yeah, I mean, if you listen to house music while you’re sitting in your house, it’s probably not going to sound good, as if you went out to some dark club and we’re listening to it with a bunch of other bodies packed next to you. So context is very important if you are going to enjoy certain music. David Byrne talks about this in his book “How Music Works”. And he positions it as, like a very radical idea, that we really write music to fit where it’s going to be heard. And I think it’s logical when you think about it.

And now sometimes if there’s a song I don’t like, I’m like, “oh, uh, you know, maybe I’m not hearing it in the right situation”. I think about that with a lot of dance music and I’m just sitting at home working my job listening to dance music. Yeah. Maybe I’ll enjoy it as I’m punching around in Excel, but I’m sure I enjoy it a little bit more if I was out at a club.

Brad Page: Yeah. There’s a thing I always find– and a lot of it’s generational…. I’m an old fart at this point, and there’s a lot of modern music that I don’t, it just doesn’t resonate with me. I got nothing against it, it’s just, it’s not written for me.

Chris Dalla Riva: Yeah.

Brad Page: But I find that a lot of stuff, hip hop or hip hop adjacent stuff, that sounds great on record but like if you, if you see the acts perform live, it’s just, It kind of falls flat.  I think because it’s music that’s designed in the studio, for earbuds, and not really designed for live in concert type performance.

Chris Dalla Riva: I don’t even think that’s a– as someone who likes a lot of hip hop music, I don’t think that’s a particularly hot take. Not a knock on the genre. I think you can go see hip hop artists in concert, but it’s very different than if you were to go see a rock artist in concert.

Brad Page: Yeah. And I think that’s evolved over time because, you know, hip hop was originally music literally from the streets, right? Yes. Guys plugging turntables into lamp posts on the street in New York.

Chris Dalla Riva: Right.

Brad Page: And from that, you got acts like Public Enemy, that I think are incredible and that music is so intense and I think works really well live because there’s so much energy and power to it. But as things evolved over time to be more produced with loops and samples and got further and further away from a live setting. Yeah, I just, I don’t feel like it works nearly as well live as it does on record.

Chris Dalla Riva: I mean there are, there are literally even people today who will get signed to a big record contract because they’ve built up a big audience online, and they have never performed live one time. And then suddenly, you know, the label’s got to stick them out there because you do have to perform live eventually and it’s horrible. Some of them, some of these people become good live performers. But we live in a very strange time where you can build a huge audience without ever stepping foot on a stage.

Brad Page: Yeah. It is a very, very interesting time that we’re in for music now, and we’ll get there, as we go through this conversation.

But as we kind of work our way forward, you spend some good detail talking about Milli Vanilli– an act that, you know, I’m not particularly fond of, but I do think got a bum deal compared to where we are today. And this idea of what was once controversial eventually becomes commonplace. And today we see all kinds of acts, including mainstream classic rock acts, performing with backing tracks and vocals that aren’t live.

Chris Dalla Riva: Yeah.

Brad Page: And it cost these guys their career and, you know, at least one of them their lives, I think. And yet today, turn on most TV, whether it’s the Grammys or Saturday Night Live or whatever… go see a concert, and there’s a damn good chance that the performance you’re seeing, a chunk of it is not live. It’s acts performing to backing tracks, maybe not even singing their actual vocals.

Chris Dalla Riva: It’s fascinating. A sort of sad thing to think about. And I agree with you– You know, if I was on a podcast called “I’m NOT in Love With That Song”, I would pick basically anything from the Milli Vanilli catalog. I’m not here defending the music. But it does seem like they got… Like, they got the Grammy stripped from them. I mean, I understand why people were upset.

Brad Page: It’s just when you look at it in the context of today, like, literally hundreds of artists are doing today what they did then, and nobody bats an eye about it.

Chris Dalla Riva: No. And I think they did get a raw deal in that sense. And I sort of mentioned that in the book, and I’m actually glad you mentioned, you bring up how it’s not just, like, young pop stars– it’s like classic rock artists who are touring now. So I do think it’s become something that people expect.

And something that the one guy who’s still living from Milli Vanilli said, in a book called “I Want My MTV”, which is a great oral history of MTV, he’s trying to defend himself, and he’s like, you know what popular entertainment is just about, “if the audience is entertained, nothing else matters”. I don’t know if I agree with that completely, but in terms of just the music business, it’s clear that people agree with that. And it’s clear in this day and age, fans don’t really care– like, they’re not going to shows to hear a live performance, people are going to just party. So Milli Vanilli, in a way, predicted the future, too.

Brad Page: Another area that you delve into in the book that I always find fascinating is everything revolving around copyright.

Chris Dalla Riva: Oh yeah. One of my pet peeve topics. Yeah, yeah, copyright. I mean, incredibly vital to making it possible for the music industry to exist. If you look at like early songwriters in the 1800s, I mean, these guys would die penniless, and they would write really popular songs, because there’s really no copyright protection. Copyright’s a vital, vital tool.

People have gotten crazy with it over the last couple of decades. First, copyright terms are really, really long. Now they last for the life of the creator plus 70 years. The idea that your copyright would outlive you is like, who is that benefiting?  Eventually your works belong to the people to some degree.

And we’ve seen this over the last few years, where financial firms have gotten involved in the music industry. They’re buying up tons and tons of copyrights. And I think copyright lasting that long really does a disservice to younger artists, because it makes it more attractive to invest in music of the past than to spend money trying to develop new talent.

Like I said, if you know The Beatles’ music is going to be generating royalties until 2100, why not spend money acquiring that catalog rather than spending it developing up-and-coming talent?

Brad Page: Mhm.

Chris Dalla Riva: I just think the tremendously long copyright terms create a lot of distortions that are actually bad for artists. Unless you are the most successful artists of all time. And because of that, those people who are making all that money, they have a tremendous amount of power to prevent people from using their work in any way possible. I just think there are a lot of bad incentives around copyright terms that last that long.

Brad Page: Yeah, I have mixed feelings about it and I’ve… and honestly, I don’t really know exactly where I come down on certain things, because on one hand, I do feel like nobody wants to see an artist that you love die penniless in their 80s in some terrible nursing home because they got screwed out of their royalties or whatever. And the idea that if you’re an artist with some integrity, that you don’t necessarily want your songs to be selling tires or cans of soup or whatever it is, you know, or to be used as the theme song on “The Apprentice” or something.

Chris Dalla Riva: Yeah.

Brad Page: But at the same time, like you said, you don’t want things that are going to shut out new artists from being successful. So I just, it’s just something that I wrestle with and it’s not a clear-cut way to come down on it. And I just, I don’t really know what the answer is.

Chris Dalla Riva: I’m not copyright lawyer so I don’t have all the answers. But I do just like to wrestle with the complexities of…

Brad Page: Well, I think as serious listeners, that we have to wrestle with these kind of things. Everything from the inherent racism in the industry to issues like this, and copyright, and kind of everything in between. Because we as listeners are fueling this with our purchasing dollars and our continued support of the music and the artists, so we have a responsibility as listeners, I think, to at least engage with these kind of deeper pieces of the business and think about what are we supporting.

Chris Dalla Riva: Yeah, I totally agree.

Brad Page: Later in the book, as time marches on, you talk a lot about the emergence of the Swedish songwriters and we start to get the Britney Spears era. They’re masterful in a way, and yet, at the same, time often feel to me like they’re stamped out of a machine. Like there’s kind of like an assembly line of making pop songs. When it works it’s, you know, you can’t really argue with it. But there is also, I don’t know, I kind of feel like a assembly line structure to some of that stuff.

Chris Dalla Riva: Yeah, the short story there is that in the 90s, this Swedish studio called, I think it’s Cheiron Studios, was created in Sweden by this guy named Denniz Pop. Denniz Pop ends up tragically dying from stomach cancer very young. But his proteges, the most successful of which is a guy named Max Martin, start producing all of the big boy and girl groups of the late 90s. Think Britney Spears, NSync, Backstreet Boys. And then Max Martin just goes on to become arguably the most successful songwriter of all time. To the point I’m talking, like, more successful than Paul McCartney in terms of charting songs.

Brad Page: Right.

Chris Dalla Riva: He’s worked with everyone. He’s worked “Since You’ve Been Gone”, Kelly Clarkson, all the big Katy Perry hits.

Chris Dalla Riva: Big Weeknd hits, Taylor Swift hits. It goes on and on and on. I mean, the man is tremendously talented and successful. And the controversy is, you’re sort of getting at is that, but there are a lot of good pop songs, but it does come across as formulaic. And this idea that, if I want to hit, I’ll just go see what some middle-aged Swedish man is thinking and all American teenagers will gobble it up.

The counterpoint that I always try to, I actually don’t bring this up in the book, but sometimes when I talk about this I do, is how different is it from what we were talking about earlier? Like the Motown machine. Motown clearly had a formula and a sound. And I don’t know. I don’t know if it’s that much different. I understand when it doesn’t work, it doesn’t work. But when it works, it can be quite good.

Brad Page: Yeah. And again, these are the kind of things that I wrestle with, because I love so much of Motown. And yet at the same time, I get annoyed by some of the Max Martin stuff. And you’re right, there’s not a huge difference in the general sense of, like, you go to these producers for a sound, they’re creating a sound. Motown is a sound. And it is one of the most production line sounds in rock history. You know a Motown song before you hit the first verse, right? You can identify it by the sound and the style and the vibe of it. And that doesn’t bother me. Why does that not bother me and yet I get annoyed by some ancillary Max Martin production? You know, I don’t know. It’s just, these are the things that make us human beings, I think– we’re just, just inherently contradictory and hypocritical. There’s never been a person born who wasn’t hypocritical on something.

Chris Dalla Riva: I think the one thing, like, I mean, you could even point to, like, songs from Tin Pan Alley, sort of. They were trying to write hit songs.

Brad Page: Sure.

Chris Dalla Riva: I think the one thing with Max Martin that I find fascinating, Max Martin, like all of his acolytes, is that they’ve had success for such a long time. Whereas, I mean, the the height. Motown was successful technically for decades, but the height of its power, where they have like a very specific sound, I mean, that’s only a couple of years, right?  Whereas the Max Martin domination, I mean, it’s been… I was born in the 90s. I mean, it’s been literally my whole life that his specific brand of pop music has been popular.

And the other thing is he hops around styles. It’s like in the early 2000s, say pop punk is popular. You know he’s going to write “Since You’ve Been Gone” for Kelly Clarkson. But then in the same breath, you know, that style goes out of favor and he’ll jump on whatever the next popular trend is. He’s great at writing melodies and great melodies can live in any genre. But he’s not like inventing new styles and stuff. And I feel like I could understand people getting fed up with that. And I say that as I like a lot of his songs, but I don’t like all of them. Yeah, I need a break from every songwriter every once in a while.

Brad Page: Sure. And that kind of brings us into the modern era, and how things have been changed so much– I feel like now maybe more than ever– by social media and things like TikTok, and how just the length of songs are affected by what you can get on TikTok.

Chris Dalla Riva: Yeah, I mean, same thing, I always like to compare things across time. In the 80s people were certainly making music to fit the MTV format or to make great music videos, because they knew it would sell records. People today definitely write to TikTok. I think the problems with TikTok are that you are getting bite-sized pieces of content. So you could have a song that is actually really horrible and it could have a 15-second moment that is just perfect for a TikTok trend. And artists definitely try to write to this.

Brad Page: Yeah.

Chris Dalla Riva: And then the song itself does not have legs. Whereas that was really not exactly possible in the past where you could have like one little 15-second tidbit that was gonna work and then the rest of the song didn’t. I’m sure there are some examples you could point to, but I don’t know if it’s a problem for music specifically but just the Internet in general. It’s just like the TikTok-ification of everything, where we’re supposed to consume content in tiny little bite-sized pieces that mess with our ability to consume longer-form, more serious, longer form content. I think that’s a problem.

There have been great songs that I found on TikTok. There have been horrible songs that I found on TikTok. But I think the music is just dealing with a larger societal issue about how we consume media. Just this unfettered slop of content that– how long does it take to watch a movie? Two hours?  In two hours, I could go through literally thousands of TikToks. It certainly doesn’t feel healthy.

Brad Page: Yeah. And everything from, nowadays you have songs that become hits, whatever a hit even means on something like TikTok, that has virtually nothing to do with the participation of the actual creator of the music. And you talk about this in the book, about how somebody can put a piece of music out there in the world and it doesn’t really go anywhere until somebody else, completely unrelated, picks it up and does a dance video to it. And then that’s what catches on. But the artist is almost forgotten in that process, right? Because it’s not the artist’s participation that made it a hit, it was the fact that, oh, now everybody’s making a dance video to this song, that they probably don’t even know who the actual creator of the song is.

Chris Dalla Riva: Yeah, I write about this sort of frequently. I call it “the anonymization of the pop star”. Whereas, you know, I was comparing this to MTV before, but one of the key differences is when you tuned in to watch the video for “Like A Virgin”, like it was clearly Madonna made that video and you were associating the song with Madonna. Whereas if “Like a Virgin” came out today, exactly to your point, it’s possible that some kid starts dancing to it, it goes viral and people become very familiar with the sound, but they don’t associate it with the artist specifically.

Brad Page: They associate it with the dance or whatever. But, but like “Madonna, who’s she? Uh, never heard of her”. Hard to believe, but that kind of thing is happening today.

Chris Dalla Riva: Like I said, that’s what I sort of started at the beginning of this, with this idea, there are some ideas that you see while listening to thousands of popular songs over the decades that are really of a specific moment. And there are certain things that come up again and again and again, and it speaks to human psychology and speaks to the technology that we’re using. And there’s always, there’s usually pros and cons. With a lot of this stuff streaming, it’s incredible. I can go on and listen to quite literally any piece of recorded music ever. I mean, that’s still eye-popping to think about.

Brad Page: It’s incredible. But at the same time, you have to.. you don’t know what you don’t know. So if you don’t know to ask for it, and if it’s just going to deliver the same slop that was being delivered to you on the radio, that frustrates me a little bit– that all the music in the world is available to us, but you have to know where to start to look.

Chris Dalla Riva: No, that’s, that’s a totally fair criticism of the system.

Brad Page: Well, this is as good a place as any to wrap up our conversation. So, thanks for coming on the podcast, Chris. I hope you enjoyed it.

Chris Dalla Riva: This was, this was unbelievable. This was the most in-depth conversation I think I’ve had about music in promotion of this book. So thank you so much.

Brad Page: Well, thanks for that. And before we go, tell everyone one more time about the book.

Chris Dalla Riva: Yeah, I mean, if you enjoyed our conversation, definitely check out my book, “Uncharted Territory: What Numbers Tell Us About The Biggest Hit Songs And Ourselves”. My name is Chris Dalla Riva, you can find me all over the internet very easily. I’m on most social media platforms, and I have a newsletter called “Can’t Get Much Higher”. But definitely go check out the book. It’ll be available wherever you purchase books online. Amazon, Barnes and Noble, Walmart, Books A Million, all that jazz. So if you like the conversation, check it out. And thanks for having me, Brad.

Brad Page: Oh, it’s been my pleasure, Chris.

Chris Dalla Riva, everyone. I highly recommend this book. I had a great time reading it, I know you will too. Go get it.

I will be back in two weeks with another new episode. Check out all of our previous episodes on our website, lovethatsongpodcast.com, or look for them in your favorite podcast app.

Support this podcast by telling people about the show. Share it with your friends.

Thanks again for listening. I’ll meet you back here soon for another edition of the “I’m In Love with That Song” podcast.

When it comes to classic rock albums, few are as iconic as Machine Head by Deep Purple. Released in 1972, this album has cemented its place in rock history, not just for its groundbreaking music but also for the incredible story behind its creation. In this episode, we take a journey through the making of this legendary album, and focus on the track they *thought* was going to be the hit from this record (and it wasn’t “Smoke On The Water“).

“Never Before” (Richie Blackmore, Ian Gillan, Roger Glover, Jon Lord & Ian Paice) Copyright 1972 R. Feldman & Co LTD trading as HSC Music

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TRANSCRIPT:

Whether you’re a child in time, a speed king, or a highway star, you’ve managed to find yourself here at the “I’m In Love With That Song” Podcast. I’m your host, Brad Page, and each episode of this show, I pick a favorite song and we explore it together, on our quest to understand what makes a great song work. You don’t have to play an instrument or read music, we don’t get into music theory here. This is just about listening.

We’ve talked about Deep Purple on this show before, back on episodes 72, 127, and with Greg Renoff on episode 104. But this time, we’re going back to 1972 and their biggest selling album “Machine Head” for a song called “Never Before”.

The most popular lineup of Deep Purple, what fans refer to as the “Mark II” version, came together in 1969 when guitarist Richie Blackmore, keyboard player Jon Lord, and drummer Ian Paice fired their original singer and bass player, and hired vocalist Ian Gillan and bassist Roger Glover, both from the band Episode Six. The first album from this Mark II lineup was “Concert for Group and Orchestra”, which is really more of an oddity than anything. It was the next album, “In Rock” that really established Deep Purple as a band to be reckoned with.

They followed that album with “Fireball” in 1971. This album gets some mixed response; some people really like it– and I think Ian Gillan has even said it’s his favorite Deep Purple album– but other people thought it was a bit of a letdown after the “In Rock” album. I like it.

One thing that’s definitely true about the “Fireball” album is that most of the songs on the record weren’t really suited for live performance, at least as far as the band was concerned. Most of the tracks from that album were never played in concert. And since Deep Purple were, above all, a band that excelled at live performance, this was a bit of a problem. So when the band set out to record their next album, they specifically wanted songs that would work well in their live set.

In fact, the original plan was to record this next album in a live setting. So they booked the casino in Montreux, Switzerland, with the intention to set up on stage and record just like they were playing a gig. The casino was about to close down for the season, so they’d have the venue all to themselves. There was one last show booked at the casino, a concert by Frank Zappa. And then once that was done, Deep Purple could move in and set up. Perfect.

Except, and everyone probably knows this story by now, but during Frank Zappa’s show, one of his crazy fans shot a flare gun into the ceiling and it set the whole casino on fire. Miraculously– and it really is amazing– everybody made it out alive, partly due to the heroic efforts of a guy named Claude Nobs, who risked his life to get some of those attendees out safely.

So suddenly, Deep Purple’s recording plans went up in smoke… literally. So, what are they going to do now? First, they booked a theater called the Pavilion, but the neighbors complained about the noise, so that didn’t work. Eventually, they landed at the Grand Hotel, which was closed down for the winter. They took over a floor and set up in rooms and corridors of the hotel, and parked the Rolling Stones Mobile studio truck outside and ran all the wires between the hotel and the truck. For the band to get from the truck to their recording positions in the hotel, they had to go past the reception, through the kitchen, across the landing, and then out on the balcony, climb in through a window every time they needed to switch between recording their tracks and listening to the playback. Apparently, this was such a pain in the ass that they were determined to get everything in one take just to avoid that hassle.

In the end, the album was recorded in two weeks. It cost $8,000 to record. When it comes to a recording budget, that’s nothing.

All of this story is told in the lyrics to “Smoke On The Water”. It’s right there in the song. Their biggest hit is a straightforward account of this whole crazy situation in which the album was made. Initially, though, the band didn’t think “Smoke On The Water” was anything special. They certainly didn’t think it would become a big hit. There was another song on the album that the band thought was going to be a hit single. It’s a song called “Never Before”.

“Never Before, like all the songs on the album, is credited to all five band members. It features Richie Blackmore on guitar, Jon Lord on keyboards, Roger Glover on bass, Ian Paice on drums, and Ian Gillan on vocals. All five members are also credited as producers. The album was engineered by Martin Birch.

The song kicks off with a very funky riff. Totally has that live in the studio feel, just the four of them jamming on that riff. Ian Paice is one of rock’s greatest drummers. Let’s hear what he’s laying down.

This is the only time they play that riff. It’s right here at the beginning of the song, then they never return to it again. It’s too bad, because I could listen to them vamping on this riff all day. Such a great groove.

But before we move on to the rest of the song, I just want to point out one thing about the recording. You can really hear the sound of the room. Listen especially to Richie Blackmore’s guitar part: you can really hear that room sound.  For an album that wasn’t recorded in a real studio– remember, they’re set up in a hotel, just trying to make it work– considering the circumstances, this is a great sounding record.

Let’s back it up and listen to just the instrumental part under the vocal, because this is a great riff, too. Deep Purple were one of the tightest ensembles out there when they locked in. You just can’t beat them.

That’s the chorus. And you can see why the band thought that this was going to be the hit, because that’s a damn catchy chorus. Let’s listen to the instrumental track underneath the vocal. The real magic here is the piano part that Jon Lord overdubs on the chorus. It’s a rollicking, fun part that really adds a lot, makes the chorus stronger. And the chorus ends with a nice little riff that leads us right back into the verse.

Let’s go back and hear that drum fill by Ian Paice. Then we’ll move on to the next verse.

Let’s go back and bring up Ian Gillen’s vocals on this verse.

This time, that riff leads us into the bridge, which is a whole different feel than the rest of the song. Also notice that Gillan doubles his vocal part here rather than harmonize.

That descending part feels very orchestral to me, but it’s just one guitar part playing off of the organ. The organ and the guitar hold a chord there, but the bass climbs up the scale.

And that takes us right into the guitar solo. It’s a great solo by Richie. Richie Blackmore’s never played a solo that wasn’t great, but this solo is more old-school rock and roll than what you typically get from Richie; it’s even some Chuck Berry-style licks at the end. Richie said that with the exception of “Highway Star”, all of the solos on this album were not worked out in advance, he’d just improvise. That just goes to show what an innate sense of melody, flow and structure he has. He’s one of the greats.

Pretty sure he’s overdubbed another guitar on that last chord to thicken it up. And because it’s not 100% matched perfectly, the slight deviation in the bending of strings makes it sound fuller.

And that takes us into the last verse.

Then we have the last chorus. First, let’s hear the bass and drums together. Roger Glover on bass; he’s certainly the least flashy player in the band, but he’s more than just rock solid. He and Ian Paice on drums make a mighty rhythm section.

And now let’s hear that all together.

Next up is a piano solo by Jon Lord. He’s playing an electric piano, but he’s also running it into a Marshall guitar amplifier to get that distorted sound. Also, notice how the guitar is panned to the left and the organ to the right.

Deep Purple – “Never Before”

 When “Never Before” was released as a single, it kind of flopped. Didn’t get past # 35 on the charts. But when they released the album, which they named “Machine Head”, in March of 1972, the album became a hit, of course, driven by the success of “Smoke On The Water” and all the other great tracks on that record.

By any measure, “Machine Head” is a classic album. You’ll find it on just about every list of classic albums that’s ever been made. I love every track on this album. In fact, one of my favorite Deep Purple tracks was recorded for this album, but it never made it onto the record. Just too many good songs to choose from, they couldn’t fit them all. It’s called “When A Blind Man Cries”, and it was only issued as the B-side of the “Never Before” single.

Thanks for listening to this edition of the “I’m In Love With That Song” Podcast. I really do appreciate it. New shows come out on the 1st and the 15th of every month, so I’ll be back here soon with another new episode. That’s your warning.

You can keep in touch with the show on our Facebook page, or on our website, lovethatsongpodcast.com, where you’ll also find all of our previous episodes. And of course, were also available on Amazon, Apple, Google, YouTube, Pandora, Spotify, iHeartRadio, pretty much anywhere you can find podcasts, you will find this show.

If you’d like to support the show, the best thing you can do is to tell your friends about it, share it with your friends and family, because your word of mouth carries a lot of weight and really helps us to grow our audience. So thanks for that.

We are part of the Pantheon family of podcasts, where you’ll find a ton of other music-related shows. So if you like this kind of thing, check some of those shows out too.

Thanks again for listening to this edition of the I’m in Love With That Song Podcast on “Never Before” by Deep Purple.