Tag: Everly Brothers

  • Warren Zevon- Excitable Boy

    Warren Zevon- Excitable Boy

    Even before he planted his flag in the awareness of mainstream rock fans with his third album, Excitable Boy in January 1978, it turns out that I had been an admirer of Warren Zevon’s songwriting talent almost ten years earlier without realizing it. “I wrote a couple of songs that The Turtles did that paid the rent for awhile. One was called ‘Like the Seasons’ and was the B-side to ‘Happy Together’, and the other was ‘Outside Chance’.” 

    By the time Warren Zevon’s third album, Excitable Boy, was released in January 1978, he already had hits, albeit recorded by Linda Ronstadt at her career peak with Zevon’s “Poor Poor Pitiful Me”, “Carmelita”, and “Hasten Down the Wind”. But because the hit “Werewolves of London” was most people’s first impression of Warren as a performer, he was tagged unfairly with the “novelty song singer” label. When it was first released, I remember having to reconcile several things about Excitable Boy, not the least of which being that several of the songs, at least for the times, seemed downright subversive!(And this copy actually glows in the dark. Ah-OOOOO!)

    There was “Roland the Headless Thompson Gunner”, an unblinking yet tongue-in-cheek look at the shadowy world of mercenaries and gunrunners in third-world hotspots. The title song was a lighthearted romp through the anatomy of a psychotic serial killer, complete with girl group backup singers, while the raucous rocker “Lawyers, Guns, and Money” was highly autobiographical, as we find  out in my classic rock interview. Yet on the same tune stack was Zevon’s  “Tenderness on the Block”, a touching look at the loneliness of senior citizens. Not since John Prine’s “Hello in There” (somehow written when Prine was a mere 19) has a young songwriter such as Zevon, not yet old enough to have experienced a teenage daughter of his own coming of age, written so convincingly of an emotion about which he could not yet had any first-hand personal knowledge. ( Warren Zevon guesting with one of his biggest fans, David Letterman, on Late Night )

    Both Warren Zevon’s final Grammy-grabbing album The Wind, as well as his premature death from inoperable lung cancer, occurred in 2003. Included here are three songs from The Wind,  including “Disorder in the House”, the new Republican congressional theme song, with Bruce Springsteen joining Warren on backing vocals; “Prison Grove”, an atmospheric, cinematic tone poem of despair; and the tender lump-in-the-throat “Keep Me in Your Heart”.

    The paradox of the wind is that we feel its presence but can never touch it. The wind only touches us. Two weeks after The Wind was released, Warren Zevon passed away on the wind. -Redbeard

  • Crowded House- Don’t Dream It’s Over/All I Have to Do is Dream- 2010

    Crowded House- Don’t Dream It’s Over/All I Have to Do is Dream- 2010

    Hey now, hey now…“. What a great band. Formed from the stray strands of New Zealand’s Split Enz, Crowded House had up to four lead singers and the brilliant songs of Neil Finn. Not even the almost criminally inept career direction of their management and US promoters could totally sabotage this level of talent, and the people that did somehow hear and see them cannot praise them enough. You’ll hear it from this live medley in the US in 2010 where they marry their 1985 hit “Don’t Dream It’s Over” with the Everly Brothers‘ chestnut. –Redbeard

  • Rembrandts-Johnny Have You Seen Her?- Ft Worth 1992

    Rembrandts-Johnny Have You Seen Her?- Ft Worth 1992

    Danny Wilde and Phil Solem of the Rembrandts have been making terrific power pop music for years, whether as Great Buildings in the early Eighties, on Danny Wilde’s power pop solo masterpiece The Boyfriend   in 1986, composing and singing the iconic “I’ll Be There for You” theme to the popular Friends   tv series, or together again as the Rembrandts which included the hit “Just the Way It Is, Baby“. Here they are without stage, lighting, or P.A. just sitting at my table in a Ft.Worth bar during my Friday afternoon radio show in March 1992. You’ll think instantly of Phil and Don (Everly), but it’s Phil and Dan!Redbeard