Saturday, May 29, 2021

1968: Brand New Beginnings

Take a look inside

Greasy Asylum's debut album was expected to be released on December 1968. The lead single, a cover version of The Beatles' With a Little Help from My Friends, reached the top of UK Singles Charts and peaked number 68 on the Billboard Hot 100. The song featured the then-Yardbirds guitarist Jimmy Page and Procol Harum drummer B.J. Wilson. Backed by Marjorine, it was the first biggest hit of Greasy Asylum, while the upcoming album was being hyped as a potential groundbreaking record.

Greasy Asylum – Look Inside the Greasy Asylum
Greasy Asylum - Look Inside the Greasy Asylum (1968)¹
Genre: Psychedelic rock, blues rock, art rock
Total: 38:20

Side A - 18:51
1. "With a Little Help from My Friends" (John Lennon-Paul McCartney) - 5:12
2. "Indian Style" (Leon Russell, Marc Benno) - 3:46
3. "Change In Louise" (Joe Cocker, Chris Stainton) - 3:22
4. "Death of the Flowers" (Russell, Benno, Greg Dempsey) - 3:15
5. "Sandpaper Cadillac" (Cocker, Stainton) - 3:16

Side B - 19:29
6. "Medley: N.Y. Op./Land of Dog/Henri the Clown" (Cocker, Stainton, Russell, Benno) - 6:07
7. "Marjorine" (Cocker, Stainton) - 2:38
8. "Soul Food" (Bill Boatman, James Markham) - 2:10
9. "Something's Coming" (Cocker, Stainton) - 2:15
10. "The New Age of Lily" (Cocker, Stainton) - 2:15
11. "Thieves in the Choir" (Russell, Benno, Jerry Riopelle) - 4:04

The debut album of Greasy Asylum was produced by Denny Cordell, being released on 17 December 1968. Look Inside the Greasy Asylum was the fifth release of the Apple Records label, and one of the two records released by the group under that label. The album is full of original numbers by the members of the group, except for two cover numbers, With a Little Help from My Friends (by Joe Cocker), and Soul Food (by Leon Russell). It is the best-selling record of the group, followed by Mad Dogs & Englishmen and I Can Stand a Little Rain.

The Greasy Asylum's version of With a Little Help from My Friends was so successful that it became a classic song in their setlist, being included on Joe Cocker's solo tours later. The album peaked in number 10 on UK Album Charts and number 35 on Billboard. Besides the lead single, Death of Flowers was released as single in early 1970 but failed to chart. The album is commonly regarded as very influential in Blues, Soul music, and R&B. Jimi Hendrix listed Look Inside the Greasy Asylum as one of his all-time favorite records.
"I became interested on their sound when they released that single, and then I bought the record and the stuff inside was... mindblowing. [...] I met Joe Cocker at the Woodstock Festival, and we chatted a bit about his career, his group, and he was such a great person..."
-Jimi Hendrix, 1990 

Apples and Umbrellas

Apple Studios, at 3 Saville Row.

Before the trip for India, the band reunited with their manager to persuade him to establish a new company to give them more creative freedom. By reaching an agreement, Brian and The Beatles established the Apple/NEMS, and along with it, the new recording label, Apple Records. The company had a contract with EMI to the distribution of the songs and albums.
"The director's board always had a cordial relationship with Brian and Beatles. The establishment of Apple/NEMS would've been a big loss for EMI and Capitol if they let them just go, but offer the distribution of albums and singles was a big move by the label."
-Bob Spitz, The Beatles: The Biography
The Beatles recording 'Umbrella', 1968.

Following the return from Maharishi's course in India, and with a big quota of new material written, The Beatles gathered at the EMI Studios to once record a new album. Though arguments inside the group were increasing, mainly between George and Paul, Brian Epstein always had to appease the situation.
"George was emerging on his songwriting period, and wanted more space from Paul and John, and both were complaining about it. After the release of Umbrella, I reunited with the boys to determine the issue with the track listings. We've agreed that George could fit four tracks on the albums, three only if Ringo had something in his hands."
-Brian Epstein, 1972.
"Actually was funny in terms. During A Doll's House, John and Paul called me frequently and to try to give me their songs to suppress George's space. But Brian himself discovered that quite quickly and warned both about the problems that they would have later.
 -Ringo Starr, 2015.
In the same period, John Lennon's relationship with avant-garde artist Yoko Ono was flourishing. In May 1968, both recorded the Two Virgins album in one night. John's relation with Yoko would deteriorate his relationship with Cynthia. One time, John brought Yoko into a recording session, but she was dismissed after Brian wanting John to follow the policy regarding that wives and girlfriends couldn't attend the sessions. Still, Yoko was somewhere at the studios.

The band recorded Umbrella in a three-month-run. One of the songs, Ob-La-Di, Ob-La-Da involved several days of work, which annoyed George and John over Paul's perfectionism for the track, who continuously would work on the track. Both expressed vocally their dislike of the song, with George referencing it later on Savoy Truffle.

Despite Umbrella being finished, The Beatles still proceeded to go to the studios to record the remaining songs for the follow-up of the album. The album was announced in late July, to be released in September of the same year. The band released Savoy Truffle backed with Ringo's rendition of Johnny Mercer's Dream. The song's performance on charts was disappointing, peaking number 4 in Billboard Hot 100 and number 2 in UK Singles Charts.

The Beatles – Umbrella
The Beatles - Umbrella (1968)²
Genre: Rock, pop, folk-rock, blues, lo-fi
Total: 43:42

Side A - 21:08
1. "Glass Onion" (John Lennon-Paul McCartney) - 2:17
2. "O-Bla-Di, O-Bla-Da" (Lennon-McCartney) - 3:08
3. "The Continuing Story of Bungalow Bill" (Lennon-McCartney) - 3:14
4. "Birthday" (Lennon-McCartney) - 2:42
5. "Don't Pass Me By" (Richard Starkey) - 4:45
6. "Why Don't We Do It On the Road?" (Lennon-McCartney) - 1:41
7. "Only a Northern Song" (Harrison) - 3:24

Side B - 22:34
8. "Martha My Dear" (Lennon-McCartney) - 2:28
9. "I'm So Tired" (Lennon-McCartney) - 2:03
10. "Savoy Truffle" (George Harrison) - 2:54
11. "Yer Blues" (Lennon-McCartney) - 4:01
12. "Mother Nature's Son" (Lennon-McCartney) - 2:48
13. "Everybody's Got Something To Hide Except Me and My Monkey" (Lennon-McCartney) - 2:24
14. "Sexy Sadie" (Lennon-McCartney) - 3:15
15. "Honey Pie" (Lennon-McCartney) - 2:41

Umbrella, the ninth studio album by The Beatles, was released on 21 September 1968, produced by Paul McCartney and John Lennon, but credited to The Beatles. The name of the album was introduced by McCartney while the band was in India when he conceived a new record with the songs composed during that period. The album was recorded at the EMI Studios and at the recently inaugurated Apple Recording Studios. The sessions of the album were remarked by growing tensions by the members of the group.

Most of the lyrics of the album were written in India, except for Only a Northern Song, Birthday, Don't Pass Me By and Savoy Truffle. For the sessions of the album, The Beatles wished for full autonomy on production, while they kept George Martin as arranger for the record. With the differences growing between the Fab Four, particularly due to Paul's perfectionism, The Beatles avoided being involved in producing their albums until the 70's.

The performance of the album was disappointing to the band and bad for Apple Records' early reputation. Umbrella topped in the United Kingdom but peaked number 4 on Billboard. After the repercussion, manager Brian Epstein decided to bring George Martin back to the producer role, leaving The Beatles to record the songs. In later years, The Beatles expressed dissatisfaction with the record. Yer Blues was later released as John's solo single, being played at The Rolling Stones' Rock and Roll Circus. The album was target from Rolling Stone's controversial article in the following week: The Fall of the Giants. Both the releases of Wild Honey and Umbrella were dubbed as the truce between The Beatles and The Beach Boys.
"You can see by my face in the cover what I feel about the album. I mean, [Umbrella] has very few bad songs in general, but it was stressful and tiresome to produce, and we ended up unsatisfied with the final result. It was a goddamn inconsistent record, a result of all the sessions and our year. Probably the next thing to an 'annus horribilis' to all of us."
-John Lennon, 1976

Apples and oranges, an old woman with a casket...

Syd Barrett in April 1968, in front of a Hendrix poster.

Meanwhile, the former Rubber Band guitarist Syd Barrett was recording his first solo effort after two break-ups with his former bands. He and his backing band, formed by Vincent Crane, fellow drummer Steve Took, and The Deviants' bass player Paul Rudolph, recorded the album throughout February and April, being assisted by Norman Smith, who was in charge of produce the album. In January, Syd recorded Apples and Oranges, Scream Thy Last Scream and Jugband Blues. To Interstellar Overdrive, recorded previously during the sessions of The Piper at the Gates of Dawn, it was added overdubs to the song.

During the recording sessions, Syd decided to step back from drugs, realizing that it was influencing his decisions in the music business. His sister, Rosemary, helped him during the rehabilitation period while both lived in the same apartment in London. In the period, Syd decided to call the album: Rooftop in a Thunderstorm Row Missing the Point; a reference to a lost song from Pink Floyd times. After the sessions, teamed with Crazy World of Arthur Brown, Syd went to another tour in the United Kingdom, France, and the Netherlands.
"I remember using drugs a lot between '66 and '67, L.S.D., sugar cubes, but then I realized that it was harming me and people around me, and I needed to stop for a little while. I still smoked pot until these days occasionally, but not at the same levels of what I was doing at that time."
-Syd Barrett, 2004 
Blackhill Records released Apples and Oranges, backed by Pow R. Toc. H., as a promotional single for Syd's upcoming album. The song peaked in number 3 in Britain but fell out quickly, and reached number 25 on Billboard Hot 100, surprisingly hitting in the Western Coast of the United States. Despite being released without Syd's consent, he expressed happiness by the success of his debut single.

Syd Barrett – Rooftop in a Thunderstorm Row Missing the Point
Syd Barrett - Rooftop in a Thunderstorm Row Missing the Point (1968)³
Genre: Psychedelic rock, space rock, acid rock, psychedelic folk
Total: 43:35
All songs written by Syd Barrett, except when noted.

Side A - 21:39
1. "Vegetable Man" - 2:31
2. "Apples and Oranges" - 3:04
3. "In the Beechwoods" - 4:43
4. "Pow R. Toc H." (Syd Barrett, Vincent Crane, Paul Rudolph, Steve Took) - 4:26
5. "Scarecrow" - 2:11
6. "Scream Thy Last Scream" - 4:42

Side B - 21:56
7. "Interstellar Overdrive" (Barrett, Crane, Rudolph, Took) - 16:40
8. "The Gnome" - 2:13
9. "Jugband Blues" - 3:02

Rooftop in a Thunderstorm Row Missing the Point is the debut studio album by the British singer-songwriter Syd Barrett. The sessions for the album started immediately after the break-up of his band, Rubber Band. The album was released on 19 August 1968 by the Blackhill Records in the United Kingdom and distributed by Capitol in the United States. It was produced by Norman Smith, who produced Rubber Band's final album and was backed by The Deviants' Paul Rudolph, former Rubber Band drummer and friend Steve Took, and Crazy World of Arthur Brown keyboardist Vincent Crane.

Syd's album was successful at the time by reaching number 8 on UK Albums Charts and number 130 on Billboard, with its performance better than Bowie's debut album. The Gnome was released after Apples and Oranges, and it was backed by Pink Theme. The single became very popular among the youth, but eventually, it was noticed ambiguous interpretations of the song, such as allegories to psychedelic drugs to an ordinary fairy tale to children. Syd later commented that the song was based on J. R. R. Tolkien's fiction.

Despite the album being released in August 1968, Syd first played it entirely at the Hyde Park Festival in June, backed by his studio band, and featuring Pink Floyd members Richard Wright and David Gilmour. Besides the songs from Rooftop, Syd also played a set of songs from the Rubber Band years. He also toured in Europe and North America for his first time.

The record became a fan favorite in the following years, with most of the songs from the album being part of the regular set. The album is regarded as highly influential in the Neo-psychedelic and Indie scenes. Along with "Clowns and Jugglers" and the 1972 album, Syd cited the album as his favorite record by its effervescing authenticity and creative freedom at the time.
"The more I was becoming a successful musician, the stress of recording/releasing/touring was becoming intense. That thing started to happen when I was recording Clowns and Jugglers, when the label put me a deadline. That's why I did Have You Got It Yet?, y'know, the pressure that [Peter] Jenner was putting upon me was exhausting! And that's why I like my debut album, because I had time and creative freedom to do what I wanted."
-Syd Barrett, 1979

Flowers to a tyrannosaurus...

Marc Bolan, 1968.

As for Marc, a few things were already set to him to make a debut album. Quicker than Syd and Bowie, Marc grabbed The Flowers' Rick Wills and Willie Wilson founding Tyrannosaurus Rex, with Marc Bolan as the frontman. Tyrannosaurus Rex was, in fact, somewhat of a solo project of Bolan, since he was the major contributing force to the group while Rick and Wilson were just sort-of the backing band for him.

Blackhill hired Tony Visconti, who was appointed by Marc Bolan to produce his debut album under Tyrannosaurus Rex. For Bolan, the album's music represented a rejection of the electric guitar-driven music he'd been playing with his previous band, Rubber Band, and a protest to the suggestions that Bowie and Syd had given back during the sessions.

Throughout the first semester of 1968, Bolan, Wills and Wilson were confined in the Advision Studios recording two albums at once. "I had actually a lot of short songs. The longer ones I generally saved for the end, but most of them were in the two-minute range.", Marc Bolan. The first album was Beyond the Risin' Sun or the Beginning of Doves, while the second one was My People Were Fair and Had Sky in Their Hair... But Now They're Content to Wear Stars on Their Brows. The former was far more concentrated on the catalogue back from the pre-Rubber Band days, while the latter was pushed through new content and far more into the psychedelic folk scene.
"Beyond the Rising Sun [or the Beginning of Doves] was not a bad album, but it sure sounded like an audition or a demo album, haha! It clearly is a taste of what would come years after that 'mystical phase'."

 -Marc Bolan


Tyrannosaurus Rex - Beyond the Rising Sun or the Beginning of Doves
Tyrannosaurus Rex - Beyond the Rising Sun or the Beginning of Doves (1968)
Genres: Psychedelic folk, psychedelic rock, blues rock, mod
Total: 30:07
All songs written by Marc Bolan.

Side A - 14:29
1. "Jasper C. Debussy" - 2:11
2. "Observations" - 2:14
3. "Misty Mist" - 1:56
4. "Jasmine Forty-Nine" - 2:27
5. "Rings of Fortune" - 2:33
6. "Black and White Incident" - 1:46
7. "Cat Black" - 1:22

Side B - 15:38
8. "Beyond the Risin' Sun" - 2:18
9. "Lunacy's Back" - 2:17
10. "Pictures of Purple People" - 2:22
11. "One Inch Rock" - 2:16
12. "The Beginning of Doves" - 1:47
13. "Sally was an Angel" - 2:43
14. "Charlie" - 1:55

Beyond the Rising Sun or the Beginning of Doves is the debut album of the British rock band Tyrannosaurus Rex. It is the first album released by Marc Bolan after his departure from Rubber Band, and the first album from a member after Rubber Band. The album was produced by Tony Visconti and released on 13 April 1968 under Blackhill Records. The album merges some of Marc's older works involving rock and roll and mod influences and mystical psychedelia.

Marc's album was midly received by the press at the time, with mixed views, reaching number 24 at UK Album Charts and failing to chart in the US. Marc preferred to not release a single, even though Jasper C. Debussy was released, reaching number 30 on the UK Single Charts. The album cover was made by reusing a poster from earlier gigs with Tyrannosaurus Rex.

To the mainstream public at the time, the album passed virtually unnoticed, but it was warmly received by more Underground fans. In 1972, it was re-released separately, along with the double album with My People Were Fair and Prophets, Seers & Sages, reaching number 15 on the United Kingdom. The rock and roll influence, that would later return on Unicorn and future T. Rex records would be absent for the next two albums.

Notes:
[1] All songs are sourced from Joe Cocker's With a Little Help from My Friends and Leon Russell & Marc Benno's Look Inside the Asylum Choir.

[2] All songs are sourced from The Beatles' White Album, except for Only a Northern Song, from the Yellow Submarine soundtrack.

[3] All songs are sourced from Pink Floyd's The Piper at the Gates of Dawn, A Saucerful of Secrets, London '66-'67, and The Early Years (1965-1972).

[4] Tyrannosaurus Rex's debut album is exactly the same, except that Mustang Ford was swapped with Debora.

Author's addendum:
1) So basically, the Greasy Asylum have two frontmen, Joe Cocker and Leon Russell. Both represent the group on interviews, and on stage, Cocker and Russell are the only two voices singing beside the background singers... by now. Yeah, Greasy Asylum is rising quickly to the fame.

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