Showing posts with label Nico. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Nico. Show all posts

Tuesday, September 5, 2023

On this day 05 September

 ...a traveler of both time and space

1966 05 September On This Day Jimmy Page recorded A Degree of Murder soundtrack with Brian Jones
♪ A Degree of Murder (Brian Jones) Soundcloud

  • 1966 Jimmy Page recorded A Degree of Murder soundtrack with Brian Jones.
  • 1969 Tous En Scene TV show, filmed June 19, aired on French TV
  • 1971 Led Zeppelin - Chicago, IL at International Amphitheatre
  • 1998 Page & Plant - Vancouver, Canada at General Motors Place
  • 2008 It Might Get Loud premiers at Toronto Film Festival
  • 2013 Jimmy Page at London launch of Lou Reed limited edition book, Transformer
It's all connected:
Jimmy Page was employed as producer, session musician and A&R scout for Andrew Loog Oldham's Immediate Records label in 1965. Jimmy Page produced and played on Nico’s 1965 singles for Immediate, I'm Not Sayin' / The Last Mile.

Oldham was manager and producer of The Rolling Stones from 1963 to 1967. Brian Jones was the founder and original bandleader of the Rolling Stones, and in 1966 Jimmy Page worked with Brian Jones recording the soundtrack to the 1967 movie, A Degree of Murder. Jones' broke up with his girlfriend, Anita Pallenberg, and shortly after was seen enjoying the Monterey Pop Festival in June 1967 with Nico.

Nico had met Bob Dylan a few years before and had traveled with him around Europe while Dylan worked on songs for his fourth album, 1964's Another Side of Bob Dylan.  During that time Dylan wrote a song for Nico's 1967 Chelsea Girl album called I'll Keep It With Mine.  Chelsea Girl was released in October 1967 by Verve Records, The Velvet Underground's label. According to some sources, Bob Dylan had introduced Nico to Andy Warhol, who had done a "screen test" of Dylan in 1965 or 1966, and Warhol introduced her to Lou Reed's band, The Velvet Underground.
  
The album The Velvet Underground & Nico was produced in 1972 by Andy Warhol. While it didn't sell many copies at the time, Rolling Stone magazine ranked it number thirteen on their list of the "500 Greatest Albums of All Time".  But then, Rolling Stone ranked Led Zeppelin's first album only 29th (that was in 2015, it's now dropped farther down),.  The magazine's music critics never have much liked Led Zeppelin, so take their ranking for what it's worth.

To continue...
Transformer was Lou Reed's second solo studio album. One of the tracks, Walk On The Wild Side, became Lou Reed's signature song. The 1972 album was produced by David Bowie and Mick Ronson, and the cover art photography was by Mick Rock, David Bowie's official photographer.  Rock continued photographing Lou Reed and other musicians over the decades.

Mick Rock has put out a number of photographic books. He and Lou Reed launched a Genesis Publications limited edition book, Transformer, in London in September 2013. Jimmy Page was at the event. Reed died October 27, 2013.  
"The Yardbirds used to cover I'm Waiting For My Man a lot; we used to drop it into the middle of  I'm A Man. I'm pretty certain we were the first people to cover The Velvet Underground."  ~Jimmy Page, Julian Marszalek interview, Quietus November 2014


1966

1966 recording A Degree of Murder soundtrack

1966 recording A Degree of Murder soundtrack

1966 recording A Degree of Murder soundtrack

1966 recording A Degree of Murder soundtrack

1966 recording A Degree of Murder soundtrack
2008
2008 Jimmy Page at It Might Get Loud premier, Toronto Film Festival

Jimmy Page, in It Might Get Loud

Jimmy Page, in It Might Get Loud
2013
2013 Jimmy Page and Lou Reed at launch of Reed's limited edition book, Transformer

2015








Saturday, August 19, 2023

On this day 19 August

 I'm not sayin' the magick had anything to do with anything.  No wait.  I am.

1965 19 August On This Day singles by Nico  released on Immediate Records label
♪  The Last Mile (Nico) Soundcloud
  • 1965 19 August On This Day singles by Nico, produced by Jimmy Page, released
  • 1966 The Yardbirds - Oklahoma City, OK at Wedgewood Amusement Park
  • 1970 Led Zeppelin - Kansas City, MO at Kansas City Municipal Auditorium Arena
  • 1971 Led Zeppelin - Vancouver,  Canada at Pacific Coliseum 

1965:
Nico's singles were released on this day in 1965 to launch the short-lived British label, Immediate Records, begun by Rolling Stones' manager Andrew Loog Oldham, with Jimmy Page hired on as guitar player, writer, and in-house producer. According to Gibson Guitar, "Page worked with John Mayall’s Bluesbreakers (which then featured Clapton), future Velvet Underground singer Nico (for whom Page and Oldham wrote songs, hoping to turn her into the next Marianne Faithfull), and R&B singer Chris Farlowe. Page also recorded a single of his own, "She Just Satisfies," on which he sang lead vocals."

Immediate Records released albums and singles in the US with MGM Records.  The group The Fifth Dimension and Nico's singles were early single releases under that US deal. 

To "routine" (referred to in the On This Day posting) according to the Oxford English Dictionary is to "link or unite (aspects of a performance) into a routine". The rest is up to your imagination.

1965 The Last Mile, by Nico, produced, arranged & conducted by Jimmy Page

1965 single by Nico, produced by Jimmy Page


1970
"...an abundance of hair was not the only change in Led Zeppelin, fast-rising British group. Without losing force and volume, they have added a mellowness which benefits their talents as well.... the group in the past always seemed to be coming on strong. Now they have developed a change of pace. Without sacrificing energy, they have added more style."
~ Steve Weber, Music in America newspaper review, Aug. 1970

It is interesting how reviewers were noticing and commenting on the evolution of the band in such a short time.

1971:
By this time not yet three years from its first performance, even more than 17,000 seats in a venue for Led Zeppelin wasn't enough. Over 3,000 fans without tickets threatened to trash Vancouver's Pacific Coliseum before the venue opened the doors to them to prevent damage to the building. The show was stopped twice to move equipment back from the edge of the stage because the audience at the front was ripping the stage apart.

Robert Plant: "Yeah, sometimes it gets a bit scary when we see half the stage disappearing..."
Jimmy Page: "It was a bit rough."
~ Rick McGrath, The Straight newspaper review, August 20 1971
1971 Jimmy Page/Led Zeppelin - Vancouver (photo Rick McGrath)

1971 the crowd and the aftermath, Led Zeppelin at Vancouver (photo Rick McGrath)

Music. Magick. Power. He has known about this for a long time.
2006 August Classic Rock Magazine (photo Ross Halfin)



Saturday, September 5, 2015

On This Day 05 September

...a traveler of both time and space, to be where he has been...
1966 05 September On This Day Jimmy Page recorded A Degree of Murder soundtrack with Brian Jones
♪ A Degree of Murder (Brian Jones) Soundcloud

  • 1966 Jimmy Page recorded A Degree of Murder soundtrack with Brian Jones.
  • 1969 Tous En Scene TV show, filmed June 19, aired on French TV
  • 1971 Led Zeppelin - Chicago, IL at International Amphitheatre
  • 1998 Page & Plant - Vancouver, Canada at General Motors Place
  • 2008 It Might Get Loud premiers at Toronto Film Festival
  • 2013 Jimmy Page at London launch of Lou Reed limited edition book, Transformer
It's all connected:
Jimmy Page was employed as producer, session musician and A&R scout for Andrew Loog Oldham's Immediate Records label in 1965. Jimmy Page produced and played on Nico’s 1965 singles for Immediate, I'm Not Sayin' / The Last Mile.

Oldham was manager and producer of The Rolling Stones from 1963 to 1967. Brian Jones was the founder and original bandleader of the Rolling Stones, and in 1966 Jimmy Page worked with Brian Jones recording the soundtrack to the 1967 movie, A Degree of Murder. Jones' broke up with his girlfriend, Anita Pallenberg, and shortly after was seen enjoying the Monterey Pop Festival in June 1967 with Nico.

Nico had met Bob Dylan a few years before and had traveled with him around Europe while Dylan worked on songs for his fourth album, 1964's Another Side of Bob Dylan.  During that time Dylan wrote a song for Nico's 1967 Chelsea Girl album called I'll Keep It With Mine.  Chelsea Girl was released in October 1967 by Verve Records, The Velvet Underground's label. According to some sources, Bob Dylan had introduced Nico to Andy Warhol, who had done a "screen test" of Dylan in 1965 or 1966, and Warhol introduced her to Lou Reed's band, The Velvet Underground.
  
The album The Velvet Underground & Nico was produced in 1972 by Andy Warhol. While it didn't sell many copies at the time, even Rolling Stone magazine has ranked it number thirteen on their list of the "500 Greatest Albums of All Time".  But then Rolling Stone, ranked Led Zeppelin's first album only 29th, and none of their other albums appear in the top 50.  The magazine's music critics never has much liked Led Zeppelin, so take their ranking for what it's worth.

To continue...
Transformer was Lou Reed's second solo studio album. One of the tracks, Walk On The Wild Side, became Lou Reed's signature song. The 1972 album was produced by David Bowie and Mick Ronson, and the cover art photography was by Mick Rock, David Bowie's official photographer.  Rock continued photographing Lou Reed and other musicians over the decades.

Mick Rock has put out a number of photographic books. He and Lou Reed launched a Genesis Publications limited edition book, Transformer, in London in September 2013. Jimmy Page was at the event. Reed died October 27, 2013.  
"The Yardbirds used to cover I'm Waiting For My Man a lot; we used to drop it into the middle of  I'm A Man. I'm pretty certain we were the first people to cover The Velvet Underground."  ~Jimmy Page, Julian Marszalek interview, Quietus November 2014

1966 recording A Degree of Murder soundtrack

1966 recording A Degree of Murder soundtrack

1966 recording A Degree of Murder soundtrack

1966 recording A Degree of Murder soundtrack

1966 recording A Degree of Murder soundtrack

2008 Jimmy Page at It Might Get Loud premier, Toronto Film Festival

Jimmy Page, in It Might Get Loud

Jimmy Page, in It Might Get Loud

2013 Jimmy Page and Lou Reed at launch of Reed's limited edition book, Transformer



Wednesday, August 19, 2015

On This Day 19 August

I'm not sayin' the magick had anything to do with anything.  No wait.  I am.
1965 19 August On This Day singles by Nico  released on Immediate Records label
♪  The Last Mile (Nico) Soundcloud
  • 1965 19 August On This Day singles by Nico, produced by Jimmy Page, released
  • 1966 The Yardbirds - Oklahoma City, OK at Wedgewood Amusement Park
  • 1970 Led Zeppelin - Kansas City, MO at Kansas City Municipal Auditorium Arena
  • 1971 Led Zeppelin - Vancouver,  Canada at Pacific Coliseum 

1965:
Nico's singles were released on this day in 1965 to launch the short-lived British label, Immediate Records, begun by Rolling Stones' manager Andrew Loog Oldham, with Jimmy Page hired on as guitar player, writer, and in-house producer. According to Gibson Guitar, "Page worked with John Mayall’s Bluesbreakers (which then featured Clapton), future Velvet Underground singer Nico (for whom Page and Oldham wrote songs, hoping to turn her into the next Marianne Faithfull), and R&B singer Chris Farlowe. Page also recorded a single of his own, "She Just Satisfies," on which he sang lead vocals."

Immediate Records released albums and singles in the US with MGM Records.  The group The Fifth Dimension and Nico's singles were early single releases under that US deal. 

To "routine" (referred to in the On This Day posting) according to the Oxford English Dictionary is to "link or unite (aspects of a performance) into a routine". The rest is up to your imagination.

1965 The Last Mile, by Nico, produced, arranged & conducted by Jimmy Page

1965 single by Nico, produced by Jimmy Page


1970
"...an abundance of hair was not the only change in Led Zeppelin, fast-rising British group. Without losing force and volume, they have added a mellowness which benefits their talents as well.... the group in the past always seemed to be coming on strong. Now they have developed a change of pace. Without sacrificing energy, they have added more style."
~ Steve Weber, Music in America newspaper review, Aug. 1970

It is interesting how reviewers were noticing and commenting on the evolution of the band in such a short time.

1971:
By this time not yet three years from its first performance, even more than 17,000 seats in a venue for Led Zeppelin wasn't enough. Over 3,000 fans without tickets threatened to trash Vancouver's Pacific Coliseum before the venue opened the doors to them to prevent damage to the building. The show was stopped twice to move equipment back from the edge of the stage because the audience at the front was ripping the stage apart.

Robert Plant: "Yeah, sometimes it gets a bit scary when we see half the stage disappearing..."
Jimmy Page: "It was a bit rough."
~ Rick McGrath, The Straight newspaper review, August 20 1971
1971 Jimmy Page/Led Zeppelin - Vancouver (photo Rick McGrath)

1971 the crowd and the aftermath, Led Zeppelin at Vancouver (photo Rick McGrath)
Music. Magick. Power. He has known about this for a long time.
2006 August Classic Rock Magazine (photo Ross Halfin)