Posts Tagged “seals and crofts”

By popular demand, I’ve dropped the ZIP’s and added MP3s for the Jim Keltner post I did a few months back.

My set of tunes featuring Steve Gadd was so well received I thought I’d dive into a series of posts featuring great session drummers. Here’s a (short) dozen from Jim Keltner.

Steely Dan – Josie (Aja, MCA, 1977)

This should probably be the finale in this set, not the opener. Notoriously finicky, Becker and Fagen put Keltner to the test on this one and he scored an “A”. Block out everything and listen to the high hat work – he mixes eighths and sixteenths from measure to measure with the grace of a Jack DeJohnette.

Leon Russell – Lay Right Here In Heaven (Will O’ The Wisp, Shelter, 1975)

This copy is a little too dirty to hear the nuances but it’s still a great groove: “Sometimes I feel like bitin’ your toes, heaven knows, anything goes”. Keltner actually shares the drum credit with two others on this tune.

Jackson Browne – Red Neck Friend (For Everyman, Elektra, 1975)

Eight bars of guitar and then it’s straight rock and roll right to the last drum beat. Decidedly un-Jackson Browne, in my book, and no doubt covered by a few million bar bands since the 1970’s. Great piano, too.

James Taylor – How Sweet It Is (To Be Loved By You) (Gorilla, Warner Brothers, 1975)

The credits say Keltner shared the drum duties with Jim Gordon but it’s hard to hear exactly how that happens. Maybe there’s one of them on tambourine? Even so, it’s a tasty shuffle with Carly doing background vocals and Sanborn on sax. Reminds me of summertime…

Carly Simon and James Taylor – Mockingbird (Hotcakes, Elektra, 1974)

A case of the remake beating the original with Carly and James reversing roles on this one (it appears on Carly’s album with James credited as the background singer). Just like Steve Gadd’s four-on-the-floor in “Danny’s All-Star Joint,” this proves that a funky drummer doesn’t have to show off…just a clean funky beat, cowbell in hand, thank you.

Seals and Crofts – Yellow Dirt (Summer Breeze, Warner Brothers, 1971)

Seals and Crofts have been much-maligned for being too soft to be called rock and roll but, in fact, they could get a little funky. The drums and pianos work together nicely here as Keltner lays down a slow groove. I love the group picture of all the happy hippies on the inside cover of the album.

John Lennon – I Don’t Want To Be A Soldier (Imagine, Apple, 1971)

Most bios of Keltner immediately refer to his work with three of the four Beatles (sans McCartney) and it’s true. He was a favorite of that gang (and their accessories like Harry Nilsson) for his diversity and ability to adapt to any style. Dirty groove is the best way to describe this one.

George Harrison – Give Me Love (Living In The Material World, Apple, 1973)

Having heard this song a billion times, I’ve never once paid attention to the drum part until today. And, truth be told, it’s one of the more complicated and tasty in Keltner’s repertoire. Funky but delicate and light of touch, this really is a masterpiece. (And there’s a “Jim Keltner Fan Club” logo on the back!)

Nilsson – Daylight Has Caught Me (That’s The Way It Is, RCA, 1976

This is another deceptively intricate drum part that doesn’t stand out against the vocals and piano. But, give this a listen with your ears focused on the drumming and you’ll him changes styles a couple of times during the song: from straight funk to reggae to rock and roll and back again. Once more, great hi-hat work.

Elliman – Sally Go ‘Round The Roses (Night Flight, RSO, 1978)

OK, this one’s a little off the beaten path. Who’d have thought Keltner would be in the company of a pop star like Yvonne Elliman? But, then again, she’s not so far afield. She sang with Clapton and hung with Delaney and Bonnie, all part of Keltner’s circle. But, stylistically, it’s definitely a stretch.

Joe Cocker – The Letter (Mad Dogs and Englishmen, A and M, 1970)

I freely admit this is a guess: Jim Gordon and Jim Keltner are credited equally for drumming on this record without pointing to specific songs. But this sounds an awful like Keltner’s style…if not, does it really matter?

All these cuts come from my well-worn record collection. Want cleaner copies? Buy the CD’s or download the tracks at Amazon.

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It is the 25th 35th anniversary of the Summer of 1973. I was 10-years old during that particular summer.

I have a 10-year old of my own today. He’s sometimes sweet, often petulant, always inquisitive. In short, he’s a lot like his father.

I’ve been thinking a lot about that summer over the past several months, how much the music will always be a soundtrack to that time.

I was going to write a week long series of posts about my summer as a 10-year old, riding our banana-seated bikes around the lake where we camped (predecessors to the mountain bikers of today), catching crayfish in the creek, fishing for blue gills in the lake, burning piles of wood in the fireplace (because we could), singeing marshmallows and eyebrows over the campfire and listening to the jukebox in the campground rec room. Especially the jukebox in the rec room, where we dropped quarters on the pool table and the pinball machine in a freshly built space that smelled forever like concrete and sawdust.

But, I’m off on a business trip tomorrow (a few hours after school starts) and, like the summer of 1973, the opportunity for a long list of reminisces has largely passed.

I did get as far as making a CD of these songs for car listening. Grandmom immediately identified them as “songs from the lake” and my kids immediately wanted to hear Smoke On The Water several hundred times (which they promptly renamed Barbeque On The River).

In a way, I managed to pull my summer and his summer as 10-year olds together. Briefly, which is always the way life is…

And say goodbye to summer…one more time.

The Carpenters - Yesterday Once More

Not written by Paul Williams, but should’ve been.

Seals And Crofts - Diamond Girl

Great piano part.

McCartney And Wings - Live And Let Die

Maureen McGovern - The Morning After

Shelly Winters. Need I say more?

Mac Davis Clint Holmes - Playground In My Mind
Jim Croce - Bad, Bad Leroy Brown
Helen Reddy - Delta Dawn

Dr. John - Right Place, Wrong Time

Spent the entire summer of 1983 learning these lyrics.

Deep Purple - Smoke On The Water
BW Stevenson - My Maria

Like Croce, we wonder what would have been if he’d stuck around.

Paul Simon - Loves Me Like A Rock

Bette Midler - Boogie Woogie Bugle Boy

Stories - Brother Louie

CDB - Uneasy Rider

Doobie Brothers - Long Train Runnin’

Paul Simon - Kodachrome

I had yet to have my first schoolboy crush (Stephanie Turk, 7th grade math class) but I got it.

Indeed…

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Whereas our last subject, Russ Kunkel, could be found in the drummer’s chair for just about every southern California rock record of the 1970’s, Jeff Porcaro was more of a moving target. Arguably more a stylistic chameleon than Keltner or Kunkel (or even Gadd), Jeff Porcaro played for a hugely diverse set of musicians. He laid down straight-ahead dance grooves for the likes of Madonna and Bonnie Pointer, played fusion with Steve Lukather and Larry Carlton and supported pop players like Alan O’Day and Leo Sayer. Here are a dozen tracks from my vinyl collection showing him at play.

Al Stewart - Valentina Way (Time Passages, Arista, 1978)

In many cases, Porcaro would play on just a tune or two per album. This is the only Porcaro-driven cut in this set from one of Stewart’s late 70’s records. It has his signature tight snare sound, high-hat swing and triplets around the tom that show up through much of his work.

Steely Dan - Dr. Wu (Katy Lied, MCA, 1975)

Some hard-core Dan-heads say this was the last true Steely Dan record. Save for one cut, Porcaro’s all over it. This is my favorite from that set. Listen to how the China ride cuts through starting with the first chorus, underscoring The Dan’s much-loved Asian vibe.

Seals and Crofts - Baby Blue (Get Closer, Warner Brothers, 1976)

I staunchly stand behind my POV that Seals and Crofts are the most underrated of all the 1970’s singer/songwriter duos: great harmonies, great songwriting and a cool spiritual message. Their stuff was challenging for drummers: it required imagination, a light touch and a sensitivity to the texture of their songwriting. Porcaro nails it on this one.

Rickie Lee Jones - Youngblood (Rickie Lee Jones, Warner Brothers, 1979)

It took some extra research to confirm but it’s accurate: Porcaro’s the guy behind this funky reggae-pop riff. Even if it weren’t documented, the high-hat work gives it away.

England Dan and John Ford Coley - Hollywood Heckle and Jive (Dr. Heckle and Mr. Jive, Big Tree, 1979)

OK, this isn’t Porcaro’s best work but it shows his diversity and has some pretty pointed drum production. Someone got a “wall of sound” instruction book for Christmas, it sounds.

Crosby, Stills and Nash - Since I Met You (Daylight Again, Atlantic, 1982)

This is the only cut featuring Porcaro on this album. I had to listen a few times before I decided to include it; it didn’t strike me as too interesting at first. But, the fact is, without Porcaro driving the train on this one, it would have been even less interesting.

Paul Simon - Train In The Distance (Hearts and Bones, Warner Brothers, 1984)

Back before Paul aged into a shorter version of Mel Brooks, he grabbed Porcaro for his “Hearts and Bones” album. (Gadd must’ve been in rehab.) There’s nothing spectacular about this cut; it just swings along nicely supporting a great Paul Simon story. Nice echo on the snare drum in the chorus.

Joe Cocker - Don’t Forget Me (I Can Stand A Little Rain, A and M, 1973)

Anyone who’s ever picked up a pair of sticks and played for more than 20 minutes knows what it means to play “behind the beat”. They also know how hard it is. Porcaro lays behind the beat just enough to give this tune it’s blues vibe (though Clydie King singing back-up doesn’t hurt). A great tune (witten by Harry Nilsson, I might add.)

Eric Clapton - Forever Man (Behind The Sun, Warner Brothers, 1985)

Disco rock ain’t easy, is it? Porcaro makes it work here on one of the two cuts he supports on this album. It will forever be Clapton’s dark period in my book (even more than his current “archive the blues” kick). But, in the end, I do dig this tune ‘cuz it’s got…rhythm and melody!

Jackson Browne - The Only Child (The Pretender, Elektra, 1972)

Even though I wouldn’t qualify myself as a J. Browne fan, many of his songs are at the heart of what I love..straight-ahead, well-written acoustic rock with a great melody and a great arrangement. This just works right.

Boz Scaggs - Lowdown (Silk Degrees, Columbia, 1978)

I try to avoid the songs you can regularly hear on just about any radio station but there’s no getting around this one. Second only to ‘Rosanna,’ this is a defining groove and it speaks for itself.

Toto - Rosanna ( IV, Columbia, 1982)

Transcribed, analyzed, scrupulously studied and poorly played by 1000’s of drummers from LA to Lhasa, this is his signature groove. ‘Nuff said.

ZIP (69MB): Download

Many thanks to our new friend over at Walkn’ Tha’ Bass for the kind words and the great link. Please check out his site…he has some very cool stuff goin’ on!

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Jerry Butler - Find Another Girl
Style Council - Life At A Top Peoples Health Farm
T. Rex - Mambo Sun
Groove Collective - Earth To Earth
Seals and Crofts - East of the Ginger Trees
Roxy Music - To Turn You On
The Who - Let’s See Action
The Replacements - Asking Me Lies
Bruce Springsteen - Spare Parts
Rufus and Carla - Night Time Is The Right Time
Marty Robbins - Saddle Tramp
James Taylor - Gorilla
Jules Shear - I Need It
Michael Franti and Spearhead - Yell Fire
Grand Funk - Rain Keeps Fallin’
Sly and The Family Stone - Runnin’ Away
Lou Reed - I’m So Free
The Waterboys - And A Bang On The Ear
Sarah Vaughn - Just Friends

<a href=”http://fusion45.com/wp-content/uploads/audio/2007/Fusion45.041-2007.08.09.mp3″>So-Full</a>

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