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'73 flashback

Johnny Lunchbucket
Jan 11 2023 10:33 AM

Released 50 years ago this week:



https://m.media-amazon.com/images/I/81hYVnuCWrL._SX355_.jpg>



7/9 good songs for a young Bruce who didn't know at the time whether he was supposed to be a singer-songwriter or a rockin' bandleader.

Edgy MD
Jan 11 2023 02:05 PM
Re: '73 flashback

Pre-Roy Bittan, pre-Steve Van Zandt, pre-Danny Federici, and pre-Max Weinberg, but still recognizeable as the band that would produce what followed, and it occasionally even predicts the swing that Weinberg would later bring in greater force, especially on "Spirit in the Night."



I was crazy for "For You" and almost broke my hand trying to work through the chord palette on it. It probably has more chords on that one track than Springsteen used in the entire decade of the eighties.

Frayed Knot
Jan 11 2023 06:47 PM
Re: '73 flashback

Every once in a while (like, maybe, every four or five years) I'll hit upon a radio program that plays LOST IN THE FLOOD while I'm listening.

Maybe not his best song (though I've always liked it) but just the rarity of hearing it combined with the hint that maybe not Every radio

station is pre-programmed with 1st & 2nd cuts only makes me stop whatever I'm doing at that moment until the song is over.







Also debuting LPs in 1973:

Aerosmith (1/5/73, same day as GREETINGS)

CLOSING TIME - Tom Waits

Marshall Tucker Band

New York Dolls

Queen

PRONOUNCED LEH-NERD SKIN-NERD



Other first timers include: Buckingham/Nicks, Pointer Sisters, Roger Daltrey (solo), Roger McGuinn (solo), Bryan Ferry (solo), Garland Jeffreys, Maria Muldaur, Barry Manilow,

Johnny Lunchbucket
Jan 12 2023 05:14 AM
Re: '73 flashback

Let's populate this thread with the chronological anniversaries of the above and more. Lots of big LPs from 73

batmagadanleadoff
Jan 12 2023 08:35 AM
Re: '73 flashback

Johnny Lunchbucket wrote:

Let's populate this thread with the chronological anniversaries of the above and more. Lots of big LPs from 73


Okay. 50 years ago today, Deep Purple releases Who Do We Think We Are, featuring their classic rock radio staple, My Woman from Tokyo. Okay. Not great or groundbreaking like Jeff Beck's Truth album getting noticed in the other thread.



You should've made this ask five or six years ago. Then we woulda had the best years of album oriented pop music covered. Better late than never.

Johnny Lunchbucket
Jan 12 2023 08:58 AM
Re: '73 flashback

I think we did have that thread

Fman99
Jan 12 2023 09:06 AM
Re: '73 flashback

Good source of '73 albums sorted by release date here.

Johnny Lunchbucket
Jan 12 2023 09:47 AM
Re: '73 flashback

So... HOLLAND from the Beach Boys was supposed to be a creative reset/change of scenery to reawaken Brian. They packed up their entire studio and relocated to the Netherlands only to discover the gear would need recalibrating to work on the European electric grid. The album wasn't all that bad (the three-part "California Saga" is good stuff) but the record company demanded a single. Brian had left Holland after only a few weeks but wound up giving them "Sail On Sailor."



[YOUTUBE]FHhDkSzl9VE[/YOUTUBE]

Edgy MD
Jan 12 2023 10:12 AM
Re: '73 flashback

The "Sail on, Sailor" story is so weird. For my money, it's the last great Beach Boys record, but Brian has almost entirely disowned it over the years. But that may be because he literally phoned in his contribution to the session. It's the only Blondie Chaplin lead vocal in the canon as far as I know, and Chaplin only got the part because it was supposed to go to Dennis and he bailed on the session too. Brian had supposedly written it for Three Dog Night but pulled it back when the label demanded a better single from the Beach Boys. But other accounts differ.



Given all that, and Brian's stuggle to re-find himself creatively, you can understand his resentment. Decades later, he appeared on The Late Show, doing the song with Matthew Sweet and Darius Rucker sharing the vocal lead with him, so somebody must've convinced him of the track's quality over the years. Or maybe he's just happy to be along for the ride.



[YOUTUBE]uJt6yYJsckA[/YOUTUBE]

Frayed Knot
Jan 12 2023 02:00 PM
Re: '73 flashback

Johnny Lunchbucket wrote:

I think we did have that thread


Yes, back in in 2020

And that thread currently resides down near the bottom of page one here in the NBBF

cal sharpie
Jan 12 2023 03:04 PM
Re: '73 flashback

March of '73 with Dark Side of the Moon, Larks Tongues in Aspic, For Your Pleasure and Birds of Fire was a pretty special month for teenage me.



For Your Pleasure and Larks Tongues in Aspic were released the same day. Allegedly, Brian Ferry auditioned to be the singer for King Crimson - Robert Fripp wanted a bass player/singer, not a pianist/singer but knew of other guys looking for a singer and referred him to what became Roxy Music.

whippoorwill
Jan 12 2023 04:20 PM
Re: '73 flashback

My favorite Mets year

Johnny Lunchbucket
Jan 12 2023 04:23 PM
Re: '73 flashback

cal sharpie wrote:

March of '73 with Dark Side of the Moon, Larks Tongues in Aspic, For Your Pleasure and Birds of Fire was a pretty special month for teenage me.



For Your Pleasure and Larks Tongues in Aspic were released the same day. Allegedly, Brian Ferry auditioned to be the singer for King Crimson - Robert Fripp wanted a bass player/singer, not a pianist/singer but knew of other guys looking for a singer and referred him to what became Roxy Music.

you should save this post for March, that's the idea

Frayed Knot
Mar 14 2023 07:50 PM
Re: '73 flashback

March 1st was the date for DARK SIDE OF THE MOON +50

Edgy MD
Mar 14 2023 08:06 PM
Re: '73 flashback

Now re-recorded by Roger Waters, an update presumably demanded by nobody, but one might guess he wants to cut in on his former band-mates' piece of the royalties that the 50th anniversary publicity may generate.



My thinking, though, is that, sheesh, anybody and everybody who would want a copy of Dark Side of the Moon must surely own one (or more) by now.

Frayed Knot
Mar 15 2023 06:20 AM
Re: '73 flashback

Just the number of times guys were forced to buy a second, third, or fourth copy because they kept clumsily

spilling bong water on their original must alone have run into thousands of extra copies sold.

kcmets
Mar 15 2023 07:09 AM
Re: '73 flashback

I think I have that album on 8-track, vinyl, cassette, cd, on a local

hard drive and up in the sky somewheres...

kcmets
Apr 02 2023 04:01 PM
Re: '73 flashback

Forgot about this the other day, 03/31/73...



[YOUTUBE]ByLj1QI1hkw[/YOUTUBE]

Fman99
Apr 02 2023 05:09 PM
Re: '73 flashback

Also, from 3/31/73, the Fleetwood Mac album "Penguin," caught in that odd period post-Danny Kirwin and pre-Stevie/Lindsey, when they band was rotating through other guitar players and vocalists in search of a long term lineup. This is the only album from that era to not also feature the very underrated Bob Welch on vocals, guitar and songwriting credits.



As with a number of their albums during this time frame, the singing and songwriting of Christine McVie are the high points of the album (in my opinion that is). I like this one, nice Caribbean feel with the steel drums.



[youtube]SZv6e-BAaqM[/youtube]

Edgy MD
Apr 03 2023 01:04 PM
Re: '73 flashback

Waitaminute ... Welchie was on Penguin.



[fimg=450]https://i.etsystatic.com/28767150/r/il/fe033a/3541072028/il_794xN.3541072028_dyay.jpg[/fimg]

kcmets
Apr 03 2023 01:15 PM
Re: '73 flashback

My knowledge of pre-Rumors Mac is astonishingly low. Practically non-existent.

batmagadanleadoff
Apr 03 2023 01:38 PM
Re: '73 flashback

Edgy MD wrote:

Waitaminute ... Welchie was on Penguin.



[fimg=450]https://i.etsystatic.com/28767150/r/il/fe033a/3541072028/il_794xN.3541072028_dyay.jpg[/fimg]


Not only did Welch appear on "Penguin", but also on The Mac's next two albums. He was an underappreciated guitarist who scored some big hits in the late 70s as a so-called "solo" artist. (As if he played all the instruments).

Frayed Knot
Apr 03 2023 02:11 PM
Re: '73 flashback

=kcmets post_id=121301 time=1680549310 user_id=53]
My knowledge of pre-Rumors Mac is astonishingly low. Practically non-existent.



You likely know a bunch of stuff from the previous album, their first following the addition of Buckingham & Nicks.

Simply titled FLEETWOOD MAC despite it being the band's 10th album, it had hits with (among others) Lindsey

Buckingham's 'Monday Morning', C. McVie's 'Say You Love Me' and 'Over My Head', plus 'Rhiannon' and 'Landslide'

by the new girl.

By most standards it would be considered a huge album but it tends to get either overlooked due to the monster

follow-up that was RUMOURS or folks simply assume that all those hits were actually from 'Rumours'

Edgy MD
Apr 03 2023 02:23 PM
Re: '73 flashback

Yeah, even the covers — both featuring grayscale photos with only two band members — get confused.



[fimg=350]https://m.media-amazon.com/images/I/71s+xbuLDTL._SL1425_.jpg[/fimg] [fimg=350]https://m.media-amazon.com/images/I/51WD0QJjRyL.jpg[/fimg]



The two albums can easily be reffered to as "The Rumours Era." The next two can be "The Tusk Era."

kcmets
Apr 03 2023 02:34 PM
Re: '73 flashback

Over My Head is a pretty song, forgot about that one...



[YOUTUBE]UXWia0TWAMM[/YOUTUBE]

Johnny Lunchbucket
Apr 03 2023 04:39 PM
Re: '73 flashback

Back in ~78-82 i was into Bob Welch solo work. I didn't know dick about his history as a FMac

Frayed Knot
Apr 03 2023 05:13 PM
Re: '73 flashback

I saw a Welch show around that time period while he was riding the success of the French Kiss album which contained the Ebony Eyes single.





And speaking of the F-Maccers, word becomes public today that Christine's death was from 'a massive stroke brought on by an aggressive form of cancer from an unknown origin'.

Fman99
Apr 03 2023 05:19 PM
Re: '73 flashback

Ah, my bad, then, I thought Welch first appeared on the next album (Mystery to Me, October '73). Turns out Welch was there as far back as '71.

Johnny Lunchbucket
Apr 03 2023 05:51 PM
Re: '73 flashback

Ebony Eyes a disco rock klassik

Frayed Knot
Apr 03 2023 06:12 PM
Re: '73 flashback

[YOUTUBE]FnJOsfalSYs[/Youtube]

batmagadanleadoff
May 08 2023 01:14 PM
Re: '73 flashback

Posted today on the web:





The 25 Best Albums of 1973

By Josh Jackson | May 8, 2023 | 9:00am

Music Lists Best Albums


1973 was a big year for big music—Pink Floyd's Dark Side of the Moon would become one of the best-selling album's of all time, spending a whopping 741 weeks on the chart, and Led Zeppelin broke The Beatles' record for the highest attendance at a concert with more than 55,000 at the Tampa Stadium. The Who released a double-album rock opera, and Stevie Wonder released one of two masterpieces. We asked the Paste music writers and editors to vote on their favorite albums from 50 years ago, and here are the 25 best albums of 1973.....


https://www.pastemagazine.com/music/best-albums/best-albums-of-1973

whippoorwill
May 08 2023 02:50 PM
Re: '73 flashback

I agree with Innervisions as #1

whippoorwill
May 09 2023 08:56 AM
Re: '73 flashback

I heard Ebony Eyes at the grocery store today and immediately thought of Alex Trevino