Category Archives: Birthdays

John Fogerty

John Fogerty

Happy birthday

May 28, 1945

John Fogerty
photo: bluejayblog

Proud Mary

I guess “Proud Mary” was the first time I heard Creedence Clearwater Revival. It was pretty good. Straight-forward rock with a taste of, I didn’t realize then, bayou.

I also didn’t know who Creedence Clearwater Revival was: Stu Cook, Tom Fogerty, Doug Clifford, and John Fogerty. The band’s name was confusing, but less so that any Dylan lyric, so I was ahead of the game.

While Creedence was the sum of its parts, those songs, the catchy song after catchy song, was from John Fogerty.

California beginnings

John and his older brother Tom Fogerty grew up in El Cerrito, California, in the San Francisco Bay Area.

At first the four friends were the Blue Velvets but became the Golliwogs when they signed with Fantasy Records, mainly a jazz label. Their singles fared poorly.

After a stint in the Army Reserve, the four band mates became Creedence Clearwater Revival. And as if John had gone down to the crossroads, suddenly a spate of songs came forth.

An abundance of hits

  • Susie Q
  • Proud Mary
  • Born on the Bayou
  • Bad Moon Rising
  • Lodi
  • Green River
  • Commotion
  • Down on the Corner
  • Fortunate Son
  • Travelin’ Band
  • Who’ll Stop the Rain
  • Up Around the Bend
  • Run Through the Jungle
  • Lookin’ Out My Back Door
  • Long as I Can See the Light
  • Have You Ever Seen the Rain

Woodstock

Despite John Fogerty’s sense that their performance at the Woodstock Music and Art Fair was below par due to a sleepy audience, I for one can say that my sense is the opposite and when asked “Who was your favorite at Woodstock?” my somewhat evasive answer is “I went home and bought Creedence.”

CCR’s Nantucket sleighride lasted until 1971 when brother Tom left the band. There are many stories why Tom left; generally it seems that John’s larger than life influence on the band, its music, its direction, and its performance was more than Tom could take.

CCR’s last album, Mardi Gras, did well but comparatively poorly. Stu Cook and Doug Clifford left and CCR was over.

John Fogerty

John continued in a sometimes sporadic way. He released an album as the Blue Ridge Rangers, but there were no rangers. It was only John. Subsequent albums were simply under his name.

Legal issues with Fantasy Records limited his production. It wasn’t until he settled that issue, much to Fantasy Records benefit and his loss, that he was able to move forward.

In 1985 he released the album Centerfield and it became a huge hit.

Brother Tom died in 1990 and CCR was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 1993. John Fogerty did not perform with his former band mates.

John Fogerty continues to write and perform today [site].

Mark Lavon Levon Helm

Mark Lavon Levon Helm

Happy Birthday
Remembering and Appreciating
May 26, 1940 — April 19, 2012

Mark Lavon Levon Helm

Mark Lavon Levon Helm

Who?

My memory is vague concerning how I first heard about the Band. I certainly did not know that they were Bob Dylan’s back up band. I just as certainly did not know they were mostly Canadian musicians, except one guy.

Mark Lavon Levon Helm

Music From Big Pink

I presume  I first heard about Music From Big Pink from Rolling Stone magazine.  If I did,  then I did read about the Dylan and Canadian connections. I definitely would have noticed that Al Kooper wrote the review. that “You can believe every line in this album and if you choose to, it can only elevate your listening pleasure immeasurably,  and that he said it was his album of the year.

Mark Lavon Levon Helm

Staten Island Ferry


I sat on the Staten Island Ferry after working as a Wall Street runner at Dempsey – Tegeler where I  had learned the quickest route from 110 Wall Street to the Chase Bank in the rain. I sat on the ferry cuddling Music from Big Pink.  If Kooper, the mainspring of the Blues Project [a source of several epiphanies) and Blood, Sweat and Tears  [Child Is Father to the Man] said The Band were It, then Amen.

Mark Lavon Levon Helm

Mono Greatness

My little mono record player was literally that and could not even dream in Hi-Fi, but it gave its all. And I listened.

What was this? Not rock. Not blues. At least not any rock or blues that I’d ever heard. Deliberate, its songs required patience that this 18 year old lacked.

Mark Lavon Levon Helm

The Band

With time and their second album I fell under the Band’s spell. Little did I realize that Levon Helm, Garth Hudson, Rick Danko, Richard Manuel, and Robbie Robertson repeatedly proved the point of their music being greater than the sum of their parts. Not even the Beatles were as instrumentally multi-talented as The Band.

When the original Band ended it’s run in 1977, a run longer than the Beatles had had, fans hoped that it was simply a postponement, not a cancellation.

Mark Lavon Levon Helm

Lifer Levon

It was and it wasn’t. Levon Helm certainly kept on playing music. Thank you! The others did, too, but Levon in particular remained the source of that sound I had, at first, not understood.

Mark Lavon Levon Helm

Better late than…

Now I get it. Now I want it. And Levon, despite many challenges, kept pace, and kept the faith. With a partially re-formed Band and without. On his own. With a voice and sometimes without one. His credits cover a lifetime of sincere and truthful music. (All Music credits)

And what Al Kooper said in 1968 about Big Pink, was true about Levon Helm until the day he died:  [His] singing is…honest and unaffected….There are people who will work their lives away in vain and not touch it.

Excerpt from PBS Special “Levon Helm Ramble At The Ryman” premiered nationwide on August 2009. Featuring John Hiatt, Sheryl Crow, Buddy Miller, Sam Bush. Levon Helm brough his Midnight Ramble to the historic Ryman Auditorium in Nashville, TN.

Mark Lavon Levon Helm

Drummer Bruce Rowland

Drummer Bruce Rowland

 May 22, 1941 — June 29, 2015

Drummer Bruce Rowland
photo from http://www.udiscovermusic.com/
Drummer Bruce Rowland

500,000 Stories

If there were 500,000 people surrounding the Woodstock Music and Art Fair that 1969 weekend, then there are 500,000 stories after their Bethel experience.

The same is true for the more than 160  performers. It is easier to track some of their trails away from that momentous event because fame can leave a scorched path. And it is easy to assume that anyone who played there forever feasted on its fame.

Of course that’s a false assumption.

Drummer Bruce Rowland

Grease Band

Bruce Rowland played drums with Joe Cocker’s Grease Band and later with the Fairport Convention.

Rowland was born in the UK and early on taught drumming. It is rumored that he taught Phil Collins how to play.

Drummer Bruce Rowland

Woodstock Music and Art Fair

For those who were there that Sunday for  Joe Cocker’s performance we likely remember watching Cocker and being amazed at his vocal and physical styles. That was me, but with a bit of hindsight, I now realize that Rowland’s drumming was integral to that power. I use a picture I took of Joe (through binoculars) as my computer’s desktop and it wasn’t until I wrote this blog entry that I realized that right behind Joe is a nice shot of Bruce Rowland (click on the picture for an enlarged view).

Drummer Bruce Rowland
Sunday 17 August 1969. Joe Cocker and the Grease Band. (photo by J Shelley)
Drummer Bruce Rowland

Queen’s Golden Jubilee

And you can see Bruce a few times thanks to the split-screen used in the movie Woodstock (in June 2002 when Joe Cocker sang “With a Little Help From My Friends” at the Queen’s Golden Jubilee Phil Collins stuck close to Rowland’s pounding fills and parts)

Drummer Bruce Rowland

Life after Grease

After the Grease band dissolved (shortly after Joe Cocker left the band), Rowland worked on various projects including the Jesus Christ Superstar album.

Initially he drummed intermittently with Fairport Convention before becoming their only drummer.  He left that band in 1979 and moved to Denmark.

Bruce Riowland
UNITED KINGDOM – MARCH 01: Photo of FAIRPORT CONVENTION; posed, group shot – L-R: Dave Pegg, Dave Swarbrick, Simon Nicol, Bruce Rowland (Photo by Estate Of Keith Morris/Redferns)
Drummer Bruce Rowland

Fairport Convention

From the Ultimate Classic Rock siteFairport multi-instrumentalist Dave Pegg commemorated Rowland’s passing with a post at the band’s official site, calling him a “lovely man and a great drummer” whose “playing and ‘feel’ for music was superb.” Recalling their last conversation, Pegg added, “I spoke to him on the phone a couple of weeks ago when I heard that he was terminally ill and I was scared to make the call. Bruce said – ‘No tears Peggy. I’ve had a great life and have wonderful memories. This hospice is the best hotel I have ever stayed in and the staff are wonderful. No tears.’ We will miss you, Bruce.” [Telegraph obit]

Drummer Bruce Rowland