Category Archives: Birthdays

Guitarist Neil Percival Young

Guitarist Neil Percival Young

Here’s to you
Neil Young
…and here’s to you, too, the Neil Young

Happy Birthday

November 12,  1945

I didn’t know I’d encountered Neil Young when I first heard “Nowadays Clancy Can’t Even Sing.” It was late July 1966 and New York’s WOR-FM had changed formats to playing rock music. Due to a DJ union issue, the station at first simply had songs and commercials. No DJ chatter. Good and bad. I preferred music to chatter: good. I also wanted to know the names of songs I’d never heard before: bad. And who was this guy Clancy I kept hearing about?

Hey who’s that stomping all over my face?

Where’s that silhouette I’m trying to trace?

Who’s putting sponge in the bells I once rung?

And taking my gypsy before she’s begun?

What I’d later discovered was the Buffalo Springfield and by extension, Neil Percival Young.

Guitarist Neil Percival Young

Neil Young

I didn’t know who this Buffalo Springfield was, but I like them and all their three of their albums. I was also disappointed when they broke up. By then I knew the names of its members and was delighted to find out that Neil Young had released a solo album

Guitarist Neil Percival Young

To this day, Neil himself  is not happy with the album’s production. The explanation I’d heard was that he did not like his singing voice and deliberately had it buried in the mix. Later, when he became successful, the tracks were remixed with his voice more prominent.

It made no difference to me. I loved the album despite it lyrical density. Unlike Dylan, I could understand the lyrics, but like Dylan they I could not translate them.

But the music went inside me and reached great places. He has continued to do so for another half century years and counting. His solo work, expansive and growing, compares to anyone.

Guitarist Neil Percival Young

World Record

Neil Young released “World Record” on November 18, 2022, his 43rd studio album. The album was produced by Young and Rick Rubin

Long May You Run

Anyone would have a pretty good argument if they said that the Neil Young was the most important musician to come out of the 1960’s counter-culture. Of course there is Nobel Laureate  Bob Dylan’s immeasurable contributions and his continued influence. but overall, Neil Young has stayed closer to the roots of those 60s, while Dylan’s musical journey has taken him many more places.

It’s not a competition.

Truly, Neil, Long May You Run!

Guitarist Neil Percival Young

Neil Young Archives

NYA contains the complete archives of Neil Young. The site is designed for a chronological exploration of artist output including music, books, films, & videos and is available via subscription.

Guitarist Neil Percival Young

Older Brother Tom Fogerty

Older Brother Tom Fogerty

November 9, 1941 – September 6, 1990

Older Brother Tom Fogerty

Creedence Clearwater Revival’s John Fogerty could certainly write hits:

  • Green River
  • Fortunate Son
  • Born on the Bayou
  • Proud Mary
  • Who’ll Stop the Rain
  • Bad Moon Rising
  • Lookin’ Out My Back door
  • Down on the Corner
  • Have You Ever Seen the Rain
  • Up Around the Bend

…and many many more. At a time when so-called underground FM radio station bands were making concept albums, CCR stuck with the older format churning out albums full of songs that typically stayed within AM radio’s strictures of under 4 minutes and more often under three minutes.

Unfortunately, John’s success overshadowed the artistic hopes of the other band members like his older brother, Tom.

Older Brother Tom Fogerty

Background

Tom Fogerty was born in Berkeley, California.  He formed a band, Spider Webb and the Insects, that Del-Fi Records signed in 1959.  Spider Webb only recorded one song for the label, “Lyda Jane,” but it was never released and the group broke up shortly thereafter.

Tom joined John’s band, the Blue Velvets, in 1960. The Blue Velvets had limited local success in the San Francisco Bay area.

The four signed with Fantasy Records in 1964. There they were briefly the Visions, the Golliwogs,  and finally, in late 1967, Creedence Clearwater Revival.

Older Brother Tom Fogerty

Stardom

TomFogertyLP.jpg

That elusive success suddenly exploded upon them: between July 1968 and December 1970, Creedence released six albums and top 10 hit after hit. The band was more a back up for John than a collaboration. Tom, the original front singer and whose own compositions were hardly included in the band’s albums, led to his leaving the band in 1971.

Post Creedence

Solo

He signed a solo deal with Fantasy in 1972 and released the first of his solo albums, Tom Fogerty, in 1972.  His other albums were:

ExcaliburTomFogerty.jpg

ZephyrNational.jpg

MyopiaLP.jpg

DealItOut.jpg

Ruby band

According to Wikipedia, Ruby was an American rock band that between 1976 and 1984 recorded three albums, RubyRock & Roll Madness and Precious Gems.

Personnel were:

  • Tom Fogerty – guitar, harmonica, vocals
  • Randy Oda – guitar, keyboards, vocals
  • Anthony Davis – bass, vocals
  • Bobby Cochran – drums, percussions, vocals

Albums:

TOM FOGERTY & RUBY - RUNNING BACK TO ME.wmv - YouTube

Ruby – Rock & Roll Madness (1980, Vinyl) - Discogs

Tom-Fogerty-Precious-Gems.jpg

With Randy Oda
  • Sidekicks  (released posthumously in 1992) Tom Fogerty Randy Oda 1988 Sidekicks 1992 Album Cover.jpg
Best of…

Fogerty, Tom - Very Best of Tom Fogerty - Amazon.com Music

None had any of the commercial success that CCR had. CCR itself broken up by 1972, many say due to John’s continued insistence that all band-related issues be his to decide.

Health

Tom moved to Scottsdale, Arizona in the ‘80s. He underwent back surgery, but an unscreened blood transfusion infected him with the AIDS virus. It led to his death, officially of tuberculosis, on Sept. 6, 1990.

He was 48. The LA Times obituary had 116 words. The NY Times had 93. A search of the Rolling Stone Magazine site revealed no obituary.

Older Brother Tom Fogerty

Retrospective

In a July 18, 2014 interview in Uncut, band bassist Stu Cook  said, “Tom had put up with a lot of shit from John. I think Tom was expecting John to say, ‘OK, now we’ve achieved our goals, why don’t you start singing a few of the songs?’ Tom had a great voice, kinda like Ritchie Valens. Tom would have done a damn good job on ‘La Bamba’. But John didn’t want him to sing it, in case we had a hit with it. He didn’t want Tom to succeed.”

The band was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 1993. One of the most infamous inductions of any band in the Hall’s history. According to The History of Tom Fogerty of Creedence Clearwater Revival from the Ultimate Classic Rock site:  When Creedence Clearwater Revival was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame…Tom Fogerty’s widow brought his ashes in an urn. John, however, refused to share the stage with his former bandmates.

The feud between the remaining three band mates (though obviously “mates” is not the word to use) continues.

Older Brother Tom Fogerty

Here Stands the Clown

Here stands the clown
Spotlight currents all around
We don’t see that that clown is me
Here stands the clown

Here stands the fool
Locomotion layin’ down the rules
We don’t see that that fool is me
Here stands the fool

Here stands the man
Close the book he made with his own hands
We don’t see that that man is me
Here stands the man

Older Brother Tom Fogerty

Jefferson Airplane Grace Slick

Jefferson Airplane Grace Slick

October 30, 1939
Happy birthday
from several years ago, Grace’s advice to women trying to break into rock
Jefferson Airplane Grace Slick

Grace Slick

Jefferson Airplane Grace Slick

From the Jefferson Airplane site: Grace Slick, to the public mind, is synonymous with Jefferson Airplane and Jefferson Starship in the way that Mick Jagger is synonymous with the Rolling Stones. Ironically, Grace was not an original member of the band, nor was she with Starship at the very end. But Grace’s importance to every phase of the band cannot be underestimated. White Rabbit, which she wrote, helped define not only Jefferson Airplane but also the acid rock era. Her unconventional vocals on Somebody to Love gave the Airplane its biggest hit. As one of the first female rock stars (as opposed to pop singers), Grace helped redefine women’s role in modern music as more than just a sex symbol backed by a band. Of course, with her statuesque beauty and icy blue eyes, Grace had the sex symbol bit down pat as well.

Grace Barnett Wing was born October 30, 1939, in Highland Park, a suburb of Chicago, IL. Her father, Ivan, was an investment banker, and her mother, Virginia Barnett Wing, had been an actress and singer in the early ’30s. Her lineage goes back to Norway, where the family name was Vinje.

grace slick woodstock

Jefferson Airplane Grace Slick
“Good morning, people!”

The Great Society

Jefferson Airplane

Jefferson Starship

Starship

What about Woodstock? From a Rolling Stone magazine article: What did you think when you walked out and saw all those people? It’s always good to see the people. I played a lot of festivals in the summer and it was set up for various kinds of performances and they had spotlights that are bolted in place, and they’re blinding. I wore a white dress with fringe. I packed it in California and I didn’t even think about the weather. I just assumed it would be marvelous. That day [after it rained], I thought, “Christ, I don’t have anything else I can wear — this is it!” So I had to keep my feet out of the mud. 

Jefferson Airplane Grace Slick

Since

In a September 2017 Variety magazine interview one of her comments was, “I mostly paint now and I will encourage or not encourage people depending on who I am talking to. But also this is a period of time where I’m sitting back, which is fine. When you are older, generally, you’re a bit quieter. Rock and roll is a young expression — it’s strong, loud, and ironic. There are just things you do when you’re 25 you don’t do when you’re 70 because you look silly.”

Thank you!

Jefferson Airplane Grace Slick