Category Archives: Music of the 60s

Big Brother Holding Company Album

Big Brother Holding Company album

Big Brother Holding Company album

“Call On Me” by Big Brother  The Holding Company
Their first album released on August 12, 1967

Monterey International Pop Music Festival

Big Brother Holding Company Janis Joplin

The audience’s applause to their performance at the Monterey International Pop Festival still echoed when Mainstream Records released Big Brother’s eponymous Big Brother and the Holding Company album.

DA Pennebaker and the festival’s organizers had to convince the band to perform twice, after it had refused to let Pennebaker’s team film their first performance.

In the end, it was Janis Joplin that Leacock-Pennebaker, the film company, put on their movie’s poster.

Big Brother Holding Company album

Big Brother and the Holding Company

The personnel on their first album was not to be the same group that played at the Woodstock Music and Art Fair two years later. By then, Joplin’s musical journey had brought her to other places with other musicians.

Personnel

This album’s band was:

  • Janis Joplin – vocals
  • Peter Albin – bass guitar
  • Sam Andrew – guitar, vocals
  • David Getz – drums
  • James Gurley – guitar, vocals
Track listing

And the songs were:

Side One

  • Bye, Bye Baby
  • Easy Rider
  • Intruder
  • Light is Faster Than Sound
  • Call On Me
Side Two

  • Women is Losers
  • Blindman
  • Down on Me
  • Catepillar
  • All is Lonliness

Band members wrote all but three of the songs which they recorded in December 1966–before Monterey Pop. The songs are AM-radio length, that is, all are under three minutes, one, Blindman, less than two minutes. A far cry from what Big Brother and most other so-called underground bands evolved into.

Big Brother Holding Company album

Future Joplin

It would be the Cheap Thrills album with its iconic R Crumb cover that put Big Brother on the musical map in terms of recordings.

If people didn’t already know of the band’s power through the Monterey film, the cover alone enticed them to purchase the album. An album with each song over four minutes, one over five, and and famous “Ball and Chain” coming in at 9:02.

Ironically, three years later to the day was Janis Joplin’s last concert performance. You will often see it listed as taking place in Boston, but it was actually in Cambridge in Harvard Stadium.

From the Boston.com siteScheafer Beer co-sponsored a summer concert series at Harvard Stadium along with the city of Boston’s “Summerthing’’ arts initiative, a program launched in 1968 to help “cool off’’ the city in the heat of the summer. The stadium could fit more than 35,000 attendees, but these events were limited to 10,000 and a $2 ticket fee per person. By 1970, the lineup was nothing to sneeze at: Highlights included The Grateful Dead, Miles Davis, Ike and Tina Turner, Van Morrison, B.B. King, and The Supremes.

The show was delayed because equipment was stolen, but to their credit, Bill Hanley and his crew regrouped and replaced and the show went on.

Big Brother Holding Company album

Another Side Bob Dylan

Another Side Bob Dylan

Recorded in one sessionJune 9, 1964
Released on August 8, 1964

Another Side Bob Dylan

Another Side Bob Dylan

Bob’s other side

By 1964, Columbia realized that Bob Dylan was a star. Although his first album, the eponymous Bob Dylan, had barely sold in it’s first year (2,500 copies), Dylan’s song writing skills and reputation among fellow folk artists grew quickly.

Another Side of Bob Dylan was his fourth album and each one had been a step further in his development. That first album was not really “his” album, he having written only two of the thirteen songs.

This album was all his.

Another Side Bob Dylan

The tracks

Side one

  1. All I Really Want to Do
  2. Black Crow Blues
  3. Spanish Harlem Incident
  4. Chimes of Freedom
  5. I Shall Be Free No. 10
  6. To Romona

Side two

  1. Motorpsycho Nitemare
  2. My Back Pages
  3. I Don’t Believe You (She Acts Like We Never Have Met)
  4. Ballad in Plain D
  5. It Ain’t Me Babe

Dylan was changing his tone. He said of this album that “there aren’t any finger-pointing songs.” His style was more poetic than previous works.

He served as pop music’s turn signal. A musician could be much more personal.

Another Side Bob Dylan

Maggie’s Farm

It will be at the 1965 Newport Folk that Dylan will take his public step away from folk-protest and go electric. The Paul Butterfield Blues Band will accompany him as well as the Newport boos.

He “…ain’t gonna’ work on Maggie’s Farm no more.”

And I thought the song was about some guy tired of farm work.

Another Side Bob Dylan

1965

Think of 1965. By December the Beatles will have released Rubber Soul and when the Beatles changed, bands and record companies followed. The bands perhaps as much as in self-expression as their search for success; the record companies in search of a better bottom line.

1964 Another Side Bob Dylan

To Ramona

When Dylan sang “To Ramona” at Newport in 1965 he introduced the song, he said, “This is called ‘To Ramona.’ Ramona. It’s just a name.”

Today we realize its much more than “just a name.”

Dylan’s relationship with New York City girlfriend and political muse Suzy Rotolo (see Freewheelin’ Bob Dylan) had ended with a 1963 abortion. His ongoing relationship with Joan Baez, who had brought him to the attention of the Newport crowd in 1963, was fading was fading and she was much more than “just a name.”

All Music said the album was, “…one of his very best records, a lovely intimate affair.”

Everything passes

Everything changes

Just do what you think you should do

And someday, maybe

Who knows, baby

I’ll come and be cryin’ to you.

Another Side Bob Dylan

1965 Beatles Release Help album

1965 Beatles Release Help album

UK, August 6, 1965
US, August 13, 1965
1965 Beatles Release Help album
back cover US release of Beatles Help album

 

1965 Beatles Release Help album

UK

Parlophone released the Beatles’ fifth UK album, Help!, on August 6, 1965.

It was mainly the soundtrack to the movie of the same name. The premiere of Help, the movie, had occurred the week before on July 29 at the London Pavilion Theatre. Princess Margaret and the Earl of Snowdon attended.

1965 Beatles Release Help album

Critics, at the time, did not praise the movie Help! as enthusiastically as they had the 1964 A Hard Day’s Night.

The New York Times Bosley Crowther wrote at the time, “Those royal rock’n’rollers, the Beatles, are making merry in a movie again—this time in a plush and far-ranging color picture entitled “Help!” And the kindliest way to describe it, with malice toward none and charity for all, is to label it 90 crowded minutes of good, clean insanity.”

1965 Beatles Release Help album

The UK album

The first side of Help! featured seven songs from the film. The flip side contained another seven songs.

Side one

  1. Help!
  2. The Night Before
  3. You’ve Got the Hide Your Love Away
  4. I Need You
  5. Another Girl
  6. You’re Going to Lose That Girl
  7. Ticket to Ride

Side two

  1. Act Naturally
  2. It’s Only Love
  3. You Like Me Too Much
  4. Tell Me What You See
  5. I’ve Just Seen a Face
  6. Yesterday
  7. Dizzy Miss Lizzy
1965 Beatles Release Help album

The American album

The North American version was the the band’s eighth Capitol Records album. It included the songs in the film plus selections from the orchestral score composed and conducted by Ken Thorne.

Three other American albums had all of the non-movie tracks from Side 2 of the British album.

Here is the spread:

  • Beatles VI: “You Like Me Too Much”, “Tell Me What You See”, and “Dizzy Miss Lizzy.”
  • Rubber Soul: “It’s Only Love” and “I’ve Just Seen A Face”
  • Yesterday and Today: “Yesterday” and “Act Naturally”
1965 Beatles Release Help album

Semaphore

Though in slightly different poses, the Beatles appear on both covers with arms out at different angles. Clever fans realized that the boys were using semaphore–the flag system that Claude Chappe and his brothers had developed in France in 1790. Letters depend on the arm angles.

Thus to signal the letters to spell help, the person would do the following:

1965 Beatles Release Help album

Unfortunately, the Beatles’ arm angles do not spell out H-E-L-P,  but…

1965 Beatles Release Help album

1965 Beatles Release Help album

Help,  Beatles Release Help,  Beatles Release Help,