Monday, November 13, 2006

Rock in 1972

1972In the late '60s, the rise of progressive rock led to the rise of FM radio. FM grew out of the Haight-Ashbury scene in San Francisco and gave air play to experimental and political records that would otherwise have gone unheard. Labels quickly learned their acts didn't need a hit single if they could instead get FM air play on album cuts, and soon the album replaced the single as the basic unit of rock. Soon after that, when its profitability became more apparent, FM radio grew nearly as formulaic and tightly controlled as AM, its playlists almost as hard to crack.By 1972, the single was becoming acceptable again. Rock had fragmented into numerous factions, most of them in reaction to the extended jams and virtuoso soloing of the '60s bands, and yet nearly all of these factions respected the 45 single. So, suddenly, did some of the very '60s acts that had inspired this reaction. Nilsson, Alice Cooper, and Derek and the Dominos perhaps best defined the parameters of that growing trend. Harry Nilsson was a clever writer, singer and arranger who signed his first record contract in the early '60s. Throughout most of the '60s, his material was recorded by many others while he worked as a computer processor at a bank in the San Fernando Valley. His first hit, Everybody's Talkin', was written by someone else, Fred Neil, and received major exposure as the theme from the popular film Midnight Cowboy. Nilsson initially mistook Without You, which he first heard while drinking at a friend's house, for a John Lennon song. But it was actually by Badfinger, Beatles soundalikes.Clapton was the blues-rock guitarist of the '60s, an artist who considered pop hits antithetical to good music. After a bad experience with the 1969 supergroup Blind Faith, he purposely adopted a less flashy profile, working as a sideman for Delaney and Bonnie and Friends, and then cutting a solo album influenced by their gospel-rock stylings. This effort yielded Let It Rain, which scored modestly as a single some two years after it was first recorded. Let It Rain set the stage for Derek and the Dominos. That group was intended, in Clapton's words, to recapture "the spirit," if not the sound, of '50s rock and included studio veterans Bobby Whitlock, Jim Gordon and Carl Radle.This album also featured appearances by Duane Allman, former Muscle Shoals session whiz and now guitar hero of the Allman Brothers Band. He and Clapton reached their apex on Layla, which was Clapton's plea to Patti Harrison, Beatle George's wife, with whom he had fallen in love. The guitars duel in a frenzy and then mesh in soft-spoken resignation. Ultimately the song's magic worked; Patti Boyd Harrison eventually left her husband for Clapton, finally marrying him in 1979. But Layla failed as a single in 1970. By the time it hit in 1972, Derek and the Dominos were long gone, and Clapton had dropped out of the scene while he battled his drug addiction.Alice Cooper exemplified perhaps the most vehement reaction to experimental rock. Alice Cooper was the name of both the band and its lead singer, a Phoenix minister's son whose real name was Vincent Furnier. The band moved to Hollywood in 1968 and hooked up with Frank Zappa, who released their first album on his own label, Straight. It was loud, crude, bone-crunching rock with a fascination for the macabre. The music was so out of step with everything else happening in pop that it masked the group's burning ambitions.That drive led Cooper to relocate to Detroit, which had a huge audience for hard rock--and which also, not coincidentally, was on the Canadian border. The band recorded in Canada with a Canadian producer, Bob Ezrin, and took advantage of the new "Canadian content" law, which required radio to devote a certain percentage of its air play to native groups or groups that recorded in Canada. Cooper received substantial air play, and of course, his records were heard back across the border in Detroit by kids who weren't getting that heavy sound from anywhere else. School's Out, the title taken from a line in a Bowery Boys movie, was the band's second hit, updating a popular rock 'n' roll theme. By the next year, Cooper was one of the biggest acts in the nation, touring with a "shock rock" show (including a guillotine and boa constrictor) designed to offend both parents and mature rockers such as Clapton.Among other significant newcomers, the Raspberries emerged from Cleveland with Go All the Way and a leader, Eric Carmen, who regarded the studio pop of the early '60s as the Holy Grail. The Doobie Brothers ("doobie" being slang for marijuana joint) came from the blue-collar town of San Jose, California, with a reputation as a Hell's Angels party band. The Doobie's ability to play boogie with folk harmonies and their appreciation for production values endeared them to mainstream rock fans. With Listen to the Music, they added to the growing body of rock songs about rock. Argent was led by Rod Argent, veteran of the British Invasion group the Zombies, which broke up in 1968. He formed his namesake band two years later and wrote Hold Your Head Up with former Zombie Chris White. As a sign of the times, the song was initially released as a single over six minutes long; when it began attracting attention, the single was shortened to a more conventional length to insure its success.The soft, acoustic band America consisted of three military brats living in London. A Horse with No Name, a dead ringer for a Neil Young song, was inspired by member Dewey Bunnell's homesickness for the desert a few hours away from Vandenberg Air Force Base in San Luis Obispo, California, where his father had once been stationed. The Moody Blue's Nights in White Satin was hardly new; it had stiffed as a single in America (but not England) in 1968. But two 1972 Moody Blues tours and a growing audience for art-rock made the song popular the second time around.In black music, the Chi-Lites, together since 1960, finally took their sensitive-guy persona to the top of the charts with the poignant Oh Girl. Back Stabbers was the first, and arguably the best, in a series of topical records by the O'Jays that featured the blossoming Gamble and Huff production sound of Philadelphia, which defined mid-'70s soul and disco. Bill Withers' folkish Lean on Me was written for his fellow workers at the Boeing plant where, until the year before, he had manufactured toilet seats for airplanes. The Staple Singers, once gospel purists and standard-bearers of the civil rights movement, consolidated their hold on the new genre of "inspirational pop," or "secular gospel," with songs such as I'll Take You There. Al Green's sensual, pleading male, who had much in common with that of the Chi-Lites, urged, Let's Stay Together. Crooner Johnny Nash introduced Americans to reggae with I Can See Clearly Now, which was cut with members of the Wailers as sidemen. (Reggae superstar Bob Marley used money he earned as a staff writer for Nash to start his own Tuff Gong label.)And then there was Three Dog Night's Black and White. This tune went back to 1955 when Earl Robinson and David Arkin (father of actor Alan Arkin) wrote it to celebrate the Supreme Court's Brown v. Board of Education ruling banning segregation in public schools. Sammy Davis Jr. cut Black and White shortly after it was written for an EP issued by the Anti-Defamation League of B'nai B'rith. Three Dog Night, however, learned the song from a version they heard on the radio by the Jamaican reggae band Greyhound. After their version was released, Earl Robinson, who had been blacklisted during the McCarthy Era, found himself at the top of the rock 'n' roll charts--further proof that the 45 single ruled once again.--John Morthland

1 comment:

Thomas Vieira said...

Great job, man! I really enjoyed that, good stuff. I'm a big fan of a lot of those people you listed, and I def learned a few things. You sound you like you really know your stuff. Come check out my blog... although it is nowhere near your level yet, I'm trying to get going.

Tom V