Unknown stories behind immortal tunes...(random stories behind great music-r)

JectWonJectWon (@_@) 1,654 Posts
edited February 2012 in Strut Central
A long time ago, one of my jazz teachers told me about the (supposed) history behind the first bar of "Moanin'"...





He claimed, that during gig intermissions, Bobby Timmons would continue to tinker/solo on the piano while the rest of the Jazz Messengers would hang with the crowd, backstage, etc. Originally, that one bar riff became something he'd do when he (or the club manager) felt the intermission was over and band members were missing....like a instrumental "where the fuck you at?!"...he'd repeat the bar every few seconds as a signal to get back to the stage. When the band heard that they knew 'Hey, it's time to get back and wrap this thing up'....

I've never really read anything to corroborate that story and the book Hard Bop Academy just says it was a riff that Timmons was fucking around with in the studio.

At any rate, I'm a sucker for lil' random stories like that and I'd really love to learn about any the Struteurs might know about...

  Comments


  • asstroasstro 1,754 Posts
    The Muppets "Manah Manah" song actually originated in a soft core porn film!



    Mel Torme's "Christmas Song" (the "Chestnuts roasting on an open fire" song) was written in LA during a summertime heatwave. He and the co-writer traded lines about all of the wintery cliches they could come up with, the idea being that if they thought about cool things they would feel cool despite the heat. Supposedly it was written in 30 or 40 minutes, music, lyrics and all.

    The Sex Pistols "Problems" was written because the rest of the band challenged Glen Matlock to come up with a song that used the chord progression A - B - C.

  • jamesjames chicago 1,863 Posts
    - "I Can't Make You Love Me," one of the all-time great unrequited-love songs (yeah, that's right), originated when the songwriter read a newspaper account of the trial of some good ol' boy who'd gotten liquored up and gone on a joyride and broken up a bunch of shit; at sentencing, the judge asked the dude what he'd learned from all this--expecting him to express some kind of remorse--and the guy just kind of plaintively said: "I learned, your honor, that you can't make a woman love you if she don't."

    - I read a story that Talk Talk's "Life's What You Make It" was done on a day when, having been pressured to record something approximating a single, Mark Hollis was feeling nostalgic and just wanted to play "Green Onions" keyboard chords, while Lee Harris was feeling modern and wanted to emulate the drums from the then-current "Running Up That Hill." They ended up just doing both.

    - Prince's "The Ballad Of Dorothy Parker" sounds like it does because it was the first song he recorded in his home studio and he didn't have his shit hooked up right. But he liked how the song turned out, so he kept it. There is also a full horn arrangement, recorded but not used. I'd kinda really like to hear that shit.

  • asstro said:
    The Muppets "Manah Manah" song actually originated in a soft core porn film!



    .

    I have versions of this song older than this movie.

  • DJBombjackDJBombjack Miami 1,665 Posts
    james said:
    Prince's "The Ballad Of Dorothy Parker" sounds like it does because it was the first song he recorded in his home studio and he didn't have his shit hooked up right. But he liked how the song turned out, so he kept it. There is also a full horn arrangement, recorded but not used. I'd kinda really like to hear that shit.

    Maybe one day we'll REALLY get to hear what Prince has in his vaults. Even back in the late 80s it is said he had unreleased recordings numbering in the hundreds... who knows what that number could be these days. Combine that with demos, alternate mixes and takes... it could be nothing short of spectacular.

  • BurnsBurns 2,227 Posts
    Mr. Reddings - Sittin' On The Dock of the Bay. -- the whistlin at the end of the song was intended to be removed when he returned to the studio to finish the song with additonal lyrics. We all know he never made it back.

  • JectWonJectWon (@_@) 1,654 Posts
    Burns said:
    Mr. Reddings - Sittin' On The Dock of the Bay. -- the whistlin at the end of the song was intended to be removed when he returned to the studio to finish the song with additonal lyrics. We all know he never made it back.

    Goddamn...that is insane. There are a lot of cool stories about the Stax dudes on the documentary Respect Yourself. It's really an incredible documentary....

    http://www.pbs.org/wnet/gperf/shows/stax

    Crazy to think that Mr. Redding was only 26 when he passed. His voice didn't sound like a 26 year old.

  • jjfad027jjfad027 1,594 Posts
    Michael Franks wrote Rainy Night in Tokyo last minute for his wife Claudia when he realized it was their aniversary and he had no gift for her.

  • JimsterJimster Cruffiton.etsy.com 6,955 Posts
    Not really "Unknown" but what is, for my money, the best Miles Davis live set (1964 : My Funny Valentine - The Complete Concert) stands apart from the others because of a backstage incident just before the band took the stage. Miles announced to the rest of the band that as this was a benfit gig for the Congress for Racial Equality, he'd waived their pay. This didn't go down too well...

    As Miles recalled: ???When we came out to play, everybody was madder than a motherxxxxxx with each other and so I think that anger created a fire, a tension that got into everybody???s playing, and maybe that???s one of the reasons everybody played with such intensity.???

    Whatever place these circumstances have in setting the scene for this music, the result is certainly something special. Nothing like this could have been achieved in a recording studio. The uptempo pieces (???So What???, ???Walkin??? ???, ???Joshua???, ???Four???, ???Seven Steps To Heaven???) are played at blistering pace and with a real cutting edge. At the same time the slower pieces (???All Of You???, ???All Blues???, ???My Funny Valentine???, ??? I Thought About You???, ???There Is No Greater Love???) are elongated, beautiful, emotional expressions of the hopes for change.

    Miles Davis: ???We just blew the top off that place that night. It was a motherxxxxxx the way everybody played ??? and I mean everybody?????? George Coleman played better that night than I have ever heard him play??????.???

    Miles himself is inspired- listen to the outbreak of spontaneous applause that greets the moment of release in his towering introductory solo to 'My Funny Valentine". The audience rapport throughout is intense; intimacy felt and expressed in a large public space. A great album that is everything that is good about jazz.

    Personally the most staggering thing about the whole set is the drumming of Tony Williams. Fuuuuuuuuuuuuuck. They go at the fast stuff like it's the Olympic 4 x 100 relay:

    ???He just lit a big fire under everyone in the group???.. I was beginning to realize that Tony and this group could play anything they wanted to. Tony was always the centre that the group???s sound revolved around. He was something else, man???..Tony played to the sound, and he played real hip, slick shit to the sounds he heard. He changed the way we played every night and played different tempos for every sound every night. Man, to play with Tony Williams you had to be real alert and pay attention to everything he did or he???d lose you in a second?????? All of this from a seventeen-year???old who nobody had heard of before the beginning of the year??? nobody ever played with me as Tony did. I mean it was scary, but then Ron Carter and Herbie Hancock and George Coleman weren???t no slouches either, so I knew we had a good thing going.???

    17. Dude was 17 and bossed that lineup :face_melt:

  • DuderonomyDuderonomy Haut de la Garenne 7,789 Posts
    Just looking on yootoob in case somebody has uploaded it, and there are live concerts of this in Tokyo, Milan and a bunch of 'edits'. Can you tell if it's any of these Jimster?

    (1964+:+My+Funny+Valentine+-+The+Complete+Concert&oq=Miles+Davis+live+set+(1964+:+My+Funny+Valentine+-+The+Complete+Concert&aq=f&aqi;=&aql;=&gs_sm=3&gs_upl=308l308l0l6497l1l1l0l0l0l0l200l200l2-1l1l0

  • JectWonJectWon (@_@) 1,654 Posts
    J i m s t e r said:

    17. Dude was 17 and bossed that lineup :face_melt:

    Wow, thanks for sharing that...I hadn't heard of any of that. It always blows my mind when you hear that someone super young is playing like a legitimately mature and wise adult. 17 is just ridiculous, though.

    EDIT: Been looking for footage as the above poaster has and no luck yet...will keep looking tho.

  • JimsterJimster Cruffiton.etsy.com 6,955 Posts
    The gig was a one-off in NYC (Googled it for ya : Recorded live in concert at Philharmonic Hall, New York, February 12th 1964) for The COngress for Racial Equality (CORE). I don't think it was filmed.

    I have the liner notes, I remember them saying that the tickets were somthing like $50 back then, it was a real posh black-tie affair and the other members of the band were looking forward to the money because they'd not gigged for a while and were skint. Then Miles said just said "I've donated all of our fees tonight to the charity."

    They started to bicker about "Well, it's OK for you Miles because you're already loaded, but we needed the money, how about we decide how much we want to donate?" One member (unnamed) didn't want to donate anything. Miles told them that they must deal. The end.

    Rudy Van Gelder was recording the gig and said he had his jaw on the floor for the whole thing.

    Wayne Shorter replaced George Coleman very shortly after, but I actually prefer the pre-Shorter stuff. I know very few people take this line, because Shorter is a big-hitting composer, but for me that later band did some meandering shit (E.S.P. and dem - yes, I said it) and never had anything like the power of this lineup; it swings so hard. I try and play (bass) along to it from time to time... if you can picture yourself onstage playing keepup with this band; it's like surfing a tsunami.

  • JimsterJimster Cruffiton.etsy.com 6,955 Posts
    Duderonomy said:
    Just looking on yootoob in case somebody has uploaded it, and there are live concerts of this in Tokyo, Milan and a bunch of 'edits'. Can you tell if it's any of these Jimster?

    Nah. I don't think any of it was filmed. But it was recorded very well. "The Complete Concert" was the complete package of the 2 LP's that previously came out of the gig ("Four and More" (the fast) and "My Funny Valentine" (the ballads) ). I have it on 2 x CD remaster, full Van Gelder liner notes IIRC.

    This is though (just the music, no footage):


    Most hyper is (ironically) "Walkin'"... They rip a new one for Herbie from about 6'00 in...

  • "[Bob] Thiele's most successful hit song was with Louis Armstrong's "What a Wonderful World", which he co-wrote with George David Weiss. According to Thiele's memoir, the recording session for this now-famous song was the scene of a major clash with ABC Records president Larry Newton, who had to be locked out of the studio after getting into a heated argument with Thiele over the song."

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bob_Thiele
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