After the Walker Brothers split, Scott went solo,
sang gorgeous, angsty songs, many by Jacques Brel, and enjoyed great success
with a series of albums: Scott, Scott 2 and Scott 3. The tunes weren't quite as
easy and lush as they had been, and hints of dissonance crept in. The lyrics
made up unsettling short stories, all the more creepy for their delicate
orchestral backdrop. The public rejected his fourth album, Scott 4, as too
weird and it didn't chart, though today it is seen as a classic. That was when
Walker cracked up big time.
Let's rewind a bit: Scott (1967) was released only
six months after Walker's third album with The Walker Brothers, Images. Its
mixture of Walker's original compositions and selection of cover versions
established Walker as a more serious and sombre artist; gone were the Beat
group and Blue-eyed soul material of his former group. The choice of material
generally fell into four main categories: his own work (Montague Terrace (In
Blue), Such a Small Love, Always Coming Back to You), contemporary covers (The
Lady Came from Baltimore, Angelica), movie songs (You're Gonna Hear From Me, Through
a Long and Sleepless Night) and significantly, English-translated versions of
the songs of the Belgian musician and songwriter Jacques Brel (Mathilde, My
Death, Amsterdam). Brel was a major influence on Walker's own compositions, and
Walker included Brel material on his first three solo albums. Walker described
Brel without qualification as 'the most significant singer-songwriter in the
world'. The real coup for Walker was his luck in acquiring and recording the
new Mort Shuman-translated versions of Brel's material before anyone else.
The album's opening track was a Brel composition: Mathilde
describes the ambivalent feelings a man feels when the big love of his life, as
well his cause of ruin, comes back to him.
Another great track from the album was When Joanna Loved Me, a song popularised by
Tony Bennett in 1964. Here are both songs sung live in the Dusty Springfield TV
show at the BBC:
My favorite song of the album is a song Scott wrote
himself: Montague Terrace (In Blue) is an exquisitely elegant song filled with
gut-wrenching images ("The girl across the hall makes love,
her thoughts lay cold like shattered stone"
and "The window sees trees cry from cold, and claw the moon").
Such a Small Love was also his composition, a
achingly lovely song about a friend of a man witnessing a girl who was a one night
stand crying at the grave:
Always Coming Back to You was also his own: the
orchestra follows a deceptively mainstream melodic line, but it's a complicated
structure, not easy to sing, and the lyrics carry saddened overtones of loneliness
and death. A unique blend.
Two more great Brel songs are featured. My Death is
as majestic as they come: Scott's version, his phrasing in particular, greatly
impacted Bowie.
Amsterdam is full of tender, funny, sad, and
grotesque images that are all found in the port of Amsterdam:
The album received critical praise and had
commercial success, hitting #3 on the UK Albums Chart.
As a teaser from his second solo album, Brel's Jackie
was Scott's first solo single. One of the few "fun" songs of the
Brel/Walker canon ("I'd have to get drunk every night, and talk about
virility
with some old grandmother"), this clever and
energetic song was met
with controversy in the UK likely because of lyrics like "authentic queers
and phony virgins" and drug references. The song was banned by the BBC and
was not performed on the corporation's TV or played on the mainstream radio
channels; which would probably explain why the song stalled at #22 in the UK,
barely missing the Top 20.
The B-side was a Scott Walker composition called
The Plague:
How can I sleep in hours like this
When anguish tracks me like a fist
My nakedness exposed, I can't stand
Still I...try to remember lips on lips
Hips on hips and ice on fire
In gloom and glow ...
When did they leave the man?
If great songs like this were relegated to the
B-side (it wasn't included on the album)... That goes to show that buying
singles and listening to the B-sides pays off big time:
His record company felt that he had to go more
mainstream, so he was given a Hatch and Trent composition to record as his next
single. Scott contributed to the lyrics, and his heavenly voice elevated the
song, making it his biggest solo single ever (#6):
Another non-album single was released: the theme
song to The Rope and the Colt, a French Spaghetti Western. Should that be
called a Bouillabaisse Western?
His second album, Scott 2, was released in March
1968 and went all the way to the top of the UK album chart, his only album to
achieve that feat. Jackie was in it, and so were two other Brel compositions.
First there's Next, about a guy whose first sexual experience in an army
whorehouse marked him for life. You don't find many songs containing a line such
as "I swear on the wet head of my first case of gonorrhea".
I just love this completely over the top version by
the late Alex Harvey:
The third Brel song in the album was The Girls and
the Dogs: It's about the charms of girls vs. the charms of dogs (spoiler: the girls
win in the end).
There were a few other interesting covers. One of
those was Tim Hardin's Black Sheep Boy:
The Bacharach/David ballad, Windows of the World:
But it was his own compositions that shone most
brightly. Plastic Palace People was one of his great songs, a glorious game of
light and darkness that contains lyrics such as "She steals the cards
tomorrow deals with deafening despair".
The Amorous Humphrey Plugg is another masterpiece.
It examines Mr. Plugg's double life: days with the kids in the park, nights in
the alluring Channing Way.
Another great song of his was The Girls from the
Streets:
"The world is up for auction sales
A thousand lies descend
The women's tear-tracked cheeks
Still we'll dance them on and on
We can't stop now
Not now until we reach the dawn"
Scott 3 was released in March 1969. Upon release, it met with
slower sales than his previous albums, as Pop audiences struggled to keep pace
with Walker's increasingly experimental approach. The dense lush string
arrangements by Wally Stott (who would soon undergo gender reassignment surgery
and become two-time Oscar nominee Angela Morley) seemed to evoke a Vegas-style
lounge crooner atmosphere, but one tinted with surreal drones and touches of
dissonance. It was a hit, however, peaking at #3 in the UK.
It was also his first album to contain mostly his
own compositions: it only had three Brel songs, apart from is own.
Here's Sons Of:
... And here's If You Go Away:
It was his own compositions that stole the show
once more: the heartbreaking Big Louise is an observational vignette of a
lovelorn woman, trying to lose herself in dreams to forget her pain. There are
those who consider the song to be written about a transgender woman. Perhaps...
Copenhagen is near perfect, using the city as a
metaphor for the awakening of love, and swelling to a quite
gorgeous climax.
Two Weeks Since You’ve Gone evokes that period of
desolation and confusion that follows the end of a relationship:
30 Century Man was Scott's nod to Bob Dylan:
The album's opening track, It's Raining Today, sets
the mood:
Finally from this album, Rosemary is a girl living
in a suffocating small town with her mother, reminiscing of a fleeting affair
that she had with a man the summer before.
In June 1969 he released a non-album single, the
more "commercial" Lights of Cincinnati, written by Macaulay and
Stephens. The song peaked at #13 in the UK and at #20 in Ireland.
At the peak of his fame in 1969, Scott Walker was
given his own BBC TV series, "Scott",
featuring solo Walker performances of ballads, big band standards, Brel songs
and his own compositions. Walker has suggested that by that time, a
self-indulgent complacency had crept into his choice of material.
His fourth solo album – Scott: Scott Walker Sings
Songs from his TV Series – exemplified the problems he was having in failing to
balance his own creative work with the demands of the entertainment industry
and of his manager Maurice King, who seemed determined to mold his protegé into
a new Andy Williams or Frank Sinatra. The album does not include
original compositions by Walker and consists of performances of ballads and big
band standards. Although it was moderately successful at the time (UK, #7), it has
since been deleted and has not been reissued. From this album, here's The
Impossible Dream:
... And here's Lost in the Stars:
Scott 4, released that same year and consisting
entirely of Walker’s own material, is simply a work of pure genius. It was
released under his real name, Noel Scott Engel. The public, having searched in
vain for Pop songs on Scott 3 & having no idea who Noel Scott Engel was,
didn’t go for it, and it didn’t even chart and was deleted soon after.
The trouble was that Scott lived in a world of his
own. He was impossible to market. The Rock crowd had its hairy-faced heroes and
the last thing they wanted was a crooner who modelled himself on Tony Bennett
and Jack Jones. But the Easy-listening audience, the mums and dads, were simply
repelled and confused by Scott’s songs. It’s a poignant symbol of his
predicament that he’d appear on cheesy TV variety shows to sing grim stuff like
Jacques Brel’s My Death.
A few years later Scott 4 was re-appreciated.
"This is bold, confident, swaggering Pop from a man at the very peak of
his powers" is one description given to the album. It was also highly
praised by artists such as Bowie and Radiohead. The opening track, The Seventh
Seal, is a direct hommage to Bergman's classic film of the same name. Listen to
the song and watch the film when you can.
On Your Own Again is a classic lovelorn ballad (no
lyric has ever summed Walker up better than “I was so happy I didn’t feel like
me”.)
The World's Strongest Man
is one of the
great underrated Walker songs:
Angels of Ashes is one of his most spiritual songs:
The stunningly beautiful Boy Child is my favorite
song of the album, along with The Seventh Seal:
After Scott 4's failure, Scott drank himself into oblivion, withdrew from the
world and thought about killing himself. "Well, I was an intense young
guy," he recently said. "The record company called me in and carpeted
me and said you've got to make a commercial record for us."
So, 'Til the Band Comes In came about. It was released
in December 1970 but that too failed to chart. Walker wrote the songs for the
album quickly while on a working holiday in Greece in September 1970. Receiving
negative reviews the album was deleted and was not available for over
twenty-five years. It was later reassessed much more favourably and was
eventually reissued in the UK.
The
first side (the strong one), included original songs, while the second (the
weak one) was mostly covers. It begins with a track called Prologue/Little
Things (That Keep Us Together):
If there are two songs that make the album worth
it, these are the two next ones: Joe, a jazzy, poignant tale of a dying,
forgotten old man:
Then there's my favorite song from the album, which
is also my excuse for including Scott in this series of Gay Culture themes: Thanks
for Chicago Mr James is a gay Dear John letter, simply one of the best
things he ever did. Here are the lyrics:
You always said I wouldn't stay
I guess you saw the way before it all began
I've always been a changin' train
And when you think on this you might forgive me
then
Thanks for Chicago Mr James
And all the shiny suits and all the shiny names
The things a country boy can't grace
Without the look of shame upon a city face
And you needed more than the smile I wore
You picked me up on my way down
That dusty one horse town - I won't forget the jail
The mayor's wife and Cadillac
The sheriff on my back 'til you put up the bail
Thanks for Chicago Mr James
You got a lot of grace but you're an empty place
The dawn falls hard upon my face
I'll move as I began through fields without a plan
Thanks for Chicago Mr James
That world of grey and gold that watched you
growing old
The things I never saw I see
To think that I'm still free and I'm not feeling
cold
And here's the song:
"I think I did temporarily go crazy,
because I don't remember the period at all very well. I can hardly remember it,"
Scott said. The funny thing is, during that period, he began making relatively
commercial records – show tunes, movie themes, songs from a short-lived TV
series.
His last original song till 1978 was the B-side to
1971's failed single I Still See You. It was called My Way Home:
"I was acting in bad faith for many years
during that time." Why? "Well, I was trying to hang on. I should
have stopped. I should have said, 'OK, forget it' and walked away. But I
thought if I keep hanging on and making these bloody awful records..."
Hey Scott, they weren't that bad. There was some good
in each one: from The Moviegoer (1972), here's The Ballad of Sacco and Vanzetti:
Any
Day Now (1973), contains When You Get Right Down to It:
Stretch (1973), contains Sunshine, which is OK:
We Had It All (1974), a out and out Country album, contains songs
such as Low Down Freedom. Not bad, but where's Scott Walker?
Perhaps for mutual protection, The Walker Brothers
reunited in 1975 to produce three albums. Their first single, a cover of Tom Rush's
song No Regrets, from the album of the same title climbed to #7 in the UK
Singles Chart, a surprise comeback if there ever was one:
However, the parent album only reached #49 in the
UK. The next album, Lines (1976) failed to chart. Its title track, which Scott
regarded as the best single the group ever released, also failed to chart.
Nite Flights, the last studio album by The Walker
Brothers, was released in July 1978. Each member of the group wrote songs for
the album: two by Gary Walker, while Scott Walker and John Walker each
contributed four. The best song in the album was a composition from Scott (of
course), called The Electrician, a song that seemed influenced by
Bowie and Brian Eno's Berlin period.
The narrator of The Electrician is a torturer
addressing his victim, offering a nauseating monologue accompanied by an
implacable bass note and eerie, discordant strings. But for the gorgeous
orchestration of the melodic middle section, it could have come from Walker's
more recent "difficult" albums. All those artistic lows and
disappointments of Scott's 1970s, his embarrassing drift away from integrity
towards the light entertainment treadmill, led to this decisive moment. After
Nite Flights, Scott would never again attempt to be commercially successful.
And once that decision had been made, he was free.
The album's title track was later covered by Bowie
himself in 1993 for his album Black Tie White Noise. Here's the original:
In 1981, interest in Scott Walker's work was
stimulated by the compilation Fire Escape in the Sky: The Godlike Genius of
Scott Walker, containing tracks selected by Julian Cope, which reached number
14 on the UK Independent Chart. Walker subsequently signed a long-term multi
album deal with Virgin Records.
In 1984, Scott Walker released his first solo album
in ten years, Climate of Hunter. The album furthered the complex and unnerving
approach Walker had established on Nite Flights. While based loosely within the
field of 1980s Rock music (and featuring guest appearances by contemporary
stars Billy Ocean and Mark Knopfler), it had a fragmented and trance-like
approach. Many of its eight songs lacked either titles or easily identifiable
melody, with only Walker’s sonorous voice as the link to previous work. Like
Nite Flights before it, Climate of Hunter was met with critical praise but low
sales. Plans to tour were made but never came to fruition. A second album for
Virgin was rumoured to be in the works (with Brian Eno and Daniel Lanois
producing) but was abandoned after early sessions. Soon afterwards, Walker was
dropped by the label. This would be his only album of the 80s.
Track Three, or Delayed, as it's also known, would
certainly feel at home in a Bauhaus album:
Rawhide is certainly different than the old Frankie
Laine number of the same name. The opening line is "This is how you disappear":
an appropriate description of Scott's feelings towards publicity.
After Climate Of Hunter, another decade was lost to
the world, with the exception of this surprise collaboration with Goran
Bregović called Man From Reno, that reminded us of the old Scott Walker from the
60s. It was composed for a French comedy film called Toxic Affair, and it
referenced the Zodiac killer. Go figure.
When he returned in 1995 with the album Tilt, it
was as a fully fledged modernist composer. On the surface, there couldn't have
been a more unlikely transformation – imagine Andy Williams reinventing himself
as Stockhausen.
The best song of the album, the opening track,
Farmer in the City, is subtitled Remembering Pasolini. It's about top Italian
film director/author/poet, Pier Paolo Pasolini, an unapologetically gay man who
gave us some of the boldest and best films of the 60s and 70s. He was murdered
in the mid 70s in what could've been cruising gone bad or a poilitical
assassination. Both theories have their champions.
A few of the lyrics are appropriated from Norman
Macafee's English translation of Pier Paolo Pasolini's poem, Uno dei Tanti
Epiloghi (One of the Many Epilogs), which was written in 1969 for Pasolini's
friend and protégé, the scruffy young nonprofessional actor, Ninetto Davoli.
Throughout the song, Walker's chant of "Do I hear 21, 21, 21...? I'll give
you 21, 21, 21...", may be a reference to Davoli's age when he was drafted
into (and subsequently deserted from) the Italian army.
The song is a cinematic sweep that somehow
maintains a melody beneath the unrelenting melodrama of Scott's most intense vocal ever. Seemingly
undecided whether he's recording an opera or simply haunting one, Walker doesn't
so much perform as project his lyrics, hurling them into the alternating
maelstroms and moods that careen behind him.
Bouncer See Bouncer would have quite a catchy
chorus if anybody else had gotten their hands on it. Here, however, it is
highlighted by an Eno-esque esotericism and the chatter of tiny locusts.
In 1999 he was asked to compose the soundtack to Pola
X by Leos Carax. Here's a short scene from the film with Catherine Deneuve and Guillaume
Depardieu:
And here's Scott Walker giving us Light:
His next album, The Drift, was
released in 2006. It was as inpenetrable as Tilt. Perhaps the key to unlocking
the mysteries of Tilt (1995), The Drift (2006) and Bish Bosch (2012) is to
understand that Walker is a cineast, and infuses his music with the influence
of film. His lyrics use powerful visual imagery, playing out dramas, and can
adopt a variety of viewpoints and personas within a single song. He uses sound
as a film-maker might, for dramatic effect. To Walker, making music means
finding the most appropriate sonic environment for his lyrics. These
unconventional, sometimes mocked and often alarming sounds are a mise-en-scène,
a dramatic setting for Walker's lyrics, which Brian Eno has described as
"peerless".
In Clara, the Clara of the song title is Claretta
Petacci, Benito Mussolini's young mistress, who chose to be shot dead alongside
Il Duce in April 1945 by Italian partisans. Their bodies were strung up and
beaten with sticks by a crowd in Milan's Piazzale Loreto. Walker says he saw
newsreel footage of this as a young boy and it gave him nightmares. The scene
was – notoriously – evoked in the recording studio by percussionist Alasdair
Molloy punching a side of pork with his fist. Yet such verité elements are only
part of the sound palette. In some ways what is striking about Walker's later
work are the similarities with his earlier work – the dynamics, the orchestral
swells, the tambourine, and always, that voice. It's the same sound as we
remember from The Sun Ain't Gonna Shine Any More, in places – but we are a long
way from three-minute songs with verses and choruses.
Jesse is a harrowing 9/11 song that also obliquely
references Jailhouse Rock as Elvis Presley cries out ("I'm the only one
left alive!") to his stillborn twin brother.
I wouldn't expect to find a Pop song called Psoriatic,
but there you are:
In 2007 he recorded And Who Shall Go to the Ball? And What Shall
Go to the Ball? which was originally commissioned as a contemporary dance piece
for disabled and non-disabled dance company CandoCo, choreographed by Rafael
Bonachela.
His next album proper came in 2012 and was called
Bish Bosch. Its title combines urban slang for the word "bitch" and
the last name of Dutch painter Hieronymus Bosch.
If you thought Psoriatic was a weird title for a
song, try SDSS14+3B (Zircon, A Flagpole Sitter). Subatomic science, a dwarf
jester in Attila the Hun’s court, St. Simeon, and an early 20th century fad all
appear in this song, whose running time is 21:45.
Epizootics! is
disorienting and confrontational. Cartoonish swamp jazz, pummelling drums,
finger clicks and hand claps, withering slide guitars, trumpet fanfares. You
think: none of this stuff should be happening. And that's the wonder of it.
In 2014 Soused appeared; a collaborative album
between singer Scott Walker and experimental metal band Sunn O))). From this
album, here's Brando (Dwellers on the bluff)
Earlier this year, Scott composed the soundtrack to
what appears to be a very good film. I plan to watch The Childhood of a Leader
asap. Here's the opening theme:
I believe the man has still a lot of great music to
give us. An appropriate headline for his music to come would be, "Scott
Walker: the sound of an artist freely expressing himself, perhaps uniquely
unconstrained by commercial considerations."
I sometimes think that Scott's true medium is film. So many of his earlier works ("Montague Terrace," "Mr. James") read like mini-movies. And I love his music to both "Pola X" and "The Childhood of a Leader." Unfortunately, his music is the best thing about both of these films; otherwise, he might be in line for an Academy Award for the latter. I found watching "Childhood" to be a singularly depressing experience. There is nobody to relate to, although Robert Pattinson is interesting in a dual role, and the child is an exasperating presence. "Pola X" is based on a Herman Melville novel, and it has Deneuve to recommend it, but little else. I don't know if he's interested, but perhaps Scott should consider writing a screenplay himself, perhaps to "Thanks for Chicago, Mr. James," which would have been perfect for the screen in the '70s but may seem a bit dated now. Calling Jon-Michael Vincent!
ReplyDeleteJan-Michael Vincent!!! Thanks for the memory AFHI! He was a real delight in the early and mid 70s. I wonder if he grew up well.
DeleteI agree that Scott's music has a very strong cinematic vibe to it. I hope he would have the inspiration - and that somebody would fund him - so that we may see a film made by him. I mean, he is 10 years younger than Eastwood, and Eastwood is still making films. So...
Man, there is so much going on in this column that it's impossible to discuss in a few paragraphs. I could fill pages going over everything but no one wants that so I'll simply say I love the musical journey this guy takes us on from the Spector infused Walker Bros through the MOR crooning to the alternative whatever the hell it is he dabbles in today. More than his golden tones, it's the exquisite orchestral arrangements that delight and intrigue me. The nearest thing I can compare it to that I was aware of in the 60s would probably be Jimmy Webb. I also hear his influence in Antony & The Johnsons.
ReplyDeleteI've always enjoyed it when artists use orchestral arrangements to color or beautify unusual subject matter. The following three offerings illustrate this and also came out during Walker's heyday:
Give Up Your Guns - The Buoys (yes, that group!)
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The Dolphins - Dion
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Requiem:820 Latham - The 5th Dimension (Jimmy Webb produced)
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Lastly, I was surprised to see SW covered this song, possibly my favorite Delfonics record:
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Sorry for the delay in replying RM, I've had a hard couple of days. Your observation concerning the value of orchestration in Walker's recordings is correct. So are the parallels with Webb and Antony.
DeleteI loved your offerings, I hadn't heard these songs in decades and it was a very welcome feeling listening to them again. And they do efficiently make your point.
I hope that I find the time to prepare a new story for today. Otherwise, there'll be one tomorrow. Have a great weekend!
To answer your question, yianang, Jan-Michael Vincent did NOT grow up well. I don't think he's worked in years, but the last time I saw him, he looked like 30 miles of bad road.
ReplyDeleteRM, here's another version of "The Dolphins" (with some changes in the lyrics) that was performed by It's a Beautiful Day":
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gDLEs2zcsQ0
The group's lead singer, David LaFlamme has a gorgeous baritone voice that reminds me of Scott. Here's his finest (and most familiar) vocal moment:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XUNgQ03D2qA
Speaking of soundalikes, nobody's come closer to matching the Walker sound than Liam McKahey, of Cousteau:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8uQJ2uFhurM
I feel obliged to add the songs Scott wrote for Ute Lemper. She's one of my favorite performers, especially in concert. She did an album called "Punishing Kiss" in 2000 that featured songs by Scott, Nick Cave, Elvis Costello, The Divine Comedy, Philip Glass, and Tom Waits. Here's "Scope J":
Deletehttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qC2-yp8KQSQ
And here's "Lullaby":
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GPMr8n2dJpY
Lemper did several songs, including three duets, with Neil Hannon of the Divine Comedy. Hannon also has a somewhat Walker-esque baritone, as witness on "Tango Ballad" from "The Threepenny Opera":
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=p1cmz-luZS0
AS I've already said to RM, sorry for the delay in replying, AFHI, I've had a hard couple of days.
DeleteIt's a pity that Jan-Michael Vincent did NOT grow up well. As gay Greek composer Manos Hadjidakis once said: "there's one advantage to being plain-looking as a young person; one usually grows old more gracefully than the pretty ones."
I love The Dolphins by It's a Beautiful Day; the first two records of this band, in 1969 and 1970, were outstanding. I wasn't aware of Cousteau; it seems I must dig in deeper, for I like what I hear.
My bad for forgetting to include the Ute Lemper songs. The woman is a force of nature. I was meaning to include her, but when part 2 was getting really long (the final tally was a little less that 4 000 words), I subconsciously began to subtract in the end, because I was becoming exhausted. Ute Lemper fell victim to this. She definitely should have been there though.
I hope to write something new either today or tomorrow. Have a great weekend, AFHI!
It was an excellent post, yianang! I enjoyed it immensely. Hope you are feeling better. It may not help to know that Jan-Michael Vincent is an alcoholic who broke his neck in an automobile accident in 1996 and more recently lost the lower half of his right leg to an infection. He retired to live in Mississippi. Understandably, he is quite bitter. Luckily for us, we'll always have "Airwolf"! Remember when he was being talked up for the role of the young athlete in "The Front Runner"? This is a project Paul Newman worked on for years. Anyway, I thought I'd offer before and after pictures:
ReplyDeletehttp://stumptownblogger.typepad.com/.a/6a010536b86d36970c01bb085396ad970d-580wi
http://i.dailymail.co.uk/i/pix/2014/11/06/video-undefined-22EC8FB300000578-370_636x358.jpg
As far as Cousteau are concerned, Liam McKahey has gone on to do some interesting work. Here he is, live, with The Bodies on "Long Black Train."
I forgot the link to the McKahey video:
ReplyDeletehttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LVK3X8rq3fE
Hey afhi! The Liam McKahey video was very interesting. As for Jan-Michael Vincent (before & after)... such a horrible shame. The man must be suffering. I remember noticing him in two quite different films: the Disney comedy The World's Greatest Athlete and then opposite Charles Bronson in The Mechanic. A couple years later he was in the Western Bite The Bullet. I haven't seen him since. If The Front Runner was made into a film in the 70s with Paul Newman and Jan-Michael Vincent... I'm sure it would be among the top gay movies ever. A great pity that it wasn't.
DeleteJan Michael was a sun-kissed golden boy who certainly got my loins stirring going all the way back to the late 60s when I first spied him in a recurring serial called Danger Island that was part of the kid's show The Banana Splits. It was awful but we got JMV running around in tight shorts so I didn't give a damn about the story. My pick for his best on screen performance would be 1974's Buster & Billie. It's an effective potboiler set in the south that I watched many, many times on HBO. Added bonus - full frontal and rear nudity. Who could ask for more? The TV movie Tribes was memorable, too. The man has demons both alcohol and anger fueled and as Ahfi stated, his life waqs and is pretty messed up. Such a shame.
ReplyDeleteI hope you're doing better. Take all the time you need.
Thanks for the wishes, RM! Much appreciated. I wasn't aware neither of Danger Island, nor of Buster & Billie, but they appear to possess all the prerequisites for compulsory viewing ;)
DeleteEye opening stuff from you guys. Being an avid SW follower since the beginning of WB hysteria, I lost out on so much of of his stuff after their split but caught up with him again many years later. He has a wonderful view on life (and death) and I had a struggle appreciating his change in writing and song but now he's proved to be one of the world's best performers. We have lost such a treasure from this world, but many thanks for all the tracks you've posted. Such wonderful memories.
ReplyDeleteThanks for your lovely comment, Scottc 10. He was indeed someone quite unique in the history of pop. Have a happy Sunday!
Delete