Last week in The Wall Street Journal, I interviewed AC/DC frontman Brian Johnson for my "House Call" column in the Mansion section (go here). On stage belting out songs since 1980, Brian seems like a stressed-out truck driver with a hair-trigger temper. The truth is Brian is among the sweetest rock stars I've interviewed. His father was British and his mother was Italian. His father fought in World War II for the British and helped liberate Rome and the region surrounding the city in June 1944. In a small town, his dad met the woman he was going to marry. In 1947, the couple headed to northern England to make a home, and Brian was born. But the gray English weather, cool temperatures and lard-cooked food dampened his mother's spirits. You'll never believe what helped save the marriage. His new memoir is here.
Here's Brian singing Back in Black with AC/DC at Donington Park in England in 1991...
And here's Brian with AC/DC at the Grammy Awards Ceremony in 2015...
Nine days to go. My book, Anatomy of 55 More Songs—the follow-up to my 2016 bestselling book Anatomy of a Song—will be out December 6. If you enjoy JazzWax, please show your support and buy a copy—go here. You know most or all of the songs in my book and you'll love the stories behind them from the composers who wrote the hits and the stars who recorded them. I'm so convinced, here are the 55 songs:
- Walk On By — Dionne Warwick
- Dancing in the Street — Martha and the Vandellas
- Sunshine Superman — Donovan
- Good Vibrations — Beach Boys
- Up, Up and Away — The 5th Dimension
- Get Together — Youngbloods
- The Weight — The Band
- Fire — Crazy World of Arthur Brown
- Bad Moon Rising — Creedence Clearwater Revival
- Crystal Blue Persuasion — Tommy James
- Ain’t No Mountain High Enough — Diana Ross
- Paranoid — Black Sabbath
- Truckin’ — The Grateful Dead
- I’m Eighteen —Alice Cooper
- Band a Gong — T Rex
- Roundabout — Yes
- Doctor My Eyes — Jackson Browne
- Long Tall Woman in a Black Dress — The Hollies
- Rocket Man — Elton John
- Papa Was a Rolling Stone — The Temptations
- I’ll Be Around — The Spinners
- Killing Me Softly — Roberta Flack
- Smoke on the Water — Deep Purple
- Hello It’s Me — Todd Rundgren
- She’s Gone — Hall & Oates
- Come and Get Your Love — Redbone
- Sundown — Gordon Lightfoot
- I’m Not in Love — 10CC
- Love Is the Drug — Roxy Music
- The Boys Are Back in Town — Thin Lizzy
- Fly Like an Eagle — Steve Miller Band
- Year of the Cat — Al Stewart
- Barracuda — Heart
- Nobody Does It Better — Carly Simon
- Peg — Steely Dan
- My Best Friend’s Girl — The Cars
- The Gambler — Kernny Rogers
- September — Earth Wind & Fire
- What a Fool Believes — Doobie Bros
- Accidents Will Happen — Elvis Costello
- Devil Went Down to Georgia — Charlie Daniels
- Good Times — Chic
- Highway to Hell — AC/DC
- Cars — Gary Numan
- On the Radio — Donna Summer
- Bad Reputation — Joan Jett
- Rapture — Blondie
- Don’t Stop Believing — Journey
- Steppin’ Out — Joe Jackson
- Burning Down the House — Talking Heads
- The Power of Love — Huey Lewis
- Small Town — John Mellencamp
- Take It So Hard — Keith Richards
- Being Boring — Pet Shop Boys
- If It Makes You Happy — Sheryl Crow
Listen to the songs for free by going to my book site and playing them on my specially created Spotify playlist in the same order as the book. Go here.
Benny Golson. Producer-director Jacey Falk hopes to finish his documentary on tenor saxophonist and composer Benny Golson by July. The documentary is Benny Golson: Going Beyond the Horizon, and he needs funding to help pay the licensing fees on the songs he wants to use. His GoFundMe page can be found here. Here's the documentary's trailer...
In Paris? The restaurant Birdie Num Num in Paris is hosting an exhibit by the fabulous photographer Gilles D'Elia through December. All of the images are for sale. For more information on Gilles as well as his glorious photographs, go here.
Giacomo Gates sent along an audio clip of Thelonious Monk's Stuffy Turkey. Think of the clip as fantastic holiday leftovers. Here's Monk...
Travel playlist. Heading home on Sunday? I've got music for you. Earlier in the week, I received the following email from Kim Paris of the FM Radio Archive...
Marc, I enjoyed reading Mark Rabin's JazzWax contribution last weekend on transportation films and soundtracks. As you probably know, Mark is one of the leading contributors of broadcast recordings on FM Radio Archive, with 70 recordings so far.
What you may not know is that Mark's contribution to the FM Radio Archive coaxed Raoul van Hall to share his "Jazz From The Left" radio show broadcasts. Raoul also made some in-flight entertainment soundtracks for Air China, China Airways, Gulf Air, Oman Air & Bangkok Airlines.
Raoul was kind enough to share one called "Jazz Giants" that I posted on FM Radio Archive so JazzWax readers can enjoy. Go here.
Duduka Da Fonseca—Yes!!! (Sunnyside). Duduka is is a Brazilian jazz drummer and a founding member of Trio da Paz with Romero Lubambo and Nilson Matta. His new album, Yes!!!, features Quarteto Universal—with Vinicius Gomes on guitars, Helio Alves on piano and Gili Lopes on bass. The beauty of Duduka is his feathery ferocity on drums that not only drives the music but creates a shimmering atmosphere around it. On his new album, Duduka is accompanied by musicians who bring the rhythmic heat with flexibility and intensity. Best of all on this album, each song has a different personality and feel. Go here.
Here's Samba Novo...
Billy Drummond—Valse Sinistre (Cellar Music). Drummer Billy Drummond has long been inspired by the edge and push of alto saxophonist Jackie McLean. So opening his new album with McLean's Little Melonae makes perfect sense. The musicians in Billy's group, Freedom of Ideas, are Dayna Stephens on saxophones, Micah Thomas on piano and Dezron Douglas on bass. What I enjoy most about this album is how the musicians go deep and create long shadows with bursts of light. Each artist in the quartet contributes extraordinary musicianship, and the approach on each song is conversational and defies convention. The thread running through all of the songs are Billy's drums, which coax, combat and challenge the other musicians as they let their personalities stand out. Go here.
Here's Clara's Room...
Ant Law and Alex Hitchcock—Same Moon in the Same World (Oim). The British jazz composer-collagists Ant Law (guitar) and Alex Hitchcock ( saxophonist) join forces with a team of special guests—Joel Ross, Eric Harland, Jasper Høiby, Linda Oh, Kendrick Scott, Shai Maestro, Tim Garland, Ben Williams and Sun-Mi Hong. Their music is deliciously eclectic and conceptual, pushing and pulling in different imaginative directions, delivering a wide range of styles and forms. The best part about this album is how it holds your attention with a shower of jazz and acid-jazz fragments and sonic layers. For me, it's jazz that grows on me and won't let go. Go here.
Here's Haven't Meta Yet...
Correction. Following my post on the Giants of Jazz, Nico Wilke sent along an email to let me know that the video was from October 1972, not 1971. He sent along photos of the 1971 event that he attended and the different attire by the musicians in 1972. I made the fix, and the 1972 poster is above. To read the post, go here.
And finally, here's Neil Young and Crazy Horse and their great new single Chevrolet from their new album, World Record. Neil is joined by Crazy Horse guitarist Nils Lofgren, bassist Billy Talbot and drummer Ralph Molina. That's Neil's late father, Scott Young, on the album cover above. Scott was a Canadian journalist, sportswriter and author of 45 novels and non-fiction books. Neil's still got it...
Here's Chevrolet...