Showing posts with label Nick Drake. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Nick Drake. Show all posts

Wednesday, September 16, 2020

Elton John - Hits '70 - Non-Album Cover Versions (1970)

Lately, I've been going through an Elton John phase, so I'll be posting more from him. Here's a very strange album that needs some explanation.

In 1969, Elton John was already starting to make it in the music business. He put out a single in 1968, and two more singles and an album in 1969. But none of them made the charts anywhere, and he needed money to live on while he waited for more success. He'd also been writing songs for other artists, but hadn't had much success with that either. 

At the time, it was very rare for record companies to put out compilations featuring recent hits from different artists, due to the difficulty of securing to rights from other companies and then splitting the profits. So instead, it was common practice to make compilation albums filled with nearly exact copies of hits done by anonymous musicians. Elton John made some extra money playing keyboards on some of these songs, and sometimes singing lead vocals on them. He did most of these in early to mid-1970, at a time when he was already starting to break out as a star. I guess the royalty checks for his own songs hadn't started coming in yet.

It was only after he became a superstar that some listeners realized that some of these anonymous copycat versions of hits were actually sung by him. Over the years, there have been various collections of these performances. But this generally has remained little more than a curiosity for his die-hard fans.

I think these recordings deserve more attention. Yeah, many of them just aren't good. Often they sound like the anonymous copies that they are. But on some of the songs, Elton John's talent and individual style shines through. So I've cut these songs about in half to the ones I think are the best. They're presented in the order they were recorded. He did a couple of lead vocals in late 1969, but those didn't make the cut. 

Generally speaking, I picked the songs where his lead vocals are the most clear and distinctive. (On many of the songs I rejected, he shared lead vocals with others, or double tracked himself to make his voice sound more generic.) I also rejected a few songs that were just weird. For instance, he sang a version of "Young, Gifted, and Black," which is silly when you know he isn't black. Also, some of his performances were more like parodies, and I wanted to keep this serious. Furthermore, I tried to avoid the versions that were too slavishly similar to the original hit versions.

The quality of this album is greatly helped by the fact that he didn't just sing copies of hit songs. In mid-1970, he also was asked to make demos for a handful of songs from lesser known artists in hopes that other artists would hear them and be more inclined to cover them. (Those are tracks 7 through 13.) Luckily, four of the seven songs from this batch were Nick Drake compositions. At the time, Drake was totally obscure, but he has risen in stature to become a music legend. So, ironically, you may find some of the Nick Drake songs here more familiar than some of the hits. 

The other three songs from that bunch were from an obscure folk duo, John and Beverley Martyn. Although the duo wouldn't last the year as a musical entity, John Martyn would go on to have a long and critically acclaimed career as a singer-songwriter. So it was a lucky thing that Elton John was assigned to record those songs too.

It wouldn't have been a smart thing for Elton John to release an all-covers album in 1970, the year he was hitting it big as a performer of the songs he co-wrote with Bernie Taupin. But in hindsight, this is a perfectly good album. By cutting out the lesser copycat songs, I think this goes from a marginal curiosity to an album that holds its own in his discography.

The album is 50 minutes long. That was on the long side for an album in that era, but some albums were that long or longer.

Here is a list of the artists who had the original and/or hit versions for each song:

01 Bridge Over Troubled Water - Simon and Garfunkel
02 I Can't Tell the Bottom from the Top - Hollies
03 Question - Moody Blues
04 Yellow River - Christie
05 Lady D'Arbanville - Cat Stevens
06 Love of the Common People - Nicky Thomas
07 Saturday Sun - Nick Drake
08 Sweet Honesty - John and Beverley Martyn
09 Stormbringer - John and Beverley Martyn
10 Way to Blue - Nick Drake
11 Go Out and Get It - John and Beverley Martyn
12 Day Is Done - Nick Drake
13 Time Has Told Me - Nick Drake
14 Natural Sinner - Fair Weather
15 Signed, Sealed, Delivered, I'm Yours - Stevie Wonder

Here's the usual song list:

01 Bridge Over Troubled Water (Elton John)
02 I Can't Tell the Bottom from the Top (Elton John)
03 Question (Elton John)
04 Yellow River (Elton John)
05 Lady D'Arbanville (Elton John)
06 Love of the Common People (Elton John)
07 Saturday Sun (Elton John)
08 Sweet Honesty (Elton John)
09 Stormbringer (Elton John)
10 Way to Blue (Elton John)
11 Go Out and Get It (Elton John)
12 Day Is Done (Elton John)
13 Time Has Told Me (Elton John)
14 Natural Sinner (Elton John)
15 Signed, Sealed, Delivered, I'm Yours (Elton John) 

https://www.upload.ee/files/15905281/EltonJn_1970_Hits70VariousCoverSongs_atse.zip.html

While I was collecting songs and information to put this album together, I came across the cover art to the many cheapo cheapo hits collections that contained one or more of Elton John's vocals. I could have tried to make a serious and respectable album cover. But instead, I decided it would be more fun to lean into the cheesy fly-by-night nature of those albums by basing my cover on one of those. 

So that's what I did. The title "Hits '70" is unchanged. The left side of the original cover was a list of the songs it contained. I replaced that with a photo of Elton John in concert from that time period. The bottom left of the cover contained some more text and the record company logo. I replaced that with Elton John's name, done in the same font as the album title.

Monday, August 12, 2019

Nick Drake - Bryter Layter - Acoustic Version (1970)

I got a comment today pointing out that the link to my acoustic version of Nick Drake's "Five Leaves Left" album had expired. I fixed the link, but that reminded me that I have yet to post my very similar acoustic version of Drake's "Bryter Layter" album. So I'm doing that here.

I love Drake's music. He's one of my absolute favorites. But if there's one fly in the ointment for me regarding his music, it's the string arrangements. I generally like them, but sometimes they get to be a bit much, and I long to hear the songs without the strings. Thus, I've created these all-acoustic versions.

As with the "Five Leaves Left" acoustic album, I'm able to make this due to a number of alternate versions of the songs. Four of the performances here are alternate versions done by Drake. Two are officially released ("Bryter Layter" from "The John Peel Session" and "Fly" from "Time of No Reply"), and two are from bootlegs. Five more songs come from stripped down or single channel mixes of the exact same performances as on the official "Bryter Later" album. (Thankfully for this project, there were some extreme stereo mixes with all the strings in just one channel.)

That leaves just one song - "Sunday." The reason I'd delayed posting this album is because I couldn't find a good acoustic version of "Sunday," which is a song with lots of strings and production. Rather than skip the song, or not post this album at all, I've decided on a rather radical solution: I'm using a 2019 cover version of the song that I found on YouTube. This is something I just came across today, by Lior Seker & Naama Shalev, who I presume are merely talented amateur musicians. They perform a flawless version of the song, with one of them playing flute and the other guitar.

Drake's guitar parts were extremely intricate and precise. Since this is an instrumental, in my opinion, it sounds exactly how Drake would have played the song if he'd done it with a flutist and without all the strings. I honestly couldn't have asked for anything more ideal. If you didn't read this text or study the song list, you'd probably never realize it was someone other than Drake playing the song.

If you want to be a purist and keep this to only actual Nick Drake performances, then just remove the last song.

01 Introduction [Instrumental] (Nick Drake)
02 Hazey Jane II (Nick Drake)
03 At the Chime of a City Clock (Nick Drake)
04 One of These Things First (Nick Drake)
05 Hazey Jane I (Nick Drake)
06 Bryter Layter [Instrumental] (Nick Drake)
07 Fly (Nick Drake)
08 Poor Boy (Nick Drake)
09 Northern Sky (Nick Drake)
10 Sunday [Instrumental] (Lior Seker & Naama Shalev)

https://www.upload.ee/files/15111064/NickDr_1970_BryterLaytrAcoustic_atse.zip.html

For the "Five Leaves Left Acoustic" album, I was lucky to find an outtake of the album cover photo session, and I used that for the cover art. I didn't have that luck this time around. I wanted to keep the art to something very similar to the official "Bryter Layter" cover, yet different. In the official cover, Drake's face is obscured by dark shadows. So I used Photoshop to lighten his face, and some of his body, to create my own alternate cover. I also added in the word "Acoustic" just below the album title.

Friday, November 30, 2018

Nick Drake - Five Leaves Left - Acoustic Version (1969)

If you're a fan of Nick Drake's music, what do you think of the orchestrations on his first two albums, "Five Leaves Left" and "Bryter Layter?" Personally, sometimes I like them, but sometimes I feel they're a bit much and I wish I could hear those albums without them. I have attempted to do just that: make versions of those albums with all the strings stripped away.

Here's my version "Five Leaves Left." I'll post my version of "Bryter Layter" another time. (There's no need for an acoustic version of "Pink Moon," since it's all-acoustic to begin with.)

I wish it were as simple as finding multitrack versions of these albums and then editing each song to remove the track or tracks with the orchestration. Unfortunately, it's not that easy. There's only been one Drake album released with more than the two stereo tracks. That's a compilation known as "A Treasury," which has a few songs from each of his studio albums. Unfortunately, I haven't been able to get editable multitracks from that. If you know of such things, please let me know.

Luckily, someone else did make stripped down mixes of a handful of Drake's songs using the multitracks from that album, and posted them on YouTube. The version of "Fruit Tree" here is one of those. It's exactly the same as the album version, just minus the strings.

The rest of the songs here come from other sources though. They're all alternate versions Drake played with just his voice and guitar (or piano) that were released on "Time of No Reply," "Fruit Tree," or "John Peel Session," plus two versions taken from bootlegs. These performances are sometimes a little different from the album versions, but generally he played and sang his songs very similarly each time. So this is as close as an orchestra-free "Five Leaves Left" as you're likely to get, unless the full multitracks are released for all his songs someday.

Frankly, some songs don't sound that different, because they were pretty close to being all acoustic anyway. But others were heavily produced, such as "'Cello Song," "Way to Blue," or "Man in the Shed," and these versions sound quite different. This version is a full four minutes shorter than the official album, since things like the bongo-based instrumental section at the end of "'Cello Song" aren't included.

I'd be curious to hear from people, if you prefer this version or the orchestral version, or if you like both.

01 Time Has Told Me (Nick Drake)
02 River Man (Nick Drake)
03 Three Hours (Nick Drake)
04 Way to Blue (Nick Drake)
05 Day Is Done (Nick Drake)
06 'Cello Song (Nick Drake)
07 The Thoughts of Mary Jane (Nick Drake)
08 Man in a Shed (Nick Drake)
09 Fruit Tree (Nick Drake)
09 Saturday Sun (Nick Drake)

https://www.upload.ee/files/15111068/NickDr_1969_FiveLeavesLftAcoustic_atse.zip.html

Regarding the cover, if you remember the artwork for the original album, the back cover prominently features a photo of Drake leaning against a wall while a man quickly walks past him. There were some outtakes from that photo session. I used one of the outtakes to replace the front photo. I otherwise kept the art the same, except I changed the title.

Also, here's another alternate I considered, that I colorized.

Friday, April 27, 2018

Nick Drake - Last Session - Non-Album Tracks (1974)

In 1974, two years after the release of "Pink Moon," Nick Drake returned to the recording studio to record another album. Unfortunately, he died before the album was completed.


Four of the songs were released in 1979. Since then, a few other things have come out  Most importantly is "Tow the Line," a fifth song sung by him, officially released in 2004. Then there's an unreleased instrumental from 1972 ("Plaisir d'Amour") which I'm including here because I don't want to touch the great Pink Moon album. Finally, there's another unreleased instrumental from 1974 that's said to be him just doodling around while testing the recording o equipment. It's nice, but very repetitive, so I edited it down some to make it more listenable.

When you put all that together, you're left with less than 20 minutes of music. That makes it half of an album. Normally, I would try to put it with something else to make for a longer listen, but I think in this case it's good if it stands on its own, to better understand his state of mind shortly before his death. He did additional takes of some of these songs in 1974, but I'm going to put them on a different album so as to not make this one too repetitive, since they are very similar.

What a loss, that he was never able to finish this off and then go on to live a long life with a lot more music to share with the world.

01 Plaisir d'Amour [Instrumental] (Nick Drake)
02 Rider on the Wheel (Nick Drake)
03 Black Eyed Dog (Nick Drake)
04 Hanging on a Star (Nick Drake)
05 Voice from the Mountain (Nick Drake)
06 Tow the Line (Nick Drake)
07 Instrumental (Nick Drake)

https://pixeldrain.com/u/AgA3sBjt

alternate:

https://bestfile.io/en/U1Y4gB9v5YvAmYn/file

Regarding the cover, there are no photos of him that I know of from the last three years of his life. And there are very few color photos of him at all - I guess people like the black and white mood to help make him look serious and sad. I used a color photo of him looking out over London and the River Thames around 1970 - looking serious and sad.  I used the Krea AI program to improve the image quality

Nick Drake - Family Tree - Alternate Version (1967)

The officially released Nick Drake album "Family Tree" is good overall, but it has some serious flaws when it comes to what songs are included or are not included.

First off, I've already moved all the Drake originals to a revamped "Time of No Reply," so they don't appear here. Secondly, there are so tracks from Drake's youth that I don't want to repeatedly here - two songs performed by his mother and him giving a clarinet recital to some relatives when he was a teen. So I cut those out.

That leaves us with just folk songs he did written by others, most of them performed by him in 1967. It's good have all of these together, because the songs he wrote are done in a very unique style and don't really fit with his cover versions. But... for some inexplicable reason, the album omitted four of his cover songs that have appeared on bootlegs and are just as good as the rest. Plus, another song  ("Betty and Dupree") is only available on rare versions of the album as a bonus track.

So this leaves out all the songs that don't fit, and adds in the five that do. It makes for a nice collection of all the songs by others that he covered (not counting "Been Smoking Too Long," which I put elsewhere because it was written by a personal friend and sounds more like a Drake original).

The album ends up being 44 minutes long, which would have been a fine length had it come out in the late 1960s. I didn't make any changes to the cover.

01 Winter Is Gone (Nick Drake)
02 All My Trials (Nick & Gabrielle Drake)
03 Betty and Dupree (Nick Drake)
04 Strolling Down the Highway (Nick Drake)
05 Cocaine Blues (Nick Drake)
06 Black Mountain Blues (Nick Drake)
07 Tomorrow Is a Long Time (Nick Drake)
08 If You Leave Me (Nick Drake)
09 Here Come the Blues (Nick Drake)
10 Blues Run the Game (Nick Drake)
11 My Baby So Sweet (Nick Drake)
12 Milk and Honey (Nick Drake)
13 Kimbie (Nick Drake)
14 Don't Think Twice, It's All Right (Nick Drake)
15 Courting Blues (Nick Drake)
16 Summertime (Nick Drake)
17 Let's Get Together (Nick Drake)

https://www.upload.ee/files/15110984/NickDr_1967_FamlyTreeAlternateVersion_atse.zip.html


The album cover is simply the official cover, unchanged.

Thursday, April 26, 2018

Nick Drake - Time of No Reply - Alternate Version (1969)

Nick Drake's music is special. The three albums released in his lifetime - Five Leaves Left, Bryter Layter, and Pink Moon - are perfect as they are. But... all the music that has been released since his death have come out in ways that need serious rearranging.

I'm greatly puzzled by the musical decisions of the Drake estate. For instance, Drake recorded five essential songs with vocals on them in one last recording session in 1974. Four of them were released in 1979. The fifth one "Tow the Line" wasn't released until 2004. Why?! I could go on and on about puzzling decisions like that. If it's because they only discovered some recordings later, that's strange too since he's had such a small body of recorded work, and no career of recorded concerts.

It seems to me the rest of his music needs to be organized in a more logical fashion. I'm keeping the album title "Time of No Reply" from his most well known posthumous release, and keeping about half the songs. But I'm repurposing it to contain all of his original songs (plus one song - "Been Smoking Too Long" - by a friend) that aren't on the three albums released in his lifetime or from his 1974 recording session. If I do that, the album is 42 minutes long, which is a fine album length for that era.

The other songs from the original "Time of No Reply" will be moved to other albums that will follow here soon. I have four more albums from him on the way (plus the original three) that should logically sort out the rest of his catalog.

I've included a few short instrumentals that are widely available on bootlegs but have inexplicably remained officially unreleased. These were recorded on a tape recorder, and each of them comes to a sudden halt in mid-song when the recorder gets turned off. So I faded the songs out at the very end of each, rather than have the mellow mood of his music jolted by the loud click of the recorder being turned off.

I included the version of "Time of No Reply" with strings because I plan to put the string-less version on a different album where it will fit better. You'll see what I mean soon.

01 Time of No Reply [String Arrangement] (Nick Drake)
02 I Was Made to Love Magic (Nick Drake)
03 Joey (Nick Drake)
04 Clothes of Sand (Nick Drake)
05 Brittle Days I [Instrumental] (Nick Drake)
06 Mayfair (Nick Drake)
07 Been Smoking Too Long (Nick Drake)
08 Strange Meeting II (Nick Drake)
09 Brittle Days III [Instrumental] (Nick Drake)
10 They're Leaving Me Behind (Nick Drake)
11 Blossom (Nick Drake)
12 Far Leys [Instrumental] (Nick Drake)
13 Bird Flew By (Nick Drake)
14 Rain (Nick Drake)
15 Come into the Garden (Nick Drake)
16 Brittle Days II [Instrumental] (Nick Drake)

https://pixeldrain.com/u/k9s5ZLvU

alternate:

https://bestfile.io/en/GfyxjhwPlCtAXDU/file

Note that the album cover is the same as the original, but cropped slightly to remove some text at the bottom touting the number of previously unreleased songs and so on. 

Also, I year or so after I first posted this album, I colorized the black and white original.  I also used the Krea AI program to improve the image quality