Casey Kasem’s Rock n’ Roll Goldmine - The San Francisco Sound

by admin on August 4, 2010 · 2 comments

in Rock

Casey Kasem's Rock n' Roll Goldmine - The San Francisco Sound

One of rock music’s golden eras is spotlighted in The San Francisco Sound, which features some of the artists who emerged from the Bay Area in the mid-to-late 1960s. There’s no arguing that various trappings of San Francisco culture at the time (the hippies and their flower power; the rampant consumption of LSD) now seem “dated,” as host Casey Kasem puts it. But even if these performances aren’t great from a purely audiovisual standpoint, there’s a certain timeless appeal to son [Read More...]

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Sy August 4, 2010 at 6:35 am
This review is from: Casey Kasem’s Rock n’ Roll Goldmine - The San Francisco Sound (DVD)

The six tracks in this 1987 DVD are presented by Casey Kasem, and include clips from some interviews, and footage of drug abusers, caught up in the prospect and excitement of turning their freedom into license, which is always a sorry sight.
Most of the musical footage is of poor audio/visual quality (some of it downright awful), and total time is 39 minutes.
A curiosity piece that will take you down memory lane if you’re a “boomer” and worth at least a rental to see Janice Joplin and Big Brother in their early days of rock and roll/blues artistry.

1: Them and Van Morrison singing “Domino”. I’ve never been a Van Morrison fan, so this, being fuzzy as well, doesn’t appeal to me.
2: Janice Joplin and Big Brother and the Holding Company singing “Ball and Chain”. This is the only 14 carat gold in the bunch, and it’s superb. Janice is riveting, and Big Brother as well, a band that sadly fell along the wayside in the Joplin rise to fame and fortune. Peter Albin, Dave Gets, with Sam Andrew and James Gurley on guitars are terrific. This cut is in black and white.
3: Grateful Dead in “Truckin’”. includes a Jerry Garcia interview. One for deadheads only to appreciate.
4: Santana perform “Jingo”. Psychedelic photography make it hard to see well, but one of the better tracks.
5: Country Joe and the Fish singing “Feel Like I’m Fixing to Die Rag”. This is the worst of the worst, so bad you’ll need the “skip” button. Includes an interview with Joe McDonald. This is also in b&w.
6: Steve Miller Band with “Livin’ in the USA”. Blurry but one of the better tracks musically.

Ursa August 4, 2010 at 9:27 am
This review is from: Casey Kasem’s Rock n’ Roll Goldmine - The San Francisco Sound (DVD)

Music is a great activity for people who like to perform, and Janis Joplin comes across as great in her delivery of “Ball and Chain”, addressing the audience with every frazzled nerve of her tortured existence. I have been familiar with four of the six songs on this DVD for so many years that about the only thing Casey Kasem was capable of telling me about the performers was that Van Morrison suffered from stage fright. It certainly seems to be true. He seems to freeze up when the camera is on him, and singing “Domino” shouldn’t be that hard, but he barely spits it out. I already had five Grateful Dead DVD discs, so seeing this one is just a chance to see younger versions of Jerry Garcia, Bob Weir, Bill Kreutzmann, and a little bit of Phil Lesh. There is a keyboard player off to the left of Jerry, who can be heard three or four times on “Truckin,” but I’m not sure who it was, and he might have been filling in for Pigpen during one of the major health problems that afflicted the original Dead player I never get to see.

I know all the words to the Fish cheer and “Feel Like I’m Fixin’ To Die Rag” so I was mainly interested in how much kazoo Country Joe and the Fish would play this time around. Joe McDonald explains how it only took twenty minutes to write the song, once an old Dixie tune popped into his head. Joe takes himself seriously as a composer, but once he gets the first verse done, he steps out of the way and lets the rest of the band each take a verse. “Just hope and pray that if they drop the bomb, they drop it on the Viet Cong” still seems to be one of the best nuking lines in rock history, and it is nice that Joe is willing to let someone else sing it, or “Be the first one on your block to have your boy come home in a box.” I haven’t seen some of the band members since the last time I saw the movie “Woodstock,” when the largest crowd ever to sing along had a chance to do the later version of the fish cheer.

Santana: the band was at Woodstock a few years after this performance, and the drummer looks younger on this DVD than when I saw that movie. Steve Miller also looks young on this DVD, but I don’t recall seeing pictures of Steve Miller ever. I listened to his music, but the best line seemed to be, “Somebody give me a cheeseburger.”

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