Tuesday, November 29, 2011

Parakeet Hero (God Is In The Details): Roy Wood's Music Book Is Released






Shazam Period


Tonight I am a hero to my parakeets.

          As I’ve previously mentioned, Skip and Flip live inCaroline’s office.  Their large birdcage is adjacent to the Mac that houses our digital music collection, but they're mostly left free to fly around, which they do all day.  The birds love music and Caroline frequently entertainsthem with tunes and sound effects thatcolor the various news stories she reads and websites she visits. 

          Skip and Flip have a distinct preference for military-style music – marchesand the like, which tend to accompany stories about the personal appearances of world leaders, e.g. Queen Elizabeth II, Hugo Chavez, Vladimir Putin.  Our birds are lively,interested -- “there and aware” -- of nature’s sounds just beyond the office's casement green glass windows.

     Roy Wood’s Music Book arrived from Amazon UKtoday.  It’s Roy’s firstsignificant record release in a very long time and signals, I guess, that this great artist has finally madepeace with EMI Records (just in time for EMI's recently announced Armageddon).







Skip and Flip


        Music Book collects Roy Wood music spanning his work in TheMove, Electric Light Orchestra (Roy’sBraniac brainchild; he abandoned and ceded the group to Jeff Lynne for still mysterious reasons aftertheir first startling, groundbreaking lp), the super-successful (in the UK only) Wizzard, and his extraordinary solo music beginning with Boulders and extending to his frame-breaking present-daybig brass band efforts.

               The anthology evencontains a couple of curious “cover” interpretations like Nancy Sinatra’s version of TheMove’s iconic (it was the first track ever played on BBCRadio One and the subject of a successful libel suit by then-Prime Minister Harold Wilson) “FlowersIn The Rain” and Status Quo’s excellent take on the pivotalearly Move single “I Can Hear The Grass Grow.”

              What the birds really love, though, are Roy’s dreamy swingy ballads – “LookThrough The Eyes Of A Fool,” “Forever,” “Any Old Time Will Do” and “This Is TheStory of My Love.”  They approveof the fact that Roy, an awesome, sometimes raunchy lead guitarist (e.g., his version ofMann-Weill’s “Don’t Make My Baby Blue” on The Move’s Shazam) eschews that typeof material here in favor of pocket symphonies like Wizzard’s SeeMy Baby Jive,” “Ball Park Incident” and “I Wish It Could Be Christmas Everyday.”






Wizzard Roy


          Watching Skip and Flip bobbing their heads, glancing obliquely in synchronous motion at the ceiling and deliberately and slowly marching in place, I know we're all on to a goodthing.  I find myself parroting (orparakeeting) their movements.    Obviously, they’re responding to the music (including what Roy’s voice intonates and communicates,of course) and not directly to the delicate, clever lyrics, which have always painted the portrait of ahighly aestheticized, romantic man keen on keeping the stoic mask in place, butwith eyes peering through, revealing everything.  Roy Wood's music is God-in-the-decorative details come alive, ornamentation wordlessly explaining everything.






The Move (l-r: Roy, Ace, Bev, Trevor, Carl)


          Music Book is a major release (36 tracks), which will probably notreach the large audience it deserves.  Butit’s great to have this material collected in one place, beautifullyremastered, bright and new for Christmas.  It's a gift we and Roy both deserve this year.






Electric Light Orchestra (l-r: Roy, Jeff, Bev)


Confession:   

          My two most intense rock and roll memories are hearing Shazam for the firsttime (just the sound of it gripped my brain like nothing else ever has on initial acquaintance)and attending my first Roy Wood performance at Annie Haslam's War Childbenefit concert at Irving Plaza in New York sometime during the 1990s.   Long after The Move's and Wizzard's heyday, most of the audience had never seen Royplay live  before (his U.S. touring history was legendarily spotty and negligilble) and he was definitely the main event that night in Manhattan.  With Cheap Trick ablybacking him, it was fascinating to see  every other act on the bill (consisting ofkey members of Procul Harum, Yes, the Moody Blues and others) standing rapt, visiblyin the wings to witness Roy’s astonishing presentation.   That sort of thing never happens.





Boulders Roy playing everything






3. Green Glass Windows (Roy Wood Link)

4.  Interested parties can visit Skip and Flip bio link, line 2 above. 

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