PAUL REVERE & THE RAIDERS
Recording years |
Main genre |
Music sample |
1960–1983 |
Pop rock |
Kicks
(1966) |
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Album
released: 1961 |
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Tracks: 1) Like, Long Hair; 2) All Night
Long; 3) Summer Time; 4) Tall Cool One; 5) Wabash Blues; 6) Concert In
"F" Sharp; 7) Beatnick Sticks; 8) Swinging Shepherd Blues; 9)
Groovey; 10) The Last Mile; 11) Road Runner; 12) Moon Dawg; 13*) Sharon
(version 1); 14*) Orbit (The Spy); 15*) Sharon (version 2); 16*) Midnight
Ride; 17*) Like Charleston. |
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REVIEW I
don’t know about you, but every time I
get to digging around the early biography of Paul Revere & The Raiders, I
get a bit of a Monty Python vibe about it. They have a bandleader, you know. You know what he’s called? He’s
called... Paul Revere. [Pause]. Paul
Revere... DICK! [Cue maniacal laughter.] According
to Paul himself, he was bullied in high school because of his middle name, but I think he’s being
too modest. After all, it is not his middle, but his last name that his wise manager advised him to drop when it was
decided that Paul’s group had to switch from «The Downbeats» (a clever, but
subtly depressing name) to something more inspiring — so they became Paul
Revere & The Raiders, heralds of the New American Revolution to come.
Rarely, if ever, has a bandleader’s real name given him at birth had a more
profound influence on his career than in this particular case. That said, from
what we know, the actual Paul Revere Dick had no more plans of «revolutionizing»
the musical trends of his lifetime in his youth than the actual Paul Revere
had of being immortalized by Henry Wadsworth Longfellow. He was an aspiring
businessman who had graduated from barber college and somehow, at the tender
age of 21, already managed to own a barbershop and a drive-in restaurant in
Caldwell, Idaho. He’d also served in the Army, and he was a pretty decent piano and organ player, with some
understanding of both the classical forms and of modern rock’n’roll (Jerry
Lee Lewis being a particular inspiration). This hobby quickly turned into a
parallel career after he’d met vocalist and sax player Mark Lindsay — who, as
legend tells us, had a dayjob selling hamburger buns at the bakery that
became the supplier for Revere’s drive-in. (In between the hamburger buns and
Paul Revere Dick, there’s probably
some sort of gross sexual joke to be made, but I really suck at those, so
feel free to make one yourself). |
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Contrary to some unverified Wikipedia information,
«The Downbeats» never recorded under that name; already their very first
single, cheekily called ʽBeatnick
Sticks’, was released on the small Californian label of Gardena in 1960 under
the «Paul Revere And The Raiders» moniker. At that time, the band consisted
of Paul himself on keyboards, Mark Lindsay on saxophone, Jerry Labrum on
drums, William Hubbard on bass, and I’m-not-exactly-sure-who on guitars; in
any case, all through the most interesting part of their career, Revere and
Lindsay were the only constants in the band, the rest of the guys usually
coming in and going out based on the classic revolving-door principle.
Actually, I’m not even sure if Lindsay is there at all on ʽBeatnik Sticks’ — the entire composition is driven
by Revere’s barrelhouse-boogie piano, with a little electric guitar solo for
distraction. It’s nothing too special, but it is worth noting that, although
the record probably came in the wake of public appetite for instrumental
bands whetted by the success of the Ventures’ ʽWalk Don’t Run’, it does not even begin to go in the same twangy,
surfy direction. Instead, Revere establishes his style as that of a
somewhat more reserved and disciplined Jerry Lee Lewis — which, if we think
about Jerry’s own origins, is basically the sound of old school boogie-woogie
greats like Pete Johnson or Amos Milburn, only with more modern production.
This choice certainly does not guarantee any greatness of the band’s early
output, but it does guarantee their own identity: pianos and organs as the
melodic center of an instrumental combo were practically unheard of in 1960,
and even if ʽBeatnick
Sticks’ failed to chart, it still must
have sounded special to anyone who actually heard it. The same could not be
said of the B-side: ʽOrbit (The
Spy)’, by contrast, did employ a twangy guitar riff, part-time Duane Eddy and
part-time James Bond, as its main theme, with Lindsay providing a sax
counterpart, and although it was certainly danceable, the Ventures did such
stuff much better — if only because the Ventures were tighter and more
virtuosic as a band, where the rhythm section was every bit as important as
the lead players. The contrast between the two numbers also shows how much
more natural the band was at sounding «silly» than «spooky». Mark Lindsay took his first lead vocal for the band
on their second single, ʽPaul Revere’s
Ride’ (later re-released as ʽMidnight
Ride’), which does indeed retell the classic story of Paul Revere to more or
less the melody of ʽJohnny B.
Goode’, thus starting the band’s novel, but funny tradition of bridging the
gap between the mythology of the American Revolution and modern pop
entertainment. If there was anything sonically special about the song,
though, it was probably the sharp, nasal, «mocking» tone of the
youthful-as-heck lead singer — which strikes me as carrying a very distinct
Sixties attitude as opposed to the Fifties and their typically deeper, more
«adult» rockabilly voices. If you tried to deceive somebody into thinking
that ʽPaul Revere’s
Ride’ was actually recorded by the likes of Herman’s Hermits, you might very
well be successful at that. In all other respects, it was a trifle whose
lyrical gimmick was not enough to ensure commercial success (in fact, I might
cautiously suppose that any teen-oriented pop song starting with "Listen my children and you shall hear..."
would automatically be a no-go for all those poor schoolchildren fed up with
Longfellow). Falling back on the instrumental circuit, the band
finally struck gold — or, at least, some other, more modestly valuable
chemical element — with their next instrumental. The syntactically odd and
semantically provocative title (ʽLike, Long
Hair’) was already intriguing enough; but what really distinguished this
overall fairly generic vocal-less piece of boogie-woogie was its intro and
outro sections, with Paul banging out a brief piano chord sequence that
totally mimicked the structural and atmospheric properties of a Beethoven /
Schumann / Grieg romantic concerto (I do not think it was a direct quotation
from any of those, though). To the best of my knowledge, no modern pop/rock
artists ever tried that before, even if most of the young piano players must
have had at least a tiny bit of classical training — from that perspective, ʽLike, Long Hair’ could easily count as the first
ever «progressive rock» song, or, at least, the great-grandmother of all
those quirky classical-meets-rock exercises like ELO’s version of ʽRoll Over Beethoven’ or ABBA’s ʽIntermezzo No. 1’ or all the jokey-lightweight
numbers by Emerson, Lake & Palmer. (For the record, "long hair" refers here
to a slang term for classical music lovers rather than kids from the British
Invasion which hadn’t even started yet. Also for the record, there are rumors
hanging about that it was actually a young and ambitious Leon Russell playing
piano on the tune rather than Paul Revere himself, but they have never been
properly substantiated, though Leon did
play with the Raiders a bit while Paul was busy proving to the U.S. Government
how much of a conscientious objector he really was.) Anyway, the performance
itself is fun, but nowhere near as wild as the average Jerry Lee Lewis piece
of boogie: Revere and his pals were clean, cautious, disciplined players,
strictly observing a certain level of energy boundaries, and neither the
piano nor the lead guitar on here ever strive to break through. My ear doth
tell me that the classical influence does not fully stop on the border between the intro/outro and the main
body of the composition; at the very least, Paul’s broad-stroke manner of
attacking the keyboard betrays the approach of a spirited classical pianist
rather than a barrelhouse banger (just try to imagine the same tune played by
Jerry Lee and you’ll end up with a completely different sound in your head).
Whether that’s actually a good thing or not is a decision that fully depends
on one’s personal philosophy of rock’n’roll. But yes, it was a little
different from the usual pattern — different enough for people to take heed,
appreciate, and even put it into the Top 50. The B-side to ʽLike, Long Hair’ was another self-penned vocal number: ʽSharon’ was a sort of
Ray-Charles-meets-early-Roy-Orbison pop-R&B hybrid with a kiddie attitude
and annoyingly high-pitched backing vocals with chipmunkified frequencies.
(There is also an alternate version available on some CD editions,
guitar-based rather than piano-driven and without the ugly backing vocals —
which, of course, still does not reveal any particular compositional genius).
But a B-side it was, and not a very good B-side; therefore, when the success
of the A-side got the Raiders and their record label thinking about an LP,
all sides ultimately agreed that the album should be completely instrumental,
in the spirit of the Ventures and other «silent» bands of the era. So Mark
Lindsay switched from singing to blowing (the sax, that is), and the boys
started to get it on — sometime in early or mid-1961, I do not know exactly
when (data on these early sessions are practically non-existent, unless you
somehow got access to Gardena’s work records). In addition to ʽBeatnik Sticks’ and the title track, the album featured only three
more original compositions, credited to Lindsay and Revere. Of these, the
pretentiously titled ʽConcert In F
Sharp’ is a minute-long musical joke that switches its tempo at least three
times, as if parodying the idea of sonata form; ʽGroovey’ is a generic surf-rock instrumental without
any idiosyncratic redemption whatsoever; and ʽThe Last Mile’ is a bit of slow, plodding blues that perfectly matches
its title, as the entire group sounds spent and out of energy. In other
words, the album does absolutely nothing to prove the Raiders’ talent as
masters of composition — but at least it does show a limited sense of musical
humor, though certainly not enough to turn the Raiders into some sort of instrumental
equivalent of the Coasters. Out of their own ideas, they turn to other
instrumentalists (and more) for inspiration, but fail on most counts, though
the failures themselves are occasionally curious and instructive. Thus, ʽAll Night Long’ used to be a great showcase for sax
player Joe Houston’s ability to harness and amplify the power of simple
repetition: the
original version from 1954 plays out like a bona fide advertisement for
the rock’n’roll capacities of the saxophone as the player diligently
demonstrates, one by one, all the stock musical phrasing of the instrument
while somehow managing to keep things exciting and even lay on extra dynamics
with each new verse. Listening to the Raiders’ version, though (which I heard
before the original), I don’t even manage to get that point — though
re-listening to it after the
original does show that Lindsay is actually trying to emulate the same vibe.
But with the Raiders, it just sounds like regular dance entertainment. Maybe
it’s because the production pushes the sax too deep into the background, so
as to give more sonic space to Revere’s piano. Maybe it’s because the sax
tone is higher and whinier, or because the blowing is messier and sloppier.
In any case, I would probably never have heard Houston’s original without
this LP, so thanks for that at least. You’d think that with Revere’s solid piano playing,
they could have at least made the Wailers’ ʽTall Cool One’
into a better proposition than the minimalistic lo-fi original — but they
only inject so much professionalism to water down its scruffy seductive
amateurishness, yet not enough to make it jaw-droppingly astonishing from a
technical point of view (again, Lindsay with his half-assed sax playing is
more to blame than Revere with his piano parts). They fare a little better
with ʽRoad Runner’
from the same band (it is at least reassuring to see how much of an influence
The Fabulous Wailers were on the Raiders), but the problem remains the same:
by making the sound formally fuller and richer, they rob the experience of
its direct, in-yer-face minimalism without compensating with extra
rock’n’roll energy. This is not to say they do not understand the
essence of the music they are playing — I mean, even when they decide to
cover ʽSummertime’
(because everyone has to cover ʽSummertime’
sooner or later), Lindsay does a credible and dutily emotional sax imitation
of the vocal part. It’s all reasonably fun and perfectly listenable, it just
doesn’t really hold up in your head, I think, because they can never think of
how to go the extra mile with any of these recreations. The same applies to
their follow-up single to ʽLike, Long
Hair’: called ʽLike Charleston’,
it was probably intended to prolong their genre-mashin’ gimmick by a
rock’n’roll interpretation of the swingin’ Twenties vibe this time — and it’s
still a little meek, meeker, I’d say, than the actual charleston compositions
as played by the likes of Rube Bloom & His Bayou Boys thirty years
earlier. Still, it is hard to deny the important legacy of
the title track, just as it is hard to deny that in the overall «starved»
context of 1960–61, these instrumentals may have offered a straw of hope to
many a desperate whippersnapper looking for a few minutes of pure rock’n’roll
fun. And they are also intriguing in the overall context of the legend of Paul
Revere & The Raiders — after all, few bands out there that happened to
make a big name for themselves after
the Beatles turn out to have actually been alive and kicking way before the Beatles, right? |