Monday, May 14, 2007

Six Degrees of Paul Kantner

It's shaping up to be Paul Kantner Day here at The Weight:

So this is just amazing. Read Anthony DeCurtis' review of Jackson Browne's "For Everyman". Names mentioned: PAUL KANTNER, David Crosby, Stephen Stills, Graham Nash, Jackson Browne, Glen Frey, Don Henley, Joni Mitchell, Greg Allman, and Bonnie Raitt. I love music connections!

For Everyman
Jackson Browne
Asylum 5067
Released: November 1973
Chart Peak: #43
Certified Platinum: 5/16/89




The title track of Jackson Browne's second album, "For Everyman," was a response to the escapist vision of Crosby, Stills and Nash's "Wooden Ships." As violence, fear and paranoia overtook Sixties utopianism, "Wooden Ships" (written by Crosby and Stills, along with Paul Kanter of the Jefferson Airplane) imagined a kind of hipster exodus by sea from a straight world teetering on the edge of apocalypse. "We are leaving/You don't need us," the song declared.

Browne wasn't giving up so easily. As David Lindley's guitar eases the introspective "Sing My Songs to Me" seamlessly into "For Everyman," Browne sings in his characteristic long, fluid lines: "Everybody I talk to is ready to leave with the light of the morning/They've seen the end coming down long enough to believe that they've heard their last warning.../But all my fine dreams, well-thought-out schemes to gain the motherland/Have all eventually come down to waiting for Everyman." Deliverance must come for everyone, Browne insisted, not just hippie troubadours.

To his credit, Crosby sings harmony with Browne on "For Everyman." In fact, the L.A. all-stars turned out in full force to support the young man who was the songwriter of the moment on a Seventies scene that was just emerging as a cultural force. The scene blended high ideals, literary aspirationand California-style pleasure seeking, while the sound merged folk rock and country. Glenn Frey co-wrote "Take It Easy," this album's opening number, with Browne -- it had already been a hit for the Eagles -- and he sings harmony on the loose-limbed, honky-tonk rave-up "Red Neck Friend." Joni Mitchell plays piano on "Sing My Songs to Me." Don Henley adds a vocal to "Colors of the Sun," as does Bonnie Raitt on the delicate folk ballad "The Times You've Come." Browne also delivers his own world-weary version of "These Days" -- a song of his that Nico had recorded on Chelsea Girl and that Gregg Allman had performed, definitively, on his debut solo album, Laid Back.

Browne is still searching for his true voice on For Everyman. Is he the genial rogue of "Red Neck Friend" or th emystical dreamer of "Our Lady of the Well"? He will find that voice the following year on his masterpiece, Late for the Sky. But on For Everyman, he was testing his various talents with obvious joy, because, like his audience, he was just discovering them.

- Anthony DeCurtis, Rolling Stone, 8/5/99.

2 comments:

Anonymous said...

I like connections too, this group of people including all the Eagles, Linda Ronstadt and Nicolette Larson had a lot of cross-pollination on many albums. Another interesting one to check out is Don Henley’s End Of The Innocence, which has Bruce Hornsby co-writing and playing piano on the title track, Patty Smyth singing back-up on How Bad Do You Want It, Axl Rose adds his signature high pitch squeal on I Will Not Go Quietly, Mike Campbell and Stan Lynch of Tom Petty and the Heartbreakers adding some guitar and keys on The Last Worthless Evening and The Heart Of The Matter, Take 6 lending vocal accompaniment on New York Minute and Shangri-La, Melissa Etheridge and Edie Brickell harmonize in Gimme What You Got, while you can hear Sheryl Crow in the background on If Dirt Were Dollars. Also appearing Danny Kortchmar from the Fugs and Fabulous Thunderbirds, jazz saxophonist, Wayne Shorter, David Paich and Jeff Porcaro from Toto and J.D. Souther.
Arguably this album could have been called Don Henley and Friends. Anyway, I wonder how many degrees it would take to get from say Buddy Holly to say Bowling For Soup, maybe not as far apart as I think they are. The are both from Texas....“If dirt were dollars, I wouldn’t worry anymore”

WeightStaff said...

Very cool info. Thanks for writing in. Any time you want to share some info, drop us an email. Thanks!