23rd & 24th October, 2006

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Details of Rod at The Luckman in November - click here

 

 

 

 

 

Photo by Edward Habib McKuen. ©2006 by Stanyan Audio Video Archives

A Thought for Today

If you insist on walking around with a bull’s-eye on your back, expect the occasional wound.

 

How I Spent My Summer Vacation: Part 1

Some vacation! I really thought this year I would have one . . .it was all planned out. I’d drive up to the high desert, find a motel in some little town when the gas started running low and just spend a few weeks incommunicado. No laptop, no telephone or newspapers, just some brain rest time. A visit with a few of the groundhogs and lizards. So much for summer sunshine plans.

As summer was a-comin’ in I received an e-mail from the head bear at Bear Family Records. The long planned Bear Box containing 7 CD’s (each 80 minutes plus) with everything I recorded released and unreleased for RCA was finally on again. They needed a couple of dozen more unpublished photos from the archives and a 14,000 (yep, FOURTEEN THOUSAND) word essay from me covering each of the couple hundred tracks. And they needed it yesterday. A week or two of yesterday’s later I completed it. Here is the introduction.

Some thoughts on words and music of a time gone by…

My years under contract to RCA were some of the most productive of my career. I met and worked with the best arrangers and musicians in Hollywood, London and Paris, and I could not have asked for a better, more knowledgeable producer than Neely Plumb.

Neely was not just accommodating and supportive but 'hands on' all the way. He never let me get away with anything less than the best performance he felt I was able to give. If it wasn't there on the first take, he'd pull it out of me by the fifth; tenth if necessary. He loved my songs and appreciated my vocal quality. We bonded immediately.

Early on, he learned that -- unlike some of his other artists -- I preferred a sustained performance, meaning that splices and bouncing snippets of vocals from track to track on the tape was pretty much out of the question. Good or bad, I wanted my vocals to have a beginning, middle, and an end. Songs are stories; you don't interrupt them at bar #44 on the first take with a phrase from take six.

My own production instincts have always led me to concentrate on getting the perfect instrumental backing track while the orchestra was assembled in the studio, and going for the vocal later. The musicians' union frowned on overdubbing, but the rule was seldom enforced. I liked to overdub because it allowed me to concentrate on shading the vocal once the band track was complete. If Neely and I had done our job correctly (listened hard enough), the instrumental tracks were as close as we could get to perfection and I would have laid down an acceptable guide (or scratch) vocal track. Later, in a booth by myself with earphones on, low lights for atmosphere, and Neely policing my voice from the control room, I could concentrate on singing the song the way I meant it to be sung.



Rod and brother Edward prior to an RCA session. Photo by Rick Strauss, 1967

If you write your own material, you have a built-in feeling of how it should be performed, and Neely and I were always on the same page concerning interpretation. The demos I did for artists of the period, Sinatra, Mathis, The Kingston Trio, Johnny Cash, Bobby Goldsboro, Waylon Jennings, Johnny Desmond, Glenn Yarbrough, Jimmie Rodgers and others nearly always ended up being the basis for their finished arrangements. I confess to being proud of that.

Songwriters can be a grumpy lot; complaining about how singers glide over a line or swallow an important word or just don't get it as far as a lyric is concerned. I'm pretty touchy about how a song of mine is treated the first time out, after all my songs are indeed my kids. But after a work has been done well a few times by singers who got it, I can smile at some of the whippings a line or a musical phrase receives at the hands of those uncaring or in a hurry.

Changing the words or music, that's another matter. Frank Sinatra, the singer who appreciated songwriters more than any vocalist I ever met, was also the hippest of all singers. Despite his love of words and wordsmiths, he was famous for substituting ‘ring-a-ding-dings’ and other things where the author had indicated something else. He once showed me the perfect rejoinder to this practice, a telegram from Cole Porter. The message consisted of a single six-word phrase, "I'll write 'em, you sing 'em." It was signed, "Love, Cole." Whoops. Frank told me he carried the Porter wire with him all the time. "It keeps me straight," he said.

By the time I arrived at RCA in 1965, I had begun to do concept albums. I enjoy order in everything except my surroundings. My room, like my personal life, is a wreck, but enough about that. One day, I'll clean the house and surprise everybody. By 'concept,' I don't necessarily mean format, but a premise – like day always following night.

Until we started putting this box together, I never realized that having a concept mind set could get me into trouble. Assembling this collection wasn't made any easier by being a record collector who already owned and loved dozens of Bear Family sets. Each of them has a prescribed order and the one rule that nearly always applies is to master the tracks session by session in chronological order. This always makes sense from the historical point of view, and more often than not it's an added treat for the fan and listener who is given the rare chance to hear his favourite artist grow.

The singer has a voice but no set style, and then gradually as you listen you hear a unique sound begin to develop. For that kind of thrill try listening to the Hank Snow, Doris Day or Frankie Laine Bear Family collections in sequence.

Spectacular performances, hidden gems, wrong turns, sometimes less than serviceable material, big hits, followed by a disc not quite dross and the final recovery and triumph is all part of the fun that rests inside a Bear Family Box. It's as if the compact disc format was invented by bears for bears.



Richard Weize & Rod discuss the RCA/Bear Box over dinner in Los Angeles. Photo by Paul Surratt circa 2001

Richard Weize, the chief bear and take-no-prisoners producer/ discographer is a collector himself, so how could I possibly be accorded my own Bear Family Box without conforming to his regimen? Without belabouring the point any longer I hope it's enough to say we arrived at a sensible solution. We would retain the original programming on each of the RCA albums and then add the supplemental material from the period to the remainder of each disc. Separating the album and the unused masters, out-takes, alternate takes and demos would be an Entre' acte consisting of one of my instrumental compositions. It works for us; we hope it works for you.

Finally, I often feel like the luckiest man alive. For more decades than I can count on a single hand I have been able to make a living at what I love and do best, writing and performing my own work. All along the way great artists have found many of my songs and made them their own. The treats in my life continue to far outnumber the tricks.

A few weeks ago a good friend e-mailed me Johnny Cash’s newly released recording of “Love’s Been Good to Me.” It was one of the last songs Johnny ever recorded and his reading of it nearly broke my heart but it left me smiling, grateful and humbled.



Johnny Cash & Rod in Nashville during rehearsal for an episode of Cash’s TV series. Photo by M. James, ABC-TV.

Lately one of the most all encompassing projects to fill up my life has been producing an album of my songs thoughtfully rendered by an old friend Petula Clark. It will come as no surprise to friends or fans that my admiration for Petula has no boundaries. She recorded more than two dozen tracks for this project and I am
wrestling with the unenviable task of narrowing that number down to 14 or 15 for her tentatively titled Sunshine & Solitude CD. All day I have been listening to the final track she laid down. “Seasons in the Sun”, my adaptation of Jacques Brel’s Le Moribond is perhaps one of my best known and most recorded works, so let me go on record as saying that her remarkable, restrained and knowing rendition of it is definitive. She got it, she nailed it.

Rod and Petula Clark

Yes, the treats and unexpected presents keep arriving and certainly not the least of them is my very own Bear Box containing all of my output beside the wagging tail of one of my favorite animals, Nipper the RCA mascot.

Rod McKuen, Sunday 5:40Am August 20th, 2006 Holmby Hills, California

Now then do I know the exact date the Bear/RCA Box will be available? I do not, but I am told it will be soon. Stay tuned. I can tell you that in a couple of weeks you will be able to order Petula Clark’s new Christmas single. “Simple Gifts” & “Thank You for Christmas” from Stanyan House.

Petula’s “Sunshine & Solitude, The Songs of Rod McKuen” will be issued on CD in January. More about that in “How I Spent My Summer Vacation, Part 2.

Click on the Stanyan House logo to buy Rod McKuen books, CD's and lots more

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Catch Rod McKuen live!

Click on the links below for details of concerts and appearances.

ROD McKUEN CONCERTS

ROD McKUEN APPEARANCES

notable birthdays

Monday 23 October
Eid-Al-Fitr Begins at Sundown / Labor Day (New Zealand)

Sarah Bernhardt o Johnny Carson o Michael Crichton o James Daly o Diana Dors o Gertrude Ederle o Doug Flutie o Ellie Greenwich o Senator John H. Heinz III o Emily Kimbrough o Martin Luther King III o Al Leiter o Gummo Marx o Pele o Ned Rorem o Frank Rizzo o Judy Stoner o "Weird" Al Yankovic

Tuesday 24 October
Eid-Al-Fitr / United Nations Day

F. Murray Abraham o Gilbert Becaud o Luciano Berio o Priscilla Blackie o The Big Bopper (J.P. Richardson) o George Crumb o Claudine Engbeck o D'Marie Ewing o Ben Gillies o Dorothy Gray o Moss Hart o Kevin Kline o Antony van Leeuwenhoek o Mainbocher o Monica o David Nelson o J.P. "Big Bopper" Richardson o Sonny Terry o Dame Sybil Thorndike o Y.A. Tittle o Rafael Trujillo o Phil Watson (hockey) o Jack Warner o B.D. Wong o Bill Wyman

Rod's random thoughts October isn’t just the month we wait for frost, it is the time frost waits to tell us that it is time for change... that change is coming whether we approve or not.

Don’t surmise or assume the truth; hang around for proof.

Courage has a clear head and is not afraid of making friends.

THE TRUTHFUL LOVER
for Chen Sam

How fragile are the dreams
                        that cross and meet
and make up love.
As need is but a plain name for desire
so too the lies that lovers use in conquest
should be held to light,
cost and consequence not pushed aside.

Whenever love comes calling in the night
                     truth bends a little.
That is to be expected.
Love is a non-exclusive instrument.
It is a savings bank,
interest computed and compounded
high above the principal.
It is a place to gather
where lover and beloved
             never come as equals.
And yet the body at its widest
is no wider than the brain that drives it.

Who is the truthful lover,
                      how can we know?
Supposing we pass over that one
who seems like all the rest,
           but only comes by once?

How is Aphrodite now and where is she?
And if she called us each by name
would we discern her voice
in crowded room and reverie?
The questions pile. The answers
run down through the distance
                 like a world unwinding.

In love there is no training ground,
only happy accidents.

-from Rusting in the Rain, 2003

 
    AND FINALLY

A very happy birthday to Priscilla Blackie the woman behind the man behind the PC at the A Safe Place To Land website. And speaking of Mrs. Blackie, her old man Ken stops by on Wednesday for his weekly outing. I’ll be here to see what he’s about this week so join me.

On Thursday I’ll announce a couple more appearances before the end of the year. One in Pittsburgh in November and two in Phoenix in early December.

Sleep warm.

RM, Holmby Hills, CA. 22 October, 2006 8:40PM PDT

 
© 1962, 1971, 1973, 1999, 2003, 2006 by Stanyan Music Group & Rod McKuen. All Rights Reserved
Webmaster: Ken Blackie • Birthday Research by Wade Alexander • Poems from the collection of Jay Hagan •
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