Friday, 15 November 2013

Sound Of The City - Charlie Gillett's Playlist 1944-1971

I'm likely going to post this at Chitlins too, when you upload a file this large, you want it to get the most action possible. I would like to assume that most of you have read some edition of Charlie Gillett's excellent book. If you haven't then you need to go buy one, they are plentiful and cheap.

In the back of that book Gillett has a 390 track playlist that only someone as crazy as my friend Cliff would set out to actually assemble in it's entirety. Well he did and it plays like one of the better musicology classes one could take. The sequencing essentially give the audio illustration of the book.

If you should notice that the list is larger than the one in your edition of the book, it is because this one incorporates all the material from all the editions. Once again, THIS IS 390 TRACKS! To do this, even in 160 mp3 requires well over a gig so it is a 7 part group of zippyshare links that are connected.

"These are the records which moved rock ’n’ roll another inch or two forward. The reasons for including each record vary, but each of them became a part of the background for anyone making records thereafter. Some are here because they brought a new musical idea into the framework of “rock’n’ roll” – piano boogie, guitar boogie, bass boogie; others redefined the use of an instrument – electric guitar, back-beat drums, electric bass, electric piano. And each new way of using a voice is represented by the person who thought of it first, usually with their first hit. The list is biased against the real giants of the era – Elvis Presley, the Beatles, Bob Dylan – whose every record tended to be a trigger for a host of imitators; for them, and for the Motown artists, a few representative records are listed, trying to catch most facets of what they did. It is easier to represent contributions by the majority of performers who only had one basic idea. Most of the records in the list were best-sellers, and they are listed in the chronological order in which they first surfaced on a national chart in the USA (pop, rhythm & blues, or country and western) or Britain. In addition to the artist, title, and record label, the recording location and producer are listed, to give an idea of the geographical shifts during the period, which saw records made in most regions of the United States and then, increasingly important through the sixties, in Britain. A few records are listed which were not hits, mostly to represent the first recording of a song which became part of the rock ’n’ roll repertoire, but occasionally to acknowledge a record whose value was recognized too late to affect its chance of making the charts. The term “producer” did not come into common use in the music industry until around 1957, so for prior recordings the terms “arranger” and “supervisor” have been used. The letters “p”,“a” and “s” are used in the following pages. Ideally, the name of the recording studio and the recording engineer would be provided too, but as such information is still largely undocumented, I have not attempted to find it. The labels listed sometimes include the original label in parentheses before the name of the label which licensed the record for national distribution; and sometimes add in parentheses the name of a parent company where the record was a hit on a subsidiary label."


Gillett, Charlie (2011-01-04). The Sound of the City: The Rise of Rock & Roll (Kindle Locations 9725-9736). Souvenir Press. Kindle Edition.

22 comments:

KingCake said...

Forgot to check the box that sends me the comments, kudos go to Unkie Cliff on this herculean compilation

LAZZ said...

Wot a stucking faggering piece of work !!!!!
Uncle Heracles indeed.

LAZZ said...

The series appears to be missing a Part 6.
Or is Part 7 mis-labelled?

LAZZ said...

OK
My conclusion (after reading your text more carefully i.e. "it is a 6 part group of zippyshare links") is that Part 7 must be Part 6.
New info is a message that says "Crackling Rose" is corrupt (the way I prefer all my women).
And my eventual file total is 369 - not 390.

Maybe Uncle Heracles has clarification?
Still stunned by the size of the achievement.
xxxxxx

pmac said...

Holy crap. The ultimate motherlode. Thank you one and all.

LAZZ said...

What I seem to have ended up short of are the following 21 tracks (which would then bring the total to 390):
Neil Diamond - Cracklin' Rosie
James Taylor - Fire And Rain
King Floyd - Groove Me
T. Rex - Ride A White Swan
Jerry Reed - Amos Moses
Dolly Parton - Joshua
Sammi Smith - Help Me Making It Through The Night
The Stylistics - You're A Big Girl Now
The Temptations - Just My Imagination
Marvin Gaye - What's Goin' On
Derek & The Dominoes - Layla
Carole King - It's Too Late
Freda Payne - Bring The Boys Home
Al Green - Tired Of Being Alone
Denise Lasalle - Trapped By A Thing Called Love
Rod Stewart - Maggie May
Isaac Hayes - Shaft
The Chi-Lites - Have You Seen Her?
Slade - Coz I Luv You
Betty Wright - Clean Up Woman
Don McLean - American Pie

Hope this info is helpful and not just a bloody annoyance.

GuitarGus said...

Three Cheers for Cliff !!!
I tried to do a similar thing years ago but many R&B songs and many others were hard to track down and I gave up ! So gracias UC again
My edition of TSOTS comes from 1984 and I have an ebook edition (at a good price from Amazon) that I'm half way through ( my third time of reading ) We all learnt a lot from good ole CG
Cheers also KC for the uploading

KingCake said...

Okay -- HERE are all 7
Charlie Gillett's Sound of The City playlist

http://www39.zippyshare.com/v/21090054/file.html
http://www39.zippyshare.com/v/28958088/file.html
http://www39.zippyshare.com/v/2626354/file.html
http://www39.zippyshare.com/v/90810937/file.html
http://www39.zippyshare.com/v/18446885/file.html
http://www16.zippyshare.com/v/49246926/file.html
http://www39.zippyshare.com/v/95248642/file.html

LAZZ said...

Cup
Runneth
Over

GuitarGus said...

OK Guys - Holding In mind what CG said about leaving out the obvious eg every Beatles, Bob Dylan etc - What did he leave out ( in your opinion ?)
This could get interesting... I hope... Or what are your top 3 ?

LAZZ said...

Not sure I can recall what the criteria were but, even looking through my little list of 21 tracks above, there are items which seem frankly a little pointless. He must have had some purpose for the inclusion of "Cracklin' Rosie" or "Ride A White Swan" or "American Pie" - even "Layla" - but they seem part of a very separate narrative, to me. For my personal taste, the list starts to get a little limp and soggy (comparatively) around 1963 - suspiciously around the time of the "British Invasion". And perhaps my eye-sight is failing badly but is there really no Aretha?

GuitarGus said...

Hi Lazz - KC has added CG's explanation/criteria to the intro above - And Aretha appears as No. 307 - Agreed how could she not!?!
Let's face it lists are fun ! And creates debate...sometimes...
Cheers

tpee said...

A labour of love and I love it. Many thanks

Jazzjet said...

Wow, this is tremendous! The bomb, as I believe young people say. Extreme kudos to Cliff.
About 10 years ago EMI released a series of city-themed compilations curated by Charlie, titled 'Sound Of The City :New Orleans (plus Memphis, Chicago, New York, Los Angeles)'. Each was a 2-CD set and only licensed for the UK, a license which expired after 3 years apparently. I imagine that there is a lot of overlap with Cliff's work but I can share them if you want.
There were a lot of Charlie Gillett shows shared on this site : http://bootsalesounds.blogspot.co.uk/search?q=charlie+gillett. Looks like the links are now dead but I have a number of them if anyone wants them.

Jazzjet said...

There are a number of Charlie's shows here too (look at the sidebar on the right of the page). Most are World Music-oriented but there are a couple of New Orleans shows as well:

http://blogs.mondomix.com/charlie-gillett.php

Jazzjet said...

In response to Guitar Gus's question about what was left out, my suggestions are :

Get Out Of My Life Woman - Lee Dorsey
Down In The Bottom - Howlin' Wolf
Frankie and Johnny - Lonnie Donegan (my personal favourite version but loads of others are available)

OK, I'll shut up now.

GuitarGus said...

Jazzjet - your offer of those CG compilations would be great - I have several of his annual World Music 2cd releases and one on Ace(UK) called 'Honky Tonk - Charlie Gillett's Radio Picks' -

Jazzjet said...

OK, I've got a few things in the pipeline but will get on it as soon as I can.

codeg said...

Jazzjet it would be really nice if you could post the Charlie Gillett city-theme compilations. Many thanks!

Jazzjet said...

GuitarGus and codeg - KC has posted the New Orleans set of Charlie Gillett's city-themed compilations. I don't know if he plans to post the others but I'll ask him and, if not, I'll post them - probably here.

Jazzjet said...

KC thinks he has the others to post (presumably at Chitlins) but, if not, he'll let me know and I'll post here. Best to keep eyes peeled I guess.

KingCake said...

You know what?...go ahead Jazzjet, I've got more stuff to post over there than I can use in 2 years - go ahead and put them here

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