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My Teenage Daze

For the past several weeks I’ve been experiencing writers block. The first time I can say this has happened since I started TheBluesBlogger site. Usually I’m never at a loss for words when it comes to discussing music… So I thought perhaps if I share a little of what’s presently going on, it might help me work through this.

After months of doctor visits and collecting data, my wife and I received the news that our 13 year old son was diagnosed with Asperger’s Syndrome… I will not discuss
the details of Asperger’s as we are just beginning to understand ourselves. However, if you’re interested or curious, Tony Attwood’s site is a terrific source of information… The good news is my wife and I are beginning to find some answers to many questions. Now we can move forward with more awareness and structure in hopes of a bright future for our son…

I think we forget how confusing and challenging life tends to be in those teenage years. You face the confrontation of bullies at school, while trying to figure out all the things you have to do to please everyone. And all this while going through hormonal changes you know little about…

Just the other day my son asked the question,

“ Dad, what was going on in your life when you were my age?”

As I pondered this question, I started to drift off… It was always music that was my escape when life was hard to figure out…

During The Early Seventies

when my brother left town, some of his friends adopted me as their kid brother. As a result, my love of music continued to flourish while hanging out with the older crowd. I guess I was cool enough, because they took me everywhere. I never really had friends my own age because my interests were seen as peculiar to a normal 13 year old.

In my early teens, I started accepting the fact that the vibe was different in my household. Times were tough for us financially, and my parents had no other choice but to sell the house. My brother and sister would then move out and start a new chapter in their lives. This was probably my biggest angst at the time. The change in tone in my household was the reason I searched for different styles of music to occupy my imagination. It was just too quiet around the house…

In 1971 my parents and I lived in a small apartment. The scene was set for brand new tensions between my father and me… After my dad’s heart attack in 1969 things changed. It was a far cry from the times I remembered in the sixties… And I recall getting lost in my love of music and my newfound fascination for writing.

My son too would experience a father who suffered a heart attack. But modern medicine and technology would make life a whole lot easier for my family as compared to what we faced back in the sixties. ~tbb

Hymn of the Seventh Galaxy

I remember receiving a new stereo system for my bar mitzvah. Man, I think my father regretted the day he agreed to that purchase. I would spin stuff on that turntable that no one ever heard before. As crazy as it may seem, it was the following two Return to Forever albums that set the tone for my teenage daze…

I recall most of the group I hung out with totally blown away by Return to Forever’s album Hymn of the Seventh Galaxy. In 1973, RTF’s music had more of a jazz/rock feel. This album was very melodic, but lacked the traditional jazz sense of their first two albums. It’s an LP that started my awareness of fusion. There were sounds on that record that were completely new to me and to many others. It combined elements of psychedelic rock, jazz, funk and avant-garde jazz… Not something that went over well with my father.

The guitar playing of Bill Connors was a central focus for me. I was speechless as I tried to digest everything that was taking place. Connors would leave shortly after the band’s release of Hymn of The Seventh Galaxy; deciding to focus on a solo career. He didn’t have the same reputation as his successor Al Di Meola, but Connor’s guitar sound and scorching licks remained the talk of the fusion world for years to come.

Where Have I Known You Before

was the band’s fourth album. It marked even more changes to the group’s style and line-up at the time. Corea explored a more synthesized sound and together with Stanley Clarke, Lenny White and the debut of then 19 year old guitarist Al DiMeola, created a rock filled funky jazz masterpiece.

The band continued to echo the sentiments of other well known artists such as John McLaughlin & The Mahavishnu Orchestra and Weather Report; music that also fueled my imagination. The new sounds on these albums would increase the band’s commercial success… Return to Forever helped expand and characterize the fusion genre. They were responsible for adopting many rock fans into the jazz world for the first time…

During Those Teenage Daze

I thought about all the effort that must go into the making a final product like the ones I have mentioned here… And I fantasized how cool it would be to one day work in a recording studio as an engineer…

Return to Forever and its incredibly tight musicianship inspired me. Five years later, I would move and pack many of my albums; these being two LP’s making trip with me to New York City in 1979. The move eventually brought a new set of experiences I never would have dreamed…

When RTF Reunited in the Summer 2008

I was asked by their online promotion team to include a spot on TheBluesBlogger site. It certainly felt like I came full circle from my bizarre teenage influences to the honor of this request. If you’re interested that post can be found by clicking the link located here.
( Return to Forever will be coming out with a new CD called “Returns” on March 2nd,2009; assembled from last year’s tour. And also a live DVD that is to be announced in the near future.)

As I come back to the present times, I want to take the opportunity to tell my son how very proud I am of him. Son, I know it’s not easy, but we are all here for you. Life will toss many curves, but stick to your convictions and be patient. Keep studying and don’t lose your sense of humor. Stay positive and you’ll find your niche… And thanks for being there for me too!

What were you listening to when you were a teenager? How many of you were digging the sounds of Return to Forever in the seventies? Any thoughts musical or otherwise you would like to share? Your comments are most welcome.

With All My Heart,

TheBluesBlogger

And The Winner of Asa’s Latest CD Is:

Congratulations To:

songstress51

Thanks to everyone who entered… Asa’s latest release on Mercer Street Records is a wonderful album. I look forward to hearing more from this incredibly gifted artist in the future.

Songstress51, I’ll be emailing you shortly to get your mailing address. Thanks for subscribing to TheBluesBlogger.com.

Stay tuned everyone, I will be back soon with my latest post…

The Blues Blogger

Blind Faith: Flashback Summer 1969

I would run into the house because Mandy (a girl I went to elementary school with) would try and kiss me yet again. Not my idea of fun when I was nine years old… My brother still teases me about that to this day… ~ tbb

My brother has only recently become aware of TheBluesBlogger site… Eight years older than me, he is a major source of inspiration for many of the posts you read here. I’m not sure how much of my blog he actually reads, but I know he’s checking this post out.

Whenever I think back to my childhood and the room my brother and I shared, what I remember most is his guitar playing. It was a sound I had always known… When I was born my folks placed my cradle in his room. I’m sure it was a real joy to have a newborn as a roommate… He would practice every night. I don’t think he ever slept much.

The years passed, and by the time I was five, music and guitar scales were embedded into my mind. By the time I was nine, I was actually able to appreciate my brother’s new found treasure back then; his Blind Faith album.

Blind Faith

was an English blues-rock band that consisted of Eric Clapton, Ginger Baker, Steve Winwood and Ric Grech. The band’s only album came in August 1969… The history of the group begins with the break-up of Clapton’s and Winwood’s bands Cream and Traffic… Steve Winwood started to jam with his friend Clapton in the basement of his house in Surrey, England. Satisfied with the sessions, they made the decision to recruit Cream drummer Ginger Baker and bassist Ric Grech. The album Blind Faith was recorded during the Spring of 1969 at Olympic Studios with producer Jimmy Miller.

The band did a short tour of Scandinavia; rehearsing at smaller gigs to prepare for bigger audiences in The United States and U.K… Blind Faith made their U.S. debut in front of 20,000 fans at Madison Square Garden… The main problem with the tour was the band had barely enough material to fill an hour. In order to complete a show, they relied on old Cream and Traffic songs. Naturally, these were a real crowd favorite. Clapton on the other hand, was exactly where he didn’t want to be. “Stuck in yet another so called supergroup.”

Clapton’s focus would change… Liking the soulful blues sounds of one of Blind Faith’s opening bands Delaney & Bonnie; he spent more time with them than his own band. Eventually Clapton would take more of a background role with Blind Faith, allowing Winwood to generate a more prominent role.

Blind Faith would take a #1 position on Billboard’s charts for Pop Album in both the U.S. and the UK. Despite, selling more than half a million copies within the first month of their album’s release, they would disband a year later.

Controversy

regarding Bob Seidemann’s cover art, featuring a topless pubescent girl holding a silver spaceship in her hands, were perceived as phallic. In the United States, the record company issued a different cover showing a photograph of the band… The original cover was nameless.

Clapton would take several members from Delaney & Bonnie and formed Derek and the Dominos. Ginger Baker started the Ginger Baker’s Air Force with both Grech and Winwood. But after a few shows, Winwood left with Grech to reform Traffic.

Clapton and Winwood would eventually reunite in the summer of 2007 for a performance at the Crossroads 2 concert in Chicago. They would play a number of Blind Faith songs as part of their set. And set off rumors of a possible Blind Faith reunion gig.

Toward The Fall of 1969

my brother starting making plans for his move out east. And the notion was a hard one for a nine year old to swallow. I remember listening along with him to Blind Faith’s album. Our age differences at the time had us absorbed in different things… He would concentrate on his guitar playing career. And I was caught in my youthful concerns of what tomorrow would bring. In a room were I would soon be living solo; facing not only the music, but the pressures of a tough family circumstance… It would take 10 years, but we would once again become roommates in NYC. Where we shared a new scene and many experiences together towards the end of 1979.

The year 1969 was very significant. Not only to myself, but the world around us… “Give Peace a Chance” bed-in for peace, Woodstock, and of course Neil Armstrong’s moon landing set the stage for so many important events that summer… I’ve written prior articles highlighting the music from the year 1969… When I look back, I realize the impact of all the things around me.

Where were you the summer of 1969? Did you dig the music of Blind Faith? Any events or moments that caught your imagination you would like to comment on?.. Or perhaps through memories that your parents have shared? I will resist the temptation to list these. I have mentioned a few… What events come to mind for you?

TheBluesBlogger