A Chuck Berry recording available on record or CD for the first time? Sounds interesting, doesn't it?
Browsing the Net I recently found out about this CD: Rock n' Roll Commercials of the 1950s was published by Lady Goose Productions of Inverness, Florida in 2007. Catalogue number is 32105. The item is labeled Volume 1, but the second volume is about the 1960s thus having a different title (#32106). The 1950s CD has 50 radio commercials sung or spoken by 1950s artists such as Sinatra, Crosby, Cole and so on. Despite the title, most are not Rock'n'Roll at all, but among the artists are Little Richard, Elvis, Buddy Holly, Bill Haley and Alan Freed.
Track 49 is a radio commercial for Applebee's Restaurants and is sung by Chuck Berry - as the track listing makes us believe. Indeed this spot includes a version of No Particular Place to Go with modified text to fit to the restaurant. It has a Chuck Berry beat, but no lead guitar and the voice does not sound like Berry at all. So I asked around and none of the Berry experts believed this to be Berry singing.
If you want to check out by yourself: The only place I found listing the CD was this eBay offer. Amazon is selling the CD contents as MP3 files. Go to this page to listen to almost the complete commercial.
The CD sound quility is pretty bad, but there are some very interesting commercials by your favorite artist which you haven't heard before. And, with most tracks the artist is correctly listed, indeed.
By accident I recently found a book on Rock music published in 1977 which has some interesting comments about Johnny B. Goode.
Rolling Stone Magazine recently voted it the Greatest Guitar Song of All Times. See here: http://www.crlf.de/ChuckBerry/blog/archives/40-The-Greatest-Guitar-Song-of-All-Times.html. What a difference...
In Rockmusik (ed. Wolfgang Sander) the editor himself and his three co-authors each wrote a one-page academical review of the song. As the book is in German language, here's what you can read:
Tibor Kneif (musicologist, author of various books on rock music, professor FU Berlin): ... unoffending-lighthearted text ... artless music ... not bad, but no better than any other mass-produced title
Hans-Jürgen Feurich (musicologist, professor Universities Hildesheim, Chemnitz, Leipzig): ... not a number on the playbill, but a closing ritual ... simple identification mark [Prof. Feurich reviewed the abbreviated version at the end of the Live at the Fillmore album.]
Wolfgang Sandner (musicologist, professor University Frankfurt, journalist, FAZ): ... unpretentious rock and roll ... a rude blank mould for rock art ... coarse, raw ... prototype of rock and roll
Ulrich Olshausen (journalist, FAZ): ... agitated, but monotonous beat ... no dynamics ... instrumental break which does not add anything new other than some rhythm intermissions ... out of the ordinary only due to the text
To me this only proves that as with any art form, critics can have a huge variety of opinions. So let's get back to the facts. And there are two undisputed facts about Johnny B. Goode:
The guitar intro to Johnny B. Goode is one of the main themes every guitar player has at least tried to reproduce.
Its guitar licks and the text telling a poor guy's way to become a rock star have made Johnny B. Goode one of the most covered songs of all times.
You may or may not have noticed, but for many months the pages of the website this Blog belongs to (http://www.crlf.de/ChuckBerry/) all ended with a question:
Would you be interested in buying a printed version of this website's contents?
Many readers clicked on this question and reached a poll questionary asking whether they would be interested and if, what they would be willing to pay for it. Over 150 readers filled the form with reasonable answers. Thanks to all of you!
In the meantime I had to remove the poll because 95% to 99% of the entered data came from automatic Spam-Bots entering random data just to see what it may be good for. Well, it was good for shutting down this kind of poll
Anyway I would like to summarize the results of the poll as those who entered their opinions might want to know what others thought.
As I said, in total there were some 150 useful replies. About 75% would be interested in buying a book version of this website. This corresponds to the opinions expressed in personal communication:
The site's contents is useful.
The site contains too much information to read it online, so you want to be able to read it offline while checking your record collection.
The second question asked how much you would be willing to pay for a printed version. The replies indicate that you have a reasonable knowledge of book prices and that you would be willing to spend a reasonable amount getting a book documenting Chuck Berry's complete recording output:
The average suggested price for a black&white version is between US$20 and US$25.
The average suggested price for a color version is around US$40.
About 5 readers suggested a price of US$75 or more. Thanks for the compliments! And about the same number suggested less than US$10. Hmmm....
Unfortunately printing a book is expensive. This site's contents adds to some 150 to 200 pages in print. Selling such a book for US$25 would require that at least 1.000 copies could be printed and sold at full price. This is not to expect, though, unless it would come from a mayor publisher. And printing the book for the 100 of you who already said they would buy it rises the price to the US$100 range.
Therefore unless a professional publisher approaches me covering most of the investment, I do not see a printed version offered in a bookstore ever. Sorry!
However, what I can envision to create is not a printed, but a printable version. I already experimented with creating a nicely laid out booklet. If I ever find the time I will put all of this site's contents into a document which prints clean and readable. I will then offer a version of this document for download so you can read it offline and print for yourself.
Such a printable PDF file will not be available for free, though. I will have to charge some amount to cover the effort spent. How much would such a printable version of this site's contents be worth to you? Let me know.
Hi everybody!
All of August not a single blog message was posted here. The reason was simple: I was traveling Denmark for some weeks - on a bike. A report will be posted soon at a different place on this site.
What did we miss in terms of Chuck Berry recordings? Nothing I know of. No new releases, no strange items found. So you did not miss anything.
Something you may have missed is Berry's performance at the U.S. TV show hosted by Jay Leno. You can view the segment on YouTube at http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eVYh8i4_gh0. There's a discussion taking place at chuckberry.com about the quality of the performance with most forum writers highly praising Chuck. My view is a bit different:
Chuck's guitar 'playing' is next to inexistent. Whatever comes out of his guitar has nothing to do with the song - And I really LIKE the original recording! Also his singing misses all of the melody of the original. So just like Chuckie Boy I am disappointed when Chuck acts as a parody of himself such as in this show. Sorry!
Chuck created some of the nicest recordings of the rock music and authored a number of its greatest songs. But seeing him downplay these songs worse and worse over the last 40 years really hurts.
There's an old story about Chuck refusing to "dance" (playback) to his music in Dick Clark's Bandstand show. But seeing a performance like the one at Jay Leno's I wish he'd learned better.
In addition what you may have missed are the problems with Berry's last European tour where he missed some shows and the uncertainties about his upcoming European shows. I will not comment on those here as this site is dedicated to Berry's music - only! But I recommend you read some of the other Chuck Berry sites on the net before spending too much money on tickets.
Willing to spend $200 or $500 on Chuck Berry memorabilia? I'm certainly not. But it's interesting to see which amounts eBay sellers demand (or try to demand) for Berry items. Here are some of the more expensive Chuck Berry items currently on offer at eBay. Judge for yourself whether the price asked for is reasonable:
This is a site about music. But up to now it does not let you hear music.
However, shops such as amazon.com not only sell music as MP3 files, they also provide samples for you to listen to before you buy. Each sample is a 30 seconds excerpt from the middle of the song. Thus it does not give you the full song, but at least you get something you can check and compare.
I am wondering if I should add such song samples to this site. This would allow you to click on a song title and listen to it. It needs some re-writing of the site's pages, but if you're interested, I'd do that over the next weeks. So please let me know if you think this is worth the effort.
Here's a sample of how the end result may work: the complete contents of Berry's last studio album:
With the recent addition of news about rare Chuck Berry items offered on eBay, readers wondered how they could keep track with changes on this Blog.
I cannot add new articles on a daily basis as this is just a hobby and I have multiple other things to do which are more important than writing for this blog. So a new article is posted only once a week or less often.
How do you know if I added new contents? The trick is to use RSS. This Blog like many others offers an RSS feed providing you with the latest changes. An RSS feed is like a very short summary containing just the latest headlines.
To make use of this feature, you need to have a browser which knows what RSS feeds are. Firefox and Internet Explorer 7 (not 6) are examples. If your browser does not support RSS, there are many add-ons and seperate RSS readers out there. Simply google for RSS and your browser name and you will get tons of pages.
In Firefox an RSS capable website is shown by the RSS icon next to the site address:
In Internet Explorer 7 the RSS icon is highlighted if a site provides an RSS feed.
In either case, click on the icon and follow the prompts to subscribe to this feed.
Once done, your browser will check regularly if a new entry was posted on this Blog. The RSS information is very small, so this does not create any overhead or costs to be noticed. Depending on your browser you can now easily check for new contents. In Firefox, for instance, simply click on the newly added bookmark button to get the latest headers:
As a reader of the discography on this site you will know that by clicking on the Get It Now icon or on a record's label number you will go to a page showing you how to order re-issues or originals from Internet shops such as amazon. This is intended to simplify retrieving Berry recordings still missing in your collection. I have now extended this list of offers to include eBay items as well. Thus by choosing this option you will be presented with a list of Buy Now or auctioned items related to the record you are looking for. Usually these are re-issues, some eBay sellers also offer the originals. However, an eBay search can also guide you to some item completely unrelated. So be careful which item you bid on. Let me know if some of the eBay links do not work as expected.
Do you have/know Maxi Singles containing Chuck Berry recordings? Sure, but what is a Maxi Single?
There is one Chuck Berry record I know of, which is labeled a Maxi Single: Chess UK 6145007 of March 1972 has a prominent MAXI SINGLE printing on its label. Other than that it looks like an ordinary 7-inch 45rpm single containing Rock and Roll Music. The flip side contains two songs, though: Johnny B. Goode and School Day. So how do you name this. Morten Reff lists this record as a single, Chess called it a Maxi Single, to me it's an EP.
When I hear record collectors talking about a Maxi Single, they are usually referring to a 12-inch (LP-size) record which is played at 45rpm just like a 7-inch single. 12" singles were common in the late 70s and throughout the 80s. And yes, there have been 12-inch maxis containing Chuck Berry recordings - as you can see on the image below:
In the center of the image is the small Chess 1972 Maxi Single. To the left you see another Chess record. Chess GCHX-101 from 1988 is listed by Morten Reff as an UK EP. To me it is an Italian Maxi Single. We're both correct, probably. The 12-inch record has two tracks on each side, so calling it an EP makes sense. It was pressed in Italy, but according to Morten distributed from the UK.
To the right is the famous DINO 12CHUCK1 record from 1991. It has two Chess recordings on one side and a mixed medley of nine Berry hits on the other. Origin is the UK. This DINO record was concurrently also released as a 7-inch single and as a CD-single.
Finally in the upper center of the image you see a promotional copy of 12CHUCK1. This is a bit strange for a promotional copy as it has completely blank labels and came in a completely white sleeve. I have no idea how a DJ would know what to play from it.
Do you know any other Maxi Single containing Chuck Berry recordings? I'm talking about 12-inch 45rpm records.
Rocksmuk is a 1972 Dutch LP which has been of interest to many Rock'n'Roll collectors because it included not only well-known hits, but also interviews with Chuck Berry, Bo Diddley, Carl Perkins, and Jerry Lee Lewis.
For many years this interview was found only on this rare album until it surfaced on several bootleg LPs and CDs in the late 1980s and 1990s. Because the original Rocksmuk LP contained hits from the Chess and Sun labels, most collectors saw this as a bootleg as well. As such it is listed on this site and in Morten Reff's Chuck Berry International Directory.
A few months ago, a Dutch reader complained about this classification:
On your site I see that you call this LP a bootleg.
However, it is a legal release from 1972 (not 1973).
One side has the Chess label, the other side has the Sun label.
For both labels the distribution rights came within the same company. By the look of it I guess it was Bovema (now EMI).
In 1972 the book "Pop smuk" (fl. 9,50) was published and this LP is an addition to that book. The book also has the interviews, but of course in print.
Both book and LP were legally widely available in bookshops.
Recently Andy McKaie of Universal complained about this site's section on recommendations: The Starter's Collection (What you must have).
I welcome critical comments, especially from Andy - because I hope he welcomes mine as well. He had two things to note: my recommendations being outdated and my selection of the most important Berry CDs being illegal.
On the first topic, Andy was completely correct. I had not updated this section since 2001! Shame on me. Since then there have been several and very good compilations of Berry's work. So if my intention is to present a Starter's Collection to a fresh Berry collector, I have to present CDs which are relevant and currently on sale. Agreed!
On the second topic I disagree with Andy. He complained that the two most important compilations I recommended were not from Universal/MCA, but from UK's Charly Records. Andy insists that Charly never had the rights to produce these CDs (which was decided in court). So he says these were essentially bootlegs and I should not recommend bootlegs. Yes and no.
Yes, I shall not encourage you to produce or to buy bootlegged records. I create copyrighted material for a living and therefore I am very strict against bootlegging, may it be software, records, or copyrighted text such as this. Where this site shows or describes bootlegs, this is purely for documenting purposes. It is nowhere that you will find recommendations or even purchase information for unofficial releases here. The descriptions are for the collector only, showing that these items exist, usually because the legal copyright owners failed to produce the material in appropriate form.
Having said that, let's continue with No: In contrast to Andy's statements, in my opinion the Charly records and CDs are not bootlegs. I do not know about Charly themselves, although I think they were under the impression to own the needed licenses. Otherwise they would not have spend such an amount of work into creating very nice and expensive CD sets. In any case I am 100% certain that record sellers as well as buyers were confident that they traded legitimate releases back then. I know I was. These items have been legally sold and can be so re-sold today. And for items such as the Bio album, the Charly CD sets are still the only way to purchase CD versions of these songs in a legally correct way. So until Universal re-releases these, I will continue to recommend getting the Charly CDs, even though this is next to impossible nowadays.
In any case I have reworked the The Starter's Collection (What you must have). Enjoy and feel free to comment!
This weblog is an addition to my Chuck Berry fansite called "A Collector's Guide to the Music of Chuck Berry" which describes all books and records of interest to everyone enjoying Chuck Berry's music.