The fab blog Consequence Of Sound’s This Must Be the Gig podcast is joined by the inimitable, the powerful Jehnny Beth. As the vocalist for post-punk band Savages, there are few performers with Beth’s intensity, and that energy has not been contained to the stage. Beth has also acted, hosted radio and TV shows, and has an upcoming book about sexual liberation and transgression.
My Next Read: Session Legend Harvey Brooks Publishes Memoir, “A View From The Bottom”
Harvey Brooks first came to the public’s attention when he played on the classic Bob Dylan album Highway 61 Revisited, released in 1965 to great acclaim. Since then he has played with everyone from Miles Davis to Jimi Hendrix, The Doors, The Electric Flag, Al Kooper, John Cale and many others. This is his story, told from his own perspective, which includes first-hand accounts of such historical events as the Monterey Pop Festival in 1967, as well as his esteemed career as a sought-after studio musician and staff producer for Columbia Records.
Paul McCartney Q&A on Releasing “Flaming Pie”, His Most Commercially Successful Album Of The ‘90s
- What is the origin of Flaming Pie, and how did you settle on that as an album title?
When we had started off as The Beatles in Liverpool there was this local music paper called ‘Mersey Beat’. John was asked to do a little explanation of where we were at at the time. He did this typical Lennonese thing and said, “It came in a vision – a man appeared on a flaming pie and said unto them, from this day on you are Beatles with an A”. And so it was. That was always the explanation when people asked us, “well why are you called The Beatles?”
And so I just thought, I’m the man on the flaming pie! I’ll write a song about that. It’s a little bit tongue in cheek. The character who is the man on the flaming pie, he’s quite cool. He’s quite mad. Anyone I mentioned it to just smiled.
And there’s a lot of heritage with it coming from that Mersey Beat article. John’s right there in it, so it had a lot of resonance and fond memories for me. John and I used to place great value on titles – Sgt. Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band, Rubber Soul, people’d go “What!?” So i really liked this left field idea of Flaming Pie.
- So were The Beatles on your mind when making this record?
I came off the back of The Beatles Anthology project with an urge to do some new music. The Anthology excited me, because it reminded me of The Beatles’ standards and the standard of the songs. It was a good refresher course, and it sort of gave me a framework for this album.
Anthology threw up all of these memories that I hadn’t had any reason to think of for so long. All of the Beatles memories. It was a very joyful period talking to Ringo and George endlessly about all the things we’d done. Particularly talking to George, who went back even further with me. I remembered all our old jokes, our old songs. The small things. Even before The Beatles. Back when he was just my little buddy who I got in the band.
Off the end of that project, I was able to more easily see where I might go next.
- How did you know where to start?
One of the things I always used to do with The Beatles was play our last album, before we went into our next. So I would play, say, ‘Rubber Soul’. I would play it in its entirety, just taking it in like a fan. And realise, that’s where we are up to. There’s the bar. Now, let’s try and jump it.
So Flaming Pie had an element of that. It was quite Beatle flavoured. There are always echoes. You can’t help it. When you write, it’s you. And when you have just reassessed your life’s work you get an idea of where to go next.
- How would you describe the songwriting process for the material on Flaming Pie?
Songs can come from anywhere. Sometimes, I would drive Linda to one of her cookery assignments, and on one particular day, I had driven her to a photo session at a farmhouse in Kent. I kept out of the way, went upstairs and made up a little fantasy for myself to write a song.
I knew that Linda would be about two hours doing the shoot, so I set myself a deadline to write a song in that time. And Somedays was it. I wrote the whole song in that time. Normally, you might get most of it down and think you’ll finish it up next week. But I thought I’ll finish it up so that when Linda had finished the shoot and would say “What did you do? Did you get bored?”, I could say, “Oh I wrote this song, wanna hear it?” It’s just a little game that I sometimes play with myself. John and I used to play this game and I don’t think it ever took us more than three or so hours to write a song.
- You play a great deal of the parts on the record yourself. What was your thought process when planning the recording sessions?
I don’t really think about it too much. The good thing is that I have always got the option. I mean, the absolute extreme scenario is just doing everything. And there are songs on Flaming Pie where I do that. Like on Somedays, I recorded that by myself, played everything, just like on McCartney. But when I was working on the final version, I thought that maybe it could use a little arrangement, so I rang up George Martin. Who better to do it?
- What differences do you notice when you do it all yourself? Are there particular things that stand out?
I don’t have a formula of how to make a record. And it’s a luxury that I don’t have to have the formula. But there’s always some sort of trigger that sends me in a particular direction.
It might be listening back to the spontaneity of old Beatles stuff, or it might be listening to one of my records, or it might even be listening to a bit of Stevie Wonder – he records a lot of his records himself too.
But for instance when I came to make what turned out to be Chaos And Creation In The Backyard with Nigel Godrich, he said “can we do it without your band?” So that was the reasoning behind that.
There’s always some sort of trigger, that makes me think ‘I fancy a bit of that’. And I’d say for the Flaming Pie album the trigger was probably Jeff Lynne.
- How did working with Jeff Lynne come about?
I knew he made good records. We’d made ‘Free As A Bird’ together as part of The Beatles Anthology, and I enjoyed working on that with Jeff. He’s very good on harmonies, and he’s very good at being precise with his production. You don’t get too many rough edges. It’s his style.
He’s a fun guy and we share a similar school of thought. Despite the success of The Beatles, none of us could ever read or write a note of music. And Jeff was the same. He quite rightly said “we all just make it all up, don’t we?” And that’s it. That’s our skill. We make it up. For example, something like ‘Here Comes The Sun’ has quite complicated time signatures, but we couldn’t name the time signatures. We wouldn’t be interested in that. We would just absorb it, know it and then play it. And that’s why Jeff said “we just make it all up, don’t we?”
That kind of person is very good to work with. We have a similar non training. Obviously, we work like mad. We put in our 10,000 hours, and that’s the equivalent of going to the Berkeley School Of Music.
- You also worked with Steve Miller, how did that come about?
I’d known Steve for a while. We met towards the end of The Beatles days. I was in a Beatles session at Olympic Studios in London that had ended in a big row, and I was hanging around in the studio after everyone else had walked out. Steve poked his head around the door and asked to borrow the stereo. We got talking and decided to do something together, so I joined in on the drums, furiously, on one of his tracks – My Dark Hour. I just wanted to drum, and it was great because this helped me let out all that frustration, in Tom Tom fills!
So I knew him from that. Working together in the sixties. Years later I rang him up and said ‘I have a couple of songs, do you want to record together?’ He said “come out to our studio”.
It was really cool, we went out to his place in Sun Valley, Idaho. And I love Steve’s music. He’s a great singer, guitar player and songwriter, so I thought it would be nice to work with him again.
- What do you remember about being in Idaho?
It was very beautiful. The weather was great, the snow was white and the sky was blue. A beautiful house, and of course the very nice modern studio that he had over there. I remember playing the piano in his living room. A nice Steinway. I would often just sit there and play endlessly. I felt very comfortable. And I remember Steve saying ‘wow, Paul’s a pretty good piano player’, and thinking ‘oh, he was listening’. And that’s kind of nice because when you noodle on the piano, which I like to do, it’s a process. It’s just lovely. It’s just like breathing. You can go anywhere on the piano, you don’t care.
- Which tracks did you focus on out in Idaho with Steve?
We worked on Young Boy over three days at his place and it was fun, we didn’t sweat it. That was the spirit of making this album. I told everyone involved in promoting it they’re not allowed to worry. There’s to be no waking up at three in the morning on this one. You’ve got to have a laugh on this album.
It’s very straightforward, Young Boy. It’s just a song straight from the shoulder, and it was written against the clock. I wrote it on Long Island in the time it took Linda to cook lunch (vegetable soup, aubergine casserole and applesauce cake) with Pierre Franey for an article in The New York Times.
- What did Steve bring to the sessions?
He’s a very good musician. He would appreciate what I was doing and with that I would be able to gauge what was good. I respect his opinion.
He’d say, “that’s a good song” or “these songs are better than the other songs on the album, so wait until you have songs of this quality then it’s going to be an incredible album.” But I was too impatient. I said “what does he know”!
And guitar playing – I know if I had wanted acoustics, he and I could do it easily, and it would be good. Just stuff like that, practical stuff. He’s a nice guy to be around, and he’s super talented.
- There’s a lot of guitar playing on this album, how did you approach that?
Actually, there’s a little bit more of my heavier guitar on this album. The World Tonight, for example. It’s got a bit of a tougher guitar riff on it.
When Linda and I first met she’d say “I didn’t know you played heavy guitar like that. I love that”. I’ve always done quite a bit of that for myself but, doing it for yourself, you don’t actually realise that people like it. So when I came to this album, Linda said “really play guitar, don’t just get someone in to play it”. It’s a little naive, my guitar style. It’s not amazingly technical. It’s a little bit like Neil Young. I feel a bit of affinity with Neil. I know we just like similar things.
- Do you remember the thought process to get Ringo involved?
I’d been saying to Ringo for years that it’d be great to do something, because we’d never really done that much work together outside The Beatles. One night Jeff suggested, “why don’t you get Ringo in?” and I said, “OK!” It just sort of happened.
I had this song Beautiful Night which I’d written quite a few years ago. I’d always liked it but I felt I didn’t quite have the right version of it.
So I got this song out for when Ringo was coming in, and right away it was like the old days. I realised we hadn’t done this for so long, but it was really comfortable and it was still there. So we did Beautiful Night and we tagged on a fast bit on the end which wasn’t there before. And as we were coming away out of the studio into the control room, Ringo’s doing like an impression of a doorman… “all right then, on your way…” if you listen closely you can hear we left that in.
Once we had done Beautiful Night it wasn’t enough, I’d had too much fun and I didn’t want it to stop. So as Ringo was there, playing great and we’d got the sound, I said “why don’t we do a bit of jam or something?”
So I grabbed my Hofner bass, he started up on the drums and Jeff Lynne came in on guitar, the three of us getting a little R&B thing going. And then I did the actor’s worst dream – he’s on stage and he doesn’t know what play he’s in – when you do a jam like that, doing the vocal is exactly that dream, you can just go anywhere, you can sing anything. But you’ve really got to clear your mind, forget everything – at the same time as playing the bass – and let your head go to some mystical place. Just totally ad-libbing it all.
Anyway, when we’d done it I played it back to Ringo and he said ‘It’s relentless’. That was Really Love You.
- You did most of the drumming on this record, but what did Ringo bring to the table?
Magic. You know, to sit down with Ringo is always a great thing. It’s always worthwhile. It’s always fun. In 2019 when I finished touring in Los Angeles, Ringo got up on stage and we were doing Helter Skelter together. And he’s drumming away and I’m singing facing front because I was on the mic. But when I wasn’t on the mic, in the solo breaks and stuff, I really made a point of turning round and watching this guy drum. And I’m thinking, my god, you know the memories across this ten yard gap here, him on the drums and me on the bass, the lifetime that’s going on here.
So, you know, it’s a sort of magic. And he and I these days get quite emotional about it, because we should. We ought to. It’s a bloody emotional thing, the years. If nothing else.
- Is it fair to say you adopt an ambiguous approach when writing songs about something emotional that’s happening in real life?
It’s true. Even if I’m writing something very specific, I veil it. That’s just my way and how I have developed as a songwriter. If I want to write about loneliness, it will be Eleanor Rigby who carries the can. With Little Willow I was very affected by Maureen Starkey’s death and I remember just going into a room and putting those sentiments into that song. The fragility of life is in that song. But, it wasn’t called Maureen, if you get what I’m saying. It was called Little Willow. So I always prefer to conjure up some story or tale, or a bit of imagination around something. Because then I can get my emotions out, but it’s not quite as raw. It makes it a little bit more available to people I think if you call it ‘Little Willow’. We’ve all got a little willow, people can relate to it.
Calico Skies is another one off this album that people related to. And I like that, I very much write with people in mind, but sometimes there is a real event that really will make me respond with a song. And that’s always a good thing. It makes it all feel a bit more real. You’re really putting your emotion on display.
- Did Calico Skies come from a similar place of inspiration to Blackbird?
I wanted to write something acoustic in the vein of Blackbird, something simple that would stand on its own and which you wouldn’t have to put drums on or an arrangement – and if anyone said ‘give us a song’, you could just do it.
We were in America and they’d just had a big hurricane – Bob, I believe – and it’d knocked out all of the power so there was no light, everything was candlelit, all the cooking had to be done on a wood fire. And we like all that enforced simplicity. It’s very primitive. So, we had a few days of that and because I couldn’t play any records, I spent a lot of time on my acoustic guitar, making up little bits and pieces and Calico Skies was one of them. It’s just a simple little song to play to people when you’re sitting around in candlelight, powerless after a hurricane. It’s a primitive little powercut memory.
- What are your favourite songs on Flaming Pie?
Souvenir is a little favourite of mine. I would have loved it as a single, but I knew that no one on earth would have ever chosen it as a single.
I was on holiday in Jamaica one lazy afternoon when I wrote this. I was thinking of Wilson Pickett. Real R&B. I like the feel, real lazy holiday. When I was making a demo the phone went in the middle of the recording. I ignored it. Then it started raining, a big tropical downpour in the middle of the recording! So I loved the demo and I almost used it on the album, because it had so much atmosphere, you could hear what was going on.
Working with Jeff we took that demo as a guide track and replaced it exactly, phrase by phrase, just putting better higher recordings over it. We didn’t recreate the lightning, but made sure it was at least as good, and had that flavour of the original demo.
Public Enemy’s Isolated Vocals For “Rebel Without A Pause”
“Rebel Without a Pause” was the first song created for It Takes a Nation of Millions to Hold Us Back, and holy, it’s forever going to pack a punch.
…and here’s the original version:
Chaka Khan and Rufus’ Isolated Vocals For “Tell Me Something Good”
You ain’t got no kind of feeling inside
I got something that’ll sho’ ’nuff set your stuff on fire
You refuse to put anything before your pride
What I got will knock all your pride aside
…and here’s the original:
Prince’s ‘Sign o’ the Times’ Gets A Massive Reissue With 13 LP Or 8CD Set
“I feel that we’re on the brink of something. It is going to be strict and wild and pretty.” — Prince, 1986
More than any other release in his four-decade-long recording career, Prince’s iconic double album Sign O’ The Times captured the artist in a period of complete reinvention.
Primarily recorded between the end of 1985 and beginning of 1987, the era saw the dissolution of his band The Revolution, the end of his engagement to Susannah Melvoin, and the creation (and ultimate abandonment) of the albums Dream Factory, Camille, and Crystal Ball. By the end of that period of transformation, Prince emerged with one of his most urgent and wide-ranging releases to date — an epochal double album that would be hailed as a creative, critical, and commercial triumph.
The Super Deluxe Edition includes all the audio material that Prince officially released in 1987, as well as 45 previously unissued studio songs recorded between May 1979 and July 1987, and a complete live audio performance from the June 20, 1987 stop on the Sign O’ The Times Tour at Stadium Galgenwaard in Utrecht, The Netherlands.
Also included is a brand-new DVD containing the complete, previously unreleased New Year’s Eve benefit concert at Paisley Park on December 31, 1987, which was Prince’s final performance of the Sign O’ The Times Tour stage show and his only on-stage collaboration with jazz legend Miles Davis.
The Super Deluxe Edition set also features a 120-page hardcover book containing Prince’s previously unseen handwritten lyrics for many of the songs from the era, including the hits “U Got The Look,” “I Could Never Take The Place Of Your Man,” and “Hot Thing,” iconic unseen images from the era taken by Prince’s primary photographer in the mid-1980s to early 90s, Jeff Katz, plus images of archive assets including original analog tape reels and studio tracking sheets.
Release date September 25th, 2020
Deluxe Edition 8 CD+ DVD Set
Deluxe Edition 13 LP + DVD Set
Track listing
Remastered Album (LP 1)
Remastered Album (LP 2)
Single Mixes & Edits (LP 3 & LP 4)
Vault, Part 1 (LP 5 & LP 6)
All tracks previously unreleased
Vault, Part 2 (LP 7 & LP 8)
All tracks previously unreleased
Vault, Part 3 (LP 9 & LP 10)
All tracks previously unreleased
Live In Utrecht (LP 11, LP 12 & LP 13)
All tracks previously unreleased
Live At Paisley Park – December 31, 1987 (DVD)
All tracks previously unreleased
Track listing
Remastered Album (CD 1)
Remastered Album (CD 2)
Single Mixes & Edits (CD 3)
Vault, Part 1 (CD 4)
All tracks previously unreleased
Vault, Part 2 (CD 5)
All tracks previously unreleased
Vault, Part 3 (CD 6)
All tracks previously unreleased
Live In Utrecht (CD 7 & CD 8)
All tracks previously unreleased
Live At Paisley Park – December 31, 1987 (DVD)
All tracks previously unreleased
Neil Diamond To Reissue All 5 “Hot August Night” As 2LPs In Black And Limited-Edition Colors On August 7
On August 7, 2020, Capitol/UMe/Universal Music Canada, the country’s leading music company will celebrate some of Neil Diamond’s most electrifying live performances with the release of his 5 Hot August Night albums as a 2 L.P. black and limited-edition color vinyl set. The iconic performer’s mastery combined with the palpable excitement of the crowd are evident throughout the Hot August Night canon, which includes Hot August Night, Love At The Greek and Hot August Night II as well as Hot August Night III, and Hot August Night/NYC, available on vinyl for the very first time. Neil Diamond’s All-Time Greatest Hits, a 23-track, standard weight 2LP collection, will also be released on black vinyl on August 7.
Hot August Night -The legend of Neil Diamond was unquestionably born on August 24, 1972, when the young singer/songwriter took over Los Angeles’ Greek Theatre for ten sold-out nights. Diamond and his band were at the peak of their game that summer, a night that would be captured forever on the two-record set Hot August Night. On one of these nights, Robert Hilburn of The Los Angeles Times declared, “His 1972 Hot August Night stand at the Greek remains among the most celebrated series of shows by a mainstream pop-rock performer ever in Los Angeles.”
As one of Diamond’s most successful releases worldwide, the album was multi-platinum in the U.S. and spent a mind-blowing 29 weeks on the top of the Australian charts. Hot August Night is one of the most celebrated and acknowledged albums of Diamond’s career and arguably one of the greatest live albums ever recorded. The original Hot August Night (the title of which was gleaned from the opening line to one of Diamond’s most celebrated tracks, 1969’s “Brother Love’s Travelling Salvation Show,) will be available as a black 2LP or crystal-clear limited-edition 2LP. Listen to Hot August Night, HERE.
Love At The Greek (the 1977 live double album) was Diamond’s second album recorded at famed Hollywood venue and the second album produced by Robbie Robertson. Love At The Greek (which features standout tracks such as “Holly Holly” and a fifteen-minute version of “Jonathan Livingston Seagull“) will be available on vinyl for the first time in 30 years as a black 2LP or a translucent non-metallic gold limited-edition 2LP. Listen to Love At The Greek, HERE.
The Platinum-certified Hot August Night II (the follow up to the original Hot August Night album) was recorded in August of 1986 and initially released in 1987, reaching #59 on the Billboard 200 chart. Hot August Night II features twenty of Diamond’s biggest hits, including “Love On The Rocks,” “America,” and “Song Sung Blue” and will also be available on vinyl for the first time in 30 years as a black 2LP or a white limited-edition 2LP. Listen to Hot August Night II, HERE.
Hot August Night Ill chronicles Diamond’s triumphant return to the legendary Greek Theatre in Los Angeles in August 2012. The magical evening was Diamond’s 40th anniversary celebration of the original multiplatinum-selling Hot August Night collection that was recorded at the very same venue in 1972. Following the 2012 shows at The Greek, Billboard Magazine said of Diamond’s performance, “His voice remains powerful and accurate; he reaches towards the baritone register for emphasis, just as he did in the 70’s. …he never falters in delivering every line with conviction.” From the fine acoustic twang of “Forever in Blue Jeans” to the pure Americana swing of “Kentucky Woman” to the eternal sing-along sunshine of “Sweet Caroline” to the raw emotionality of “I Am…I Said” to the welcoming arms of “America.”
Hot August Night Ill cements Diamond’s mastery of the live stage and his unique connection with audiences the world over. This is the first time that Hot August Night Ill will be available on vinyl and will be available as a black 2LP or a sea glass limited-edition 2LP. Listen to Hot August Night III, HERE.
Hot August Night/NYC – Recorded live at New York’s Madison Square Garden in August 2008 (originally released in 2009, the album includes 25 career-spanning hits from Neil’s phenomenal four-night sold-out run at the fabled concert hall. Hot August Night/NYC debuted at number 2 on the Billboard 200 in 2009 and is certified Platinum. This is the first time Hot August Night/NYC will be available on vinyl and will be available as a black 2LP or translucent red limited-edition 2LP. Listen to Hot August Night/NYC, HERE.
All-Time Greatest Hits marks the Grammy winner and Rock and Roll Hall of Fame inductee’s most comprehensive hits collection, encompasses the artist’s entire body of work, from the earliest recordings through the present-day. Neil Diamond’s All-Time Greatest Hits black 2LP features the original studio recordings of such standards as “Sweet Caroline,” “Holly Holy,” “I Am…I Said,” and chart-toppers like “Cracklin’ Rosie,” “Song Sung Blue,” and the rarely heard original solo version of “You Don’t Bring Me Flowers.” The set captures his beginnings as a songwriter-turned-singer in New York to his multi-platinum days in Hollywood. Listen to All-Time Greatest Hits, HERE.
Throughout his illustrious and wide-ranging career, Neil Diamond has sold over 130 million albums worldwide and has dominated the charts for more than five decades with 38 Top 40 singles and 16 Top 10 albums. He has achieved record sales with 40 Gold albums, 21 Platinum albums, and 11 Multi-Platinum albums.
A Grammy Award-winning artist, Diamond is a member of the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame, the Songwriters Hall Of Fame, and has recently received The Johnny Mercer Award and the Sammy Cahn Lifetime Achievement Award, two of the highest honors bestowed upon songwriters. Diamond’s many other achievements include a Golden Globe Award, 13 Grammy nominations, ASCAP Film and Television Award, Billboard Icon Award, American Music Award, and 2009’s NARAS’s MusiCares Person of the Year Award. In 2011, Diamond received the prestigious Kennedy Center Honor for his lifetime of contributions to American culture.
Track Lists
Hot August Night
Side A
- Prologue
- Crunchy Granola Suite
- Done Too Soon
- Solitary Man
- Cherry Cherry
- Sweet Caroline
Side B
- Porcupine Pie
- You’re So Sweet
- Red Red Wine
- Soggy Pretzels
- And The Grass Won’t Pay No Mind
- Shilo
- Girl You’ll Be A Woman Soon
Side C
- Play Me
- Canta Libre
- Morningside
- Song Sung Blue
- Cracklin’ Rosie
Side D
- Holly Holy
- I Am…I Said
- Soolaimon/Brother Love’s Travelling Salvation (Encore)
Love At The Greek (2LP)
Side A
- Street Life
- Kentucky Woman
- Sweet Caroline (Good Times Never Seemed So Good)
- The Last Picasso
- Longfellow Serenade
Side B
- Beautiful Noise
- Lady-Oh
- Stargazer
- If You Know What I Mean
- Surviving The Life
Side C
- Glory Road
- Song Sung Blue
- Holly Holy
- Brother Love’s Traveling Salvation Show
Side D
- Jonathan Livingston Seagull
- Bee
- Dear Father
- Lonely Looking Sky
- Sanctus
- Skybird
- Be (Encore)
- I’ve Been This Way Before
Hot August Night II (2LP)
Side A
- Song Of The Whales (Fanfare)
- Headed For The Future
- September Morn
- Thank The Lord For The Night Time
- Cherry, Cherry
- Sweet Caroline
Side B
- Hello Again
- Love On The Rocks
- America
- Forever In Blue Jeans
- You Don’t Bring Me Flowers
Side C
- I Dreamed A Dream
- Back In L.A.
- Song Sung Blue
- Cracklin’ Rosie
- I Am…I Said
Side D
- Holly Holy
- Soolaimon
- Brother Love’s Traveling Salvation Show
- Heartlight
Hot August Night III (Recorded At The Greek Theatre, Los Angeles, CA. August 2012) (2LP)
Side A
- Overture
- Soolaimon
- Beautiful Noise
- Forever In Blue Jeans
- Play Me
- Red Red Wine
Side B
- You Got To Me
- Cherry Cherry
- Kentucky Woman
- Solitary Man
- Cracklin’ Rosie
Side C
- I’m A Believer
- Holly Holy
- Sweet Caroline
- Sweet Caroline Reprise 1:49
Side D
- I Am…I Said
- America
- Brother Love’s Traveling Salvation Show
- I’ve Been This Way Before
- Walk Off
Hot August Night / NYC Live From Madison Square Garden (2LP)
Side A
- Opening / Holly Holy
- Streetlife
- Beautiful Noise
- Love On The Rocks
- Play Me
Side B
- Thank The Lord For The Time Time
- Home Before Dark
- Don’t Go There
- Pretty Amazing Grace
- Done Too Soon
Side C
- Brooklyn Roads
- I Am…I Said
- Solitary Man
- Kentucky Woman
- Forever In Blue Jeans ORE
Side D
- You Don’t Bring Me Flowers
- Song Sung Blue
- Man Of God
- Hell Yeah
All-Time Greatest Hits (2LP)
Side A
- Cracklin’ Rosie
- Forever In Blue Jeans
- Song Sung Blue
- Sweet Caroline
- Holly Holy
- Red, Red Wine
Side B
- Hello Again
- Beautiful Noise
- America
- September Morn
- Love On The Rocks
Side C
- Shilo
- You Don’t Bring Me Flowers (Duet Version-Barbra Streisand and Neil Diamond)
- Morningside
- Soolaimon
- Play Me
- Kentucky Woman
Side D
- Girl, You’ll Be A Woman Soon
- Solitary Man
- I’m A Believer
- Brother Love’s Traveling Salvation Show
- Cherry, Cherry
- I Am… I Said
AI Bot Writes A Nirvana Song
Funk Turkey is bringing us all into the future with his AI-helped of creating a Nirvana song.
SOCAN Foundation Launches Relief Fund for SOCAN Members
SOCAN Foundation announces the launch of the SOCAN Foundation Relief Fund for SOCAN members during the COVID-19 pandemic. “While SOCAN members are quarantining, the SOCAN Foundation offers this program to provide some financial support to music creators and publishers to get through these unprecedented times.” Said Victor Davies, President of SOCAN Foundation.
This new fund is open to all SOCAN members who have earned more than $500 in royalties in the four most recent SOCAN distributions.
The Board of Directors generously allocated a total of $500,000, which will be available for distribution from the SOCAN Foundation Relief Fund. These grants are valued at $250 each.
Applications will be accepted from June 26, 2020 until August 15, 2020. Applicants are encouraged to submit applications early as once funds are exhausted, the application portal will be closed.
SOCAN Members can learn more about the program by visiting www.socanfoundation.ca

