Daily Times (Primos, PA)

Frisco’s legendary hippie scene spotlighte­d in new set

Vinyl of the Week: Hanoi Rocks, 'Oriental Beat' remix

- By Michael Christophe­r To contact music columnist Michael Christophe­r, send an email to rockmusicm­enu@ gmail.com. Also, check out his website at thechronic­lesofmc.com.

Those born too late to experience first-hand what made late ’60s and early ’70s San Francisco so musically — and culturally — significan­t will finally get the opportunit­y to understand what drew even Beatle George Harrison to the city’s Haight-Ashbury district to see what all the fuss was about with a brandnew home video collection.

Announced this week, and set for release by Mercury Records May 12, is a trio of hippie brilliance on film in “A Night at the Family Dog,” “Go Ride the Music” and “West Pole” across two DVDs.

The three psychedeli­c trips down memory lane, complete with new artwork and ’60s-styled poster, were originally produced and created as groundbrea­king television documentar­ies by Ralph J. Gleason, who arguably did more than any other journalist to hip the world to what was in the (bong) water in San Francisco circa the late ’60s.

It was a time of wild experiment­ation in poetry, film, journalism, sex, drugs and political activism with a wide variety of music providing the daily soundtrack.

The San Francisco sound, as it came to be known, was a montage of shrieking guitars and bold, now-classic acid rock.

Held on Feb. 4, 1970, at the Family Dog concert hall, “A Night at the Family Dog” featured the brightest three lights of the Bay Area in Jefferson Airplane, the Grateful Dead and Santana.

Those bands would define a scene that had the whole world wondering what exactly was going on in the Haight-Ashbury section of San Francisco.

The original mono recording has been remixed and remastered on “A Night at the Family Dog,” which starts with two iconic Santana performanc­es before the Dead covers Otis Redding’s “Hard to Handle.”

Jefferson Airplane then splits the club wide open with their incendiary and provocativ­e performanc­e style.

Then all hell breaks loose when Carlos Santana, Jerry Garcia, Jorma Kaukonen, Jack Casady and Paul Kantner kick out the jams to end it all.

The 1969 documentar­y “Go Ride the Music” is a stunning record of Jefferson Airplane and Quicksilve­r Messenger Service, the latter a band destined for stardom who shortcircu­ited their own success. The film also sees cameo appearance­s from David Crosby and Jerry Garcia.

Filmed the same year, “West Pole” captures the magnetic attraction of musicians who provoked the establishm­ent enough to create national news.

It’s a firsthand witnessing to the birth of a culture with the Steve Miller Band, Jefferson Airplane, the Grateful Dead, Quicksilve­r Messenger Service, the all-female act Ace of Cups and others.

Though “A Night at the Family Dog” has been released on home video previously, having it packaged together with “Go Ride the Music” and “West Pole” is essential viewing for anyone looking for a representa­tion of what shaped such an important part of American music history.

Vinyl of the week

Keep an eye on this spot as each week we’ll be looking at new or soonto-be-released vinyl from a variety of artists.

It might be a re-pressing of a landmark recording, special edition or new collection from a legendary act. This week, it’s another chance for an album that should’ve been huge, but suffered from a case of seriously poor production.

• Hanoi Rocks: “Oriental Beat (The 40th Anniversar­y Re(al)mix)”

The second album from Finland glam punkers Hanoi Rocks, 1982’s “Oriental Beat,” was supposed to be the band’s big breakthrou­gh in the States.

Recorded in London for 200 pounds a day, the album was made during the height of the British punk and new wave movements, when the band was hanging out with everyone from Thin Lizzy’s Phil Lynott to the Damned.

It seemed like a cocktail for success on paper, but due to some truly awful production, “Oriental Beat” was either ignored or downright panned by critics.

Released before it could be remixed or rerecorded, as their then label had run out of money, the group has always considered the original mix of “Oriental Beat” to be a disaster.

Come the late ’80s, when Guns N’ Roses purchased the rights to the Hanoi Rocks catalog to re-release on their vanity label, Uzi Suicide, the master tapes for the LP went missing in transit and were thought to be lost forever.

Incredibly, the tapes mysterious­ly showed up in the Universal Records vault in 2020, and the band was finally able to mix and re-sequence the album the way they wanted it to sound.

Dubbed the “Re(al) mix”, the 40th anniversar­y edition was mixed by Petri Majuri at E-Studios in Finland in collaborat­ion with the band.

Frontman Michael Monroe said in a statement the release is, “the longest and slowest album recording project ever” and that, “40 years in the making, it’s not just a remix, but the REAL MIX supervised and approved by Hanoi Rocks.”

The vinyl edition is available in three configurat­ions: standard black vinyl and blood red vinyl limited to 1,500 copies each or a cyan blue vinyl limited to just 500 copies. All three include a poster of the band.

Looking at it through a new lens, it’s clear “Oriental Beat” is a defining masterpiec­e made when Hanoi Rocks was about to explode onto the world’s music scene.

It was also written at the absolute peak of lead guitarist Andy McCoy’s creativity as a songwriter.

Look for “Oriental Beat (The 40th Anniversar­y Re(al)mix)” online and from all respectabl­e retailers who carry vinyl.

 ?? ?? COURTESY OF MERCURY STUDIOS
COURTESY OF MERCURY STUDIOS
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COURTESY OF SVART RECORDS

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