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Conference mr1pst::music

Title:MUSIC V4
Notice:New Noters please read Note 1.*, Mod = someone else
Moderator:KDX200::COOPER
Created:Wed Oct 09 1991
Last Modified:Tue Mar 12 1996
Last Successful Update:Fri Jun 06 1997
Number of topics:762
Total number of notes:18706

670.0. "Al Anderson" by LEDS::BURATI (My other keyboard's on a Hammond B-3) Thu Sep 08 1994 18:14

    Big Al's not quite so big anymore, physically anyway. After 20 years
    he's left NRBQ to focus on his own stuff full time. A master of the
    Telecaster, Big Al is known coast to coast as a guitar player's guitar
    player. Now, he has his tunes appearing on albums scattered all over the
    charts.

    I first saw Al with the Wild Weeds in Connecticut in 1968. They were
    pure R&B, lot's of Motown/Atlantic/Stax-Volt tunes. Back then Big Al,
    who was about 19, played a Gibson Archtop. They produced one very
    successful record, "No Good To Cry", a wonderful R&B track written by
    Al. You can occassionally catch it on oldies stations and, until Al's
    departure, you could hear performed by NRBQ. This tune is classic 60s
    R&B. It's so good that I get goosebumps every single time I hear it.

    Other Anderson singles are "(and I still think about you everytime I'm)
    Driving In My Car" and "When She Smiles". His hits with NRBQ include a
    rather corny piece put out in honor of the great gasoline embargo of
    1973 called "Get that Gasoline", "(Howard Johnson's got his) HoJo
    Working" and "Me and the Boys".

    Al's clean and sober now. Although Al still lives part time in Windsor
    Locks, CT, he also spends much of his time in Nashville, which brings me
    to why I entered this note.

    Last night while channel surfing I stopped at TNN to listen to someone
    performing on Music City Tonight (at least I think that's what it's
    called). During one shot of what looked like the house band, my eyes
    fell upon Big Al, standing there playing a Tele in front of a blonde
    Fender amp with a piggyback Fender reverb unit perched atop it. There
    was another guitar player too, so I don't know if Al's a regular part of
    this band or if he was just playing that tune because of the guest
    artist, whose name escaped me.

    So there you go, Big Al 1994. And now he has his own note.

    --Ron

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670.1Big Al was propheticKOLFAX::WIEGLEBHave you considered the phalarope?Tue Sep 13 1994 01:399
    Minor nit:  Since "Get That Gasoline" was released in 1973 (as you
    correctly stated), it beat the oil embargo by a good three years.
    The song actually has nothing to do with being unable to find gas or
    inflated prices, but rather being unable to afford it due to being broke.  
    The song became a hit as a re-release during the 1976 oil embargo.
    
    Thanks for the write-up.  Glad to hear Big Al is doing well.
    
    - Dave
670.2help: need date of first energy crisisLEDS::BURATIMy other keyboard's on a Hammond B-3Tue Sep 13 1994 02:3916
    Dave,

    I think your thinking of a second "mini" energy crunch that came a few
    years later. You see, I was in a band during the great middle-east oil
    embargo and that band split up in the spring of 1975. In fact our big
    ol' GMC box truck that we were desparately trying to get gas for to get
    to Provincetown died pathetically during the winter of '74-'75. The big
    crisis was definitely in the vacinity of 1973 and they wrote that song
    specifically for it. I know because we shared club billings with them on
    a regular basis at the time. In fact, Al Anderson ended up marrying the
    ex-wife of a friend of mine who was in Clean Living. (I believe they are
    divorced now, though)

    On the other hand, maybe I dreamed it all. Sure seems like it sometimes.

    --Ron
670.3If my memory serves me...CUPMK::WIEGLERTue Sep 13 1994 14:022
    I remember the first *big* oil embargo/crisis hitting in 1973.
    
670.4LEDS::BURATIMy other keyboard's on a Hammond B-3Tue Sep 13 1994 14:083
    I was just thinking that maybe it was re-released later and did better
    on the charts the second time. So maybe we're both right. But there's
    lots of synaptic noise in those memories, too, if you know what I mean.
670.5LEZAH::CLARKTue Sep 13 1994 16:3311
  I've been listening to the NRBQ Rhino anthology, Peek a Boo, and am
  finding a lot of my favorite songs are Anderson compositions.
  
  Ridin' In My Car, It Comes To Me Naturally, It Was a Accident, a couple of
  ballads...
  
  For some reason he reminds me of the 5 Royales (unsung but brilliant)
  guitar player & songwriter.  Maybe it's the sense of humor (thinking of
  the 5 Royales "Women About to Make Me Go Crazy" & others.)
  
  I'm glad Brian Rost & other Q fans in notes pointed me at that set.  - Jay