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I. Still for the last time tonight sadly Pictish trail which will be Johnny. A lot of these sessions. And Joy and joy the overalls. 6. 666666. a chunk Melzi who passed away in the Nov 2017 The album was released in 1905 but upon some research I know I know it seems that wasn't the original saying it was a guy called Mike Morris who was in the band from 199982 the kind of change in a morphed around a little bit but in essence he was fate no more I didn't know this between 190984 Courtney Love was in the bombed apparently on vocals that's a new one on me most definitely and Faith No More song a few times I could say some twice with Chuck actually and he was vocals but then he left he made every day leave the stage at one point I'm just on a wig and did I'm going to use it on did a version of the season Vegas Luka and nobody enjoyed it very much its all and he was out of the band within about a month so that's brutal but that is show business imo Riley. This is not showbiz believe you me. Text me. B.b.c. 6 Music you've got 20 minutes to do that which probably going to. Will be along with the musical history of everything musical looking at the career of some Philips. Records Ok this is past nip and rip it off. They will be featuring in the best record in sessions of the past nip and rip it off Ok Sean's been on and I'm marking a play for the 2 Seans driving home from football in Dublin tonight right along the next week for a gig and to catch up with some may she can have that one guys with bows on I failed you a plan for every brand new band you've introduced me to mark you be a very drunk boy indeed thanks to your influence mile Billy Boy and I head into walls Glasgow's Q m you on Friday for a blast of beak I cannot wait if they're anywhere near as good as they were at the our school earlier in the year than they're going to be amazing they will be at Thanks Marc keep up the cultural and introductions Mari in Glasgow It's a pleasure now that song ended with a line about the black book reminded me of a Stranglers one can remember the title which goes what do you think you've got to look so pleased about I'm sure it will come to me eventually Derek Coghill in Edinburgh which is up there keep me posted mate talking to get to the gigs of the year beg your pardon my machine pictures trail with Phil Jupiters a Q paths that run back in June they did the best virgin my favorite songs I don't know where to begin plus brilliant cover develops a seal's seal them reasons to be cheerful looking forward to following them around London in a couple of weeks to see if they can top that from Wendy in Brighton. This is Tindersticks and pinky in the daylight. even in the band about 30 years but anyway yeah that was and The Killing Joke talking of session so we did the Killing Joke I should have mentioned this before but it was a year in gestation they started it did the soundtrack and then finished off a year later but he was brilliant and worth waiting for just also worth remembering on rocket science either arrange to do an interview with Jodie a phone or. Raven bless him he picked up the phone said always going to the corner shop all the way instead and he was great yeah slightly checkered past with killing Joe just one of the best bands ever as this will show this is chop chop for the b.b.c. . Ily killing. Babies. Coming out of the musical history of everything music Phillips calls but. With the 6 Music News. This is b.b.c. Radio. News today one of the men who attempted to stop the London. Jataka said tonight that he acted instinctively the man who was working as a kitchen porter at the fishmonger's school said he grabbed a pole when he saw his men can begin his attack before being stopped himself NATO leaders attending a reception at Buckingham Palace this evening to mark the 70th anniversary of the organization with deep divisions evident between some of its key members Donald Trump has attacked European allies for not spending more and this tension with Turkey over its operation against Kurdish groups in Syria Danielle Relf is at the palace receiving was essentially a moment when for a sort of normal political discussions really it was a chance rather formal setting but a more relaxed evening really the queen hosting with a number of other senior members of the world family including Fritz Charles and the Duchess of Cornwall and Kate the Duchess of Cambridge to host all of the NATO leaders and their wives here for an hour or so inside Buckingham Palace Mr Trump has rejected Labor claims that the n.h.s. Would be on the table in any post breaks it trade talks with Britain he said America wanted nothing to do with the health service even if it was served on a silver platter. International Weather experts say average temperatures since 2010 will probably show that this decade has been the warmest ever the World Meteorological Organization says the impact of climate change is already being felt with heat waves and floods which used to be once in a century of events becoming more regular plan Alice is from the w.m.o. The oceans are acting as a buffer at the moment they're absorbing more than 90 percent of excess heat as a result becoming much more acidic even if we cut emissions you know it will take a long long time for the oceans to recover from that and Spotify has revealed that the biggest songs albums and artists of the past decade with Drake emerging as the most stream musician of the last 10 years the Canadian star racked up. More than 28000000000 streams with. 1.7000000000 times that was. Made at the. Track. Now. The musical history of everything music. 2 things that really need to be mentioned in a can is one of the they just didn't know what the words were at the end they do it . Later some don't worry about it yeah the other thing is how amazing all old records sound incredible I mean if you think the facilities which we're going through in a short while you know I'm obviously very primitive groundbreaking at the time but when you think we were moved on now you doesn't particularly Little Richard records they just blow the roof after only their incredible you know it's people playing in the rooms a lot to be said in that for people in the same room that the sound moving through the air the really obvious thing to save everyone spaceplane something you could I mean now you would have your look there and you got to be probably $89.00 microphones on it although in those days it will be warm they will not be 3 marks in a full room you know yet you know suspended from the sail and it all kind of stuff so that was of course Elvis wasn't recorded Yes And so we have in the musical history of everything musical and it's some Philips I'm so. Many guys it's probably the most iconic record label in history well most important most important American label if you look at the a in our suite which we're willing to show while a certain point in time just when they got rid of Elvis actually bought incredible and I will say at this point time when one myself and John Langford and Sally Timms went over to America to do the promo for the Johnny Cash tribute. And we went to the song studios and it was incredible to be in there and just think of what happened but I also do remember it hadn't been kind of number exactly how long brown being that long I think it reopened in there the refurbished in $87.00 so you must be one of the. Visitors you know year later well they probably got wind of us coming over and made an effort I mean it had been I think remember an insurance broker Yeah yeah and you just think I mean if you look at the things like cultural damage that people do we always go back to the cabin don't we yes with the 1st car park the Mosier aisle and then and then open in another one on the other side of the you know all I care. To imagine just been sitting there and thinking there are buildings all around where fantastic things have happened kind of the birth of rock and roll in that and you start there trying to flog insurance to somebody don't particularly want to that's a bizarre scenario is it is really especially if you know the reception is that he's at the front desk imagine all these people have troops through in time and it's just mind boggling what it was mind boggling when we went in there and you just stood there thinking how does. The $1000000.00 cost sat here last of but anyway so he starts now with some Phillips It's a vision of $1.00 money so some for the well the youngest of 8 kids newly born a place near Florence an arc in. Alabama a 200 acre farm so one of the most sort of kind of searing memories of his youth was listening to all the work songs of the black laborers on the farm and he could hear them or something so the so deep and spiritual and striking about it that it really struck a chord with him and he never forgot it but the thing is I mean look at the story unfolds more if you look 200 acres and you got these labels working on the farm it would imply that the family is quite wealthy yet but it's certainly doing all right where you think so yeah but then of course you know this is not a pretty great depression which we'll get to now because because so he goes to school at the high school called Coffee high school how great so he goes to school he wants to be a mini I think he conducts a local less school band so as a musical interests but more than that else he wants to be a criminal defense lawyer that's his big ambition absolutely bullies ambition gets taken away from him done it because because he's dad dies and yeah they struggled to get real hardship and then the Great Depression hits Yeah and his dad dies Yes So we have to leave high school to look at. His mom and his aunt and he takes all sorts of jobs he works a grocers for awhile he works in a funeral parlor as well and then he gets a bit of a break he becomes a d.j. An engineer a radio station in Muscle Shoals in Alabama which is the start of everything isn't it it is so $945.00 he spends 4 years as an announcer w r e c which is in Memphis yet we've moved on now in 5 years nothing much happened within that point somebody calls it's got a good ear January $950.00 Memphis recording service 7 o 6 Union Avenue with Marion Keiser Yeah we've got a long time friend there and you know the struggle to begin with as you'd imagine just trying to establish themselves get a name so it's recording a ghost a wedding records weddings record funerals choirs school dances the lot but the thing is they had they had an open door policy day so I don't know exactly how groundbreaking the facilities they offered were born he was obviously not. A common occurrence so they opened this open door policy you could just go through the door give him a dollar or whatever it was and you could make an acetate record you've got your own record now if you think of it it was kind of a again you look at the waves of music but if you think of one home recording started that completely changed music video of course even the fact of cassettes you know you could you could listen to music in a car yeah and all of these things you've got all of these pivotal moments but there are still you know just like a guy in the street a woman in the street you can go in there and come out and you own your own record here 10 minutes later amazing to such a simple idea one that So I think just why it's a Revive that then if you could go into a booth and make your own records take home did you know what their motto was we record anything anywhere anytime Stiff Records No they're not forcing Yeah you know that's all so then he goes in partnership with Joey Phillips no relation it was a local d.j. And they start some records I do and the initial idea release is not to $52.00 so the initial idea is you want to record black artists from the south because there's no way they could get into a recording studio they he would be the only. That really that was so that was the initial I'm really sure at least anyway and Guy and Julie Phillips are talking about here it was a proper carrots a few Morrison guy I mean partly one point I mean at a t.v. Program where you just had to play records and dance about. Clown about is the phrase that is used to live a cat John so the 1st record is by a guy called Joe Hill boogie in the park it sells only 400 copies and so Phillips records Folds Yeah straight afterwards and somebody else on the record and then the other name Yes So he's resourceful anyway so so in the meantime to make ends meet he sort of helping out Chess Records a modern records being a bit of a promoter helping them with distribution or all the rest of it and then of course a big moment in the musical history rock n roll history much 951 where 88 is recorded credited to Jackie Princeton and is Delta Katz was that we know this is well documented singing but we know this is Ike Ike Turner who's leading all ace it is it is regarded as a verse rock n roll rare what so is one of the most pivotal things happened in the last 70 years without a shred of a doubt but the weird thing was it was the sound of the record number really frightened people yeah and so I mean we've talked before about the Kinks how Dave Davies apparently is to Sly Yeah the speakers to give it a really rough sound people say no obvious this record something credible and it was rock and roll kind of stuff but then they were saying some Philip must be a genius but then he was kind of a refuted somewhat by the bon Dieu said well no actually it was not good and we just showed some paper in there to hold the speaking together so who knows well he was a well you know I might know because I was one of the last people to interview I turned to go way way back and we thought I was thing I want to know was about this and he told me all about the circumstances leading up to our b.b. King and put him in touch with some Phillips and all the rest of it got the band together and they traveled through quite a way as it is about you know 250 miles I think right to get there in the 1st place with everything packed in the whole band just in this small car wasn't even a van right with the amp on the roof and at one point they fell off and got damage so hence that it wasn't some stroke. Genius in the studio it was just a dodgy rope on the top of a car that's what it was all about well it's really well I mean I've got a comparative story I'm a so well in the keep yourself in the family. With me with a box of teaches on the top of the van and I go all the way through altering and before somebody got a box on your roof so we didn't change the course of history but it was a similar story. So it's a. Great so anyway either way it is the 1st record all record in effect and some Philips was involved and it was such an important recall that some Phillips took on as a scout didn't because he knew everybody so he brought in people Howlin Wolf Bobby Bland Little Milton so real so the profit stream of Maysan So in February 952 they launch Sun Records Finally they find a guy called John Gale parkas to come up with a logo $50850.00 and. Some Philips he did this logo for me I'm going to have a budget so just as one color which hence the rusty brown thing with a yellow background and he paid him $50.00 for it and the idea being that for some Phillips represented optimism and you start a new beginning which he got from the farm you know daybreak at the farm as a kid so that's where that all comes from the police didn't last too long they're going to play and we're going to I had to pull them out but it didn't last too long that's the equivalent of Eastenders didn't do so we're going to play a record now and then we'll come back and tell you what else how great this is Johnny Cash So Doug. I. Need. To make believe there's nothing. But they're always asking. Time stands still when you're away. Some time to think my hardest stop into a. Long lonely hours sleep for. Johnny Cash so doggone lonesome wryly not so doggone lonesome killer call Bob used to accompany me all let's continue with. The struggles begin with Disney He knows he's not going very well our soul hits the bottle yeah I mean he's doing the stories covering up 60000 miles a year just in promo just trying to drum up business you know it was absolutely didn't want to yeah it fell once already and you came back again he knew there was something going on but he wasn't able to harness it and so as you say. To even offer a lesser royalty the idea of the record label if a 3 percent there is no play 5 is now at least 5 percent he was sectioned Yeah he was you know obviously and then he then they released the record Rufus Thomas back out it was a hit in $950.00 so you think this will be a lifeline Well that's the thing but then soon after that there's a copyright infringement case so he finds himself in trouble again. He's pressing on to the prison as commanded just walking in the rain and then which leads to a report on that in the local Memphis newspaper now well you have to say that the prison as were prisoners Oh yeah they were the they were let out of prison to make a record yeah which is just quite phenomenal in itself and you could imagine just walking in the rain is quite a big thing for a prisoner because it only in Casablanca is a good point but it really is so over the cliff they have the main thing here is that they get into the paper the prisoner paper report is seen by a young 18 half year old Elvis Presley so we look about sort of August $53.00 here aren't we we are and so we're always starts to do what we want to commend make an acetate goes past because past Marion Keisler says alone all that stuff does my happiness and that's where your heart aches begin he says you know he described his own sound when he's I said I don't sound like anybody just me you know which is true yeah that would stand up in call when you're just one of the most recognizable voices in the world yeah but she also wrote down I mean fair play to it just you know you'd have to give a lot of credit she poked good ballad singer Holt because you have to remember people coming through the door. And she said I'm thinking well I don't think they want them to come but we she obviously hear something in l. This is the opposite tail to the guy who to another Beatles in it is you want to just got the notice you're not going in thinking on a minute I'm going to bed but he may in the a it was the genuine 954 Elvis made the 2nd acetate nobody was particularly interested with a no no it's all but there's something about him and some Phillips thinks will if there is something in his voice he's got here and of course some Philips idea and this is a quote when she said that some Phillips said if I could find oh a white guy who had the negro sound and the negro feel I could make a 1000000000 dollars That's where it becomes written bit dark as yet because you know he was inspired by the laborers on the farm yet he knew what they were doing was absolutely wonderful he also thought that the white audience will be resistant to law Yeah that's the thing so he's looking for the craft crossover star and what he's trying to do is I mean he could be construed to be the height of cynicism could really if you think about it and I was that was a whole thing which people have brought up you know over the decades only that yeah we've only managed to do so well because he was why you know which it was he was pretty cruel but I mean when you look at you look at the artists some did bring through eventually there's another side to the coin you know there is there was a session one there on the 5th of July yet and nothing was happening so it's like an evening session so I was in the bands you got Bill Black in there Scotty Moore as well on the plane I was playing everything I could think of any song I've ever learned and it was just all fall in really flat and they were actually on the voice on the verge of just call me a day and just going home just about to pack up you've got a guitar up for one last time and started playing. Song that's all right which we heard before suddenly things change right Ok right there's a quote here from Scotty Morrison is as a Listen Elvis just started singing this song Jumping around and act in the fool and then Bill picked up his bass and he started to act in the film as well and I started playing with them some I think of the door to the control booth open he stuck his head out and said What are you doing and we said we don't know well back up he said trying for. The place to start and do it again Phillips got a got the tape roll and that was the start of everything else that was recorded that became the a side it's funny isn't it because I mean it was a screaming you have screaming or not screaming off such Jayhawk in screaming Jayhawk and so he was trying to do a possible a new time and time again new world working so he just got Rory Asli drunk and did it for a laugh and that was it and he was based on the Eventually So it's just that slight indorsing It is weird is l.a. And so the next thing is over beside the record Bill Monroe song Blue Moon of Kentucky and that's when some Phillips introduces the famous echo which came in known as slap back slap back is just absolutely pencil is now and has been used to just of yeah right throughout the course of history musical history books anyway so Elvis you moved on now to 955 and now this is a massive star I mean as a manager Eagles we're all children but we've already covered a number I mean if you don't know much about Colonel Tom Parker try and find the musical history about him yeah because he was it defines the Woodrow salute Lee So he saw the potential as everybody else did and thought well this needs to be on a bigger label he just couldn't sort of handle you know the need for it because well I think the local d.j. Might be Judy Phillips who played up his record so many played it 2 hours days nonstop That's right it was him but even so good also meant to some villages that look you know it needs to be on a major layer now the with thing was that sound was in a sticky place still regardless of the fact how big Elvis was because this court case a really really sent him into wild that hadn't yet so this is still the roof of someone's record he was trying to pay the cost of that and he was ill so and quite a lot of the debt so he needed money so he threw out a figure $35000.00 which you know bearing in mind $155.00 is a is a lot of money thinking that perhaps Colonel Tom on the other labels would be put off by a lot you know kind of cold in a block really Book Of course if they were able to take that little you know and awful I mean they did of course you know the rest is history Well yeah I mean there's so some went on to sign Johnny Cash we just heard what Carl Perkins and Jerry Lee Lewis and Roy Orbison. Just that single sweep there has got to be probably the greatest day in our sweep that's what was alluded to earlier I mean I can't think anybody just went through signed in like you know to see classic artists and of course there were the right place right time to scoop in everybody yeah also some things must go to is an engineer as well student Jack Clement Cowboy Jack because he tipped him off to I mean I think some flips off in Florida on holiday when brought in Jerry Lee Lewis right not a single as a great piano player that was the idea wasn't going to be a session player that's right and as everybody knows he's just he's a force of nature himself in me and so but this is a weird story the 1000000 Dollar Quartet which again mention previous Yeah Ok so this took place for the December 9056 Obama my record in 63 years ago tomorrow wow isn't it so so this was initially the idea was so Carl Perkins was going into the record matchbox and Jerry Lee was being brought into play piano on a session good but with Elvis had already been on Ed Sullivan and was like a megastar just happen to be in town with his girlfriend and we just called in to say hello yes so we wanted to start jamming with them and then you. Know Romans you should call him Johnny Cash Dolly cash so they all under the famous photo in the mall so they all start playing various songs you know and then it gets to a point some fillets realize the importance of this and he called over a local reporter Bob Johnston and a photographer from the local paper said let's you know this is news you should be covering this and so and it was also even a point time oh yes oh elvis did leave Johnny Cash said no one wanted to follow Jerry Lee not even Elvis is that good I mean it's a book that is that is just a sign of the modern No he's just a strange strange book and all of those stories the fall of the you know which seem to be his kind of moniker really people even in a room with Elvis Presley it was the biggest white star certainly in the world the point I'm going to rock n roll to there and you've got Johnny Cash in there and you've got Carl Perkins established artist brought into session money still. Not giving him a you know a shout Yeah it's incredible it really really is I mean so many other people and so on as well that we probably you know compared to those 4 you'd say that minor players we know still there were men you Charlie Rich was on that Conway Twitty as well under another name can wonder what it is now how ironic or other and then you cook up early Reilly as well recorded some classics it's funny you would think you'd see a change in him from Conway Twitty to something else but anyway that's just an aside you know we've got some quotes here on your brother so this is from a Rolling Stone interview with some Philips in 1978 so they the question is there are many stories about how Elvis came to Sun in 9054 I'd like to hear your version so some says all he was working for Crown electric I'd seen the truck go back and forth outside and I thought they sure are doing a hell of a business around here but I never saw it stop anywhere so Elvis had sort of case the joint a long time before he stopped the truck and got out and there's no telling how many days and nights behind that wheel he was figuring out a way to come in and make a record without saying Mr Phillips would you auditioned me so his mother's birthday gave him the opportunity to come in and make a little personal record that was excuse wasn't it yeah he continued I knew he had the fundamentals of what I wanted he was the 1st one I had seen who had that potential he had a different type of voice and this boy listened to a lot of different music from the Grand Ole Opry to Bing Crosby to Dinah Shore to credit to Bill Monroe to Hank Snow and his are kind of telling things he continues Elvis Presley probably innately was the most interested person that came into the studio because he didn't play with bands he didn't go to this little club and pick it grin all he did was sit with his guitar on the side of his bed at home I don't think even played on the front porch so out to try to establish a direction for him I knew from the beginning I was going to have to do something different and it might be harder to get it going but if I did get it going I might have something and then the question was did you give Elvis any advice when he left sawn to which is the only real I mean I gave them all don't let them tell you what to do don't lose your individuality Now we talked about Colonel Tom Parker and about how his just did everything he was told until the Christmas special. I wish when I wanted to dress up as Father Christmas and I was lol. Well not that well. Liked. But I just as a quick aside I did go to Grace on this well when I was in the fall and we have the Spinal Tap moment by the grave and all. The time. But what we've got to go and so we will be playing Jerry Lee Lewis in Crazy Arms next and let's say have been thanked I've been involved in the program and I will be along tomorrow night we shall have the thing rolling as usual Gideon cow is next and thanks for listening and take care all until we go you know just fill in a few seconds if you noticed. All From. a buck $6.00 and $4.00. With the killer on the other side it is one of the great 2 siders discuss. Good evening Lou what fans everywhere thanks very much smart Reilly b.b.c. Radio 6 Music is Gideon Co with you until midnight achieved in our already. Sessions on the way from the pastels meet raffle holy f. Dodgems an orchestra party rhythm of the final hour includes concert numbers from granddaddy elsewhere to my elder Japanese television suborned Wilson yabby you Phil Hayes in the trees blue orchids The Blue Nile NY waters and Emily Barker Prince Buster Strawberry Switchblade Will Burns and ham appeal plenty others and feel free to get in touch Gideon da 6 Music b.b.c. To. 64046. Tuesday night. Little other suffered so I close more from pictures trail provided the session tonight from our riding me why art is everywhere to Mary and Hobbes down to Margate. With various guests including Alan Cooper. Will be in session and there's the annual Women's Institute take over a round table more and all that via b.b.c. Sounds right records and t. Until Wednesday then. Admin. For everyone obviously and open tonight for the larger between the records gig reviews and points of order and any general business possibly worth sharing on a cheesy night in December with that in mind any further December songs which.

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