Whio Sings in the Road Again

"On the Road Once again"
On the Road Again45.jpg
Single past Canned Heat
from the anthology Boogie with Canned Estrus
B-side "Boogie Music"
Released Apr 24, 1968 (1968-04-24)
Recorded September 6, 1967
Studio Liberty, Los Angeles
Genre
  • Blues stone[a]
  • psychedelic rock[a]
Length
  • 4:55 (album version)
  • 3:33 (unmarried version)
Label Liberty
Songwriter(s)
  • Floyd Jones
  • Alan Wilson
Producer(s) Cal Carter
Canned Heat singles chronology
"Evil Adult female"
(1967)
"On the Road Again"
(1968)
"Going Up the Country"
(1968)
Sound
"On The Route Again" (Remastered 2005) on YouTube

"On the Road Again" is a song recorded past the American dejection-stone group Canned Heat in 1967. A driving blues-rock boogie,[ii] information technology was adapted from earlier blues songs and includes mid-1960s psychedelic stone elements. Unlike most of Canned Heat'due south songs from the catamenia which were sung past Bob Hite, second guitarist and harmonica player Alan Wilson provides the distinctive falsetto vocal. "On the Road Again" start appeared on their second album, Boogie with Canned Heat, in January 1968; when an edited version was released equally a unmarried in Apr 1968, "On the Road Over again" became Canned Oestrus's first record chart hit and i of their best-known songs.

Earlier songs [edit]

With his tape company'south encouragement, Chicago blues musician Floyd Jones recorded a song titled "On the Road Once again" in 1953.[3] Information technology was a remake of his successful 1951 song "Dark Road".[4] Both songs are based on Mississippi Delta bluesman Tommy Johnson's 1928 song "Big Road Blues"[5] (Canned Heat took their name from Johnson's 1928 vocal "Canned Heat Blues"[6]). Johnson's lyrics include: "Well I ain't goin' down that large road by myself ... If I don't comport you gonna conduct somebody else". Jones "reshaped Tommy Johnson's verses into an eerie evocation of the Delta".[7] In "Dark Route" he added:

Whoaa well my mother died and left me
Ohh when I was quite young, when I was quite immature ...
Said Lord have mercy ooo, on my wicked son

And in "On the Road Once again" he added

Whoaa I had to travel, whoaa in the rain and snow in the pelting and snowfall
My baby had quit me ooo (2×)
Have no place to go

Both songs share a "hypnotic i-chord drone piece"-arrangement that i-time Floyd Jones musical partner Howlin' Wolf used for his songs "Crying at Daybreak" and the related "Smokestack Lightning".[7] [8]

Recording and composition [edit]

"On the Road Again" was amidst the get-go songs Canned Estrus recorded as demos in Apr 1967 at the RCA Studios in Chicago[9] with original drummer Frank Cook. At over seven minutes in length, it has the basic elements of the later album version, only is two minutes longer with more harmonica and guitar soloing.[b]

During the recording for their 2d album, Canned Estrus recorded "On the Road Again" with new drummer Adolfo "Fito" de la Parra. The session took place September 6, 1967, at the Liberty Records studio in Los Angeles. Alan Wilson used verses from Floyd Jones' "On the Road Once again" and "Dark Road" and added some lines of his own:

Well I'm so tired of cryin' only I'm out on the road again, I'one thousand on the road again (2×)
I ain't got no woman only to call my special friend

For the instrumental accompaniment, Canned Heat uses a "basic East/G/A blues chord pattern"[10] or "one-chord boogie riff" adapted from John Lee Hooker's 1949 hitting "Boogie Chillen'".[11] Expanding on Jones' hypnotic drone, Wilson used an Eastern string instrument called a tambura to give the song a psychedelic ambience. Although Bob Hite was the group's primary vocalizer, "On the Road" features Wilson as the vocaliser, "utilizing his best Skip James-inspired falsetto song".[ten] [c] Wilson as well provides the harmonica parts.[d]

The basic riff is used over again by Canned Heat on "Fried Hockey Boogie", an eleven-minute boogie by Larry Taylor which showcases the band'due south musicality with a series of virtuoso solo performances by members.

Personnel [edit]

  • Alan Wilson – vocal, harmonica, electrical guitar, tambura
  • Henry Vestine – electric guitar
  • Larry Taylor – bass guitar
  • Adolfo de la Parra – drums

Releases and charts [edit]

"On the Road Again" is included on Canned Rut's second album, Boogie with Canned Heat, released January 21, 1968, by Freedom Records. After receiving strong response from airplay on American "underground" FM radio, Liberty issued the song every bit a unmarried on April 24, 1968.[13] To brand the song more Top-xl AM radio-friendly, Liberty edited it from the original length of 4:55 to a iii:33 unmarried version. It became Canned Oestrus's starting time single to appear in the tape charts.[10] [due east]

Chart (1968–1969) Peak
position
Australia Go-Set Acme twoscore[15] 9
Belgium (Ultratop l Flanders)[16] five
Canada RPM Top Singles[17] 8
France (SNEP)[xviii] 7
Ireland (Irish gaelic Singles Chart)[xix] 14
Netherlands (Dutch Top 40)[xx] 5
Netherlands (Unmarried Top 100)[21] 3
Switzerland (Schweizer Hitparade)[22] 3
U.Chiliad. (Official Singles Chart)[23] 8
U.S. (Billboard Hot 100)[24] 16
Due west Frg (Official German language Charts)[25] 13

On the singles, Floyd Jones and Alan Wilson are listed as the composers, while the album credits Jim Oden/James Burke Oden (too known as St. Louis Jimmy Oden).[f] "On the Route Again" appears on several Canned Heat compilation albums, including Allow's Work Together: The All-time of Canned Oestrus (1989) and Uncanned! The All-time of Canned Heat (1994). Too, information technology is featured on the soundtrack to Wim Wenders 1974 pic Alice in the Cities.

Influence [edit]

Although songs inspired by John Lee Hooker's "Detroit-era boogie"[two] had been recorded over the years by a diverseness of blues musicians, Canned Heat'southward "On the Road Again" popularized the guitar-boogie or E/Thousand/A riff in the rock globe.[8] Every bit a consequence, "it's been a standard stone and scroll pattern ever since".[eight] Canned Rut used it frequently as the starting point for several of their extended jam songs, including the 40 minute live opus "Refried Boogie (Office I & 2)" from their late 1968 Living the Blues anthology. When Hooker recorded an updated version of "Boogie Chillen'", titled "Boogie Chillen No. 2", with the group in 1970 for Hooker 'n Heat, it had come full circumvolve.[26]

Notes [edit]

Footnotes

  1. ^ a b "On the Road Again, Canned Rut: This song... is psychedelic blues-stone that benefits from studio overdubbing engineering."[i]
  2. ^ Bob Hite prefaces the recording with "OK ... light and greasy, don't allow information technology go down".[9]
  3. ^ One author described Wilson's vocal style as "reminiscent of Skip James at his most ectoplasmic".[12]
  4. ^ Wilson's harmonica solo has a note that is not playable without an overblow; he re-tuned his harmonica's half dozen hole up a half step.
  5. ^ Canned Heat'southward first single, "Rollin' and Tumblin'", appeared in Billboard's Bubbling Under Hot 100 Singles chart at number 115 in July 1967.[14]
  6. ^ St. Louis Jimmy Oden was a part-owner of J.O.B. Records, the label that issued Floyd Jones' singles.

Citations

  1. ^ Evans 2005, p. 180.
  2. ^ a b Gioia 2008, pp. 262–263.
  3. ^ J.O.B. Records 1013
  4. ^ J.O.B. 1001
  5. ^ Victor Records 21409
  6. ^ Koda 1996, p. 142.
  7. ^ a b Rowe 1991, p. ii.
  8. ^ a b c Palmer 1981, p. 231.
  9. ^ a b Russo 1994, p. five.
  10. ^ a b c Greenwald, Matthew. "Canned Oestrus: On the Road Over again – Vocal review". AllMusic . Retrieved November 20, 2013.
  11. ^ Palmer 1981, p. 244.
  12. ^ Murray 2002, p. 382.
  13. ^ Russo 1994, p. nine.
  14. ^ Russo 1994, p. 21.
  15. ^ "On the Road Again in Australian Chart". Poparchives.com.au. Retrieved July 17, 2013.
  16. ^ "Canned Heat – On the Road Over again" (in Dutch). Ultratop 50.
  17. ^ "On the road once again in Canadian Top Singles Chart". Library and Archives Canada. Retrieved July 17, 2013.
  18. ^ "On the route again in French Chart" (in French). Dominic DURAND / InfoDisc. July 17, 2013. Retrieved July 17, 2013. Y'all have to use the index at the top of the page and search "Canned Heat"
  19. ^ "On the road again in Irish gaelic Chart". IRMA. Retrieved July 17, 2013. 2nd result when searching "On the Road Over again"
  20. ^ "Nederlandse Top 40 – Canned Heat" (in Dutch). Dutch Top 40.
  21. ^ "Canned Heat – On the Road Again" (in Dutch). Single Superlative 100.
  22. ^ "Canned Heat – On the Road Again". Swiss Singles Chart.
  23. ^ "Canned Oestrus – Singles". Official Charts . Retrieved July 17, 2013.
  24. ^ Russo 1994, p. 22.
  25. ^ "Offiziellecharts.de – Canned Heat – On The Road Once again". GfK Entertainment charts. Retrieved February 18, 2019. To meet peak chart position, click "TITEL VON Canned Estrus"
  26. ^ Murray 2002, p. 395.

References

  • Evans, David (2005). The NPR Curious Listener's Guide to Blues. Penguin. ISBN978-0-399-53072-2.
  • Gioia, Ted (2008). Delta Dejection. W. Westward. Norton. ISBN978-0-393-33750-1.
  • Koda, Cub (1996). Erlewine, Michael (ed.). All Music Guide to the Blues. Miller Freeman Books. ISBN0-87930-424-3.
  • Murray, Charles Shaar (2002). Boogie Man: The Adventures of John Lee Hooker in the American Twentieth Century. Macmillan. ISBN978-0-312-27006-three.
  • Palmer, Robert (1981). Deep Blues. Penguin Books. ISBN0-14-006223-8.
  • Rowe, Mike (1991). Blues Is Killing Me (Album notes). Various artists. Paula Records. PCD-19.
  • Russo, Greg (1994). Uncanned! The Best of Canned Heat (CD compilation booklet). Canned Oestrus. EMI/Liberty. 7243 8 29165 2 ix.

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Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/On_the_Road_Again_(Canned_Heat_song)

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