Showing posts with label Guitar Music. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Guitar Music. Show all posts

Thursday, 29 March 2018

VINNY BELL "WHISTLE STOP" (1964)

«SPECIAL NOTE TO THE CONSUMER AND RECORD REVIEWER: this album contains recordings by VINNIE BELL, at this writing New York's busiest studio guitar player. It is designed to show-case Vinnie's electronic genius and his musicianship. The album is based on the contemporary, popular, instrumental approach to recording. This is not a JAZZ recording.»

[from the back cover notes of "Whistle Stop"]



It's high time for another chapter in our series of posts that celebrate leading American session guitarist and pioneer of electronic effects Vincent 'Vinnie' Bell.

One of the two or three greatest guitar geeks of the Space Age Pop era, Vinnie Bell will go down in musical history as the inventor of the 'water guitar sound' that was a big fad in instrumental recordings during the '60s.

Used most prominently on Ferrante and Teicher's 1969 Top Ten cover of the theme to "Midnight Cowboy", and on his own rendition of the "'Airport' Love Theme" in 1970, the effect became one of the most-copied technique among guitarists until the wah-wah pedal became standard equipment in the '70s. Among the other essential records that feature his trademark sound, we should at least mention Dick Hyman / Mary Mayo's "Moon Gas", released in 1963 and available here on Stereo Candies..

Born in Brooklyn in 1935, Bell started to learn to play the mandolin when he was four years old according to the old method: solfeggio and a good swat for every mistake. Then, at eight years of age came the switch to guitar, and at the ripe maturity of twelve years the start of his professional career.



Trained by teachers like Carmen Mastren, who taught him the rhythm guitar, and Tony Mottola, who taught him the basic all-around fundamentals and made him his protégé, Bell also studied under Everett Barksdale and Mickey Baker.

Long before any company commercially produced guitar effects pedals, Vinnie Bell was tinkering and inventing with his own electronic custom effects pedals for his guitars. He constantly invented new effects using fuzz distortion and wah-wah pedals, before anyone else had them. This gave him an edge over most other guitarists in the '60s recording world, and producers loved to bring him on their sessions to get his unique guitar effects.

Bell soon became an in-demand session guitarist. The list of artists who benefited from his work is huge and includes Louis Armstrong, Simon and Garfunkel, Frank Sinatra, Dionne Warwick, Donovan, The Mamas & The Papas, The Four Seasons, The Lovin' Spoonful, Bobby Darin and many more...

For a detailed biography of Vinnie Bell, I suggest that you read the post I dedicated to his debut album a while ago.


My copy of "Whistle Stop" comes with an original Verve company inner sleeve, yippee!!!


"Whistle Stop" contains the following tracks:

01. Moonglow (2:02)
02. Night Train (2:41)
03. Fever (2:29)
04. Dawn (2:09)
05. Bellzouki (2:12)
06. What'd I Say (2:57)
07. Last Stop (1:39)
08. Trainman's Blues (2:23)
09. Shindig (2:06)
10. Whistle Stop (2:13)
11. Memphis (2:18)
12. I Have But One Heart (1:59)
13. The End of the Line (1:47)
14. Tramp Song (2:07)

All tracks were remastered from the original vinyl in March 2018 and are available in FLAC lossless format, along with complete artwork reconstruction and printable PDF files.

Please have a look at the comments for the download link.

Here's the complete credits and personnel list of the album:

Vincent Bell: guitars and effects
Everett Barksdale: bass
Paul Griffin: electric piano, electric organ
Al Gorgoni: rhythm guitar
Gary Chester / Buddy Saltzman: drums

Arranged by Claus Ogerman and Charles Calello, except "Bellzouki", "Trainman's Blues" and "Whistle Stop" arranged by Vincent Bell.

Director of engineering: Val Valentin

Liner notes: Warner Fredericks

Cover photograph: Todd Webb

Produced by Creed Taylor.


Vincent Bell, circa 1964


Probably recorded sometime during the last months of the previous year, "Whistle Stop" was released by Verve with catalogue number V6-8574 (stereo) and V-8574 (mono) around January or February 1964.

The album cover features a picture by famous American photographer Todd Weeb, which depicts a small train station in Domingo, some sixty kilometers south-west of Santa Fe, New Mexico. Luckily, there is a road just near the rails, and Google Maps can help to give a more precise idea of where the picture was taken. Of course at least 55 years has passed, the small station is not there anymore, but I think I have recognized the old water tower...

Both the album title and its cover clearly imply that this work is focused on the railroad, and at least five of the tracks also explicitly refer to trains, trainmen, stops, stations and lines. A nice theme, I would say, and one that also vaguely inspired Bell on his previous solo effort.

Anyway, curiously enough the author's name is spelled as Vinny Bell on the front cover, spine and center labels, but he is referred to with the more usual Vinnie Bell on the back cover and in the liner notes... The same liner notes identifies this as Bell's «first recording as a soloist», which is not the case since his debut album was released no less than three years earlier, in late 1960.

In the page dedicated to the album on the super cool Spage Age Pop website, the reviewer points out how apparently the label was trying to «distance itself from its own artist» by including on the back cover the "Special note to the consumer and record reviewer" that you can read in full at the beginning of this post, warning them that «this is not a Jazz recording»... I can't help but agree with him, also when he writes that «Whistle Stop is, arguably, Bell's best album by far.»

In November 1963, "Whistle Stop" was preceded by a 7" release credited to Vinny Bell and The Bell Men. This included the title track on Side A and "Shindig" on the flipside. In Italy the songs were switched and the record was given the picture cover that you can see below. In Australia the songs included on the single were "Moonglow" and, once again, "Shindig". On such occasion they were credited to Vinnie Bell; pictures of this release are also available below.


In Italy the "Whistle Stop / Shindig" single was released in a picture sleeve and sides were switched...


    
...while the public in Australia was offered a "Moonglow / Shindig" single


The following is a slightly edited version of the liner notes written by Warner Fredericks that are printed on the back cover of "Whistle Stop":

«Better open the window and get ready to toss out every idea you’ve ever had about what a guitar should sound like. Because from the moment the stylus touches the first groove of the record inside this sleeve every guitar you’ve ever heard will become part of the past tense of your life. Vinnie Bell’s new recording as a soloist, composer, leader, arranger is a straight-off blast into the future of guitar music.

Look at the line-up of tunes: "Night Train", "Memphis", "What’d I Say", "Bellzouki", "Dawn", "Trainman’s Blues", "Shindig", "Fever", "Last Stop", "Moonglow", and the title tune - "Whistle Stop". Every one of them is dressed up in sounds you’ve never heard before - sounds no one has ever heard before on record. Sure you’ve heard train sounds - but who ever heard a trombone moan come out of a guitar? Listen to the moving bass line on "Moonglow". Or, who ever dreamed of making a violin come singing out of a guitar - or a French Horn, or cello, or pipe organ, or a baritone sax?

Vinnie Bell - he’s the dreamer behind this fantastic array of new sounds that come roaring, sighing, singing out of an instrument that once used to hang around in the background of folk songs and blues. Vinnie, a superb musician and a natural born inventor, got the idea a few years ago that there was a terrific, rockin’ orchestra hidden inside the curved frame of his guitar. He was determined to pry every instrumental sound loose he could discover - or invent.

Remember when Paul Anka took off with “Steel Guitar and a Glass of Wine”? - a gold-mine of an LP. The guitar was Vinnie’s, the same guitar you will hear on "I Have But One Heart". He could bill himself like an old-time private detective, “The Eye That Never Sleeps”... He’s too busy - playing, composing, inventing.


Recently, he counted down the Top Fifty singles in the best-seller charts and discovered to his happy amazement that he had played guitar on thirty-two of the recordings! He averages close to twenty recording sessions a week in the New York studios; single dates, LP dates, TV commercials, radio commercials, movies, network TV shows... And he is a consultant for Danelectro in the engineering and development of new guitars, amplifiers and guitar attachments - both acoustical and electronic. "Bellzouki" is named after a patented device of Vinnie’s that he based on the terrific Greek bouzoukee sound. (Remember the sound track of Never On Sunday? That was a bouzoukee.)

Vinnie is originally a Brooklyn boy, born just about a mile from Coney Island. He’s a family man (“When I get to see them”) with a son and two daughters, all under 9. Married ten years, he and his wife went together for 9 years before they decided to take the final step. Vinnie’s training was informal - “But, with some really good teachers,” he says, “Tony Mottola and Carmen Mastron. Tony taught me the basic all-around fundamentals, and Carmen taught me rhythm guitar. Then, fellows like Everett Barksdale and Mickey Baker taught me a lot more later on. They’ve got something special.”

Incidentally, Everett Barksdale plays on this date and helps Vinnie make his debut as a combo leader on records. Barksdale plays bass guitar and gives the album a terrific drive. He sounds like he’s playing a bass fiddle - but most of the time it’s a Danelectro bass guitar that Vinnie helped research and develop. The other players in Vinnie’s group are: Paul Griffin, electric piano and electric organ; Al Gorgoni, rhythm guitar; Gary Chester or Buddy Saltzman on drums. Vinnie arranged three of the tunes and the others were scored by Claus Ogerman and Charlie Calello, both outstanding arrangers.

Vinnie has adapted, modified, invented, experimented, dreamed... Sometimes people are likely to think that a guy so obsessed with perfection is a little out of this world - a little touched. Vinnie’s certainly way out in a world of his own - a world of vibrant, exciting, rocking new sounds. And indeed he is touched - with genius.
»



Side A starts with "Moonglow", a popular song written by Will Hudson and Irving Mills with lyrics by Eddie DeLange. There is an abyss between the first version of the song recorded by Joe Venuti in 1933 and Bell's version, but the original melody is still quite recognizable. As I already wrote, this tune was released as a single in Australia.

On "Night Train" Bell emulates a variety of train sounds with his guitar, a trick that he already applied to "Sentimental Journey" on his debut album, but in a completely different way. This song was written by Jimmy Forrest with added lyrics by Lewis C. Simpkins and Oscar Washington. compared to Bell's rendition, the original version recorded by Jimmy Forrest in 1952 is much slower and creates a completely different atmosphere. James Brown also recorded his own version of the song in 1961, turning it into a Funky number with different lyrics.

"Fever" was written by Eddie Cooley and Otis Blackwell. The song was first recorded in 1956 by American R&B singer Little Willie John, and topped the Billboard R&B chart when it was released as a single in April the same year. Bell aptly takes the original vocal line and builds his soloing on it with a lot of expressiveness. His trademark water guitar sound is scattered all over the track and it takes the lead along with an heavy reverb during a break halfway through the song, making it one of the best cuts on the album.

Well, I tried my best but I couldn't find any relevant information about "Dawn" a song written by one Robert Robinson... It's a real pity because this is probably the most scintillating track on "Whistle Stop" and I would have been curious to learn something more about it and listen to the original version... Maybe someone in the know could shed some light about it? Thank you!
Anyway, once again I agree with the reviewer at Space Age Pop: «"Dawn" stands out in its compact intensity. It starts revved up and keeps the pedal to the metal right to the last note. Bell's fuzzed-out tone is pretty remarkable to hear, given that it's just 1964. It's the kind of track that blows the dust out of the speakers and leaves compilation makers wondering how to possibly follow it up.»

The album proceeds with "Bellzouki", the first of three compositions co-written by Bell himself with Wandra Merrell Brown that appear on the record. As per title, the song makes good use of the Bellzouki, an electric 12-string guitar that Bell had invented and perfectioned for Danelectro just months early. Bell's creation was inspired by the Bouzouki, a Greek string instrument, and I easily guess that this is one of its very first appearances on a record.

"What'd I Say" was written by Ray Charles, who also recorded it in 1959. Bell's version is pretty tight just like the original, and although it doesn't introduce new elements we can still appreciate the precision of his mighty touch.

First side finish with "Last Stop", the shortest number on the album. This instrumental was written by Phil Ramone and Cathryn Williams, and having being copyrighted just in December 1963 I believe that it is an original piece of music created on purpose for the inclusion on this LP. Bell's guitar introduces the track with its imitation of a steam whistle and then proceeds solidly to the end, making this a favourite of mine.



Side B opens with "Trainman's Blues", another instrumental written by the Bell-Merrell duo. As the title clearly implies, this is a Blues number augmented by Bell's tremolo and distortion effects. At times I feel like he's about to dive into a devastating solo along the lines of the one played by Marty McFly / Michael J. Fox in one of the best scenes of "Back To the Future", but instead he always manage to keep the train on the track, just to use a metaphor which suits both the song and the album.

"Shindig" is an instrumental written by Hank Marvin and Bruce Welch and brought to success in 1963 by their band, The Shadows. Bell adds a touch of his water guitar sound, but his version - althought being more powerful, in my opinion - remains mostly faithful to the original.

"Whistle Stop" is the third number written by Bell and Wandra Merrell Brown, this time also aided by Phil Ramone. It would be interesting to know the name of the anonymous whistler who gives this distinctive touch to a rather simple bluesy track... Since Bell had often collaborated with Dick Hyman - who is also well-known for his whistling ability - I wouldn't be surprised if it was really him, but of course this is just mere speculation... As I already wrote, apart from being choosen as the album's title, this cut was also released as a single. This was not a wise choice in my opinion, and the album has stronger tracks that could have served that purpose better.

"Memphis" is a famous song written by Chuck Berry, which was first released in 1959. Somehow Bell's version differs from the original and I must admit that I was not able to recognize it at first listen. The chord progression seems to be the same but the distinctive vocal line is completely absent and is not replaced by any instrument, making it difficult to draw a connection with the original composition, at least for me.

"I Have But One Heart" is a popular song composed by Johnny Farrow and Marty Symes. The song is an adaptation of a traditional Neapolitan song entitled "O Marenariello", and was first recorded by Vic Damone in 1947. Bell brings the song back to its original Southern Italy context by aptly playing most of it on a mandolin and using a very clean and gentle guitar sound.

"The End of the Line" is another short instrumental written by the Ramone-Williams duo, and I assume from its copyright date that, once again, this is an original number created for the album. Bell's guitar is at its best and this track - although not sharing any striking similarities - somehow reminds me of Perrey and Kingsley's "Swan's Splashdown" from "The In Sound from Way Out!", a 1966 album that also features an unaccredited Vinnie Bell on guitar, uhm...

"Tramp Song" brings the album to an end. The original version of this track is entitled "Tramp-Melodie" and comes from the original soundtrack written by German composer Martin Böttcher for the 1963 movie "Der Schatz im Silbersee" (The Treasure of the Silver Lake). It may seem an odd choice, but the orchestral movements of the original are faithfully reconstructed by Bell on his guitar, making it a perfect closure.


The following clips offer a preview of the remastered album: enjoy "Moonglow", "Night Train", "Fever", "Dawn", "Bellzouki", "Shindig", "Whistle Stop" and "The End of the Line"!


















More information about Vinnie Bell and "Whistle Stop" is available here:

http://www.vinniebell.com/

http://www.spaceagepop.com/bell.htm

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vinnie_Bell

https://www.discogs.com/artist/353572-Vinnie-Bell

http://www.spaceagepop.com/rc008.htm

http://uniqueguitar.blogspot.com/2010/02/danelectro-bellzouki-model-7010-was.html

http://wfmuichiban.blogspot.com/2014/05/the-liquid-guitar-of-vinnie-bell.html

http://chmatinee.blogspot.com/2015/06/newsreel-corner-cross-promotion-for.html

https://www.namm.org/library/oral-history/vinnie-bell

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cE3C1bX-6yk


If you have other useful information about this post, or if you spot any dead links, please get in touch with me at stereocandies [at] hotmail [dot] com or leave a comment in the box below, thank you!

Wednesday, 30 August 2017

THE OVERTONES "SMOKE RINGS / HAWAIIAN HAZE" (1959) [featuring VINNIE BELL on guitar]



Here comes another chapter in my attempt to reconstruct Vinnie Bell's path in the recorded music industry before his first single and debut album were released in 1960.

The last time I treated you with "Silently b/w Barracuda", a 1958 single by The Gallahads (...still available here), now it's time to dedicate a post to the mysterious - at least for me - The Overtones and their "Smoke Rings b/w Hawaiian Haze" 7" record released in 1959.

This single features Bell's guitar mastery and also credits him for co-writing one of the two instrumentals on offer.

For a detailed biography of Vinnie Bell, I suggest that you read this other post of mine.

Unfortunately I wasn't able to find any information about The Overtones... I am sure that some kind and gentle soul will come up with something relevant to fill the gap, thanks for your help as usual!




Here's the track list for this 7" single:

01. Smoke Rings (2:19)
02. Hawaiian Haze (3:01)

Both tracks were remastered from vinyl in June 2017 and are available in FLAC lossless format, along with scans of the original item.

Please have a look at the comments section for the download link.



"Smoke Rings b/w Hawaiian Haze" was released by ABC-Paramount with catalogue number 45-10053 sometimes in late September / early October 1959. The copy in my possession comes in a plain white sleeve, but at the time of release it was probably offered in a company sleeve similar to the one that I tried to faithfully reconstruct as the opening image of this post.

Although the record was reviewed in the October 5, 1959, issue of Billboard - and also mentioned in an ABC-Paramount ad on the same magazine a few weeks later - I never happened to see any actual copy of the officially released version, just promotional items like the one I'm offering here... Chances are that this release is extremely rare, or that it never passed the promotional stage.



On Side A we find Vinnie Bell performing the lead part - on what sounds almost unmistakably like a steel guitar - in the smooth "Smoke Rings", a song written in 1932 by Jazz musician Gene Gifford and lyricist Ned Washington. In 1937 the tune became the radio theme song for the Casa Loma Orchestra, a popular American dance band; you can listen to this version here. Strangely enough, the Billboard ad points to «an unusual electronic harmonica solo» which is nowhere to be found...

Side B offers "Hawaiian Haze", a song written by Vinnie Bell (as Vincent Gambella, his birth name) and one Johnny Brown, which was copyrighted on "21 September 1959". In my opinion the flipside is as interesting as the main piece, with Bell probably overdubbing himself on various parts, including the mandolinlike main melody. Nowadays, the term "Hawaiian Haze" indicates a popular strain of Marijuana, I can't help to wonder if it had the same meaning back in the days when this instrumental was recorded...


Vinnie Bell in the early '60s


The following clips offer a complete preview of the remastered single, enjoy!






More information about "Smoke Rings b/w Hawaiian Haze" and Vinnie Bell is available here:

https://www.discogs.com/Overtones-Smoke-Rings-Hawaiian-Haze/release/6884010

http://www.vinniebell.com/

http://www.spaceagepop.com/bell.htm

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vinnie_Bell

http://www.danguitars.com/VINCENT_BELL.html

https://www.discogs.com/artist/353572-Vinnie-Bell


If you have any other useful information about this post or if you spot any dead links, please get in touch with me at stereocandies [at] hotmail [dot] com or leave a comment in the box below, thank you!

Saturday, 27 May 2017

THE APOLLO "HONG KONG FASCINATION - APOLLO 12 GUITAR MUSIC" (太陽神樂隊 "美麗的香港", 1969)



It's with great excitement and renovated interest that, after a long break, I return to feature an instrumental Hong Kong album on this blog. I promise it won't take so long next time...

So, today here we have another nice LP by The Apollo (太陽神樂隊), released at the end of the '60s by New Wave Record Co. (新風), whose complete title is "Hong Kong Fascination - Apollo 12 Guitar Music (美麗的香港)".

As with most of the label's output, the exact release date for this album catalogued as NWLP 12 is not written anywhere on the cover. Anyway, other releases bearing a later catalogue number are proven to have been published in 1969, so I guess that this LP was released around the same time or slightly earlier.

Recently I discovered that some of the albums released in Hong Kong by New Wave Record Co. (新風) were also released by well-known Malaysian label Life Records (麗風) with the same covers, but with different catalogue numbers. This strengthened my theory that New Wave was probably a Life sublabel or that, at least, they licensed selected albums for the Hong Kong market... Well, that was until I discovered that New Wave also released albums originally produced by Fung Hang Records Co. - another renowned Hong Kong label - with slightly-adjusted covers...

At this point I'm quite confused about the nature and role of New Wave, and the only other option that comes to mind is that sometimes it acted as a budget label, but I have no proof about it... I'm still hoping that some reader of this blog can shed some light on the subject, thank you!



The Apollo (太陽神樂隊) were an Hong Kong prolific studio band that reached a cult status in the region during the late 60s / early 70s. Their name has probably been borrowed from the Teisco / Kawai manufactured Apollo model guitar from that time period.

They recorded a lot of instrumental albums, a few of them for New Wave Record Co. (新風) and most of them for Life Records (麗風). They were also featured as a backing band on countless releases by popular singers like Teresa Teng (鄧麗君), Pancy Lau (劉鳳屏), Frances Yip (葉麗儀), Stella Chee (奚秀蘭), etc. It should be noted that in the early days of the label, they were the only available band at Life headquarters, so this comes as no surprise...

Their own instrumental records, often arranged by band leader Oscar Young (楊道火), a key-figure in the Hong Kong / Singapore music scene of the late 60s / early 70, usually feature a prominent guitar sound that has spawned a lot of imitators.

Labeled as a guitar music album on the cover, "Hong Kong Fascination" mainly features the electric guitar as solo instrument but, as usual in the Far-East instrumental albums of this period, the organ plays an important role in the arrangements, aptly providing accompaniment and counterpoint. On this release we can also hear a few traditional Chinese instruments, mostly mallet and assorted percussions, flutes, etc. A couple of tracks also include brief saxophone solos.

For the English translation of the song titles I used on-line tools. The results are not perfect - to say the least - but they give more than a rough idea.

By the way, I would be really grateful if someone could help me with this release: I need a correct translation of the songs titles. If you can help and share your knowledge please get in touch with me at stereocandies [at] hotmail [dot] com or leave a comment in the box below, thank you so much!


"Hong Kong Fascination - Apollo 12 Guitar Music" (美麗的香港) contains the following tracks:

01. 今天不回家 [Not Coming Home Today] (2:45)
02. 新桃花江 [The Return of the Peach Blossom River] (2:56)
03. 美麗的香港 [Beautiful Hong Kong] (2:16)
04. 萍水相逢 [Chance Meeting of Strangers] (3:03)
05. 上山崗 [On the Hillock] (2:19)
06. 淚的小花 [Flower of Tears] (2:49)
07. 像霧又像花 [Like Fog and Like a Flower] (2:29)
08. 戀愛的季節 [The Season of Love] (2:20)
09. 姑娘十八一朵花 [A Girl at 18 Is Like a Flower] (2:43)
10. 天上人間 [Heaven On Earth] (2:34)
11. 痴情恨 [Beloved Unfaithful] (3:43)
12. 你幾時回家 [When Will You Come Home?] (2:08)

All tracks were remastered from the original vinyl in April/May 2017 and are available in FLAC lossless format, along with complete artwork reconstruction and printable PDF files.

Please have a look at the comments section for the download link.



Here's what I discovered searching information about the music included on this release.

Originating from the soundtrack to the movie of the same name, the original version of "今天不回家" (Not Coming Home Today) was a huge success for 姚蘇蓉 (Yao Su Rong) in 1969. Later on the song was also covered by other popular singers like 櫻花 (Sakura, available here) and 张露 (Chang Loo, available here).

I am not sure if "新桃花江" (The Return of the Peach Blossom River) is a traditional piece or an original track, anyway it was successfully recorded in 1968 by 鄧麗君 (Teresa Teng, available here) and 凌雲 / 櫻花 (Rita Chao and Sakura, available here).

The title track, "美麗的香港" (Beautiful Hong Kong), is also one of the best cuts on the album. I was inclined to think that this was an instrumental rendition of the same song recorded by 潘迪華 (Rebecca Pan) in 1969, but I can't notice much resemblance... Do you?

"萍水相逢"(Chance Meeting of Strangers) is a song originally performed in 1960 by 吳鶯音 (Wu Yingyin), one of the Seven Great Singing Stars. Through the years the song has been covered many times, you can listen to the original version here.

I wasn't able to discover the exact origin of "上山崗" (On the Hillock)... It seems that during the late '60s this song was recorded by many singers - among them 吳剛 (Wu Kang) - and also by a few bands as an instrumental piece, including The Stylers (...available here...) and The Saints (...here).

Between 1969 and 1970 "淚的小花" (Flower of Tears) was recorded by so many artists, and I really couldn't find out who is the very first performer... I suppose that the originator could be 姚蘇蓉 (Yao Su Rong, available here) or 陳芬蘭 (Chen Fern Lan, here) - but who knows... Even The Quests recorded their own instrumental version in 1970.



At the end of the '60s, "像霧又像花"(Like Fog and Like a Flower) was another huge hit for 姚蘇蓉 (Yao Su Rong), you can listen to the original version here. The song was later covered by many other singers, including a young 徐小鳳 (Paula Tsui), available here, and 黃鸝 (Wong Li), available here.

"戀愛的季節" (The Season of Love) is the Mandarin version of a famous late '60s Japanese song. Among others, it was performed - once again - by 姚蘇蓉 (Yao Su Rong), 鄧麗君 (Teresa Teng, available here), 孔蘭薰 (Kong Lan Xun, here), and 劉鳳屏 (Pancy Lau, here).


"姑娘十八一朵花"(A Girl at 18 Is Like a Flower) is a 1966 movie starring 陳寶珠 (Connie Chan), 呂奇 (Lui Kei) and 薛家燕 (Nancy Sit). The original theme song was covered, among others, by 刘韵 (Yun Liu, available here) and 鄧麗君 (Teresa Teng, here),

The original version of "天上人間" (Heaven On Earth), was probably recorded first by actress and singer 李麗華 (Li Li-Hua) sometimes during the '40s / '50s; here's a link to her performance. The song resurfaced during the late '60s, and both Maurice Patton & The Melodians and 楊小萍 (Yang Xiao Ping) recorded their versions in 1968.

I really have no idea about who performed the original version of "痴情恨" (Beloved Unfaithful), but in the late '60s and early '70s many of the usual suspects recorded it, among them we remember 姚蘇蓉 (Yao Su Rong, available here) and 黃鸝 (Wong Li, here).

The album closes with "你幾時回家" (When Will You Come Home?). I wasn't able to find much information about this song... I speculate that the original was performed by 劉鳳屏 (Pancy Lau, available here), but 姚蘇蓉 (Yao Su Rong) and 周玲寶 (Chow Ling Po) also recorded it around the same time...


Here's some of my favourite tracks taken from "Hong Kong Fascination", please enjoy "今天不回家", "美麗的香港", "萍水相逢", "上山崗", "戀愛的季節", "姑娘十八一朵花" and "你幾時回家"!
















If you enjoyed this post, I'd like to remind you that I already dedicated to the New Wave Record Co. (新風) a few entries.

A few more information about The Apollo (太陽神樂隊) and New Wave Record Co. (新風) is available here:

http://blog.roodo.com/muzikland/archives/2512021.html

http://www.discogs.com/artist/1638765-Apollo-The-2

http://rateyourmusic.com/artist/%E5%A4%AA%E9%99%BD%E7%A5%9E%E6%A8%82%E9%9A%8A

http://www.freewebs.com/ritachao/apollothe.htm

http://radiodiffusion.wordpress.com/category/hong-kong/

http://www.radiodiffusion.net/extra/Apollo_Guitar_Ad.jpg

http://rateyourmusic.com/label/new_wave_record_co_



I'm still struggling to find somebody who can help me with translations:

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Friday, 31 March 2017

VINCENT BELL "THE SOUNDTRONIC GUITAR OF VINCENT BELL" (1960)


"The Soundtronic Guitar of Vincent Bell", front cover

Vinnie Bell (born Vincent Gambella, July 28, 1935, New York, United States) is a leading American session guitarist and pioneer of electronic effects in Pop music.

One of the two or three greatest guitar geeks of the Space Age Pop era, Vinnie Bell will go down in musical history as the inventor of the 'water guitar sound' that was a big fad in instrumental recordings during the '60s.

Used most prominently on Ferrante and Teicher's 1969 Top Ten cover of the theme to "Midnight Cowboy", and on his own rendition of the "'Airport' Love Theme" in 1970, the effect became one of the most-copied technique among guitarists until the wah-wah pedal became standard equipment in the '70s. Among the other essential records that feature his trademark sound, we should at least mention Dick Hyman / Mary Mayo's "Moon Gas", released in 1963 and available here on Stereo Candies.

Originally a Brooklyn boy, born just about a mile from Coney Island, Bell started to learn the mandolin when he was four years old according to the old method: solfeggio and a good swat for every mistake. Then, at eight years of age came the switch to guitar, and at the ripe maturity of twelve years the start of his professional career.

His training was informal, but with some good teachers like Tony Mottola and Carmen Mastren. Mottola taught him the basic all-around fundamentals and made him his protégé, while Mastren taught him the rhythm guitar. He also studied under Everett Barksdale and Mickey Baker.


"The Soundtronic Guitar of Vincent Bell", back cover


Bell and effects


«I was always into electronics. I was always making effects pedals that weren't in the vogue. I used to fool with electronics - taking apart old radios, when I was nine years old! I can't count the many times I came close to being electrocuted! But I learned by doing that. I was just always inventing things...»

Long before any company commercially produced guitar effects pedals, Vinnie Bell was tinkering and inventing with his own electronic custom effects pedals for his guitars. He constantly came up with new effects like fuzz distortion and wah-wah pedals, before anyone else had them. This gave him an edge over most other guitarists in the '60s recording world, and producers loved to bring him on their sessions to get his unique guitar effects.


Vincent Bell, 1964

Although the invention of the wah-wah pedal in 1966 is attributed to Bradley J. Plunkett, Bell claims he actually built one in 1954 and used it on recording sessions, as early as 1956: «I came up with what later became known as the 'wah-wah pedal' while experimenting at my workbench with some filter circuits, so I started using it at sessions. No one else had anything like it, of course. I was the only one.»

At the time Bell didn't have enough money to patent his invention. His idea was unprotected and unfortunately he was enough naive and kind to explain how it worked, until he finally discovered that the wah-wah pedal had been made commercially available by someone else...: «Ever since then, I have a policy to never give out information about how my pedals work. In fact, Les Paul went to his grave, still begging me to tell him how my 'water sound' pedal worked!»


Vincent Bell and the Bellzouki, 1965

In Dana Countryman's book about Jean-Jacques Perrey, "Passport To the Future", from which a few of the quotes in this post are taken, Bell describes in detail the moment when the basis of his creation were stolen by a German manager who later sold the idea to a company for $500. Althought there's absolutely no reason to doubt about his words, I believe that we also should take in consideration that, during those years, many engineers were working with electronics to produce new ways to treat sound.

As the early phase of his recording career clearly confirms, Bell was probably one of the first to achieve the wah-wah effect - or even THE first - in the '50s, but, with the technologic advances of the '60, it was just a matter of time before someone else would come up with a similar device... Having said that, we should never forget the fact that professionals are still puzzling over Bell's 'water guitar sound' after almost sixty years. His genius in unquestionable, period.


Bell as a session guitarist


«I'd bring my pedals to sessions, and the producers would go nuts! They always want 'new sounds', whatever that may be. So, by playing these strange effects, I created a market for myself, which is why I'm on so many hit records. The producers knew they could count on me to bring something different to their sessions.»

Bell used to play nightclubs in New York City during the very early '60s, but by 1962 he decided to devote his energies to working solely as a studio musician. Well before that, he was already sitting in as a session player on various recordings, often to take advantage of the unique guitar effects he was known for producing.

Bell was one of the few session men to regularly rate a mention in an album's credits or liner notes, at least when his special effects were a major ingredient. On the other hand, for every credit, there were hundreds of sessions for which his name was never mentioned. For Space Age Pop fans, the sight of Vinnie Bell's name on an album is usually a sure sign of something well worth a listen.


Vincent Bell as he appears on the front cover of his "Big Sixteen Guitar Favorites" album, 1965

His early wah-wah designs can be heard on such rare singles as "Jersey Bounce / Blast Off"" by The Spacemen and "Smoke Rings / Hawaiian Haze" by The Overtones, both released in 1959. More of his signature guitar sounds can also be heard on the track "Barracuda", the instrumental flipside of the "Silently" single by The Gallahads released on Vik the previous year.

Taking a little step backward and according to the Doo-wop.blogg.org website, Bell joined The Gum Drops - an evolution of the Ray Allen Trio - sometimes around 1955. It is unclear to me if his stay with them was just a brief affiliation or a long-term relationship, and whether it included participation to any of the group's recordings. Anyway, as a matter of fact, none of The Gum Drops pictures that I was able to find on the web includes Bell, so I'm inclined to believe that his activity within the group only lasted for a short period of time.

Throughout his career, Bell may have played on more hit records than just about any other session musician, as producers counted frequently on him for variety and uncommon tricks. Proof that he knew his stuff, is the huge list of artists who benefited from his work: Louis Armstrong (...the banjo on "Hello Dolly"...), Simon and Garfunkel (...no less than "The Sound of Silence"...), Frank Sinatra (...the theme from "New York, New York"...), The Four Seasons (...their rendition of the classic "I've Got You Under My Skin"...), The Lovin' Spoonful ("You Didn't Have to Be So Nice"), Bobby Darin ("If I Were a Carpenter")...

He added the distinctive 'chk, chk-chk' percussive sound that comes at the end of each phrase on Dionne Warwick's "Walk On By" and also stands out on Frankie Valli's "Can't Take My Eyes Off of You". An uncomplete list of hits that received Bell's contribution is available on his own website and is no less than impressive!


A Danelectro catalogue featuring Vincent Bell on cover, circa 1965-66

During the years, Bell has left his indelible mark on many other recordings that were not 'hits' in a strict way, but still they have sedimented in the musical experience of many generations of listeners.. Undoubtedly, Vinnie Bell is part of popular music history, and is surprising to learn how many people - even among those who are strongly interested in music - have never heard his name.

Charles Fox leaned heavily on him for his score for the legendary Jane Fonda space sex kitten saga "Barbarella". Even Lester Lanin succumbed to Bell's spell, hiring him and Fox for his album "Narrowing the Generation Gap". Several decades later, his pedalboard tremolo was used to tremendous effect in the bass guitar part that leads off Angelo Badalamenti's atmospheric theme to David Lynch's television series "Twin Peaks", and should I omit to bring to your attention that he also played the mandolin on "The Godfather" soundtrack?

Many times Bell's work has been left uncredited, for example on the two seminal albums "The In Sound from Way Out!" (1966) and "Kaleidoscopic Vibrations" (1967) by Perrey & Kingsley, or even credited to other musicians, for example his lead guitar on Kai Winding's version of "More (Theme From Mondo Cane)" (1963) which was attributed to Kenny Burrell in the liner notes.

These lists could go on forever, as a last trivia I would only like to mention that, in 1993, Bell even managed to be featured on the album "Sound of White Noise" by legendary New York thrashers Anthrax...


Bell and the Electric Sitar


For many years, Vinnie Bell has been a consultant to the Danelectro Corporation, Neptune City, New Jersey, a leading manufacturer of electric guitars and musical instrument amplifiers. One of his earlier contribution was the introduction of the first twelve-string electric guitar, called the Bellzouki, which he developed with Nathan.I. Daniel, president of the company.


Vincent Bell as he appears in an ad for the Danelectro Coral electric sitar, circa 1967-1968

When Bell heard the Indian Sitar for the first time, he recognized the potential of its sound. Althought the Indian instrument is extremely difficult to play, Bell, because of his exceptional ability and talent, was quickly able to master it. Soon he was using it on recording dates and the Sitar Sound became definitely 'In'.

Bell asked himself how could other pop artists learn to use such a difficult instrument. Why not create a new instrument, an Electric Sitar, designed along the lines of the guitar, which could be used on recording sessions and which could be played with the rest of the group, rather than be dubbed in separately, as in the case with the Indian instrument, one that would overcome another weakness of the original, the inability to play chords. Again he collaborated with his friend, Nathan I. Daniel, and after a year of intensive research and development, a new instrument was born in 1967: the Coral Electric Sitar.


Vincent Bell, circa 1967-68

During the same year Decca Records released the aptly titled "Pop Goes the Electric Sitar", an album where Bell applied the various possibilities offered by his freshly invented instrument to recent hits and classics like "Goin' Out of My Head", "You Don't Have To Say You Love Me", "Eleanor Rigby", "Quiet Village" and others.

In that time, Bell played the Coral Electric Sitar on Pop hits like "Green Tambourine" by the The Lemon Pipers, "Band of Gold" by Freda Payne, "She's an Heartbreaker" by Gene Pitney, "Glory Bound" by The Grass Roots and many more.

«When Jimi Hendrix came on the scene, he blew everyone away. Of course I knew who he was. He was making quite a name for himself. One day I got a call from him, and it turns out he was a big fan of my albums! He asked me how I got certain sounds. I mean the guy really had ears, and he did his research. I told him what I could, and later I helped make up a custom left-handed Danelectro Electric Sitar for him, which he used onstage.»


Vincent Bell as he appears on the back cover of his "Airport Love Theme" album, 1970


Solo discography


«When I recorded my own solo albums in the '60s, I used all kinds of effects that had never been heard before.»

Compared to his career as a session man, Vincent Bell's own output is not plentiful as you could imagine, infact all his solo recordings span a mere eleven years period. From 1960 to 1970 he released eight albums (including a collaborative one) and eleven singles.

In the following brief discography I will try to give an overview of his albums and also mention a few singles that contain exclusive material not available on the LPs. When mono and stereo versions of an album exist, the catalogue number refers to the stereo version, here we go:

"Lead Guitar / Quicksand", 7"
(Independent Record Company - 102, 1960)

Produced by Monte Bruce, this single was released sometimes in early/mid 1960 by Independent Record Company, a small label distributed by Laurie Records. The single marks the debut of Vincent Bell as a solo artist and is probably one of his most rare releases.

"The Soundtronic Guitar of Vincent Bell", LP
(Independent Record Company - 8012, 1960)

This album's release date is often wrongly placed in 1959. As a matter of fact, Billboard informed record dealers that such LP had a «limited sales potential» no earlier than November 21, 1960, so I believe that a late 1960 release date is more correct.

"Whistle Stop", LP
(Verve - V6-8574, February 1964)

This is one of the best works that Bell has ever released, and a real showcase of his array of guitar effects. It was such a departure from its usual jazz fare that the label felt compelled to include a sort of warning in the liner notes which advised listeneres that «this is not a Jazz recording»...

"51 Greatest Motion Picture Favorites", LP
(MusicVoice - MVS-3009, October 1964)

As per title, this album contains four long medleys of 51 movie themes and is far less daring if compared to the previous release. It seems like Bell has adapted his performance to more traditional schemes, even though every now and then some of his trademark sounds can still be heard.

"Big Sixteen Guitar Favorites", LP
(Musicor - MS-3047, March 1965)

In this second album on Musicor, Bell returns to explore most of the possibilities offered by his different guitars and effects. This LP was also released in France with a different cover. In 1970, in the wake of the "Airport Love Theme" success, the album was re-released with a new title, "The Best of Vinnie Bell"...

"Love Is a Guitar", collaborative LP
(ABC-Paramount - ABCS 568, November 1966)

Bell contributes his guitar to this Easy Listening album arranged and conducted by Peter De Angelis, along with other three famous guitarists of Italian descent: Don Arnone, Al Casamenti and Ralph Casale. Althought this is not a solo recording, I believe that it should be included in this discography for completeness.

"Pop Goes the Electric Sitar", LP
(Decca - DL 74938, October 1967)

Following his invention of the electric sitar and its commercialization, for his first album on Decca Bell applies the possibilities of this newborn instrument on recent hits and various classics. The record was also released in Japan with a different cover and title.

"A Sinner Kissed an Angel / California Summer", 7"
(Decca - 32418, December 1968)

The track "California Summer" was recorded during the sessions that later produced the "Good Morning Starshine" album, but is exclusive to this 45 rpm release.

"Ballad of John and Yoko / Les Bicyclettes de Belsize", 7"
(Decca - 732530, August 1969)

"Ballad of John and Yoko" was also recorded during the sessions for "Good Morning Starshine", but wasn't used on the album.

"Good Morning Starshine", LP
(Decca - DL 75138, September 1969)

For his second album on Decca, Bell offers his classy and imaginative interpretations of various late '60s hits using the usual plethora of effects and tricks. The electric sitar is also present in a few tracks providing an exotic touch.

"Airport Love Theme", LP
(Decca - DL 75212, May 1970)

Bell's last solo album was also the most successful. Released as a single, the title track climbed all the way to #31 on the Billboard Hot 100 in May 1970 and sold more than one million copies, celebrating Bell's trademark 'water guitar sound'.

Despite his ongoing studio work through the '70s and the '80s, I can't help but wondering why Bell didn't release any other record after the success of his own version of the "Airport Love Theme". I'm sure that he had plenty of aces up his sleeve, but anyway...

A closing trivia about Bell's discography: in 1970, riding the wave of the "Airport Love Theme", Musicor not only re-released the album that Bell recorded for them in 1965, but also came up with another album with an almost identical title and a similar cover... This LP included most of the tracks recorded and released in 1965, along with a version of the "Airport Love Theme" performed by another guitarist named Giovanni Matteo...

The cover was clearly arranged to mislead the public into believing that the album contained Bell's hit single, and in my opinion it is very sad to see how those professionals were motivated by fraudolent intentions, shame on them!

Decca took legal action against Musicor in June 1970 and the scam album was probably retired from the market shortly after its release. Nowadays it is uncommon to find copies available for sale.


Vincent Bell and his Danelectro Coral electric sitar, early '70s


"The Soundtronic Guitar of Vincent Bell" contains the following tracks:

01. Sentimental Journey (2:00)
02. The Faint (2:16)
03. Sunny Boy (3:08)
04. Stompin' at the Savoy (4:15)
05. Auburn (2:35)
06. Echoes of Spain (4:25)
07. Caravan (2:29)
08. I'll Remember April (4:27)
09. Travelin' Guitar (2:25)
10. Darn That Dream (4:05)
11. Malaguenia (5:40)

The following bonus tracks are taken from the single released shortly before the album, more information about it are available in this other post:

12. Lead Guitar (1:45)
13. Quicksand (2:17)

All tracks were remastered from October 2016 to March 2017 and are available in FLAC lossless format, along with complete artwork reconstruction and printable PDF files.

Please have a look at the comments for the download link.

Here's the complete credits and personnel list of the album:

Vincent Bell: guitar
Buddy Brower: piano
Joe Andre: bass
Bob Alexander: drums

Notes written by Max Bodden.

Cover designed by Walter Rich.

Produced by Monte Bruce.


Vincent Bell as he appears on the back cover of his debut album, circa 1960

The following is a slightly edited version of the liner notes printed on the back cover of "The Soundtronic Guitar of Vincent Bell":

«Wherever guitarists gather they talk, sooner or later, of the soundtronic guitar of Vincent Bell... and whenever Vincent Bell's group performs in nightclubs or on the concert stage these same musicians, professionals and amateurs, will flock to hear, see and enjoy.

Who then is Vincent Bell, this versatile young man who can capture any mood, any effect, with his almost magical musical mastery?

He was born in New York, in 1935. When he was four years old, Bell started to learn to play the mandolin according to the old method: solfeggio and a good swat for every mistake. Then, at eight years of age came the switch to guitar and at the ripe maturity of twelve years the start of the professional career. Since that time he has recorded with such great names in popular music as Eddie Fisher, Julius La Rosa, Lou Monte, Bob Eberly, The Mary Kaye Trio, Vic Damone and many others. As a matter of fact, whenever an outstanding guitarist is needed for a recording session, Vincent is the first choice.

In addition to his numerous recording sessions, Vincent Bell has found time for personal appearances on radio and television and has performed in most of the better supper-clubs and night-clubs from coast to coast.

In this recording Bell demonstrates his unusual command of the guitar to the fullest. From the explosive brilliance of the flamenco to the glittering technical proficiency of the classics, every number is full of sound, of vital force and imaginative treatment. From the first cut to the last, this magnificent record fairly crackles with excitement, with a range of moods from melodic nostalgia to uncontrollable enthusiam, with a variety of tempos from the fastest, most furious strumming to the softest, dreamiest rhythms.

The soundtronic guitar of Vincent Bell, the fabulous instrument that makes possible this dazzling display of dexterity, is the result of endless electronic experimentation. Countless hours were spent by Vincent and other electronic experts to perfect the special sound projections and effects that make this recording an outstanding audio treat. Not only guitar afficionados, but all those interested in amazingly fine sound reproduction, will appreciate the technical proficiency and unmatched fidelity of this album.

Instrumentalist-arranger Vincent Bell is assisted here by Buddy Brower, piano - Bob Alexander, drums - and Joe Andre, bass. “They work WITH me” says Vincent Bell, “they fit-in completely with whatever I am doing.”

Listen to "The Soundtronic Guitar of Vincent Bell" once... you'll want to listen to it over and over... and you'll be another of the dyed-in-the-wool fans of this "guitarists' guitarist".»


"The Soundtronic Guitar of Vincent Bell" was released by Independent Record Company with catalogue number 8012 sometimes in 1960. The release date of this album is often wrongly placed in 1959 or in the early '60s. As a matter of fact, Billboard informed record dealers that such LP had a «limited sales potential» no earlier than November 21, 1960, so I believe that a late 1960 release date is more correct. Anyway, how cruel is that limited potential thing? Isn't it...?

The album comes in an essential but effective cover designed by Walter Rich which features red and black concentric circles, simple typography and little else. On the back of my copy, the picture portraying Bell is of an awful quality and was reversed for unknown reasons. Two examples of the same cover coming with a better-looking and unreversed picture are available on these websites.

This LP is not an absolute rarity, but among Bell's discography it is surely one of those items that are rarely available for purchase nowadays. Even rarer than the version presented in this post, is the Australian pressing that was released by Top Rank International, you can catch a glimpse of its slightly different front cover here.



Right from the beginning of Side One Bell clearly conveys to the listener the sensation that the guitar they're about to listen will sound different from their previous experiences of the instrument, whatever they are. There's no doubt that the journey in, ehm, "Sentimental Journey" is by rail as Vinnie spends most of his energies reproducing a variety of train sounds. The original composition, featuring the voice of Doris Day, was written in 1944 by Les Brown and Ben Homer, with lyrics by Bud Green, and it stands out as one of the most remembered songs of the late WWII years.

"The Faint" is the first of the four instrumentals written by Bell that are included on the album, and the percussion-lead rhythm makes it one of its most lively tracks. This number was also included as the flipside on the "Caravan" single around the same time that the LP was released.

"Sunny Boy"is a retitled - or mistitled - version of "Sonny Boy", a song written by Ray Henderson, Bud De Sylva, and Lew Brown no earlier than 1928, and first performed by Al Jolson in The Singing Fool movie. The original is almost lost in Bell's version, who turns it in a series of impeccable guitar solos.

"Stompin' at the Savoy" is a Jazz standard composed by Edgar Sampson in 1934 and named after the Savoy Ballroom, a long since defunct ballroom that was located in the Harlem neighborhood of Manhattan, New York City. Benny Goodman's 1936 version is probably the most famous. Bell's version retains the original structure and enriches it with his incomparable and infectious verve, great!

Although it doesn't feature exactly the same 'water guitar sound' for which Bell is famous, his self-penned "Auburn" has a sort of underwater feeling to it. Some of the parts of this gentle composition sounds like they were muffled somehow, and the tremolo effects adds character to the general pathos. Guitar is the only instrument that is featured in this track, and there seem to be at least three or four of them overlayed one on another, making this one of the most original numbers on the album.

"Echoes of Spain" brings the first side to an end. Written by Bell, this track is obviously inspired by the Flamenco classics, but also incorporates small parts played on an electric guitar along with the usual Flamenco guitar schemes.



Side Two opens with a superb version of "Caravan", a Jazz standard composed in 1936 by Duke Ellington and Juan Tizol with lyrics by Irving Mills. Bell's rendition is a tour de force where his multilayered guitars take care about all the musical parts which, in this piece, are usually shared by brass and woodwind instruments. Most notably, the piano is completely absent in this recording, and the only other instruments that seems to be featured are contrabass and assorted percussions. This tracks was aptly released as a single, backed with the aforementioned "The Faint".

"I'll Remember April" is another standard written in 1942 by Gene de Paul with lyrics by Don Raye and Patricia Johnston. The first half of the version found on "The Soundtronic Guitar of Vincent Bell" is mostly faithful to the original, but the levels of expression reached by Bell's guitar are sublime as he recreates the original vocal part using a swell pedal or a similar effect. Suddendly the mood changes and Bell embarks on a fast guitar solo as the other members of his small group aptly support him, just before returning to the initial calmness.

"Travelin' Guitar" is the fourth original Bell composition included on the album and its simple structure has a strong Country feeling. It may not be the best track on the record, but nonetheless it serves to balance its contents in an appropriate way.

"Darn That Dream" is a popular song written in 1939 by Jimmy Van Heusen and Eddie DeLange, which was first featured in the Broadway short-lived musical "Swingin' the Dream". This is a very calm peace which is completely built on Bell's multitracked acoustic and electric guitars, except - maybe - for a few bass notes. As usual, his playing is clean and expressive, and small portions of treated sounds are thrown in the mix for good measure.

The album ends with "Malaguenia", a mistitled version of "Malagueña", a piece written in 1928 by famous Cuban composer and pianist Ernesto Lecuona. The song has since become a standard and has been provided with lyrics in several languages. As if proof was needed, this closing number once again demonstrates Bell's technical capabilities and lyricism.

edit 03.04.2017:

A visitor of this blog was kind enough to share more information about the album in the comments section: it looks like the four instrumentals penned by Vincent Bell, namely "The Faint", "Auburn", "Echoes of Spain" and "Travelin' Guitar", were later included on an album credited to The Platters and The Exotic Guitars. That's weird!

Such album was released by Guest Star in two versions: the first one was released in 1962 and the second appeared no earlier than 1968 with a completely different artwork.

Even weirder is the fact that The Exotic Guitars were usually a vehicle for guitarist Al Casey... Bell's name doesn't appear anywhere on the two records mentioned above: this is just another example of how frequently his work has been concealed for unknown reasons.


The following clips offer a preview of the remastered album: enjoy "Sentimental Journey", "The Faint", "Caravan", "Darn That Dream" and "Malaguenia"!












More information about Vinnie Bell is available here:

http://www.vinniebell.com/

http://www.spaceagepop.com/bell.htm

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vinnie_Bell

http://www.danguitars.com/VINCENT_BELL.html

https://www.discogs.com/artist/353572-Vinnie-Bell

http://www.spaceagepop.com/rc008.htm

http://chmatinee.blogspot.com/2015/06/newsreel-corner-cross-promotion-for.html

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cE3C1bX-6yk


If you have other useful information about this post, or if you spot any dead links, please get in touch with me at stereocandies [at] hotmail [dot] com or leave a comment in the box below, thank you!

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