Robert Johnson - On Tour (1979, Infinity Records L33-1005 promo EP)(24-bit 96kHZ vinyl rip)


Robert Johnson - On Tour (Promo EP)

Vinyl rip in 24-bit / 96kHZ [and redbook] FLAC + artwork
261 MB / 75 MB | magnet + mega | Rock
Promo EP from "Close Personal Friend" with Elvis cover!

Having auditioned for the slot made vacant by Mick Taylor, ROBERT JOHNSON at the age of 23 was in his opinion too young and too American to join The Rolling Stones. In 1974 he secured the lead guitar slot in Who bass players JOHN ENTWISTLE’s OX where he stayed for the next three years.




In 1978 the world was finally exposed to ROBERT JOHNSON solo artist whose two albums were released in UK on the Ensign Label (bonus album 'The Memphis Demos' was released in 1980'.)

With a name like Robert Johnson there was initially some confusion with the late blues hero but once the music was played and a fresh faced blonde hair kid exposed to the press/public there was no confusion this was the 70’s Robert.

He toured in support of 'Close Personal Friend' opening for amongst others The POLICE and The KNACK but 'bad vibes and bad management' doomed his band and albums to a premature fate.

Crank up loud and enjoy.
MAY 4, 1998: Rotterdam, 1975 – “I flew in on KLM airlines around 11 in the morning, and when I called over to the hotel, Mick [you know, Jagger] told me they [you know, the Rolling Stones] were just going to bed. He said he’d call back around 5 or 6 that afternoon. It ended up being closer to 7 p.m. When I finally did get the call, they told me to come down to their hotel room. When I got there, one of their valet guys answered the door. He asked me to come in, and when I walked in it was just me and the boys. You could tell it was Keith’s room. All the white light bulbs had been replaced with red ones. There were these weird scarves hanging over all the lampshades, and, man, there were guitars everywhere. For a while we just sat around and listened to tapes – some Memphis stuff, some stuff they’d been working on, some stuff I’d been working on with John Entwistle and Nicky Hopkins. We listened for a while, and then we plucked around on a few guitars. Then we went to this makeshift studio they had set up in an old auditorium down the street from the hotel. Glyn Johns [you know, the Stones’ engineer] had their mobile recording unit set up in a big Mercedes truck outside – huge cables running out of it and everything. [Johns] had this primitive video system running from the auditorium to the truck, and he would just talk to us from outside through the monitors. … I didn’t know going in, but they were also auditioning Jeff Beck at the same time. I remember he came into the studio smoking a big ol’ cigar. … By the end of the session all four of us – even Mick – were playing guitar together. It was pretty cool.”

Pretty cool, indeed. Just another day in the life of “the World’s Greatest Rock-and-Roll Band,” but a day that Robert Johnson will never forget. Whether he’d like to or not. Needless to say, Johnson’s 1975 audition for the guitar spot that Mick Taylor vacated a year earlier didn’t pan out. At 23, he was probably too young to join the then-thirtysomething Stones, and he was definitely too American (the charge eventually fell to Ron Wood, who had him beat on both counts), but he sure didn’t lack for experience. By 1975, young Robert Johnson’s life already read like the bluebook for a rock-and-roll fantasy camp. While still attending West Side High School, he became a regular session player at Stax, Sonic, and a host of other Memphis studios.

By the ripe old age of 20, he was splitting his time between Memphis and London, and his company between Isaac Hayes and Marc Bolan. He shared an apartment with Ian Anderson, trashed a hotel room with Keith Moon, and, in 1974 – among a field of 200 hopefuls – secured the lead guitar slot in John Entwistle’s band Ox. Sure, luck had a little to do with it; Johnson found himself in the right place at the right time more often than any one person justly should. And he’ll look you square in the eye and admit that “I’ve just always had the desire to hang around certain people.” But the kid from West Side High also had the ambition of 10 men and the chops to match. And therein lies the essence of Robert Johnson – a rare individual who tempers a fan’s zeal with a player’s composure. It’s a balance he strikes to this day, juggling music consulting (for several television documentaries, B.B. King’s Blues Club on Beale, and the Hard Rock Cafe, which features some of Johnson’s memorabilia on the walls of its Beale Street restaurant, making him the only Memphis-born guitarist represented there) and regular session work (with everyone from ZZ Top to an obscure Swedish band called Eric Von Zipper). Living a rock-and-roll fantasy: Robert Johnson has jammed with the likes of the Rolling Stones and Little Milton (above).

Back to the ’70s. After a three-year tenure with Entwistle’s Ox, Johnson moved back home and began work on what would become his crowning solo achievement – the album Close Personal Friend. Newsweek called it “one of the late-’70s’ best, if least known, rock-and-roll records.” But Close Personal Friend – reissued just last month on EMI subsidiary label Bubblehead Records – is hardly the brand of rock you’d expect from a Stax/Stones affiliate. In the context of 1998’s splintered pop landscape, it’s easy to forget what a shock the album must have been upon initial release. There he was, a guitar player rooted in blues and soul churning out a power-pop gem worthy of a slot on the Stiff records release schedule right between Dave Edmunds and Nick Lowe. The shift was more than mere trend-spotting. “You have to remember what was on the charts in those days [1978],” Johnson explains. “You had Saturday Night Fever, Donna Summer, Dolly Parton. There just weren’t many people in the top-100 playing rock-and-roll [maybe things haven’t changed so much after all]. The Sex Pistols came along and changed all that. They really floored me.” Again, the fan led, and the player followed.

-
Johnson toured in support of Close Personal Friend, opening for the Police and the Knack, but “bad vibes and bad management,” doomed his band and album to a premature fate. Johnson has retreated to quieter musical confines since then. He recently co-wrote a song for the upcoming Dennis Quaid Bosnian War drama Savior. And he’s enjoying the monthly royalty checks for the use of another of his songs, “The Country’s Rocking,” in the current production of Sesame Street Live. And though he recently struck out on a publicity tour for the Close Personal Friend re-release – most of these promotional efforts have been focused in Europe, where this July VH-1 will broadcast a live concert featuring Johnson and his bandmates from the album, fellow Memphians Blair Cunningham and David Cochran – Johnson seems most content pursuing his hobby of collecting and restoring old Midtown homes. But don’t be fooled; this rock-and-roll refugee can still bend your ear with the best of them.



You have no doubt see the LP in cut-out bins for years, right?



And you thought, "he looks like Moon Martin", even though you probably don't know who Moon Martin really is, but everyone says Robert Johnson looks like him...  anyhow, if you never bothered to listen, you missed some good rockin' stuff, I would say in the general vein of Dave Edmunds, Nick Lowe, Rockpile, that whole lot of pub rockers from that era. That is if I have to make some sort of comparison...  but for now, here is a little taste, a promo-only sampler that has a cover version of "Burning Love". I think this is the most text I ever included for so few songs!



tracks:

A1 I'll Be Waiting 4:42
A2 Responsibility 3:48
B1 Burning Love 2:58

credits:

Guitar, Vocals, Bass, Drums – Robert Johnson
Bass, Vocals, Drums – David Cochran
Vocals, Drums, Percussion – Blair Cunningham

;flac fingerprints generated by xACT 2.22 on 2013-04-08 20:34:20 -0600
A1 I'll Be Waiting.flac:3cb26d1210bf03272cfd957d3078c87d
A2 Responsibility.flac:535427a1f17012479e70fcd689740823
B1 Burning Love.flac:60460e8331272622e0edfb3b855ade2c



transfer: April 08, 2013
Record Doctor RCM
Audio-Technica AT33EV
Sota Sapphire w/ Eminent Technology Tonearm 2 (ET-2)
Cardas 4×33 cryo-treated tonearm wire loom w/ rhodium 1877phono clips and plugs
Tube Box SE II w/NOS Telefunken ECC83
TC Electronic Impact Twin ACD
Sound Studio [capture 24-bit/96kHZ]
Amadeus Pro [Analyze, split tracks, verify waveform, no clipping]
Izotope RX2 [manual de-clicking, dither and resample for redbook]
xACT [sbe correction, encoding to flac + ffp, tagging]


Comments

geoagee said…
Yes! What a nice surprise! Thank you very much.
garybx said…
Has anyone ripped "Close Personal Friend" yet? If not, I have it and can add it to the pile. Thanks for the reminder about him.

And speaking of Moon Martin, I've got 3 of his albums. They would be good candidates for ripping too.
86ed said…
Don't think so, I have it and Memphis Demos too... good stuff!
garybx said…
I'll leave it to you then, master!

What about Moon?
vegas said…
Never listened, thanks for the transfer. And for all the high quality work you always do. :)
sippinjava said…
Nice find - thanks!
theZguy said…
thanks for the rip

on discogs he is Robert Johnson #21
86ed said…
Yeah, most of that is mine on discogs... but he is the first Robert Johnson here!
86ed said…
You can do the Moon!! :cool:
Tigermks said…
But Keef loves Robert Johnson, how could he not make it with the Stones? Oh, nevermind ...

Thanks
86ed said…
The liner notes to the Angel Air CD reissue (which has all the demo material too) mentions this:
"This CD was mastered using a proprietary mastering technique developed by Robert Johnson and Doug Walker. The Blitz-Billy Method enables Analog tape transfer to digital formats with faithful Analog Hi-Fidelity results. This process uses Western Electric Circuitry and Tandberg RIAA Curve replication combined with FairChild Schematics, a unique Nylon point to point circuit board and Vintage Vacuum Tubes.

I cannot find anything about this 'method' on the google....?
Vogelweide said…
Thanks - looks interesting! After this album, no doubt he found himself at the crossroads...
crvnts said…
Fine sound and I like it the music, thanks!

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