Barbecue King

Barbecue King Artist: Jorma Kaukonen
Label: Acadia Records
Category: Music


Average customer rating: 3 out of 5 stars
Media: Audio CD
Number Of Discs: 1


UPC: 805772800427
EAN: 0805772800427
ASIN: B000053ZQC


Release Date: 2001-03-13

Barbecue King


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Tracks:

  1. Runnin' With The Fast Crowd
  2. Man For All Seasons
  3. Starting Over Again
  4. Milkcow Blues Boogie
  5. Roads & Roads &
  6. Love Is Strange
  7. To Hate Is To Stay Young
  8. Rockabilly Shuffle
  9. Snout Psalm
  10. Barbeque King

Similar Items:

  1. Jorma
  2. Stars in My Crown
  3. Quah
  4. Blue Country Heart
  5. The Land of Heroes

Album Description

First time on CD for 1980 release for the former Jefferson Airplane guitarist who went onto form Hot Tuna. On this release the guitarist returned in a group context, co-billing this record to the rhythm section of drummer John Stench and bassist Denny DeGorio under the name Vital Parts. Ten tracks including a cover of 'Love Is Strange'. Standard jewel case. 2001 release.

Customer Reviews:

3 out of 5 stars Runnin' With The Jorma Crowd.......2004-02-09

The first song, Runnin' with the Fast Crowd, is a very catchy tune. It plays over and over in your head even if you haven't listened to it in months or even years. The rest of the songs are pretty forgettable. I can't recommend an entire album for one song, but it's up to you. It is Jorma we're talking about, after all.

3 out of 5 stars God Save The King/BBQ Uber Alles.......2003-04-21

JORMA'S PUNK ALBUM?

When Hot Tuna broke up, in 1978, it was a strange world indeed. This amazing guitar player, troubador of tunes and craftsman of original music always gave a tip of his hat to tradition, while he dutifully carried the torch of the reigning free spirit of the Volunteers of Amerikkka and the Woodstock generation. Jorma always had an open mind, encouraged creativity in everyone around him, and was an amazingly humble person.

Jorma was not a punk-rocker, nor did he try to be. What he did try to be, if anything, was true to himself. To be forced into anyone's preconceived notion or expectation of what he should be would contradict everything he beleived in and stood for. It must have seemed odd I imagine, that the very audience that enthusiastically embraced this ideology in the sixties, were the very ones who seemed to not want to let Jorma change, grow or experiment at this time. Jorma could have easily found a Jack Cassady replacement, there were tons of fans that worshiped him, and knew every song backward and forwards. Fans that had access to him. There may not be anyone who could truly replace Jack, for he was truly a great and unique bass player in his own right, but he could have found someone who knew the songs and someone who could at least emulate Jack's approach. To Jorma, I think, it was about more than that. It was about the spirit.

I was there, that's how I know. I heard people shout disappointedly, "Let your freak flag fly Jorma!!!" after he had cut his hair and died it PURPLE. His hair was short and PURPLE!!!! What more of a Phreak Phlag do you want!!!...This reaction seemed about as open minded in '79/'80 as a redneck hollering get a haircut a decade earlier.

Would his audience of been happier if he put together a mellow cover band of his greatest hits? It certainly would seem so. Would Jorma have been? Obviously not.

When Jorma first asked me to play with him it was after he saw Bob Steeler and I play a show in our band "The Offs". When I met him I didn't know a single one of his songs. I had a couple of Jefferson Airplane albums as a kid, and I called him JOR-MA (With a "hard" J as in "Jump"). I asked him how Maurice was.(That strange character on the back of the Volunteers Album-he was never in the band-he was just a character on the cover is all) We met up a couple of days after that if I recall, the three of us. We got together and just jammed for hours. The next time I saw him was at a gig in New York. We hadn't even practiced, not in any disciplined sense. I think it was booked as a Hot Tuna show, as I recall. As we continued to play together, we got a little better. There were alot of things lacking, and the band was never as good as a band with Jorma should have been. This was for a variety of reasons, including my relative inexperience. We also had our moments, and I always thought in retrospect we could have been so much better, especially with the right support. The audience apparently hated me. For better or worse this album chronicles that time. I keep a copy like one might keep a yearbook or a picture album. It reminds me of a younger innocent time for me. It reminds me of fun times, wild times, free times. It also brings back some bad memories. You can say what you will about this album, but if you listen maybe you can sense a little bit of that spirit, I can even hear it through the over-production.
I give this Album three stars, and each one of those stars go completely to Jorma. His guitar playing is impecable. I honestly think that although Quah is a must have, this album rounds out any true collection representative of the man. His audience hated this album, for the most part - it sold less than any of the Albums that preceded it. The radio stations barely played it. They scapegoated me for some reason so it seemed. They seemed to view Jorma as being a "traiter" for joining the "punks" (playing with me in other words). Thus far I had only played in punk bands so I was used to people throwing stuff at me. I guess you could say Jorma didn't especially "strike a chord" with his audience at this time, and he was soon dropped from the record company immediately following this album (RCA) .-We parted ways not long after that, though to this day we keep in touch. Although Jorma's audience might not have been all that open minded, they were eager to forgive him and take him back. It was soon forgotten, as if it were just a prank, and he continues to forge ahead to this day. In retrospect, I admire Jorma now, and think it took a lot of courage to do what he's done. He is a brave man, and he taught me the life long lesson that it takes true courage to be yourself, sometimes even when you are unsure of what that is. Like any true artist, he is a complicated man, and this album is part of a complete picture. If you are a Jorma fan, you should buy it. If you are one of the old fans that used to throw things at me, you should buy me a beer -hehe -though I guess I can't really blame you- but in case you wondered.... I was never such a bad guy!

5 out of 5 stars This Album Will Cook Your Barbeque For SURE!! GREAT!!!.......2003-01-29

Whoever said this is punk must of been listening to the wrong album. This JORMA release is a real great upbeat from his others."A MAN FOR ALL SEASONS" also known as "JUNKIES ON ANGEL DUST" for all of those who attend live JORMA shows will love this version. Some excellent electric guitar work here. All new songs for all JORMA/HOT TUNA fans which is a real treat. The Stench brothers sound good on drums & bass.
A real Treat for all!!!

3 out of 5 stars Some good cuts on here.......2002-10-13

I have to disagree with the other reviewer here. I would not call this a "punk rock" album. The musicianship is way above the Ramones, Dead Kennedys etal.

When Hot Tuna broke up in 1978, Jorma seriously looked for some new directions to go in. This is another collection that sounds better to me now than when it originally came out in 1980. There are some great songs on here: I especially like "Too Hate is To Stay Young" and "Snout Pslam". "Running With A Fast Crowd" is Jorma taking a stab at power pop and not doing half bad. I like it.

There's a great band verion of "Roads and Roads &" on here. The title cut is excellent and, once agan I have to disagree with this other guy, "Milkcow Blues" is done ala' Eddie Cochran.

Jorma stuck with a trio format for the most part on this. Denny Degorio (bass) came from a SF band called the Offs. The Stench brothers came from an interesting SF power pop group called Pearl Harbor and the Explosions.

There are a number of recent Cd's of Jorma's that I would say to go for before this but if you're looking for something different.....

2 out of 5 stars

Music Album:

  1. Welcome Back 1982-1985 ~ Various Artists
  2. All My Bright Tomorrows ~ Paul Pierce
  3. Summer Holiday: 40th Anniversary Edition ~ Cliff Richard
  4. Retrospective: The Best of Suzanne Vega ~ Suzanne Vega
  5. Steel Guitar Tribute to the Eagles ~ Various Artists
  6. Never Enough Time ~ Dial-7
  7. Spirit of Autumn Past ~ Mostly Autumn
  8. Dan Reed Network ~ Dan Reed Network
  9. If Love Comes with It ~ Alan Copeland Singers
  10. Hatfield and the North ~ Hatfield and the North

Music Album

Music Album

Music CD

Dreams ~ Dreams

Jazz/Concord ~ Herb Ellis, Joe Pass, Ray Brown, Jake Hanna

1939 Camel Caravan Shows ~ Bob Crosby & the Bobcats

The Best of Candy Dulfer ~ Candy Dulfer

Live from Soundscape: Latin New York 1980-1983 ~ Various Artists

Ti Amo: Das Beste Von 1996-2000 ~ Brunner & Brunner

Live (Alle Zeit der Welt) ~ Rainhard Fendrich

Geppo II Folle ~ Adriano Celentano

O'Deon 99 ~ Juliette Gr%C3%A9co

Sem Tempo ~ Sem Tempo