It's probably not quite right to say that Creedence Clearcater Revival are underrated. They are very much appreciated by everyone, and everyone that hears one of their tunes can probably sing or whistle along and would agree that that is a very fine tune. Therein lies the problem me thinks. If CCR aren't underrated they are somehat taken for granted. Almost everyone likes their music just fine, but when the discussion turns to great American bands, how often does the name Creedence Clearwater Revival come up? Not very often I fear. The very fact that their monster hits were monster hits that still play on classic rock stations everywhere gives them, at least in some quarters, the reputation that they were somehow bubblegum rock'n'rollers, not, you know, serious artists.
And John Fogerty, for better and worse, the head, voice and main hand of the ensemble wouldn't have liked it any other way. CCR is the rare band that didn't search out critical approval, that never went for the 'serious album statement' or really any album statement at all. For Fogerty, and CCR, albums were what they were: You collect the hits, a couple of album tracks, then fill out the rest with a couple of well-chosen covers. Bam. That makes for good to very good albums, but arguably not a great one, at least not the kind of venerated great album that shows up in Greatest Albums Of All Time list, though Green River, their most consistent album, should probably be a candidate for such a list. As a matter of fact, I'd say that their run between 1969 and early 1971 is one of the best runs in American music history. Five albums, tons of great songs on them, and oll that in a little more than two years. I'm not sure who has a better hit rate in such a short time.
The idea to post some CCR came while I was working on the Bluegrass Chartbusters series (and boy has that one ballooned out of proportions since last we mentioned them...) and I realized that I put a CCR cover on almost all volumes, not only because the covers were very good, but also because of how great these songs really are. For this little compilation, I kept things simple: I stuck with the best songs which most of the time also were the biggest songs. No need to try and go for the deepest deep cut and sell that as a lost classic. Sure, there were some contenders that could have been on here, like "Pagan Baby", or "Effigy", or "Cross-Tie Walker", or half a dozen others, But considering my 80 minute time limit, there were tough choices to be made. Hey, you still get 27 great CCR numbers, programmed for maximum listening pleasure, or so I hope. I didn't want to sequence chronologically ( as the Chronicles - the name oliges - did), so I sequenced - say it with me, kids - for feel and flow, making sure that the uptempo ravers would be buffered by a midtempo number from time to time.
As you will see from my track selection, I am not a huge fan of the band's first two albums. Their eponymous (suck it, Ed!) debut album was really a product of its time, coming out in 1968 and sounding like it with its long, relatively aimless jams that are prevalent on these albums. CCR were never particularly interested in aligning themselves with the other San Fran rock bands, but they soon realized that the long jam was not only en vogue, but could also serve to fill out time when material was scant, a trick they repeatedly used when an album had to be made in the usual record time and Fogerty hadn't come up with enough numbers. I mean, I like Cosmo's Factory just fine, but the only reason "Ramble Tamble" is seven minutes and "I Heard It Though The Grapevine" a mind-numbing eleven is to reach vinyl album running time.
So the debut is represented by a single number, or rather: half one. I liked the song portion of "Walk On The Water", but that part is a very concide (and indicative of the future) 1:45 minutes long, then has a jam section attached that stretches it out to almost five minutes, uselessly I might add. The jam isn't even particularly well integrated, it is literally just tacked on at the end. Not here, though, on the first of two 'An American Band edits'. The second is "Born On The Bayou" from sophopore effort Bayou Country, were the band was starting to come into its own but hadn't shaken off the kind-of sludgy jam band stuff from the beginnings quite yet. So I mercilessly cut the song down for an imaginary single version of "Bayou" with both of the mid-song instrumental sections either completely or mostly gone and the song clocking in at a breezy three and a half minutes instead of a slovenly five and a half...
You might have guessed by now, but yeah, I largely prefer Fogerty's sub-three minute 'get in, get the job done, get out' songs. And boy, did he have a great number of those, and aren't they all swell. With a band like Creedence Clearwater Revival you can really talk about a 27-track comp that is 'all killer no filler'. Just top notch stuff, even on some of the slightly lesser-known numbers I included like "Don't Look Now", "Sinister Purpose" or "Molina". Speaking of sinister purpose: One of the interesting - and not that often discussed - aspects of Fogerty's songwriting in CCR is how dark and scary it is. The music is often upbeat and bouncy, but the sentiments aren't: Fogerty is often evoking fear and paranoia in songs whose titles say it all: "Tombstone Shadow", "Sinister Purpose", "Gloomy", "Bad Moon Rising".
Just take the latter song, the newly-minted opening number here. When you sing and tap along you tend to forget how dark and ominous the lyrics really are: "Hope you got your things together / I hope that you're quite prepared to die / looks like we're in for nasty weather / one eye is taken for an eye". Fire and brimstone from doomsday preacher John Fogerty, set to one of the bounciest beats to accompany the apocalypse you'll ever hear. Total masterpiece of course...And just as easily Fogerty could be goofy and cute in the whimsical fancy of "Lookin' Out My Backdoor" or serve up realer-than-real Sun single imitations on "Don't Look Now" and others.
So, because you can never have enough CCR in your life, here's a generous serving of some of the best from one of the best of the American rock bands...




CCR - An American Band
ReplyDeletehttps://workupload.com/file/XP9ht9zgwDJ
I know it's tough, so many choices, but when it comes down to it: What's your favorite CCR song?
ReplyDeleteDifficult indeed, but the first one that comes to mind: Long as I can see the light
ReplyDeleteHa! You follow up a comp aimed at least partly at me with a comp I won't listen to. Not because I don't like CCR, but because they're my fave band so I won't be hearing anything I don't already know and love. But I must vehemently disagree with some of your points here. CCR was great out the gate, and among my fave CCR songs is their absolutely slaying, intense version of I Put A Spell On You, from that debut. But, I like long songs that build a feeling -- like that one -- so we'll never agree on that, or Born On The Bayou (sacrilege to make an AM version of such an FM song!), or Ramble Tamble, which, to answer your question, is not only my fave CCR number, but one of my favorite songs, period.
ReplyDeleteI have a bud that didn't think twice about CCR, til we saw An American Werewolf In London and, when Bad Moon Rising came on (I guess he wasn't familiar with it), he saw the light. We saw the movie when it came out in 1981, and CCR was already my favorite band, so I've been a fan a loooooong time.
PS I'm also a Doors fan, and I hate to think what you'd do to Light My Fire or The End or When The Music's Over.....
C in California