The Stories Behind 50 Rock Classics (Vol. II), 1982-2000

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The Stories Behind 50 Rock Classics (Vol. II), 1982-2000


, I’ve assembled a pair of recent books simply in time for the vacation season of 2022 –

A+ Albums: The Stories Behind 50 Rock Classics (Vol. II), 1982-2000.

Set in chronological order vis-à-vis launch date, every entry accommodates a quick artist historical past, the place the album suits of their historical past, an evaluation of the fabric, and usually, quotes from both the artist or somebody related to the recording, and/or a famend admirer (in addition to chart placements and certifications, the place relevant).

And beneath is the entry for Blind Melon‘s self-titled debut, included in Vol. II, an album that not solely gave us the MTV hit “No Rain,” but additionally such further alt-rock classics as “Tones of Home” and “Change,” amongst others.



Blind Melon (Blind Melon, 1992)Blind Melon

It appeared like for a spell throughout the early-mid ’90s, an album that’s now thought-about a “rock traditional” was unveiled nearly each month. Some have been anticipated…some weren’t. Blind Melon’s self-titled debut actually will get my vote for the latter class. While greatest identified for its hippie-ish hit, “No Rain,” there was oh-so-much-more to this album (and band) – and I’ll now take the chance to state my case.

To again up a bit, the members of Blind Melon hailed from in all places however the metropolis they might finally first cross paths in – Los Angeles. Case in level, singer Shannon Hoon was from Lafayette, Indiana; guitarist Christopher Thorn from Dover, Pennsylvania; whereas guitarist Rogers Stevens, bassist Brad Smith, and drummer Glen Graham all traveled from West Point, Mississippi. But by 1991, the band had signed to Capitol Records (thanks partially to Hoon’s affiliation with fellow Lafayette native Axl Rose, and singing on the G N’ R hit “Don’t Cry”) – and provided up a novel sound that whereas typically labeled as “alt-rock,” was extra like a cross between Jane’s Addiction and the Allman Brothers.

Sessions for what would turn into their debut album happened between February by means of June 1992 at London Bridge Studio in Seattle, with Rick Parashar and the band producing (the studio and Parashar have been chosen because of traditional recordings by Temple of the Dog, Pearl Jam, and Alice in Chains being created/produced there). “London Bridge on the time owned a home a few mile away that they lived in,” remembered the album’s assistant engineer, Jon Plum, within the guide An Angel on One Shoulder and a Devil on the Other: The Story of Shannon Hoon and Blind Melon. “They spent quite a lot of time adorning and making it their residence. I bear in mind they adorned the studio – they put up tapestries and had candles. Shannon would drip wax in all places. We’d have all these music stands, and he’d sit and make little wax artwork initiatives.”

“That was actually enjoyable – undoubtedly one of many excessive factors of our band life,” added Stevens in the identical guide. “None of the dangerous stuff had actually occurred and it was a really optimistic time. Working with Rick Parashar – him and his brother, Raj, have been so related. This entire actually enjoyable nightlife scene. So we skilled a enjoyable, decadent time. Rick had a extremely good rapport with the band, he was in a position to coax the report alongside to get the place it was, with out getting too heavy-handed about it. Because I can solely think about what it will need to have been like for him – it was apparent that there have been quite a lot of issues we have been fairly naïve about. And it was additionally apparent that there was quite a lot of volatility amongst the individuals within the group. But we obtained it executed. It seemed like the way in which we needed it to be. I bear in mind on the time Brad being actually sad with it. But trying again on it, I’m positive he’d really feel in any other case.”

“The common rule for me was ‘keep as far-off as potential from Shannon when he was recording’,” says Graham in regards to the singer. “We recorded after which he got here in afterwards. Basically, for each the albums, when he got here in to do his vocals, he was coming off of a six-week to two-month full-on, throw down social gathering. And having abruptly to relax. Which is tough to do, after you’ve got been smoking, ingesting, and doing no matter else you are doing all day and all evening for a very long time. I prevented him. [Laughs] He might be very unstable. He wasn’t a self-conscious particular person usually, however he was very self-conscious about doing his vocals. And I’m very direct. The much less stated the higher. It was extra blatant on the second report – he was overlaying up quite a lot of it on the primary report.”

Opening the album can be the rootsy rocker “Soak the Sin,” which Smith remembered the lyrical inspiration as being “About tripping within the desert. The entire band went out to the desert, and we noticed Liquid Jesus play – it was out close to Joshua Tree. I feel it was some form of homegrown competition. It was perhaps 3-500 individuals on the market. I used to be driving again out into the desert after coming to Los Angeles. So the tune was a little bit about simply driving within the desert and realizing how far you’ve got are available in your musical journey. And how good it feels to return residence and get re-grounded.”

Up subsequent was one of many album’s prime tunes, “Tones of Home,” which it seems Stevens had a hand in writing. “[‘Tones of Home’] was written proper as we met [Shannon]. I keep in mind that Brad wrote the primary verse, I wrote the second verse – the lyrics – and Shannon completed it off. But it was actually about how we obtained on the market and we have been utterly disillusioned – that LA wasn’t what we thought it was.” Another standout was positioned after, the Zeppelin-ish “I Wonder,” which Stevens remembers, “I had the principle riff to. I introduced that riff in, and we constructed the tune off that. It’s a type of escape-ism sort vibes to me, that Shannon wrote the phrases about. But I keep in mind that riff, as a result of I had that opening huge rock riff for some time. Before the band was even shaped, I used to be taking part in it in my bed room in Los Angeles.”

The subsequent tune, “Paper Scratcher,” was about an intriguing gentleman that caught Hoon’s consideration, in keeping with Stevens. “It was about this man that we used to see on a regular basis – he was a homeless man, that was proper round the place Shannon and I lived. He would have these magazines or catalogs – ripping pages out of – scratching stuff off of, just like the personal elements of the individuals. Really odd. He was clearly mentally sick. So that tune is about that man. We would give him cash on a regular basis and discuss to him – some days he can be completely sane, and different days, he’d be simply gone.”

Since Stevens is doing such a terrific job giving us the meanings behind the songs so far, let’s maintain an excellent factor going! Concerning “Dear Ol’ Dad,” he remembers that it was “Written about [Shannon’s] girlfriend. We had that piece of music – it was constructed round Brad’s bass, after which we put the refrain in. It was written about…he had a girlfriend that was dwelling on the market on the time – a little bit of a wildcard. There was some stuff that she revealed to him about her father, and he wrote the tune about it.”

And additionally one other album standout, the acoustic gem “Change” – which Hoon performed for his soon-to-be-bandmates upon their first assembly in 1990. “[‘Change’] blew us away proper off the bat. It has these larger than life lyrics. Part of it was nearly like a Hallmark card. Just the lyric, ‘Life is difficult, you need to change,’ I imply critically, you would see that on a Hallmark card! In a manner, form of corny, however in a manner, profound. He had that capacity to say actually easy issues, that everyone may relate to, and that was a type of songs. It was simply immediately good.”

And then…the aforementioned tune that will function the album’s breakthrough hit, “No Rain.” And the tune’s composer, Smith, described its which means as the next: “At the time, I believed I used to be writing it about my ex-girlfriend, and the reality was, I used to be writing it about myself. You get so overwhelmed by Los Angeles or any huge metropolis if you come from someplace like West Point, Mississippi. The tune is about despair, and discovering excuses to not be pleased, or discovering excuses to be a loner, as a result of it feels good to be sad.”

Smith additionally remembers the lyrical inspiration behind the album’s subsequent tune. “[‘Deserted’] is about getting back from the desert. We have been tripping on acid, and I used to be nonetheless tripping once I obtained residence the subsequent morning, at 10:00. The tune is like, ‘Man, I’ve obtained to get sober – I’m uninterested in tripping my balls off. I’m utterly exhausted, dehydrated, hungry. I simply needed to be in my mattress and ‘unstoned.’ I walked within the door, grabbed my guitar, and wrote that first verse – simply executed.”

“Sleepyhouse” can be a few home the band rented in Durham, North Carolina to pen materials for his or her debut, whereas “Holy Man” was written about a few of Stevens’ childhood experiences. “Seed to a Tree” stays a little bit of a thriller lyrically [Stevens: “To me, that song is open for interpretation, I think it has to do with his relationship to his father”], whereas Thorn as soon as defined the story behind “Drive.”

“I labored with this man named Willie [at a second-hand clothing store called ‘Jet Rag’], and he began to experiment with heroin, sadly. I used to be telling Shannon the story – Shannon was pals with William as effectively. One day, Shannon got here down to go to me at work, and Willie hadn’t had medication, so he was detoxing – going by means of withdrawals. The tune ‘Mother’ got here on from John Lennon, and he began crying – it was this actually heavy second. So Shannon wrote the lyrics about that – and the lyrics are about another stuff that I would not wish to discuss, about another experiences Shannon and I had.”

And the ultimate tune, “Time,” would quickly develop into a live performance spotlight – because of it turning into a jam favourite. Stevens: “The lyrics are about being in Columbus [and] West Point. And then we simply crammed in as a band. I actually preferred that tune as a result of it had a lot vitality – it was enjoyable to play reside. [The ending] was a type of issues – it was so open. It was just a bit easy two-chord factor, and we may transfer round with it. Some audiences you’d lose with it – typically it could be good. As we went together with it, we began settling into it and doing that on another songs. Sometimes it was out of boredom and typically it was out of inspiration. It was hit and miss.”

Released on September 22, 1992, it could take nearly a full yr earlier than Blind Melon broke by means of – because of the extremely fashionable video for “No Rain.” Directed by Samuel Bayer (greatest identified on the time for guiding Nirvana‘s “Smells Like Teen Spirit” clip), the video took the album cowl and introduced it to life. The solely drawback is that the duvet was a photograph from again within the ’70s of Graham’s sister, Georgia, who was now clearly significantly older. After a seek for a teenager who resembled the “bee lady,” an actress by the identify of Heather DeLoach was solid.

“I bear in mind the costume was too brief for my torso,” DeLoach recalled within the guide Shannon. “I naturally did not have that slouch that you just see within the video – it was as a result of I did not need my little lady elements to come back out. [Laughs] And I bear in mind by the point I did the VMA’s [which aired live on September 2, 1993], the lady stitched a brand new costume for me that was rather a lot larger. And I bear in mind being within the studio and them saying, ‘You’re going to faucet’ – and I had no clue learn how to faucet. I even assume on one of many photographs, it is not even my ft – I feel it is any person else’s ft, as a result of I believed, ‘I did not try this transfer’!”

“The video with the bee lady is one thing that’s utterly unforgettable,” former MTV VJ Matt Pinfield defined in a Songfacts interview, entitled Matt Pinfield on 10 of the Greatest Alt-Rock Videos of the ’90s. “It’s enjoyable, it reveals the band extremely in a cool, vibrant mild. And the tune is so infectious.” As a end result, Blind Melon’s debut would peak at #3 on the Billboard 200, and possess spectacular endurance (coming in at #45 and #81 on Billboard’s Year-End Album Chart for 1993 and 1994, respectively), and ultimately depend, was licensed quadruple platinum within the US and in Canada.



Greg Prato is a longtime AllMusic contributor and creator of a number of books, together with A+ Albums: The Stories Behind 50 Rock Classics (Vol. II), 1982-2000.

A+ Albums Vol II

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