Home | Rodriguez AliveA live album recorded during the 1979 Australian Tour Tracks | Releases | Sleevenotes | Musicians | Reviews | Comments | Tour info
Side One: Side Two: Total time: 40.44 (Individual tracktimings measured using my tape deck's counter) Recorded live at The Regent Theatre, Sydney, Australia,17th & 18th March 1979. To coincide with the 1981 Australian tour BlueGoose Music released this live album with catalogue numbers: BGM 003 (LP) & BGMC 003 (Cassette) In 1986 Powderworks records re-issued this album with these numbers: POWX 6119 (LP) & POWC 6119 (Cassette) Philip Birnbaum, Blue Goose Music, and Rodriguezauthorized a one year only release of the "Alive" album in Australiaand New Zealand only. Rodriguez Alive (Australian version) wasa limited 1 year release and won't be re-released. The only one Ihave is an old cassette. Musicians: Jake and José were Americans who left three-quartersof the way through the tour and were replaced by an Australian Joe Creightonon bass. The local boys all came from the Mark Gillespie Band whowere the support act. Gil Matthews: Producer and remixing engineer "Ladies and Gentlemen... Rodriguez". These few simple words form the introduction to this rare live album. It seems almost understated. Did he just say Rodriguez? The guy who brought out the sublime 'Cold Fact' and then blew his brains out on stage while working behind a deli in a New York jail, dying of a drug overdose from battering his wife or something like that. No it's the other Rodriguez, the guy who brought out the sublime 'Cold Fact', then disappeared into a life of obscurity only to re-emerge years later, alive, well, and rocking. RODRIGUEZ: A LIVE FACT
I have heard from several different people that Rodriguez performed inBrisbane in 1988. I don't know if this was a tour of Australia, orwhether it was only in Queensland. As far as I can find out, thiswas the last time Rodriguez played here, so I think it's about time hecame back... Rodriguez says he never touredAustralia in 1988. I suspect that this was actually a reference to the Brisbane radio broadcast mentioned by Lonnie. Sleeve notes from backcover of album: The strange and mesmerising held which this shyMexican-American exerted over some 40,000 Australians, is a phenomenonquite without precedent. It began at the close of the sixties with an albumon the small independent American label, Sussex Records. "Cold Fact" was a stark, assertive collectionof dark and intense songs of conscience from a concerned artist with acapacity for the lyrical imagery of Bob Dylan and the Mexicali vocal inflectionof José Feliciano. The songs were simple in structure but compellingin their command of street language and emotions. Whores and hovels, drugsand disillusionment, sex and sinners, all took a starring role in Rodriguez'sangry ghetto soundtrack. This album was released in Australia to normalsales. A second album, "Coming From Reality", recorded in Englandwas not released at all. One LP from the original small pressing was purchasedby Sydney radio announcer Holger Brockman, who began dropping the track"Sugar Man" into his 2SM evening shift around 1972. Three yearslater, having moved over to the freeform 2JJ he was regularly playing theentire Rodriguez repertoire. The buyer demand generated by this airplay simplycould not be met. Sussex had long gone bankrupt and, after warehouse stocksin America and South Africa were exhausted, import stores were turningaway hundreds of willing purchasers. As word of mouth enhanced the popularityof the singer/songwriter and his bleak observations of hopelessness, agiant cassette network sprang up with friends taping their taped copy forfriends who then ... In 1978, Blue Goose Music after a considerablesearch, tracked down the owner of Sussex and secured licence rights fora "Best Of" album. With no commercial airplay whatsoever andcertainly no hit singles, the LP shot to platinum status. This feat wasechoed by "Cold Fact", and in 1979 "Coming From Reality"helped to move Rodriguez past the collective double platinum mark, a seeminglyimpossible achievement for a non-chart entity. The search for the recording rights was nowherenear as elusive as the problems in tracking down the elusive Rodriguez.Rumours had him dead of a heroin overdose in a New York gutter, but, asit eventuated, he had slipped from music into social work, participatingin child development programs for the city of Detroit. "I saw somethings I thought people should be made aware of" he explains, "butI was unable to do that with my music". Having once declared "This system's gonnafall soon, to an angry young tune-and that's a concrete cold fact",Sixto had tempered his position a little to work within the system andrun (unsuccessfully) for Michigan public office on four occasions. He hadalso undertaken a university degree in philosophy and sociology, explaining,"I struggle like an everyday person. I'm hard working and proud ofit. I dig books and like to read, I'm into communication". When contacted by Australian Concert Entertainment,the retired singer who had never performed before more than a few hundredpeople at a time, was understandably apprehensive at the thought of flying12,000 miles for a concert tour. After lengthy contemplation he decided,"I owe it to those people who have taken time to find my music". Rodriguez arrived in Australia with his family.He readily admitted his difficulty in relating to the press attention whichsurrounded him, and early interviews were awkward and unproductive. Hedid manage to make plain that his social conscience had not dimmed. "Theseare new times and there are different answers that we're are trying toseek out. There has to be an end to violence but the answers are not aseasy as they were ten years ago". Gradually his trepidation gave way to a realisationthat the interest in his music was sincere but still he walked the streetslate at night unable to sleep and he sat nervously shaking in a taxi forfifteen minutes before taking the stage at Melbourne's Dallas Brooks Hallfor his first concert. Slim, in a conservative beige suit, he merely venturedon stage with a sheaf of lyrics to songs he had long since ceased to perform,and entered into a form of holy communion with the entranced audience;the majority of which was young and working class. The opening chords ofmost of his seventeen songs were greeted with whoops of recognition andjoy, while some followers of this unlikely Messiah were obviously transportedinto the realms of ecstasy. Rarely has an audience been in such accordwith a performer; never has the youth of one generation found such empathyand identification in the street poetry of an alien era of consciousness. In all, Rodriguez played to sixteen sold-out concerthalls in Sydney, Melbourne, Perth, Brisbane, Adelaide, Newcastle and Canberra.In the Queensland capital he filled the cavernous Festival Hall, a featbeyond many high profile rock acts. Having heard of the huge popularityof his music on the inmates' radio station, he asked to perform at Melbourne'sPentridge Prison, an event which had a profound effect upon him. By theend of the tour the man brimmed so full of confidence and excitement thathe pleaded to be able to make record store autograph appearances. He leftAustralia, buoyed by the love and devotion of a following that neitherhis dreams or aspirations had prepared him for, pledging to return. "Just climb up on my music and my songs willset you free" Glen A Baker Thanks to Desmond from Australia for sending a scan of the back-cover of the original album. |
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