Living the Blues
202 pages
English

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202 pages
English

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Canned Heat's Story of Music, Drugs, Death, Sex and Survival

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Publié par
Date de parution 22 mai 2011
Nombre de lectures 0
EAN13 9781456603328
Langue English
Poids de l'ouvrage 2 Mo

Informations légales : prix de location à la page 0,0500€. Cette information est donnée uniquement à titre indicatif conformément à la législation en vigueur.

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Canned Heat's Story
Of Music, Drugs, Death, Sex and Survival
by
Fito de la Parra
with
T.W. and Marlane McGarry


LIVING THE BLUES
Canned Heat's Story of Music, Drugs, Death, Sex, and Survival
by Fito de la Parra
with T.W. & Marlene McGarry
 
CANNED HEAT MUSIC
www.cannedheatmusic.com
webmaster@cannedheatmusic.com
www.myspace.com/cannedheat
www.facebook.com/CannedHeatOfficial
 
Copyright 2011 by Adolfo de la Parra
 
Published in eBook format by eBookIt.com
http://www.eBookIt.com
 
ISBN-13: 978-1-4566-0332-8
Third Edition. All Rights Reserved.
 
Except for inclusion of brief quotations in a review, no part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in an Information retrieval system, or transmitted, in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, internet, or otherwise, without prior written permission of the publisher.
 
Fillmore Posters: Copyright © 2000 BGP
 
Steve LaVere's Photographs: Copyright ©1968, 2010 Delta Haze Corporation (unless otherwise noted)
 
Cover Photography Concept and cover photo by Walter de Paduwa AKA "Dr. Boogie"
Editing and Investigative Research by Brett G. Lemke
Layout, Book and Cover Production by Rooks Tower LLC ( www.rookstower.com )


 
 
DEDICATION
 
 
Dedicated to my son, the loyal fans of Canned Heat,
the young, struggling musicians of the 21st Century,
and with grateful remembrance to
The Owl, The Bear and
The Sunflower
 
Christians by the grace of God
Gentlemen thanks to our Spanish descent
Noble lords from our Indian ancestry
Mexican by pride and tradition
And American by destiny
 
...Thus we are The Mexican-Americans
 
PREFACE
 
Afraid to admit you do remember the '60's? Or sorry you were born too late to have been there?
If you were part of the kaleidoscopic hippie days, here's everything you hoped your kids would never find out. If you weren't, here's everything your parents will never admit.
This Is the true story of Adolfo "Fito" de la Parra, a kid from Mexico City who fought his way into the ranks of top American rock and rollers and barely escaped with his life.
Enter his mind-boggling journey of four decades on the road with boogie-blues music legends Canned Heat, a saga of hit records, world tours, drugs, sex, outrageous behavior, and death.
If you were to meet Fito, a man of infinite charm, In a European hotel bar or some backwoods American bikers hangout - and that could happen if you get lucky - he might buy you a drink, light up a smoke and tell you how it happened. Through it all, he remembers everything, and the riveting tales flow smoothly. This book is a chance to do that, to sit down with Fito and a beer and listen to how it really was.
It is a story of survival through perseverance as the band reaches the heights of fame in the Woodstock era, and then plunges into decades of death and disaster.
An Intense, talented kid, his energy and disciplined determination brought hometown stardom as he grew up in the weirdly wonderful world of Mexico City rock 'n Roll. But Fito - one of the handful of top-flight rockers with a college degree - dreamed of making it big in the United States, in the homeland of the blues and rock music.
After a brutal apprenticeship In the honky-tonks of Tijuana, he actually smuggles a band of eager Mexican Teenagers over the border illegally and delights crowds at a chic Hollywood nightclub, but is caught by the Border Patrol and deported.
Making his way back, his dreams come true, his dreams come true when he signs on as drummer for Canned Heat, an L.A. band just about to explode out of Topanga Canyon onto stages all over the world.
But Canned Heat, which sold millions of records, was as cursed by bad luck and its own self-destructive manias as it was blessed with musical genius.
Committed from birth to a wildly chaotic lifestyle, Canned Heat took pride in its reputation as the outlaws of the rock world, the hardest living of them all.
Fito's tale Is also the story of the band's founders. Alan "Blind Owl" Wilson was one of the strangest characters in the history of rock 'n roll, a brilliant nerd, a sensitive genius obsessed with the fate of the earth and obscure recordings by brilliant black bluesmen of the 1930's and 1940's.
Pimply, smelly, forgetful, unfashionably dressed with broken Coke-bottle-lens glasses taped to his nose, he was obsessed with botany and the environment, convinced that and was destroying the earth. He slept outdoors whenever possible, curled up in the weeds outside motels on tour, boiling rice in a pot like a hobo while the others in the band groped groupies in luxury suites.
He was surely one of the few rock stars with a problem getting women. He wrote songs about that, but mostly he wrote about death, about going away ("On The Road Again," "Goin' Up The Country"). Even as the doors of wealth and fame opened to the band members, they spent much of their energy trying to keep him from killing himself.
Bob Hite, the other co-founder and lead singer, was Wilson's polar opposite, a Falstaffian giant of unbounded appetites who everyone called "the Bear." He would eat, drink, screw, play, sing, snort, or shoot anything.
He was in the music business so he could party for a living. He enjoyed getting people boogieing so much that he sang for hours, sometimes until most of the audience left out of sheer fatigue and he passed out on the floor.
Several of Canned Heat's best-known songs ("My Crime," "Highway 409") chronicle the band's own arrests or flights from the law. Rights to their hit records are sold for a pittance to provide bail money for the guys after an arrest. They are reduced to playing in cut-and-shoot backwoods biker bars in the 1980's.
Canned Heat blows one comeback attempt after another, descending into poverty.
The band becomes a front for criminal enterprises from dope smuggling to armed robbery, falling in with remnants of the Manson Family. A hells angel runs It for some years, making one of the first rock videos with outlaw motorcyclists writing and producing.
As the years pass, Fito comes into his own, assuming command and clawing his way back to where the band Is again putting out CDs regularly, touring Europe several times a year and again playing prestigious venues, both for devoted middle-aged fans and younger admirers who have just discovered them.
Canned Heat never disbanded they play on today,
From Woodstock to the band's resurgence in the '90s, here Is the real shit, no punches pulled, not even for me.
As Fito told me the day he was hired, he was "born to play with Canned Heat."
This book tells the story of an unconquerable spirit who never forgot to boogie. Fito will not surrender. Music, Canned Heat, the blues, these are his life.
He is "Living the Blues."
 
Skip Taylor
Manager, Producer, friend
1 - GOIN’ UP THE COUNTRY

 


F uck Woodstock, leave me alone.
It was the dawn of the Age of Aquarius--literally--and I was damn well not going to get up to greet it. Screw the band's manager trying to pull me out of bed and the cocaine camel he rode in on.
If I weren't too exhausted to think about anything but sleep, I should have been one happy dude. I had made my boyhood dream come true. The little kid from Mexico City who idolized Chuck Berry, Bill Haley and John Lee Hooker, who used to beat out rock rhythms on cookie tins with sticks, had scuffled and pounded his way into a gig as drummer for Canned Heat, one of the legendary bands of rock's golden age. I was a rare non-English foreign recruit in the legion of an American art form that was bursting out with raw, powerful new growth every day. I had rave reviews, roadies, groupies and a rising mountain of dollars and dope.
I was also a 5-foot-7, 135-pound foreigner, who could manage only a little rudimentary English, plunked down in a brotherhood of mad geniuses boogieing down a long dark road to ruin, misery and death.
It was only about 6 A.M., maybe three hours after I went to bed. I was crying from exhaustion, begging.
"Leave me the fuck alone."
With my accent, it came out "dee fawk."
Our manager, Skip Taylor, wrapped his arms around my waist and dug in his heels, trying to break my grip on the bedpost in my room at the Warwick Hotel in New York.
"Please, Skip, please. Don't do this to me. Or fire me. I don't give a shit."
Skip pulled harder.
"Fito, listen to the radio for Christ's sake--there's half a million people out in this fucking field. There are thousands more showing up every hour. We had no idea this thing was going to be this big. There are people dying there. There are babies being born. It's all over every TV station in the country. The band has got to be part of this."
"It's so damn big the cops have closed all the highways. I sent the roadies up with the equipment truck after the gig last night. I've been up all night trying to find a plane or helicopter or something and if you don't get up right now we're screwed."
By now he's bending my thumbs back.
"I don't care what kind of troubles you guys have, you gotta play this one. This is going to be one of the most famous gigs ever."
I'm pulling on my Levis and a T-shirt, my head cracking with fatigue and despair. "Fuck this. I hate it."
Canned Heat's rocket is still rising fast but already there are flames shooting out the sides.
In the previous 34 hours, I played a devastating gig at the Fillmore West in San Francisco where the band's nuclear-pile cast started coming apart, then another at the Fillmore East in New York with a brand new lead guitarist we grabbed from the audience. The guy has an awesome amount of talent, but he has to use it to hide the fact that he has no idea what the rest of us are doing.
Oh, and another gig the same night, in New Jersey or Long Island or someplace on our way in from the airport. I had no idea where we'd been. Or where we were.
I had not been in an actual bed for a long time, until we got to thi

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