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Randy Bachman

@RandysVinylTap21,016 subscribers

Randy Bachman. Founding member of The Guess Who & BTO. Management: https://t.co/udxeIbIiLs Media Inquiries: [email protected]

Shorts

#TBT By early 1973, Randy Bachman had burned through $97,000 of his Guess Who royalties keeping Brave Belt alive. He was paying the band $175 a week while they toured in a drafty van, eating peanut butter sandwiches. Randy flew to New York and Los Angeles, hand-delivering their third album to every major label in America. The responses came back on identical letterhead. 26 rejections. One such note came from from Charlie Fach's desk at Mercury Records: "Dear Randy, I pass on the tape." Not even signed. Randy called a band meeting in Toronto. "We've got 26 refusals. I've sent out four more tape packages. If it doesn't happen, this Friday is the last paycheque." On a final trip to New York to sell the tapes one last time, Fred Turner, who had gone with, went for a walk. He turned a corner and a man was standing there - knife out, hand extended. "Gimme your money, please." The "please" made it more terrifying somehow. Fred handed over his cash and walked straight back to his hotel room, picked up his bass and wrote the whole thing down; a pile-driving rocker with Fred's gritty vocals and Randy's gutty, piercing guitar. They called it "Gimme Your Money Please." It became the first track on the Brave Belt III tape. Randy sent the tape to Charlie Fach at Mercury one more time, via special air messenger. The next morning, Fach called Randy at his hotel, song playing in the background. "I've just put the tape on," Fach said. "You know, if the rest of the album is like this, you've got a deal. We've been looking for a strong rock group." Mercury offered a two-album deal at $50,000 per album. Fach insisted they couldn't be called Brave Belt so Randy suggested Bachman-Turner Overdrive. They signed. Within three months of BTO I hitting stores in May 1973, Mercury had recouped its investment. Edited from Killer Guitar Academy. #rocknroll #music #history #blowthisup MercuryRecords

#TBT By early 1973, Randy Bachman had burned through $97,000 of his Guess Who royalties keeping Brave Belt alive. He was paying the band $175 a week while they toured in a drafty van, eating peanut butter sandwiches. Randy flew to New York and Los Angeles, hand-delivering their third album to every major label in America. The responses came back on identical letterhead. 26 rejections. One such note came from from Charlie Fach's desk at Mercury Records: "Dear Randy, I pass on the tape." Not even signed. Randy called a band meeting in Toronto. "We've got 26 refusals. I've sent out four more tape packages. If it doesn't happen, this Friday is the last paycheque." On a final trip to New York to sell the tapes one last time, Fred Turner, who had gone with, went for a walk. He turned a corner and a man was standing there - knife out, hand extended. "Gimme your money, please." The "please" made it more terrifying somehow. Fred handed over his cash and walked straight back to his hotel room, picked up his bass and wrote the whole thing down; a pile-driving rocker with Fred's gritty vocals and Randy's gutty, piercing guitar. They called it "Gimme Your Money Please." It became the first track on the Brave Belt III tape. Randy sent the tape to Charlie Fach at Mercury one more time, via special air messenger. The next morning, Fach called Randy at his hotel, song playing in the background. "I've just put the tape on," Fach said. "You know, if the rest of the album is like this, you've got a deal. We've been looking for a strong rock group." Mercury offered a two-album deal at $50,000 per album. Fach insisted they couldn't be called Brave Belt so Randy suggested Bachman-Turner Overdrive. They signed. Within three months of BTO I hitting stores in May 1973, Mercury had recouped its investment. Edited from Killer Guitar Academy. #rocknroll #music #history #blowthisup MercuryRecords

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Yesterday we chatted about first guitars and my Harmony electric. Here is the acoustic I bought before it as a teenager. It took a hit at a birthday party in Winnipeg and I sold it to a friend in high school to fund the electric. It now lives at the Seminole Hard Rock in Hollywood, Florida. Guitars are a very personal instrument, you hold them close to play and that's where the magic happens. A special thank you to Lisa S. Johnson, author of "108 Rock Star Guitars" & "Immortal Axes" for these clips. You can see more of her work LSJRockPhotos #rocknroll #musician #guitar #blowthisup #foryou

Yesterday we chatted about first guitars and my Harmony electric. Here is the acoustic I bought before it as a teenager. It took a hit at a birthday party in Winnipeg and I sold it to a friend in high school to fund the electric. It now lives at the Seminole Hard Rock in Hollywood, Florida. Guitars are a very personal instrument, you hold them close to play and that's where the magic happens. A special thank you to Lisa S. Johnson, author of "108 Rock Star Guitars" & "Immortal Axes" for these clips. You can see more of her work LSJRockPhotos #rocknroll #musician #guitar #blowthisup #foryou

12,976 次观看

Here's a "Name That Tune" quiz going back to the early Guess Who days. Do you know this one? What are your memories of that era? #rocknroll #GuessWho #coversong #music #60s ⁦National Music Centre | Centre National de Musique⁩

Here's a "Name That Tune" quiz going back to the early Guess Who days. Do you know this one? What are your memories of that era? #rocknroll #GuessWho #coversong #music #60s ⁦National Music Centre | Centre National de Musique⁩

11,606 次观看

Videos

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#MusicMonday: Led Zeppelin I’ve been asked to share a bit more about my experiences with Led Zeppelin. I first met Jimmy page in 1967 when I was with The Guess Who and he was with The New Yardbirds at The Cleveland Art Institute. Both bands shared a dressing room. He asked if he could play my Rickenbacker and I said yes, if I could play his Telecaster. This week in 1968, as an official band, Led Zeppelin played their first ever Canadian show at The Pacific Coliseum in Vancouver. Their North American tour in ’68-’69 exploded their popularity in the US and Canada. In 1969, The Guess Who played The Seattle pop festival in Woodinville, WA. We ended up playing the same venues as Led Zep several times. After our band played, we’d go to the back of the crowd and watch the other acts. At one of the festivals, which were always in fields with generators, the main generator went out. Only one little amp was working. It had Robert Plant’s harmonica mic in it and the rest of the PA system was down. John Bonham kept drumming and Plant sang into this little mic and played harmonica for about 40 minutes until the power came on. I was amazed. They were just great! We crossed paths many times over the next few decades, playing the same circuits. It was a memorable moment for me as a musician when Robert Plant told me how much he loved “American Woman”. Decades later at Sweden Rock where I played with Fred Turner, I was able to give Jimmy an original poster from Seattle Pop I had saved from '69 and send one to Robert Plant as well. Incredible musicians who have rocked the world. #ledzeppelin #music #classicrock #askrandy

Randy Bachman

96,835 次观看 • 5 个月前

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#TBT Let's Go! CBC's "Let's Go!", 1967/68. After a failed trip to England, we had lost our throne in Winnipeg-the other bands took our place. We didn’t have any bookings & ditched our management. One day, my phone rang. A man named Larry Brown from CBC TV Winnipeg said they were looking for a new house band for Let’s Go!, a weekly television show that would be broadcast across the country, coast to coast every Thursday, and featured artists from across Canada. We grabbed it. Each show was broadcast from a different city and was a great way to connect the country. All we were supposed to play was the hit parade songs and were asked if we could read music. The phrase, “Fake it ’til you make it” comes to mind here. I said we did. The audition call was a Thursday and we were told to come in with Bob McMullin to read charts. I knew Bob, so I “casually” called him up to see which songs we'd be asked to play. He had 8 lined up. I went out and got the records. We listened and when we had to play cold, we aced it. Bob came up to me after me and said: “That was amazing.” “Thanks, Bob.” “You sound just like the albums!” “Great!” You can’t read a damn note, can you?” “No.” That show meant we were seen and heard all across the nation at a time when we were down on our luck. People don’t like to talk about failures but they aren’t just an end. They’re leading you to new beginning. #rocknroll #upsanddowns #music #foryou The Guess Who CBC Music

Randy Bachman

11,977 次观看 • 2 个月前

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#MusicMonday Did you know The Guess Who once wrote jingles for Coca-Cola? In 1968, Toronto-based musician and jingle-writer Jack Richardson got involved with The Guess Who while he was with McCann-Erickson, the advertising agency for Coca-Cola. He said: "We developed this youth radio campaign whereby we decided to use younger spokespeople for our product. We did a series of radio commercials using Canadian acts & we ran them in 30, 60 & 90 second spots. The Guess Who was one of the acts we approached." By the fall of 1967, we were established television stars on the Winnipeg edition of CBC-TV's popular Let's Go show so The Guess Who was an obvious choice for the ad campaign. We were Canada's best-known group having cracked the American charts two years earlier with "Shakin' All Over." One of our dreams had been to do a Coke commercial. Ray Charles had done one and we thought it was cool. Jack brought The Guess Who to Toronto's Hallmark Studios to cut radio jingles for Coke incorporating the soft drink's signature slogan "Things go better with Coke!" "The outcome of that," recalls Jack "was that the agency recommended we put together a compilation album from the catalogues of these artists. I suggested it would be better to go with something original. The first one we did was with Bobby Curtola and it was so successful they decided to do it again. That became A WILD PAIR with The Guess Who on one side and the Staccatos on the other." Some of you still have that album! You can read more at: Cheers! #canadian #music #60s #remember Coca-Cola The Guess Who

Randy Bachman

12,601 次观看 • 4 个月前

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