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Madiba website, October 1996Rodriguez --- Cult or Crap? The Cold Facts During November 1996 the third in the trilogy of
Rodriguez LPs "The Best of Rodriguez" will be released in South
Africa on CD for the first time. There are no references to Rodriguez or his work in any of the rock (or general music) reference books. Originally released on Buddah Records in the U.S.A., the masters of the three LPs became the property of A & M Records when they bought Buddah Records. The three LPs were subsequently pressed and released in S.A. For an assortment of reasons, of the three, "Cold Fact" achieved the most success and sold like the proverbial bushfire. It nestled in the record collections of practically every home that already had "Abbey Road", "Bridge over Troubled Water", "Aqualung", "Leonard Cohen's Greatest Hits" and "Harvest". It featured a nasal Hispanic-American singing sweet but vitriolic folk-songs about "DRUCKS", unrequited lust and big city misery; but everyone around here knew all the words and would sing along without having any idea what Rodriguez was really moaning about. When "Cold Fact" first appeared on CD, it found many of the S.A. Baby Boomers living in a multitude of new (adopted ) countries where Rodriguez was as well known as Bles Bridges; so the locally pressed CD was soon on the list of things to be sent to family and friends overseas, that were "unavailable anywhere" like fishpaste and biltong.. Hearing "Sugar Man, won't you hurry, cause I`m tired of these scenes" is like closing your eyes, clicking your heels together and zooming off back to the old homestead like Dorothy did, and that essentially is it's appeal. When "After the Fact" first appeared on CD, it attracted a critical response largely, and adversely, centering on the fact that Rodriguez (like Cat Stevens) was just 70's crap and deserves no more mystical perusing then "Tea for the Tillerman" does. To them I say "Well I
wonder how many times you've been had, and I wonder if all your dreams
have gone bad…." There is something in these records that resists
analysis and objectivity, you just had to be there! "After
the Fact" is mostly as unknown as "Cold
Fact" is known, so it should be interesting to see how it`s judged
by "The old fans". It is a strong LP and bears close comparison
with "Cold Fact". "The Best
of Rodriguez" contains songs mostly from the two "Fact"
LPs with a few rarities thrown in. |
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