Posts From Cary Baker

Cary Baker

Cary Baker is a writer based in Southern California. Born on Chicago’s South Side, he began his writing career at age 16 with an on-spec feature about Chicago street singer Blind Arvella Gray for the Chicago Reader. His return to writing follows a 42-year hiatus during which Baker, by 1984 based in Los Angeles, directed publicity for six labels (including Capitol and I.R.S.) and two of his own companies, working with acclaimed artists and labels such as R.E.M., Bonnie Raitt, the Smithereens, James McMurtry, the Mavericks, Bobby Rush, Willie Nile, and Omnivore Recordings. Prior to his PR years, Baker wrote for the Chicago Reader, Creem, Trouser Press, Bomp!, Goldmine, Billboard, Mix, Illinois Entertainer, and Record magazine. He has also written liner notes for historical reissues from Universal, Capitol-EMI, Numero Group and Omnivore. He has been a voting member of the Recording Academy since 1979. His first book, Down on the Corner: Adventures in Busking & Street Music, was published in November 2024

Lou Reed ‘Rock ‘n’ Roll Animal’: Behind the Scenes

“Until the day he died, Lou didn’t know that the applause on his best-selling album came from a John Denver concert!”—Producer Steve Katz

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Mitch Ryder Releases 40th Album with Legacy In Mind: Interview

Two of the Rolling Stones told producer Bob Crewe, “If you put out ‘Jenny Take a Ride,’ you’ll have a hit record. And that’s what we did.”

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When Marshall Tucker Band Took the Highway to Southern Rock Nobility

The debut album, like the spectrum of Southern rock itself, showed more diversity than some fans of the genre gave it credit for.

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Edgar Winter’s ‘They Only Come Out at Night’: The Story Behind the LP and Its Monster Hit

Edgar on the LP: ‘We were just having fun. Play the music you love and follow your heart, and you can’t go wrong.’

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The 1981 Blasters Album: Roots Music Finds Its Place in the Punk Revolution

They came out of Downey, California, mashing together blues, country, rockabilly, jazz and good ol’ rock & roll into something all their own.

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Bev Bevan of ELO Remembers ‘A New World Record’: ‘Jeff Lynne at His Most Brilliant’

Said Bevan in our 2024 interview, “[It’s] a fabulous album, and I am proud to have been part of it.”

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‘The London Howlin’ Wolf Sessions’: When Clapton, the Stones, Winwood & Starr Helped Out a Blues Hero

When Eric Clapton was asked in 1970 if he’d like to record with a blues legend, it took him seconds to say yes. And so it began.

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Cheap Trick ‘Heaven Tonight’: They Just Seemed a Little Weird

Our look back at the band’s third album, released in 1978.

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‘Electric Mud’: When Muddy Waters Went Psychedelic

While the album would find itself the object of critical scorn, it served its purpose: introducing a new generation to blues.

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Fine Young Cannibals’ ‘The Raw & the Cooked’: For One Year, They Drove Us Crazy

They only gave us two albums and then they were gone, but that hit-packed second one helped to define an era.

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