Posts From Mark Leviton

Mark Leviton

Mark Leviton began writing about music and pop culture in 1967, with credits in Rolling Stone, Creem, Fusion, Bay Area Musician, LA Weekly, Phonograph Record and many fly-by-night publications. For 25 years he worked for the Warner Music Group and Rhino Records, producing hundreds of compilation albums and historical reissues, placing recordings in films and TV, and generally having a blast. His bi-weekly radio show "Pet Sounds" is heard on KVMR-FM in Nevada City, CA and the website www.petsoundsmusic.com.

Little Feat ‘Waiting for Columbus’: The End of the Beginning

How they pulled off one of the best live albums of all time is a heartening story of persistence and a sad, cautionary tale.

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Jefferson Airplane ‘Surrealistic Pillow’: The LP That Fed Your Head

The Summer of Love landmark sounds like a sonic experiment, drenched in echo and reverb, with poetic lyrics that often flirt with the totally irrational.

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Creedence Clearwater Revival’s ‘Bayou Country’: Proud & Loud

“I could go anywhere because I was a writer. I was conjuring that place deep in my soul,” said John Fogerty about the songs on the band’s 2nd LP.

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Joe Jackson ‘Look Sharp!’: An Artful Debut

The impressive 11 songs that made the final cut of this new wave-era debut comprise a coherent piece of art with nary a dull moment.

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Waylon Jennings & Willie Nelson ‘Waylon & Willie’: Two of a Kind

It was actually a strange hybrid, but it proved irresistible to record buyers, including many rock fans who’d never bought a country album before.

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Deep Purple ‘Made In Japan’: Onstage Chemistry

The reserved Japanese audience is clearly stunned as the concert ends, and is silent for a moment until exploding into raucous applause.

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Daryl Hall & John Oates: ‘Abandoned Luncheonette’—2nd Chances

The soul-influenced duo was still finding their way when they recorded their second album. Superstardom would soon find them.

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George Harrison ‘Cloud Nine’: Back at the Top

With friends Jeff Lynne and Eric Clapton aboard, and songs like “When We Was Fab” and “Got My Mind Set on You,” the 1987 album was a huge hit.

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Randy Newman ‘Sail Away’: The Big One

The 1972 album proved a breakthrough for his career both in terms of quality and box-office appeal as singers of many genres competed to record its tunes.

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Don Henley ‘Building The Perfect Beast’: Don’t Look Back

The 1984 album, recorded with ace musicians, yielded four hit singles, making the Eagles’ drummer/singer even more ubiquitous on the AM and FM radio dials.

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