"Act Naturally," written by Johnny Russell, was a
tune the songwriter couldn't get anyone interested in recording, until a
writer friend of his named Voni Morrison pitched it to rising country
superstar Buck Owens, who recorded it at Hollywood's Capitol Studios in
February 1963, the same month the Beatles recorded the bulk of their
debut LP, Please Please Me. The song would top the country chart
for Owens in June of that year, becoming the Bakersfield-based
musician's first Number One. In 1965, when the Beatles released their
second film, Help!, the song, led by Ringo's twangy vocal, was
included on the soundtrack LP's non-film-related B-side. The song was
something of an in-joke about Ringo's then-budding acting career, but it
would also achieve legendary status as the flipside of the
Paul-dominated single, "Yesterday."
On March 27th, 1989, Buck Owens joined Ringo at Abbey Road Studios in London,
where the Beatles had recorded so many of their iconic recordings, to
update "Act Naturally" as a duet. The tune was accompanied by an
elaborate music video with a Western theme, as Starr and Owens, decked
out in cowboy garb ride into a dust-filled ghost town on horseback,
enter a saloon and order a couple of whiskeys from bartender Vic
Tayback, best known for his role as Mel in the TV series, Alice.
The ghost town, it turns out, is actually a movie set and as the tune
begins to play, Owens emerges from a trailer strumming one of his famous
red, white and blue guitars. At the start of his own verse, Starr,
dressed in black and wearing a cowboy hat similar to Owens', descends on
a movie-camera crane and the two ham it up, play-fighting about which
performer will be the bigger star. The song, of course, has nothing to
do with Hollywood ambitions, it's really all about a dejected man and not having to act the part in the movie about his "sad and lonely" life.
Just
two months after recording the song together, Ringo would perform with
his All Starr Band, the supergroup that would, in its first incarnation,
include among its ranks Joe Walsh, Nils Lofgren, Dr. John, Billy
Preston, Clarence Clemons and The Band members Rick Danko and Levon
Helm.
Still going strong, on October 13th the All Starr Band will kick off its latest tour this fall with eight shows at Planet Hollywood Resort and Casino in Las Vegas.
The trek is currently slated to run through November 16th in Newark, New Jersey. Since 2012, the band has included Todd Rundgren, Gregg Rolie, Steve Lukather, Richard Page, Warren Ham and Gregg Bissonette, the longest-serving All Starr Band in the group's nearly 30-year history.
Still going strong, on October 13th the All Starr Band will kick off its latest tour this fall with eight shows at Planet Hollywood Resort and Casino in Las Vegas.
The trek is currently slated to run through November 16th in Newark, New Jersey. Since 2012, the band has included Todd Rundgren, Gregg Rolie, Steve Lukather, Richard Page, Warren Ham and Gregg Bissonette, the longest-serving All Starr Band in the group's nearly 30-year history.
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