Saturday, October 2, 2021

Free - Free Live! (1971 uk, stunning classic rock, 2002 remaster with bonus tracks)



Although Free made excellent studio records, Free Live! is perhaps the best way to experience the band in all its glory. Led by singer-guitarist Paul Rodgers and lead guitarist Paul Kosoff, the band swings through nine songs with power, clarity, and a dose of funk. Of course, the hit single "All Right Now" is gleefully extended, much to the audience's and listener's delight. Superbly recorded by Andy Johns, this is one of the greatest live albums of the 1970s. 
by Matthew Greenwald
Tracks
1. All Right Now - 6:26
2. I'm A Mover - 3:42
3. Be My Friend - 5:56
4. Fire And Water - 3:58
5. Ride On A Pony - 4:31
6. Mr Big (Andy Fraser, Paul Kossoff, Paul Rodgers, Simon Kirke) - 6:20
7. The Hunter (Al Jackson Jr., Booker T. Jones, Carl Wells, Donald "Duck" Dunn, Steve Cropper) - 5:20
8. Get Where I Belong - 4:18
9. Woman - 4:34
10.Walk In My Shadow (Paul Rodgers) - 4:18
11.Moonshine (Paul Kossoff, Paul Rodgers) - 9:23
12.Trouble On Double Time (Andy Fraser, Paul Kossoff, Paul Rodgers, Simon Kirke) - 3:51
13.Mr Big (Andy Fraser, Paul Kossoff, Paul Rodgers, Simon Kirke) - 5:53
14.All Right Now - 5:32
15.Get Where I Belong - 4:21
All titles by Andy Fraser, Paul Rodgers except where indicated
Bonus Tracks 9-15
Tracks 1, 7, 11, 12, 13 were recorded live at Sunderland Locarno-Fillmore North, January 1970.
Tracks 2 - 6, 9, 10, 14 were recorded live at Fairfield Halls, Croydon, 13th September 1970.
Tracks 8, 15 were recorded at Island Studios, 26th March 1971. 

Free
*Paul Rodgers - Vocals
*Paul Kossoff - Guitar
*Andy Fraser - Bass
*Simon Kirke - Drums


Friday, October 1, 2021

Fairport Convention - Liege And Lief (1969-70 uk, folk rock masterpiece, 2007 deluxe edition)



The best British folk-rock band of the late '60s, Fairport Convention did more than any other act to develop a truly British variation on the folk-rock prototype by drawing upon traditional material and styles indigenous to the British Isles. While the revved-up renditions of traditional British folk tunes drew the most critical attention, the group members were also (at least at the outset) talented songwriters as well as interpreters. They were comfortable with conventional harmony-based folk-rock as well as tunes that drew upon more explicitly traditional sources, and boasted some of the best singers and instrumentalists of the day. A revolving door of personnel changes, however, saw the exit of their most distinguished talents, and basically changed the band into a living museum piece after the early '70s, albeit an enjoyable one with integrity.

When Fairport formed around 1967, their goal was not to revive British folk numbers, but to play harmony- and guitar-based folk-rock in a style strongly influenced by Californian groups of the day (especially the Byrds). The lineup that recorded their self-titled debut album in 1968 featured Richard Thompson, Ian Matthews, and Simon Nicol on guitars; Ashley Hutchings on bass; Judy Dyble on vocals; and Martin Lamble on drums. Most of the members sang, though Matthews and Dyble were the strongest vocalists in this early incarnation; all of their early work, in fact, was characterized by blends of male and female vocals, influenced by such American acts as the Mamas & the Papas and Ian & Sylvia. While their first album was derivative, it had some fine material, and the band was already showing a knack for eclecticism, excavating overlooked songs by Joni Mitchell (then virtually unknown) and Emitt Rhodes.

Fairport Convention didn't reach their peak until Dyble was replaced after the first album in 1968 by Sandy Denny, who had previously recorded both as a solo act and with the Strawbs. Denny's penetrating, resonant style qualified her as the best British folk-rock singer of all time, and provided Fairport with the best vocalist they would ever have. What We Did on Our Holidays (1969) and Unhalfbricking (1969) are their best albums, mixing strong originals, excellent covers of contemporary folk-rock songs by the likes of Mitchell and Dylan, and imaginative revivals of traditional folk songs that mixed electric and acoustic instruments with a beguiling ease.

Matthews had left the band in early 1969, and Lamble (still in his teens) died in an accident involving the group's equipment van in mid-1969. That forced Fairport to regroup, replacing Lamble with Dave Mattacks, and adding Dave Swarbrick on fiddle. Their repertoire, too, became much more traditional in focus, and electrified traditional folk numbers would dominate their next album, Liege and Lief (1969). Here critical thought diverges; some insist that this is unequivocally their peak, marking a final escape from their '60s folk-rock influences into a much more original style. This school of thought severely underestimates their songwriting talents, and others feel that they were at their best when mixing original and outside material, and contemporary and traditional styles, in fact becoming more predictable and derivative when they opted to concentrate on British folk chestnuts.

The Liege and Lief lineup didn't last long; by the end of the '60s, Ashley Hutchings had left to join Steeleye Span, replaced by Dave Pegg. More crucially, Denny was also gone, helping to form Fotheringay. Thompson was still on board for Full House (1970), but by the beginning of 1971 he too had departed, leaving Nicol as the only original member.

Fairport have kept going, on and off (mostly on), for the last 25 years, touring and performing frequently. It may be too harsh to dismiss all of their post-Thompson records out of hand; Angel Delight (1971), the first recorded without the guitarist on board, was actually their highest-charting LP in the U.K., reaching the Top Ten. Nicol's exit in late 1971 erased all vestiges of connections to their salad days. Fairport was now not so much a continuous entity as a concept, carried on by musicians dedicated to the electrified British folk style that had been mapped out on Liege and Lief.

So it continues to this day, supported by a devoted fan base (Dirty Linen, the top American roots music magazine, originally began as a Fairport Convention fanzine). Denny would actually return to the group for about a year and a half in the 1970s, prior to her death in 1978; Nicol rejoined in 1976. Keeping track of Fairport's multitudinous lineup changes is a daunting task, and the group has coexisted on an erratic basis with the various other projects of the most frequent members (Nicol, Mattacks, and Pegg, the last of whom has played with Jethro Tull since the late '70s). They played annual reunion concerts during the 1980s and '90s (sometimes joined on-stage by Fairport alumni like Thompson), events that turned into some of the most popular folk festivals in Europe. They've also released some albums of new material intermittently throughout the last couple of decades, mostly pleasant, unexceptional traditional-oriented outings that appeal primarily to diehards.

The most distinguished graduates of Fairport, however, have continued to shape the British folk and folk-rock scene with notable solo and group projects. Richard Thompson is one of the most critically acclaimed singer/songwriters in the world; Ian Matthews made some interesting recordings as a solo act and with Plainsong and Matthews Southern Comfort; Denny sang with Fotheringay and released several solo albums before her death; and Hutchings carried on the most traditional face of British folk-rock with Steeleye Span, the Albion Band, and the Etchingham Steam Band.
by Richie Unterberger 
Tracks
Disc 1 Original Album
1. Come All Ye (Sandy Denny, Ashley Hutchings) - 5:00
2. Reynardine (Traditional) - 4:30
3. Matty Groves (Traditional) - 8:07
4. Farewell, Farewell (Richard Thompson) - 2:37
5. The Deserter (Traditional) - 4:21
6. Medley (Traditional) - 4:06 
.. The Lark in the Morning 
.. Rakish Paddy
.. Foxhunters' Jig
.. Toss the Feathers
7. Tam Lin (Traditional) - 7:11
8. Crazy Man Michael (Richard Thompson, Dave Swarbrick) - 4:41
Disc 2 Studio Out-takes and BBC Sessions
1. Sir Patrick Spens (Traditional) - 3:59
2. Quiet Joys Of Brotherhood (Traditional, Richard Farina) - 5:59
3. The Ballad Of Easy Rider (Roger McGuinn) - 4:53
4. Tam Lin (Traditional) - 7:46
5. Medley - The Lark In The Morning/Rakish Paddy/Foxhunter's Jig/Toss The Feathers (Traditional) - 4:13
6. Sir Patrick Spens (Traditional) - 3:44
7. Reynardine (Traditional) - 4:19
8. Quiet Joys Of Brotherhood (Traditional, Richard Farina) - 7:50
9. The Lady Is A Tramp (Richard Rodgers, Lorenz Hart) - 2:11
10.In Other Words (Fly Me To The Moon) (Bart Howard, Richard Rodgers, Lorenz Hart) - 2:21 

Fairport Convention
*Sandy Denny - Vocals 
*Dave Swarbrick - Fiddle, Viola 
*Richard Thompson - Electric, Acoustic Guitars, Backing Vocals 
*Simon Nicol - Electric, 6-String, 12-String Acoustic Guitars, Backing Vocals 
*Ashley Hutchings - Bass Guitar, Backing Vocals 
*Dave Mattacks - Drums, Percussion

Thursday, September 30, 2021

Dragonwyck - Chapter II (1973-74 us, fantastic psych rock, 2006 issue)


Their Doors-influenced style of psych rock was captured on a demo LP in 1970 which is now very collectible. A second demo LP was recorded in 1973 (including a couple of remakes of songs from the first LP). Then a 45 in 1974. More changes were in store, including gigs and recording under the names Flying Turns (the name of a thrill ride at the defunct Euclid Beach Park) and Fun (a Gentle Giant influenced period), before the band called it quits.

I was born in Venezuela. When I was a child, my parents moved to the industrial city of Cleveland, Ohio. In the 1960’s, Cleveland had some of the best radio in America. Plus we were able to receive CKLW out of Detroit. Almost all early rock and roll music was black. Great performances of 3 chord songs loaded with rhythm and attitude. After the Beatles, music became more intelligent, using chord patterns and harmonies no one had ever heard before. And it wasn’t just the Beatles. All British bands were so fucking great. It was the beginning of progressive music. Those two separate attitudes of rhythm and composition were my main musical influences when I was young.

The early 70’s was rock and roll heaven. There were a lot of great original bands and places to play. Cleveland was a factory town with hard drinking men and women who loved loud rock bands, and going out 3 or 4 nights a week to support them. Besides the night clubs, Dragonwyck toured with rockers Foghat, Golden Earring, The Edgar Winter Group and Emerson, Lake and Palmer. It was a very exciting time for music, and for us being in the middle of it all.

It’s really hard to tell them without the context of the time. The 70’s was a decadent decade throughout the world. Everybody, EVERYWHERE was living outside of the walls of conformity that exist today. There was so much more tolerance and social freedom to misbehave. But to say that the 70’s was a drunken, drug induced fuck-fest, would be an understatement. It was a beautiful time.

‘Chapter 2’ was recorded at Audio Recording Studio in Cleveland. This was 1972 and the studio had an Ampex 16-track machine. The mellotron and moog synthesizer was just released at that time, so we bought one each and had a ball recording that record. We also put a lot of work into background vocals on that album. The “fun” album was anything but fun. It was interesting from a clinical point of view, and in 1974 we were one of the first bands to be using samples, albeit primitive tape loops. We did a lot of tape edits on that record, and from that point on, I never went back to recording effects more that musical performance.
Tom Brehm Interview
Tracks
1. Kimberly (Tom Brehm) - 0:32
2. He Loves You (Bill Pettijohn) - 3:18
3. Fire Climbs (Bill Pettijohn) - 6:41
4. Relics (Bill Pettijohn, Tom Brehm) - 5:11
5. Freedom Son (Bill Pettijohn, Tom Brehm) - 3:57
6. Lady (Bill Pettijohn, Tom Brehm) - 3:47
7. Run To The Devil (Bill Pettijohn, Kenneth Staab, Tom Brehm) - 3:45
8. Dead Man (Bill Pettijohn) - 4:15
9. The Music (Bill Pettijohn, Jack Boessneck, Tom Brehm) - 3:14
10. Forever Only Last A Little While (Tom Brehm) - 4:40
11. Lovin' The Boys (Bill Pettijohn, Tom Brehm) - 3:14
12. The Music (Bill Pettijohn, Jack Boessneck, Tom Brehm) - 3:07
Bonus Tracks 11-12

Dragonwyck
*Tom Brehm - Guitars
*Mikey Gerchak - Bass, Vocals
*Jack Boessneck - Drums
*Bill Pettijohn - Vocals
*John Hall - Keyboards, Vocals
*Jerry Moran - Keyboards (Tracks 11-12)


Tuesday, September 28, 2021

Fuchsia - Fuchsia, Mahagonny And Other Gems (1975-78 uk, delicate baroque prog rock, 2005 release)

 



The first three songs on the album were recorded on a primitive 1/4 track in the wilds of Torquay, in the West of England. "The Band" and "Ragtime Brahms", Maddie's title for the track, were recorded about 9 months after the 'Fuchsia' album was released. With our musical progress on hold for the best part of a year, we were looking for a new record company to record & promote us. The third song is from the original Fuchsia demo acetate. The Mahagonny project was I suppose a second incarnation of Fuchsia. In 1975/76 I wrote a series of songs for a theatre show. 

The inspiration for Mahagonny came from two works by Bertholdt Brecht and Kurt Weill, and I believe came closest to realising the true potential of the string trio/rock band ensemble. Mahagonny was based loosely on The Threepenny Opera, and The Rise and Fall of the City of Mahagonny. It was a story of urban decay and exploitation, a story told through 'black humour' and satire, of a society divided by wealth and poverty, as its protagonists go about securing their livelihoods in any way they could. The end comes as the masses eventually take up arms. Michael Gregory from Fuchsia played drums on the demos, while other players were friends I was working with at the time, or students from the Royal College of Music, London.

 I wrote and arranged the songs over about twelve months. We eventually recorded five demo tracks at 'Spaceward Studios', Cambridge, then mixed them at Majestic Studios, Clapham London. Being part of a theatre production, the aim was to secure Arts Council backing in the UK supported by a record deal. One major label was interested in signing but the deal was never done. Perhaps not too surprising as punk rock was emerging as the new 'big thing' in London. It was around this time that I recorded the next 2 songs with my good friend Bob Chudley in a small London 8 track studio. He wrote "Me and My Kite" on the Fuchsia album, and some other really good stuff, but never got the publishing deal he deserved. "I'll Remember Her Face, I'll Remember Her Name" was part of some music I recorded for a film around 1978. I love John's vocals.

Thanks to all the great people who made this music possible by contributing so much to these projects. Special thanks to my good mate Gianpaolo, at Night Wings Records.
by Tony Durant

After the premature ending of the Fuchsia experience, Vanessa played briefly with an unrecorded band called Touchstone, and Tony Durant went on playing for a while around London with Michael Day and Michael Gregory. Tony then joined the hard blues oriented Punchin' Judy led by 'leather-larynx' Barbara O'Meara (who previously sang with Old Nick, one 7" on Decca in 1971). Whilst the band had an album out on the Transatlantic record label it had all but disbanded. The only survivors from the recording sessions were Barbara, Keith Grant-Evans -ex-Downliners Sect- and Robin Langridge. So Durant and Gregory filled the gap and Punchin' MK2 toured England and Holland (where a single was also issued) and also recorded some interesting demos for an eventual second album but the album was never recorded. 

Tony, Michael, Robin and Keith became the de facto 'house' band for Transatlantic, helping out various new signings to the label. They became part of pop-reggae band Greyhound for a brief time, culminating in one excellent live performance for the Jimmy Saville Show in 1975. Tony recorded some great demos with Glenroy Oakley, the Greyhound vocalist and both Gregory and Durant played on 'The Mind Parasites' (Transatlantic, 1976), an Al Stewart sounding LP by Simon Boswell who later became a highly regarded soundtrack composer. Tony continued to write, and in 1974 began toying with the idea of writing some songs for a theatre show based on the two Brecht works. 

In 1975 Tony began work on the "Mahagonny" project. Five songs were recorded and these follow the three Fuchsia demos on the CD. Even if the musical direction was far from the first Fuchsia LP, you can clearly hear their shared heritage. Tony and Michael were joined in these recordings by friends Keith and Robin. The vocals were handled by Nick Pallett (from the late Principal Edwards Magic Theatre, the 'other' great Exeter folk-rock band) and Jan Pulsford. Jan's sister Angela (both are the elder sisters of Nigel, bassist with rock stars Bush, and Jan went on to tour with the Thompson Twins and write songs for Cindy Lauper) and a friend, Philida Ahearn, formed the string section. 

It's odd to note that, as happened with Jonesy's fourth album (also issued for the first time by Night Wings Records in 2003), it was again Richard Branson's Virgin who missed a good opportunity. 'Fuchsia, Mahagonny & Other Gems' kicks off with the two demos Fuchsia recorded after the first album was issued, when they were looking for a new label. They were out of luck, but the beautiful "The Band" and "Ragtime Brahms" show they still had huge potential. Then we hear a track from their first demo, probably the only surviving acetate, sent around the record companies by Tony and his mates, which secured them their original contract. The second track on the demo, "Shoes and Ships", was unfortunately too damaged to be recovered in its entirety, with a slightly different arrangement including a French horn part not included in the album version. 

Next up are the Mahagonny demos, followed by two great songs by Bob Chudley (who also co-wrote "Another Nail" on the first album). After having occasionally worked with Chris Cutler (his and Tony's old pal in psychedelic band Louise), this underrated songwriter continued to write without finding a publisher. Luckily, some of his songs were recorded with Tony, these demos being Bob's last venture into serious songwriting. Finally, as the icing on the cake, we've added a great folk-rock song, "I'll Remember Her Face", recorded in 1978 and sung beautifully by John Tams, then of the Albion Band (along with Michael Gregory and Pete Bullock). The song was composed with other incidental music for a film production called "The Golden Medallion".

1978 was a magic year for Tony. By chance he met Dave Warner, an emerging Australian punk songwriter, and they recorded some demos in London. At the same time he worked with an old Exeter University mate Steve Jamieson on his Zero Zero project. There was a lot of interest in this band around the London 'scene' and EMI provided some studio time. Zero Zero produced a good single but no follow up, even if an album worth of material was recorded. Meanwhile Warner's demos attracted some strong interest in Australia and Tony joined him in Melbourne for the first national tour of Warner's band - Dave Warner From The Suburbs. Tony produced the band's first album, 'Mug's Game' and it moved up the charts. When back in London, Pete Farndon of the Pretenders contacted Tony through some mutual friends, Aussie folk icons the Bushwackers who Farndon had previously been playing with in Australia. The Pretenders were then an unsigned band and Pete Honeyman Scott was considering leaving. Farndon was looking for a replacement but Pete made the right decision and stayed with the band. Tony flew back to Australia where Warner was riding a wave of success and based himself in Perth. The collaboration with Dave lasted for two years before Tony moved on into production, jingles and advertising. 

In the early '90's Tony moved to Sydney with a new Polygram publishing contract. The band, Cat's Crafty went on to produce some great music, but never signed a record deal and eventually folded. On a bibliographic note, it is interesting to know that Nick Pallett went on to sing with Contempt in '77 together with Howard Paul and Robin Langridge, who in turn played with Medium Medium, Karel Fialka, Michael O'Brien, Ivor Biggun, Annabel Lamb, Paul Roberts, Ofra Haza, Sniff'n Tears and joined for a while the reformed Downliners Sect, of course with Keith Grant-Evans. Keith deserves a page on his own, with a career that included lesser known bands like Magnet (led by Mick Cox of Eire Apparent and Van Morrison fame), Nasty (around 1970/72, with Dave O'List!), a collaboration with ex-Magnet Tony Kelly in 1972 and a band called Tarot in 1976. Today Keith is still playing with Downliners Sect, helped by Alan Brooks (from Punchin' Judy MK1) and Alan's old pal in the sixties band (Purple) Barrier, Del Dwyer. 
Night-Wings
Tracks
1. The Band - 3:21
2. Ragtime Brahms - 5:02
3. Ring Of Red Roses - 4:02
4. Prologue - 5:43
5. Pirate Jenny - 3:44
6. Mr. Munch's Interminable Lunch - 5:26
7. Drunken Meanderings - 4:22
8. Behind Innocent Eyes - 3:52
9. Absent Friends - 4:36
10.Mary Used To Play The Piano (Robert Chudley) - 2:15
11.I'll Remember Her Face - 2:32
All songs written by Tony Durant except where indicated
Tracks 1-3 as Fuchsia
Tracks 4-8 as Mahagonny
Tracks 9-10 as Robert Chudley
Track 11 The Golden Medaillion

Musicians
*Tony Durant - Guitars, Lead Vocals
*Michael Gregory - Drums, Percussion
*Michael Day - Bass (Fuchsia, Robert Chudley)
*Janet Rogers - Violin (Fuchsia)
*Madeleine Bland - Cello (Fuchsia)
*Vanessa Hall-Smith - Viola (Fuchsia)
*Jan Pulsford - Vocals (Mahagonny)
*Nic Pallett - Vocals (Mahagonny)
*Robin Langridge - Keyboards (Mahagonny)
*Keith Grant-Evans - Bass (Mahagonny)
*Angela Pulsford - Violin (Mahagonny)
*Philida Ahearn - Cello (Mahagonny)
*Bob Chudley - Vocals, Guitar (Robert Chudley)
*Andrew Wilson - Keyboards (Robert Chudley)
*John Tams - Vocals, Accordion (The Golden Medallion)
*Pete Bullock - Piano (The Golden Medallion)




Monday, September 27, 2021

Fuchsia - Fuchsia (1971 uk, elegant prog folk rock, 2003 edition)



I was born in London, Palmers Green, (a first generation post war baby boomer!) and moved to South Africa when I was 6 months old. My family returned to England when I was 10. Then boarding school, Dover College, a middling English public school. I started playing drums at school, then guitar when I left school, and during the '60's found myself caught up in the progressive psychedelic music thing. From 1966 to 1968 I played in a band called Louise in south London, with Robert Chudley and Chris Cutler (later with Henry Cow), doing some pretty weird stuff, original songs ("Another Nail" resurfaced years later, while a recording of "Look at the Sun" could still exist somewhere!) and others with long free form sections in the middle...liquid light shows, all that kind of stuff. 

With the end of the '60's, the band was going nowhere and I felt a need to do something quite different, so I went to Exeter University to escape music for a while. Two weeks into University, and I had started writing music again, this time for a night of poetry based around Ferlinghetti's poems, on Goya's pictures of the Napoleonic wars of all things, and with a general anti war theme. I advertised for players and found a London Cockney piano player (Mick McGee) and ex colonial Dave Haskins on drums. From memory the bass player could have been Mick Day. It was a good night, which had me totally hooked into music again. Then I wrote and recorded some harder edged songs like "Ring of Red Roses", playing them at one of the Ottawa concerts in 1971, organised by Chris Cutler and featuring various luminary associates of his. I played this gig as a three piece with Chris Cutler on drums and Mick Day on bass. 

About the same period, I formed the Fuchsia band with Michael Gregory and Mick Day. I wanted to experiment with writing songs not to the normal pop format, rather a series of musical themes, which start at a particular, point and move on, without necessarily following the normal classic pop song format. Also I wanted to experiment making string parts an integral part of the song itself, rather than something added to embellish the song once written (this was pre Electric Light Orchestra, remember), so we were soon joined by Madeleine Bland (Cello), Janet Rogers (Violin) and Vanessa Hall-Smith (Viola). Also students at Exeter, the girls were from a purely classical background and wanting to do something different. It was a very adventurous project with great production difficulties in actually amplifying the strings for live performances, together with our relative lack of experience. 

We played a few gigs at the university, and recorded two songs, "Ring of Red Roses" coupled with "Shoes & Ships", at a demo studio in Torquay. A good friend in the industry, Paul Conroy, passed the demo on to Terry King, who signed us up to his new Kingdom Records label, distributed through Chrysalis Records. I think Terry was as impressed by the radically different approach to the music as he was by the fact that there were three girls in the band! We recorded the album in the early summer of '71 with David Hitchcock producing, and then went back to university, with the intention of doing a promotional tour for the album in the next holidays. The album was released with one ad in Melody Maker and some reviews in various papers, which were all very complimentory. That was the total extent of the promo it received. The proposed promotional tour disappointingly never eventuated, and after months in limbo, the project came to an end.... and a band that don't play together, don't stay together. 

We recorded another demo, ("The Band" and "Ragtime Brahms") but failed to capture a new record deal. I continued to play with the drummer and bass player, eventually ending up in London and playing round there. The Fuchsia concept revived itself in 1975, when I wrote a series of songs for a theatre show based on Brecht's Threepenny Opera, which to this day I feel was the best thing I ever did in terms of realising the true potential of the string trio/rock band ensemble. This was with various players from the London College of Music. There was some interest from Virgin records, but a miss is as good as a mile!! 

The rest is history. I played with Punchin' Judy with Greg, Robin Langridge and Keith Grant-Evans, (a true legend-Downliners Sect) and am still in touch with Keith today. This blues based band had a deal with Transatlantic Records and an LP to promote, so we played mainly university venues in England, and toured Holland.  The album was also issued (in 1972) in France too, this time by Kingdom label itself (cat. KV 6002). Fuchsia owed their name to the excellent Mervyn Peake's book Titus Groan. 
by Tony Durant
Tracks
1. Gone With The Mouse - 4:59
2. A Tiny Book - 8:03
3. Another Nail (Tony Durant, Robert Chudley) - 6:57
4. Shoes And Ships - 6:14
5. The Nothing Song - 8:23
6. Me And My Kite (Robert Chudley) - 2:34
7. Just Anyone - 3:33
All songs written by Tony Durant except where indicated.
     
Fuchsia
*Tony Durant - Acoustic Guitar, Electric Guitar, Lead Vocals
*Michael Day - Bass Guitar
*Michael Gregory - Drums, Percussion
*Janet Rogers - Violin, Backing Vocals
*Madeleine Bland - Cello, Piano , Harmonium, Backing Vocals
*Vanessa Hall-Smith - Violin, Backing Vocals

Sunday, September 26, 2021

Santana - Welcome (1973 us, fusion rock masterpiece, 2003 remaster with extra track)



The choice of “Welcome,” a John Coltrane composition from Kulu Se Mama, as the title tune of the new Santana album is a natural follow-up to Carlos’ album with Mahavishnu John McLaughlin. Coltrane pioneered the direct rendering of spirituality through music in performances like “A Love Supreme” and “Welcome,” and the recent resurgence of interest in his work by spiritually inclined rock musicians is scarcely surprising.

But Welcome covers more territory than Love Devotion Surrender, which was simply a series of ecstatic jams on Coltrane and Coltrane-influenced material. Unlike the latter album, it refers explicitly to its various inspirations. Carlos has apparently been impressed by Airto’s Fingers, Chick Corea’s Light as a Feather and recent recordings by Leon Thomas, Alice Coltrane and Lonnie Liston Smith. In fact, Welcome begins with an Alice Coltrane arrangement, and both Leon Thomas and Airto’s vocalist, Flora Purim, make brief appearances. None of these is integral to the album, suggesting an intended tribute to sources of musical enlightenment rather than an all-star session or a round of hip name-dropping.

The two outstanding qualities which have separated Santana’s music from that of its competitors—Carlos’ expressive abilities as a guitarist and the talents of the band’s various percussionists—are much in evidence throughout Welcome. The qualities which characterize the “new” Santana are the keyboard work of Tom Coster and Richard Kermode and the broad range of the material. As examples of the latter, “Yours Is the Light” is similar in both design and execution to Airto’s current style of hot, neo-samba percussion with jazz keyboard solos, while “Mother Africa” departs considerably from Herbie Mann’s original with a kalimba introduction, thundering Afro-percussion, and a boiling, post-Trane soprano saxophone solo by Jules Broussard. “Going Home,” the Alice Coltrane arrangement, is a sea of organ sounds: “Samba De Sausalito” is a meeting of Brazilian and Puerto Rican rhythmic thrusts with an extended electric piano solo by Coster riding over the top, and “Love, Devotion and Surrender” sets words to the theme of the Santana/Mahavishnu album and builds to an impassioned, gospel-inflected chorus by Leon Thomas.

Carlos himself has never played better. On “Flame” and “Welcome,” he displays a resourceful guitar adaptation of the flutter-tonguing techniques introduced by Coltrane on the soprano sax; there is now more content and less effect in his solos, without the slightest diminution of the delicate touch and bell-like tone which make his work so unmistakable. The rhythm section is at its loosest and best; veteran Afro-Cuban powerhouse Armando Peraza and the much younger Jose Areas interact beautifully, and Michael Shrieve is developing a bag of his own out of directions laid down by Airto and Elvin Jones. There is more use of suspended time, different rhythmic structures and percussive colorations, making Welcome the most rhythmically satisfying rock recording since Professor Longhair’s.

Conceptually, the album sprawls somewhat, due to the occasionally divergent pulls of its various inspirations. But Carlos’ devotion to the musical substance of the Coltrane legacy is admirable, and he seems less inclined toward the superficial treatments which marred Love Devotion Surrender. There may not be another “Black Magic Woman” here, but there is enough of the old Latin fire to satisfy the fans, as well as a promising expansion of sources and resources.
by Bob Palmer, January 3, 1974 
Tracks
1. Going Home - 4:11
2. Love Devotion And Surrender (Carlos Santana, Richard Kermode) - 3:38
3. Samba De Sausalito (Jose "Chepito" Areas) - 3:11
4. When I Look Into Your Eyes (Maitreya Michael Shrieve, Tom Coster) - 5:52
5. Yours Is The Light (Maitreya Michael Shrieve, Richard Kermode) - 5:47
6. Mother Africa (Carlos Santana, Tom Coster, Herbie Mann) - 5:55
7. Light Of Life (Carlos Santana, Richard Kermode, Tom Coster) - 3:52
8. Flame-Sky (Doug Rauch, Carlos Santana, Mahavishnu John McLaughlin) - 11:33
9. Welcome (John Coltrane) - 6:35
10.Mantra (Carlos Santana, Maitreya Michael Shrieve, Tom Coster) - 6:11
Bonus Track 10

Santana
*Carlos Santana - Electric, Acoustic Guitars, Bass, Kalimba, Percussion, Vocals
*Tom Coster - Yamaha Organ, Hammond Organ, Electric, Acoustic Piano, Organ, Marimba, Percussion, Strings Arrangements 
*Richard Kermode - Hammond Organ, Mellotron, Electric, Acoustic PianoMarimba, Shekere, Percussion
*Douglas Rauch - Bass 
*Michael Shrieve - Drums 
*José "Chepito" Areas - Percussion, Congas, Timbales 
*Armando Peraza – Percussion, Congas, Bongos, Cabasa
*Leon Thomas - Lead Vocals, Whistling
With
*Alice Coltrane - Piano, Organ, Farfisa 
*Wendy Haas - Vocals
*Flora Purim - Vocals
*John McLaughlin - Guitar 
*Joe Farrell - Solo Flute 
*Bob Yance - Flute 
*Mel Martin - Flute 
*Douglas Rodriguez - Rhythm Guitar 
*Tony Smith - Drums
*Jules Broussard - Soprano Saxophone 
*Greg Adams - Strings Arrangements 

1972  Santana - Caravanserai (2011 MFSL Ultradisc) 

Friday, September 24, 2021

Premiata Forneria Marconi - Photos Of Ghosts (1973 italy, magnificent prog rock, 2010 remaster with extra tracks)

 


PFM were already Italy's premiere progressive rock band when Emerson, Lake & Palmer signed them to the British trio's own Manticore label in 1972 and turned to King Crimson alumnus Peter Sinfield to write English-language words (sung phonetically) for this, the Italian group's debut international release. 

A phantasmagorical creation, Photos of Ghosts is filled with lush melodies and rich musical textures, all wrapped around Sinfield's frequently surreal lyrics, which seem an extension of some of his better work from King Crimson's Lizard and Islands albums. In contrast to ELP's music of the same period, PFM's music still retains some loud echoes of psychedelia, and the music has a refreshingly airy, open sound, free from the thick, heavy-handed Germanic textures generated by most of the rival U.K. classical rock bands of the period -- this album can stand next to competing works by Genesis, Yes, et al. from the same period. 

Additionally, PFM were not only unafraid of doing songs that changed time signatures radically, but reveled and thrived in such unusual structures, as demonstrated by "Il Banchetto," the one song on the album transferred -- at least in terms of lyrics -- intact from the original Italian release. The phonetically sung English lyrics also take on a special eeriness on track such as "Promenade the Puzzle." Oddly enough, the group actually became a better rock band in the year following this release, with a shift in personnel and the addition of bassist Patrick Djivas, and subsequent releases rocked harder and better, but they never had a finer, more consistently rewarding body of music in one place to their credit than this album. T

he various CD editions have been a major improvement over the fuzzy, indistinct mastering (and accompanying poor pressings) of the original 1970s-era U.S. vinyl release. The 2010 CD re-release also features significant bonus tracks, consisting principally of early mixes and unaccompanied backing tracks from much of the album -- all of which bring the running time up past 70 minutes -- and reveal a wealth of inner detail and instrumental textures that were otherwise masked on the finished album, plus the single edit of "Celebration." 
by Bruce Eder
Tracks
1. River Of Life - 6:59
2. Celebration - 3:51
3. Photos of Ghosts - 5:21
4. Old Rain (Flavio Premoli) - 3:41
5. Il Banchetto (Mauro Pagani, Franco Mussida, Flavio Premoli) - 8:34
6. Mr. 9 'til 5 - 4:09
7. Promenade The Puzzle - 7:30
8. Photos of Ghosts - 5:22
9. River Of Life - 7:07
10.Old Rain (Flavio Premoli) - 3:40
11.Il Banchetto (Mauro Pagani, Franco Mussida, Flavio Premoli) - 8:34
12.Mr. 9 'til 5 - 3:54
13.Celebration - 2:13
All songs by Franco Mussida, Flavio Premoli, Pete Sinfiled except where indicated
Bonus TrackS 8-13

Premiata Forneria Marconi
*Franz Di Cioccio - Drums, Vocal
*Franco Mussida - Electric, Acoustic Guitar, Vocal
*Mauro Pagani - Flute, Violin, Windwood, Vocal
*Giorgio Piazza - Bass
*Flavio Premoli - Keyboards, Hammond Organ, Piano, Mellotron, Moog, Vocal

Thursday, September 23, 2021

Lindisfarne - Happy Daze (1974 uk, fine folk soft rock, 2008 remaster with bonus tracks)


This album was recorded by the Mk 2 line-up of Lindisfarne and, as such, reveals a widening choice of possible directions for them to follow. Tonight is a big, brash and joyous opener, much noisier than many of their original fans would have expected. After this, however, things settle into more familiar territory with an effective midtempo In Your Head and the gentle delights of Alan Hull’s The River. The latter, written some years previously, would have reassured some of the fans as Alan Hull and Ray Jackson represented the spirit that originally made the band stand out so delightfully.

From there on the album balances Alan Hull songs with more strident ones from new members Ken Craddock and Thomas Duffy, all of which reflect a band undergoing changes and partially feeling their way in their new clothes. Everything is well played and sung, with pleasing arrangements, but taken as a whole Happy Daze may well have confused as many as it satisfied. Market Square have added seven original Alan Hull demos, including Dingly Dell, as pleasing fare for Lindisfarne fans.
by Kingsley Abbott , 13 October 2008
Tracks
1. Tonight (Tommy Duffy) - 3:25
2. In Your Head  (Kenny Craddock) - 3:08
3. River - 4:15
4. You Put The Laff On Me - 3:53
5. No Need To Tell Me - 2:22
6. Juiced Up To Lose (Tommy Duffy) - 2:48
7. Dealer's Choice - 2:57
8. Nellie (Kenny Craddock) - 3:51
9. The Man Down There (Kenny Craddock) - 3:50
10.Gin And Tonix All Round - 3:24
11.Tomorrow (Kenny Craddock) - 5:12
12.Dingly Dell - 3:55
13.Where Is My Sixpence? - 2:23
14.Do Not Be Afraid - 1:57
15.Smile - 1:49
16.Picture A Little Girl - 3:20
17.Doctor Of Love - 4:00
18.Alright On The Night - 2:19
All songs written by Alan Hull except where indicated
Bonus tracks 12-18 unreleased Demo by Alan Hull, recorded at Impulse Studios, Wallsend, in the late 1960s by David Wood.

Lindisfarne
*Alan Hull - Guitar, Vocals
*Lindsay Raymond Jackson - Vocals, Mandolin, Harp, Percussion
*Charlie Harcourt - Lead Guitar
*Thomas Duffy - Bass, Vocals
*Kenneth Craddock - Piano, Electric Piano, Organ, Guitar, Vibraphone, Vocals
*Paul Nichols - Drums


Wednesday, September 22, 2021

Alan Hull - Pipedream (1973 uk, grandiose meditative, reflective, folk rock, 2005 remaster and expanded)


With half of Lindisfarne having scampered off to form Jack The Lad, Alan Hull's first solo venture, recorded with cohorts Ray Jackson and Kenny Craddock, was first released in 1973. Reissued to mark the tenth anniversary of Hull's death, Pipedream is by far his most self-assured work: the playing and production beingless folk-driven than on Lindisfarne's classic early albums.

Most of the tracks deal with real-life situations, around themes that permeated much of Hull's writing over the years -booze, relationships, politics - and this gives them an earthy colour. "Breakfast", a morning-after tale of waking up with your mistress, kicks off the album with an energetic humour. The similarly comic "Country Gentleman's Wife" was inspired by the posh housewives he met back in the 60s, as he cleaned windows in one of Newcastle's richer quarters. The story, he once explained, is one that could have happened, but didn't.

Hull was a conscious voice for the underdog and the working man and woman. "Money Game" and "Song For A Windmill" are paradigmatic of his peculiarly northern English take on the protest song: caustic fables of mill owners and brass in pocket. "Drug Song", which became a staple in Hull's live set until his death in 1995, was one of his personal favourites and one he considered (rightly) to be among his best. Although Hull admitted that it was written under the influence, it's neither pro nor anti drugs.

The beautifully cracked and broken "I Hate To See You Cry", which closed the original album, is now followed by some B-sides and tracks from a 1974 BBC session. "Dan The Plan" and "One More Bottle Of Wine" both surfaced on Hull's second solo set, Squire. After Pipedream, Hull never again articulated such pathos and passion.
by Rob Webb 2005
Tracks
1. Breakfast - 3:39
2. Justanothersadsong - 2:54
3. Money Game - 2:48
4. STD 0632 - 3:07
5. United States Of Mind - 3:06
6. Country Gentleman's Wife - 3:36
7. Numbers (Travelling Band) - 3:56
8. For The Bairns - 2:27
9. Drug Song - 3:08
10.Song For A Windmill - 2:47
11.Blue Murder - 5:06
12.I Hate To See You Cry - 3:27
13.Drinking Song - 2:34
14.One Off Pat - 0:50
15.Down On The Underground - 2:39
16.Gin And Tonics All Round - 2:57
17.One More Bottle Of Wine - 3:12
18.Dan The Plan - 4:04
Music and Words by Alan Hull
Bonus Tracks 13-18

Personnel
*Alan Hull - Vocals, Guitar, Piano, Harmonium
*John Turnbull - Guitar
*Colin Gibson - Bass
*Ken Craddock - Piano, Organ, Harmonium, Electric Piano, Guitar
*Ray Laidlaw - Drums
*Ray Jackson - Harp, Mandolin, Vocals
*Dave Brooks - Saxophone 

Related Act

Monday, September 20, 2021

Various Artists - Shapes And Shadows (1968-72 uk, marvelous psych and other rare flavours, 2014 remaster)



Not content with co-writing some of the most cherished soft-pop hits of the 60s (It’s Not Unusual, The Last Waltz, There’s A Kind Of Hush), Les Reed also funnelled his largesse into establishing the Chapter One imprint. Shapes And Shadows dips an exploratory finger into the label’s archives to reveal that it was a typical independent operation of its era: hardly bursting at the seams with “psychedelic pop” per se, but certainly issuing material indicative of the provender that skulked around the chart perimeter during Chapter One’s momentary lifespan.

If it’s popsike ye seek, try Lifetime by The Bliss, borne on a zephyr of flute (courtesy of Harold McNair) and strings, not dissimilar to the Ramases of Glass Top Coffin. Thereafter, head straight for the Episode Six selections, famously featuring the pre-Purps Ian Gillan and Roger Glover. The rubicund melody and pillowy harmonies of Lucky Sunday establish a UK branch of The Association, while Gentlemen Of The Park is a comparably luscious genuflection at The Beach Boys’ altar.

We’re also partial to Spring Never Came Twice by Jason Cord – chest-beating balladry with a paisley cravat – and Big Bare Beat by The British Lion Orchestra: a blaring defector from Les Reed’s Girl On A Motorcycle soundtrack, replete with an inexplicable musique concrète interlude. 
by Oregano Rathbone, 05 November 2014
Artists - Tracks
1. Putney Bridge - What's It All About - 3:15
2. Episode Six - Lucky Sunday - 3:43
3. The Bliss - Lifetime - 2:45
4. Philwit And Pegasus - The Elephant Song - 2:45
5. Jason Cord - Spring Never Came Twice - 2:37
6. Episode Six - Mozart Versus The Rest - 3:00
7. Putney Bridge - Your Turn To Die - 2:36
8. Christopher - The Race - 2:24
9. Sad People - Turn Around - 3:08
10.The Matchmakers - Lover's Congregation - 3:14
11.The Californians - You've Got Your Troubles - 3:16
12.Episode Six - Mr Universe - 4:17
13.Christopher - Sharkey - 2:01
14.The March Hare - Cry My Heart - 2:57
15.Morning Glory - Marjory Daw - 3:07
16.The Bliss - Courtyards Of Castile - 2:56
17.Brother John - Brother John - 2:37
18.Sad People - Lonely Man - 2:39
19.Episode Six - Jack D'Or - 3:15
20.Putney Bridge - The Meaning Of Love - 2:54
21.The Matchmakers - Thank You Baby For Coming - 3:25
22.Morning Glory - Munday Street - 3:50
23.The March Hare - With My Eyes Closed - 2:49
24.Episode Six - Gentlemen Of The Park - 3:12
25.British Lion Orchestra And Les Reed - Big Bare Beat - 2:16
26.Tandem - Shapes And Shadows - 2:31