Thursday, July 2, 2026

rep>>> The Fool - The Fool (1969 holland, tasteful blend of psychedelia, sunshine folk with experimental mood, 2005 bonus tracks remaster)



The Fool were a Dutch quartet transplanted to London in the middle ’60s, whose original impact on the rock world was visual rather than musical.  They were two women, Marijke Kooer and Josje Leeger – who designed clothes for people like Patti Boyd Harrison (George Harrison’s first wife) – and with Marijke’s husband, Seemon (Simon) and their friend, Barry Finch they became collectively known as “the Fool,” exemplifying the hippie ethic of the mid-’60s.   

They had a shop off London’s Montague Square, where John Lennon was an early visitor.  Brian Hogg’s CD liner notes quote Seemon from the Granada TV documentary, It Was Twenty Years Ago Today: “He walked into our place, and saw our stuff – furniture and posters as well as clothes – and he said ‘This is where I want to live.’”  That established the Fool.  They did concert posters for Brian Epstein’s Saville Theatre, decorated Lennon’s piano and his Rolls Royce and painted the exterior of the Apple building.  They flourished at the height of “flower power” and their distinctive images helped define the era.   

As artists they did several album covers, starting with the Hollies’ 1966 Evolution and the Move’s debut album, and perhaps culminating in 5000 Spirits On The Layers Of The Onion by the Incredible String Band – all in an instantly identifiable style.  In 1968 they recorded their only album, for Mercury Records. 

I remember that while my friends were getting excited about the Incredible String Band, I – never very fond of folk music – kept telling them, “Yeah, sure, but have you heard the Fool?”   When I played the album for them I made a lot of converts for it. 

The Fool is an album with some of the same English folk elements – including bagpipes! – but it is not a folk music album.  So what is it?  Good question.   In an odd way it reminds me of George Harrison’s very under-appreciated Wonderwall Music:  both are early precursors of “World music.”  But The Fool is much more. 

The album opens with spacey psychedelic effects that lead us directly into “Fly,” which has a naοve folksy quality but in turn leads (in a direct segue) to a rippling piano, banjos, and a deep organ accompaniment to the second track, “Voice On The Wind.”  Hogg states that Graham Nash, whom they’d met when he was in the Hollies, “acted as producer and he doubtlessly helped sculpt the textured opening two tracks … which served as an atmospheric introduction to the album.  The use of bagpipes and other exotic instruments signaled a wish to create something both adventurous and folksy.”  (I might add that I rarely enjoy the sound of bagpipes – as they are traditionally played – but they work well for me on this album.  Seemon is pictured playing bagpipes on the album’s cover.) 

 “‘Cry For Me,’ with its plaintive banjo, proved the Fool’s grasp of melody, a feature enhanced by their confident vocals and atmospheric seashore sound effects.  ‘No One Will Ever Know’ blends pop with a jugband feel feel before a now familiar [bagpipe] skirl grabs the casual listener. 

“A trumpet, whistles and almost gospel-styled singing inhabit ‘Reincarnation.’  ‘Hello Little Sister’ plays with the riff from ‘Walk Don’t Run’ and more faintly choral voices before ‘Keep On Pushin’ hits a bluesy vein.  The piece is underpinned by a Hammond organ, prompting scholars to suggest the presence of R&B veteran Graham Bond who was often photographed with the Fool around this time.  The eastern-styled [tenor] saxophone break would seem to confirm it.  ‘Inside Your Mind’ is another track hewn from Episcopalia, while ‘Lay It Down’ [which concluded the original album] is full blown intoxicated psychedelia.”  

When I first got this album I was struck by the nature of its melodies.  They seemed to derive in part from old English church hymns – blended with blues, boogie and rock.  “Episcopalia” is another way to describe it.  Oddly Calvinistic, I thought then.  But original: nothing else, before or since, sounds very much like it.  And that “eastern-styled  saxophone break” turns into a quote from Rahsaan Roland Kirk playing with Charles Mingus (as recorded in 1962) – a nice touch. 

This album dates to the days before “progressive rock” existed, but prefigures it in its adventurousness and wide-ranging musicality.  I always wondered why there was no second album to follow up on this one, but Hogg says, “Unfortunately for the Fool, flower-power was wilting in 1968 [when the album was released] and their efforts herein went largely unrecognized, despite cover art typical of their work.   Their designs were now deemed passι – the Apple building was repainted at the behest of residents, and the collective split up at the end of the decade.”  Frankly, I was never impressed by their style of artwork – the cover of the Move’s first album never did anything for me – and I miss that aspect of the Fool much less than I do their music. 

In the early ’70s Seemon and Marijke came to America and made an album for A&M Records, Son Of America (SP 4309). Graham Nash again was the producer (and contributed vocals), and Seemon plays bagpipes in a few spots, but the music is rather pedestrian and ordinary, perhaps the result of using American musicians (including Booker T. on organ), or perhaps the desire for greater commercial success – which eluded it.  This album was not a continuation of the Fool.  Then the couple returned to Amsterdam and split up.  Hogg says that Barry and Josje also returned to Amsterdam, “and, last heard, were still together.” 
by Dr. Progresso and Brian Hogg
Tracks
1. Fly - 2:43
2. Voice On The Wind - 5:08
3. Rainbow Man - 2:21
4. Cry For Me - 3:52
5. No One Will Ever Know - 2:53
6. Reincarnation - 4:07
7. Hello Little Sister - 2:00
8. Keep On Pushing - 6:00
9. Inside Your Mind - 2:43
10.Lay It Down - 4:51
11.We Are One - 2:38
12.Shining Light - 2:40
All compositions by Barry Finch, Josje Leeger, Marijke Koger, Simon Posthuma
Bonus Tracks 11,12

The Fool
*Simon Posthuma
*Marijke Koger
*Barry Finch
*Josje Leeger

Just Paste

Wednesday, July 1, 2026

rep>>> Joe And Bing - Daybreak (1971 us, magical sunny baroque folk, 2004 bonus tracks remaster)



A lost sunshine pop gem – with some unique Brazilian touches! The album's the first offering from the folk rock team of Joe & Bing – an earthy duo who remind us a fair bit of Alzo & Udine, with jangly use of acoustic guitar, sweet harmony vocals, and a surprisingly soulful undercurrent. But added to this already-great style are some beautiful arrangements by a young Deodato and Atlantic pop stringmeister Harry Lookofsky – expanding the sound wonderfully, and giving the album a beautifully airy quality. 

The record also has the distinction of being one of the few to appear in Brazil on the legendary Quartin label – no doubt because of the Deodato connection – but overall, it's got a wonderful post-folk sound that's right up there with the best Sunshine pop of the late 60s! Titles include "Summer Sound", "Sail", "Drifting With Time", "Fenario", "If Love's In Season", and "I'm Not Forgetting Your Name". CD also features a whole bunch of bonus tracks, including the tunes "Come & Bring The Sun Again", "Those Sunday Soda Pop Dreams", "More Than I Can Live With", and "Panther Pond Breakdown".
Tracks
1. Daybreak - 2:31
2. I'm Not Forgetting Your Name - 3:25
3. It's OK - 2:59
4. Summer Sound - 2:54
5. Fennario - 3:43
6. Love The One You're With (Stephen Stills) - 3:09
7. If Love's In Season - 2:53
8. Just Plain Livin' Blues - 2:21
9. Sail - 3:14
10.Drifting With The Time - 3:14 - 
11.Come And Bring The Sun Again - 3:15
12.Summer Sound - 2:47
13.If Love's In Season - 2:47
14.Without Her (Harry Nilsson) - 2:53
15.More Than I Can Live With - 2:31
16.Panther Pond Breakdown - 2:07
17.Those Sunday Soda Pop Dreams (William "Bing" Bingham, Joe Knowlton, McKeon) - 3:59
Words and Music by William "Bing" Bingham, Joe Knowlton except where noted
Bonus Tracks 11-17

Personnel
*Joe Knowlton - 5-string Banjo, Acoustic Guitar, Vocals
*William Bingham - Guitars, Vocals
*Ken Asher - Organ, Piano
*Joe Beck - Electric Guitar
*Garnett Brown - Trombone
*Geoffrey Daking - Drums, Percussion
*Eumir Deodato - Keyboards
*Joe Foster - Synthesizer
*Harry Lookofsky - Violin
*Donald MacDonald - Drums, Percussion
*Don Payne - Bass
*Nick Robbins - Synthesizer
*Dom Um Romão - Drums, Percussion
*Bob Rose - Electric Guitar 
*Rick Rowe - Flute
*Jimmy Seldar - Trumpet
*Dick Hurwitz - Trumpet
*Grady Tate - Drums, Percussion

Tuesday, June 30, 2026

rep>>> Ambrosia - Ambrosia (1975 us, a masterful act with progressive refinement, shifting to blue-eyed soul and yacht rock)



Although they would become better known for smooth AOR ballads like "How Much I Feel," Ambrosia first made their name with this album of progressive rock with a pop music twist. Its songs skillfully blend strong melodic hooks and smooth vocal harmonies with music of an almost symphonic density. Good examples of this crossbreeding are "Drink of Water," which sounds like the Beach Boys tackling a Pink Floyd space rock epic, and "Nice, Nice, Very Nice," which utilizes a combination of stately close-harmony vocals and dynamic instrumental breaks to put forth a clever lyric derived from a Kurt Vonnegut novel. 

The complexity of the music is further highlighted by its crystal-clear sonic landscape, mixed by Alan Parsons, which highlights unique touches like the use of a Russian balalaika ensemble and 300-year-old Javanese gongs on "Time Waits for No One." Despite this prog rock ambitiousness, the group is smart enough to avoid letting their instrumental chops take precedence over their music's melodic content: They keep their songs succinct and punchy (nothing extends over six-and-a-half minutes) and they infuse tunes like "Lover Arrive" and the radio favorite "Holdin' on to Yesterday" with a delicate sense of pop songcraft that makes the group's cinematic sound easy for listeners to assimilate. The end result is an album that is intricate enough to please prog rock addicts but catchy enough to win over a few pop fans in the process. Though Ambrosia would go on to score bigger hits later in their career, this is definitely their most cohesive and inspired album. 
by Donald A. Guarisco
Tracks
1. Nice, Nice, Very Nice (Burleigh Drummond, Christopher North, David Pack, Joe Puerta, Kurt Vonnegut Jr.) - 5:55
2. Time Waits For No One (Burleigh Drummond, Christopher North, David Pack, Joe Puerta) - 4:53
3. Holdin' On To Yesterday (David Pack, Joe Puerta) - 4:19
4. World Leave Me Alone (David Pack) - 3:18
5. Make Us All Aware (Burleigh Drummond, Christopher North, David Pack, Joe Puerta) - 4:29
6. Lover Arrive (David Pack) - 3:11
7. Mama Frog (Burleigh Drummond, Christopher North, David Pack, Joe Puerta) - 6:05
8. Drink Of Water (Burleigh Drummond, Christopher North, David Pack, Joe Puerta) - 6:29

Ambrosia
*Burleigh Drummond - Drums, Percussion, Vocals
*Christopher North - Keyboards, Vocals
*David Pack - Guitar, Keyboards, Vocals
*Joe Puerta - Bass, Guitar, Vocals
With
*Andy Toth - Violin
*Chuck Girard - Violin
*Fletch Wiley - Violin
*Daniel Kobialka - Violin
*Ian Underwood - Saxophone
*James Newton Howard - Synthesizer Programming
*Jim West - Violin
*Keith Johnson - Violin
*Michael Granger - Synthesizer Programming
*Ruth Underwood - Marimba
*Splash Price - Violin

rep>>> Jody Grind - Far Canal (1970 uk, impressive heavy bluesy progressive rock, 2nd album, 2006 japan remaster)



Hinkley’s finest moment came with the second Jody Grind album Far Canal, launched in June 1970 next to Pete Gavin and future Hummingbird guitarist Bernie Holland who had started out in the early days with Bluesology, Patto and Ferris Wheel.The classical motif intro “We’ve Had It” spirals like a magician into some ejaculated riffs that make you realise this is no ordinary group. You have to hear the live track “Plastic Shit” recorded at the Roundhouse to understand the capabilities of this nuclear force. 

The lengthy workout on the instrumental “Red Worms And Lice” with Bernie’s guitar spurting like hot mercury balanced with the jazzy ”Ballad For Bridget” were astounding. Peter Gavin joined Heads, Hands & Feet and Vinegar Joe while Tim played sessions with Al Stewart, Snafu and Alvin Lee. Bernie Holland went on to play with Van Morrison. 
by Shiloh Noone
Tracks
1. We've Had It - 5:07
2. Bath Sister - 3:29
3. Jump Bed Jed - 7:14
4. O Paradiso - 7:32
5. Plastic Shit (Bernie Holland, Tim Hinkley) - 7:19
6. Vegetable Oblivion - 2:10
7. Red Worms And Lice (Bernie Holland, Tim Hinkley) - 7:22
8. Ballad For Bridget  - 3:40
Songs 1,3,6 written by Bernie Holland
Songs 2,4,8 written by Tim Hinkley

 Jody Grind
*Bernie Holland - Acoustic Guitar, Electric Guitar, Bass Guitar, Vocals
*Pete Gavin - Drums, Percussion
*Tim Hinkley - Organ, Piano, Electric Piano, Vibraphone, Vocals

1969  Jody Grind - One Step On (2006 Strange Days Japan)

Just Paste

Monday, June 29, 2026

rep>>> Various Artists - Floor Filler Killers • New Directions Vol. 3 (1965-69 uk, excellent groovie garage beat psych)



Fantastic 14-track British beat/garage compilation garnered from the personal collection of one of Britain's top record dealers. As the name suggests, each of these tracks is a real killer. I can't think of a better way to announce that Past and Present is back than with this, the first of dozens of great titles that will be appearing on the imprint in the future." Artists: Gavin Hamilton, Neil Christian, Tangerine Peel, The Groop, Ian and the Zodiacs, The Moving Finger, Guy Darrell, The Hipster Image, Jerry Martin, The Quotations, Winston G, Gene Latter, The Kool, The End. 
Artist - Tracks - Composer
1. Gavin Hamilton - It Won't Be The Same (Nick Sandys, V. Bourne) - 2:38
2. Neil Christian - I'm Gonna Love You Baby (Neil Christian, Dilys Rhys Jones) - 2:54
3. Tangerine Peel - Solid Gold Mountain Top (Terry Tootill) - 2:54
4. The Groop - Such A Lovely Way (Brian Cadd, Don Mudie) - 3:18
5. Ian And The Zodiacs - No Money No Honey (Charles Flynn, Klaus Doldinger, Ian Edwards) - 2:23
6. The Moving Finger - Shake And Fingerpop (Autry DeWalt, Lawrence Horn, Willie Woods) - 3:44
7. Guy Darrell - Evil Woman (Larry Weiss) - 2:25
8. The Hipster Image - Little Piece Of Leather (Celestine Dallas, Jimmy Dallas, Donnie Elbert) - 2:09
9. Jerry Martin - I Can't Find Her (Jerry Martin) - 2:29
10.The Quotations - Cool It (Kenny Young, Scott English) - 3:00
11.Winston G - Judge And Jury (Winston Beresford Gawk, G. Watkinson) - 2:45
12.Gene Latter - Just A Minute Or Two (Terry Dempsey) - 2:45
13.The Kool - Step Out Of Your Mind (Al Gorgoni, Chip Taylor) - 2:40
14.The End - Why (Colin Giffin, David Brown) - 2:42

The Past and Present compilations
60-70's  Mind Expanders Vol.2
1967-74  Psych Bites Vol.1
1968-74  Psych Bites Vol.2
1969-73  Up All Night

Just Paste
Text Host

Sunday, June 28, 2026

rep>>> Delivery - Fools Meeting (1970 uk, canterbury masterpiece with female vocals, bonus tracks remaster)



First of all one must add that the sole Delivery album, Fool's Meeting was released by Cuneiform Records together with several bonus tracks. However one must also state that unfortunately much of what this band had recorded, has unfortunately been lost. Master tapes of this album have been lost as have also been the recordings of the band live at various concerts such ss the BBC Top Gear Sessions. Notwithstanding all this the label have managed to include two "bonus" tracks from the same recording session of the album, including the single release Harry Lucky that was unavailable on the vinyl edition, together with two live tracks and the track One For You from the Lol Coxhill/Steve Miller album sessions.

The album opens with the track Blind To Your Light, which with its running bass line conjures up a definite bluesy atmosphere thus confirming the record label's aspirations for Grimes' contention as a vocal ist to rival Janis Joplin and Grace Slick. However the saxophone playing of Coxhill together with Steve Miller's piano helps add spice to the atmosphere giving it a jazz touch alongside the likes of bands such as Colosseum. The live version of this track is played in an incredibly much slower pace with the guitar coming to the fore of the band's playing, something that was not too conspicuous on the studio version. The absence of Lol Coxhill on saxophone is probably the most plausible reason for this and it is up to bass and guitar to fill in his shoes. The slow bluesy touch is maintained on Miserable Man, though the pace is slowed down considerably (in comparison to the studio version of Blind To Your Light) and the overall sound of the track has its roots in the sixties psychedelic rock scene, with Jefferson Airplane a strong contender for inspiration.

On Home Made Ruin one can start to fell the progressive rock slowly creeping into the band's music. The first track that had Phil Miller as sole composer, the music sees the guitar coming to the fore to reply to the jazzy keyboard solo, though the striking factor of this track is the strong ever increasing rhythm and power with which it is played out. The alternate take of this track features a completely different overall structure with some delightful interplay between piano and guitar. With Is It Really The Same, the band start to take on the sounds that were pervading the British rock scene, namely via bands like King Crimson. Coxhill manages to infuse a raw energy into the band's performance giving them a much more raw rock sound, rather than the polished feel that many progressive and Canterbury bands would tend to follow. The live version has Phil Miller's distorted guitar carrying the load of the saxophone, though one must admit that there is a lack of broadness and harshness when the track is executed live.

Once again it takes a Phil Miller composition to bring out a more obvious progressive feel to the music of Delivery. We Were Satisfied is just one such track with a mixture of prog and psychedelia while tracks like The Wrong Time and Figuring It out sound more like a jazzed up version of The Grateful Dead with elements of R&B surfacing occasionally. The last track that was originally on the vinyl album was the title track, Fool's Meeting, which is a true bluesy number that once again re-evokes the Grace Slick/Janis Joplin comparisons with Carol Grimes' powerful vocals.

Harry Lucky was originally omitted from the vinyl version, but was released as a single to promote the release of the album. Of the tracks on the album it is probably the weakest of the lot featuring little of note, unlike the final track on this album, One For You. Written after the official demise of the band it was recorded during the Coxhill/Miller recording sessions in Autumn, 1971 ad could be considered to be more of a jam session than anything else. However it shows how the involved musicians had matured over the short period since their last official recording. The music had evolved from a broad blues style to a more improvisational jazzy approach, a sure feature of most Canterbury bands.

It is indeed a pity that both the album and the band have become mere footnotes in the history of Canterbury music. The album should prove of interest to all those who want to see (or hear!) how much of the British progressive rock scene evolved from the British blues sixties boom. This album is an important stepping stone for such bands standing somewhere in the middle of both genres.
by Nigel Camilleri
Tracks
1. Blind To Your Light (Carol Grimes, Phil Miller) - 5:05
2. Miserable Man (Carol Grimes, Phil Miller, Pip Pyle, Roy Babbington, Steve Miller) - 8:28
3. Home Made Ruin (Phil Miller) - 3:23
4. Is It Really The Same (Keith Jarrett) - 5:44
5. We Were Satisfied (Phil Miller) - 4:02
6. The Wrong Time (Carol Grimes, Phil Miller, Pip Pyle, Roy Babbington, Steve Miller) - 7:50
7. Fighting It Out (Phil Miller) - 5:48
8. Fools Meeting (Carol Grimes, Phil Miller, Pip Pyle, Roy Babbington, Steve Miller) - 5:27
9. Harry Lucky (Alfreda Benge, Pip Pyle, Steve Miller) - 3:41
10.Home Made Ruin (Phil Miller) - 2:56
11.Is It Really The Same (Keith Jarrett) - 5:19
12.Blind To Your Light (Carol Grimes, Phil Miller) - 5:29
13.Miserable Man (Carol Grimes, Phil Miller, Pip Pyle, Roy Babbington, Steve Miller) - 8:15
14.One For You (Carol Grimes, Phil Miller, Pip Pyle, Roy Babbington, Steve Miller) - 7:43

Delivery
*Steve Miller - Piano
*Phil Miller - Guitar
*Roy Babbington - Bass, String Bass
*Pip Pyle - Drums
*Carol Grimes - Vocals, Percussion
Guest Musicians
*Lol Coxhill - Soprano-Tenor Saxophone
*Roddy Skeaping - Violin on "Miserable Man"
*Richard Sinclair - Bass on "One for You"

Related Act
1972  Uncle Dog - Old Hat (Japan remaster)

Just Paste
Text Host

Saturday, June 27, 2026

It's A Beautiful Day - It's A Beautiful Day • Marrying Maiden (1969-70 us, gorgeous psych folk prog rock)



It's a Beautiful Day were no less memorable for their unique progressive rock style that contrasted well with the Bay Area psychedelic scene. Led by David LaFlamme (flute/violin/vocals) and his wife, Linda LaFlamme (keyboards), the six-piece unit on this album vacillates between light and ethereal pieces such as the lead-off cut, "White Bird," to the heavier, prog rock-influenced "Bombay Calling." One of the most distinct characteristics of It's a Beautiful Day is their instrumentation. The prominence of David LaFlamme -- former violin soloist with the Utah Symphony and original member of Dan Hicks & His Hot Licks -- adds a refinement to It's a Beautiful Day's sound. Likewise, the intricate melodies -- mostly composed by the LaFlammes -- are structured around the band's immense virtuosity, a prime example being the exquisitely haunting harpsichord-driven "Girl With No Eyes." The noir framework, as well as lyrics such as "...she's just a reflection of all of the time I've been high," point rather candidly to the hallucinogenic nature of the song's -- if not the band's -- influences. 

The same can be said of the languidly eerie "Bulgaria." The almost chant-like quality of the track slowly crescendos into an hypnotic and dreamlike sonic journey -- led by LaFlamme's brilliant violin work. By virtue of being a Bay Area fixture in the late '60s, It's a Beautiful Day could also easily double as a hippie dance band -- which they can also execute with great aplomb -- as the wildly up-tempo "Time Is" amply proves. It's a Beautiful Day remains as a timepiece and evidence of how sophisticated rock & roll had become in the fertile environs of the San Francisco music scene. 

The second long-player from It's a Beautiful Day is an exceedingly more pastoral effort than the band's self-titled debut. As many of the Bay Area groups -- most notably the Grateful Dead with Workingman's Dead and American Beauty -- had begun to do, the band realigns its sound from the dark psychedelia and proto-prog of its earlier works and into a lighter and earthier country-flavored rock. Marrying Maiden does, however, continue highlighting both the sextet's stellar instrumental proficiencies as well as vocals -- featuring the entire band -- throughout. "Don and Dewey," the album's opener, is a hot-steppin' spotlight for David LaFlamme's classically trained violin work. Presumably, the tune is an ode to the late-'50s/early-'60s R&B duo of the same name. The track has distinct hints of the concurrent contributions that LaFlamme had been making in an incipient incarnation of Dan Hick & His Hot Licks. It likewise sets the tenor for the remainder of the disc's down-home feel.

The cover of folkie Fred Neil's "The Dolphins" is notable for Fred Webb's honky tonk piano fills and LaFlamme's vocals, recalling some of the earliest New Riders of the Purple Sage sides. One of the more solidly unifying factors linking the NRPS and It's a Beautiful Day is the guest appearance by Jerry Garcia, who is featured on two numbers. As he had done on Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young's "Teach Your Children," Garcia lends a few distinct pedal steel guitar riffs to the perky "It Comes Right Down to You." The track also features former Charlatan Richard Olsen on, of all things, clarinet. Another sign of the times is the pickin' and grinnin' on the appropriately titled "Hoedown" -- on which Garcia adds some fiery banjo fretwork. 
by Lindsay Planer
Tracks
It's A Beautiful Day 1969
1. White Bird (David Laflamme, Linda Laflamme) - 6:06
2. A Hot Summer Day (David Laflamme, Linda Laflamme) - 5:46
3. Wasted Union Blues - 4:00
4. Girl With No Eyes (David Laflamme, Linda Laflamme) - 3:49
5. Bombay Calling (David Laflamme, Vince Wallace) - 4:25
6. Bulgaria - 6:10
7. Time Is - 9:42
Marrying Maiden 1970
8. Don And Dewey - 5:10
9. The Dolphins (Fred Neil) - 4:25
10.Essence Of Now (Mitchell Holman) - 3:15
11.Hoedown - 2:25
12.Soapstone Mountain - 4:15
13.Waiting For The Sun (Hal Wagenet) - 1:15
14.Let A Woman Flow (David LaFlamme, Pattie Santos) - 4:25
15.It Comes Right Down To You (Fred Webb, Robert Lewis) - 3:10
16.Good Lovin' (Fred Webb, Mitchell Holman) - 4:55
17.Galileo (Hal Wagenet) - 3:00
18.Do You Remember The Sun? (Fred Webb, Robert Lewis) - 3:05
All songs by David LaFlamme except where indicated.

It's A Beautiful Day
*Pattie Santos - Percussion, Vocals
*Val Fuentes - Drums, Vocals
*Fred Webb - French Horn, Keyboards, Vocals
*David Laflamme - Flute, Violin, Guitar, Vocals
*Mitchell Holman - Bass, Harmonica, Vocals
*Hal Wagenet - Guitar, Vocals
Guests
*Bruce Steinberg - Harmonica (Track 2)
*Avenue Theatre - Organ (Track 12)
*Richard Olsen - Clarinet (Tracks 8-18)
*Jerry Garcia - Banjo, Pedal Steel (Tracks 8-18)

1968  It's A Beautiful Day - Live At The Fillmore (2013 release)
1971  It's A Beautiful Day - Creed Of Love

Just Paste

Friday, June 26, 2026

rep>>> Jo Ann Kelly - Jo-Ann Kelly (1969 uk, spectacular delta blues rock)



The rock era saw a few white female singers, like Janis Joplin, show they could sing the blues. But one who could outshine them all -- Jo Ann Kelly -- seemed to slip through the cracks, mostly because she favored the acoustic, Delta style rather than rocking out with a heavy band behind her. But with a huge voice, and a strong guitar style influenced by Memphis Minnie and Charley Patton, she was the queen. 

Born January 5, 1944, Kelly and her older brother Dave were both taken by the blues, and born at the right time to take advantage of a young British blues scene in the early '60s. By 1964 she was playing in clubs, including the Star in Croydon, and had made her first limited-edition record with future Groundhogs guitarist Tony McPhee. She expanded to play folk and blues clubs all over Britain, generally solo, but occasionally with other artists, bringing together artists like Bessie Smith and Sister Rosetta Tharpe into her own music. 

After the first National Blues Federation Convention in 1968 her career seemed ready to take flight. She began playing the more lucrative college circuit, followed by her well-received debut album in 1969. At the second National Blues Convention, she jammed with Canned Heat, who invited her to join them on a permanent basis. She declined, not wanting to be a part of a band -- and made the same decision when Johnny Winter offered to help her. 

Throughout the '70s, Kelly continued to work and record solo, while also gigging for fun in bands run by friends, outfits like Tramp and Chilli Willi -- essentially pub rock, as the scene was called, and in 1979 she helped found the Blues Band, along with brother Dave, and original Fleetwood Mac bassist Bob Brunning. The band backed her on an ambitious show she staged during the early '80s, Ladies and the Blues, in which she paid tribute to her female heros. In 1988, Kelly began to suffer pain. 

A brain tumor was diagnosed and removed, and she seemed to have recovered, even touring again in 1990 with her brother before collapsing and dying on October 21. Posthumously, she's become a revered blues figure, one who helped clear the path for artists like Bonnie Raitt and Rory Block. But more than a figurehead, her recorded material -- and unreleased sides have appeared often since her death -- show that Kelly truly was a remarkable blueswoman. 
by Chris Nickson
Tracks
1. Louisiana Blues (McKinley Morganfield) - 3:32
2. Fingerprints Blues (Joe McCoy) - 3:27
3. Driftin' and Driftin' (Oscar Brown, Jr.  Warren "Pete" Moore) - 2:40
4. Look Here Partner (Jo Ann Kelly) - 2:36
5. Moon Going Down (Charley Patton) - 4:04
6. Yellow Bee Blues (Joe McCoy) - 3:48
7. Whiskey Head Woman (Tommy McClennan) - 1:52
8. Sit Down on My Knee (Jo Ann Kelly) - 2:43
9. Man I'm Lovin' (Hooker, Josea) - 2:44
10.Jinx Blues (Son House) - 2:31
11.Come on in My Kitchen (Robert Johnson) - 2:49

*Jo Ann Kelly - Guitar, Vocals

Related acts
1969  Tramp - Tramp (2007 Japan remaster)  

rep>>> The John Dummer Blues Band - The Lost Album (1973 uk, exceptional classic rock with blues stains, 2008 issue)



The John Dummer Blues Band's reputation as one of those groups that hung forever on the cusp of a major step forward, but never quite made it over the top, is one of those odd little injustices with which the British blues scene forever prickles. 

There is simply no way of judging why one band made it while another failed to crackle, but Dummer and company were unluckier than most and, by 1973, their fortunes had reached rock bottom. Vertigo, their home for two albums, was about to let them go as part of the company-wide purge that so devastated what had once been one of Britain's most visionary record labels -- and when the bandmembers returned to the studio, it was in the knowledge that they had one last chance to convince the bigwigs to keep them on board. They should have succeeded, too. The result is a pièce de résistance, a sparkling album that not only packs some of the band's best ever recordings, but also boasts one of their strongest ever lineups: organist Colin Earl and guitarists Dave Kelly and Pete Emery, a rhythm section of Ian Thompson and Pick Withers, and, on saxophone, the legendary Graham Bond. But somehow it all slipped through the cracks. 

Within a year, Bond was dead; this may well have been his last ever recording session, a manic four-day span that saw no less than 11 tracks kicked out, and then abandoned. Before that, though, Vertigo did indeed pass on the album, and attempts to land a U.S. deal via the Foghat connection (Colin Earl, of course) were doomed to failure. The tapes were shelved, the band broke up, and it would be 35 years before anybody ever thought to give them another listen. Now, however, they are where they belong, on the streets and still sparkling as brilliantly as the best of the Dummer band ever did. 
by Dave Thompson
Tracks
1. LA Lady - 2:39
2. Sunny Wine Song - 3:17
3. Short Haul Line - 3:15
4. Reach For Me - 4:29
5. Goin' Home - 3:51
6. Bad Dream - 6:19
7. Good Rockin' Man - 4:01
8. Undying Love - 5:15
9. Who's Foolin' Who - 5:40
10.Stealin' - 2:31
11.Keep It In My Mind - 7:19

The John Dummer Blues Band
*Pick Withers - Drums
*Ian Thompson - Bass
*Dave Kelly - Guitar, Lead Vocals
*Pete Emery - Guitar
*Colin Earl - Keyboards
*Graham Bond - Saxophone
*John Dummer - Percussion, Vocals

1969  John Dummer Blues Band - Cabal / John Dummer Band (2010 remaster)
1970  John Dummer - John Dummer's Famous Music Band / Blue (2011 BGO)
1973  John Dummer's Oobleedooblee Band - Oobleedooblee Jubilee (2005 Walhala)

Just Paste

Thursday, June 25, 2026

rep>>> Various Artists - Three O'Clock Merrian Webster Time (1966-68 us, great texas psychedelic brands)



By the time 1966 ended, many of the groups in Texas that started out playing British Invasion and folk-rock music, were now immersing themselves in the newly emerging psychedelic music. The five groups that comprise this album reflect the changes that occurred during this period and four of them even changed their names to sound more psychedelic.  The Nomads became Smoke, Carrols Mood became The Sights And Sounds, The New Imperials became The Front Page News, and The Boys became The Remaining Few.

Represented by twelve tracks on this album, The Nomads/Smoke, started out playing folk-rock music, but by 1967 went psychedelic-as witnessed by their “freak-out” version of “My Little Red Book” replete with backwards tapes. “Carrols Mood” went from singing ballads to surreal songs such as “Mystical Bells”. 

The Front Page News went from the soul of “Baby Let Me Bang Your Box” to the fuzz drenched “Thoughts and Afterthoughts”.  If the 13th Floor Elevators were the epitome of what a Texas psychedelic band was, then the groups on this album were not far behind in trying to emulate that state of existence. Here then are twenty-two tracks compiling the changes that occurred from late 1966 to 1968, when the Texas bands went metaphorically speaking from “Kool-Aid” to “Electric Kool-Aid Acid”.  
Tracks - Artists
1. What You're Doing to Me (Previously Unreleased Mix) - Carrols Mood - 3:47
2. Out She Goes (Previously Unreleased Mix) - Carrols Mood - 2:30
3. I'll Be There (Single Master) - The Nomads - 2:39
4. I Walk Alone (Single Master) - The Nomads - 2:26
5. Thoughts (Previously Unreleased Mix) - The Front Page News - 3:09
6. My Little Red Book (Unreleased Master) - The Nomads - 1:58
7. Situations - The Nomads - 2:45
8. Three O'Clock Merrian Webster Time (Single Master) - The Nomads - 3:22
9. The New Generation (Previously Unreleased Mix) - The Rebellers - 2:45
10.Mainstream (Single Master) - The Smoke - 2:35
11.Church House Blues (Single Master) - The Smoke - 3:28
12.Painted Air - The Remaining Few - 3:37
13.In the Morning - The Remaining Few - 2:40
14.Mystical Bells (Unreleased Master) - The Sights And Sounds - 3:28
15.You Keep Me Hangin' On (Unreleased Master) - The Sights And Sounds - 2:49
16.I Walk Alone (Previously Unreleased Mix) - Carrols Mood - 3:02
17.Three O'Clock Merrian Webster Time (Take 1) - The Nomads - 2:33
18.Three O'Clock Merrian Webster Time (Take 2) - The Nomads - 2:50
19.Three O'Clock Merrian Webster Time (Take 3) - The Nomads - 3:26
20.Three O'Clock Merrian Webster Time (Take 4) - The Nomads - 3:23
21.My Little Red Book (Previously Unreleased Alternate Mix) - The Nomads - 1:56
22.Out She Goes (Alternate Version) - The Sights And Sounds - 2:29

Related release