Saturday, February 28, 2026

rep>>> Gass - Gass "Juju" (1970 uk, exciting blend of blues, jazz, psych and prog, with Peter Green)



Bob Tench (also frequently credited as Bobby Tench) is a talented journeyman singer and guitarist who has worked with some of the biggest and best-respected names in British rock during a career that has spanned six decades. Born on September 21, 1944, Tench got his start as a bass player, working with a variety of acts on the London club circuit before forming his first band, Gass. 

Gass cut singles for Parlophone and CBS between 1965 and 1967, and in 1969, when impresario Jack Good presented his rock & roll stage adaptation of Othello, Catch My Soul, Gass were recruited to serve as the backing band and later appeared on the original cast album. Gass cut an album of their own in 1970, Juju, which featured a guest appearance by British blues legend Peter Green, but the group broke up in the summer of 1971. 
by Mark Deming
Tracks
1.Kulu Se Mama - 7.14
2.Holy Woman - 5.29
3.Yes I Can - 6.51
4.Juju - 3.39
5.Black Velvet - 3.50
6.House For Sale - 3.47
7.Cold Light Of Day - 4.13
8.Cool Me Down - 6.10
All songs by Godfrey McClean, Delisle Harper, Robert Tench

Gass
*Robert Tench - Bass, Guitar, Organ, Vocals
*Godfrey Mclean - Drums, Congas, Vocals, Percussion
*Delisle Harper - Bass, Percussion
*Derek Austin - Organ, Piano, Flute, Percussion
*Michael Piggott - Violin, Guitar
With
*Junior Kerr - Guitar
*Errol Mclean - Congas
*Humphrey Okah - Sax
*Lan Roskans - Lead Guitar
*Frank Clark - Organ
*Peter Green - Guitar

Friday, February 27, 2026

Ruthann Friedman - The Complete Constant Companion Sessions (1969-70 us, wonderful folk rock, 2014 remaster)



When The Association's "Windy," reached the #1 position in July 1967, writer Ruthann Friedman didn't just score a hit single, she also achieved a milestone: Ruthann was the third female songwriter to compose an American #1 record without a cowriter. In 1999, BMI desig- nated the infectious smash the 61st most played song of the 20th century. But the story doesn't end there.

Produced in 1969 by JOE WISSERT (The Turtles, Lovin' Spoonful, Jackie DeShannon) Constant Companion is Ruthann's only LP released during the first chapter of her career. An intimate folk album replete with lysergic lyrical imagery, Constant Companion will intrigue fans of Joni Mitchell and Judee Sill.

Also included is a full album's worth of previously unreleased material cut during the Constant Companion era. Some of these tracks feature the participation of Ry Cooder, Van Dyke Parks, and Byrds members Clarence White and Gene Parsons. The booklet includes rare photos and extensive liner notes featuring the participation of Ruthann herself!
CD Liner-Notes

The songs on Constant Companion cover a range of styles, from Simon and Garfunkel style folk (“People”) and Mitchell-inspired psychedelic ruminations (“Fairy Prince Rainbow Man,” “Danny”) to jazz-inflected pop (“Morning Becomes You”). The arrangements are sparse, consisting solely of Friedman’s acoustic guitar and voice, with the exception of lead guitar by Peter Kaukonen (brother of Jefferson Airplane and Hot Tuna’s Jorma, and creator of Constant Companion’s cover art). Friedman’s wide stylistic range suggests that the suits at Reprise may have been a little too eager to force her into the role of “the next Joni”; several of her songs cry out for further orchestration (the fingerstyle guitar intro to “Looking Back Over Your Shoulder” being one case in point). 

While they work as acoustic compositions, they may have benefited from more complex arrangements, as does the post-album single “Carry On (Glittering Dancer),” a quirky track that indulges in Van Dyke Parks-style baroque orchestrations (apparently Parks and Friedman were briefly an item, and he executive produced the track.) Given the fact that Friedman hasn’t recorded anything since, Constant Companion can hardly help but evoke imaginings of what might have been had she stayed in the business longer. As it stands, though, the album is a fine effort, and its rescue from the archives is certainly to be applauded. 
by Michael Cramer
Tracks
1. Topsy-Turvy Moon (Charles Shaw, Dick Kuhn, Jerry Kanner) - 0:38
2. Piper's Call - 3:40
3. Fairy Prince Rainbow Man - 3:04
4. Too Late To Be Mourning - 2:53
5. Ringing Bells - 3:08
6. Looking Back Over Your Shoulder - 3:35
7. People - 3:35
8. Morning Becomes You (Peter Kaukonen) - 3:12
9. Peaceable Kingdom - 4:23
10.No Time - 3:10
11.Danny - 1:49
12.Look Up To The Sun - 3:25
13.Carry On Through (Glittering Dancer) - 2:26
14.Off To See The World - 2:41
15.When You're Near - 3:59
16.Traveling Around (Peter Kaukonen, Ruthann Friedman) - 2:36
17.Chocolate See (Peter Kaukonen, Ruthann Friedman) - 2:09
18.Ginger - 3:32
19.Song For My Brother - 2:24
20.I Understand (Pamela Polland, Ruthann Friedman) - 3:18
21.World's End (Peter Kaukonen, Ruthann Friedman) - 3:02
22.The Sky Is Moving South (Peter Kaukonen, Ruthann Friedman) - 4:04
23.Have A Good Time - 2:08
24.Windy - 1:58
All compositions written by Ruthann Friedman except where indicated

Personnel
*Ruthann Friedman - Vocals, Guitar
*Peter Kaukonen - Electric Guitar


Wednesday, February 25, 2026

Charlie - No Second Chance (1977 uk, a blend of hard melodic rock with strong harmonies, 2009 remaster)



Charlie was a British band that had a few minor hits in the UK and the US, but they are completely unknown in continental Europe. And that's a shame, because their commercial, slick type of Melodic Rock / AOR is pleasing to the ear. If you're a contemporary or alternative Rock fan, don't read on. Charlie's style is mainstream as hell, and so 80's and sweet that it'll make you run for cover. But they were very good at what they were doing, so I decided to write something about them here, for the old, the unhip and the ugly and for those who are all this times two (like yours truly).

The band had some pretty interesting personnel throughout their existence. There were people coming from bands like the NWOBHM band Axe (John Anderson and main song writer Terry Thomas) and 70's Rockers Argent (Bob Henrit and John Verity). Several of Charlie's members would later be active as producers, session musicians or band members for different well known Pop, Rock, Prog and Hard Rock bands. Names like Bad Company, Bonnie Tyler, The Kinks, Janus Stark, Steve Hackett, The Church, Clannad, Toto, Crawler, Foreigner, Giant,... will undoubtfully ring a few bells. And that's not even half of the complete list of names.

Charlie has released eight studio albums between 1976 and 1986. I'm limiting myself to these three as they are the only ones I know. I can only guess that their other albums sound similar.

"No Second Chance" exists with two different album covers. The other one has a barely dressed girl in a hotel room on it. Compared to the other two albums on this page, this one sounds far more Progressive. Apparently they started their carreer as a Progressive Rock band, but already their sound was smooth and accessible. No sharp edges and a clear emphasis on vocal melodies. Some Funk influences too, in tracks like the uptempo Rock song 'Johnny hold Back'. Highlights are the tracks 'Don't look back' (Soft Prog Rock), 'No Second Chance' (a combination of Soft Rock parts and "harder" Funk Rock parts) and 'Pressure Point' (a slick synth-injected version of 'Déjà-Vu'-era Crosby Stills Nash & Young). As a whole this album has its highs and lows.
by Johan Wuyckens
Tracks
1. No Second Chance (TerryThomas, Martin Smith) - 4:44
2. Don't Look Back - 4:29
3. Pressure Point - 3:40
4. Turning To You - 3:06
5. Thirteen (TerryThomas, Martin Smith) - 6:10
6. Lovers - 6:22
7. Johnny Hold Back - 4:14
8. Love Is Alright (TerryThomas, Martin Smith) - 3:51
9. Guitar Hero (False Messiah) - 7:38
All songs written by Terry Thomas except where stated

Charlie 
*John Anderson - Vocals, Bass
*Martin Smith - Guitar 
*Steve Gadd - Drums
*Terry Thomas - Vocals, Guitar
With
*Peter Zorn - Saxophones, Flutes  
*Richard Burgess - Percussion  
*Martin Smith - Guitars 
*Geoff Leach - Piano (Track 5)  
*Graeme Quinton-Jones - Keyboards 

Related Act

Sunday, February 22, 2026

rep>>> Various Artists - Take My Tip (1963-67 uk, exciting mod r 'n' b artyfacts from the EMI vaults)

 
 
Dedicated to the  enduring appeal of 60s music in its various guises. UK  bands in the 60s successfully fused their love of U.S. black music with  other styles, charged it with a healthy dose of youthful aggression and  called it their own.
 
That's in essence the Beat and R&B era, of course, in  a nutshell. But a quick glimpse at the credits for this compilation reveals  more: previously, serious-minded musicians shunned "pop". The R ‘n’ B explosion  brought them into the fold: now, hardcore jazz musicians could be found in  the ranks of various beat combos. 

Running parallel with this musical renaissance was a similarly exciting  evolution in youth culture. Mod was the catch-all term used to describe the  newly-acquired aspirant lifestyle adopted by many teenagers - with a  strongly identifiable look, the emphasis on the neat, the sharp, the  modern.
 
Four or so decades on, Mod has now come to symbolise the era,  inseparable from the iconography of the mid-60s, and kept alive by a small  but perfectly formed scene of people who weren't even born at the time.  What's Mod? What you want it to be. Is this Mod? Who cares?! In essence, Take My Tip is a fascinating jukebox of classic rarities.
From CD liner notes
Artists - Tracks - Composer
1. Ottilie Patterson with Sonny Boy Williamson - Baby Please Don't Go (Joe Williams) - 1:48
2. Long John Baldry And Hoochie Coochie Men - Up Above My Head I Hear Music In The Air (Sister Rosetta Tharpe) - 2:50 
3. Duffy Power - If I Get Lucky Some Day (Duffy Power) - 2:42 
4. Tony's Defenders - Yes I Do (Tony Diamond) - 2:23 
5. The Manish Boys - Take My Tip (David Joner) - 2:15 
6. Chris Farlowe And The Thunderbirds - Buzz With The Fuzz (Albert Lee, John Deighton, Ricky Charman) - 2:30 
7. The Shotgun Express - Curtains (Peter Bardens) - 2:21
8. Herbie Goins And Night Timers - Cruisin' (John McLaughlin) - 2:40 
9. The Ram Jam Band With Geno Washington - Shake Shake Senora (Frank Guida, Gene Barge, Joseph Royster) - 2:31 
10.Cliff Bennett And The Rebel Rousers - Strange Feeling (Bert DeCoteaux, Joseph Cook) - 2:37  
11.Simon Dupree And The Big Sound - Medley: 60 Minutes (Of Your Love) A Lot Of Love (David Porter, Isaac Hayes / Homer Banks) - 3:37 
12.Haydock's Rockhouse - Mix-A-Fix (David Paramor, Eric Haydock, Peter Eden) - 2:24 
13.Beryl Marsden - What's She Got (Bob Barratt, Len Beadle) - 2:35  
14.The Roulettes - Jackpot (Bob Henrit, John Rogan, Peter Thorpe, Russ Ballard) - 2:05  
15.Mike Patto - Love (Elton Dean, Mike Patto) - 3:01 
16.Rod Stewart - I Just Got Some (Billy Emerson, Willie Dixon) - 2:40  
17.Toni Daly - Like The Big Man Said (Giovanni Alceo Guatelli, Mario Panzeri, Daniele Pace, Peter Callander) - 2:51 
18.Murray Head with Blue Monks - You Bore Me (Murray Head) - 2:11 
19.Kenny Lynch with Laurie Jay Combo - Harlem Library (Kenny Lynch) - 2:22
20.Edwick Rumbold - Boggle Woggle (Roger James) - 2:48  
21.The N' Betweens - Evil Witch Man (Dave Hill, Don Powell, Jim Lea, Kim Fowley, Noddy Holder) - 2:19  
22.The Shadows - Scotch On The Socks (Brian Bennett, Bruce Welch,  Hank Marvin, John Rostill) - 2:18
23.Ben Carruthers And The Deep - Jack O'Diamonds (Ben Carruthers, Bob Dylan) - 2:44  
24.Paul Williams And Big Roll Band, The - Gin House (Fletcher Henderson, Henry Troy) - 2:37  
25.Night-Timers Featuring Herbie Goins - The Music Played On (Ray Smith, Tony Colton) - 2:46  

Saturday, February 21, 2026

rep>>> Marsupilami - Arena (1971 uk, epic agile potent concept progressive rock, 2007 remaster)



After their debut album's release, Marsi toured and expanded by adding Mandy Riedelbanch on multiple wind instruments and found themselves relocating in Amsterdam, where they were playing a series of concert in the Paradiso theatre with the then-state of the art MC2 Lightshow. This is when they started to write and rehearse for their second album, with the assistance of an external lyricist Bob West. 

The album, recorded in London, was produced by future Camel founder Peter Bardens, and indeed you can hear some of Mirage's source of inspiration in Arena, including Latimer's flute, much reminiscent of Jessica Stanley. "Graced" with one of the ugliest ever prog artwork, Arena was an improvement on their debut, partly because the extra musician allowed the group to have much more possibilities, sonically and songwriting-wise.

So the aptly titled opening track Prelude does musically exactly that: it resumes the first album's progress and the band is ready to pick up things where they'd left it at. So with the following Peace Of Rome (we're in a concept, but I was never bothered to follow it too much without smirking at the pretentiousness, the worst offender being Triumvirate) is a very ambitious piece, exploring its themes over circus/arena crowd noises, and a touch of mellotron (that was missing in the debut album) and plenty of interplay time. 

The mammoth title track starts rather eerily, but in a second movement, it picks a mid-eastern them over tabla and drums, but in the next one, the ambitious and daring vocal passage turns close to ridicule, but saved from it by further impressive progressions until a sharp and raw end. At one point, you can hear Laverock's bowed guitar give an acetate cello sound.

The flipside starts on effects-laden narration as intro of the other epic of this album, Time Shadows. This tracks spends a considerable time in its first movement a piano/organ duo (overdubbing from Leary, certainly), before gradually intervening are Jessica's flute, Mandy's sax and Laverock's now jazzy guitar. After an insufferably long passage dishing out whatever lyrics the track had to offer, the group unleashes on a bass and closing lyric lines, before echoing keys and sax bring the track into a very Graaf-esque ending. Indeed you'd swear this is Jaxon, Banton, and Hammill closing this track. 

I'm not sure whether the closing Spring track is supposed to be part of the concept, for it doesn't get one of those pompous description like the first four tracks, but it's also a collectively-written track, that starts as a complete mayhem to slowly settle down in a dervish-like trance, with Fred's meandering scat vocals soaring over the rest of the band's great semi-raga, until the guitar and flute slowly deconstruct the group's unity (there is a superb double flute interlude that last until the organ breaks it up, announcing the piano and now double scat vocals. Fantasrtic stuff and definitely the group's best moment and it is quite accessible too. Much more than some of the more "baroque" passages that "doesn't click all the way".

One of the rare deceptions I have is that it seems that the new member Riedelbanch is only really present (or at least noticeable) on the album's flipside, which is a crying shame, because I think she made quite a difference. Arena is definitely an improvement on their debut album, but it is a bit like Gnidrolog?. Get both albums as they're equally good, even if this one will get more nods.
by Sean Trane 
Tracks
1. Prelude To The Arena (Leary Hasson, Bob West) - 5:23
2. Peace Of Rome (Leary Hasson, Bob West) - 7:01
3. The Arena (Leary Hasson, Bob West) - 12:55
4. Time Shadows (Leary Hasson, Fred Hasson, Bob West) - 11:16
5. Spring (Dave Laverock, Leary Hasson, Fred Hasson, Richard Hicks, Mike Fouracre, Jessica Stanley-Clarke, Mandy Reidelbanch) - 9:16

Personnel
*Fred Hasson - Lead Vocals, Percussion, Harmonica
*Dave Laverock - Electric, Acoustic, Bowed Guitars, Percussion, Vocals
*Leary Hasson - Piano, Mellotron, Tubular Bells
*Richard Hicks - Bass
*Mike Fouracre - Drums, Timpani, Percussion
*Jessica Stanley-Clarke - Flute, Vocals
*Mandy Reidelbanch - Tenor, Alto Sax, Flute, Percussion
*Bob West - Vocals
*Peter Bardens - Percussion

1970  Marsupilami (2008 Eosteric remaster)

Friday, February 20, 2026

Roger Troy - Roger Troy (1976 us, pleasant soulful groovy brass rock, 2016 korean remaster)



Roger Troy's only solo work in 1976, former of Jellyroll and member of Mike Bloomfield Band, and Electric Flag, and also provided songs and performed the most soulful vocals. This work was released two years later. In addition to his own compositions, here features songs by Dan Penn, Carole King, Randy Newman, and others, showing the true essence of swamp rock. From sweet, mellow ballads to tight funky numbers, this is a great record full of southern soul taste. 
Tracks
1. Don't Put The Blame On Me Baby (Roger Troy) - 3:03
2. A Woman Left Lonely (Dan Penn, Julie Oldham) - 3:44
3. Never Be Lonely (Roger Troy) - 4:16
4. Sweet And Slow (Al Dubin, Harry Warren) - 3:15 
5. We Are All In This Together (Carole King, David Palmer) - 4:27
6. Don't You Have Any Love In Your Heart? (Roger Troy) - 3:29
7. When A Man Loves A Woman (Andrew Wright, Calvin Lewis) - 4:27
8. Sad Eyes (David Spinozza) - 3:49
9. Kentucky Home (Randy Newman) - 2:30
10.Shine On Love (Roger Troy) - 4:21

Personnel
*Roger Troy - Bass, Vocals, Strings, Horns Arrangements
*Henry E. Davis - Bass
*James Gadson - Drums
*James Vincent - Rhythm Guitar
*Larry Goshorn - Guitar
*Mary Lu Whitney - Vocals 
*Mike Anthony - Rhythm Guitar, Strings, Horns Arrangements
*Mike Lipskin - Piano, Synthesizer, Strings, Horns Arrangements
*Sonny Burke - Keyboards
*Ernie Watts - Saxophone, Clarinet Solos
*Deniece Williams - Vocals
*Mary Lu Whitney - Vocals

Related Acts

Wednesday, February 18, 2026

Skyhooks - Ego Is Not A Dirty Word (1975 australia, fine glam rock)



"Ego Is Not a Dirty Word" is Skyhooks finest album. I know that Living in the Seventies is the much-loved debut, selling over 300,000 copies, and enjoying the infamy of six of its offerings being banned. But, on this second release, there’s an increased breadth in the songs, with “Love’s Not Good Enough” musing on suburban loneliness, “Smartarse Songwriters” featuring Greg Macainsh’s meta-cognitive explorations, and the title track, pushing the patience of many (I can’t imagine Sir Joh was a fan) with its brazen reference to the triumvirate of Richard Nixon, Leonard Cohen, and in an Australian music first, Jesus.

My favourite is side 2, track 2. I know it’s a hundred types of wrong, but I recently played it in the car for the boys. On the first note of “Mercedes Ladies” they both giggled at the larrikinism of bass line, the cheeky guitars and Freddie’s comical tom-tom drumming. It rollicks along with the musical highlight the double hi-hat chick at the end of each line. It’s a great way to spend three minutes, and encapsulates the band, their time, and their legacy. In this, as in much of their material, Skyhooks satirise the suburbs while also rejoicing in them.

Of course, we’re all apprehended by our creative context. Even here in smug 2016, history will eventually scold us. 1975 imprisoned many with multiple charges: sexism, homophobia, stereotyping. But despite this, Skyhooks also pioneered themes concerning the suburban and the local. It was music of the largely untold other; it was not of NYC or London.

Such is the significance of Skyhooks for me that the mention of Carlton evokes the song first, and the footy team second. The band’s collected lyrics still generate an imagined google map of Melbourne, and a reference to Toorak or Balwyn returns me to my original conceptions of the city by the Yarra. If the Beatles are Liverpool, and the Rolling Stones are London, then Skyhooks is Melbourne. Their music has always presented the geography of a highly human environment, as there’s colourful pictures of grimy pubs, menacing streetscapes, and widescreen vistas too.

I love that I can go years without listening to a band, and then one afternoon find myself dragging out a dusty CD, and with the opening chords, being teleported to a distant, thrilling place. With Skyhooks that place is in the dimming distance and unreconstructed, but from time to time, I really enjoy going back there.
by Michael Randall, Mar 14, 2016
Tracks
1. Ego Is Not A Dirty Word - 3:00
2. Love On The Radio (Greg Macainsh, Steve Hill) - 4:18
3. Saturday Night - 2:48
4. Love's Not Good Enough - 7:18
5. The Other Side - 3:14
6. Smartarse Songwriters - 4:12
7. Mercedes Ladies - 3:31
8. All My Friends Are Getting Married - 4:49
9. Every Chase A Steeple (Red Symons) - 3:41
10.Private Eye - 3:00
All songs written by Greg Macainsh except where indicated

Skyhooks
*Graeme 'Shirley' Strachan - Lead Vocals
*Redmond Symons - Guitar, Vocals, Plano (Tracks 4,9)
*Bob 'Bongo Starkle - Guitar
*Freddie Kaboodleschnitzer - Drums, Vocal, Percussion 
*Greg Macainsh - Bass Guitar
With
*Peter Jones - Fender Rhodes Piano (Tracks 2,8), Marimbas, Vibes (Track 1), Chimes (Track 3) Boo Bams (Track 4)
*Greg Sneddon - Arp Synthesizer (Track 10)
*Andy Cowan - Mini Moog (Track 10)
*Col Loughnan - Tenor, Baritone Saxaphones (Track 6)
*Pat Wilson - Finger Cymbals (Track 1)
*Ross Wilson - Yamaha Synthesizer (Track 1), Vocal Harmonies
*Ian Mason - Harmony Vocals (Track 8)
*Jenny Keath - Harmony Vocals (Track 1)


Tuesday, February 17, 2026

rep>>> Pavlov's Dog - Pampered Menial (1975 us, stellar prog rock, 2009 japan xpanded and 2013 remasters)



While 1974 is considered to be the closure for classic English progressive rock, it was a promising, groundbreaking year for the Americans in the genre, with bands like Kansas and Rush releasing their debut albums. Pampered Menial, the forgotten debut album by St. Louis band Pavlov’s Dog, serves as a further testament to this.

Pavlov’s Dog can actually be the missing piece linking Kansas and Rush – mixing the accessibility of the first with the harder edge of the latter. While not as aggressive as early Rush efforts, Pampered Menial offers about 35 minutes packed with well-written, captivating songs that are dense with instrumental beauty and creativity – creating a sense of celebration from one side and a painful heartbreak affair on the other.

This concentrated, orchestrated work is clearly inspired by early European progressive rock albums (a sub-genre known as "proto-prog"), such as King Crimson’s In the Court of the Crimson King and Spring (another forgotten gem), with various keyboards, mellotron, flutes and strings being a substantial part of the work aside the varied guitar playing, giving it a symphonic touch. It all rocks with intensity, driven by highly dynamic, imaginative drumming, and filled with melody, much in the way Kansas did in their early days.

Lead vocalist David Surkamp’s high singing is very close to that of Rush’s Geddy Lee, both in tone and in delivery. In fact, Surkamp takes his muscular-feminine vibrating vocals to an even more extreme point, using them with more confidence than early Lee, in a way that can be seen as a cross between Lee and the goat-like trembling vocals that Family’s (a late 60’s-70’s outfit that offered orchestrated prog-pop material) Roger Chapman is remembered for.

In fact, Surkamp is not the only one who is performing with confidence. The entire band performs remarkably well and displays maturity and refinement that are sometimes absent from debut albums. Unlike the Led Zeppelin-ish early Rush, Pavlov’s Dog managed to bring on their debut a polished sound that is their own, thus making it a mandatory acquisition to anyone who is interested in American progressive rock.
by Avi Shaked
Tracks
1. Julia - 3:10
2. Late November (Steve Scorfina, David Surkamp) - 3:12
3. Song Dance (Mike Safron) - 4:59
4. Fast Gun - 3:04
5. Natchez Trace (Steve Scorfina) - 3:42
6. Theme From Subway Sue - 4:25
7. Episode - 4:04
8. Preludin (Siegfried Carver) - 1:39
9. Of Once And Future Kings - 5:28
All songs by David Surkamp except where stated
Bonus Tracks 10-13 only on Japanese Edition 2009
10.Subway Sue (David Surkamp) - 4:38
11.Preludin (Siegfried Carver) - 9:58
12.I Wish It Would Rain (David Surkamp) - 5:48
13.Rainbow (David Surkamp) - 3:00
Track 10 recorded live in Detroit 1975
Tracks 11-12 recorded live in St. Louis 1975
Track 13  from the 1969 Album "Stree Suite' by the Touch

Pavlov's Dog
*David Surkamp - Lead Vocals, Guitar
*David Hamilton - Keyboards
*Doug Rayburn - Mellotron, Flute
*Mike Safron - Percussion
*Rick Stockton - Bass Guitar
*Siegfried Carver - Violin, Vitar, Viola
*Steve Scorfina - Lead Guitar

Sunday, February 15, 2026

rep>>> Wendy Saddington And The Copperwine - Live (1971 new zealand, fantastic blues rock, 2011 digi pak remaster)



Wendy Saddington's musical influences included the likes of Bessie Smith, Etta James, Mahalia Jackson, Odetta, Aretha Franklin, Nina Simone, Janis Joplin, and the raw blues from the Mississippi delta, along with the swanky soul coming from the American Stax, Atlantic and Motown labels. There was also something of the vulnerability of Edith Piaf in Wendy's pleading, bleeding vocal entreaties.

Saddington first came to notice in Melbourne psych-soul outfit The Revolution, before swiftly joining Adelaide's psychedelic/classically flavoured James Taylor Move around late 1967. Virtually all the members of this band went on to bigger and better things -- Peek, Tarney and Spencer all moved to the UK, where Tarney and Spencer became sought-after session players, writers and producers as well as forming their own successful band. 

Peek likewise became an in-demand session player in London and later linked up with renowned classical guitarist John Williams, and together they formed the enormously successful classical-rock fusion band Sky. As with most of Saddington's band collaborations, she had already left the band before any recordings were made.

Such was again the case when Wendy joined the emerging blues-rock ensemble Beaten Tracks, which she named (The) Chain, after the song by one of her heroines, Aretha Franklin's soul classic, "Chain Of Fools". Wendy spent around 18 months touring with Chain, and it was during this time that her passionate, earth-mother Joplin/Franklin vocal style came to prominent notice among promoters and punters alike. Also, her 'outlandish' appearance attracted magazines like Go-Set: a sad waif-like face, heavily mascara-ed around the eyes, framed by the hugest of afro 'do' this side of Jimi's Experience! Wendy favoured simple Levi's, with a basic shirt or cheesecloth kaftan top, copiously accessorised with love-beads and bangles.

During 1969 Wendy made a guest appearance on the short-lived ABC-TV program Fusions, an innovative 'in concert' series starring Sydney-based progressive band Tully. It's not known whether any tapes of this series have survived, but the recent rediscovery of a large number of episodes of the ABC's GTK series give hope that at least some of this series has sruvived.Circa 1969 Wendy also began writing a regular column in Go-Set., giving advice on love and relationships.

Saddington's next musical outing was with Jeff St John's highly acclaimed and well-established group, Copperwine, and it's here that we finally have an officially-released recording of her sublime vocal performances! Wendy joined the band in March 1970, just after the release of Copperwine's superb Joint Effort album, and she sang live as co-lead with St John for a concentrated touring regime through to February 1971. In January of that year, with St John temporarily away from the band, Saddington fronted Copperwine for their acclaimed performance at the Wallacia Festival on the central-coast of New South Wales.

An live recording of the event was released on Festival's new progressive subsidiary Infinity during '71, which showcased Copperwine's sympathetic backing sensibilities for Wendy's distinctive vocals. On such cuts as the funky opener, Nina Simone's "Backlash Blues", and her heartfelt reading of Dylan's "Just Like Tom Thumb's Blues", Saddington continually astonishes with her sensual soul power. Another notable inclusion is Wendy's introspective and idiosyncratic reading of John Lennon's "Tomorrow Never Knows" (which Wendy introduces as a George Harrison composition!). 

Other highlights include "Five People Said I Was Crazy " (which, with its wild Ross East guitar solo, Barry Kelly's electric piano flourishes and Wendy's monumental banshee wail, certainly lives up to its title). The closing tour-de-force "Blues In A" completely satisfies the listener as a consummate combination of the music of one of Australia's premier all-purpose prog-blues bands of the time, with definitely one of our most unique and mesmerising blues-soul vocalists.
Tracks
1. Backlash Blues (Nina Simone) - 4:16
2. Just Like Tom Thumb's Blues (B. Dylan) - 7:31
3. Tomorrow Never Knows (J. Lennon, P. McCartney) - 8:42
4. Five People Said I Was Crazy (Wendy Saddington And The Copperwine) - 7:35
5. Blues In 'A' (Wendy Saddington And The Copperwine) - 14:27
6. Looking Through A Window  (Warren Morgan, Billy Thorpe) - 5:58
7. We Need A Song  (Warren Morgan, Billy Thorpe) - 3:24
8. Looking Through A Window (Warren Morgan, Billy Thorpe) - 3:58
Tracks 1-5 recorded live at "The Odyssey" Music Festival Wallacia January 1971
Bonus Track 6-9 single infinity recorded July 1971

Musicians
*Wendy Saddington - Lead Vocals
*Harry Brus - Bass
*Ross East - Guitar, Vocals
*Peter Figures - Drums
*Barry Kelly - Keyboards, Vocals

Related Act

Saturday, February 14, 2026

rep>>> SRC - Lost Masters (1970-72 us, detroit raw garage psych rock)



Consisting of an amalgam of leftover and unreleased material recorded after leaving Capitol, and both early and late non-album singles, this compilation will be of interest for ardent SRC followers, but is not an advisable introduction. The psychedelia, '70s rock, and soul/R&B do not sit too easily together, which is not surprising either as this set is intentionally and odds and ends package.

And as that, it works extremely well. "After Your Heart," "Gypsy Eyes," "Love Is Here Now," "Cry of the Lonely," and the moody instrumental "Valerie" could have quite easily fit on Milestones and indeed are comparable to any of their best releases. A more commercial soul sound was adopted a little later, and in working with Motown producers, a horn section, and female backing vocalists Scott Richardson attempted to emulate his black brethren.

Material performed in this manner includes covers of the Animals' "I'm Crying," Holland-Dozier-Holland's "Heatwave," and heroes the Pretty Things' "Out in the Night," which while playable are not a match of earlier efforts. Of more interest from this era are "Evil," (SRC parodying Howlin' Wolf) and a number of laid-back numbers, such as "No Rules in Love" that hint at how they would of sounded if they continued in a more soft rock vein.

All in all a very good album of perhaps Detroit's best and yet least recognized '60s band. After buying the re-releases of the originals, this is the next step to complete the picture.
by Jon "Mojo" Mills

The first ten tracks represent what would have been SRC's fourth album. The rest ten tracks "...represent various stylistic experiments...", where Gary Quackenbush had rejoined the band and Richard Haddad was added on bass and vocals. Richard died in an automobile accident in Los Angeles in 1977 and "Lost Masters" is dedicated to him per the suggestion of Gary Quackenbush.
Tracks
1. After Your Heart  (Glenn Quackenbush, Scott Richardson) - 3:26
2. Gypsy Eyes - 4:11
3. Valerie (Gary Quackenbush, Scott Richardson) - 3:43
4. Love Is Here Now - 5:00
5. (Love Is Like A) Heat Wave (Brian Holland, Edward Holland, Jr., Lamont Dozier) - 2:57
6. Out in the Night (Dick Taylor, Phil May) - 2:46
7. Badaz Shuffle - 3:14
8. Eliza Green the Shimmie Queen - 3:36
9. My Sunday's Gone (Glenn Quackenbush, Scott Richardson) - 3:59
10.Never Let Your Daystar Fade Away (Glenn Quackenbush, Scott Richardson) - 3:13
11.Born to Love - 2:54
12.No Rules in Love (Glenn Quackenbush, Scott Richardson) - 3:54
13.The Deeper the Longer  - 2:33
14.Lovelight (Brian Holland, Edward Holland, Jr., Lamont Dozier) - 3:08
15.Cry in the Lonely - 3:26
16.Get the Picture  (Dick Taylor, Phil May) - 2:29
17.Evil  (Willie Dixon) - 4:04
18.I'm Crying  (Alan Price, Eric Burdon) - 4:35
19.Ride the Wind  (Scott Richardson) - 3:04
20.Richard's Song - 3:50
All songs by Elmer George Clawson, Glenn Quackenbush, Gary Quackenbush, Scott Richardson, except where indicated.

SRC
*Gary Quackenbush - Guitars
*Glenn Quackenbush - Keyboards, Vocals
*Scott Richardsonn - Vocals
*E.G. Clawson - Drums, Percussion, Vocals
*Richard Haddad - Bass, Vocals

1968  SRC (2010 Micro Werks edition)