Tuesday, March 5, 2013

Gentle Soul - Gentle Soul (1968 us, charming baroque folk psych, Sundazed expanded remaster)





Sundazed have done a fantastic job in reissuing the lost 1960s folk rock gem that is The Gentle Soul. Thriving in the vibrant mid to late 1960s folk rock movement, Pamela Polland and Rick Stanley of The Gentle Soul hung out with the likes of Neil Young, Jackson Browne (there's an early tune written by him as one of the bonus tracks here), The Byrds, and Tim Buckley, and worked with the likes of Terry Melcher, Jack Nitzsche, Ry Cooder (whose incredible guitar playing is throughout this cd), Van Dyke Parks, Larry Knechtel, Jerry Cole and Hal Blaine. Amongst this incredible scene of creativity, The Gentle Soul released one album and a handful of singles, but never had the push they needed or any luck with sales. Their recordings became more and more scarce through the years, the album even becoming a collector's item with a 3 figure price tag.

Thanks to Sundazed, we've got the entire recorded output of The Gentle Soul, as well as three previously unissued sides all on cd for the very first time. The cd has the entire album first, then the singles and unreleased tracks, so it doesn't play chronologically. The singles (tracks 12-14, 17-18) have a slightly more rocking sound then the gently orchestral album, but the singles are by no means rock-n-roll.

Tell Me Love is an incredible single which has an alternate take too, both arranged magically by Jack Nitzsche. Both mixes are quite different and shed a different feel on the melodic celtic lilt. The single mix has a harder hitting sound, but the alternate version has a fuller, modern sound. The first single's b-side, You Move Me, has that coffee house folk rock sound and Mamas and Papas styled harmonies and is tremendous.

The second single, Our National Anthem should've been a hit, and it's a astonishing it was not. It's also got that Mamas and Papas anthemic folk rock feel, but maybe it's the fact that the chorus is not as out right sing-a-long-able is what kept it off the charts. It's still a catchy as heck folk rock number. Song For Three, its b-side has a Dylanesque melody about a girl named Wendy. The final single, 2:10 Train has a more country folk sound and is a bit meandering, sort of like Linda Ronstadt and The Stone Poneys.

The Gentle Soul album (tracks 1-11) are wonderful orchestrated folk rock. Pamela Polland and Rick Stanley combine incredible vocal harmonies with some great original tunes, which are only improved upon thanks to the production of Terry Melcher and instrumentation from the likes of Ry Cooder and Van Dyke Parks. Songs like Renaissance or Love Is Always Real (which also has an alternate take as a bonus track) are baroque and orchestrated with harpsichords and flutes.

The melodies they came up with just enhance the whole proceedings. Generally speaking the songs with Pamela singing come out on top and remind me at times of the Michelle album Saturn Rings. At times this album reminds me of Belle and Sebastian or their side project Gentle Waves (rather fitting) - if they were more inspired by traditional folk music instead of Nick Drake. If you want to hear Ry Cooder at his most pronounced, check out the instrumental album opener Overture or the haunting song Reelin'. If I were to pick a favorite song, it would have to be See My Love - which to me sounds like it could be straight off a Belle and Sebastian album with it's melody, piano and Pamela's light as air lead vocals. It's the closest they come to rocking out.

I was very glad when I learned that Sundazed were going to reissue The Gentle Soul album. I'm glad that more than just the collectors can hear the magic held in this delightful folk rock album. Hopefully, it can find a place in your collection too.
by Patrick Gullbuy
Tracks
1. Overture - 4:34
2. Marcus (Pamela Polland) - 2:54
3. Song for Eolia - 2:16
4. Young Man Blue (Rick Stanley) - 2:34
5. Renaissance - 3:14
6. See My Love (Song for Greg) (Pamela Polland) - 3:59
7. Love Is Always Real - 2:59
8. Empty Wine (Woods of a Song) - 2:39
9. Through a Dream - 4:00
10.Reelin' (Pamela Polland) - 3:20
11.Dance (R. Stanley, N. Wynn) - 3:27
12.Tell Me Love (Rick Stanley) - 2:27
13.Song for Three (P. Polland, G. Copeland) - 3:00
14.2:10 Train (T.C. Campbell) - 2:55
15.Flying Thing (Jackson Browne) - 3:18
16.God Is Love - 2:22
17.You Move Me (Pamela Polland) - 2:16
18.Our National Anthem (Pamela Polland) - 2:31
19.Tell Me Love (Rick Stanley) - 2:26
20.Love Is Always Real (Pamela Polland) - 3:05
All songs by Pamela Polland and Rick Stanley except where indicated

Musicians
*Pamela Polland - Vocals, Guitar
*Rick Stanley - Vocals, Guitar
*Tony Cohan - Tabla
*Ry Cooder - Guitar, Mandolin
*Mike Deasy - Guitar
*Van Dyke Parks - Harpsichord
*Paul Horn - Flute
*Sandy Konikoff - Drums
*Larry Knechtel - Organ
*Gayle Levant - Harp
*Ted Michel - Cello
*Bill Plummer - Bass
*Riley Wildflower - Guitar
*Jerry Cole - Guitar
*Joe Osborne - Bass
*Hal Blaine - Drums

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8 comments:

  1. super-offering! gets the GE seal of approval

    ReplyDelete
  2. I can't enjoy your fine music anymore since you've decided to go all flac splitting! This is the only music site I know of that uses splitting. Can't we at least just have flac, or 320. I guess I'm the only one who can't find a good mac splitter, but it's preventing me from enjoying your site anymore. Too bad.

    ReplyDelete
  3. Hi Gyro1966,
    I sorry that you haven't solved the splitting problem yet,
    but I'm sure we can find a solution, for start check this here, it has also pictures to guide how to use it: http://www.bigasoft.com/articles/how-to-split-flac-cue-files.html
    meanwhile I'll search for more options.
    Thank you

    ReplyDelete
  4. These audio filesets are of whole disc image flac rip... giving just one file. A whole lot of people do it this way, and it seems that a lot of people do prefer it, especially to share in torrents and for archiving. You should right click on the .cue file for the disc you wish to play, open that in foobar media player... and, that will give you perfect track playback options. Or, conversely, you can open that in a CUE splitter program and convert... and it will give you perfect, individual tracks separated instead of the single flac. In fact, many people do prefer this type for easier archiving, burning, etc...
    If you want the tracks separate, just open the .cue in any CUETool, CueSplitter software... many available and are freeware. Load it into the CueSplitter, simply hit 'split', and it will give you all the tracks separated.

    For those who are Mac users, if you don't know how to split the file, follow above explanation using XLD (X Lossless Decoder) program with the .cue. Simply launch XLD and drop the .cue onto the icon in your doc.

    ReplyDelete
  5. Kind Marios, Please RE-up >>> Gentle Soul.
    I dunno how you do it Marios, you must hava Hard Drive as big as the Pacific (imagine that ladies ;-)!

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Snosbig, Gentle Soul repaired... I have two External Hard Drives 10 terabytes (5 TB each), beside the 2 SSD's about 2 terabytes)

      Delete
  6. ThX Mate!....errrr...I mean?....MegaMegaBytes Marios

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  7. I really prefer the typical flac image (single file with cue sheet) than the separated tracks, because i use Foobar2000 to play my music and it's much easier playing the cue sheets of a single file instead of having to import the separated tracks, and i know that there is a problem with some old rips that are that way (single lossless file+cue sheet), and that's when the audio file was converted from wav to flac, ape, wavpack or something like that, and that can be easily resolved with the native text editor or notes block of a computer, just open the cue sheet and where you have something like this: "Artist - Album.wav" WAVE, you change it to ".flac" or whatever format you've have the audio, and you can play it without problems in Foobar2000 and other players, except Windows Media Player, iTunes, Winamp, etc.

    Otherwise, beautiful album that i'm enjoying right now!

    ReplyDelete