Saturday, May 3, 2014

Shocking Blue - Shocking Blue (Beat With Us) (1968 dutch, debut album, nice beat psych)



Though the band reached the peak of their commercial success at the start of the Seventies, their origins lay further back in the diverse, exciting and woefully ignored Dutch scene of the mid-Sixties.

The Dutch beat boom started when Johnny Kendall and the Heralds' version of 'St James' Infirmary' charted in late 1964. Prior to that, most of the home- grown acts to find success had either been wholesome teen stars or guitar instrumental acts in the style of the Shadows. 

Robbie van Leeuwen, guitarist, songwriter and effectively leader of Shocking Blue, had previously held a similar position in the Motions in their early hit making phase. Those hits included 'It's Gone', 'Wasted Words' (a paean to Dr. Martin Luther King), 'Every Step I Take' and 'Everything That's Mine' the latter one of the finest slices of Mod/Art Pop produced anywhere in the world.

The Shocking Blue story effectively started when Van Leeuwen left the Motions in 1967 due to conflicts with lead singer Rudy Bennett. He recruited members from other Hague bands for his new group: the line-up for the first Shocking Blue singles, up to and including the first hit, 'Lucy Brown Is Back In Town', was Van Leeuwen (guitar), Fred de Wilde (vocals), Klaasje van de Waal (bass) and Cor van Beek (drums). The single charted well, things were about to change.

About the same time as Lucy Brown's release, fellow Hague band Golden Earring had hit the jackpot with the pure bubblegum of 'Dong Dong Di Ki Di Gi Dong'. A band was hired to play at the party they held to celebrate their first Number 1; named the Bumble Bees, they were fronted by a strong and striking female vocalist. Shocking Blue's manager and publisher both attended the party, and both felt certain this singer would be ideal for their band. The woman in question was Mariska Veres.
Tracks
1. Love Is In The Air (R.Van Leeuwen, Dimitri) - 2:39
2. Ooh Wee There's Music In Me - 2:35
3. What You Gonna Do - 2:19
4. Whisky Don't Wash My Brains - 1:02
5. Little Maggie - 2:50
6. Jail My Second Home (R.Van Leeuwen, Dimitri) - 2:25
7. What's Wrong Bertha (R.Van Leeuwen, B. Hay) - 2:27
8. League Of Angels - 2:10
9. Rockin' Pneumonia And The Boogie Woogie Flu (Huey Piano Smith) - 2:02
10.That's Allright (Arthur Crudup) - 2:25
11.Crazy Drunken Man Dreams (R.Van Leeuwen, B. Hay) - 2:53
12.Beggarman (R.Van Leeuwen, Dimitri) - 2:33
13.Hold Me, Hug Me, Rock Me (G.Vincent, B.Davis) - 2:03
14.Where My Baby's Gone (R.Van Leeuwen, Dimitri) - 5:12
15.Lusi Brown Is Back In Town - 2:55
16.Fix Your Hair Darling - 2:18
All songs by R.Van Leeuwen except where stated

Shocking Blue
*Robbie Van Leeuwen - Guitar, Vocals
*Cor Van Der Beek - Drums
*Klaasje Van Der Wal - Bass Guitar
*Fred De Wilde - Vocals

1970  Shocking Blue - Scorpion's Dance

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Friday, May 2, 2014

Kennelmus - Folkstone Prism (1971 us, jagged garage surf 'n' roll with psych folk tinges, Sundazed edition)



Kennélmus laid down in the grooves of this collection some of the weirdest shit to be tracked to wax as psych gave way to its early seventies successors. The compositions are clumsy, the vocals almost totally unmusical, the instrumentation mostly wild and undisciplined and the studio production way over the top. Yet there’s something compulsive about this whacked-out mess of an album by a forgotten band that’s right up there with the Elevators, the Prunes and Syd Barrett. Or think Cold Sun, with the same peyote-driven woozy urgency and the trademark autoharp substituted with a melodica, and you won’t be a million miles out.

Morphing from Phoenix-based top forty/British Invasion covers outfit the Shi-Reeves, this four-piece, centred on the compositional and multi-instrumental talents of guitarist/keyboardist Ken Walker, took its name from his own unanglicised birth moniker: Kennélmus Walkiewicz. The album’s title was derived inexplicably (but probably under chemical influence) from Folkestone Prison, a minor penitentiary in the environs of the sedate Kentish seaside resort and Channel port, and was originally to have been Folkestoned Prism, but to avoid prejudicing potential radio exposure the “d” was left off. As it turned out they needn’t have worried; a vanity run of a thousand copies on small independent Phoenix International Records was all that surfaced and, as Walker relates, “It took a long time to sell out the original pressing . . . some of them were given away for sexual favours”.

It’s a schizophrenic son of a bitch, this record. Most of what would have been the first side is instrumental and – the psychedelic surf tag notwithstanding – these tracks exhibit to my ears a combination of the guileless chord sequences and melodies that Joe Meek was using with his instrumental combos a decade earlier and the sonic palette of Ennio Morricone’s spaghetti Western soundtracks, in the arrangements but also notably in the clean, springy lead guitar work, with a whiff of Lost In Space electronic frippery thrown in for good measure. “Dancing Doris” has an intermittent Middle Eastern zither riff that makes you want to scratch, and “Goodbye Pamela Ann” brazenly steals the jerky drum pattern from the Fabs’ “Tomorrow Never Knows”. 

When the vocals start to infiltrate on what was originally the flipside it’s clear that the band are off on a shamelessly lysergic expedition. The nearest thing to a conventional sung song is “Mother Of My Children” with its classic chat-up line refrain “woman, would you be the mother of my children?” “Think For Yourself” is a four-chord garage bash with melodica, wah-wah guitar and schizophonic stereo-split vocals, whilst “Shapes Of Sleep” is Beefheart’s Magic Band reflected in a distorting mirror and the hysterical plane-crash narrative of “Sylvan Shores” boasts wilfully out-of-tune bass guitar and an appropriately disintegrating outro. The lengthy closing “The Raven”, based on Poe’s verses of the same name, combines proto-punk vocals and chainsaw rhythm guitar with further primitive electronic squeals. The five “songs” are seamlessly segued with short intermissions incorporating backwards instrumentals, found sounds, vocal gibberish and a fake radio newsreel. It really shouldn’t work, but it all does, though it might take you several plays to rub down to the shine beneath the verdigris.

The band lasted around six years, but despite frequent gigging and a parallel career for Walker and fellow guitarist Bob Narloch as a folk club duo the album never raised major label interest and would remain their sole recorded product and a great rarity until reissued by Sundazed in 1999. Interestingly three of the band actually worked at Phoenix International’s pressing contractor and literally pressed their own album, probably a first in rock annals.
by Len Liechti
Tracks
1. I Don't Know - 2:27
2. Patti's Dream - 4:31
3. Dancing Doris - 3:34
4. Goodbye Pamela Ann - 3:39
5. Monologue - 0:52
6. Black Sunshine (Charles R. Hauke) - 2:50
7. Think For Yourself - 2:49
8. The Bug, The Goat And The Hearse - 0:42
9. Shapes Of Sleep - 2:43
10.Clouds Of Lead - 0:37
11.Mother Of My Children - 2:44
12.1001 Twice - 1:05
13.Sylvan Shores - 2:51
14.Bulletin!! - 0:30
15.The Raven - 5:23
All songs written by Ken Walker except where stated

Kennelmus
*Ken Walker - Vocals, Guitar, Zither, Melodica, Electric Piano, Organ, Effects
*Bob Narloch - Vocals, Guitar, Harmonica, Tambourine
*Om Gilmore - Recorder, Bass
*Mike Shipp - Drums, Percussion

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Thursday, May 1, 2014

Wil Malone - Wil Malone / Until the End (1970 uk, elegant baroque acid folk with prog shades)



Today, Wil Malone is a first-call arranger in the music industry – “The Malone Arranger”, naturally – who has worked with pretty much everyone from Corinne Bailey Rae to Massive Attack via DJ Shadow and The Verve. Back in 1970, however, the tireless Orange Bicycle/ Fickle Pickle mainstay and Morgan Studios operative was the progenitor of a needlessly obscure solo album, dribbled on to the marketplace with minimal fanfare by Fontana, which has since been recognised as a classic of acid-folk – even if no one was calling it that at the time.

Baroque, restrained and wintry, it’s a masterpiece of languorous introspection. Malone surrounds his dry, careworn vocals with a warmly protective cordon of sympathetic cello, flute and oboe, closest in essence to Chris Gunning’s arrangements on Colin Blunstone’s One Year, on the exquisitely forlorn Down Maundies, the shimmering Winter In Boston and One More Flight To Parker.

The 15 “lost” bonus tracks include the staggering LA – harmonic sunshine pop in excelsis – the unnerving Lean On My Gun and the Randy Newman-esque narrative of One Foot In The Gutter. Wil Malone is also the latest album in RC’s series of classic vinyl reissues: snap it up with confidence and salivatory anticipation.
by Marco Rossi
Tracks
1. Catherine Wheel - 2:11
2. I Could Write A Book - 3:05
3. February Face - 2:16
4. Love In The Afternoon - 2:33
5. Winter In Boston - 2:05
6. Caravan - 3:07
7. Down Maundies - 2:39
8. Suzy - 2:41
9. Tale To Tell - 2:54
10.One More Flight To Parker - 3:01
11.At The Silver Slipper - 3:00
12.How About Then - 2:30
13.Jesus - 3:08
14.Until The End Dreamer - 0:42
15.Jane (Danny Beckerman) - 2:35
16.Until The End Drifter - 0:38
17.L.A. - 3:07
18.Until The End Songbird - 0:49
19.Message To Mary - 2:15
20.Jake And The Wife (Danny Beckerman) - 2:04
21.Madame Le Mar (Danny Beckerman) - 2:12
22.Until The End Angel - 0:40
23.Lean On My Gun - 1:39
24.Do You Remember The Day - 2:52
25.Beautiful Green - 1:32
26.One Foot In The Gutter - 3:19
27.Jesus (Alternative Version) - 3:06
All compositions by Wil Malone except where stated
Bonus Tracks 13-27 Until The End (The Long Lost Album?)

*Wil Malone - Vocals All Instruments (1 to 12)

1970  Orange Bicycle - Orange Bicycle (Japan extra tracks remaster) 
1970  Bobak, Jons, Malone - Motherlight 
1971  Fickle Pickle - Sinful Skinful

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Wednesday, April 30, 2014

Freedom - Is More Than A Word (1972 uk, fine blues rock with funky vibes)



Freedom's final outing in 1972, Is More Than a Word, is a study in contrasts. It still rocks hard as all get out, á la Humble Pie, but it also points in an interesting direction in places: toward more textured and acoustic-flavored material that echoes country music, thanks to an electric violin -- uncredited -- on the opening track "Together." 

Elsewhere, there is scathing blues-rock in the funky, raucous, rave-up vein on cuts like "Sweaty Feet," the elongated "Brainbox Jam," that goes off the funk nut, and a smoking cover of Don Nix's "Going Down." The shimmering, jazzy pastoralism of "&Direction" provides a glorious, smoky, spiritual vibe with killer guitar solos. While it is not an altogether successful outing, it nonetheless offers some great tracks, and a view of the band that would have been interesting, to say the least, had they continued.
by Thom Jurek
Tracks
1. Together (Steve Jolly, Bobby Harrison) - 4:20
2. Miss Little Louise (Bobby Harrison, Roger Saunders) - 3:13
3. Sweaty Feet (B. Harrison, R. Saunders, P. Dennis, S. Jolly) - 3:59
4. Brainbox Jam (B. Harrison, R. Saunders, P. Dennis, S. Jolly) - 7:58
5. Direction (Roger Saunders) - 5:58
6. Going Down (Don Nix) - 4:45
7. Dream (Bobby Harrison, Roger Saunders) - 2:54
8. Ladybird (Peter Dennis, Bobby Harrison) - 4:23

Freedom
*Bobby Harrison - Congas, Drums, Vocals
*Roger Saunders - Guitar, Piano, Vocals
*Peter Dennis - Bass, Acoustic Guitar, Vocals
*Steve Jolly - Lead Guitar

1969 Nero Su Bianco / Black On White
1970  Freedom
1973-74  Snafu - Snafu / Situation Normal

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Tuesday, April 29, 2014

Martha Velez - Fiends And Angels (1969 us / puerto rico, splendid vocals in a tough blues trip)



I met Mike Vernon for the first time when I got to London. Thankfully, he turned out to be a very calm, but diligent producer who really regarded the artist. He was very encouraging to me. He looked like a rock star too, with a great A&R business brain and an acute vigilance for the blues, ergo his Blue Horizon Record Label. Before we went into the studio, Mike Vernon and I went through a ton of his blues records collection to see what songs might work for me…what I could get into emotionally, psychically and musically. From that batch we honed it down to a few.

I had brought with me from the States, Drive Me Daddy, Fool For You, Tell Mama, Let The Good Times Roll, It Takes A Lot To Laugh, It Takes a Train to Cry (Dylan was eventually my neighbor when I lived in Woodstock). The songs I ended up choosing in London were Feel So Bad, I’m Going to Leave You and In My Girlish Days while we were working the album. Before the sessions began, I locked myself in a hotel room for about a week just rehearsing, singing with the original records of a bunch of songs. I sang them a million times before I decided which songs to present to Mike and which songs would jive with the musician lineup we had. I wrote the lyrics to Swamp Man from a groove that Paul Kossoff wound up at the recording session …and then, Sweet Man which came as an extemporaneous blues…pretty much written on the spot.

For the most part, I wanted to find a way to make the old songs my own – tried to give them my take. I was singing these songs so intensely and ferociously, day and night, that many times the Hotel manager knocked on my door, saying he liked the music, but people were trying to get some sleep. I just sang softer until I just konked out!

All of the musicians on “Fiends and Angels” were Mike Vernon’s buddies or at least players he had worked with to help create their originating mark on the music world. Every time another amazing musician walked into the studio, I was wide-eyed and gleeful. Everything about the sessions was magical…gathering with these players, the producer, the engineer, all of it was so transcendent, I was happy for the experience. The first time I heard I’m Gonna Leave You on the radio, I was in San Francisco. I was concentrating on something else, when Clapton’s intro guitar lick came on and I heard myself and suddenly it all congealed like a surreal recollection. But then, there it was, I was on the radio…it was a great kick.

What happened at the recording sessions was extraordinary. Musicians who command admiration by virtue of their musical abilities seem larger than life. I was not so much intimidated, but very grateful to these young men for responding to the call. I was a bit awkward with them at first, but London musicians really have a yen for the American sound, and that’s where we coalesced. They listened to some playbacks, thought it sounded really immediate and cool, and spread the word. Jimmy Page came by, wanting to play…actually, I ran into him on the street as he was coming to the studio. I was standing outside of Decca Studios, with Clapton, Bruce and Mitchell, Jimmy Page walked up and said he would love to play. As luck would have it, we had just finished for the day and he was heading out on tour or some other place….or, he too would have added his vibe.

The album title, “Fiends and Angels” came to me because everyone was such a fiend, ferocious, dangerous, mad about playing, that is when they played, and sweet, pristine, shy and innocent angelic when they were not playing. As far as I remember there were no tracks recorded that were left off the album.

Although this was early in the career of Clapton, Bruce, Jim Capaldi and Mitch Mitchell, the image in my head had created these rather larger than life individuals. When we met that day in Decca Studios that image was ameliorated by reality. They came in. We met – both Eric Clapton and Jack Bruce were soft spoken and polite. Clapton was almost shy. I’m a rather tall girl, and in those days, I was into wearing these suede patchwork boots, so I felt like a towering lanky tree branch gazing down at these pristine pale-faced boys. 

They were trim with tight hipped bell bottoms and snug silk tee shirts. Their hair was long enough for the era’s cool mode, their demeanor did not betray any secrets they held about impending destructive habits at the hand of narcotics. They were simply beautiful young men at the precipice of greatness in the music of the day. Clapton cast his eyes down when he spoke with this urgency to be shielded by his instrument and staved off his shyness by speaking through the language of his guitar. 

Bruce was more talkative and talked about his recently born son….and, if I remember this correctly said he had named him Joe, “a good cab driver’s name” he said. We told each other quick quipping stories of our respective music deals. We laughed a lot at the language of the “suits”, but were grateful for them and their ways of seeing us as more than talented but business partners in this magic of music. Clapton had this thing about looking around the room checking out the people there, slightly leaning forward like a telescope, searching out any discrepancies. 

That day, there was a very young girl that Clapton had brought with him to the session. She was quite beautiful, but the most astounding part of her presence were the sparkles that she had somehow put on her cheeks…Later, I found out that she was some British Lord’s daughter who was barely 15 years old. She never uttered a word…I know now why she was so discreet. Eric played for her and gazed from the fire in his guitar to her serene very still sparkled baby face. As they set down to play, Clapton, who was rather shy and careful, seemed to caress his guitar, passed a soft cloth over it, and appeared to caress it as a shield of personal discretion. The musicians and I got down to the business of making music together. Most of the tunes were “head arrangements”, ideas that came on the spot. I had practiced the tunes on my own, so when the players arrived, I had an idea as to what my thoughts were on the songs, how they could be sung, but only imaginings as to how they could work with these players. They, of course, had their musicianship flowing and after a few rehearsal run throughs, we hit the songs running. 
by Martha Velez
Tracks
1. I'm Gonna Leave You (Jackie Johnson, Lionel Whitfield) - 4:08
2. Swamp Man (Henry Bellinger, Martha Velez) - 2:56
3. Fool For You (Ray Charles) - 4:48
4. In My Girlish Days (Minnie Lawlers) - 2:44
5. Very Good Fandango (Martha Velez) - 0:38
6. Tell Mama (Clarence Carter) - 2:15
7. Feel So Bad (Sam Lightnin' Hopkins) - 5:14
8. Drive Me Daddy (Helen Humes) - 4:55
9. It Takes A Lot To Laugh It Takes A Train To Cry (Bob Dylan) - 3:00
10.Come Here Sweet Man (Martha Velez) - 5:08
11.Let the Good Times Roll (Leonard Lee) - 2:55

Musicians
*Martha Velez - Vocals
*Johnny Almond - Saxophone
*Brian Auger - Organ
*Dave Bidwell - Drums
*Duster Bennett - Harmonica
*Jack Bruce - Bass
*Jim Capaldi - Drums
*Eric Clapton - Guitar
*Jeff Condon - Horns
*Rick Hayward - Guitar
*Spit James - Guitar
*Paul Kossoff - Guitar
*Christine Mcvie - Keyboards
*Chris Mercer - Saxophone
*Mitch Mitchell - Drums
*Terry Noonan - Horns
*Bud Parkes - Horns
*Andy Silvester - Bass
*Derek Wadsworth - Horns
*Blue Weaver - Keyboards
*Stan Webb - Guitar
*Chris Wood - Saxophone

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Message - Message (1975 germany / uk, sensational prog jazz rock)



Message were one of those enigmas of the Krautrock scene, in that their origins were not only from Germany, but also from Britain. They evolved out of an early sixties Scottish rock 'n roll band called The Waysiders. When they split, guitarist Allan Murdoch returned to England and ended up playing in a band called M15 with future Nektar keyboard player Allan ' Taff ' Freeman. 

Due to lack of media interest, M15 moved to Germany in 1967 and eventually became Prophesy which evolved into Nektar. In the meantime, current Birth Control bassist Horst Stachelhaus had formed Message in 1968 and the two bands became close friends. Murdoch joined Message and invited along his old friend, vocalist and sax player Tom McGuigan, and that's how the British / German Message was formed. 

The band were similar in style to Nektar in many ways. Message combined the best of British heavy progressive styles with Krautrock innovation, and they secured a record deal with German label Bacillus and released their excellent debut album in 1972. As good as the album was, it was only when they released their second album, "From Books and Dreams", that people started to realize their worth. In 1975, drummer Manfred von Bohr (also later to join Birth Control), replaced Gunther Klingel and the band also had a change of record label, moving to Nova Records. (The new album, self-titled and released in 1975, also received a British release on Deca Records). Subsequent albums saw them move into a slightly more jazzy direction. Message split in the early 80's.
Tracks
1. Before The Dawn - 6:01
2. Thoughts - 5:40
3. Is That The Way - 4:12
4. I Can See The World - 3:15
5. Waters - 6:02
6. Horrorscope - 3:28
7. Back Home - 4:50
8. Train To Nowhere - 4:00
All compositions by Message

Message
*Alan Murdoch - Guitars
*Tommy McGuigan - Vocals, Sax
*Horst Stachelhaus - Bass
*Manfred v. Bohr - Drums, Percussion

1972  Message - The Dawn Anew Is Coming (extra track issue)

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Monday, April 28, 2014

Love - Lost Love (1971 us, outstanding hard psych, 2009 Sundazed release)


Love Lost was recorded in 1971, during a brief, little-known period during which Love was signed to Columbia Records. Lee and the then-current Love lineup—bassist Frank Fayad, guitarist Craig Tarwater and drummer Don Poncher—recorded an album’s worth of new material for the label. But after the band left the company, the recordings sat unreleased and unheard until now. The material on Love Lost—comprised of the unreleased Columbia sessions, plus five unreleased acoustic demos from the same period—captures Love in a transitional phase, charting the next step in Lee’s idiosyncratic musical trajectory, following the lush garage-psychedelia of the classics Da Capo and Forever Changes, and the bluesier direction of the hardrocking
False Start and Out Here.

Many of the songs included on Love Lost would resurface, often in radically different form, on subsequent Love releases, and on Lee’s fabled solo album Vindicator. But the original versions included on Love Lost boast a playful looseness that’s absent from most of Lee’s later work, as well as a raw, edgy urgency that underlines his credentials as an early progenitor of punk-rock attitude. Love Lost also features three songs—”For a Day,” “Trippin’ And Slippin’” and “C.F.I. Instrumental”—that have not previously been released, in any form.

With a treasure trove of vintage Love music that has never before been heard by fans, Love Lost is a major addition to Arthur Lee and Love’s body of work, and its release is a major event for Lee’s fervent fan base.
Tracks
1. Love Jumped Through My Window - 3:21
2. I Can't Find It - 4:49
3. He Said She Said - 3:39
4. Product Of The Times - 4:20
5. Sad Song - 2:56
6. Everybody's Gotta Live - 4:01
7. Midnight Sun - 4:12
8. Good And Evil I - 4:23
9. He Knows A Lot Of Good Women - 3:13
10.Find Somebody - 3:57
11.For A Day - 2:08
12.Good And Evil II - 2:56
13.Looking Glass - 2:32
14.Trippin' And Slippin'/Ezy Ryder - 6:58

Love
*Arthur Lee - Vocals, Guitar
*Frank Fayad - Bass
*Don Poncher - Drums
*Craig Tarwater - Guitar

more Love
1966  Love
1967  Da Capo
1967  Forever Changes (2008 digi pack double disc set)
1992  Five String Serenade

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Sunday, April 27, 2014

Moby Grape - Moby Grape (1967 us, superb west coast psych, Sundazed remaster and expanded)



Moby Grape’s debut encapsulates the frantic power and inspired genius of the group in the brief moment that it existed. All members contributed songs to this explosive record, giving each song a fresh feel within the triple-guitar rock/country/psych Grape sound. The songs are quick, great, and perfect illustrators of the San Fransisco sound from whence they came.

The problem is, things practically fell apart for the Grape after their debut record; it’s widely reported that the talents of this great, legendary band fell prey to mismanagement. If the Jefferson Airplane were today’s “Strokes,” then Moby Grape were “The Vines” or “Jet” or whatever over-hyped carbon copy band the music industry could get on the shelves in the wake of the former. Their record company released five singles at once, trying to stir up an artificial demand. Worst of all, the mismanagement continues today with the Moby Grape name being held hostage by some guy named Matthew Katz (hence, the still exorbitant CD price). The 2007 reissue of this record from Sundazed has been halted as well, producing a stilted run of 180G vinyl lps that are going for hefty prices on ebay.

Following the recording of this record, frontman Skip Spence lost it Syd Barrett style and took an axe with him on a short rampage at his band member’s hotel before being committed to Bellevue Hospital. After his release, he would take off on his motorcycle, equipped in pajamas rather than leather jacket, on the way to record his magnificent, and only solo album, Oar.

But despite these unfortunate circumstances, Moby Grape’s eponymous debut remains well respected as one of the best albums of the psychedelic era, its sound still holding up extremely well. In fact, you may have even heard the sometimes classic rock radio-worthy Omaha. And while this powerful debut may be one of the best rock records of all time, the Grape managed to reinstate its spirit in moments over several more excellent albums during their frenzied life span.
by Brendan McGrath
Tracks
1. Hey Grandma (Jerry Miller, Don Stevenson) - 2:25
2. Mr. Blues (Bob Mosley) - 1:55
3. Fall On You (Peter Lewis) - 1:50
4. 8:05 (Miller, Stevenson) - 2:17
5. Come In The Morning (Mosley) - 2:04
6. Omaha (Skip Spence) - 2:19
7. Naked, If I Want To (Miller) - 0:51
8. Someday (Miller, Stevenson, Spence) - 2:30
9. Ain't No Use (Miller, Stevenson) - 1:33
10.Sitting By The Window (Lewis) - 2:38
11.Changes (Miller, Stevenson) - 3:13
12.Lazy Me (Mosley) - 1:39
13.Indifference (Spence) - 4:09
14.Rounder (Instrumental) (Skip Spence) - 2:04
15.Looper (Audition Recording) (Peter Lewis) - 2:38
16.Indifference (Audition Recording) (Skip Spence) - 2:53
17.Bitter Wind (Previously Unissued) (Bob Mosley) - 2:50
18.Sweet Ride (Never Again) (Long Version) (Moby Grape) - 5:56

Moby Grape
*Peter Lewis - Rhythm Guitar, Vocals
*Bob Mosley - Bass, Vocals
*Jerry Miller - Lead Guitar, Vocals
*Skip Spence - Rhythm Guitar, Vocals
*Don Stevenson - Drums, Vocals

1966-69  Live (Sundazed digipack issue)
1967-68  The Place And The Time (2009 Sundazed release)
1969  Wow (Sundazed Issue)
Related Act
1972  Bob Mosley - Bob Mosley
1974-77  Bob Mosley - Never Dreamed

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Saturday, April 26, 2014

Good Dog Banned - Good Dog Banned (1973 us, splendid mix of rural rock and blues with brass tones, Gear Fab edition)



As the 1960s turned into the '70s, cultural overload with the influence of political convictions often resulted in young people withdrawing from the predominant culture and trying to sustain a more "natural" way of life that eschewed commercial considerations. Good Dog Banned formed amid such circumstances around 1971. 

Guitarist Doug Mortenson was playing a gig in a bar called the Rite Spot in northern California one night in 1971, when Tim Cain (sax, guitar) walked in, took out his flute, and proceeded to bring down the house. The two played a set together before Cain left without a word. Mortensen later came to find that Cain was from San Francisco cult legends the Sons of Champlin, and, with the band's ex-manager Bamboo, he had come from Marin to form a commune. Mortensen had left Los Angeles in 1971 along with Chris Miller (guitar, sax) during the hippie exodus from the cities, looking for cheap rent and a good time. He had played in numerous garage bands while Miller had come out of the coffee house-folk circuit. Bassist Dwight Wolf joined up with the other guys after exiting his miniscule town in Colorado, where he was likely exposed mostly to country and rockabilly. Lee Marks came from Pasadena to round out the band . His roots arose, in part, from his experiences in high school attending black church services with his girlfriend and absorbing the rhythms and nuances of gospel. 

As with a lot of the bands that seemed to spontaneously arise on communes, Good Dog Banned played entirely for fun and the experience of musical interaction without even considering the commercial possibilities, and, as such, their performances tended to lean more in the direction of joyous dance party rather than bar or club gig. They typically improvised for long periods of time, sometimes for over 45 minutes. There was also a fair share of countercultural weirdness: after one gig, Cain was inducted into the Church of Universal Light by a fan, and the band routinely added marriage ceremonies to its repertoire. The band played throughout Humboldt County during a fruitful musical period in the early '70s. 

There were plenty of clubs, and, with local hippies and the influx of countercultural types from the cities, there was a hungry audience looking for non-commercial music, something more in the moment and without music business motives. And like many folks who experienced the communal life, the members of Good Dog Banned, while having moved on from their backwoods existences living (and playing) off the land, still consider themselves family. Their single eponymous album, privately pressed in 1973 (in a run of only 200), was reissued on CD by Gear Fab in 1999. 

Although it ran parallel with the back-to-basics feeling that permeated the early '70s, Good Dog Banned arrived at a distinctive strain of organic rock that was much more joyous and good-timey than many of their musicians-in-arms. Their one stab at rock & roll immortality, Good Dog Banned seems oblivious to any sense of anger at the "failure" of the '60s dream to take complete effect as of 1971. Whereas some '60s expatriates were decrying the cultural revolution, Good Dog Banned were singing "Things Ain't so Bad," heading down to the river and drinking wine. 

There is no nostalgia, no cynicism present. The band was untethered, ingenuous. Perhaps it could be viewed as rose-colored hippie denial, but in retrospect, the pure, unselfconscious charisma and the lack of piety that Good Dog Banned inject into their only effort makes it seem less of its time than other bands of this ilk. Still, a lot of love and togetherness are espoused in Good Dog Banned's lyrics (cynics beware), and the members do seem to have a tightness that only comes from "Livin' in Harmony," as they sing on the final song on the album. Each of the members take a stab at singing lead, and each is a solid vocalist, but it is Lee Marks' wonderful, soul-drenched voice (like Bob Mosley in his softer moments) that is the clear standout. 

The music has the same funky, loose ensemble playing -- from the sprinkling guitar chords on long groover "Smokestacks" to the steel pedal-led country-rock groove of "Rust & Decay" -- and the same old-time country-boy sunniness of the Band and same-period Grateful Dead, only with more prevalent saxophone that keeps the music from seeming overtly wistful or nostalgic, not throwback as much as laid-back. The album is not wholly consistent -- "Don't Burn Baby Grow" seems more silly than anything else, and a couple of the cuts inch somewhat too close to the inane boogie of Grand Funk Railroad -- but, on the whole, Good Dog Banned is draped in moonlit country soul. 
by Stanton Swihart
Tracks
1. Rollin' Into Salyer (Lee Marks) - 5:30
2. Smokestacks (Lee Marks) - 6:15
3. Rust And Decay (Chris Miller) - 4:02
4. Things Ain't So Bad (Dwight Wolf) - 4:07
5. River Bummin' (Lee Marks, Anthon Davis) - 4:04
6. Worthy (Tim Cain) - 3:57
7. Don't Burn Baby Grow (Tim Cain) - 3:33
8. Utah (Doug Mortenson) - 4:23
9. Livin' In Harmony (Lee Marks) - 3:10

Good Dog Banned
*Doug Mortenson - Electric, Acoustic, Pedal Steel Guitar
*Chris Miller - Electric, Acoustic Guitar, Saxophone
*Lee Marks - Drums, Bamboo, Flute
*Dwight Wolf - Bass
*Tim Cain - Sax, Electric Guitar

1969  The Sons Of Champlin - Loosen Up Naturally (2003 Remaster) 
1969  Sons of Champlin - The Sons (2005 Japan)
1971  Follow Your Heart (2002 remaster) 
1971  Betty - Handful

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Friday, April 25, 2014

Goodthunder - Goodthunder (1972 us, solid heavy prog rock)



Goodthunder were a heavy progressive five piece from Los Angeles, comprising of James Cahoon Lindsay (lead vocals, percussion), John Desautels (drums), David Hanson (guitars, vocals), Bill Rhodes (bass) & Wayne Cook (keyboards). Their short-lived existence produced only one album, 1972's 8 track, eponymous debut, released through Continental records, a sub division of Elektra.

Their album is now largely forgotten and certainly didn't attempt to break new ground within the field of Californian bands writing hard, guitar oriented art-rock with a progressive/ psychedelic edge, during the early 70's. That said, the musicianship behind the crunchy guitars, driving bass-lines and underpinning Hammond organ rhythms, demonstrate a more than competent level of proficiency. Indeed, the construction of their more progressive tracks (such as 'Barking At The Ants', the stand-out track of the album) leave one wondering what might have been, with a couple more albums under their belts.

This album would appeal to those who enjoy their traditional, heavy progressive rock with an overtly melodic, pre-AOR commercial feel in the vein of early Angel & White Witch, mixed with Deep Purple, High Tide & Uriah Heep classic rock, with the odd touch of Allman Brothers quirkiness.
by Jared Butcher
Tracks
1. I Can't Get Thru To You (Wayne Cook, James Cahoon Lindsay) - 3:18
2. For A Breath (Steven Forster, John Desautels) - 5:35
3. Moonship (Wayne Cook, Greg Phifer, James Cahoon Lindsay) - 2:46
4. Home Again (David Hanson, James Cahoon Lindsay - 6:48
5. Sentries (David Hanson, James Cahoon Lindsay, Terry Linvell) - 2:36
6. P.O.W. (David Hanson, John Desautels) - 6:50
7. Rollin Up My Mind (Wayne Cook) - 4:11
8. Barking At The Ants (David Hanson) - 6:39

Goodthunder
*James Cahoon Lindsay - Lead Vocals, Percussion
*John Desautels - Drums
*David Hanson - Guitars, Vocals
*Bill Rhodes - Bass Guitar
*Wayne Cook - Keyboards