Saturday, December 10, 2022

Mike Cooper - Five Albums On Three Discs (1969-72 uk, amazing blues folk rock, 2019 three disc digi pak remaster)



Born in 1942 but briefly emigrating with his family to Australia in 1953, his teens were later spent in the fertile music area of Reading England. At 16, inspired by jazz in the days of pre-TV radio, he began playing guitar when with his drummer father they built their own one. An early notice was Slim Whitman’s ‘Rose Marie’, a UK #1 in 1954, which influenced some fresh-faced Beatles too. First performing in local skiffle groups, like many in the jazz and folk booms he rode the blues wave in the early 1960s after a concert by Sonny Terry and Brownie McGhee at the Town Hall, then analyzing the works of such as Mississippi Fred McDowell and Blind Boy Fuller.

Adding harmonica to his repertoire (and a 1932 National resophonic metal guitar, like Taj Mahal and Son House, suitably percussive), in 1961 he co-founded The Blues Committee as singer only because the quartet already had two guitarists (Paul Manning and Dick Reeves). Noting that “melody has contours”, he created vocals his own way for a group that performed classic blues and R&B, as did their inspiration Alexis Korner’s Blues Incorporated. A live Marquee recording still exists, and in ’64 their repertoire expanded to include jazz and other modern styles. Co-releasing with guitarist Derek Hall a four-track EP of standards such as Terry & McGhee’s ‘Living With The Blues’ and a co-write with Paul Lucas, Out Of The Shades (1965) was named after an important Reading club for folk and touring bluesmen. Issued by the Kennet label of Newbury, it was financed by the club owner who also set up a weekly residency, Cooper having lost his job and marrying the same week! Appearing as a guitar-playing extra in the film That Kind Of Girl which didn’t pay the bills, he toured Holland including festivals with Jerry Kingett as well as Norway with Jo-Ann Kelly in 1967 while developing his own distinctive style.

That year he issued EPs with folk luminary Ian A. Anderson on Saydisc such as Up The Country (1968), and an LP The Inverted World (a side each and one track together) that was unreleased until 1970 when both had already signed to major labels. Anderson founded Village Thing Records in Bristol (Steve Tilston, Pigsty Hill Light Orchestra etc. featured on BBC radio) and is still well-known as the editor of Folk Roots. Adding slide and lapsteel, Cooper is also on a compilation Blues Like Showers Of Rain (Matchbox 1968) with Anderson, Dave and Jo-Ann Kelly, met like other friends in the forefront (John Martyn, Michael Chapman, Ralph McTell, Roy Harper, Stefan Grossman) gigging at prestigious London clubs such as Les Cousins, Half Moon and Bunjies. He appeared on BBC broadcasts by Mike Raven and John Peel (a debut in August ’68 from the first LP here resulting in 8 sessions until ’75, all repeated) as well as Holland’s Radio Veronica.

Peter Eden, who first recorded Donovan and Mick Softley, phoned to offer a Pye contract in 1968. Producer Eden took him to Pye Studios in Marble Arch on 30th December for just over a week resulting in Oh Really!?, augmented on two songs by Derek Hall, for the first of the five Pye/Dawn LPs on this lavish box with informative (though date-weak) booklet. Opening with one of the most emotive blues classics ever, Son House’s ‘Death Letter’, the eerie bottle-neck chimes and reverberating vocal by one clearly enjoying himself, could be the ‘40s: if covers can be authentic, this heart-felt rendition is it. It’s as if more than one song is encapsulated in each track though only one breaks three minutes thirty.

The finger-picking Delta-style delight with shimmering almost Gospel vocal of ‘Bad Luck Blues’ is part-based on Blind Boy Fuller (both are seminal influences, Cooper learning every note Fuller recorded), reuniting with Derek Hall for ‘Leadhearted Blues’ and Bessie Smith’s regretless ‘(Send Me To The) Electric Chair’. ‘Maggie Campbell’ (with middle space for Lightnin’ Hopkins’ ‘CC Rider’) revisits one of the genre’s oldest topics as does the Robert Johnson-like ‘Poor Little Annie’ with frenzied slide and ‘Crow Jane’. ‘Tadpole Blues’ is fine stomping: if had foot percussion it could be Joe Hill Louis reincarnated. Three instrumentals (‘Four Ways’; ‘Pepper Rag’; and the haunting ‘Divinity Blues’ as if by one left on the riverbank after everyone had gone home) round off this guitar masterclass.

Seen as one of the UK scene’s best acoustic blues LPs—the melodiousness with bite recalls the 12-string stories of Lead Belly, the intense but controlled vocal of Son House allied to Fred McDowell’s driving single chord or bottleneck style—the cover shot shows him at the 1st National Blues Convention where he also played in the month before recording. Son House, incidentally, didn’t tour the UK as headliner until 1970 (plus a BBC session) but by then Cooper saw new horizons. As did Pye, who formed Dawn Records for a more progressive roster perfectly suited to Cooper’s vision of favourite genres at a time when acoustic blues was becoming less commented-upon and mostly put on in folk clubs on set nights rather than in their own venues, or moved to smaller rooms in the developing college scene. (He has questioned the notion of a blues boom, believing it was just more noticed in the preceding years.)

Buying a big Gibson SJN Jumbo from Mike Chapman—whose ‘Rainmaker’ has often been compared to Cooper’s second album—the 27-year-old moved to the more intimate Sound Performance Studio in Denmark Street in London’s Soho. Alongside jazz influences rather than instruments, the songwriter augmented tracks with ambient field recordings (birdsong, church bells, the sea) as an artistic statement. Issued on Dawn in March 1970 (not ’69 as the booklet says; Janus in Canada/USA, Polydor in Japan), Do I Know You? features eleven songs in a gate-fold photographed at Reading Abbey, where a plaque claims the oldest piece of English music was written down in circa 1240. He is seen talking to G.T. Moore, another Reading and Dawn musician who was later in Heron and pub-rockers G.T. Moore & The Reggae Guitars (Cooper later appeared briefly in his The Outsiders in the 1980s).

Recorded in a couple of days with a streaming cold affecting his vocals and Eden again at the desk, openers ‘The Link’ and Martyn-like ‘Journey To The East’ are modal open tunings with drone effects creating breezy, driving fluency. More (but barely) folk-based, like ‘Thinks She Knows Me Now’ with lilting double-tracked vocal and female harmony, they create variant atmospheres when on the same CD as the debut here, though percussive, scintillating glissando and bell-like slide still permeate. The driving lament ‘First Song’ and ‘Wish She Was With Me’ is in keeping with the melancholic ‘Too Late Now’, a theme more poignant today. The title track delivers a weighty fugue, a bit like another pure English troubadour-traveller Mick Softley, as is ‘Start Of A Journey’ about just being yourself. The first CD closes with the philosophical ‘Looking Back’, a banjo-like folk song with soul-feeling, double bass suiting its tone by the South African jazz-man Harry Miller who’d worked with Manfred Mann, Mike Westbrook and Keith Tippet’s Centipede. Its style clearly prefigures his next albums.

Ney-sayers criticize his thinnish voice but the style is distinctly expressive in an ethos of less can be more; indeed, after a decade perfecting guitar he concentrated consciously on vocals to not sound as a copyist as do many white blues musicians. His approach was always technical indeed intellectual by design, he told an interviewer, whereas the old bluesmen were more emotion-focused when forging their own styles. Adapting what he heard at festivals and all-nighters (from Chapman, Martyn and Roy Harper to Americans like Stefan Grossman, Jackson C. Frank and Dave Van Ronk) for his own style of country (rural) blues, it is quite English in viewpoint: countryside blues perhaps?!

Sales were good enough to encourage Pye to up the budget for the next LP, such as more sessioneers, while a sojourn in Spain fuelled songs for his next LPs and two maxi-singles. Trout Steel (1970) features Stefan Grossman (while on his way to Rome), Nick Pickett on violin (John Dummer Blues Band and the solo classic Silversleeves), Mike Osborne (alto sax, clarinet), Geoff Hawkins (flute), John Taylor (piano), Alan Jackson (drums) among others in Mike Westbrook’s band. The upbeat, sax-bled love song ‘That’s How’ sets the scene for a new wider palette. ‘Sitting Here Watching’ and the eleven-minute epic ‘I’ve Got Mine’ show superb remastering of strident confidence with a Tom Waits-like band going for it. ‘Pharaoh’s March’, a seven-minute homage to Pharaoh Sanders, doesn’t jar with country stories (‘Trout Steel’; ‘Goodtimes’), the amusing advice of ‘Don’t Talk Too Fast’, or instrumental dedicated to the tragic American writer Richard Brautigan, who did a spoken voice for Harvest at the time that was first in Apple’s catalogue. ‘Hope you See’ is a honky tonk piano/violin hoedown with a twist-ending, a softer interlude for ‘In The Mourning’ (“Didn’t ask any questions / I didn’t want no lies / I could tell there was something / By the look in your eyes”). Poignant closer ‘Weeping Rose’ embellishes the guitar mid-trope of ‘March’ about a vanquished lover (“Go ahead, I’ll meet you further down the road”). A BBC live in concert in May, between these LPS, confirmed his standing.

One or two critics saw Trout Steel as country blues adapted to a melodic accompaniment, it certainly has the biggest nod to American styles: they see it as his best album, which depends on what you’re reacting to and looking for. Some call it a travelogue or soundtrack without a film, maybe, perhaps stream of consciousness with his own lyric content melded to structured jamming? What’s never disputed is that all his work is an exhilarating adventure each time.

Places I Know (1971) was planned as a double of different styles per side but, due to “the men in suits with cigars and bad taste in ties”, was issued as a single album followed by the ‘other half’ as The Machine Gun Co. With Mike Cooper eighteen months later, though both were recorded during two all-night sessions in June ’71. With some arrangements by Mike Gibbs, full-band backing (more than two dozen in all) and vocals by the Dawn Chorus (Norma Winstone, Jean Oddie Gerald T. Moore), Places I Know received notable air-play for some of his best-known songs. The same year Dawn issued a maxi-single with a track from the last two LPs plus the non-album ‘Ballad Of Fulton Allen’, alas not included, but two other picture-sleeve singles are: ‘Your Lovely Ways (Part 1 & 2) with Chris Spedding on 12-string guitar in 1970, ‘Time In Hand’ / Schaabisch Hall (1972). The upbeat first, with Roger Chapman-like vocals and violin, fades to show the A and (instrumental) B side break; the country-tinged folk-rock of ‘Time In Hand’ is backed with a dreamy, past-time instrumental of piano, cello and violin.

The LP highlights breadth of styles while tightly focused: from the countryish (‘Country Water’ and title track’s lyrics, unusually the shortest song) to the sax-blast stomp of ‘Night Journey’, the joyous love celebration ‘Now I Know’ with fizzing fuzz solo, and emotional ‘Paper And Smoke’ with echoes of Dylan’s ‘It Takes A Lot To Laugh, It Takes A Train To Cry’, while ‘Goodbye Blues Goodbye’ is tongue-in-cheek jazz (as when the poet John Betjeman was set to music; tuba, French horn etc.) as a reflection on Randy Newman’s lyric style. In fact the whole album was an exercise in making songs in the styles of various writers. ‘Broken Bridges’, a piano-led strong beat for what is nostalgic with the haunting refrain “All these things are mine and much more” leads to the punchy band-beat of ‘Three-Forty Eight (Blues For Or Against Andalusia)’, which should have been issued to world-acclaim as a hit (I at least remember it fifty years later): timeless still with shiver-effect like the truly beautiful ‘Time To Time,’ classical piano and strummed guitar floated by ethereal female harmonies (“It’s only when she’s gone / She comes to me in a song”). You may like the famous only (I don’t) but this magnum opus smokes the essence of that fecund decade’s first half and deserves much wider notice.

Disc three’s The Machine Gun Co… (1972) reflects more discoveries in longer songs (five, written in Spain) though backing is shorn to four top-notch musicians: Geoff Hawkins on brass from The Blues Committee and Cooper’s previous two albums, pianist Alan Cook (ex-Trader Horne), Les Calvert (bass) who worked with touring Americans and Mungo Jerry later, and Tim Richardson (percussion). With Eden in the same cozy studio enhancing the vibe, these local musicians worked with Cooper before (though had split before the delayed release), rehearsing these songs during the early summer of ’71. Opener ‘Song For Abigail’ is an extended style-feast that’s been called “avant-country-reggae” i.e. country-like lapsteel and lyrics building to a piano-pinned, percussive guitar romp with shades of Tim Buckley’s Lorca. Pastoral lyrics adorn folk-rock ‘The Singing Tree’ splattered with delicate free saxophone, the fast pace continued in ‘Midnight Words’ about going home. Pedal work phrases the atmospherically joyful fifteen-minute ‘So Glad (That I Found You)’, pointing to his next albums while “listening to the breeze searching for the song”. It’s rare for a love lament about its promises to close an album in such a beguiling way (‘Lady Anne’).

Rawer than usual, it highlights his origins from even before Pye with friends that knew his previous styles. Looser but paradoxically more structured with each knowing where the other could or might go, boundaries become more elastic and blurred; if jamming, it is so tight it could almost be a virtuoso octopus. Often seen as his magnum opus, the culmination of years of craftmanship to achieve originality among diverse traditions, this can be felt, but needs to be heard with Places I Know because the pair form a spell-binding achievement.

Seeing out the last two years of his Pye contract without recording, led to Life And Death In Paradise (1974) on the DJ Tony Hall’s Fresh Air imprint as “one of the most memorable [albums] to create” in a continuing career of experiment. They’d met in Spain when the host suggested his own album with Mike Osborne, South African and Reading musicians that was recorded practically live; it “closed a bracket” (with some very bitter lyrics) for the songwriter, marking not only a return to jazz roots with diverse musicians but also self-production for a short-lived label that had kindred spirits like Lyn Dobson. This year and the next saw his last Peel radio sessions, with no Dawn material. He told M-Magazine in 2015 that by then he’d “left behind the safe shores of melody and conventional harmony to head out into the sea of timbre”, exploring the globe for inspiration (and homes) as an “icon of post-everything music”, as a later label-owner put it. Mike Cooper’s subsequent work is so extraordinarily wide that we can only touch on it, briefly glimpsed by this reviewer when he saw him recently on the same Warsaw bill as Mike Chapman in a tiny Jewish bar-club that’s now a car-park.

A compilation (Grossman, Jo-Ann Kelly, Son House etc.), Country Blues Guitar Festival in 1977, was his last recording of the decade. ‘Ave They Started Yet? (1981, Matchless) was a live recording (over four hours!) involving dance theatre reflecting Cooper’s now-wider scope. Soundscapes via guitar/electronics resulted in sound installations, videograph documentaries, music for silent films etc. while working with such free spirits as Lol Coxhill, Dave Holland, David Toop, Ian Anderson again (re-interpreting Inverted World), G.T.Moore, Cyril Lefebvre and many others. Just as his “aural perspective” had once been influenced by a local Caribbean music club, and lapsteel resulted from an American stranger in a Reading café applying a glass from the table, he augmented his sound with guitar pedals as they came on the market. Self-taught, he modestly doesn’t see himself as a guitarist but as an aid to accompany expression. Microtonality is the essence, and just as Ornette Coleman’s harmelodic approach was an early but enduring influence, he found that the Hawaiian guitar style was in new Indian music and even Vietnam (the blind street musician Kim Sinh is mentioned). The “broken and elastic rhythms” that non-Europeans use were first collected on music cassettes he bought from a shop in Ealing Broadway.

Fascination with techniques led to a lasting exploration of Polynesian music (first visiting in 1994, he notes that its recordings predate the blues), Balkan, Iberian, Chinese and Arabic via strings and techno-sophistication’s loops and layers exploring ambience. Since the ‘90s it’s on Room40, Discrepant and his own Hipshot resulting in work as an artist-in-residence as far apart as Italy and Hawaii as a hands-on pioneer of world fusion music. Prolific in chosen styles, since Radio Paradise in 2011 he’s released White Shadows In The South Seas (2013), New Globe Notes (2014) with booklet by David Toop, Cantos de Lisboa (2014), Light On A Wall live in Beirut (2015), Fratello Mare (2015), Kiribati (2016), Reluctant Swimmer/Virtual Surfer (2017) etc. Raft hymns solo sea-travellers that year, a vinyl self-release Blues Guitar (vocals/guitar collaged together) was re-issued by Idea Records with graphics by Tom Rechion, who worked with the Beach Boys. Uncut (June 2019) reviewed three of these albums at 8/10 each and this BGO box-set as 9/10, which grew from the American label Paradise of Bachelors reissuing three of them and his first recording Out Of The Shades on vinyl to wide acclaim, achieving Best New Releases from Rolling Stone and Pitchfork in 2014.
by Brian R. Banks
Tracks
Disc 1
1. Death Letter (Eddie James House, Jr.) - 3:18
2. Bad Luck Blues (Blind Boy Fuller) - 3:12
3. Maggie Campbell - 3:14
4. Leadhearted Blues - 2:37
5. Four Ways - 1:34
6. Poor Little Annie - 3:44
7. Tadpole Blues - 2:43
8. Divinity Blues - 2:24
9. You're Gonna Be Sorry - 2:13
10.Electric Chair - 2:54
11.Crow Jane - 3:09
12.Pepper Rag - 0:43
13.Saturday Blues - 3:31
14.The Link - 3:01
15.Journey To The East - 3:39
16.First Song - 4:27
17.Theme In C' - 2:42
18.Thinking Back - 2:40
19.Think She Knows Me Now - 4:25
20.Too Late Now - 3:10
21.Wish She Was With Me - 2:17
22.Do I Know You - 4:05
23.Start Of A Journey - 3:25
24.Looking Back - 4:27
All songs by Mike Cooper except where stated
Tracks 1-13 from "Oh Really" LP 1969
Tracks 14-24 from "Do I Know You?" LP 1970
Disc 2
1. That's How - 4:20
2. Sitting Here Watching - 3:10
3. Goodtimes - 3:30
4. I've Got Mine - 11:21
5. A Half Sunday Homage To A Whole Leonardo Da Vinci (Without Words By Richard Brautigan) - 1:37
6. Don't Talk Too Fast - 3:21
7. Trout Steel - 2:23
8. In The Mourning - 5:17
9. Hope You See - 4:20
10.Pharaoh's March - 7:15
11.Weeping Rose - 3:24
12.Country Water - 3:04
13.Three-Fourty Eight - 3:53
14.Night Journey - 5:13
15.Time To Time - 8:33
Words and Music by Mike Cooper
Tracks 1-11 from "Trout Steel" LP 1970
Tracks 12-15 from "Places I Know" LP 1971
Disc 3
1. Paper And Smoke - 3:57
2. Broken Bridges - 4:40
3. Now I Know - 5:00
4. Goodbye Blues, Goodbye - 4:57
5. Places I Know - 2:30
6. Song For Abigail - 9:07
7. The Singing Tree - 5:37
8. Midnight Words - 3:33
9. So Glad (That I Found You) - 15:21
10.Lady Anne - 5:21
11.Your Lovely Ways (Part 1,2) - 7:15
12.Time In Hand - 3:36
13.Schaabisch Hall - 4:43
All compositions by Mike Cooper
Tracks 1-5 from "Places I Know" LP 1971
Tracks 6-10 from "The Machine Gun Co. With Mike Cooper" LP 1972
Track 11 Single release 1970
Tracks 12-13 Single release 1972

Musicians
*Mike Cooper - Vocals, Guitars
*Derek Hall - Second Guitar (Tracks 4,10 Disc 1)
*Poor Little Anne - Vocals (Tracks 14-24 Disc 1)
*Harry Miller - Double Bass (Tracks 14-24 Disc 1, Tracks 1-11 Disc 2)
*Mike Osborne - Alto Saxophone, Clarinet, Melodica, Pipe (Discs 2-3)
*Geoff Hawkins - Tenor Saxophone, Flute (Discs 2-3)

Tracks 1-11 Disc 2
*Roy Babbington - Double Bass, Electric Bass
*Alan Jackson - Drums, Percussion
*Bill Boazman - Guitar 
*Stefan Grossman - Guitar
*John Taylor - Piano
*Alan Skidmore - Tenor, Soprano Saxophone
*Jerry Field - Violin
*Nick Pickett - Violin 
*The Heron - Vocals

Tracks 12-15 Disc 2, Tracks 1-10 Disc 3
*Alan Cook - Electric Piano
*Jeff Clyne - Bass
*Johnny Van Derrick - Violin
*Laurie Allan - Drums
*Les Calvert - Electric Bass
*Tim Richardson - Drums
*Tony Pook - Vocals
*Gerald T. Moore, Jean Oddie - Chorus
*Norma Winstone - Solo Voice, Chorus
*Martin Nicholls - Trombone
*Martin Fly - Tuba
*Tony Coe - Tenor Sax
*Stan Sulzman - Alto Sax
*Bob Burns - Alto Sax
*Peter Civil - French Horn


Friday, December 9, 2022

Cherubin - Our Sunrise (1973-74 germany, excellent poppy and funky based psych prog rock, 2004 bonus track remaster)



Guitarist Andreas "Andy" Marx lived in London for two years (1968-70) and played with "Creepy John Thomas". In 1971 he joined Doldingers Passport. Soon after, he left the jazz rock combine and together with Udo Lindenberg they recorded Udo's first solo album in Hamburg. 

By the same time Andy Marx recorded his first solo album "The Circle", but he didn't want to move on completely alone, and at the beginning of 1973 he decided το  form  "Cherubin" together with Eberhard Wilhelm (drums), whose previous collaboration was in Amos Key, Wolfgang Graf (bass), Peter Bornkessel, Bo Born (Organ) and Peter "Pit" Troja. They first album was release thru United Artists.
by Wolfgang Wilholm
Tracks
1. Funky Beat (Andy Marx) - 8:00
2. East Wind Blowin' (Andy Marx) - 3:59
3. Cracy (Micheal Hodjera) - 3:21
4. Sunrise (Andy Marx, Robby Rogers) - 3:05
5. Sunday Child (Andy Marx) - 3:15
6. The Letter (Wayne Carson Thompson) - 2:40
7. Bikini Panties And White Lipstick (Micheal Hodjera) - 1:15
8. One Way Ticket (Andy Marx) - 3:48
9. Lost Lession In Time (Micheal Hodjera) - 3:05
10.Feel Is Real (Andy Marx, Micheal Hodjera) - 6:06
11.Electric Waves (Andy Marx, Wolfgang Graf, Eberhard Wilhelm) - 4:54
Bonus track 11 Live At Zirkus Krone Munich '76

Cherubin
*Andy Marx - Electric Acoustic Guitars, Banjo, Sitar, Vocals
*Bo Born - Organ, Piano, Vocals
*Wolfgang Graf - Bass
*Pit Troja - Percussion, Vocals 
*Eberhard Wilhelm - Drums, Vocals
With
*Micheal Hodjera - Electric Acoustic Guitars, Vocals
*Thor Baldurson - Piano
*Dieter Bauer - Bass
*Frank Baum - Pedal Steel Guitar
*Wolfgang Grude - Flute, Alto, Tenor Saxophones
*Bertl - Backing Vocals

Related Act

 

Thursday, December 8, 2022

Brian Hopper with Beggars Farm - Brian Hopper with Beggars Farm (1969-70 uk, solid heavy psych rock with jazz and prog elements)



Here's one of the latest of the Canterbury music resurrections. Brian Hopper, brother of former Soft Machine bassist Hugh, was a key member of the "original" Canterbury band, The Wilde Flowers. His rhythm guitar, winds, occasional vocals, and R'n'B sensibility had a lot to do with The Wilde Flowers' embryonic Canterbury rock sound. So, as an encore to the successful reissue of old Wilde Flowers material, Voiceprint has released this, ostensibly a Brian Hopper project. Do not be misled, however. There is very little Hopper, Brian or otherwise, to be found on this disc. The liner notes credit Hopper for flute, saxophone, electronics, and "growler" (?), but in reality, there are only a couple of tracks on this album which contain any of the above. Hopper receives no songwriting credits, either.

What we do have is a pretty basic rock band playing heavy prog-inspired music that relies more on crunchy riffs than on instrumental color. At their best ("Story"), they sound a bit like early Jade Warrior at their hardest. At other times, they even sound like the Yardbirds, as on the standout track "You're Not My Girl at All". Overall, it's an entertaining album, provided you're not expecting A) that it qualify as progressive rock, or B) that it actually feature Brian Hopper — which are, ironically, two of the main reasons you're reading this review in the first place! Not at all bad, but be careful before you shell out for this one.
by Steve Robey, 01/02/1998
Tracks
1. Long Time (John Lawrence) - 3:21
2. Story (John Lawrence) - 3:12
3. Tomorrow Won't Be Long (John Lawrence) - 3:17
4. Astral Plane (John Lawrence) - 3:59
5. Sea (Dave Holman) - 5:06
6. You're Not My Girl At All (John Lawrence) - 2:28
7. Living In A Building (John Lawrence, John Tilley) - 2:26
8. Looking Back (Dave Holman, John Tilley) - 3:16
9. Thinking Of Me (Dave Holman, John Tilley) - 3:00
10.Your Lovin' Man (Dave Holman, Dave Smith, John Lawrence, John Tilley) - 5:53 
11.You Forever (John Lawrence) - 8:00

Personnel
*John Tilley - Lead Vocals, Flute 
*John Lawrence - Guitar, Backing Vocals
*Brian Hopper - Soprano, Tenor Saxophones, Flute
*Dave Holman - Bass, Backing Vocals
*Dave Smith - Drums

Wednesday, December 7, 2022

Stonehouse - Stonehouse Creek (1971 uk, remarkable bluesy hard rock, 2007 digi pak remaster)



The band was a short-lived and unlucky brainchild of Peter Spearing, amazing guitarist and composer. Before founding "Stonehouse" he toured Germany in 66-67, recorded few sigles for Deutsche Vogue, and even appeared on Bremen TV. After returning to UK, he released some singles on Decca and Columbia.

"Stonehouse" emerged in 1970 with James (Jimmy) Smith on vocals - powerful high-pitched voice, which goes almost hysterical on "Hobo" and screaming like lost soul on "Cheater"; and Ian Snow ("Snowy") on drums, while Terry Parker provided solid bass.

The band soon was offered a contract by RCA, and within only 3 (!) days in Advision Studios in London they've recorded "Stonehouse Creek 1971" named after a small locality in Plymouth, knowns as Tinkies and "Deadlake" - in the days of Queen Victoria.
Tracks
1. Stonehouse Cree - 1:24
2. Hobo - 3:33
3. Cheater - 4:16
4. Nightmare - 4:54
5. Crazy White Folk - 5:03
6. Down, Down - 4:31
7. Ain't No Game - 3:53
8. Don't Push Me - 3:49
9. Topaz - 3:44
10.Four Letter Word - 3:29
11.Stonehouse Creek - 1:22 
All songs by Peter Spearing

Stonehouse
*Ian Snow - Drums, Percussion
*Peter Spearing - Lead guitar, Vocals
*Terry Parker - Bass
*James Smith - Vocals

Tuesday, December 6, 2022

Exmagma - Three (1975 germany, excellent avant garde jazz prog rock, 2006 remaster)



The famous lost Exmagma album finally on the loose! What a long strange trip it has been... As one of the hand-selected chosen few who own a tape copy for a couple of years, it’s as much a great joy as it is a relief to live to see a proper (though 3 decades delayed) release of the masterpiece of one of the most inventive Krautbands and one of Konrad Plank’s best ever production jobs.

If you’ve ever seen the band on stage you knew that the problem with the two Exmagma releases always was double trouble. The time limitations of an lp prevented them from showing the full spectrum of their potential and both their albums were rare as hen’s teeth, as the first one wasn’t much more than a private pressing on the tiny Neusi label and the second an equally limited French-only release on the obscure Urus label more or less unavailable in their homeland.

The third album, intended as a double-LP, is their most mature and representative release. While all the influences from Hendrix via Soft Machine to "Bitches Brew"-Miles Davis are still intact, the band had now developed a great ability in songwriting and singing, as opposed to their former strictly instrumental recordings which sometimes made it hard for the average rock customer. But it’s amazing how cleverly contrasting the whole project is puzzled together. Whenever you start thinking: "wow, Exmagma gets commercial!", they strike back with one of their experimental soundscapes and, listening to it in its entirety, it always reminds me of the idea behind "Ummagumma". But I can’t help it: it’s a lot more fun.

It’s not Kraut, it’s not Rock, it’s not Jazz, it’s not Avantgarde. It’s all of that. But the result is much bigger than the sum of the parts. Don’t miss it!
by Allen Voran
Tracks
1. Box 25 - 3:36
2. My Baby's Gone I'm Out Of Tune Blues - 2:08
3. Torpedo Tits - 3:59
4. Fred Braceful Is Talkin' To Bread Faithful - 1:14
5. It's So Nice - 6:06
6. Rock 'n' Roll - 7:46
7. Weltstar - 0:17
8. The Pope - 5:49
9. Überm Beutental - 3:19
10.Dr. Phil. S.H. - 7:34
11.Qu'est-ce Que C'est? - 1:19
12.Da Da Too - 2:28
13.Stoned Chicken - 5:25
14.In Arkansas Steht 'n Atomkraftwerk - 1:11
15.Full Moon Again - 12:06
16.Walkin' On Ice - 4:27
17.If I Could - 0:18
All compositions by Thomas Balluff, Fred Braceful, Andy Goldner

Exmagma
*Thomas Balluff - Organ, Electric Piano, Clavinett, Effects
*Fred Braceful - Sonor Drums, Percussion 
*Andy Goldner - Fretless Electric Bass, Electric Guitar, Alto Sax, Tape Recorder

  


 

Sunday, December 4, 2022

Steve Young - Renegade Picker / No Place to Fall (1976/78 us, brilliant singer songwriter, double disc remaster)



While Steve Young may be best known as "the guy who wrote that Eagles hit ("Seven Bridges Road")," he also held his own with Waylon, Willie, and the boys during the 1970s. Renegade Picker and No Place to Fall are superior mid-'70s outlaw albums, filled with splendid songs (many of them Young's), inspired performances, and, very importantly, have a real honky tonk sound. Young is a fine singer, and his resounding vocals really bite into a lyric like Willie Nelson's "It's Not Supposed to Be That Way" and Merle Haggard's "I Can't Be Myself." He also has a knack for reimagining familiar material, even material, on first glance, that may seem far afield from country. 

He transforms John D. Loudermilk's "Tobacco Road" into slow blues, Mentor Williams' "Drift Away" into pure country-soul, and Bob Dylan's "Don't Think Twice" into a deeply moving melodrama. Several of Young's best-known songs make an appearance across these two discs, including "Montgomery in the Rain," "Lonesome, On'ry, and Mean," and "Seven Bridges Road." As mentioned above, both albums have a superior sound and streamlined (read: non-Nashville) arrangements, allowing the guitars -- acoustic, electric, and, most importantly, steel -- to ring out cleanly in the mix. (Renegade Picker and No Place to Fall, in fact, are much closer to pure country than David Allan Coe's early Columbia albums from the same period.) It is somewhat of a cliché among Young fans to call him underrated and unsung, a lost outlaw. The availability of Renegade Picker/No Place to Fall, however, guarantees that anyone who purchases the set will soon discover just how good Young is. 
by Ronnie D. Lankford, Jr.

Issued in 1978, No Place to Fall is, regrettably, the second and last album for RCA. Like its predecessor, Renegade Picker, Young's ever-evolving music is centered in the heart of outlaw country this time out, though there are, as usual, interesting twists and turns. The band is stellar, with Buddy Emmons and Buddy Spicher, Tracy Nelson, Jerry Shook, Dale Sellers, and a bunch of guitar pickers, as well as drummer Kenny Malone, among others. The material is noteworthy on many levels, not the least of which is Young's decision to record, for the third time, "Montgomery in the Rain" and "Seven Bridges Road." Once more, he reinvents both songs, fills them out, adds different textures and stresses, and as a result, in the grain of his voice the meanings widen and deepen. The title track was written by the late Townes Van Zandt, and Young's read is damn near definitive, with layers of guitars haunting the middle of the tune and his own voice carrying the lonely edge of Van Zandt's lyric into oblivion. 

In addition, Young delves deep into Okie blues with a barbed-wire-and-whiskey cover of J.J. Cale's "Same Old Blues," with stunning slide guitar work. But it is in the cover of Mentor Williams' composition "Drift Away" -- the multi-million-seller recorded by Dobie Gray -- that Young offers his greatest surprise. This is a soul song, performed by a soul singer originally, and here Young, while keeping the song's intent essentially the same, transforms it into a country prayer. The same can be said for his loose cover of Dylan's "Don't Think Twice It's Alright"; Young reworks the melody slightly while emphasizing different parts of the lyric as the band fills in the cracks to bring an entirely new light to the song. No Place to Fall failed ultimately to sell, but it did a great deal to bolster his confidence as both a bandleader and as a producer. Young is a survivor, albeit on the fringes; he is one of the few whose records are so consistent as to be essential listening for anyone interested in late 20th century country music and rock 'n' roll. 
by Thom Jurek
Tracks
Disc 1
1. Renegade Picker - 3:13
2. I Can't Be Myself (Merle Haggard) - 3:19
3. Old Memories (Mean Nothing To Me) - 3:18
4. It's Not Supposed To Be That Way (Willie Nelson) - 3:44
5. Tobacco Road (John D. Loudermilk) - 3:45
6. Light Of My Life - 4:08
7. Lonesome, On'ry And Mean - 3:18
8. All Her Lovers Want To Be The Hero - 3:30
9. Broken Hearted People (Take Me To A Barroom) (Guy Clark) - 4:11
10.Sweet Thing (Buddy Starcher) - 2:56
11.Home Sweet Home (Revisited) (Rodney Crowell) - 5:58
Disc 2
1. No Place To Fall (Townes Van Zandt) - 4:02
2. Montgomery In The Rain - 4:28
3. Dreamer - 3:44
4. Always Loving You - 4:54
5. Drift Away (Mentor Williams) - 4:33
6. Seven Bridges Road - 4:53
7. I Closed My Heart's Door (Ralph Jones, Stoney Cooper) - 4:56
8. Don't Think Twice It's All Right (Bob Dylan) - 4:09
9. I Can't Sleep (Steve Goodman) - 3:45
10.I've Got The Same Old Blues (J.J. Cale) - 2:26

Personnel
1976  Renegade Picker
*Steve Young - Guitar, Vocals
*Johnny Gimble - Mandolin, Violin
*Buddy Emmons - Steel Guitar
*Jerry Shook - Guitar, Harmonica
*Mike Leech - Bass
*Bobby Wood - Keyboards
*Dale Sellars - Guitar
*Terry Mcmillan - Harmonica
*Mac Gayden - Guitar
*Karl Himmel - Drums
*Tracy Nelson - Vocals
*Kim Young - Vocals
*Kimberly Morrison-Cole - Vocals
*Anita Ball - Vocals

1978  No Place To Fall
*Steve Young - Guitar, Vocals
*Buddy Spicher - Violin
*Buddy Emmons - Steel Guitar
*Lloyd Green - Steel Guitar
*Jerry Shook - Guitar, Harmonica
*Joseph Allen - Bass
*Mike Leech - Bass
*Charles Cochran - Keyboards
*Kristin Wilkinson - Viola
*Larry Byrom - Guitar
*Jimmy Colvard - Guitar
*David Kirby - Guitar
*Dale Sellers - Guitar
*Charlie McCoy - Harmonica
*Mac Gayden - Guitar
*Karl Himmel - Drums
*Kenny Malone - Drums
*Tracy Nelson - Vocals
*Kim Young - Vocals

1968  Stone Country - Stone Country
1969  Steve Young - Rock Salt And Nails (2010 korean remaster)

Saturday, December 3, 2022

The Peanut Butter Conspiracy - Is Spreading / The Great Conspiracy (1967-68 us, wonderful psych rock)



If you want to know why producer Gary Usher is revered in some circles, play The Peanut Butter Conspiracy Is Spreading next to the pretty much self-produced For Children of All Ages. A name as trendy as the Jefferson Airplane -- and a sound that is absolutely the Airplane -- meets the Mamas & the Papas; the '60s guitars sound smart; the 1967 liner notes by Lawrence Dietz tell you nothing about the group; and the front cover looks like something Peter Fonda and Dennis Hopper encountered during Easy Rider. "It's a Happening Thing," like much of this record, tries too hard. 

Decades after it was recorded, there is charm in a band like the PBC (which rhymes with PCP) being such an authentic figment of someone's countercultural imagination. Sandi Robison is stunning on "Then Came Love," and the production by Gary Usher really is impressive -- it makes the record something special. But if the intro to "Twice Is Life" sounds like the Monkees (and it does), The Peanut Butter Conspiracy ends up sounding like an FM version of Spanky & Our Gang. Spanky McFarlane's hits are what made her so hip, and the PBC's lack of hits makes for an interesting trip back to the days of flower power, and not much else. "You Took Too Much" has gorgeous harmonies, a sing-songy guitar riff, and lyrics bogged down by blatant references to the hippy-dippy mindset of a record company trying to cash in. "Second Hand Man" could be Peter, Paul & Mary on mescaline. That's not a knock; the song actually works in its audacity. 

A very hip oldies station could play this and attract listeners. It's just hard to take songs like "Why Did I Get So High" seriously when artists like Marty Balin and Grace Slick were freaking out their record label and doing this for real. 
by Joe Viglione

The Great Conspiracy, the second long-player from the Los Angeles-based Peanut Butter Conspiracy, was much more a reflection of their live sound than their debut effort, the pop-driven Peanut Butter Conspiracy Is Spreading (1967). Around 1964, the quintet was literally born from the Ashes (another burgeoning L.A. rock combo whose personnel featured soon-to-be Jefferson Airplane drummer Spencer Dryden). After solidifying their lineup, they inked a deal with Columbia Records, which assigned staff producer Gary Usher to work with them. His well-meaning but over-the-top production style diffused the band, which came off sounding more like the Mamas & the Papas than the Jefferson Airplane or It's a Beautiful Day -- both of whom also sported female lead singers. 

However, by the time of this release the Conspiracy were sonically asserting themselves with a decidedly hipper approach. This is especially evident on the stretched-out and psychedelic "Too Many Do" and the deliciously trippy "Ecstasy" -- which sports frenzied and wiry fretwork similar to that of Quicksilver Messenger Service string man John Cipollina. Equally inspired are "Lonely Leaf" and the somewhat paranoid and darkly guilded "Time Is After You." These contrast with the somewhat ersatz hippie fodder "Turn on a Friend (To the Good Life)," the 38-second throwaway "Invasion of the Poppy People," or the simply wretched "Captain Sandwich." [In 2000 the Collectables reissue label coupled both The Peanut Butter Conspiracy Is Spreading and The Great Conspiracy on a single CD. Also included were the 45-rpm sides "I'm a Fool" and "It's So Hard" as well as the previously unissued track "Peter Pan."
by Lindsay Planer
Tracks
1. It's A Happening Thing (Alan Brackett) - 2:24
2. Then Came Love (John Merrill) - 3:41
3. Twice Is Life (John Merrill) - 2:47
4. Second Hand Man (Daniel Walter Dalton) - 3:23
5. You Can't Be Found (Alan Brackett) - 2:45
6. Why Did I Get So High (Alan Brackett) - 2:07
7. Dark On You Now (John Merrill) - 2:19
8. The Market Place (Lance Fent) - 4:02
9. You Should Know (John Merrill) - 2:10
10.The Most Up Till Now (Alan Brackett) - 2:33
11.You Took Too Much (John Merrill) - 2:06
12.Turn On A Friend (To The Good Life) (Alan Brackett) - 2:20
13.Lonely Leaf (John Merrill) - 3:52
14.Pleasure (John Merrill) - 3:24
15.Too Many Do (Alan Brackett) - 6:30
16.Living, Loving Life (Alan Brackett) - 3:18
17.Invasion Of The Poppy People (John Merrill) - 0:38
18.Captain Sandwich (John Merrill) - 2:09
19.Living Dream (Alan Brackett) - 4:18
20.Ecstacy (John Merrill) - 6:17
21.Time Is After You (Alan Brackett) - 3:02
22.Wonderment (John Merrill) - 4:09
23.I'm A Fool (Alan Brackett) - 2:35
24.It's So Hard (Alan Brackett) - 2:31
25.Peter Pan (Alan Brackett) - 3:18
Tracks 1-11 from "The Peanut Butter Conspiracy Is Spreading " 1967 LP 
Tracks 12-22 from "The Great Conspiracy" 1967 LP 
Tracks 23,24 1968 single  
Track 25 previously unreleased

The Peanut Butter Conspiracy
*Barbara "Sandy" Ronbinson - Vocals
*Alan Brackett - Bass, Vocals
*Jim Voigt - Drums
*John Merrill - Vocals, Lead Guitar
*Lance Fent - Lead Guitar (Tracks 1-11)
*Bill Wolff - Guitar, Harmonica (Tracks 12-22)
With
*James Burton – Guitar (Tracks 1-11)
*Glen Campbell – Guitar (Tracks 1-11)

1967-68  The Peanut Butter Conspiracy - Living Dream
1969  Peanut Butter Conspiracy - For Children Of All Ages (2008 bonus tracks remaster) 

Friday, December 2, 2022

The Count Bishops - The Best Of (1975-79 multinational, strong garage boogie pub rock)



This 27 track compilation assembles the very best of The Bishops studio recordings and the complete "Live At The Roundhouse" LP from 1978. The CD plots the various line-up changes from their formation in 1975 to their demise after the death of guitarist Zenon de Fleur in 1978. Sleevenotes are by long-time fan Charles Shaar Murray and track-by-track commentary by band member Johnny Guitar. Look out soon for the Count Bishops "Speedball EP" with extra tracks.A rowdy, high-energy R'n'B outfit, The Count Bishops were magic on a good night. 

John Crosby remembers one such occasion: "It was a balmy summer night in 1978. I had bought a ticket to The Mekons at Hull University Union hall and was not having fun. The local police (in the heavy-handed manner of the punk era) were trying to eject two under-eighteen year olds from the event and had repeatedly emptied the whole venue of everybody in order to achieve their goal (the targeted kids, of course, resourcefully climbed back in through an open toilet window after each expulsion). Somebody said The Bishops were playing the adjacent Higher Education College hall and half of the crowd decided to go check it out. Great band that The Mekons are, those who made the switch were not disappointed.The music The Bishops made just sucked you in and the couple of hours of blissful, hard-drivin' R&B and rock 'n' roll they created live was always among the finer rock experiences of those crazy late 1970s nights. The band had the slightly shambolic air of a new group playing their second high school gig, but the music - oh, the music was as tight and heady as it comes. Most of the material you will hear on this new Best Of was given an airing that night, including the singles Train, Train and I Want Candy plus most of what constituted their (then) recent "Live At The Roundhouse" set. We all left very late and very elated. By the end of the year, the band was sadly no more but the records they made bear testimony to a very special kind of fire and passion."
Tracks
1. Train, Train (Zenon De Fleur) - 3:17
2. Baby You're Wrong (Zenon De Fleur) - 2:39
3. Stay Free (Zenon De Fleur) - 3:07
4. I Want Candy (Bert Berns, Bob Feldman, Jerry Goldstein, Richard Gottehrer) - 2:25
5. I Take What I Want (David Porter, Isaac Hayes, Teenie Hodges) - 2:36
6. Mr. Jones (John D. Loudermilk) - 2:02
7. I Need You (Ray Davies) - 2:22
8. Down In The Bottom (Willie Dixon) - 2:50
9. You're In My Way (Steve Lewins) - 3:09
10.Talk To You (Steve Lewins) - 3:45
11.Taste And Try (Chris Youlden) - 2:32
12.Someone's Got My Number (Steve Lewins) - 2:32
13.Good Time Tonight (George Young, Harry Vanda ) - 3:21
14.Your Daddy Won't Mind (Dave Tice, Zenon De Fleur) - 2:16
15.What's Your Number (Dave Tice) - 2:20
16.Till The End Of The Day (Ray Davies) - 2:02
17.These Arms Of Mine (Otis Redding) - 3:19
18.Rolling Man (Zenon De Fleur) - 2:54
19.Paul's Blues (Paul Balbi, Dave Tice) - 2:31
20.No Lies (Dave Tice, Zenon De Fleur) - 2:35
21.Too Much, Too Soon (Paul Balbi, Dave Tice) - 2:39
22.Sometimes Good Guys Don't Wear White (Ed Cobb) - 2:37
23.Don't Start Me Talking (Sonny Boy Williamson II) - 2:27
24.Somebody's Gonna Get Their Head Kicked In Tonight (Jeremy Spencer) - 2:43
25.I Don't Like It (Zenon De Fleur) - 2:05
26.Route 66 (Bobby Troup) - 2:31
27.Train, Train (Zenon De Fleur) - 3:22
Tracks 21-27 recorded Live At The Roundhouse 18/02/78

The Count Bishops
*Johnny Guitar - Guitar, Vocals
*Paul Balbi - Drums
*Steve Lewins - Bass
*Zenon De Fleur - Guitar Vocals
*Dave Tice - Vocals
With
*Pat McMullan - Bass, Vocals
*Noel Norris - Horns
*Ruan O'Lochlainn - Horns


Thursday, December 1, 2022

Exmagma - Exmagma / Goldball (1972-74 germany, eccentric jazzy space krautrock, 2003 remaster)



Exmagma was a jazzy Krautrock trio that released its eponymous debut in 1973. With a side of studio tracks and a side of live recordings, the album offers psychedelic jazz-rock with some avant-garde moves thrown in. The band falls somewhere between earlier Krautrock psychedelic jazz-rock groups like Xhol Caravan and Thirsty Moon and Canterbury groups like Soft Machine. The Soft Machine comparison is even more apt because Andy Goldner's fuzz bass style owes a debt to Hugh Hopper. "The First Tune" begins with a tripped-out jam with bass, drums, and keyboard locked into a relaxed groove, and then suddenly that trails off and is replaced by a far more free-form section, with schizophrenic organ chords over choppy drums and a very fat fuzzy bass rift. 

The second track makes a similar abrupt tangent, as a drum and bass workout with tweaky electro bleats suddenly slows into an electric guitar-driven space rock piece that comes off both dirgy and pastoral. The live side offers a trio of cuts on one long track, and finds the group further along in improvisational free form. It begins even more amorphously, with loose clatters of drums, the squall of an alto sax, bubbles of electronic noise, and high chirp twitters, the whole thing very apt for the title, "Trippin With Birds." Suddenly the drums launch out into rapid rhythms to raise the rest of the music into a loud racket that soon dies down again. Whereas the studio side skewered different sound spaces every few minutes, the live side has a more sustained effect. Eventually the group locks again on another wild groove jam to finish the record near where it began. 

Though not quite as avant-garde as the earlier eponymous debut, Goldball can hardly be called commercial or compromising. Though the music is less eccentric and unpredictable, they make up for it with tighter playing, and there are plenty of tweaked guitar and keyboard solos, funky drum and bass grooves, and lots of creative improvisation. "Marylin Kennedy" opens up the proceedings with a propulsive jazz-funk rhythm and swirls of keyboard tones. "Dada" tones down the energy just a little bit, as it locks into a repetitive riff for a couple minutes, before it gets hyper toward the end. 

"Jam Factory for People Insane" adds some whacked-out vocals, though most of the song is still instrumental. "Greetings to the Moroccan Farmers" is an amorphous free-form piece with piano tinkles, odd bits of drum clatter, and even the sound of a cow at one point, and it comes closest to the avant-gardism of their earlier effort. With most of the tracks being quite short, and only two over six minutes long, the group never gets into any excessively long jams, which may or may not be a good thing. Otherwise, the record is an interesting Krautrock mix of jazz and psychedelic rock. 
by Rolf Semprebon
Tracks
1. The First Tune - 7:37
2. Tönjès Dream Interruption - 4:17
3. Interessante Olè - 2:50
4. Two Times - 2:26
5. Trippin With Birds / Kudu / Horny - 18:48
6. Marilyn F. Kennedy - 2:31
7. Dada - 3:37
8. Adventures With Long S. Tea 25 Two Seconds Before Sunrise - 2:53
8. Groove - 4:53
10.Tango Wolperaiso - 2:36
11.Jam Factory For People Insane - 4:05
12.Habits - 5:57
13.Dance Of The Crabs - 0:53
14.Greetings To The Maroccan Farmers - 6:36
15.Last But One Train To Amsterdam - 0:57
All compositions by Thomas Balluff, Fred Braceful, Andy Goldner

Exmagma
*Thomas Balluff - Organ, Electric Piano, Clavinett, Effects
*Fred Braceful - Sonor Drums, Percussion 
*Andy Goldner - Fretless Electric Bass, Electric Guitar, Alto Sax, Tape Recorder

Wednesday, November 30, 2022

Excalibur - The First Album (1972 germany, fine bluesy hard rock, 2007 remaster)



Excalibur was a rock group, from Germany. The three members came from Mönchengladbach area. Werner Odenkirchen (guitar and vocals), Hartmut Scholgens (organ, bass and vocals), Charlie Terstappen (drums).They first and only album is musically somewhere between Tiger B. Smith and Black Sabbath, so on the one hand it is very influenced by the British hard rock of the time, but it also has nice krautrock elements.

Excalibur is a legendary sword. Who owns it is unbeatable. Just like King Arthur of England once received it from Merlin's hand. After the king's death, it was smashed into a mountain. From former Rattles and Wonderland drummer Dickie Tarrach. Excalibur is still sharp and invincible today. Hear it for yourself, Excalibur is unbeatable.
Tracks
1. Light In The Dark - 6:05
2. Get Me, If You Want - 2:54
3. Zamuno (Hartmut Schölgens, Werner Odenkirchen) - 2:56
4. Run Through The Past - 3:58
5. Sure You Win - 4:27
6. Hollywood Dreams - 3:27
7. Questions (Hartmut Schölgens, Werner Odenkirchen) - 5:03
8. Don't Look Backwards - 5:02
9. Feelin's - 6:32
All songs by Werner Odenkirchen except where noted

Excalibur
*Werner Odenkirchen - Vocals, Lead Guitar 
*Hartmut Schölgens - Organ, Bass, Vocals 
*Manfred Terstappen - Drums