Thursday, October 24, 2013

If - If 2 (1970 uk, spectacular jazz rock fusion prog rock, repertoire digipack edition)



The second If album came out within the same year as the first, and continues in the same distinctive jazz-rock vein the band worked on its debut.

The playing is excellent, with the sax and flute work of Dave Quincy and Dick Morrissey carrying the group's sound to a level unmatched by other, better known contemporaries like Chicago and Blood, Sweat & Tears. J. W. Hodkinson's unique vocals continue to sail through the music, while Terry Smith employs a deeper, grittier guitar tone than he used on the first LP.

The material here is not as interesting as on the earlier release, but the soloists have plenty of space to stretch out and strut their stuff over John Mealing's organ/electric piano bed of chord changes.

Jim Richardson lays down some inventive basslines and drummer Dennis Elliott keeps the band on track through various rhythmic twists and turns 
by Jim Newsom
Tracks
1. Your City Is Falling (Dave Quincy) - 5:05
2. Sunday Sad (Dick Morrissey) - 8:23
3. Tarmac T. Pirate And The Lonesome Nymphomaniac (John Mealing, Preston) - 4:34
4. I Couldn't Write And Tell You (Dave Quincy) - 8:20
5. Shadows And Echoes (Margaret Busby, Lionel Grigson) - 4:27
6. Song For Elsa, Three Days Before Her 25th Birthday (J. W. Hodkinson) - 5:40

If
*Dennis Elliott - Drums
*J.W. Hodkinson - Vocals, Percussion
*John Mealing - Organ, Electric Piano, Backing Vocals
*Dick Morrissey - Tenor Saxophone, Soprano Saxophone, Flute
*Dave Quincy - Tenor Saxophone, Alto Saxophone, Flute
*Jim Richardson - Bass
*Terry Smith - Guitar

1970  If - If (Repertoire remaster)
Related Acts
1968  Terry Smith - Fall Out
1974  Zzebra - Zzebra

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Wednesday, October 23, 2013

The Jarvis Street Revue - Mr. Oil Man (1970 canada, remarkable heavy acid psych 2000 digipak remaster with extra tracks)



The Jarvis Street Revue was formed in Thunder Bay, Ontario, Canada in the late 60's around the talents of, Tom Cruickshank, Wayne Faulconer, Tommy Horricks and George Stevenson. In 1970 the band released their only album, Mr. Oil Man which was recorded at DMG Sound Studios in Thunder Bay.

This official CD reissue of rare psychedelic classic from Canada. Remastered from the original tapes & supplemented by seven bonus tracks.

First release by Columbia Records in 1970 / Completely dried up Canadian heavy psych monster, with fantastic acid guitars throughout: The album is predominantly heavy rock with psychedelic overtones blended acid rock in The Who style and green politics anti-bussiness influence in the lyrics.
Tracks
1. Mr Business Man (Tommy Horricks) - 2:38
2. Mr Oil Man (Stevenson, Faulconer, Horricks) - 13:10
3. 20 Years (George Stevenson) - 3:05
4. Sally's Hymn (George Stevenson) - 4:42
5. 300 South (Jordan) - 2:41
6. Heidi Ho (Wayne Faulconer) - 3:27
7.Sweet Susan (Jordan) - 2:23
8. Angela (Jordan) - 2:31
9. Mr Rock (Grashey) - 2:32
10.Uncle Benny (Tommy Horricks) - 3:39
11.I Believe In Freedom (George Stevenson) - 3:23
12.Sweet Eyed Satin Lady (Wayne Faulconer) - 3:41
13.Better Things To Do (Jordan) - 2:13
Bonus Tracks 7-13

The Jarvis Street Revue
*Tommy Horricks - Vocals
*Tom Cruickshank - Drums
*Wayne Faulconer - Guitar
*George Stevenson - Bass

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Tuesday, October 22, 2013

If - If (1970 uk, elegant jazz fusion prog rock, repertoire remaster and expanded)



If was Great Britain's contribution to the jazz-rock movement begun and popularized in the late '60s/early '70s by Blood, Sweat & Tears and Chicago.

Formed in 1969 by Melody Maker jazz poll winners Dave Quincy, Dick Morrissey, and Terry Smith, the band never found popular success in the United States. However, If produced several albums noteworthy for placing jazz players in a pop/rock band context and producing a true fusion of the two genres without diluting the players' improvisational skills.

Unlike most of their horn-band contemporaries, If had no brass players in the band, relying solely on the saxophones of Dick Morrissey and the flute and saxophones of Dave Quincy.

But what really gave If its unique sound were the vocals of J.W. Hodgkinson and the guitar of Terry Smith. Hodgkinson's vocal timbre was unusual -- smooth, flexible, and strong in the high end, sounding like no other vocalist.

Smith's trebly guitar sound was also unique, combining a rocker's use of sustain with the jazz fluency of Wes Montgomery and Django Reinhardt. The original incarnation of If produced five excellent albums between 1970 and 1972, but these albums failed to find an audience.

Morrissey soldiered on with the If name for two more albums with a totally different lineup and a more generic rock-type sound, but these, too, went nowhere. Drummer Dennis Elliott was later a member of the platinum-selling rock band Foreigner 

In 1969, one of the big stories in pop music was the emergence of a new hybrid, "jazz-rock." Magazines and newspapers were full of stories about the "comeback" of the big band sound, and every rock band with a horn or two was lumped into this new category, whether there was any jazz component to their music or not.

The leading purveyor of the new sound was Blood, Sweat & Tears, a nine-piece outfit from New York whose eponymously titled second album burned up the charts that year following its release in December, 1968. Originally formed by Al Kooper in 1967 with the express purpose of mixing jazz improvisation into a horn-expanded rock band, BS&T's first album, Child is Father to the Man, failed to capture the music-buying public's imagination.

After some personnel changes, including the replacement of the founder in a coup by other band members, the group recorded and released Blood, Sweat & Tears. Propelled by the hit singles "You've Made Me So Very Happy," "Spinning Wheel" and "And When I Die," this album spent seven weeks in the number one slot on the Billboard album chart and eventually won the Album of the Year Grammy award.

1969 also brought forth another horn band album, Chicago Transit Authority, by the group that called itself Chicago. CTA didn't reach the stratospheric level of popularity that BS&T found at first, but the combined success of the two led many young musicians from various backgrounds to create their own versions of jazz-rock horn bands.

One of the best groups to emerge in the wake of the 1969 jazz-rock explosion was a septet from England that called itself "If." Formed by two Melody Maker jazz poll winners, saxophonist Dick Morrissey and guitarist Terry Smith, If integrated jazz into its arrangements more seamlessly than did Blood, Sweat & Tears.

Differentiating themselves from other horn bands of the era, If had no brass instruments. The band's horn section was all woodwinds---Morrissey and saxophonist/flutist Dave Quincy. Another distinguishing characteristic was the unusual vocal timbre of singer J. W. Hodkinson, who soared through the upper reaches in a manner similar to Steve Winwood, only with more polish and elasticity.

In addition, guitarist Smith selected a unique trebly guitar tone that blended the sustain of a rocker with the fluent licks of a jazzman. The band's first album, titled simply If, was released in the United States in the fall of 1970 to much fanfare from Capitol Records, their American label. It was a great album, one that still holds up more than thirty years later.

The album opens quietly, a lone guitar playing a gentle, bluesy intro that becomes a repeating riff in 7/4 time. Hodkinson's vocal arrives, with the first couple of verses accompanied only by the electric guitar floating atop barely audible organ chords.

The saxophones appear playing a complementary pattern as the bass guitar and drums sneak into the mix. The song builds for a couple of minutes, the odd-metered rhythm becoming more insistent. Then the guitarist's riff turns into a sizzling two-minute solo flight over smoldering organ, bass and drums.

When the horns reemerge to resume their earlier pattern, vocalist Hodkinson returns to take the song to its lyrical climax: "I'm reaching out on all sides, I'm grabbing at the truth instead of lies; I want it said when I am gone…I moved the world just one step on." Saxophones, organ and guitar build to a climax, until guitarist Smith is left alone for the denouement.

"I'm Reaching Out On All Sides" is a powerful opening musical statement. But the best was yet to come. The second track is the album's centerpiece, an eight-and-a-half minute instrumental jazz mini-suite called "What Did I Say About the Box, Jack?"

This piece builds to several internal climaxes and features an out-of-this-world flute solo, a fiery guitar solo, and a concluding slice of tenor sax virtuosity. Bassist Jim Richardson provides the hook at the beginning and end of this number, and John Mealing's organ chords make the bed over which the soloists soar.

The record's first side concludes with Hodkinson's best vocal of the set on "What Can a Friend Say?" The horn section is augmented on this track with trumpet and trombone, giving the arrangement a Blood, Sweat & Tears-like luster.

After Hodkinson belts out the lyrics, Dick Morrissey cuts loose on a ferocious Coltrane-inspired romp, only to be upstaged when Terry Smith comes out of nowhere to grab the spotlight with another well-constructed guitar solo that covers the length and breadth of the fretboard.

Whew!! It's already been an exciting twenty-one minutes of music, and we're only halfway through the disc.

The second half of the record opens with a much more conventional R&B/soul-style workout called "Woman Can You See (What This Big Thing is All About)." There's a nice soprano sax solo in the middle that sets this apart from the typical soul raveup of the time. Hodkinson flexes his bluesy vocal muscles and the band really cooks.

"Raise the Level of Your Conscious Mind" is the most poppish of the songs on If. As the title implies, the lyrics offer the kind of optimistic sentiments that were prevalent in 1970, but may sound dated to jaded 21st century ears. (Horn bands generally weren't known for the depth or profundity of their songs' lyrics.)

The wistfully nostalgic ballad "Dockland" provides a refreshing respite, but its middle section still offers guitarist Smith an opportunity to display his jazz chops. The recording closes with a blaze of horn-driven rock and roll as the band travels to "The Promised Land." When the recording ends, you can't get the insistent invitation of the chorus to "Come, come with me into the promised land" out of your head.

If became popular briefly in England and on the European continent, but never found its audience in the United States. The jazz-rock horn band genre didn't last very long, and If began to disintegrate in 1972 after four albums. Drummer Dennis Elliott ended up in the mega-selling rock band, Foreigner 
Tracks
1. I'm Reaching Out On All Sides (Quincy, Fishman) - 5:46
2. What Did I Say About The Box, Jack? (Dick Morrissey) - 8:24
3. What Can A Friend Say? (Dave Quincy) - 6:57
4. Woman Can You See (What This Big Thing Is All About) (J. W. Hodkinson) - 4:13
5. Raise The Level Of Your Conscious Mind (Fishman, Marsala) - 3:18
6. Dockland (Daryl Runswick) - 4:47
7. The Promised Land (Dave Quincy) - 3:46
8. Raise The Level Of Your Conscious Mind (7 Version) (Fishman, Marsala) - 3:17
9. I'm Reaching Out On All Sides (7 Version) (Quincy, Fishman) - 5:44

If
*Dennis Elliott - Drums
*J.W. Hodkinson - Vocals
*John Mealing - Keyboards, Vocals
*Dick Morrissey - Saxophones, Flute
*Dave Quincy - Saxophones
*Jim Richardson - Bass
*Terry Smith - Guitar

Related Acts
1968  Terry Smith - Fall Out
1974  Zzebra - Zzebra

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Monday, October 21, 2013

Various Artists – Loose Routes 1, Music From Holyground (1965-73 uk, amazing jagged folk psych blues rock, kissing spell 2001 release)


Pre 1965, Mike Levon began recording his Shadows covers band in Grantham, Lincolnshire, England. Whilst at college in Yorkshire, 1965-66, he recorded and released a folk LPs and EPs, including Last Thing On My Mind. In 1966, Mike and Dave Wood set up Holyground, recording Number Nine Bread Street during 1966-67. In 1967 Mike moved into Cass Yard, where he set up the studio. All Holyground recordings till 1975 were made in this room, including Mike's first electric session, with Bill Nelson and Global Village. A to Austr was started in 1968, and the name Holyground Enterprises was registered.

In 1971 work had already begun on Astral Navigations. Thundermother came to record in 1970. In the summer Global Village were recorded live in Wakefield's Thornes Park, and in the studio Jumble Lane was started. A to Austr was released in September. 

The rest of Astral was recorded in 1971. Some of this was captured on film by Mike's brother, Kevin, and released as the Astral Windows video in 1991. Jumble Lane was released in July 71. Mike got Bill Nelson in to record what was to be Northern Dream. This period saw the recording of Gygafo's Legend of the Kingfisher, Northern Dream, and the start of the Ode LP. Many local bands were recorded. In 1975 Mike closed Holyground, recording Tears On The Console as its swansong.

In 1988 Mike started to reissue Holyground records, with this soon turning into writing and recording new music. Music from the 1990's was released on And Strangeness And Charm, and a new album, In And Out Of Time was begun in 2000.

Mike Levon, owner of Holyground Records, died peacefully on 4th September 2011.
Tracks – Year - Artists
1. Quite So! (The Trends)  1965 (Mike Levon, Bob Simmonds)
Bob Simmonds & Mick Woodhouse - Guitars, Mike Levon - Drums
2. Don't Think Twice  1965  (Bob Dylan)
Terry Mccann - Vocal, Marilyn Collins - Guitar, John Williams - Bass, Jane Westlake - Tambourine
3. I Still Miss Someone  1966  (J. Cash, R. Cash)
Jane Westlake - Vocals, Guitar
4. I Don't Believe You  1965
5. I Don't Believe You (Live) - 1966 (Bob Dylan, Arranged By The Group)
Dave Nuttall - Vocal, Clive Colling - Piano, John Williams - Guitar , Brian Wilson - Bass, Mike Levon - Drums
6. Recording Corrina, Corrina  1966
7. Corrina, Corrina  1966 (Mississippi John Hurt, Arranged By The Group)
Chris Coombs - Vocal, Harmonica, Jane Westlake - Guitar, Jim Reed - Lute, Richard Smith - Flute, Clive Colling - Virginals, John Williams - Bass, Ian Jones - Drums
8. Song Of Black Glass  1966
9. San Francisco Bay Blues
Bob Hart - Vocal, Jane Westlake - Vocal, Jim Reed - Lute, Clive Colling - Virginals, John Williams - Guitar
10.A Little Bit Of Nelson  (Bill Nelson)
11.Outro To The Friend (Chris Coombs, Bill Nelson)
12.Dear Mr. Fantasy
Al Quinn, Bill Neson, Global Village
13.It's Alright
Chis Coombs
14.Super Judy  1968  (Mike Levon, Brian Calvert)
Chris Coombs - Vocal, Brian Calvert - Guitar, Brian Wilson - Bass, Ted Hepworth - Drums, Chris Heinitz - Brass
15.Working On Between The Road  1969  (Chris Coombs)
Chris Coombs - Vocal, Guitar, Brian Wilson - Bass, Ted Hepworth - Drums
16.I Slept Clear Thru  1971
(Ark)
Paul Travis - Vocal, Other Members Of The Group Sang And Played The Rest!
17.Nearly Home  1971
 (Ark)
18.Horse Rehearsing  1971
(Horse)
Chris Roddick - Guitar, Vocal, Pete Ball - Fiddle, Other Musicians Unknown
19.Down By The River
(Steve Channing)
Steve Channing - Vocal, Guitar
20.Those Old Arabian Nights  1970
21.White Knight  1970
(Steve Channing)
Steve Channing  Vocal, Guitar
22.Hold Me In Your Arms  1971
(The John Perfect Jazz Group)
John Perfect - Saxes, Mike Gould - Trumpets, Marcia - Vocal Linda King - Vocal, Martin Snell - Piano, Liam Arthurs - Bass,  Nick Dew - Drums
23.Feed Your Head (Out-Take)  1971
(Unknown Group, Could Be 'Noah')
24.Play The Game  1971
(Method)
Played By The Group Method - Names Unknown
25.Shabby Tiger  1973
(Andy Diggle, 'Loz' Laurence)
Gemma & Julia - Vocals, Andy Diggle - Guitar, Vocal, 'Loz' Laurence - Piano, Lead Guitar, Vocal, Unknown Bassist & Drummer
26.Boogie Music Version 1  1971
(L. T. Tateman III)
Dave Millen - Vocal, Lead Guitar, Daz - Bass, Fred Kelly - Drums

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Sunday, October 20, 2013

Beacon Street Union - The Eyes Of The Beacon Street Union / The Clown Died In Marvin Gardens (1967-68 us, outstanding bosstown psychedelia)



The Beacon Street Union were part of the dreaded, overhyped Bosstown Sound. The scene was a reaction to the San Fransisco rock explosion but Bosstown could in no way compete with the Bay area. The Beacon Street Union released three good experimental psych/hard rock albums (one album under the Eagle moniker) during the late 60′s and early 70′s. They were one of the best amongst a desperate bunch which included the Ultimate Spinach, Eden’s Children, Puff and Orpheus.

The Bosstown Sound was not a total waste as it did produce other decent acts such as Earth Opera (which included a young David Grisman and the Rowen Brothers), Listening and Phluph. The Eyes Of The Beacon Street Union was the band’s debut released in 1968 off the MGM label. Most of the songs were written by John Lincoln Wright (vocals) and Wayne Ulaky (bass). The album opens with a silly introduction by Tom Wilson which explodes into the records first song, My Love Is. My Love Is was an excellent way to open up the band’s debut, as it was full of crashing Who-like drums and energy, strong harmonies, amateur lead vocals and a ripping psych guitar solo. 

Of the albums 11 songs, there are three weak songs which include two covers (Beautiful Delilah and Sportin’ Life) and a pointless jugband tune titled Four Hundred And Five. The rest of the album was pretty stellar, hard hitting garage psychedelia, full of highlights like the very trippy, percussion oriented Mystic Morning. Blue Avenue (with some great heavy riffs), the anti drug anthem Speed Kills and Green Destroys The Gold were full on psych assaults with guitar freakouts and a strong sense of urgency (Sadie Said No is more of the same). Just these three killer bad trips alone are worth the price of admission. Other compositions such as South End Incident/I’m Afraid and The Prophet are slow but still strong with lots of drug inspired dimentia. The Eyes of.. was a powerful debut that showed a band that took chances and fired on all cylinders.
by Jason Nardelli

The second album The Clown Died In Marvin Gardens again was critically assaulted. I was thrilled with it from the cover to the arrangements. It seemed like someone had put time and money into the affair. It was thrilling for a fan to see this group be lavished with production efforts. The orchestrations by Larry Fallon were lush and fully integrated to the songs.

The album begins with The Clown Died In Marvin Gardens. A fully blown metaphor of life as a surrealistic Monopoly game. The follow up song The Clown's Overture is a soothing orchestral wash. A perfect come down after what should be an intense experience of the opening song. Then the orchestra leads you into Agnus of Aberdeen a dramatic ballad of childhood lost. Thus ends a trio of songs united by common orchestra arrangements that have the earmarks of 'concept' on them. Nicley done, but no concept is apparent and it's not successful in that way. A cover of Blue Suede Shoes breaks the unified feel and reminds you they are ROCK after all.

Beacon Street Union promo picture     May I Light Your Cigarette? is an innovative mood piece. It is built up on layers of heavily tremoloed guitars almost exclusively. Wright does a Morrison-stlye monologue which never seems to add up to anything. The cut fails as a song but shows the group's efforts to be experimental and creative. This is always dangerous as a 'product' to sell to the public but can be essential to group creativity in the long run. It shows that they had plenty of ideas and should have had time to develop them but this was the second and last album so that would never happen.

The album ends with the 16;34 minute Baby Please Don't Go. This was a live favorite of the band (and many other groups in the sixties) and is a showcase for the band playing. It works that way and gives you a good idea of what they did live. Although they never recorded another album, this effort shows them to be a healthy creative unit who have progressed as a group. It would have been nice to get more material from them. 
by Paul "Blowfish" Lovell
Tracks
1. My Love Is (Ulaky) - 4:09
2. Beautiful Delilah (Berry) - 2:10
3. Sportin' Life (Beacon Street Union) - 3:08
4. Four Hundred And Five (Farrell, Rhodes, Tartachny, Ulaky, Weisberg, Wright) - 2:09
5. Mystic Mourning (Rhodes, Ulaky, Weisberg) - 5:55
6. Sadie Said No (Ulaky, Wright) - 2:51
7. Speed Kills (Ulaky, Wright) - 1:55
8. Blue Avenue (Ulaky) - 2:49
9. South End Incident (Ulaky) - 3:53
10.Green Destroys The Gold (Ulaky) - 3:00
11.The Prophet (Ulaky, Wright) - 4:31
12.The Clown Died In Marvin Gardens (Ulaky, Wright) - 3:53
13.The Clown's Overture (Fallon) - 2:40
14.Angus Of Aberdeen (Ulaky, Weisberg) - 4:39
15.Blue Suede Shoes (Perkins) - 2:08
16.A Not Very August Afternoon (Rhodes, Tartachny, Weisberg, Wright) - 3:43
17.Now I Taste The Tears (Clifford)  - 3:12
18.May I Light Your Cigarette (Ulaky, Wright) - 5:38
19.Baby Please Don't Go (Rhodes, Tartachny, Ulaky, Weisberg, Wright) - 11:13

Beacon Street Union
*John Lincoln Wright - Vocals
*Richard Weisberg - Percussion
*Wayne Ulaky - Bass
*Paul Tartachny - Guitar
*Robert Rhodes - Brass, Keyboards

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The Alarm Clocks - Yeah! (1966 us, awesome rough garage punk)



Formed in 1965 in Parma, OH, teenagers Mike Pierce (bass and vocals), Bruce Boehm (guitar), and Bill Schwark (drums), the Alarm Clocks got a lot of mileage out of one 45 single, although it would be 40 some years before they would really take advantage of it. The trio recorded two raw slices of garage punk, "Yeah!" and "No Reason to Complain," live in a studio in 1966 and released it on their own Wake Up label, and a month or so later recorded a live demo tape of their live set at Sound Ideas Recording Studios. Nothing much came of either venture, and the group disbanded in 1967. The single, though, took on a life of its own, gradually filtering through the informal garage band collectors network and becoming a highly sought-after item.

Both sides of the 45 turned up on 1996's Back from the Grave compilation from Crypt Records, and eventually the bandmembers were tracked down. The A and B side of the single plus the complete demo tape and three tracks from Boehm's earlier band the Perceptions made up the album Yeah!, which was released by Norton Records in 2000. 

Perhaps sensing unfinished business, the Alarm Clocks re-formed in 2006 with all the original members on board plus a new fourth member, guitarist Tom Fallon. This second coming of the group recorded a new album in two days at Freddy Fortune's basement studio in Michigan in 2006. The album appeared as The Time Has Come later in the year from Norton Records. 
by Steve Leggett
Tracks
1. Yeah (M. Pierce) - 2:44
2. No Reason To Complain (M. Pierce) - 2:12
3. Louie Louie (R. Berry) - 3:18
4. Money (Cordy, Bradford) - 2:48
5. It's All Over Now (B. Womack) - 3:58
6. Bald Headed Woman (S. Talmy) - 3:23
7. I'm Alright (Nanker, Phlelge) - 3:13
8. She's About A Mover (D. Sahm) - 2:41
9. Route 66 (B. Troup) - 2:14
10.The Perceptions - Wipe Out (The Surfaris) - 2:12
11.The Perceptions - I'm A Fool (J. Cooper, R. West) - 2:39
12.The Perceptions - Tree Stump Cover Theme (B. Boehm) - 1:56

The Alarm Clocks
*Mike Pierce - Bass, Vocals
*Bruce Boehm - Guitar
*Bill Schwark - Drums

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Thursday, October 17, 2013

Johnny Rivers - Rewind / Realization (1967-68 us, great straight ahead rock with blue eyed soul and psych touches)



With a big, clean production, and quality L.A. session musicians, Rewind is a great collection of blue-eyed soul and rock. The album's two Motown covers, "Baby I Need Your Loving" and "Tracks of My Tears," are more similar to tributes than attempts to outshine the originals. Rivers sounds like a well-adjusted Southern hipster on tracks like "The Eleventh Song," which makes him sound like a cooler version of Sonny Bono. "Rosecrans Boulevard" showcases superb vocal harmonies and horn playing. 

The most interesting track would have to be "Sidewalk Song/27th Street," which is pretty mediocre as a song, but are the bizarre sound clips possibly attacking commercialism? No one really knows. Produced by Lou Adler, arranged by Jimmy Webb, featuring Joe Osborne on bass, Larry Knechtel on piano, and Hal Blaine on drums, this record is a solid, tight recording, with excellent production and inventive arrangements provided by Webb. 
by Zach Curd

Not a concept album, but a song cycle depicting life in southern California in the late '60s, Realization is a fine cycle to catch a ride on. It's also a serious surprise -- when psychedelia reared its head in 1967, the results were frequently disastrous for those performers who'd been specializing in straight-ahead rock & roll, and few had rocked harder or more straight-ahead than Johnny Rivers. Instead of jumping on a bandwagon that had nothing to do with where he was musically, he hijacked the sounds of psychedelic rock -- much as the Temptations did at Motown -- and took it where he was going. 

Acting as his own producer for the first time, Rivers opened up a slightly gentler side to his work that's equally valid and a lot more interesting, if not quite as exciting as his rock & roll classics. After a few sonic digressions as a lead-in, "Hey Joe" gets going, carrying listeners into Rivers' gorgeous rendition of James Hendricks' "Look to Your Soul." His own achingly beautiful "The Way We Live" follows, and then comes Hendricks' "Summer Rain," which turned into Rivers' last big hit of the 1960s. And then he has the temerity to take "A Whiter Shade of Pale" and make it prettier and harder -- but less spacy -- than the Procol Harum original; from there he plunges into blue-eyed soul on "Brother, Where Are You." 

The surprises continue right through to the rather delicate, introspective reading of "Positively Fourth Street" at the close, Rivers succeeding in evoking a vast array of thoughts and emotions. For his trouble, helped by the two hits, he was rewarded with a Top Five charting album, and one that has continued to find new admirers across the decades. 
by Bruce Eder
Tracks
1. The Tracks Of My Tears (Warren "Pete" Moore, Smokey Robinson, Marvin Tarplin) - 3:00
2. Carpet Man (Jimmy Webb) - 3:05
3. Tunesmith (Jimmy Webb) - 3:12
4. Sidewalk Song / 27th Street (Jimmy Webb) - 2:27
5. It'll Never Happen Again (Tim Hardin) - 3:28
6. Do What You Gotta Do (Jimmy Webb) - 2:22
7. Baby I Need Your Lovin' (Holland, Dozier, Holland) - 3:10
8. For Emily, Wherever I May Find Her (Paul Simon) - 2:53
9. Rosecrans Boulevard (Jimmy Webb) - 2:34
10.The Eleventh Song (Jimmy Webb) - 2:21
11.Sweet Smiling Children (Jimmy Webb) - 2:14
12.Hey Joe (Billy Roberts) - 4:33
13.Look To Your Soul (James Hendricks) - 3:11
14.The Way We Live (Johnny Rivers) - 3:09
15.Summer Rain (James Hendricks) - 3:52
16.Whiter Shade Of Pale (Gary Brooks, Keith Reid) - 5:39
17.Broker Where Are You (Oscar Brown, Jr.) - 3:37
18.Something's Strange (James Hendricks, Johnny Rivers) - 3:28
19.What's The Difference (Scott Mckenzie) - 2:48
20.Going Back To Big Sur (Johnny Rivers) - 3:28
21.Positively 4th Street (Bob Dylan) - 5:03

Musicians
*Johnny Rivers – Vocals, Guitar
*Larry Knechtel – Piano
*Mike Deasy Sr. – Guitar
*Joe Osborn – Bass
*Mike Deasy Jr. – Vocals
*Hal Blaine - Drums,  Percussion
*James Burton - Guitar
*James Hendricks - Rhythm Guitar
*Marty Paich - Horn, Strings

1964-2006  Secret Agent Man, The Ultimate Johnny Rivers Anthology

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Wednesday, October 16, 2013

Blue Sun ‎– Festival (1970-71 denmark, excellent jazz fusion progressive rock)



Danish band, formed 1969 in Copenhagen. Originally a hippie band with roots in avant-garde jazz-rock. Most of their body of work come from live recordings - mostly improvisations dominated by sax, organ and guitar. The music is mainly instrumental, with some South African inspiration. 

The band was very popular at that time among youngsters, having strong spiritual power when they performed live. Their album from 1973 presents similar style but a bit more peaceful with leading sax and vocal, alternately. Disbanded and reformed several times with changing members throughout the 1970s until they split up for good in 1981.

This is no less than Blue Sun's 2 LP's and their single on 1 CD. The first LP was a live recording from 'Tagskaegget' in Aarhus Danmark 1970 titled 'Peace be Onto You' (Spectator Records). The second LP named just 'Blue Sun' (Parlophone). Also Parlophone released their single from 1970. In a very short period Blue Sun was the prefered hippie-party band. 

No one hit the hippie-wave better than this jazz-rock-soul inspired band with 2 unique front figures: Charismatic black man Dale Smith (vocal + percussion) and Jesper Zeuthen. The latter achieved in no tim reputation to be best in Dk on tenor-saxophone, based on the fact that he archieved his totally unique way of playing. The band was inspired of Dollar Brand, Jimi Hendrix and Black Soul.
by Adamus67
Tracks
1. Festival (Smith. Zeuthen) - 2:48
2. Katedralen (Zeuthen) - 4:26
3. PÃ¥ Fjeldet (Kaspersen. Zeuthen) - 3:22
4. Kære Irene (Smith. Kaspersen. Zeuthen) - 2:14
5. Afro Blue (Kaspersen) - 3:22
6. Working Man (Blue Sun, Smith) - 9:46
7. Velkomst (Zeuthen. Pontoppidan) - 4:49
8. Aum (Blue Sun) - 11:15
9. Peace Be Unto You (Smith. Kaspersen. Zeuthen) - 16:24
10.John Henry (Smith. Ehlers) - 8:40
11.Lyset (Zeuthen) - 6:51

Blue Sun
*Dale Smith - Vocals, Percussion
*Jesper Zeuthen - Tenor, Soprano Saxophones
*Soren Berggreen - Flute,Alto Sax,Mouth Harp, Electric Violin
*Jan Kaspersen - Keyboards
*Niels Pontoppidan - Guitar
*Poul Ehlers - Contrabass
*Bo Jacobsen - Drums

1975-76  Blue Sun And Jytte Pilloni - It's All Money Johnny

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Monday, October 14, 2013

Escombros - Escombros (1970 chile, great heavy psych, Shadoks 2012 release)



A few days ago I had a three-way telephone conversation with Michel Boisier and Jose Rosemblut. In one of my turns I asked Jose about his musical influences, as he paused for a moment to think about his answer, he repeated to himself "influences", then I heard Michel's voice in the background saying "Ah? Influences' Tell him we belong "to the spirit of the Woodstock generation" I thought that this is a sincere and clear answer and could be a great metaphor to explain the reasons behind the appearance on the Chilean scene in the late 50s and early 70s of bonds as free and outstanding as "Los Jaivas" "Slops". 'Kissing Spell" and of course "los Escombros"

I liked the answer very much, because I believe the strong enthusiasm is a significant part of the group s music and that is why even today, everything that surrounds their history continues to be so beautiful Apparently everything began with the friendship of two classmates in the Faculty of Engineering at the University of Santiago In their first year and |ust at the lime when the firs' rock groups were emerging in Chile (“Jockers". "Vidrios Quebrados". "Beat 4". etc ) 

Jose and Michel met and created their first group "Colored Soap" to which Michel brought two North American friends - John & Matt, who were living in Santiago as they were the children of diplomats - and Jose brought Lito Benito.

For a while the five of them played together until halfway through 1968. when the two Americans had to go back home it was just after that first setback when the "spirit" appeared for the first time, and m the wake of this disappointment they decided to stay together and introduce a new second guitarist to the band. Ricardo Mendeville (Lolin). So, after they got over the setback, they finally named themselves "los Escombros" (which means rubble or debris in English, in other words, dispersed elements after the catastrophe! upon Michel’s initiative  Things started to go extremely well, thanks to one of those great secrets behind the creation of marvellous bands play, play and enjoy.

It was precisely at one of these performances where they met Walter Sitzmann, an Austrian who had recently arrived in Chile. He connected very well with them and their music and quickly became another "Escombro" member and contribute his ideas to the group Now as a five-piece band, the group began performing at every possible venue and giving some outstanding shows They hove started playing cover versions of "Grand Funk Railroad". "Led Zeppelin" "Conned Heat" and "Jimi Hendrix" But soon they ve added a large number of own compositions to the program which the audience connected with really well (From what I hove been able to read in venous magazines from that time, most of the performances were always booked out, no matter if they were playing alone or with other bonds together at different festivals and concerts which big groups of the time - such as "Aguaturbia", "Los Tropos" and "Kissing Spell'- and the connection was brilliant).

So the complete line up of the band was Lito Benito on lead guitar (several members of the band have all agreed in telling me that he was an especial talented musician) the youngest member Ricardo Mendeville (Lolin) alternating between second guitar and organ and Jose and Michel on the bass and drums respectively, making up a strong Rhythm section. On top the band had a very interesting and exotic frontman Walter Silzmann, who wrote many songs and sang with great personality and even more, in "perfect English".

Under Allende's government, the country was culturally successful, with a young society that enthusiastically look part in the progressive hippie movement.  However, on the organisational side perhaps things where not as good and without a doubt both, the company 'Arena" where they recorded - over 4 night shifts on a simple 4 track - an LP and subsequently a single "love Machine / Green Eye Lady' (both tracks are included in this edition). and the scarce music press that were around were incapable of promoting sales property That is why today the record is so rare and difficult to find, this poor distribution did not happened to others groups of the same music style And Escombros were not exactly a band of the minorities.

The group always had a full agenda and their concerts were packed and sold-out meaning they were mostly well-accepted They even performed alongside "Los Jaivas" in February 1970. at the important festival in the 'Quinla Vergorn de Vina del Mar", an event with a huge audience where the group were had a fantastic performance

Due to the time of year (February in Chile is summertime) and after the drummer of en Argentinean band got a sunstroke (who offer spending the entire day in the sun was red as a lobster) Michel even performed for another group at the festival going on stage as a replacement hardly knowing the repertoire and improvising the entire performers the spirit of Woodstock' indeed)

At the end of this fantastic musical journey. Walter had to return to Vienna, so the group split up and each member was going their own way Michel and Lito together with Sergio del Rio (Ex Jockers and Carlos Eduardo Reyes (The future keyboardist of Boney M!!) formed a group, which unfortunately lasted only o short lime, by the name of "Masquenunca" 

After that Lito continued with "Miel" and then travelled to several different places. He ended up becoming genuine master at making guitars (luthier) He went on to live in the United Stales working for the guitar manufacturer "Taylor at upon his return to Chile set up his own company Jose continued in music as a session musician for the Brazilian artist "Manduka and the as guitarist of 'Antonio Restucci". I don't wont to miss out the curious anecdote that took place on a flight between San Francisco and New York. He travelled with Soft Machine and one of their greatly admired musicians, Hendrix himself, who he had the opportunity to chat with and was able to confirm the truth of two myths how accessible and friendly he was in person and the attraction he had for groupies!  Apparent halfway through the journey while the film "Mary Poppins" was showing on the plane right there, on an improvised bed, using the seals of the plane, he made it with o beautiful admirer.

Finally. Ricardo Mendeville (Lolin), who was the first "Escombro" we where able to locate for this great project, left Chile shortly after the Military Coup (September 1973) He sold his "Leslie" amplifier from his Hammond organ" bought a boat ticket and came to Europe, where he lives ever since In Holland he formed the very interesting group 'Amankay" and after finishing his studies in classical guitar in Rotterdam he started, together with his teacher Paco Pena, the Flamenco Guitar department of the Rotterdam! Conservatory, where he works today.

Walter is continuing to produce his music in Vienna. Austria and recently has finished recording a double CD called SITZMANN Heartbreakers & Soultakers'. He still continues to be inspired by classic rock where the marriage of melody rhythms and sincere words continue to be the main motive to transfer true feelings hence the "spirit of Woodstock” lives on.

My admiration goes to all five of them and I hope that their "spirit' lives on today in all the people who listen to their great songs.
by Enrique Rivas Viniegra, January 2012
Tracks
1. Stone Free (Jimi Hendrix) - 2:31
2. Romeo Y Juliet  (Nino Rota) - 3:12
3. Zenith (Richard Schonherz, Walter Sitzmann, Victor Rigoni) - 3:32
4. Cyclops (W. Sitzmann, Ricardo Mendeville) - 3:29
5. Magnetism - 2:45
6. Mauritius - 3:04
7. Green Eyed Lady (Jerry Anthony,  James Corbetta, John C. Phillips, David Riordan) - 3:32
8. Circumstances (W. Sitzmann, Lito Benito) - 2:42
9. Sitting In The Park (Karl Ratzer, R. Schonherz, W. Sitzmann) - 3:39
10.Understandiflfg - 3:03
11.I Love You - 3:40
12.Girl - 3:53
13.Love Machine - 3:45
All songs by Walter Sitzmann except where noted

Escombros
*Lito Benito - Lead Guitar
*Ricardo Mendeville - Guitar, Organ
*Jose Rosemblut - Bass
*Miguel "Michel" Boisier - Drums
*Walter Sitzmann – Vocals, Piano

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Chad And Jeremy - Of Cabbages And Kings (1967 uk, wonderful baroque psych folk with raga shades, 2006 japan bonus tracks remaster)



After a string of pop hits that were, and largely remain, underrated for their artistry, Chad Stuart and Jeremy Clyde were looking for the project that would boost their esteem beyond the teen idol level. Releases like Pet Sounds and Sgt. Peppers had raised the bar for pop production considerably, and in September of 1967, Chad & Jeremy entered the studio to create their response, Of Cabbages And Kings. Although the album didn't have the commercial impact the duo hoped for, it has stood as one of the underrated gems of 60's pop. Sundazed has assembled the original album's six bonus cuts for reissue, and it's a reissue that should delight any fan of Brit-pop who is familiar with it, and happily inform those who aren't.

Producer Gary Usher ran interference with the Columbia accountants, providing Stuart and Clyde the time and resources they needed to realize their ambitions, and their ambitions were high. Using sounds ranging from didgeridoo, horns and strings to flushing toilets and the verbal antics of their labelmates, The Firesign Theater, they produced a set of original songs that included the five movement "Progress Suite," a collage of music and found sounds. 

The result was an album worthy of inclusion in the pantheon established by its noteworthy predecessors, but ultimately it wasn't the album Chad & Jeremy fans were looking for, and save for the relative handful of us who revered it both then and now, it became best remembered more as a novelty near the end of a career (they would record one more album, the similarly ambitious The Ark, before Clyde departed to pursue an acting career on British stages) than as a triumphant peak. 
by Shaun Dale
Tracks
1. Rest In Peace (Chad Stuart) - 6:47
2. The Gentle Cold Of Dawn - 3:52
3. Busman's Holiday - 3:25
4. Can I See You - 3:49
5. Family Way - 2:47
6. I'll Get Around To It When And If I Can (James William Guercio) - 2:41
7. Prologue (Chad Stuart) - 5:48
8. Decline (Chad Stuart) - 4:08
9. Editorial (Vocal) - 2:56
10.Fall (Chad Stuart) - 8:30
11.Epilogue (Vocal) - 5:08
12.Rest in Peace (Chad Stuart) - 3:18
13.Family Way - 2:47
14.The Progress Suite: Editorial - 2:56
All compositions by Jeremy Clyde except as else indicated

Musicians
*Jeremy Clyde - Vocals, Guitar
*Chad Stuart - Vocals, Guitar, Banjo, Harpsichord, Organ, Tack Piano, Ukulele, Sitar

1968 Three In The Attic (2013 edition)

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