Tuesday, June 1, 2021

F.J. McMahon - Spirit Of The Golden Juice (1969 us, rough acid folk rock, 2009 reissue)



The most puzzling of backstories comes when someone decides to make one album, just one sole record to define their entire musical legacy, and proceeds to disappear from the face of the earth. Imagine if a painter like Dalíor Monet only ever finished one painting, and simply cleaned off their brushes and never returned to a blank canvas again. In truth, some of the most coveted records never saw the light of release at all, but are sought after and compiled years later, if anything to preserve some sort of special presence that may or may not have been left behind.

So it was with F.J. McMahon, an army veteran who returned home from duty to cut one of history’s most profound acoustic records. He drove up and down California’s Pacific Coast with a few copies in the back of his pickup truck and never cared to make another album for the rest of his life. It’s the type of story that rings a bell similar to Townes Van Zandt, who, after recording his first record in Los Angeles, hitchhiked his way back to Austin, Texas with nothing but a bag full of vinyl, all his own, leaving copies behind with anyone kind enough to give him a ride. It’s amazing to consider how carefree something might seem in the moment, when decades later such throwaways can be so valuable.

McMahon caught his first interest in music upon hearing ‘Guitar Boogie Shuffle’ by the Ventures, growing up in the very dawn of 50’s & 60’s rock and roll and soaking up the then pioneering sounds of Elvis & the Beatles. He began playing guitar as a young teenager, and after finishing school he enlisted in the United States Air Force, serving in Southeast Asia, Vietnam & Thailand in particular.

Returning stateside years later, he wrote and recorded ‘Spirit of the Golden Juice’ as a sort of summary or ode to his time spent overseas. All in all it’s the perfect acoustic rock record, heartfelt and autobiographical, with minimal instrumentation besides a lightly brushed drum kit and panned guitars, all led by his calm, unaccompanied vocal takes. When asked if hallucinogens impacted his songwriting, he answered: “More than Richard Nixon and less than Jerry Garcia. Everything experienced affects everything.” The very first chord struck in the album opener ‘Sister Brother’ sets the hazy, road-weary tone of the entire record. 

There is a slowness, not quite melancholic, but beautifully reflective that envelops each track, as if you could see McMahon cruising down Highway One in the back of someone else’s pickup truck, no place to go and no place to be, just happy to be home. In ‘Early Blue’ he laments: “In the morning’s light I try to hide from people. But it’s never right, I see my friends at night and it works out fine.” In ‘The Learned Man’ he sings about coming upon a wise man in the road, who taught him the importance of peace and silence. “I walked away, thanking him inside. He’d answered me the only way he could. Time had taught him much and so he understood. And now I know the lesson by the sea. I must have an answer. The only one to ask is me.” Perhaps this encounter is what gave McMahon the resolve to never record again, satisfied with the way his album had turned out and happy to move on quietly with his life.

The album’s front cover features a photograph of McMahon posing straight-faced and stoic in a room at the Chateau Marmont in Hollywood, the famed hotel hosting the likes of Jim Morrison, John Belushi, and other famous writers and performers. “If you must get into trouble, do it at the Chateau Marmont," said Harry Cohn, former president of Columbia Pictures. The back cover is a photograph taken in Big Sur, California, just a few hours north of McMahon’s home town of Santa Barbara.

McMahon played wherever possible for a few years, sometimes just walking into bars and passing a hat for tips. After almost a decade went by without selling many records, he gave up in the age of disco, therefore leaving us without live footage or any extra material. “When the age of glitter/glam and disco happened I hung it up. Bands were fewer and places would rather hire one DJ than four or five people. At that point I decided I needed a trade so I joined the Navy, went to avionics and electronics school and spent the next three years fixing radar and electronic systems on Navy aircraft. That turned into a twenty five year career as a computer field engineer.”

The great rediscovery happened in 2009 when the UK label Rev-Ola reissued the album on CD. But a 2012 vinyl reissue by The Circadian Press, distributed by indie mainstaySacred Bones(home of acoustic guitar-wielding Amen Dunes, Marissa Nadler, and other weird-folk rockers) was limited to 500 copies that authentically duplicated the original Accent pressing. The audio was even transferred from one of those original records to be restored and remastered in New York City.

The original 1969 Accent pressingis nearly impossible to find, with simply too few of them having made it out and into the world. Aprivately pressed 90’s reissueis available on Discogs starting at $100. And of the newest reissue, limited to 500 copies, only one iscurrently listed for sale, also starting at $100 on eBay.
Magazine Vinyl Me Please March 2nd 2016
Tracks
1. Sister Brother - 4:05 
2. The Road Back Home - 3:12 
3. Early Blue - 3:02 
4. Black Night Woman - 3:22 
5. One Alone Together - 2:57 
6. Five Year Kansas Blues - 2:44 
7. Enough It Is Done - 2:35 
8. The Learned Man - 2:37 
9. The Spirit of the Golden Juice - 3:33 
All compositions by F.J. McMahon

Musicians
*F.J. McMahon - Vocals, Rhythm Guitar, Lead Guitar
*Junior Nickles - Drums
*John Uzonyi - Bass

Saturday, May 29, 2021

Downchild Blues Band - Road Fever (1980 canada, splendid roots blues brass rock, 2003 remaster)


Downchild (originally Downchild Blues Band). Toronto blues band, named for the Sonny Boy Williamson song "Mr. Downchild." It was formed in 1969 by the lead and slide guitarist, harmonica player and singer Don (Mr. Downchild) Walsh (b Toronto 24 Mar 1947). Members have included the singers Rick (The Hock) Walsh (b 19 Dec 1948, d Toronto 31 Dec 1999) and Tony Flaim (b 1948, d 10 Mar 2000), who alternated with Downchild for more than 20 years, and the pianists Jane Vasey (b Winnipeg 1949, d Toronto 7 Jul 1982; a member 1973-82) and, as of 1987, Gene Taylor (b Norwalk, California, 2 Jul 1952).

Downchild first performed its spirited brand of jump-band and Chicago-style blues at Grossman's Tavern, Toronto, before moving onto the national club circuit. After the release of their first album, Bootleg, the group was signed by RCA. In 1973, the band's single "Flip, Flop and Fly" (from the LP Straight Up) was a Canadian hit; two other songs from that album, Walsh's "(I Got Everything I Need) Almost" and the Walsh brothers' "Shot Gun Blues," were recorded in 1978 by the Blues Brothers (Briefcase Full of Blues, Atlantic KSD-19217), and the songs' popularity brought Downchild several US engagements. Vasey's "Tryin' to Get Her 88s Straight" was a minor Canadian hit in 1980. Downchild slowed in the years immediately following Vasey's death (of leukemia) but made a comeback in 1987.

Downchild has included several trumpeters, saxophonists, bassists, keyboard players and drummers during its history and by 1990 more than 100 musicians had passed through the band, which has been, variously, a quintet, sextet and septet. Since the early 1990s the core of the band membership has comprised Donnie Walsh, guitar and harmonica; Chuck Jackson (b Toronto, 11 Mar 1953), vocals; Michael Fonfara (b Stevensville, Ont, 11 Aug 1946), keyboards; bassist Gary Kendall; drummer Mike Fitzpatrick; and Pat Carey, saxophone. By 1990 the group had toured Canada more than 25 times, appearing at folk festivals, the NAC, Ontario Place, etc, as well as in countless bars in towns and cities from coast to coast.

In 1991, Downchild received a Juno Award for best roots and traditional album (Gone Fishing). Individually the musicians have each earned several Maple Blues Awards and Downchild was awarded electric act of the year (2005), recording of the year (Come On In, 2005), and entertainer of the year (2005, 2006). 
The Canadian Encyclopedia
Tracks
1. Road Fever (Jane Vasey) - 3:37
2. Stages Of Love (Jane Vasey) - 2:32
3. Caught In The Middle (Tony Flaim) - 3:55
4. Low Tide (Freddie King) - 4:06
5. Money Trouble (Tony Flaim) - 4:27
6. What You Gonna Do? (Don Walsh) - 2:50
7. Try To Fall In Love With Me (Don Walsh) - 3:28
8. You Don't Do (Jane Vasey) - 4:01
9. She Won't Come Home (Don Walsh) - 3:22
10.Half Ain't Been Told (James Burke Oden) - 2:28
11.T.V. Mama (Big Joe Turner) - 3:13

Downchild Blues Band
*Don Walsh - Guitar, Harmonica, Slide Guitar
*Jane Vasey - Piano, Vocals
*Tony Flaim - Lead Vocals
*Gary Kendall - Bass, Vocals
*Bob Heslin - Trumpet
*Larry Bodner - Sax
*Richard Howse - Sax

1971  Downchild - Bootleg (2007 edition)
1973  Downchild Blues Band ‎- Straight Up (Vinyl edition)

Friday, May 28, 2021

Pavlov's Dog - At The Sound Of The Bell (1976 us, gorgeous ballads prog and sheer exuberances, a little wonder, 2010 bonus tracks remaster)

 


I know, maybe it would have been better by reviewing the debut Pampered Menial (which was released in 1975) nut for some reason At The Sound Of The Bell landed first into my cd-player. Not that it is that important as for some reason (just like all the other fans do) these two albums form a holy duo.

Reviewing an album by this progrockband isn't the easiest of things as you either hate them or worship them, even if I still have to meet the first person who dislike Pavlov's Dog! These six guys who formed a band in St. Louis, Missouri are making prog-rock just like so many others did, but still their music is very, very different. The band were "big" listeners of British progrockbands like King Crimson, Soft Machine, Family, Gentle Giant and of course Genesis and they used these influences to make something quite unique.

It's not only the Bee Gees-voice from frontman David Surkamp which make Pavlov's Dog a godlike band. Nah, everything's perfect....from arrangment to the used ingredients. The album opens with a poppy (almost forgettable) She Came Shining but beneath the pop lies a layer of melancholic feelings. Cos yes, you'll cry on Standing Here With You, Mersey and you'll definitely burst out in tears once you reach Valkerie or Early Morning On.

Every song is perfect and I'm sure (at least that's in my case) you'll hear the album a thousand times once you discovered it and no (if I'm not counting King Crimson) then Pavlov's Dog is the sole progrockband in my collection, so there you go!

It's not the first time that this album (just like the debut Pampered Menial) got reissued but the version on Cherry Red is digitally remastered and even if there are no extra tracks on it, the cd comes with a mighty booklet in where you can finds lots of information about this essential band.

If you never tried Pavlov's Dog, you better do as changes are big they'll chance your life. And yes, these are the kind of albums you'll take to that famous island.... Classic.
by Didier Becu, 03/04/2013
Tracks
1. She Came Shining (David Surkamp, Doug Rayburn) - 4:19
2. Standing Here With You (Megan's Song) - 3:52
3. Mersey (David Surkamp, Steve Scorfina) - 3:05
4. Valkerie - 5:21
5. Try To Hang On - 2:11
6. Gold Nuggets - 3:28
7. She Breaks Like A Morning Sky (David Surkamp, Doug Rayburn) - 2:28
8. Early Morning On (David Surkamp, Doug Rayburn) - 3:12
9. Did You See Him Cry (David Surkamp, Doug Rayburn) - 5:42
10.Gold Nuggets - 4:38
11.Standing Here With You (Megan's Song) - 4:07
12.Try To Hang On - 3:12
All songs by David Surkamp except where indicated
Bonus Tracks 10-12
Track 10 recorded live at Burg Herzberg Festival 2007
Tracks 11 - 12 recorded live at Ford Auditorium Detroit 1976

Pavlov's Dog
*David Surkamp - Lead Vocals, Veleno, Acoustic Guitars
*Steve Scorfina - Lead Guitar
*Tom Nickeson - Acoustic Guitar, Backing Vocals
*David Hamilon - Keyboards
*Doug Rayburn - Mellotron, Bass, Percussion
*Rick Stockton - Bass
With
*Martyn Ford Orchestra - Strings
*High Wycombe Parish Boys Choir - Chorus Vocals
*Elliot Randall - Guitar
*Les Nicol - Guitar
*Paul Prestopino - Mandolin
*George Gerich - Organ
*Mike Abene - Organ
*Andy MacKay - Saxophone
*Michael Brecker - Saxophone
*Gavin Wright - Violin
*Bill Bruford - Drums

Wednesday, May 26, 2021

Russ Giguere - Hexagram 16 (1971 us, fine multi sunny beats, 2013 reissue)



In 1971, rhythm guitarist/vocalist/songwriter Russ Giguere departed the band’s ranks to pursue a solo career.  He teamed that year with the producer of The Association, John Boylan, to craft his Warner Bros. solo debut Hexagram 16.  With support from musicians including Jim Keltner, Russ Kunkel, Spooner Oldham, The Dillards’ Herb Pedersen, steel guitarist Buddy Emmons and The Flying Burrito Brothers’ Chris Ethridge, Hexagram was released to little fanfare.  It’s just made its CD debut from Real Gone Music. Real Gone’s CD, produced by the label’s Gordon Anderson, has no remastering credits, but shouldn’t disappoint.

“Now we begin, we’re reaching out to you/Now we begin, doing the thing that we do,” Giguere’s familiar voice intones over some gentle strums on “Now We Begin,” the first track on Hexagram 16.  Though an accomplished songwriter, he only wrote two songs on the album, turning over the balance of the tracks to writers including producer Boylan, Randy Newman, Judee Sill, Bill Martin, Association bandmate Jules Alexander, and even Smokey Robinson for a cover of “Shop Around.”  The solo voice introduced on “Now We Begin” momentarily jars, hearing Giguere’s plaintive instrument sans the billowy blend of Association harmonies.  But the acoustic folk-pop sound is just one of the many solo styles explored by the artist on Hexagram 16.

Future Eagle Bernie Leadon played guitar, along with Giguere, on “Begin.”  He also supplied the heavier licks on Boylan’s folk-rocking “Brother Speed,” first recorded by Boylan and his brother Terence the song in 1968 as Appletree Theater.  Judee Sill, one of the most original voices to emerge from the Laurel Canyon rock scene, accompanies Giguere on her own mini-western vignette “Ridge Rider.”  (Sill’s own rendition can be heard on her 1971 eponymous debut album.)  Jim Spheeris’ “Let It Flow” is a truly lovely, almost Byrds-ian track, in an even more explicitly country vein.

Sill and Leadon weren’t the only well-known guest musicians.  For Bill Martin’s impressionistic “My Plan,” Giguere enlisted Wrecking Crew vet Larry Knechtel (of Bread and “Bridge Over Troubled Water” fame) to play gothic organ, while The Association’s onetime producer Jerry Yester, his wife Judy Henske, and keyboardist Craig Doerge of The Section on the track’s ethereal, high harmonies.  Martin also supplied the considerably more relaxed “Rosarita Beach Café.”  The starriest track on Hexagram is a tough and funky remake of “Shop Around,” with Leadon, pianist Spooner Oldham and R&B legend Bobby Womack (also on guitar) joining Giguere, Merry Clayton, Clydie King and Venetta Fields on the soulful vocals.

Giguere affected an exaggerated voice for the rock-and-roll of his song “In New Germany,” but more naturally rocked on Randy Newman’s 12 Songs track “Lover’s Prayer.”  With Oldham doing his best boogie and Clayton leading Fields and King on the backups, it’s one of the best tracks on the LP.  As with so many rock covers of Newman tunes – think Tom Jones or Joe Cocker – Giguere’s version plays it straight on the lyrics that came off as dryly funny when sung by their composer in character: “Don’t send me no young girl to love me, With their eyes shinin’ bright/All the young girls are afraid of me, Send me a woman tonight…”

Hexagram 16 concludes with Jules Alexander’s “Pegasus,” orchestrated by Al Capps in Wagnerian style.  It ends the eclectic album on an offbeat and grandiose note, and indeed, perhaps Hexagram 16 was too diverse for its own good.  In the liner notes penned by Richie Unterberger, Giguere confesses, “It’s pretty hard to bag it, pretty hard to put it in a category.  Because it’s just music for music’s sake.”  True though that may be, it’s a more-than-worthwhile reissue for any fans of The Association eager to hear one of the group’s finest vocalists out front exploring his many facets and influences.
by Joe Marchese, August 7, 2013
Tracks
1. Now We Begin (Russ Giguere) - 2:54
2. Brother Speed (John Boylan) - 3:44
3. Ridge Rider (Judee Sill) - 3:20
4. My Plan (Bill Martin) - 4:40
5. In New Germany (Russ Giguere) - 2:37
6. Rosarita Beach Cafe (Bill Martin) - 3:56
7. Lover's Prayer (Randy Newman) - 2:12
8. Let It Flow (Jimmie Spheeris) - 3:50
9. Shop Around (Berry Gordy, Smokey Robinson) - 3:28
10.Pegasus (Jules Alexander) - 3:31

Musicians
*Russ Giguere - Vocals, Guitar
*Bernie Leadon - Guitar
*Larry Knechtel - Celesta, Piano, Bass
*Jim Keltner - Drums
*Russ Kunkel - Drums
*Jules Alexander - Guitar
*Ben Benay - Guitar, Bass, Harmonica
*Bobby Womack - Guitar
*Buddy Emmons - Guitar
*Judy Sill - Guitar
*Herb Pederson - Banjo
*Bob West - Bass
*Chris Ethridge - Bass
*John Boylan - Bass
*Lyle Ritz - Bass
*Tony McCashen - Bass
*Bob Brookmeyer - Brass
*Bud Childers - Brass
*John T. Johnson - Brass
*Lew McCreary - Brass
*Roy Caton - Brass
*Don Beck - Mandolin
*Bill Perkins - Woodwind
*Bud Shank - Woodwind
*Gene Cipriano - Woodwind
*Emil Richards - Percussion
*Jungle Giguere - Percussion
*Spooner Oldham - Piano
*Clydie King - Backing Vocals
*Craig Doerge - Backing Vocals
*Fat John - Backing Vocals
*Herb Pederson - Backing Vocals
*Jackie Allen - Backing Vocals
*Jerry Yester - Backing Vocals
*Judy Henske - Backing Vocals
*Julia Rinker - Backing Vocals
*Merry Clayton - Backing Vocals
*Vanetta Fields - Backing Vocals

with the Association
1966-69  The Association - Original Album Series (2016 five discs box set)  

Tuesday, May 25, 2021

White Witch - A Spiritual Greeting (1974 us, integrating prog, glam, psych elements into something of a hard rock sampler)


Formed in Tampa, Florida by guitarist Buddy Richardson, a veteran of the late-60s and early-70s Florida scene (The Outsiders, Soul Trippers, Noah's Ark), White Witch played an eclectic mix of psychedelia, prog, power pop, heavy Southern rock and glam rock, with painted faces, powerful vocals and some strange lyrics. 

They developed a devoted live following around the southeast, and their two albums (on Capricorn Records) are highly rated by some, ignored by others. Flashy vocalist Ronn Goedert was renowned for his histrionics; he sounded like a more glam Robert Plant. Some say he influenced Axel Rose, but that's debatable. Goedert passed away in 2000, as did keys man Buddy Pendergrass in 2003. Remaining members have played sporadically over the years. Highlights include "Home Grown Girl" from the first LP. "Showdown", "Class of 2000", and "Walk On" from 'Spiritual Greeting'.

Regardless of their obscurity, White Witch was versatile, often surprising, and always listenable. Lead singer Ron Goedert was a vocal chameleon, and the band was equally adept at playing heavy and with finesse. The addictive "Showdown" sounds like a gutsier version of Supertramp or a poppier Deep Purple, and trippy tracks, "Crystallize and Realize" and "Class of 2000" could almost pass for lightweight early Genesis. "Walk On," the album's best song, is a lilting stroll that would stand out on any of the Kinks' '70s concept albums. 

While the group's philosophy is never exactly clear, lyrics referencing the Book of Revelations and Jean Harlow (in a single song) make for interesting listening. And whether sounding like a leather-lunged Brit screamer or a ringer for Ray Davies, Goedert delivers even when the songwriting doesn't. Although A Spiritual Greeting was, in fact, the band's farewell, it's a satisfying slice of  hard rock. 
by James A. Gardner
Tracks
1. We'll All Ride High (Money Bags$) - 5:02
2. Slick Witch - 4:50
3. Walk On - 3:36
4. Class Of 2000 - 6:14
5. Showdown - 4:06
6. Crystallize And Realize - 3:54
7. Black Widow Lover - 4:52
8. Auntie Christy/Harlow - 5:15
All songs by Buddy Pendergrass, Buddy Richardson

The White Witch
*Buddy Richardson - Guitars
*Bobby Shea - Drums
*Ron Goedert - Vocals
*Buddy Pendergrass - Keyboards
*Charlie Souza - Bass, Percussion
*Bill Peterson - Percussion


Monday, May 24, 2021

Armageddon - Armageddon (1975 uk / us, extraordinary heavy prog rock with Keith Relf, 2010 japan SHM remaster)


Cynics who perceive many super-groups as nothing more than bloated extrapolations of, at times, perfectly mundane musical components, can back up their assumptions with Armageddon's eponymous debut from 1975. The first and final spawn of the would-be-super-group featuring former Yardbird vocalist Keith Relf, erstwhile Captain Beyond drummer Bobby Caldwell, ex-Steamhammer guitarist Martin Pugh, and Relf's Renaissance partner, bassist Louis Cennamo, the album contains a meager five tracks -- four of which extend beyond the eight-minute barrier due to bouts of arguably unnecessary, self-indulgent waffling. On the other hand, this was the '70s, people, and of course this sort of excess was par for the course, back then. What's more, these same dubious qualities actually contributed to the album's eventual adoption as a precursor to the stoner rock movement by dope fiends everywhere, most of whom rarely heard a lengthy jam session they couldn't nod approvingly to. 

Whatever one's opinion, the quartet's admirable pedigree unquestionably yielded some inspired songwriting, and even memorable improvisational moments within driving opener "Buzzard," the gently whimsical post-psych ballad "Silver Tightrope," and the 11-minute, prog rock smorgasbord of "Basking in the White of the Midnight Sun" (boasting four subtitled movements). Like the LP's sole conventionally sized offering, the Pugh-dominated "Paths and Planes and Future Gains," as well as its bluesiest, loosest jam, "Last Stand Before" (where Relf finally whips out his famous harmonica), these songs all fall significantly short of their obvious objective, Led Zeppelin, but fare quite nicely in comparison to more down-to-earth contemporaries like Budgie, Hawkwind, or the interconnected Captain Beyond. 

Upon release, Armageddon was met with wildly polarized love/hate critical reviews and actually skimmed the lower reaches of the American charts; but very infrequent live shows and Relf's shocking death by accidental electrocution the following year put an end to the band's hopes. A few half-assed reunions took place in years to come but, thankfully, none proved serious enough to yield any Relf-less Armageddon recordings, thus guaranteeing the enduring cult status of this far from perfect, but intriguing and understandably one-of-a-kind LP. 
by Eduardo Rivadavia
Tracks
1. Buzzard - 8:16
2. Silver Tightrope - 8:23
3. Paths And Planes And Future Gains - 4:30
4. Last Stand Before (Bobby Caldwell, Keith Relf, Martin Pugh, Louis Cennamo) - 8:23
5. Basking In The White Of The Midnight Sun - 11:30
..a. Warning Coming On - 1:00
..b. Basking In The White Of The Midnight Sun - 3:03
..c. Brother Ego (Bobby Caldwell, Keith Relf, Martin Pugh, Louis Cennamo) - 5:10
..d. Basking In The White Of The Midnight Sun Reprise - 2:18  
All compositions by Bobby Caldwell, Keith Relf, Martin Pugh except where stated
Armageddon
*Keith Relf - Lead Vocals, Harp, Harmonica
*Martin Pugh - Electric, Acoustic Guitars
*Bobby Caldwell - Drums, Vocals, Piano, Assorted Percussion
*Louis Cennamo - Bass, Electric Bowed Bass Guitars

Related Acts
with the Yardbirds
1963-68  The Yardbirds - Glimpses (five disc box set, 2011 release)
1964  The Yardbirds - Five Live Yardbirds (2007 Repertoire digi pack with extra tracks)
1965  The Yardbirds - For Your Love (japan 2018 mono edition)
with Renaissance
1969  Renaissance - Renaissance (2008 remaster)
1970  Renaissance - Illusion (2010 bonus tracks remaster)

Saturday, May 22, 2021

Dr. Strangely Strange - Heavy Petting And Other Proclivities (1970 ireland, amazing folk rock, with young Gary Moore, 2011 remaster with bonus tracks)


On their first album, Irish band Doctor Strangely Strange declared themselves to be "strangely strange but oddly normal," and by their time of their second effort, 1970's Heavy Petting, it's possible that "oddly normal" no longer applied. The spiritual cousins of the Incredible String Band, although less rooted in folk traditions, their music flitted around like a butterfly, rarely settling anywhere for long -- and certainly never for the length of an entire song. "Gave My Love an Apple," for example, begins as a folk ditty, and then morphs into an extended electric bluesy guitar solo that has little to do with what went before.

Childlike in its innocence, the album seems eager to taste all the possible flavors of music in a short span, making it a miracle that it holds together at all, let alone as well as it does. For make no mistake, Heavy Petting is something of a hippie joy. Joe Boyd's production is pristine, and the playing is well above the amateur standard of so many bands of the ilk, even if the frequent left turns of the material -- try "Summer Breeze" and "When Adam Delved" as examples -- makes things disorienting, but in a good way. If you're willing to expect the unexpected, you'll love it. 
by Chris Nickson

Dr Strangely Strange were Ireland's answer to the Incredible String Band, a delightfully quirky outfit whose vinyl releases have become collectors' items – and rightly so. Now digitally remastered, and with out-takes and live tracks added in, this set was originally released in 1970, and includes fine, fluid early guitar solos from the great Gary Moore, then a teenager. 

The songs match surreal lyrics against an engagingly bizarre kaleidoscope of styles; Moore's blues-rock is intercut with ragtime, country (including a burst of the Patti Page favourite, Tennessee Waltz), acoustic traditional and medieval styles, along with church music and carols, with Jove Was at Home suddenly segueing into a triumphant Gloria, Hosanna in Excelsis. There is also inventive vocal harmony work – which sounded particularly impressive.
by Robin Denselow, Thu 3 Nov 2011 
Tracks
1. Ballad Of The Wasps (Tim Goulding) - 3:23
2. Summer Breeze (Tim Booth) - 3:39
3. Kilmanoyadd Stomp (Ivan Pawle) - 2:44
4. I Will Lift Up Mine Eyes (Tim Goulding) - 1:55
5. Sign On My Mind (Ivan Pawle) - 8:26
6. Gave My Love An Apple (Tim Booth) - 6:07
7. Jove Was At Home (Ivan Pawle) - 2:37
8. When Adam Delved (Ivan Pawle) - 2:11
9. Ashling (Tim Booth) - 4:42
10.Mary Malone Of Moscow (Tim Goulding) - 3:55
11.Goodnight My Friends (Ivan Pawle) - 1:50
12.Sign On My Mind (Ivan Pawle) - 9:06
13.Gave My Love An Apple (Tim Booth) - 5:39
14.Horse Of A Different Hue (Tim Goulding) - 4:44
15.Ballad Of The Wasps (Tim Goulding) - 3:07
16.Sweet Red Rape (Tim Booth) - 6:07
17.Lady Of The Glen (Ivan Pawle) - 2:57
18.The Prisoner (Medley) (Tim Booth, Tim Goulding) - 3:14
Tracks 2, 3, 5, 6, 8, 10 recorded at Eamonn Andrews Studios, Dublin
Tracks 1, 4, 7, 9 recorded at Sound Techniques Studios, London
Tracks 12, 13 Outtakes from the Dublin sessions
Tracks 14, 15, 16 Recorded Live in Autumn 1970
Track 17 Edited Version for use on an unissued Single
Track 18 Excerpt from a Film Soundtrack recorded in September 1983 

Dr. Strangely Strange
*Ivan Pawle - Organ, Bass, Mandolin, Bass, Rhythm Guitar, Tin Whistle, Human Whistle, Voices, Vocals, Keyboards, Harmonium, Piano
*Tim Booth - Banjo, Vocals, Voices, Guitar, Keyboards, Harmonium, Rhythm Guitar, Bass
*Tim Goulding - Organ, Bass Recorder, Voices, Vocals, Recorder, Keyboards, Fiddle, Piano, Violin, One-String Fiddle, Harmonium
With
*Dave Mattacks - Drums, Percussion
*Jay Myrdal - Glockenspiel
*Heather Wood - Vocals
*Brendan Shields - Bass Guitar
*Johnny Mounthay - Bouzouki
*Annie Xmas - Harmonium, Vocals
*Brush Shiels - Bass
*Johanna - Harmonium, Vocals, Keyboards, Cover Photo
*Annie Christmas - Keyboards, Vocals
*Linus - Percussion, Autoharp, Whistle, Finger Cymbals, Voices, Vocals
*Gary Moore - Guitar
*Andy Irvine - Mandolin
*Heather Woods - Vocals


Friday, May 21, 2021

Darryl Way's Wolf - Canis Lupus (1973 uk, creation of shifting moods, incorporating classical, rock, and jazz elements, 2008 japan SHM bonus tracks remaster)


The 70s continue to be a repository of stimulating music that new and old labels don’t stop digging out. Well, this is not all gold that glitters, but several forgotten works resurface, coming as surprises to newcomers and as useful reminders to those who had already known them in their youth. A case in point is Wolf, the group founded by Darryl Way after leaving Curved Air (Keyboardist Francis Monkman left too in the same period). It was in 1972, the band had just released their third album, Phantasmagoria, the peak of their creativity as well as of their chart success. 

The blond fiddler’s new group consisted of guitarist John Etheridge, Canadian bass player Dek Messecar and drummer Ian Mosley. These names did sound new to rock fans, but this was balanced by the producer’s one: Ian McDonald, former King Crimson sax player. In those days, an actual guarantee. In Curved Air, Way’s counterpart had been Francis Monkman’s keyboards, whilst in Wolf this role was taken up by John Etheridge’s jazzy guitar — in retrospect, already walking on the road that would lead him to Soft Machine and his solo career. 

The leader also plays some keyboards, mainly electric piano and synth. Dek Messecar’s vocals cannot compare with Sonja Kristina’s, and besides that instrumental tracks use to look more interesting. This is the case of "Cadenza," mixing reminiscences of "Vivaldi," the famous Curved Air hit, with rock accents and powerful synth episodes. Echoes of Curved Air can still be heard in "Chanson sans paroles." "McDonald’s Lament", dedicated to the producer, is arguably the best track, with Way’s violin reaching lyrical peak.
by Jeff Melton, 2009-07-01 
Tracks
1. The Void (Darryl Way) - 4:35
2. Isolation Waltz (Darryl Way, Dek Messecar) - 4:37
3. Go Down (Darryl Way, Dek Messecar) - 4:45
4. Wolf (Darryl Way, Dek Messecar) - 4:06
5. Cadenza (Darryl Way, Ian Mosley) - 4:48
6. Chanson Sans Paroles (Darryl Way, John Etheridge) - 6:28
7. McDonald's Lament (Darryl Way, Dek Messecar, Ian Mosley, John Etheridge) - 7:10
8. Spring Fever (Darryl Way) - 3:29
9. Wolf (Single Version) (Darryl Way, Dek Messecar) - 4:05
Bonus tracks 8-9

Darryl Way's Wolf
*Darryl Way - Violin, Viola, Keyboards
*John Etheridge - Guitar
*Dek Messecar - Bass, Vocals
*Ian Mosley - Drums
With
*Ian McDonald - Piano, Tambourine

1974  Darryl Way's Wolf - Night Music

Thursday, May 20, 2021

Dr. Strangely Strange - Kip Of The Serenes (1969 ireland, beautiful tender hippie folk, 2002 and 2009 remaster and expanded)


The fact that the Stranglies were Dublin-based, friends of The Incredible String Band and managed and produced by Joe Boyd should be enough to allow you, in your mind’s ear, to hear them. Thankfully, however, it’s not that simple. The title of the opener, Strangely Strange But Oddly Normal explains some of their everlasting charm and deserved cult status, for this album is a rich and rewarding mix of both. Dr Dim & Dr Strange underlines their debt to The Hangman’s Beautiful Daughter but, on tracks such as Roy Rogers, they are more oddly normal, more approachable than the ISB. 

Their song structures often belie the homely, but nevertheless very genuine weirdness of the lyrics – just listen to On The Westcork Hack for evidence.The variety in their playing and instrumentation, the Stranglies’ love of counterpoint and, above all, the sheer fun in the songs makes Kip… a sheer joy from start to finish.  Highly recommended and oddly
catchy.
by Jan Zarebski, 28 March 2009
Tracks
1. Strangely Strange But Oddly Normal (Ivan Pawle) - 4:28
2. Dr. Dim And Dr. Strange (Tim Goulding) - 7:33
3. Roy Rogers (Tim Booth) - 5:37
4. Dark Haired Lady (Ivan Pawle) - 4:25
5. On The West Cork Hack (Tim Goulding) - 2:32
6. Tale Of Two Orphanages (Tim Booth) - 3:49
7. Strings In The Earth And Air (Ivan Pawle) - 6:38
8. Ship Of Fools (Tim Goulding) - 6:18
9. Frosty Mornings (Ivan Pawle) - 3:59
10.Donnybrook Fair (Tim Booth) - 8:48
11.Mirror Mirror (Ivan Pawle) - 4:39
12.West Cork Hack (Tim Goulding) - 3:11
13.Strings In The Earth And Air (Ivan Pawle) - 2:06
14.Strangely Strange But Oddly Normal (Ivan Pawle) - 5:59
Bonus Tracks 11-14 only on 2009 edition

Dr. Strangely Strange
*Ivan Pawle - Acoustic Guitar, Vocals, Whistle, Electric Guitar
*Tim Booth - Acoustic Guitar, Mandolin, Bass, Vocals
*Tim Goulding - Piano, Hammond Organ, One-String Fiddle, Electric Piano, Melodic, Whistle, Vocals 
With
*Jay Myrdal – Glockenspiel
*Linus - Vocals, Percussion


Tuesday, May 18, 2021

Vince Martin - If The Jasmine Don't Get You... The Bay Breeze Will (1969 us, fantastic jazzy folk psych rock, 2006 remaster)


Vince Martin first emerged in the late 1950s as a folk-blues singer around Greenwich Village...of the tendency which kind of avoided the academic approach. A friend of commercial folk-pop group The Tarriers, he was the lead singer on their 'Cindy Oh, Cindy' 45, a monster hit and one of the first real big successes to emerge from the Folk Boom. Vince, lending not only a gritty edge of authenticity, but a note of wistful yearning no amount of study can bring, in the early 1960s, gravitated toward the intense club nights presented by black activist and broadside editor, Len Chandler. Starting a celebrated partnership with fellow maverick Fred Neil which stretched over live appearances which influenced a generation, David Crosby, Mama Cass, Richie Havens, you name them... and cutting an acclaimed and now-classic album for Elektra.

It was Vince who started the to-ing and fro-ing of the folk scene players between Greenwich Village and Florida's Coconut Grove, a place he discovered by chance in 1961, later immortalized in a song by Fred Neil covered by everyone. All of this is perfectly captured on Vince Martin's 1969 album, If the Jasmine Don't Get You ... The Bay Breeze Will, one of that decade's overlooked gems, and a record whose title truly says it all, and whose time has come. From the opening cut, 'Snow Shadows,' the sound is an airy blend of folk spirit and rock dynamics. Softly brushed drums push forward behind propulsive flat-picked twin acoustic guitars; Martin's high tenor sings of romantic loss, quivering over the lines 'Stumbling through the snow..../Nothing waitin' for me like I'm leaving behind..../Cities are meant for leaving before I get too black and blue.' 

As the song builds, the drummer dramatically downshifts, cracking his snare with a full stick. Martin's voice in turns seems to lift off with a thrilling effect, soaring, as he croons, 'Heading south without you like a wild bird flying blind/Someone should have told me I'd never go home.' Produced by infamous A&R man/producer Nickolas Venet at Capitol's studio in Nashville, Tennessee, this record came in out on Capitol releases which included Euphoria, Gandalf, and Karen Dalton's self titled album... strange company indeed
Tracks
1. Snow Shadows - 06:59
2. I Can't Escape From You (Hank Williams) - 03:14
3. Summerwind - 03:46
4. Danville Girl (Traditional) - 04:36
5. Yonder Comes The Sun - 08:09
6. Jasmine - 13:17
Words and Music by Vince Martin except where noted

Musicians
*Vince Martin - Vovcals, Guitar
*Charles R. McCoy - Harmonica
*Fred F. Carter, Jr. - Guitar
*Henry P. Strzelecki - Bass
*John Buck Wilkin - Guitar
*Kenneth Buttrey - Drumms
*Lloyd Green - Dobro, Steel Guitar
*Murrey M. Harman, Jr. - Drums