Thursday, November 4, 2021

The Sidewinders - The Sidewinders (1972 us, solid power pop, Vinyl edition)



In the backwoods of Biddeford, ME, Catfish Black took first form. The band members were all Harvard University students, hippie style. Upon return to the Crimson Castle, in the fall of 1970, the band began testing the local waters in a handful of college appearances. Itching for big- ger and better things, they sought management. Bassist Ernie Brooks' classmate suggested his girlfriend, Museum School attendee, Wellesley, MA native, Suzie Adams. Lead singer Jimmy Mahoney departed. Drummer Andy Paley reaped vocal responsibilities. At the First Earth Day, held next to Harvard Stadium, backing a group based out of Tennessee's Hog Farm commune, Adams saw Catfish Black magic and agreed to fill the management void. A multitude of college mixers, and endless nights of lead guitarist Eric Rosenfeld, (Paley's childhood friend and songwriting partner) screaming chord changes to not-so-well rehearsed Brooks (A! C! Bb!) followed. What also followed were Marblehead brothers, Neil and Loy Grossman.

The Grossman's game plan was this: Take the band into an MIT Union Hall, record them on a TEAC 2-Track, and shop the tapes. The tape shopping caught Janus Records' eye, but other interesting occurrences happened meanwhile. Ernie Brooks' lackadaisical approach to remembering songs got the band thinking in the direction of possible replacements. The outstanding prospect was local bassist Leigh Razowski. The problem with Leigh was that he was in another band and was quite loyal to his situation. After much persuasion, a paid trip from New York to come to one rehearsal, Leigh agreed to join. Ernie in the meantime persuaded Catfish keyboardist Jerry Harrison to come with. At this time, the band looked like this: Andy was fronting the band. Eric was handling lead guitar. Leigh was on bass. Mike Reed, of Hawaii, an original member (I didn't bring him up yet 'cause he was busy reading) played rhythm guitar. Henry Stern was playing drums in Andy's place. Somehow, Adams got all of them to cut their hair. Next came Richard Robinson.

A New York friend of Paley's, Richard Robinson (husband of the rock columnist Lisa Robinson) visited Boston in the summer of 1971. Robinson was riding high being responsible for the Jaggerz' one hit wonder The Rapper and he booked Catfish Black into some New York City Max's Kansas City dates, the home away from home for Warhol's Factory workers.

Record corporation RCA had recently cleared house and Dennis Katz, manager of Blood, Sweat and Tears, and brother of band member Steve Katz was brought in for A &R. When Katz and RCA president Rocco Laginestra signed an inordinate number of new acts, trying to quell the company's previous buffoonery, Catfish Black (now the Sidewinders) were included. (Note: When the band hit New York, they learned of a band with a too-similar moniker and changed their name to the Sidewinders after a line in Roger McGuinn's Chestnut Mare.) Now the Sidewinders were slated to hit the studio under Robinson's production direction for RCA Records.

A week prior to the studio, Richard Robinson rang and informed the band that he was off to London to produce ol' Lou Reed's first solo LP. He also informed the band that his dear friend, Lenny Kaye, later of Patti Smith fortune, was to fill his shoes. The band was too naive to question the situation. The session got off on a positive note. The new direction of RCA and its enthusiasm helped. Fellow label mate, David Bowie, was among the many who slipped through to check out how things were going. Katz was happy. Andy spent the session saying everything was going to be ok. Keep positive. Eric didn't necessarily trust Lenny. Mike was doing a lot of reading. Henry was trying to adjust to a newly found wealth. Leigh was unavailable for comment. One of those cultural phenomena followed. After an infamous Cambridge Boathouse bash, the album was released to mixed radio feelings and excellent press. Billboard Pick of the Week, and those wonderful reviews in Circus, Creem, Variety and Rolling Stone. The record sold well, ironically, in Texas and some scatterings around the country. The record, however, flopped in general.

Henry Stern and Mike Reed quickly departed after the album's release. After 1,000 auditions, blues keysman Larry Luddeke (Far Cry) and drummer Bryan Chase joined. Xmas 1972, the band returned to live performing but after a couple of gigs it was clear that Luddeke wasn't gelling with the band and Susie was called upon to drop the axe again. As a four piece, Rose, Paley, Razowski and Chase played a couple of shows which are best described as disasters. The band needed another guitar.

The audition worked fairly well in terms of sound but the band was dubious of the man. The Sidewinders were informed that Squier was their newest member not long after. Adams was growing weary and decided it was best to pass the band, taking a secondary position, to a big agency. Really big. She figured about a five-month preparation for a Max's industry showcase for New York management would be appropriate to make the transition. With a Billboard Cross Reference (the Who's Who of What's Who), she began the Sidewinder drive. Jerry Weintraub, Nat Weiss, Sid Bernstein, Chrysalis and Katz, who by now had become Zeppelin's American management rep. All showed up at a Sidewinders' gig and all were very impressed. In a sad turn of events, Squier tried to remold the band. Rose felt his creativity was being squashed and Katz (who knew all the words to the Sidewinders' songs), the band's prospective management, ironically thought Squier had to go. Susie thought it would be best to ease Billy out of the situation, slowly. But Squier's alleged innate ability to dismantle had already crippled the band. The Sidewinders slowly unwound.
by Charles William White III, The Beat 1985
Tracks
1. Bad Dreams (Leigh Lisowski) - 3:12
2. Superhit (Andy Paley, Eric Rosenfeld) - 2:11
3. Moonshine (Andy Paley, Eric Rosenfeld) - 2:49
4. The Bumble Bee (Nikolai Rimsky-Korsakov) - 2:45
5. Told You So (Andy Paley) - 2:43
6. Rendezvous (Andy Paley, Eric Rosenfeld) - 3:22
7. O Miss Mary (Andy Paley) - 4:06
8. Got You Down (Andy Paley, Eric Rosenfeld) - 2:26
9. Slip Away (We're Gonna Try) (Andy Paley) - 5:24
10.Reputation (Andy Paley, Eric Rosenfeld) - 2:20
11.Parade (Leigh Lisowski) - 3:03

The Sidewinders
*Leigh Lisowski - Bass, Vocals
*Henry Stern - Drums, Percussion, Vocals
*Eric Rosenfeld - Lead Guitar, Vocals, Gong
*Andy Paley - Lead Vocals, Harmonica, Percussion
*Mike Reed - Rhythm Guitar

Wednesday, November 3, 2021

McChurch Soundroom - Delusion (1970 Switzerland, fine heavy jam psych bluesy rock)



McChurch Soundroom is a Swiss krautrock band formed in Basel Switzerland near the German border. The band was fronted by the Italian-Swiss multi-instrumentalist Sandy Chiesa. All together the band consisted 5 members. Heiner Althaus (guitar), Alan Veltin (organ, piano, vocals), Noby Jud (drums, percussion), Kurt Hafen (bass) and Sandy Chiesa (vocals, flute and acoustic guitar).

Soundroom's first and only album was produced by Conny Plank. The music is heavy krautrock with jazz, fusion, progressive and psychedelic elements. The songs are well arranged and the musicianship is absolutely amazing!!

The album does have a rather rough, unpolished production, starts off acoustic and sounds a whole lot like it came right off Stand Up, right down to vocals that sounds just like Ian Anderson. As the song progresses, the music turns to electric guitar and Hammond organ with bluesy undertones, and progressive passages that oddly sound like they belong on a Yes album, then there's a totally killer jam I wished was much longer, then it goes back to the acoustic beginning.

The next cut, "Dream of a Drummer" is an instrumental, guitar-oriented piece that would have done much better if it wasn't for that useless drum solo. That's the only weak spot on the album, by the way. "Time is Flying" is more of the same great bluesy prog rock sound.

The next song, "What Are You Doin'" is much in the same vein as the previous cut, but I really can't stomach the preachy, anti-drug message in the lyrics, this band totally predates Nancy Reagan's "Just Say No" by a full decade. That's plain silly, because people in to that kind of music at the time were likely lighting up the bong every now and then. The album ends with a two part instrumental called "Trouble" which is basically a jam, played in a rather jazzy manner with flute and Hammond organ dominating.

Unsurprisingly, the LP is quite rare and difficult to find (one online dealer was selling it for $200).The cover to the album is way cool, which is a picture of a skull all covered in dripping candle wax, which also clues you in on the underground nature of the album.
Tracks
1. Delusion (Heiner Althaus, Sandro Chiesa, Marcel Schaar) - 5:47
2. Dream Of A Drummer (Norbert Jud) - 9:24
3. Time Is Flying (Heiner Althaus, Sandro Chiesa, Marcel Schaar) - 6:17
4. What Are You Doin' (Heiner Althaus, Sandro Chiesa, Jakob) - 8:31
5. Trouble Part I (Alain Veltin, Heiner Althaus, Kurt Hafen, Norbert Jud, Sandro Chiesa) - 4:29
6. Trouble Part II (Alain Veltin, Heiner Althaus, Kurt Hafen, Norbert Jud, Sandro Chiesa) - 5:40

McChurch Soundroom
*Alain Veltin - Organ 
*Heiner Althaus - Guitar 
*Kurt Hafen - Bass
*Norbert Jud - Drums 
*Sandy McChurch "Sandro Chiesa" - Vocals, Flute

Monday, November 1, 2021

Nitzinger - One Foot In History (1973 us, strong blues rock with extra track)



Aside from jettisoning some increasingly archaic psychedelic tendencies (and welcoming second guitarist Bugs Henderson to the fold), Nitzinger's rather arrogantly named sophomore outing, One Foot in History, pretty much picked up right where the Texan band's critically lauded first album had left off. Which is to say that it too boasted an eclectic batch of songs whose only common denominator was orbiting Planet Southern Rock in some capacity, at a time when the genre was approaching its summer solstice, thanks to the tenacity of its star-crossed founding fathers, the Allman Brothers Band, and their fast-rising heirs apparent, Lynyrd Skynyrd. 

Among Nitzinger's novel stylistic diversions on One Foot in History were the mellifluous saxophone and orchestrated string backdrops added to the title track and the imperial, Cream-like "Uncle John"; the full-blown jazz breakdown anchoring the Allmans-esque "Motherload"; and, on a negative note, the misplaced, easy listening schmaltz of "Driftwood." Yet heavy Southern rockers were also available in droves, with clear standouts including the barroom brawler "The Cripple Gnat Bounce" (whatever that means!); the driving "Let the Living Grow" (clearly inspired by Humble Pie's barnburning cover of "I Don't Need No Doctor"); and the all-time classic "Earth Eater," which contrasted a pummeling main riff against an amazing melodic hook, the likes of which seems to have cropped up in many an Aerosmith song over the ensuing years. 

In fact, were it not for the aforementioned "Driftwood" and a pair of rather average rockers in "Take a Picture" and "God Bless the Pervert" (hmmm...funny, but no "Louisiana Cockfight," that one), One Foot in History might have turned out as impressive and enduring as its predecessor. In the end, it was close enough to give no indication of the troubles that lay ahead, as bandleader John Nitzinger became embroiled with too many distractions and made fans wait almost four years for another Nitzinger LP. [New millennium reissues of One Foot in History were enhanced with a pair of bonus tracks: the funky album outtake "Power Glide" and a hair-raising, nine-minute live jam on "Texas Blues, Jelly Roll."]
by Eduardo Rivadavia
Tracks
1. Take A Picture - 3:17
2. Motherlode - 3:47
3. God Bless The Pervert - 3:20
4. Earth Eater - 2:55
5. Driftwood - 3:53
6. Let The Living Grow - 3:13
7. The Cripple Gnat Bounce - 2:51
8. One Foot In History - 4:12
9. Uncle John - 5:12
10.Texas Blues / Jelly Roll - 9:18
All songs by John Nitzinger
Bonus Track 10

Nitzinger
*Linda Waring - Drums, Percussion, Vocals
*Curly Benton - Bass, Vocals
*Bugs Henderson - Lead Guitar
*John Nitzinger - Lead Guitar, Vocals. 



 

Sunday, October 31, 2021

Nitzinger - Nitzinger (1972 us, jaggy hard blues rock with bonus tracks)



John Nitzinger is a Fort Worth, Texas guitarist and songwriter. In the very early 1970s, Nitzinger penned five songs for the Fort Worth band Bloodrock. When Bloodrock 2 went Gold, Nitzinger signed a contract with Capitol Records and his first album, the self titled Nitzinger, was released in early 1972.

Nitzinger's self-titled debut album was in fact the work of a budding Texan guitar cult legend -- the one and only John Nitzinger -- and his namesake power trio, whose music consisted of eclectic but still blues-drenched Southern hard rock and post-psych. The results include ZZ Top-style boogie and blues-rock ("Boogie Queen"), pre-Ted Nugent Gonzo guitar heroisms ("Witness to the Truth"), both of these at once ("Tickelick"), or neither, when it comes to the anthemic Southern rock of "My Last Goodbye," and semi-hit single "Louisiana Cock Fight." In addition, several cuts ("No Sun," "The Nature of Your Taste," etc.) see the trio augmented by soulful backup singers for a Mad Dogs & Englishmen sort of vibe, while others still see the versatile trio flirting with country-rock ("L.A. Texas Boy ") and plaintive balladry (the piano-enhanced "Enigma"). 

Yet the album's most intriguing/unique quality may be how the deceptively simple, universal, off the cuff material described above features obvious, if nuanced, sophistication, and is offset by lyrically weighty, post-flower power fare as seen in the aforementioned "No Sun" and "Hero of the War." And the fact that even these would-be progressive tendencies are kept to concise song lengths is what probably spared this album from utterly fatal dating; by extension, further separating Nitzinger's raised-on-the-jukebox-singles wheat, from the era's dominant music-conservatory-on-mushrooms chaff. Originally presented in a deluxe gatefold sleeve, it's not surprising that the Nitzinger LP has long been coveted by '70s rock collectors for the band's one-of-a-kind mixture of earthy grit and fearless (possibly naïve) flights of fancy.
by Eduardo Rivadavia
Tracks
1. L.A. Texas Boy - 2:20
2. Ticklelick - 2:41
3. No Sun - 3:46
4. Louisiana Cock Fight - 3:33
5. Boogie Queen - 4:46
6. Witness To The Truth - 3:24
7. The Nature Of Your Taste - 2:24
8. My Last Goodbye - 4:32
9. Enigma - 4:22
10.Hero Of The War - 3:35
11.King's X - 2:50
12.Pretty Boy Shuffle - 2:39
All songs by John Nitzinger
Bonus Tracks 11-12

Nitzinger
*Linda Waring - Percussion Section, Vocals
*Curly Benton - Bass, Vocals
*Bugs Henderson - Lead Guitar
*John Nitzinger - Lead Guitar, Vocals



 

Saturday, October 30, 2021

George Smith And Bacon Fat - The Complete Blue Horizon Sessions (1970 us, astonoshing blues rock, 2006 remaster and expanded)



George Smith was born on April 22, 1924 in Helena, Arkansas, but was raised in Cairo, Illinois. At age four, he was already taking harp lessons from his mother, a guitar player and a somewhat stern taskmaster: it was a case of get-it-right-or-else. In his early teens, he started hoboing around towns in the South and later joined Early Woods, a country band with Early Woods on fiddle and Curtis Gould on spoons. He also worked with a gospel group in Mississippi called the Jackson Jubilee Singers. Smith moved to Rock Island, Illinois, in 1941 and played with a group that included Francis Clay on drums. There is evidence that he was one of the first to amplify his harp. While working at the Dixie Theater, he took an old 16mm cinema projector, extracted the amplifier/speaker, and began using this on the streets.

Smith's first album on World Pacific, A Tribute to Little Walter, was released in 1968. In 1969, Bob Thiele produced an excellent solo album of Smith on Bluesway, and later made use of Smith as a sideman for his Blues Times label, including sets with T-Bone Walker and Harmonica Slim. Smith met Rod Piazza, a young white harp player, and they formed the Southside Blues Band, later known as Bacon Fat. In 1969, Smith signed with U.K. producer Mike Vernon and did the No Time for Jive album. He was less active in the '70s, appearing with Eddie Taylor and Big Mama Thornton. Around 1977, Smith became friends with William Clarke and they began working together. Their working relationship and friendship continued until Smith died on October 2, 1983.
by Michael Erlewine

Blue Horizon didn’t sign many contemporary US acts, although they did reissue lots of classic American tracks. Bacon Fat featured two bona fide blues heroes in the shape of the West Coast harmonica ace George Smith and the pianist J. D. Nicholson, as well as a bunch of talented white kids, including the harmonica- star-in-the-making Rod Piazza. Together, in these 1970 cuts, they give a blues masterclass with Smith — a revered figure among harp fans — showing off his big, almost sax-like harmonica sound and Piazza revelling in some choice Little Walter numbers.
by John Clarke, September 23 2006
Tracks
Disc 1 Bacon Fat "Grease One For Me" 1970
1. Up The Line (Walter Jacobs) - 4:15
2. Boom, Boom (Out Goes The Lights) (Stanley Lewis) - 3:47
3. Small's On 53rd (Rod Piazza) - 3:46
4. She's Wrong Woman (Rod Piazza) - 5:21
5. I Need Your Love (J.D. Nicholson) - 3:44
6. Juicy Harmonica (George Clinton Smith) - 3:54
7. Nobody But You (Walter Spriggs) - 2:13
8. Telephone Blues (George Clinton Smith, Sam Ling) - 5:58
9. You're So Fine (Walter Jacobs) - 3:09
10.Too Late (Willie Dixon) - 5:57
11.Evil (Willie Dixon) - 2:43
12.Blues Feeling (Rod Piazza) - 3:58
13.Off The Wall (Walter Jacobs) - 2:57
14.Ah' W Baby (Walter Jacobs) - 3:39
15.Mellow Down Easy (Willie Dixon) - 3:25
16.Blues With A Feeling (Rabon Tarrant) - 3:09
17.Tight Dress (George Clinton Smith, Nat McCoy) - 2:59
18.I've Had My Fun (James B. Oden) - 6:53
19.Help Me (Sony Boy Williamson, Willie Dixon) - 3:56
20.My Babe (Part 1) (Willie Dixon) - 2:38
Bonus Tracks 11-20
Tracks 11-12 single versions
Tracks 13-20 previously unreleased
Disc 2 George Smith "No Time For Jive" 1970
1. Someday You're Gonna Learn (To Treat Me Right) (Nat McCoy) - 4:14
2. Blue Switch (George Clinton Smith) - 2:53
3. Mississippi River Blues (George Clinton Smith) - 9:14
4. Before You Do Your Thing (You'd Better Think) (Nat McCoy) - 4:18
5. I Don't Want To Go, Baby (Nat McCoy) - 7:03
6. Good Things (Nat McCoy) - 3:45
7. Soul Feet (George Clinton Smith) - 3:44
8. No Time For Jive (George Clinton Smith) - 7:21
9. My Babe (Part 2) (Willie Dixon) - 1:55
10.I'm Ready (Willie Dixon) - 2:51
11.Telephone Blues (George Clinton Smith, Sam Ling) - 5:23
12.Forty Four (Chester Burnett) - 4:40
13.Blues With A Feeling (Rabon Tarrant) - 3:33
14.Summertime (DuBose Heyward, George Gershwin, Ira Gershwin) - 3:43
15.Got My Mojo Working (Preston Foster) - 4:09
16.Hamp's Boogie Woogie (Lionel Hampton, Milt Buckner) - 5:16
Bonus Tracks 9-16

Musicians
*George Clinton Smith - Harmonica, Vocals
*Rod Piazza - Harmonica, Vocals
*J.D. Nicholson - Organ, Piano
*Buddy Reed - Guitar
*Gregg Schaefer - Guitar
*Pee Wee Crayton - Guitar
*Marshall Hooks - Guitar
*Dick Innes - Drums
*Jerry Lee Smith - Bass
*Mike Vernon - Tambourine

Related Acts
1970  Bacon Fat - Grease One For Me

Friday, October 29, 2021

Muddy Waters - Fathers And Sons (1969 us, masterfully regal electric blues, 2001 bonus tracks remaster)



Fathers and Sons is certainly one of the finest sets of performances from Muddy in quite a while and will do much to offset the bad taste left by the previous Electric Mud and After the Rain albums.

Actually, the performances are surprisingly conservative efforts — certainly not the sort of exciting or fruitful cross-generation, cross-stylistic music one might have been led to expect from the lineup; Waters and Spann (and perhaps drummer Sam Lay) representing the modern Chicago blues mainstream, Bloomfield, Butterfield and Duck Dunn signaling more recent extensions of modern electric blues styles. No, the anticipated fusion doesn’t really take place, and the younger musicians seem content in undertaking roles that are wholly subservient to Muddy’s music. It gives an indication of just how highly the sons regard the father(s), and is a fine tribute to Muddy.

Mike and Paul are almost completely self-effacing throughout the album, particularly on the studio-recorded tracks — “All Aboard” (actually a remake of Crudup’s “Mean Old Frisco”), “Mean Disposition,” “Blow Wind Blow,” “Can’t Lose What You Ain’t Never Had,” “Walkin’ Thru the Park,” “Forty Days and Forty Nights,” “Standin’ ‘Round Crying,” “I’m Ready,” “Twenty-Four Hours” and “Sugar Sweet.” The impression left by these performances is that the participants were striving towards recreating the sounds and textures of Muddy’s original recordings of them and, in this, they’re fairly successful. They’re also helped greatly by the fact that these are songs that have not been done to death, so there’s a certain amount of freshness just due to this. Producer Norman Dayron chose wisely in determining what numbers were to be concentrated on at the sessions (I know for a fact that he sifted through virtually every Waters Chess recording, including unreleased numbers, to come up with a program of tunes that were good and strong but not over-familiar, and his advance planning paid off handsomely).

Happily, Muddy is in excellent voice throughout these performances and he comes across solidly and excitingly. This is in fact some of the best, most convincing singing from Muddy in a hell of a long time; these tracks show that when he’s at the top of his game he’s unbeatable. And he’s there most of the way through these performances. The music takes its lead from Muddy, and everything falls in place behind him.

Butterfield is excellent, playing with a great deal of controlled power, with taste and invention to spare, and tons of energy in reserve. His amplifier tone is beautifully gutty and funky, with just the right edge of cutting intensity. And he never overplays or indulges himself; his accompaniments perfectly complement Muddy’s singing — Paul is listening and responding all the time. Why, Butter, what big ears you have! The basic impetus of his work here is clearly Little Walter, and he’s got it down beautifully, as any number of performances reveal — “Mean Disposition,” “Blow Wind Blow” (two tasty hot Buttered choruses, the first with Bloomfield fills), “Forty Days and Forty Nights,” “I’m Ready,” and so on. Just tasty, intelligent, feelingful harp work, spare, lyrical, driving in turn — and always appropriate. And almost as rhythmically relaxed and insinuating as Little Walter, which is high praise indeed. By the way, while we’re talking about harmonica playing, there’s superlative chromatic work by Jeff Carp (formerly with Sam Lay, lately working with Earl Hooker) all the way through “All Aboard,” acting as a sort of continue to Muddy’s singing and Paul’s rhythmic interjections, on regular harmonica, on the other channel. But on this track it’s Jeff’s show, and he does a hell of a job.

Though he gets a few solos, Spann’s role is primarily rhythmic, and his playing seems a shade less incisive than it has been in the past (his recent heart attacks doubtless explain his adopting a more subdued role). And his piano sound, while clearly defined, is a bit distant sounding.

Bloomfield is almost completely subsidiary to Muddy, although he does have a few soloes in his usual style. Mike’s at his best here — in terms of the overall contours of the music, that is — when he works closely with Muddy and plays in a style akin to the usual second-guitar role developed by such as Little Walter and Jimmy Rogers. That is, good, interesting bass guitar lines that contrast nicely with what Muddy’s playing, or in brief line or phrase-ending fills. He’s actually less effective in solo, for here he plays in his own distinctive, very modern style and this tends to clash with the generally funkier needs and colors of Muddy’s music. Mike’s playing on “You Con’t Lose,” for example, seems a bit too cute for the tune, and his solo on “Walkin’ Thru the Park,” while good, is just a bit too frantic, particularly in view of the already busy textures on which it’s overlaid. The solo with which “I’m Ready” ends also seems inapposite when contrasted with what’s gone before. And so on. Generally, though, Mike does a good supporting job, the only clashes occurring when his own basically sweet melodic style is superimposed on Muddy’s guttier, more rhythmically forceful and less introspective of lyrical approach.

Let me emphasize, however, that these are fine performances on their own terms. It’s perhaps unfortunate that they hew so closely to the arrangements and textures of the “original” recordings of the tunes because this inevitably invites comparison with the originals. And quite frankly, these recent performances — all of them — come off second best. I don’t believe I’m being unfair, obstinate or wrongheadedly romantic in saying this, either: the originals just happen to have greater power, more clearly defined textures, better organization and focus more subtle rhythmic playing and, finally, greater originality than do these. For people who are not familiar with Muddy’s originals this will not be a problem, of course, and these pieces can be enjoyed for what they are — strong, direct, modern Chicago music played honestly and unpretentiously. I do hope, though, that new listeners will be motivated by these performances into checking out the original recordings, which Chess hopefully will be issuing as part of its forthcoming ambitious reissue series.

“Long Distance Call,” “Baby, Please Don’t Go,” “Honey Bee,” “The Same Thing,” and two versions of “Got My Mojo Working” — recorded at an April 24th Chicago benefit concert for the Phoenix Fellowship. Personnel is the same as for the studio sessions, with the exception that drummer Buddy Miles is added (to little audible effect) for the second “Mojo.” Not as polished or as well recorded as the studio material, these tracks possess a good bit of excitement and spirit — though not enough to challenge comparison with the original Waters recordings of the tunes.

Again, Muddy is in excellent voice and, fortunately, his singing is one of the few elements of the proceedings that were recorded adequately. His singing here is simultaneously relaxed and driving, with a nice easy swing that is never forced. Then, too, Butterfield plays slashing, burning harmonica on these tracks, never letting up and pushing things along. He and Muddy make these performances what they are. Bloomfield has two brief solos, neither particularly interesting primarily because they’re just too short, and he pretty much stays in the background, working with the rhythm section.

The recorded sound is not very good; it starts off very poorly but does manage to get a bit better. Spann’s piano and Bloomfield’s guitar are inaudible on “Long Distance Call,” but they’re brought up to a relatively proper level by the time “Baby, Please Don’t Go” (composer credit given Muddy rather than to Big Joe Williams; why?) gets under way. Things pop in and out through the rest of the performances. Sometimes Butterfield’s harp playing is all but lost in the shuffle, other times it cuts through the fuzzy textures with an abrupt sharpness. Apparently the recording situation was difficult (people milling around backstage, etc.), but still and all recording engineer Reice Hamel — who ostensibly specializes in location recording — should have been able to do better than this. With good mikes and a Scully 4-track, the sound should have been far better defined and balanced than this.

Some of the finest Muddy performances in a while but still a long way from the original performances on which his towering reputation rests. The project is helped not a little by Butterfield’s intelligent and feelingful playing, and Sam Lay’s propulsive drumming. Certainly this is the only recent Muddy Waters set to buy … and that’s what this set is — a Muddy Waters album. The faces of some of the sidemen may be white and young but otherwise that’s the sole difference between the performances of this and several earlier editions of the Waters band.
by Pete Welding
Tracks
1. All Aboard - 2:52
2. Mean Disposition - 5:43
3. Blow Wind Blow - 3:38
4. Can't Lose What You Ain't Never Had - 3:06
5. Walkin Thru The Park - 3:22
6. Forty Days And Forty Nights (Bernard Roth) - 3:08
7. Standin' Round Cryin' - 4:05
8. I'm Ready (Willie Dixon) - 3:39
9. Twenty Four Hours (Eddie Boyd) - 4:48
10.Sugar Sweet - 2:18
11.Country Boy - 3:20
12.I Love The Life I Live (I Live The Life I Love) (Willie Dixon) - 2:45
13.Oh Yeah (Willie Dixon) - 3:38
14.I Feel So Good (Big Bill Broonzy) - 3:01
15.Long Distance Call - 6:37
16.Baby, Please Don't Go (Big Joe Williams) - 3:04
17.Honey Bee - 3:56
18.The Same Thing (Willie Dixon) - 5:59
19.Got My Mojo Working, Part One (Preston Foster, McKinley Morganfield) - 3:23
20.Got My Mojo Working, Part Two (Preston Foster, McKinley Morganfield) - 5:12
All songs by McKinley Morganfield except where noted

Musicians
*Muddy Waters - Vocals, Guitar
*Otis Spann - Piano
*Michael Bloomfield - Guitar
*Paul Butterfield - Harmonica
*Donald Dunn - Bbass
*Sam Lay - Drums
*Paul Asbell - Rhythm Guitar
*Buddy Miles - Drums 
*Jeff Carp - Chromatic Harmonica 
*Phil Upchurch - Bass



Wednesday, October 27, 2021

Jade Warrior - Kites (1976 uk, fused ethnic african and far eastern influences with superbly innovative rock guitar, 2010 remaster)



Kites is more layered and complex than Waves, the duo's previous outing. The album reportedly took nine months to record, a long time by mid-1970s standards. The first half is dominated by Jon Field compositions, which are meant to convey the sounds of a kite drifting through skies that range from sunny and calm to stormy and dangerous. Dense and dramatic, numbers such as "Songs of the Forest" and "Wind Song" spotlight unconventional percussive combinations, ethereal wordless choir voices, and Field's gentle flute playing. 

Tony Duhig dominates the second half of Kites with a group of songs interpreting Teh Ch'eng, the Boat Monk, a traditional Zen story. This is a rare example of intense ambient sound, best realized in "Quietly by the River Bank," which begins with an ominous tone and explodes with the fury of a samurai warrior. The remainder is more contemplative and some of the energy flags, but the album concludes on a high note with "The Last Question," one of Jade Warrior's prettiest melodies.
by Casey Elston
Tracks
1. Songs of the Forest - 3:12
2. Wind Song - 4:05
3. The Emperor - 1:58
4. Wind Borne - 6:52
5. Kite Song - 3:04
6. Land of the Warrior - 3:29
7. Quietly by the River Bank - 3:20
8. Arrival of the Emperor: What Does the Venerable Sir Do? - 1:06
9. Teh Ch'eng: Do You Understand This? - 2:32
10.Arrival of Chia Shan: Disclosure and Liberation - 4:10
11.Towards the Mountains - 2:03
12.The Last Question - 0:36
All compositions by Tony Duhig, Jon Field

Jade Warrior
*Tony Duhig - Guitars, Percussion, Keyboards, Production
*Jon Field - Flutes, Guitar, Percussion, Production
With
*Roger Bryson - Piano
*Fred Frith - Violin
*Pete Gibson - Brass, Horn
*Coleridge Goode - Bass Guitar
*Debbie Hall - Violin
*Jeff Westley - Electric Piano
*Graham Morgan - Drums
*Joe O'Donnell - Violin
*Clodagh Simonds - Vocals
*Gowan Turnbull - Saxophone
*Geoff Westley - Piano
*Willie - Drums, Percussion
*Elmo - Mexican Foot Drums




 

Tuesday, October 26, 2021

Muddy Waters - After The Rain (1969 us, raw chicago blues with psych, fuzzy guitars and groovy basslines, 2011 digipak remaster)



Though Muddy Waters was no cadet by the time After The Rain emerged in the Spring of 1969, it was only his fifth studio album. It came on the heels of Electric Mud, his much-vaunted “psychedelic” album that was panned on release, though it sounds pretty decent in hindsight.

In theory this album is more Muddy than its precursor, full of songs he wrote or associated with him, though the picture of him looking weird with a frog in his hand is fair warning that this is not trad blues.

Again he’s in the company of Chess’ young dynamos: the great Charles Stepney co-produces with Marshall Chess and Gene Barge; the deliberately intrusive lead guitar is played by the underrated Phil Upchurch, and that’s Morris Jennings (Ramsey Lewis, Superfly) on drums.

It’s not quite the clash of cultures Electric Mud was perceived as; it doesn’t all work but when it does, it really works. It improves as it goes on: Rollin’ And Tumblin’ becomes a funky blues that you can imagine turning a beer shack to matchwood; the aiming-for-abstract Bottom Of The Sea, with riffin’ cellos and guitars like distant kelp, is amazing.

Honey Bee could almost be normal Muddy, Blues And Trouble flips another funk grenade on your ears and the album closes with two tunes played kinda straight. Kinda.

Muddy doesn’t pretend to be anything other than himself – BS might be goin’ on but it don’ bother me – which is what makes it work. Far better than you feared.
by Ian McCann
Tracks
1. I Am The Blues (Willie Dixon) - 4:39
2. Ramblin' Mind - 4:45
3. Rollin' And Tumblin' - 4:50
4. Bottom Of The Sea - 5:24
5. Honey Bee - 4:18
6. Blues And Trouble - 4:24
7. Hurtin' Soul (Clarence Williams) - 4:39
8. Screamin' And Cryin' - 5:02
All songs by McKinley Morganfield except where stated

Personnel
*Muddy Waters - Vocals, Guitar
*Phil Upchurch - Guitar
*Pete Cosey - Guitar
*Paul Oscher - Harmonica 
*Louis Satterfield - Bass
*Morris Jennings - Drums
*Otis Spann - Piano
*Charles Stepney - Organ





 

Monday, October 25, 2021

Denny Doherty - Waiting For A Song (1974 canada, wonderful vocal orchestrated folk, 2011 digipak remaster)



Denny Doherty was born in Halifax, Nova Scotia, the son of an ironworker and a "housewife and mystic" as he once described his mother. He made his first public appearance at the age of 15 singing the Pat Boone hit Love Letters in the Sand at amateur night at the local skating rink. By the late 1950s he had shifted allegiance to the burgeoning folk song movement and had gained a recording contract with the New York company Columbia, with his group the Halifax Three.

The group emigrated to New York, the centre of the folk revival in the early 1960s. In Greenwich Village, he met Cass Elliott with whom he formed a short-lived group, the Mugwumps, which also featured future Lovin' Spoonful members John Sebastian and Zal Yanovsky.

Next, Doherty joined forces with husband and wife John and Michelle Phillips, as the New Journeymen. Michelle recalled that "it was so incredible to sing with somebody who had such a beautiful voice because John and I were just little croakers". Early in 1965, Cass Elliott brought her equally vital vocal talent to the group and the Mamas and the Papas were formed. As John Phillips (obituary, March 20 2001) wrote in the song Creeque Alley, his New York musician friends such as Roger McGuinn (of the Byrds) and Barry McGuire (singer of the hit Eve of Destruction) had already headed west ("McGuinn and McGuire just a-gettin' higher in LA"); the Mamas and the Papas decided to follow suit.

In the summer of 1968, however, the group collapsed as a result of the prodigious drug intake and the complicated inter-personal relationships of its members. As music historian Barney Hoskyns put it: "An affair began between Michelle and Denny for whom Cass lusted."

Mama Cass launched herself on a solo career, while Michelle Phillips moved into acting and John and Denny each recorded solo albums. Denny's Waiting For a Song was the last album Cass sang on before her death in London in 1974. In 1975 Doherty made his acting debut in Man on the Moon, a Broadway show created by Phillips and Andy Warhol.

Dennis (Denny) Gerrard Stephen Doherty, singer and actor, born November 29 1940; died January 19 2007.
by Dave Laing, 22 Jan 2007

Denny Doherty's second effort released in 1974. The title of "Give Me Back That Old Familiar Feeling," paired with the album's title, provide the intertwined recurring lyrical themes: Doherty as the lost artist looking for a song to sing and a reason to live -- the concepts becoming interchangeable after a while -- and continually looking to the past for fear of looking forward. This motif is underscored by the presence of his former bandmates, Cass Elliot and Michelle Phillips, on backing vocals throughout the record. Their harmonizing voices are in fine form, but the arrangements are far less novel than those from the group's heyday, and Doherty doesn't hit notes as brightly with his tenor as he once did.

The poor distribution rendered this album an instant obscurity, though collectors and Doherty fans were delighted by its reissue on the Varese Vintage imprint in 2001. In hindsight, the record is remarkable for its naked honesty, Doherty making little secret, either in the tunes or in the liner photos, of how much of a wreck he is, but on its own merits, Waiting for a Song is too much of a buzzkill to tout unreservedly. Highlights include the minor AC hit "You'll Never Know" and the Larry Weiss-penned ballad "Lay Me Down (Roll Me Out to Sea)."
by Joseph McCombs
Tracks
1. Simone (Dan England, John Ford Coley) - 3:13
2. Children Of My Mind (Gary Osborne) - 3:16
3. You'll Never Know (Harry Warren, Mack Gordon) - 2:56
4. Together (Dick Addrisi, Don Addrisi) - 3:16
5. It Can Only Happen In America (Denny Doherty, Henry 'Bud' Fanton) - 4:02
6. Southern Comfort (Rick Sandler) - 3:03
7. You've Lost That Loving Feeling (Barry Mann, Cynthia Weil, Phil Spector) - 4:23
8. Goodnight And Good Morning (Daryl Hall, John Oates) - 2:41
9. Lay Me Down (Roll Me Out To Sea) (Larry Weiss) - 4:12
10.Give Me Back That Old Familiar Feeling (Bill C. Graham) - 2:28
11.I'm Home Again (Timothy Martin, Walt Meskell) - 3:04

Personnel
*Denny Doherty - Guitar, Vocals
*Cass Elliot - Vocals 
*Michelle Phillips - Vocals 

Sunday, October 24, 2021

The Second Coming - The Second Coming (1970 us, awesome jazz blues brass rock)



Originally hailed from Chicago moved to San Francisco and released one album and a couple of singles. With the recent glut of groups using a brass section, it's good to hear one that has potential to top all the ones currently in existence.

The Second Coming, is a nine piece homegrown group played with finesse not often seen in rock groups during its recent stay here. Music is tight when its need to be and fee when the songs call for it.

Leader is Buddy Stephens who is vocalist and doubles on drums and trumpet. His voice is powerful and was well sjhowcased as the group did several numbers from its Mercury records LP. Les King is a standout on drums, as he pushed, shoved and drove the band through the songs, never allowing a letup.

The horn section was punchy, with Bob Penny on guitar, Ernie Seil on bass, Tom Palmer  on bass, and Dave Miller on organ, each leading the right amount of support.

The Strong soloing talent of the group was showcased during "Ain't It Funky", a 20 minute piece that was all too short. Put simply the group is a dynamite.
by George Knemeyer, October 10, 1970
Tracks
1. Requiem For A Rainy Day (Dave Miller) - 4:03
2. Take Me Home (Dave Miller) - 4:19
3. Nobody Cares (Dave Miller) - 5:33
4. Landlubber (Dave Miller) - 5:32
5. Roundhouse (Dave Miller) - 3:34
6. It's Over (Bob Penny) - 4:47
7. Jeremiah Crane (Bill Dinwiddie, Jack Kramer, Richard Single) - 10:53

The Second Coming
*Buddy Stephens - Lead Vocals, Drums, Trumpet
*Bob Penny - Guitar, Vocals
*Les King - Drums, Congas, Percussion, Timpani
*Jack Kramer - Trumpet, Flugelhorn, Trombone, Vocals
*Bill Dinwiddle - Trombone
*Dick Rudolph - Alto, Baritone Saxophones, Alto Flute, Trombone
*Ernie Seil - Bass, Vocals, Guitar
*Tom Palmer - Bass, Vocals, Guitar
*Dave Miller - Hammond Organ, Electric Piano, Vocals