Sunday, February 6, 2022

Golden Earring - Contraband (1976 holland, high energy rock)



After pursuing a strict art rock style on To the Hilt, Golden Earring altered its style once more on the band's next album. Golden Earring replaced keyboardist Robert Jan Stips with guitarist Eelco Gelling and put aside its art rock pretensions for a hard rock sound dominated by the group's new twin-guitar attack. The result was Contraband, the band's strongest album since Moontan. It starts powerfully with "Bombay," an exuberant blast whose elaborate arrangement works in plenty of atmospheric country-styled shadings into an otherwise hard rock track. 

Other highlights include "Mad Love's Comin'," a dazzlingly atmospheric rumination on romance that transforms from a tense acoustic blues into a spacy mid-tempo rocker worthy of Pink Floyd, and "Fighting Windmills," a stately tribute to being an individual (a common theme of Golden Earring songs) that works a snaky, Indian-sounding guitar riff augmented by swooning strings into the song's midsection. "Con Man" is another worthwhile track, a tribute to the raffish character of the title that highlights the electrifying guitar interplay between Gelling and George Kooymans. Despite this high percentage of strong tracks, not everything on the album is this strong: For instance, "Sueleen" and "Faded Jeans" are solid tracks but lack the sense of dynamics and powerful riffs that fuel numbers like "Bombay." 

However, even these lesser tunes work thanks to lean arrangements and a consistently energetic performance from the band. In the end, Contraband is a worthwhile addition to any Golden Earring collection, and well worth a spin for fans of '70s hard rock in general.
by Donald A. Guarisco
Tracks
1. Bombay - 3:52
2. Sueleen - 5:40
3. Con Man - 7:10
4. Mad Love's Comin' - 7:45
5. Fighting Windmills - 4:38
6. Faded Jeans - 5:07
7. Time's Up - 3:52
All songs written by Barry Hay, George Kooymans

The Golden Earring
*Eelco Gelling - Guitar, Slide Guitar
*Rinus Gerritsen - Bass, Keyboard
*Barry Hay - Flute, Vocals
*George Kooymans - Guitar, Vocals
*Robert Jan Stips - Piano, Keyboard, Moog Synthesizer
*Cesar Zuiderwijk - Drums
With
*Robert Jan Stips - MiniMoog, Piano, String Arrangements
*Neppie Noya - Percussion, Conga
*Patricia Paay - Vocals
 
1965 Just Ear Rings (2009 extra tracks edition)
1966  Winter-Harvest (2009 extra tracks issue)
1968-69  Miracle Mirror (2009 bonus tracks edition)
1969  On The Double
1969/71 Eight Miles High / Seven Tears

Noah - Noah (1970 canada, elegant psych pop)



Not to be confused with several groups called 'Noah' before or after, Dutch immigrant Barry "Buzz" Vandersel started his first band, Buzzy & The Belvederes at 14 years old. With himself handling bass and his cousins Peter and Marinus Vandertogt on guitars and drums, the Trenton, Ontario kids recruited Paul Clapper as lead vocalist and began playing around the local area through the mid '60s.

They were eventually noticed by manager Al MacMillan from Nimbus 9 Productions. The first thing he did was chang their name to Tyme And a Half. He had enough confidence in their writing he let them write their two singles that year, both dripping of flower power - "It's Been A Long Time" b/w "Magic Island," and then "Cassandra" b/w "It's Happening Here."

Jack Richardson took a personal interest in the band, and helped land them a deal with RCA Victor, who suggested another name change, and Noah was born. Their self-titled debut was on the store shelves in the summer of 1970. All the members had a hand in writing the songs, with Peter Vandertogt and Clapper handling the majority of it. "Summer Sun" became the first single under the new name, but Clapper wasn't happy with the direction the music was going - less poppy than previously, so he quit prior to the band setting off on the road to promote the album.

At the age of 23, Vandersel passed away in the fall of 1975, and members went on to other projects, or eventually got out of the business all together.
by Jaimie Vernon
Tracks
1. Bury The Remains (Marinus Vandertogt) - 3:11
2. Sleep Sleep (Marinus Vandertogt, Paul Clapper) - 3:54
3. Try A Little Kindness (Marinus Vandertogt) - 2:54
4. Angela (Paul Clapper) - 3:12
5. Summer Sun (Paul Clapper) - 3:51
6. Sunday Mass (Barry Vandersel, Marinus Vandertogt) - 3:21
7. (Suite For An) Antique Lady (Marinus Vandertogt, Paul Clapper) - 4:07
8. One Way Street (Marinus Vandertogt, Paul Clapper) - 2:50
9. Oscar's Cellar (Marinus Vandertogt, Paul Clapper) - 2:26
10.I Wish You Love (Marinus Vandertogt, Paul Clapper) - 3:10

Noah
*Barry "Buzz" Vandersel - Vocals, Bass
*Marinus Vandertogt - Lead Guitar, Vocals
*Peter Vandertogt - Drums
*Paul Clapper - Vocals, Guitar

Thursday, February 3, 2022

Dewey Terry - Chief (1972 us, fun and funky stew of blues, soul and rock, 2018 edition)



DEWEY TERRY HELPED INVENT ROCK & ROLL, BUT ALL it's given him is a case of the blues. As the songwriting force that drove late-'50s Specialty Records duo Don & Dewey, he and partner Don "Sugarcane" Harris took command of the fledgling rock & roll idiom with high frantic style. Melding the gospel passion of Sister Rosetta Tharpe, the soul grit of James Brown, the tortured blues of Guitar Slim and the lusty carnival rock & roll of Little Richard, they jammed it all into a reckless beat grinder, twisted the crank and delivered the final product with a howling force that could only have come from the streets of Los Angeles.

The Don & Dewey mix of heat, jive and unadulterated talent was a shock in its day. Not yet 21 when they started on Specialty, these cats were upstarts, hardcore; they not only wrote, played and produced all their songs, they both flat-out Screamed Into The Microphone. When they weren't hollering, they spoke in wildly poetic, almost indecipherable tongues (langga langga oli-oki changa-chang). They did the jungle hop with the beeb-a-lee bop, mammer-jammered at the hootenanner and got clean for their mama's papa's sister's brother's uncle's crazy child -- the one with the champagne eyes. They did it all, leaping from slam to simmer on perfectly vocalized close-harmony ballads that anticipated the glories of mid-'60s soul with blueprint accuracy. Hell, when Dewey went into a recitation, Don even urged him to "Go on, rap!"

Terry, a big, genial man with a clean-shaven howitzer shell of a dome, was born in Los Angeles on July 17, 1937, the son of a railroad man who gave the family a comfortable upbringing in nearby Pasadena. Terry always had a piano at home. "It was just a natural thing for me to do, play piano and sing," he says. "I started out playin' boogie-woogie. My mother had an old Victrola and lots of 78 records. I could always hear Count Basie, Duke Ellington, but what was so nice was that I could go out in my back yard where my mother raised chickens, stand up on a box and look over the chicken coops, and there was always a church caravan that came through on Sundays. You'd see a couple hundred people there, and I had the pleasure of seeing Sister Rosetta Tharpe, Mahalia Jackson, the Five Blind Boys of Mississippi. At the time I didn't know who they were, but I knew they got down!"

From his mid-'50s teenage launch with local doo-wop sextet the Squires (whose "Cindy" on the indie
Mambo label remains a prized dusty), Terry was clearly a force on the rise. He and boyhood chum Don Harris soon departed the staid vocal group: "We became Don & Dewey because there were too many people in the other band to make any money," he says. "Don and I did a record called 'Miss Sue' and 'My Heart Is Achin'' on a label called Spot, and we had some managers out of Chicago who'd been shaping us for a couple of years, and that evolved into this record. And it got a lot of radio play: Hunter Hancock -- Hunting With Hunter -- he used to play my record all the time. Peter Potter's Platter Parade, and [fabled record shop] Dolphins of Hollywood was playing it, too."

That kind of exposure was invaluable, and with such instant local notoriety, Don & Dewey's supercharged sound only blossomed wilder. "The real stomp-down, knockdown blues things, we'd been doin' that the whole time," he says. "Rhythm & blues were changin'. That's when we learned to rock it. R&B was too slow, too methodical -- felt like, 'C'mon, baby, we don't want to hear that!' The thing is, at that time, most people found what we did quite harsh. They said the music was too loud, always told us to cut our amplifiers down -- they did not want you to wiggle and jiggle. But I think that contributed to our success, because -- well, the kids were doin' it anyway: rock & roll."

DON & DEWEY SWIFTLY ASCENDED FROM HIGH school auditorium dates to steady work at Billy Berg's, the Hollywood boīte that had for years featured the biggest names in jazz, and at the Royal Room at Las Palmas and Hollywood, where Specialty head Art Rupe wooed them in 1957, not long before Little Richard, after seeing Sputnik arc over the Australian stadium where he was performing, took it as a sign from God and quit rock & roll.

"We immediately signed with Specialty," says Terry. "They already had Little Richard, and we were billed as 'The Two Little Richards,' but at that time Richard was so hot that he was overbearing everything. And that label had Guitar Slim -- 'The Things I Used To Do.' He came out of Louisiana to do some recording, and he was playin' at the 5/4 Ballroom. I had met him at Specialty Records one day -- he came in a green car, with a green suit, about 30 crazed women, and the party was on! He was really the Charlie Parker of the time, with that Fender guitar, which at that time was very new. So I learned to play the Fender just like Guitar Slim. He didn't play with a pick -- I don't play with a pick. We were taught to play the guitar with our hands, because there is nothing like the human touch. That's the way we learned."

The exposure to Slim's cataclysmic brand of guitar blues was warped further by Terry into a mystic brand of volcanic rock & roll. Don & Dewey's cover of Los Angeles R&B stalwart Joe Liggins' "Pink Champagne" pushed it into such radical spheres that Specialty didn't release it for decades. Their career reached fever pitch as quickly as their music: "We started touring for the Gill Agency, who were located on Western Avenue, and they sent us to the Apollo Theater with Redd Foxx, the Dells, Screamin' Jay Hawkins, Moms Mabley and Big Maybelle.

"We did the first concert over in Honolulu, with Chuck Berry and Pat Boone! Pat came in with his little white shoes and his sweaters, very nice man -- very young at the time. But we did those shows, and then my audiences changed -- they were no longer black audiences, they were totally white. Right after the Apollo show, the records started and things changed."

They rocked through the early '60s on bandstands all over the nation, participating in the 1964 second coming of a secular Little Richard, both on the road and on his comeback single, "Bama Lama Bama Loo." It peaked at No. 83 on the Billboard chart, then Don & Dewey, like the Treniers, another gloriously raw, rocking R&B band, began annual lounge engagements in Las Vegas, appearing at the Dunes for five straight years.

After Harris went tripping off with John Mayall and Frank Zappa, Terry saw several of his compositions revived with significant impact: "Farmer John," covered by Chicano rockers the Premiers, became an East Los anthem; the Olympics scored with "Big Boy Pete," and the Righteous Brothers began life as stone Don & Dewey clones, copping the pair's repertoire and stage moves and even charting with two Don & Dewey songs. In 1974, Terry's ballad "Leaving It Up to You" became the BMI-certified most-played song of the year, thanks to covers by R&B's Dale & Grace, pop's Donny & Marie Osmond and country's Freddy Fender. But much of that money went into wily Art Rupe's exploitative coffers; Dewey has fared quite badly, at times, in business -- as did everyone else on Specialty (in the mid-'80s, he joined Little Richard's picket line outside Specialty's Sunset Boulevard offices). Dewey Terry died at aged 65 on May 11 2003
by Jonny Whiteside
Tracks
1. She's Leavin' Me (Dewey Terry) - 1:51
2. Big Boy Pete (Dewey Terry, Don "Sugarcane" Harris) - 3:25
3. Funky Old Town (Dewey Terry, Robb Kunkel) - 5:01
4. Suit For The Cat (Dewey Terry, Don "Sugarcane" Harris) - 4:41
5. Do On My Feet (What I Did In The Street) (Dewey Terry) - 4:42
6. Reef Ade (Dewey Terry) - 1:31
7. Well Known Man (Danny Holien) - 4:28
8. Sweet As Spring (Dewey Terry) - 3:48
9. De Blooze (If You Wanna Get Groovy Now) (Dewey Terry) - 5:35
10.Let Them Ol' Stars And Stripes Shine (Dewey Terry) - 3:39

Musicians
*Dewey Terry - Piano, Vocals, Guitar, Electric Harpsichord, Organ
*Steve Swenson - Bass
*Bob "Jenks" Jenkins - Congas
*Ga Ga - Drums
*Danny Holien - Rhythm Guitar
*Ron Brown - Bass 
*Earl Palmer - Drums 
*Harvey Mandel - Guitar  
*Bob "Jenks" Jenkins - Congas 
*Ignatz Therbly - Percussion 
*Robb Kunkel - Guitar, Piano 
*John R. - Voice Actor 
*Jim Horn - Soloist, Saxophone 
*Jimmie Haskell - Vibraphone
*Eric Gale - Bass 
*Mel Brown - Guitar
*Cathy Caper - Chorus  
*David Haskell - Chorus 
*Debbie Brown - Chorus  
*Scottie Haskell - Chorus

Wednesday, February 2, 2022

126 - Graveyard Paradise The Complete 126 And Taboo Recordings (1966-68 norway, reflective folk beat, 2008 remaster)



Rock band started in Bodø in 1964 under the name The Blue Flames. Originally an instrumental group with Asbjørn Krogtoft (guitar), Gunvar Marken (guitar), Oddvar Hansen (bass) and Hans Erik Steffensen (drums). The latter was soon replaced by Roger Saksenvik, and inspired by the Beatles, they began to sing. The group was called The Fighters for a short period, before in 1965 they changed their name to 126. - with a full stop, so that it should be pronounced "one hundred and twenty-six". It was the group's supporters who began to pronounce the name with the English variant "one-two-six", which the band did not mind at all. The number combination was the group's vocalist and songwriter Asbjørn Krogtoft (Asa) who came up with: He had a girlfriend who lived in Håkon at streetnumber 26. Number 1 was for him,

1-2-6 signed up for a talent competition in connection with the Polar Circle Festival in Mo in 1966. They won this, and the prize was a trial recording for the record company RCA Victor . This resulted in the group's first single "Veto" / "Little You", which became a small hit in Bodø in the winter of 1966/67, but a flop in the rest of the country. However, the band came back strong six months later with single number two: "Graveyard Paradise". A strong Bob Dylan-inspired Asa had originally written the text as a poem in Norwegian, and it was one of many poems that made up the collection Epigon, intended for Gyldendal Norsk Forlag. The collection of poems never saw the light of day, but in 1990 - when 1-2-6 was to mark the group's 25th anniversary - most Norwegian stanzas were used in a remake of "Graveyard Paradise" with the subtitle "Cemetery of Eden".

"Graveyard Paradise" exploded like a bomb in August 1967. It attracted justified attention that a young Norwegian - 20-year-old Asa - could write such a reflective song, and even more so in well-formulated English. However, the composer himself was disappointed that so few record buyers understood the serious message of the song. For most of them, 1-2-6 appeared as pop stars, which is underlined by the album's success: "Graveyard Paradise" was a total of 15 weeks on the VG list, six of them in third place. 20 years later, it was chosen by Dagbladet's readers as the second best Norwegian melody of all time, only beaten by "Du ska få en dag i mårå". It is part of the story that the song actually had four verses, but that one was cut so that the song would fit better with the single format. The long version can be heard on the compilation album One Two Six (1995).

The group began work on an LP, two singles came out, before it's release. "Who's Been Sleeping In My Bed" got the uncomfortable job of being the sequel to "Graveyard Paradise". An impossible task for a lightweight song, and it did not take long before both the group and the record company realized that they had opted for the wrong horse. "Elisabeth" was a far stronger song, and it managed to capture a place among the top ten on the VG list. The LP Curtains Falling was finally released in early 1968, but by then it was already 1-2-6 dissolved. After a very strenuous tour along the coast from Western Norway to Kirkenes, the decision was made on Christmas Eve 1967. The fans sat back with Curtains Falling- an LP full of experimental inventions and good songs, all twelve composed by Asa. There was a last single in the spring of 1968, recorded the autumn before while working on the LP. Ironically, it was entitled "1-2-6".

Asa had debuted as a solo artist at the end of 1967 with the single "Woman in black" / "Then she was just as pale" (with 1-2-6 as a backing band on the A-side), but instead of focusing on a solo career formed he band Taboo in early 1968. Taboo only managed to make two singles before they disbanded after six months. For a while, Asa chose schooling and family, and made his record career a hobby. (All four of Taboo's single songs are also on the CD collection One Two Six .)

In May 1990, the four members of 1-2-6 met in the studio to discuss the possibility of a reunion on the occasion of the 25th anniversary. Gunvar Marken had found the lyrics to a song that 1-2-6 had never recorded on a record - "17 Fool, Heh!" - and one led to the other: The group met in the studio to make five new recordings and then went on a nationwide tour. "Graveyard Paradise" turned out to be as relevant as in 1967, especially in its original Norwegian language costume. The new version was a combination of both Norwegian and English text. The back of this single was the charming "Spring -65", where Asa retold the story of the four young boys from Bodø who put everything into the music. Four of the five recordings made by the reunited 1-2-6 in 1990 were found good enough for the double CD collectionOne Two Six , which was published in 1995 and which contains the group's collected works.
Rockipedia
Tracklist
1. Mirror For Sale - 2:01
2. That's Why I'm Here - 2:52
3. Veto - 1:52
4. Graveyard Paradise - 2:47
5. MES (Mailbox Execution System) - 3:11
6. Curtains Falling - 3:13
7. Elisabeth - 2:59
8. Sing And Smile - 2:54
9. Today - 2:59
10.Wake Up, Johnny - 2:07
11.Who's Been Sleeping In My Bed? - 2:53
12.We're Too Young - 2:36
13.The Rowboat Captain - 2:49
14.Theme From A Green Mailbox - 3:02
15.Little You - 2:46
16.I'm Jokin' - 2:10
17.I Don't Want Your Love - 2:18
18.1 2 6 - 2:17
19.I'm Poisoned - 2:43
20.Graveyard Paradise (Radio Session) - 3:59
21.Vampire Tango - 2:59
22.You're My Friend - 1:53
23.Queen Of Spades - 2:45
24.Fonebone Street - 2:18
25.Today - 2:39
26.The Rowboat Captain - 2:35
27.We're Too Young - 2:08
28.1 2 6 - 3:19
All songs written by Asa Krogtoft
Tracks 21-24 as Taboo

126
*Asbjørn "Asa" Krogtoft - Vocals, Lead Guitar
*Gunvar Marken - Rhythm Guitar
*Oddvar Hansen - Bass
*Roger Saksenvik - Drums

Tuesday, February 1, 2022

Merry Clayton - Merry Clayton (1971 us, fascinating amalgam of blues folk classic rock, 2010 remaster)



The Sophomore album from Merry Clayton, arrived in 1971 and again featured a superb backing ensemble including Preston, Sample, and the James Cleveland Choir. That same year, she also released a cover of the Carole King/Gerry Goffin song "Oh No Not My Baby," which became her second song to crack the Billboard Hot 100 and earned her a Grammy nomination for Best R&B Vocal Performance. That same year, she also starred as the original Acid Queen in the first London production of the Who's Tommy. More high-profile sessions followed, including singing on Carole King's Tapestry, Linda Ronstadt's Linda Ronstadt, the Rolling Stones' Exile on Main St., and Lynyrd Skynyrd's Second Helping, the latter of which found her singing on the classic "Sweet Home Alabama." She also sang on Ringo Starr's Top Five 1974 hit "Oh My My," and the Blackbyrds' 1975 hit "Rock Creek Park," before returning to her solo work with 1975's Gene McDaniels-produced Keep Your Eye on the Sparrow. 

Clayton rounded out the decade with 1979's disco- and gospel-infused Emotion. Though her own recordings slowed over the next decade, she remained a highly sought-after session vocalist, appearing on albums with Irene Cara, the Brothers Johnson, Kenny Loggins, Lou Gramm, and others. She also contributed to several soundtracks, scoring another Hot 100 hit with "Yes" off the Dirty Dancing soundtrack. She branched out, joining Della Reese's all-star gospel group Brilliance and moving into acting with roles in the 1987 Ally Sheedy film Maid to Order and the cop drama Cagney & Lacey. In 1989, she recorded a cover duet of the song "Almost Paradise" with Eric Carmen. 

In 1994, she returned to her solo work with the gospel-inspired Miracles. That same year, she sang on Tori Amos' hit "Cornflake Girl" on Under the Pink. Shen also joined Marianne Faithfull and Darlene Love on the 1996 television show 20th Century Pop for a performance of "20 Rock-Era Standards." More work followed, including sessions with Sparta, Joe Cocker, Holly Robinson, and others. In 2013, she was featured in the documentary about background singers, 20 Feet from Stardom. The film won the Oscar for Best Documentary and the Grammy for Best Music Film. Around the same time, she contributed to sessions for G. Love & Special Sauce's Sugar and Coldplay's A Head Full of Dreams.

In 2014, Clayton was involved in a car crash in Los Angeles that left her with severe injuries to her lower extremities. Consequently, her legs were amputated at the knees. She eventually recovered and returned to work, releasing the 2021 album Beautiful Scars. Co-produced by her longtime friend, A&R legend-Lou Adler, along with legendary gospel vocalist, instrumentalist, and songwriter Terry Young, Beautiful Scars featured songs by Diane Warren and Coldplay's Chris Martin. Also included on the album was a reworked version of Leon Russell's "Song for You," which Clayton first recorded on her  debut album. 
by Matt Collar
Tracks
1. Southern Man (Neil Young) - 3:15
2. Walk On In (Carole King) - 2:44
3. After All This Time (Carole King) - 3:09
4. Love Me Or Let Me Be Lonely (Anita Poree, Jerry Peters, Skip Scarborough) - 3:32
5. A Song For You (Leon Russell) - 4:15
6. Sho'Nuff (Billy Preston, Joe Greene) - 2:44
7. Steamroller (James Taylor) - 3:44
8. Same Old Story (Carole King) - 4:50
9. Light On The Hill (Richard Jones) - 2:40
10.Grandma's Hands (Bill Withers) - 3:30
11.Whatever (Leon Ware) - 2:40

Musicians
*Merry Clayton - Vocals
*Wilton Felder - Bass
*Paul Humphrey - Drums
*David T. Walker - Guitar
*Billy Preston - Keyboards 
*Carole King - Keyboards
*Clarence McDonald - Keyboards 
*Jerry Peters - Keyboards, Vocals 
*Joe Sample - Keyboards
*Abigail Haness - Vocals  
*Patrice Holloway - Vocals 
*James Cleveland - Vocals 
*Curtis Amy - Saxophone


Monday, January 31, 2022

Merry Clayton - Gimme Shelter (1970 us, impressive blend of rhythm 'n' blues, folk and classic rock, 2010 remaster)



Best known for singing on the Rolling Stones' classic song "Gimme Shelter," Merry Clayton is a powerful, gospel-influenced vocalist who's had a long and successful career as backup singer, solo artist, and actress. A member of Ray Charles' Raelettes in the early '60s, Clayton rose to fame singing backup on the Rolling Stones' 1969 anti-war anthem "Gimme Shelter." The song gained immediate popularity, eventually reaching the status as one of the best songs to emerge out of the Vietnam era. Clayton covered her own version of the song for her 1971 debut album, Gimme Shelter, and built upon her success, releasing several more albums and continuing to sing for artists like Carole King, Linda Ronstadt, Lynyrd Skynyrd, and many more. Raised in the church, she also sang in a gospel group with Della Reese and got into acting, appearing in film and on TV. Following her appearance in the Oscar-winning 2013 documentary 20 Feet from Stardom, Clayton was involved in a car accident that resulted in the amputation of her legs. Ever resilient, she recovered and in 2021 completed her return to the spotlight with the ebullient studio album Beautiful Scars.

Named Merry in honor of her birth on December 25, 1948, Clayton grew up in New Orleans in a religious, musically inclined family, the daughter of Eva B. Clayton and Reverend A.G. Williams Clayton, Sr. Beginning at the age of five, she sang with her siblings (including percussionist Sam Clayton) at her father's New Zion Baptist Church. After a family move to Los Angeles, the then-teenaged Clayton caught the attention of vocal group the Blossoms, members of whom took her under their wing and encouraged her to pursue a music career. Often mistakenly billed as "Mary," Clayton quickly found work singing backing vocals. In 1962, she made her recorded debut duetting with Bobby Darin on the song "Who Can I Count On? (When I Can't Count on You.)." Around the same time, she released the Jack Nitzsche-produced solo single "The Doorbell Rings." In 1963, she also recorded the original version of "The Shoop Shoop Song (It's in His Kiss)," which would become a Top Ten hit for Betty Everett the following year. 

More work followed, including a stint as a member of Ray Charles' backing vocal group the Raelettes. She also sang on tracks with a bevy of iconic performers, including Pearl Bailey, Phil Ochs, Burt Bacharach, Tom Jones, Joe Cocker, Linda Ronstadt, and Carole King, as well as appearing on several tracks off Neil Young's debut album. However, it was her 1969 session on the Rolling Stones' "Gimme Shelter" that solidified her reputation. Recorded during a late-night session with producer Nitzsche, the song heavily featured Clayton (who was pregnant at the time) throughout, including on the chorus, which found her harmonizing with Mick Jagger. Although never officially released as a single, "Gimme Shelter" helped land Rolling Stones' album Let It Bleed at number three on the Billboard 200 and became an iconic anti-war anthem of the Vietnam era. Regularly played at the Stones' live shows, it is largely considered not just one of the group's best songs, but one of the best songs of the '60s.

In 1970, Clayton followed her success with the Rolling Stones by releasing her debut solo effort, Gimme Shelter. Produced by Lou Adler, the album found her backed by a bevy of soul and funk musicians, including keyboardists Billy Preston and Joe Sample, guitarist David T. Walker, drummer Paul Humphrey, and others. Her version of "Gimme Shelter" peaked at number 73 on the Hot 100. That same year, she sang a version of "Lift Every Voice and Sing" which was included on the soundtrack of director Robert Altman's film Brewster McCloud, and she contributed two songs to Donald Cammell and Nicolas Roeg's film Performance, which also starred Jagger. 
by Matt Collar
Tracks
1. Country Road (James Taylor) - 3:45  
2. Tell All the People (Robby Krieger) - 2:54  
3. Bridge Over Troubled Water (Paul Simon) - 5:47 - 
4. I've Got Life (Galt MacDermot, Jerome Ragin, James Redo) - 3:27 
5. Gimme Shelter (Mick Jagger, Keith Richards) - 3:30  
6. Here Comes Those Heartaches Again (James Cleveland) - 3:03  
7. Forget It I Got It (Jimmy Miller, Gary Wright) - 2:53 
8. You've Been Acting Strange (Billy Preston) - 3:16  
9. I Ain't Gonna Worry My Life Away (Merry Clayton, Billy Preston) - 4:19  
10.Good Girls (Billy Page) - 2:43  
11.Glad Tidings (Van Morrison) - 2:40

Personnel
*Merry Clayton - Vocals
*David Cohen - Guitar
*Gary Coleman - Percussion 
*Victor Feldman - Percussion 
*Paul Humphrey - Drums
*King Errisson - Congas 
*Lou Morrell - Guitar 
*Orville 'Red' Rhodes - Guitar
*Billy Preston - Organ, Piano
*Joe Sample - Organ, Piano
*Louie Shelton - Guitar
*David T. Walker - Guitar
*Bob West - Bass 

Saturday, January 29, 2022

The Mirage - Tomorrow Never Knows Singles And Lost Sessions (1966-68 uk, delicate swinging psych pop, 2006 release)



Although an unauthorized Mirage CD compilation (You Can't Be Serious) combining some of their singles with unreleased material made its appearance around 2000, this official anthology is preferable for its better sound quality and thorough liner notes. Tomorrow Never Knows -- The Pop Sike World of the Mirage: Singles & Lost Sessions is still not a complete document of the group, featuring just six of the tracks that appeared on their eight singles (some of which were issued under different names than the Mirage), though it does offer a whopping 17 unreleased cuts, some of which didn't show up on You Can't Be Serious. 

As a band obviously inspired by the Beatles, the Hollies, and to a lesser degree by the Who and the Kinks, the Mirage were more convincing emulators than most, though they still weren't as original or as inspiring as their role models. The best comparison might be to the Hollies as they were moving from British Invasion pop to psychedelia-influenced pop -- there's more ambition at work here than the average British Invasion group, but it's not nearly as far out or cutting edge as the Beatles and the Who were by the late '60s. If you're looking for comparisons, some of them are in-your-face; "You Can't Be Serious" can't fail to bring to mind "Nowhere Man"-era Beatles with a dash of the Hollies. 

Meanwhile, the demo of "Lazy Man" is a rip-off of "Rain"; although it was rearranged so that the similarity was far more subtle by the time it had been re-recorded for a 1967 single, the rearrangement in turn borrowed heavily from the Who circa "Happy Jack." There's also their brave interpretation of "Tomorrow Never Knows" for a 1966 single, and while that track has its novelty value as a cover of a Lennon-McCartney tune rarely done by other artists, its far more basic rock arrangement can in no way stand up to the brilliant psychedelic original. 

The Mirage's strongest suit was probably their slightly spooky, almost churchy story-songs, like "The Wedding of Ramona Blair" (the most famous of their official 45s among '60s collectors) and "Mrs. Buzby." These are strong enough to make this release of some interest to those who treasure that time when British Invasion pop/rock, mod, and psychedelia crossed to some extent, though the Mirage were more competent executors of those trends than innovators.
by Richie Unterberger
Tracks
1. Tomorrow Never Knows (John Lennon, Paul McCartney) - 2:37
2. You Can't Be Serious - 2:00
3. Gone To Your Head - 2:05
4. I Want Love (David Hynes, Ray Glynn) - 2:24
5. Hold On - 2:22
6. Can You Hear Me (Dee Murray) - 2:58
7. One More Time - 1:59
8. That I Know - 2:19
9. The Wedding Of Ramona Blair - 2:14
10.Lazy Man - 2:23
11.Ebaneezer Beaver - 2:22
12.Mrs Busby - 2:33
13.I See The Rain - 2:07
14.Lonely Highway (Ray Glynn) - 2:45
15.Hello Enid - 2:12
16.Is Anybody Home - 2:44
17.What Do I Care - 2:11
18.How's Your Pa (Alan Longstaff, Kirk Duncan) - 2:59
19.Lazy Man - 3:02
20.See My World - 2:53
21.Katherine - 2:07
22.Ebaneezer Beaver - 2:03
23.Go Away (Allan Clarke, Graham Nash, Tony Hicks) - 1:52
All songs by David Hynes except where indicated
Track 23 featuring Graham Nash

The Mirage
*Dee Murray Oates - Lead Guitar, Vocals
*Pete Hynes - Lead Vocals
*Ray Glynn - Guitar, Vocals
*Pat Hynes - Bass
*David "Dave" Hynes - Drums, Vocals
*Kirk Duncan - Keyboards
*Jeff Peters - Bass

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Friday, January 28, 2022

Morning Glory - Two Suns Worth (1968 us, fine paisley folk psych, 2007 edition)



A seemingly endless tidal wave of groups swept along the Californian coast in the wake of Jefferson Airplane in the late ’60s and Morning Glory is one of the more noteworthy bands who lived in the shadow of the great “White Rabbit”. The band cut their one and only record in May 1968. Produced by Abe “Voco” Kesh (best known for his work with Bay Area psychedelic rockers Blue Cheer) and engineered by John Cale.

The album is a solid, tightly arranged set of lysergic love which puts the stereo effect to head-swimming use while combining barrelhouse psych-organ, upfront drum fills and female-male harmonies, to ensure that trippy vibe keeps you guessing. And numbers as good as the haunting, Eastern-influenced psych-folk melancholia of “Jelly Gas Flame” and the dreamy pop of the harpsichord-led “I See a Light” ensure that this is one obscure vinyl artifact which is actually worth digging up.
by Alan Brown, 8 January 2008 
Tracks
1. Need Someone - 4:28
2. I Cry - 2:34
3. Hey Little Girl - 2:22
4. Stone Good Day - 4:00
5. Even When I'm Up I'm Down (Danny NuDelman) - 5:20
6. Jelly Gas Flame (Danny NuDelman) - 4:38
7. I See A Light (Danny NuDelman, Gini Graybeal) - 3:12
8. Live For Today - 3:12
9. Point Of No Return (Larry Gerughty) - 5:02
10.So Glad Being Here - 3:37
All compositions by Bob Bohanna except where stated
 
Morning Glory
*Danny NuDelman - Lead Guitar, Rhythm Guitar, Vocals  
*Gini Graybeal - Lead Vocals, Cymbal, Tambourine
*Larry Gerughty - Organ, Piano, Harpsichord, Vocals 
*Bob Bohanna - Bass, Rhythm Guitar, Vocals 
*Allen Wehr - Drums 

Thursday, January 27, 2022

Matthew Fisher - Matthew Fisher / Strange Days (1979/81 uk, splendid silky rock vibes)



The self-titled album from 1979 is a superb album, full of heartfelt ballads. 'Anna', for example, combines the slightly folksy singer-songwriter image with big, bold, and slightly epic arrangements that give you the 'small man on a big stage' feel that would, for example, be so successful for the likes of Andrew Gold. In fact, you could draw comparisons between the two here.

Strange Days (1981) offers more power pop sensibilities with a lush production - and lots of double tracked vocals combined with the more new wave music fashion of the period. A higher energy suite of songs, in fact. This album doesn't quite have the dramatic focus of the earlier album but there is still much to like here with a suite of light and airy songs presented with lots of energy. In mastering terms, there is a touch of compression residing within the mids but the effect is quite subtle so that the effect is used more to emphasise detail than to intrude upon the whole soundstage.
Hi-Fi World, April 2018
Tracks
1. Can't You Feel My Love - 4:19
2. Give It A Try - 3:34
3. Back In Your Arms Again - 3:31
4. Only A Game - 4:13
5. Why'd I Have To Fall In Love With You - 4:14
6. Looking For Shelter (Linda Fisher, Matthew Fisher) - 3:50
7. Anna - 4:40
8. Miss Suzie - 2:59
9. Just How Blind - 4:17
10.Running From Your Love - 4:21
11.Something I Should Have Known (Chris White, Matthew Fisher) - 4:17
12.Without You (Chris White, Matthew Fisher) - 4:29
13.Living In A Dream (Chris White, Matthew Fisher) - 3:34
14.Why Can't You Lie To Me (Chris White, Matthew Fisher) - 3:40
15.Only Yourself To Blame (Chris White, Matthew Fisher) - 3:27
16.Desperate Measures - 3:16
17.Can't Stop Loving You Now - 4:09
18.She Makes Me Feel (Chris White, Matthew Fisher) - 3:55
19.Take Me For A Ride (Chris White, Matthew Fisher) - 3:36
20.Strange Days (Chris White, Matthew Fisher) - 4:35
All compositions by Matthew Fisher except where indicated
Tracks 1-10 from 1979 LP "Matthew Fisher"
Tracks 11-20 from 1981 LP "Strange Days"

Personnel
*Matthew Fisher - Multi Instruments, Orchestral Arrangements
*Rod Argent - Vocal Harmony
*Ron Asprey - Alto Sax 
*Steve Bingham - Bass
*Barry DeSouza - Drums
*James Dewar - Vocal Harmony
*Mo Foster - Bass
*Mick Grabham - Electric Rhythm Guitar
*Alan Jones - Bass
*Dill Katz - Bass
*Dave Mattacks - Drums
*Paul Westwood - Bass
*Peter Van Hooke - Drums
*Terry Popple - Drums
*Graham Preskett - Arranger, Orchestral Arrangements
*Tim Renwick - Guitar
*Henry Spinetti - Drums
*Dave Nevin - Vocal Harmony
*Val Stokes - Vocal Harmony
*Steve Stroud - Vocal Harmony
*Stephanie de Sykes - Vocal Harmony
*Clare Torry - Vocal Harmony
*John Verity - Vocal Harmony
*Pete Zorn - Vocal Harmony

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Wednesday, January 26, 2022

Badfinger - Wish You Were Here (1974 uk, glistening powerful rock, 2014 japan SHM and 2018 remaster and expanded)



Wish You Were Here was Badfinger’s second and last album for Warner Brothers, and as with their album, Badfinger, was originally released in 1974. This was to have been their breakthrough album. The reviews were great, and it had entered the charts with a bullet but  then it was pulled due to contract disputes with Warner Brothers, mismanagement of money by their manager, and other legal issues. The album disappeared off the shelves, their tour was cancelled, and an album that was to have been a classic was somewhat forgotten.

Chris Thomas was once again at the producers helm (as he was with their two previous albums Badfinger and Ass), and with this album he produced a rock masterpiece. It is interesting that in two short years he would be producing The Sex Pistols.

For this rerelease, Real Gone Music have added a previously unreleased song (“Queen Of Darkness”) and a number of outtakes and works in progress. But it is the original album that still holds up and is the main reason to purchase this new version of the album. Here Badfinger were firing on all cylinders. At this time, Badfinger were Mike Gibbins (drums), Joey Molland (guitar), Tom Evans (bass), and Pete Ham (lead guitar).

There is not a weak song on the album, and it features two incredible medleys: “Meanwhile Back At The Ranch/Should I Smoke” and the brilliant “In The Meantime/Some Other Time”. These are cornerstones of this classic album. But really, all the songs are melodic, well produced, and show their excellent musicianship. The album is a rock album in the classic sense of the word, and is instantly accessible.

Wish You Were Here was the last album featuring the four members. 
by Aaron Badgley
Tracks
1. Just A Chance (Pete Ham) - 2:57
2. You're So Fine (Mike Gibbins) - 3:03
3. Got To Get Out Of Here (Joey Molland) - 3:30
4. Know One Knows (Pete Ham) - 3:16
5. Dennis (Pete Ham) - 5:15
6. In The Meantime/Some Other Time (Mike Gibbins, Joey Molland) - 6:46
7. Love Time (Joey Molland) - 2:18
8. King Of The Load (Tom Evans) - 3:30
9. Meanwhile Back At The Ranch/Should I Smoke (Pete Ham, Joey Molland) - 5:18
10.Queen Of Darkness (Tom Evans) - 2:38
11.Just A Chance (Pete Ham) - 3:18
12.You're So Fine (Mike Gibbins) - 3:04
13.Got To Get Out Of Here (Joey Molland) - 3:28
14.Know One Knows (Pete Ham) - 3:20
15.Dennis (Pete Ham) - 6:04
16.In The Meantime/Some Other Time (Mike Gibbins, Joey Molland) - 6:57
17.Love Time (Joey Molland) - 2:36
18.Meanwhile Back At The Ranch/Should I Smoke (Pete Ham, Joey Molland) - 5:29
Bonus tracks 10-18 only on 2018 Real Gone version
Badfinger
*Pete Ham - Vocals, Guitar, Keyboards
*Joey Molland - Vocals, Guitar
*Mike Gibbins - Drums, Keyboards, Vocals On 
*Tom Evans - Vocals, Bass
With
*Average White Horns - Horns On "Just A Chance" And "Should I Smoke"
*Mika Kato - Japanese Spoken Words On "Know One Knows" 

1969  Iveys - Maybe Tomorrow
1970  Badfinger - Magic Christian Music (2010 remaster and expanded)
1970  Badfinger - No Dice (2010 remaster and expanded)
1971  Badfinger - Straight Up (2010 remaster and expanded)