Thursday, November 17, 2022

Cromwell - At The Gallop (1975 ireland, exciting guitar pub rock, 2022 remaster)



Emerging from the giant shadow cast by the greatness of Thin Lizzy, this obscure band with a venomous guitar attack, and dual vocalists that kick ass and take names, puts the ‘ire’ in Ireland and delivers with a sound that’s not for the squeamish.

Initially self-released in 1975 by the Drumcondra, Dublin-based Cromwell, At The Gallop is a blistering, heavy, loud’n’lascivious ten track offering (thirteen in this expanded edition) of infused street rock’n’roll from a time when Ireland was still under the sway of conservative showbands, quasi-religious, sentimental pop pap and traditional Irish music.

Despite their cultural struggles, Cromwell crafted a creative and compact catalog—five fuzzed’n’ferocious 45s and this footlong—led by co-vocalist/bassist Michael Kiely’s come hither coo and fey Jagger pose’n’preen, the in-the-pocket drumming of Derek Dawson and minor-guitar hero moves of Patrick Brady, exercising taste, talent and towering mountains of fuzz’n’fury as comfortably as greasy ‘70s raunch and rural modes. At The Gallop is a rare—fetching upwards of 400€ when the original LP does appear—little heard classic in the pub/ fried rock’n’roll /proto-punk terrain.
Tracks
1. Ireland (The Wild One) (Michael Kiely, Patric Brady, Derek Dawson) - 3:26
2. Down On The Town - 3:32
3. First Day - 3:23
4. You Got It Made - 3:36
5. At The Gallop - 2:24
6. Guiness Rock - 4:14
7. Hoodwinked (Michael Kiely, Patric Brady, Derek Dawson) - 2:22
8. Nothing Left To See - 4:07
9. Deal Me In - 2:47
10.Dawson's Fun Palace - 3:22
11.Stomp Stomp Stomp - 2:48
12.You Hate It To Turn On - 3:40
13.Guiness Rock - 3:47 
All compositions by Michael Kiely, Patric Brady except where stated
Bonus Tracks 11-13

Cromwell
*Michael Kiely - Vocals, Bass, Acoustic Guitar, Piano, Synthesizer
*Patric Brady - Vocals, Electric, Slide Guitars
*Derek Dawson - Drums, Percussion Jews Harp
With
*Joylon Jackson - Piano (Track 7)
*John O'Callaghan - Organ (Tracks 3,8)
*Finin O'Callaghan - Guitar, Harmony Vocals 
*John Keogh - Piano (Track 4) 

Wednesday, November 16, 2022

Noah - Peaceman's Farm (1972 canada, nice classic rock, feat. Randy Bachman)



Noah started originally playing local clubs around Trenton, Ontario in 1964-65 as Buzzy And The Belvederes. The band featured 'Buzzy' Vandersel’s (who was 14 at the time of the band's inception), his older cousins Peter and Marinus Vandertogt and finally, lead singer Paul Clapper. The band was re-christened Tyme And A Half by Nimbus 9 Productions' manager Al MacMillan during the recording of their first single "It's Been A Long Time". They would release the song and a second single in 1969.

The group then landed a deal with RCA-Victor through their Nimbus 9 producer Jack Richardson, and with a final name change to NOAH, released their debut in 1970. Paul Clapper, unhappy with the direction the band was taking under the leadership of Al McMillan, left and was replaced by Ron Neilson as they toured the debut album. However, Neilson also left and Noah carried on as a three piece.

Moving to ABC/Dunhill their 1972 album 'Peaceman's Farm' was produced by Randy Bachman. Bachman also wrote the song "Sussex" for the record and played guitar on several tracks as did keyboardist Jim Morgan. The song "World Band" would later be covered by US group GRIFFIN. The album not only recieved great reviews in RPM, Cashbox and Billboard magazines, but increased their profile as one of the featured acts in the Canadian music industry's summer Maple Music Junket.

Noah began extensive touring in the USA to promote the album in the Spring of 1972 and Bachman toured with them. One stint included a live broadcast on radio station WCMF in Rochester, New York. Al Manning joined the group at this time as well. A 3rd album left unreleased, and one single. After the frontman and singer Barry "Buzz" Vandersel died in fall 1975, the band split up.
Tracks
1. Peaceman's Farm - 6:15
2. They Come, They Go - 3:05
3. Sussex (Randy Bachman) - 3:27
4. April Roads - 3:37
5. Light Of A Different Day - 4:00
6. For Us All - 3:31
7. World Band - 3:44
8. Something's In My Way - 3:36
9. Take Me Back - 2:59
10.Never Too Late - 6:01
All songs by Barry Vandersel, Marinus Vandertogt, Peter Vandertogt except track #3 

Noah
*Barry "Buzz" Vandersel - Vocals, Bass
*Marinus Vandertogt - Lead Guitar, Vocals
*Peter Vandertogt - Drums
With
*Randy Bachman - Vocals, Guitar (Tracks 1-3,6,8)
*Jim Morgan - Keyboards (Track 4)


Tuesday, November 15, 2022

Dave Davies - Decade (1971-78 uk, straight ahead rock, ranging from hard rock to pop and all stops in between, 2018 digipak remaster)



It must be tough being in a band with your big brother – especially when he writes the tunes and calls the shots. It doesn’t help when the band you’re in is the Kinks – a volatile powder keg of ego, sibling rivalry, and God only knows what else. We all know that Dave Davies can write a decent tune – check out “Death of a Clown” and “Susannah’s Still Alive” for proof of that, but can the younger Davies brother consistently deliver the goods? If Decade is anything to go on, then yeah, he can.

Decade has been lovingly assembled by Dave’s sons Simon and Martin from recordings made at the band’s Konk Studios, throughout the 1970s. The good news is that it hangs together well as an album and sounds cohesive -not a ragbag of demos and half-baked ideas, but a genuine long-playing record. The other good news is that the tunes are strong and don’t sound as if they were written by his brother. Well, a few do, but they are family, after all.

In the 1970s, the Kinks were an eccentric arena band, packing them in across the USA and ramping up the rock elements of their sound. English whimsy combined with a loud guitar or two was a powerful draw to your average gig going American, and Davies was a major part of that. If you need proof, then just listen to One for the Road – recorded in a variety of American cities (with a couple of tracks from Zurich) in late 1979, Dave Davies guitar is front and center and propels the band forward with real urgency. On Decade, we get a hint of that, but it’s quite surprising that it isn’t more, well, heavy, I guess. This is the guy that invented heavy metal, after all.
by Ian Rushbury, 7 November 2018 
Tracks
1. Cradle to the Grave - 3:32
2. Midnight Sun - 4:03
3. Islands - 4:23
4. If You Are Leaving - 4:18
5. Web of Time - 4:25
6. Mystic Woman - 2:33
7. Give You All My Love - 4:04
8. The Journey - 3:12
9. Within Each Day - 3:45
10.Same Old Blues - 4:10
11.Mr. Moon - 3:48
12.Shadows - 3:37
13.This Precious Time (Long Lonely Road) - 5:42 
All songs by Dave Davies

Personnel
*Dave Davies - Vocals, Lead Guitar, Acoustic Guitar, Drums
*Phil Palmer - Electric Guitar, Electric Bass (Tracks 1,2,6,8,12)
*Neil McBain - Drums (Tracks 1,2,6,8,11,12)
*Ron Lawrence - Bass (Tracks 9,10)
*John Gosling - Organ (Tracks 1,2), Strings Arrangement (Track 12)
*Nick Trevisick - Drums (Tracks 3,7,9,10,13)
*Andy Pyle - Electric Bass (Tracks 3,7,13)
*Mick Avory - Drums (Track 4)

Related Act
1972  The Kinks - Everybody's In Show-Biz (2003 MFSL Ultradisc) 
1976  The Kinks - Present Schoolboys In Disgrace (2004 SACD) 

Monday, November 14, 2022

Strange - Souvenir Album (1974-78 us, fusion underground art psych rock, 2009 reissue)



The Strange were an underground art-rock band from Olympia, WA, close to the Canadian border. Tom Hackett, Robert Rensel, David Chamberlain, Rick Rackleff plus Mike Pitcher, Don Morris & Carl Dexter recorded the Souvenir Album over a period of several years, and it was finally released in a tiny pressing in 1976 on the Yantis Record label. With a touch of the West Coast sound and lots of Mothers Of Invention influences, this album is just as special as The Spoils Of War and as complex as Time and Think Dog, with Zappa-style wah-wah/flange guitar, great vocals, piano, effects, some horns, and a well-balanced mixture of heavy psych guitar tracks and twisted underground folk tunes. 
Tracks
1. Segment from Barapp (9-75) - 1:14
2. Somebody - 6:10
3. The Ballad of Hollis Spaceman - 7:06
4. Four Eyes - 5:39
5. Segment from Barapp - 0:41
6. Segment from on Winning the War / A Faced Dream - 4:18
7. Rick's Song (Rick Rackleff) - 2:30
8. Segment from Mushroom Wednesday / Lies by Poetic License - 5:37
9. Twelve Boats (Tom Hackett) - 5:05
10.The Last Song - 4:31
All compositions by David Chamberlain except where stated

Personnel
*Carl Dexter - Vocals, Bass
*David Chamberlain - Guitar, Vocals
*Tom Hackett - Twelve-String Guitar
*Robert Rensel - French Horn, Keyboards, Vocals
*Rick Rackleff - Bongos, Drums, Organ
*Don Morris - Bass, Saxophone, Vocals
*Ron Redifer - Drums
*Jim Eager - Drums 

Saturday, November 12, 2022

Roger McGuinn - Thunderbyrd (1977 us, wonderful folk classic rock, 2007 japan remaster)



1977's Thunderbyrd, McGuinn's last solo album until 1991's Back From Rio, is very different from Cardiff Rose and almost as good. At first, it sounds like a fairly typical late-'70's pop-rock album when you hear "It's Gone" and Peter Frampton's "All Night Long". But as the album goes along, it tends toward an urban style of country rock that McGuinn pulls off well. A special treat for rock trivia buffs is McGuinn's rendition of Tom Petty's "American Girl", a classic example of a musical pioneer paying homage to a well-known disciple. Thunderbyrd is a fine album that improves with repeat listenings. 
Tracks
1. All Night Long (Micky Gallagher, Peter Frampton) - 4:18
2. It's Gone (Roger McGuinn) - 3:57
3. Dixie Highway (Roger McGuinn) - 3:28
4. American Girl (Tom Petty) - 4:28
5. We Can Do It All Over Again (Barry Goldberg, Mentor Williams) - 4:46
6. Why Baby Why (Darrell Edwards, George Jones) - 3:49
7. I'm Not Lonely Anymore (Roger McGuinn) - 3:07
8. Golden Loom (Bob Dylan) - 4:06
9. Russian Hill (Roger McGuinn) - 5:05

Personnel
*Roger McGuinn - Vocals, Guitar
*Charlie Harrison - Vocals, Bass
*Marty Grebb - Keyboards
*Rick Vito - Guitar, Dobro Steel Guitar, Mouth Harp
*Greg Thomas - Drums, Percussion
*Bruce Barlow - Bass (Tracks 2,9)
*Tom Scott - Saxophone (Track 4)
*Janis Oliver - Vocals (Track 5) 
*Jennifer O'Neill - Vocals (Track 5)  
*Kristine Oliver - Vocals (Track 5) 
*Steve Forman - Percussion (Track 9)

1973  Roger McGuinn - Roger McGuinn (2013 Edition)
1974  Roger McGuinn - Peace On You (2008 japan)
1975  Roger McGuinn And Band - Roger McGuinn And Band (2004 extra tracks remaster)
1976  Roger McGuinn - Cardiff Rose (2013 edition)
1979  McGuinn, Clark And Hillman (2014 Japan SHM Remaster)
1979-80  McGuinn Clark Hillman - The Capitol Collection (2007 double disc set)
1964  The Byrds - Preflyte (2012 Edition)

Friday, November 11, 2022

The Stampeders - Ballsy (1979 canada, fine straight classic rock, 2006 remaster)



Following the release of their first Greatest Hits compilation album, The Stampeders went back to recording and released "Ballsy" in 1979. With members Rich Dodson and Kim Berly departing, Ronnie King was left to bring in three new members for the LP. The original members departure brought in a decade long hiatus for the band following this release, but King took the bands sound into his own hands to end this era of The Stampeders.

Ronnie King tried to keep the flame burning with "Ballsy". The new line-up included Ronnie's youngest brother, Roy Van Sprang, Bob Allwood and Gary Storin. Lack of sales, high overhead and disappointed fans led to the band's final break-up in 1980 and the departure of manager, Mel Shaw. 

In 1979, Kim Berly started his own new-wave band, The Cry, in which he performed under the name, Kimball Fox. Two album releases on RCA, good sales and intensive touring sustained the band for a couple of years, but mounting personal problems forced Kim to leave the music scene. From 1983 to 1989, Kim went briefly into acting, gaining recognition in the Toronto theatre community. Despite speculation within the music industry about just how successful The Stampeders would have been had they focused on just one style of music, one thing remains clear -- they left an enduring musical legacy. 

Between 1970 and 1977, they released ten albums and 15 singles, with six albums and seven singles going gold. Along with three Billboard chart singles in the U.S., The Stampeders had ten, Top-Ten singles in Canada. They also won three JUNO Awards, three BMI Awards, an EDISON Award and toured Canada, Europe, the U.S., including Hawaii, and South America.
Tracks
1. We're Here To Rock And Roll - 3:47
2. Within You (Bob Allwood) - 3:36
3. How Does He Do It? - 5:56
4. Bye Bye Johnny (Chuck Berry) - 4:19
5. Got My Mojo Working (Preston Foster) - 6:00
6. Mama You - 3:40
7. Are You Coming To Your Senses? - 3:15
8. If You Really Want To - 5:59
All songs by Ronnie King except where stated

The Stampeders
*Roy King - Drums
*Ronnie King - Bass, Vocals
*Gary Storin - Guitar, Vocals
*Bob Allwood - Guitar, Vocals
With
*Dick Smith - Congas
*Kathy Young - Vocals
*Rhonda Silver - Vocals

1971  The Stampeders - Against the Grain (2006 bonus tracks)  

Thursday, November 10, 2022

Randy Denison - Collage (1970 us, wonderful laid back folkish psychedelia)



Texas-born, late 60's Singer-Songsmith  with  full combo backing,  Sky-bound melodic Folk  Rock, dreamy vibes, subtle vocal harmonies with flute 'n some lofty string-arrangements.  
Tracks
1. Prelude (Sing For You) - 1:06
2. Throughout The Woods - 1:50
3. Treat You Like A Lady - 2:26
4. Interlude Of Young And Old - 3:28
5. Country Evening Day - 2:23
6. Imaginary Mary - 2:48
7. Changing Scenes - 3:26
8. Before Morning Wakes - 3:28
9. Easier Way - 1:56
10.Soft Spoken Words - 2:51
11.Lamenting Seasons - 3:23
Lyrics and Music by Randy Denison

*Randy Denison - Vocals, Guitar

Wednesday, November 9, 2022

Michele - Saturn Rings (1969 us, west coast folk psych gem, 2006 release)



Saturn Rings by Michele O'Malley, issued on ABC in 1969, is truly one of the lost psychedelic pop masterpieces. O'Malley was a member of the Ballroom, and was a session vocalist in Los Angeles, singing backup on Tommy Roe's It's Now Winters Day and Sagittarius' Present Tense. West Coast popster and legendary crazy man Curt Boettcher (leader of the Ballroom) was heavily involved, with arrangements by Michael Melvoin and session players including Lowell George (pre-Little Feat), Bobby Notkoff (pre-Rockets), Elliot Ingber, Gordon Alexander, and Bobby Jameson (aka songwriter Chris Lucey). Boettcher either wrote or co-wrote seven of the album's 11 cuts, and sings backup on the sessions as well. To say the album bombed is an understatement. It disappeared almost upon release, and O'Malley never made another one.

Τhere are some truly amazing moments such as "Fallen Angel," with its beautiful sawing electric violin floating through the mix above the acoustic guitars, tabla drums, and electric bass. O'Malley's voice just soars and glides between Western melody and Eastern modalism effortlessly. Some of the psychedelic pop arrangements have the feeling of some stranger than strange nostalgia -- like a sound that is familiar, but its textures are strange and alien, such as on "Spinning, Spinning, Spinning," with a harpsichord and either an oboe or soprano saxophone and strings. O'Malley wrote "Song to a Magic Frog" for Sagittarius, and the arrangement on this version is lush, full of elegant textures and richly layered instrumentation. 

Her voice is where the real "magic" lies, however. She moves through the melody with a meld of passion and restraint and creates hooks where there are none. The truth of the matter is, that with bands like Belle & Sebastian out there, if Saturn Rings were released today it would be regarded as a quirky masterpiece. Its production and arrangement excesses for the time -- which made it inaccessible to the masses -- would now be heard as the work of genius. Three cheers for Fallout for making this little-known classic available again. 
by Thom Jurek


Tracks
1. Would You Like To Go (Bobby Jameson) - 2:33
2. Blind As You Are (Michele O'Malley) - 2:54
3. Song To Magic Frog (Michele O'Malley) - 3:43
4. Fallen Angel (Michele O'Malley) - 3:32
5. Spinning, Spinning, Spinning (Curt Boettcher, Lee Mallory) - 3:24
6. Know Yourself (Bobby Jameson) - 4:39
7. Musty Dusty (Curt Boettcher, Tandyn Almer) - 5:08
8. Lament Of The Astro Cowboy (Curt Boettcher) - 8:09
9. White Linen (Bobby Jameson, Michele O'Malley) - 2:31
10.Misty Mirage (Curt Boettcher) - 3:51
11.Believe You (Curt Boettcher) - 4:00

Personnel
*Michele O'Malley - Vocals
*Lowell George - Flute, Harmonica
*Elliot Ingber - Electric Guitar
*Bobby Notkoff - Electric Viola, Electric Violin

Monday, November 7, 2022

Roger McGuinn - Peace On You (1974 us, amazing folk classic rock, 2008 japan remaster)



When Roger McGuinn released his second solo album, Columbia promoted it by playing up McGuinn’s status as a rock & roll legend. It was a point that needed making after several mediocre Byrds albums and a solo record that somehow managed to fly under the radar of rock fans and radio stations. Peace on You isn’t a markedly better record than his first, again suffering from an identity crisis as McGuinn brings in material from other writers, although the production value has more oomph this time. It’s not a bad record and, in fact, grows on me the more I listen to it, but at no point do I have the sense that I’m listening to a rock & roll legend.

Of course, McGuinn wasn’t the only rock star to flounder in the mid Seventies: Neil Young rejected his rock-star status, John Lennon retired, Joni Mitchell was making jazz records. And Peace on You isn’t any worse than those Stephen Stills albums. Individually, the songs are interesting enough. In fact, the songwriting partnership with Jacques Levy was proving almost as fruitful as the Hunter-Garcia team. The Lady, Gate of Horn and Without You are all solid songs with good lyrics. Two songs from James “Donnie” Dacus, who would join Stills in the studio the following year, are also very good: Going to the Country and Do What You Want To.

The remaining songs come from very different quarters. Better Change from Dan Fogelberg is a nice match for McGuinn’s voice; (Please Not) One More Time, featuring Al Kooper, not so much. But the oddest choice is the decision to make a fairly straight cover of Charlie Rich’s Peace on You (from his award-winning Behind Closed Doors album of the previous year) the centerpiece of the album. It gets the album off to unsteady start from which it never really recovers.

As I said, this album grows on me the more I listen to it, and the quality of the individual songs make up for its inconsistencies. Bill Halverson (credited with wife Suzanne) provides plenty of production polish and the backing band (featuring past and future Stills collaborators) is a nice change of partners.
by Dave Connolly, October 4, 2022
Tracks
1. Peace On You (Charlie Rich) - 4:01
2. Without You (Jacques Levy, Roger McGuinn) - 4:07
3. Going To The Country (Donnie Dacus) - 3:17
4. (Please Not) One More Time (Al Kooper) - 3:23
5. Same Old Sound (Roger McGuinn) - 3:30
6. Do What You Want To (Donnie Dacus) - 3:00
7. Together (Jacques Levy, Roger McGuinn) - 3:38
8. Better Change (Dan Fogelberg) - 3:00
9. Gate Of Horn (Jacques Levy, Roger McGuinn) - 2:45
10.The Lady (Jacques Levy, Roger McGuinn) - 4:16
11.Rock And Roll Time (Bob Neuwirth, Kris Kristofferson, Roger McGuinn) - 3:17

Musicians
*Roger McGuinn - Lead Vocals, 12-String Rhythm, Lead Guitar
*Donnie Dacus - 6-String Rhythm, Lead Guitar, Backing Vocals 
*Dan Fogelberg - Backing Vocals, Electric, Acoustic Guitar (Tracks 6, 8)
*Paul Harris - Keyboards 
*Russ Kunkel - Drums, Percussion
*Lee Sklar - Bass 
*Jorge Calderon - Backing Vocals (Track 1) 
*Tish Coulter - Backing Vocals (Track 1) 
*Gwendolyn Edwards - Backing Vocals (Track 1) 
*Brenan Gordon - Backing Vocals (Track 1) 
*Jordan Halverson - Backing Vocals (Track 1) 
*Charles Higgins, Jr. - Backing Vocals (Track 1) 
*Brooks Hunnicutt - Backing Vocals (Track 1) 
*Howard Kaylaw (Kaylan) - Backing Vocals (Tracks 5, 8)
*Mark Kellgren - Backing Vocals (Track 1) 
*Eddie Lee Kendrix - Backing Vocals (Track 1) 
*Al Kooper - Sweetening,  Clavinet, Piano, Guitar, Arranger,  Conductor  
*Al Perkins - Steel Guitar  (Track 6)
*Brian Russell - Backing Vocals (Track 1) 
*William Smith - Backing Vocals (Track 1) 
*Paul, Cynthia - Backing Vocals 
*Pilar Stallworth - Backing Vocals (Track 1) 
*Mark Volman - Backing Vocals (Tracks  5, 8)
*Tommy Tedesco - Flamingo Guitar  (Track 7)

1973  Roger McGuinn - Roger McGuinn (2013 Edition)
1975  Roger McGuinn And Band - Roger McGuinn And Band (2004 extra tracks remaster)
1976  Roger McGuinn - Cardiff Rose (2013 edition)
1979  McGuinn, Clark And Hillman (2014 Japan SHM Remaster)
1979-80  McGuinn Clark Hillman - The Capitol Collection (2007 double disc set)
1964  The Byrds - Preflyte (2012 Edition)

Sunday, November 6, 2022

Wilderness Road - Wilderness Road (1972 us, extraordinary outlaw folk rural rock)



Into the life of every critic, there come rare times when both heart and head simultaneously signal blast-off! and he falls happily head-over-heels in love with a rock & roll band, just like when he was seventeen. While a decade may have weeded out much of the naiveté, that warm glow definitely remains, and the qualitative difference is that both sides supposedly know something this time around. A mature appreciation, some would call it, but I prefer good old-fashioned love. To me, Wilderness Road, on this LP and (especially) in concert, sum up much of the best of American music, and such an event surely calls for at least one joyful and unabashed whoop of genuine pagan delight. After all, any philosophizing fool can prove through logic that he doesn't exist when you wish he didn't, but how (or why) do you hightone and thereby reduce a sensual and celebrative experience into mere reasonableness? 

There's this outlaw on my record player - Billy or Ishmael the Kid - and, goddamn, I'll stake my critical reputation, et cetera, that he's a real outlaw. Before formality, permit me one more voyage of sentimental reminiscence. I've seen Wilderness Road at a small club in Chicago at least a dozen times - on one occasion, so great was my enthusiasm, I paid full air fare from New York City for another writer so he, too, could enjoy the magic - and each time, when the music was over, standing on the street in what the late Jack Kerouac would call the great American night, talking with Warren Leming and Nate Herman, the guitarists, and the Haban brothers, Andy and Tom, bass and drums, respectively, I've had the mythic feeling that, during the preceding three or four hours, there was no better music to be heard anywhere in the land.

They seemed at then best like the Who crossed with the Byrds, Jerry Lee Lewis spawning the Firesign Theater (Leming and Herman are erstwhile Second City members), the J. Geils unit all mixed up with the boys in the Band, two Eric Claptons playing dual (and dueling) lead guitars with the Carter Family while everybody goes crazy.

Thematically, Wilderness Road begins with a whisper - the desert wind blows over the plains as the Rider, the "hero" of this brilliant and original aural Western movie (yes, that's what it is: a concept album) ruminates about his pursuers (himself?) and the living death of the freedom of the road - and ends with an almost literal band: the nameless protagonist being shot to pieces in the climactic, obligatory, end-of-the- "picture" gunfight. In between, there's a lot more - a flashback to a "Peaceful Life," some Wanted "Pictures in a Gallery," a professional "Bounty Man" hot on the trail, salvation through religious ("Revival") and secular ("Dr. Morpho's Revenge") means, dramatic foreshadowing ("Death Dream"), a love interest ("Don't Cry Lady"), and the strange, near-Camusian, Ahab-like soliloquy ("I Had the Right") which somehow holds things together while asking more questions than it answers.

Imagine a fusion of Ford's The Searchers, Stevens' Shane, Peckinpah's The Wild Bunch, Malle's The Fire Within, throw in a passage or two from Freud, Jung, Huckleberry Finn, Moby-Dick, and play some of the gentle traditional music of Elizabeth Cotten for a soundtrack and you've got at least some of it.

Yes, folks, it's the same old story, but, as is the case with most really old stories (archetypes, myths), don't (mis)understand it too quickly. Horton Barker used to claim that songs like these were easy enough to get into; the problem was trying to get back out again. Exactly. The power of the positive cliche may at times be so much romantic nonsense, but, just as often, it strikes deep to draw heavily upon the supply of rich, red, native American blood; and all of those orphans, widows, solitary strangers, hobos, gamblers, cowhands, and gunfighters who have haunted as many geniuses as they have readers of Modern Screen at last have a rock & roll record to call their own, with a critique on modern violence and the gratuitous act thrown in as a footnote. That should be worth at least one (I hope not lonesome) howl at the stars. And what may well be the best - a live LP (make that a double, please) showing the full range and power of the group - is yet to come. Why not too much, too soon? 
by Paul Nelson, August, 1971
Tracks
1. Wilderness / Queasy Rider (Nate Herman, Andy Haban) - 3:14
2. Peaceful Life (Andy Haban) - 4:25
3. Revival - Yes I Am / Testify (Nate Herman, Warren Leming) - 1:28
4. Ten Miles / Testify Reprise (Nate Herman) - 2:41
5. Lost And Lonely Navigator (Nate Herman) - 2:42
6. Sing Your Song To The Lord / Brother Are You Troubled? (Nate Herman) - 2:14
7. I Had The Right (Nate Herman) - 3:27
8. Pictures In A Gallery (Andy Haban, Nate Herman) - 4:54
9. Bounty Man / Interlude In (Nate Herman, Andy Haban)- 5:10
10.Dr. Morpho’s Revenge (Andy Haban) - 3:25
11.Death Dream (Nate Herman) - 1:01
12.Don’t Cry Lady (Nate Herman) - 1:35
13.Rider’s Return (Andy Haban, Nate Herman) - 6:00

Wilderness Road
*Warren Leming - Electric, Acoustic Guitars, Banjo, Vocals 
*Nate Herman - Electric, Acoustic Guitars, Mandolin, Dobro, Organ, Vocals 
*Andy Haban - Bass, Vocals 
*Tom Haban - Drums, Oboe, Vocals