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Sunday 22 May 2016

"The Everly Brothers" by THE EVERLY BROTHERS (2006 Ace Records 'Hip Pocket' 5" Card CD Repro and Remaster) - A Review by Mark Barry...





"...They’re Off And Rolling..."

God Bless their little Steele Road cotton socks - but Ace Records of the UK probably thought the 'Hip Pocket' Series of card facsimiles/CD reissues was a good idea. But in truth - some of them have ended up looking every so slightly naff and inconsequential when that was clearly never the intention (this issue is a case in point). Not that the January 1958 Cadence Records Mono LP debut of The Everly Brothers is a dismissible platter - nothing could be further from the truth. In fact re-listening to its sub 28-minutes in 2016 (with just shy of 60 years distance) and its genuine brilliance and classiness is all the more remarkable. The Ev's first album is one of Rock's great debuts and a starter point for both harmony Rock 'n' Roll and (what we now call) Country Rock. Shame the card sleeve of it just ends up looking ordinary when you would have wanted more for this most brilliant of beginnings. That said let's get to the factoids and music...

UK and Europe released September 2006 - "The Everly Brothers" by THE EVERLY BROTHERS on Ace Records CDCHM 1127 (Barcode 029667021425) is part of Ace Records 'Hip Pocket Series' of CD Reissues (see list below) and plays outs as follows (27:03 minutes)

1. This Little Girl Of Mine
2. Maybe Tomorrow
3. Bye-Bye Love
4. Brand New Heartache
5. Keep A Knockin'
6. Be Bop A-Lula
7. Rip It Up [Side 2]
8. I Wonder If I Care
9. Wake Up Little Susie
10. Leave My Woman Alone
11. Should We Tell Him
12. Hey Doll Baby
Tracks 1 to 12 are their debut album "The Everly Brothers" (aka "They're Off And Rolling...") - released January 1958 in the USA on Cadence CLP-3003 and March 1958 in the UK on London HA-A 2081 (Mono only). It peaked at No. 16 in the US LP charts.

The 5" card sleeve repros the original American Cadence Records LP with some basic (boxed) reissue notes on the rear sleeve. Although it doesn’t say who did the mastering (probably Nick Robbins or Duncan Cowell) – Ace always use real tapes and the Audio here is fabulous – full of that Fifties atmosphere – the instruments and production kept so sweet. The CD label mimics the maroon colour of the rare original American LP – but there is no inner-sleeve or any assessment of the album - and it makes the reissue feel unnecessarily bare. It's also mid-price so available for less than six quid in most places. 

The whole 'Hip Pocket' series is designed to ape those 4" multi-track mini records (played at 33 1/3) put out in the USA between 1967 and 1969 as a way for fans to get the music in a 'handy and portable' way (they issued about 60 titles). As you can see from the list below – most of these albums are either obscurities - or overlooked classics Ace feel you should pay attention to. Genres stretch from 50ts Jazz (Chuck Higgins) to Blues Piano and Vocals (Roosevelt Sykes and Hadda Brooks) to 70ts Metal (Motorhead) to Punk (Radio Stars) and 60ts Garage & Psych (Sonics and Zombies) and beyond...

"The Everly Brothers" (sometimes called "They're Off And Rolling..." because of the liner notes on the front cover) is essentially a compilation of their first three US 7" singles (both sides) – two of which sold millions of copies - with six other tracks added on. The self-titled debut LP for Kentucky's DON and PHIL EVERLY may be short on playing time but is chock-full of hits and quality songs. "Bye Bye Love" b/w "I Wonder If I Care As Much" made No. 2 in the USA and No. 6 in the UK on Cadence 1315 and London HLA 8440 respectively - while the irresistible "Wake Up Little Susie" b/w "Maybe Tomorrow" went one better and hit No. 1 in the USA on Cadence 1337 (No. 2 UK on London HLA 8498). The third 78"/45 "This Little Girl Of Mine" b/w "Should We Tell Him" stalled at No. 26 in the USA (Cadence 1342) but didn't chart in the UK (London HLA 8554).

Of the other tracks "Rip It Up" and "Keep A Knockin'" are of course Little Richard covers while the UK's primo wildman Gene Vincent gets a look in with their Side 1 ender of the Screaming End's signature tune "Be Bop A-Lula". The two Ray Charles cuts "This Little Girl Of Mine" and "Should We Tell Him" suited their stunning Brotherly Harmonies so well as did the Titus Turner cover of "Hey Doll Baby" that ends Side 2. But impressively the album is dominated by the songwriting talents of Boudleaux and Felice Bryant – a husband-and-wife songwriting duo from Georgia who would become synonymous with both The Everly Brothers and that other great era crooner - Roy Orbison. They penned "Bye Bye Love", "Brand New Heartache" (beautiful Audio on this track) and "Wake Up Little Susie". Not to be outdone the boys penned "I Wonder If I Care As Much" and "Should We Tell Him" in very much the same vein - boppy catchy hits.

If you want to go the whole hog I'd recommend the truly gorgeous "Classic Everly Brothers" - a 3CD Box Set by Bear Family from 1992 and their stunning "Studio Outtakes" single-disc mini box set from February 2006 that offers fans 34 previously unreleased outakes complete with studio patter and Audio that defies its age.

Simon & Garfunkel covered "Bye Bye Love" on their "Bridge Over Troubled Water" 1970 LP masterpiece - singing "...I'm through with romance...I'm through with love..." Sixty years on and we're still not through with this fantastic start and the incomparable Everly Brothers...

Titles in Ace Records Mid-Price 'Hip Pocket' CD Series are:

1. DONALD AUSTIN – Crazy Legs (Ace/Westbound CDHP 016, Dec 2006)
2. THE BISHOPS – Cross Cuts (Ace/Chiswick CDWIKM 256, June 2005)
3. HADDA BROOKS – Femme Fatale (Ace CDCHM 1129, Nov 2006)
4. THE CHAMPS – Go, Champs, Go! (Ace CDCHM 1126, Sep 2006)
5. THE DAMNED – Machine Gun Etiquette (Ace/Chiswick CDHP 027, July 2007)
6. THE ESCALATORS [ex Meteors] – Moving Staircases (Ace CDHP 017, Dec 2006)
7. THE EVERLY BROTHERS – The Everly Brothers (Ace CDCHM 1127, Sep 2006)
8. FUNKADELIC – Maggot Brain (Ace/Westbound CDHP 030, Aug 2007)
9. CHUCK HIGGINS – Pachucko Hop (Ace CDHP 024, April 2007)
10. B. B. KING – The Jungle (Ace/Kent CDHP 031, Nov 2007)
11. JOHNNY MOPED – Cycledelic (Ace/Chiswick CDHP 029, Oct 2007)
12. JACKIE LEE – The Duck (Ace/Kent CDHP 032, Dec 2010)
13. LONNIE MACK – The Wham Of That Memphis Man! (Ace CDCHM 1134, Nov 2006)
14. MOTORHEAD – Motorhead [1977 Debut LP] (Ace/Chiswick CDHP 021, Oct 2007)
15. THE OLYMPICS – Something Old, Something New (Ace/Kent CDHP 018, Dec 2006)
16. THE RADIO STARS – Songs For Swinging Lovers (Ace/Chiswick CDWIKM 5, June 2006)
17. THE SONICS – Here Are The Sonics! (Ace/Big Beat CDHP 022, Feb 2007)
18. THE SONICS – The Sonics Boom (Ace/Big Beat CDHP 023, April 2007)
19. ROOSEVELT SYKES [aka 'The Honeydripper'] – Sings The Blues (Ace CDCHM 1132, Nov 2006)
20. VARIOUS – For Dancers Only [Kent's 1st Reissue LP compilation] (Ace/Kent CDHP 019, Feb 2007)
21. VARIOUS – For Dancers Also [Kent's 2nd Reissue LP compilation] (Ace/Kent CDHP 020, April 2007)
22. VARIOUS – Hollywood Rock 'n' Roll [80ts Rockabilly compilation] (Ace CDHP 026, July 2007)
23. VARIOUS – Fool's Gold [70ts Punk compilation] (Ace/Chiswick CDHP 028, August 2007)
24. LINK WRAY – Early Recordings (Ace/Chiswick CDCHM 6, June 2006
25. THE ZOMBIES – Odyssey And Oracle (Ace/Big Beat CDHP 025, June 2007)

Saturday 21 May 2016

"Party Time" by JULIA LEE (1995 Bear Family 5CD Box Set ("Kansas City Star") and 2016 10" Vinyl LP Repress Remasters) - A Review by Mark Barry...




"...He Has Four-Foot Shoulders And That Ain't All..."

Back in the salty mists of time I reviewed Bear Family's fabulous 5CD Box Set "Kansas City Star" by JULIA LEE and HER BOYFRIENDS (Bear Family BCD 15770 EI) and provided a detailed Discography to quantify every track. Amidst the saucy R&B rhythms was her debut US LP in 1950 - "Party Time" on Capitol H-228 - an ultra-rare 8-track 10" Mono mini album. Capitol reissued it in 1955 in a 12" LP with 12 tracks (see list below). As part of their 'Vinyl Club Exclusives' - Bear Family of Germany have decided in their wisdom to give the original 8-track LP "Party Time" by JULIA LEE - A 2016 Vinyl 10" LP repress on Bear Family Records BAF 11002 with two bonus tracks added that weren't on the original nor the 12" reissue. They've pressed 1000 copies - the first 500 of which are on coloured vinyl (an instant collectable). As it says on the rear - 'these cats dig music'. The 2016 LP configuration plays out as follows.

Side 1:
1. King Size Papa
2. Snatch And Grab It [aka "(Opportunity Knocks But Once) Snatch And Grab It"]
3. You Ain't Got It No More
4. Tell Me, Daddy

BONUS TRACK:
5. Oh, Chuck It (In A Bucket)

Side 2:
1. Tonight's The Night
2. I Didn't Like It The First Time (The Spinach Song)
3. Ain't It A Crime
4. Don't Save It Too Long

BONUS TRACK:
5. Lotus Blossom

All of the tracks are old R&B shuffling 78"s ranging from October 1947 for "Snatch And Grab It" (Capitol Americana 40028) up to "Ain't It A Crime" from 1950 (Capitol 938). The music is almost all saucy tunes about her 'daddy' and her 'big man'. The double-entendres are brilliant - take "I Didn't Like It The First Time (The Spinach Song)" where she sings "...I used to run away from the stuff...but now I can't get enough..." or the seriously fruity "...somehow it's always hittin' the spot...especially when they're bringing it in hot..." In "King Size Papa" she warns the neighbours that "...I take the door off the hinges when he comes to call..." or missing her man in "Tonight's The Night" where she advises "...one time we set a record...and it was quite a feat...but I just have a feeling that record can be beat...yes tonight's the night..."

Other times she cools on her big beau where in "Ain't It A Crime" she whines, "...out of millions of men...it's me that got stuck with you..." Worse is to come in the soggy-chip song "You Ain't Got It No More" where Miss Lee breaks the sad news "...you say baby let's bop and let's beep...I get ready for action...but it's sound asleep...” And later on in that tune of bedroom woe Julia informs us that his 'rear end's shot' (ouch). Half the fun of course is listening to the whole combo – her voice, the sly and witty words, the genius arrangements and a super-tight house-band – all shuffling drums, piano rolls and Saxophone solos – what fun.

If you get a chance - sequence the stunning 12-Track version of the 1955 "Party Time" LP on Capitol T-228 (Mono) by JULIA LEE. You can do this by using the Bear Family "Kansas City Star" 5CD Box Set. Here's how it plays out (16/3 = Track 16 on Disc 3 and so on):

Side 1:
1. King Size Papa [16/3]
2. Snatch And Grab It [14/2]
3. You Ain't Got It No More [15/4]
4. Tell Me, Daddy [22/3]
5. Last Call (For Alcohol) [16/5]
6. I Was Wrong [11/3]
Side 2:
1. Tonight's The Night [7/4]
2. I Didn't Like It The First Time (The Spinach Song) [20/3]
3. Ain’t It A Crime [3/3]
4. Don't Save It Too Long [13/4]
5. After Hours Waltz [14/4]
6. My Man Stands Out [8/4]

Of the four new tracks - "Last Call (For Alcohol)" is a 1952 USA 78" on Capitol 2203 and is typical barroom boozy tune while "My Man Stands Out" gives lyrics like "...when my man's at the wheel...that's the deal..." (what a lucky gal).

Julia Lee's naughty R&B is forgotten now and the sexily great "Party Time" LP in all its forms is the same. Typical of the mighty Bear Family to remind us of the errors of our musical ways with this brilliant Limited Edition reissue - love it to bits...

"Still Crazy After All These Years" by PAUL SIMON - October 1975 US LP on Columbia Records (2004 & 2011 UK Sony/Legacy 'Extended Edition' CD Remaster) - A Review by Mark Barry...




This Review and 199 More Like It Are Available In My
Amazon e-Book 

BLOW BY BLOW - 1975

Your All-Genres Guide To
Exceptional CD Reissues & Remasters 
All Reviews From The Discs Themselves 
(No Cut And Paste Crap) 

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"...Get On The Bus, Gus..."

In 2015 Paul Simon has had a fourth number one album in an incredible (and at times choppy) career – albeit with a compilation that combines both Simon and Garfunkel with his Solo material for the first time. Which got in mind of the 15CD Box Set peach – "The Complete Albums Collection" and his 70ts output. The box gives you classy presentation, gorgeous remastered Audio and a wad of Previously Unreleased stuff for those who haven’t bought the previous reissues. It’s even turned up on sale of late with a price that will entice.

Which brings us to this 1975 peach. Like 1983's "Hearts And Bones" - I often feel his album "Still Crazy After All These Years" is an overlooked gem in a wildly distinguished career – yet another platter crammed full of classy tunes and complimentary productions. The man’s day job as intelligent generational spokesman seems in tact. Here are the Fifty Ways...

There are two ways to get the CD. The November 2011 UK and European issue on Sony/Legacy 88697819992 (Barcode 886978199928) is essentially a re-run of an American Remaster from 2004 with the two bonus tracks listed below (45:32 minutes). It can be bought on Amazon for around a fiver. But I'd argue that Paul Simon is such a good artist with such a consistent catalogue that you should go the few extra quid and seek out the October 2013 Box Set "The Complete Albums Collection" on Sony/Legacy 88691912922 (Barcode 886919129229). It's a 14-album/15CD Mini Box with 5” Repro Card Sleeves and beautiful VIC ANESNI Mastering. His is a name I seek out - Anesini has handled very prestigious SONY catalogue – Elvis Presley, Simon & Garfunkel, The Byrds, Nilsson, Stevie Ray Vaughan, Carole King, Janis Joplin, Blood, Sweat & Tears, Santana, Mountain, Lou Reed and The Jayhawks to name but a few. Clean – full of presence and warmth – this thing is a joy to listen too.

1. Still Crazy After All These Years
2. My Little Town [with Art Garfunkel]
3. I Do It For Your Love
4. 50 Ways To Leave Your Lover
5. Night Game
6. Gone At Last [with Phoebe Snow and the Jessy Dixon Singers] [Side 2]
7. Some Folks’ Lives Roll Easy
8. Have A Good Time
9. You’re Kind
10. Silent Eyes
Tracks 1 to 10 are the 4th studio album "Still Crazy After All These Years" by PAUL SIMON – released October 1975 on Columbia PC 33540 and in the UK on CBS Records S 86001.

BONUS TRACKS:
11. Slip Slidin' Away – Demo
12. Gone At Last – Original Demo with the Jessy Dixon Singers

The 62-page colour booklet of the Box Set is beautifully laid out – full track-by-track annotation (musicians, producers, studios etc) for every album. In-between the pages of info are period black and white photos – guitar on his back for “The Paul Simon Song Book” LP, the straw hat face shot for the “Paul Simon” LP and a live photo of Simon on stage with Ladysmith Black Mambazo before the credits for “Graceland”. As fans will already know many of the early albums were remastered in the 2000s by Ted Jensen and Vic Anesini – two names high on the list of those looking for quality audiophile. Produced by STEVE BERKOWITZ and BILL INGLOT, the whole box is listed as being mastering by VIC ANESINI at Sony Music Studios. There are also a couple of pages at the beginning by journalist ASHLEY KAHN on Simon’s long and prestigious career. Only one of the card sleeves is a gatefold (“There Goes Rhymin’ Simon”) and all have white rims around the front and rear artwork. A nice touch is that each CD is a picture disc (usually using the front cover artwork) and 37 Previously Unreleased Bonus Tracks accompany the albums.





"Still Crazy After All These Years" opens with a sweet Barry Beckett keyboard tinkle where Paul informs us that he met his old lover on the street last night – they had a few bevvies and reminisced as to how they'd survived the emotional rollercoaster of life. He says "...I ain't no fool for love songs that whisper in my ears..." - but somehow you can't help but feel that Paul Simon is as big a mushball as the rest of us. And don't you just love that Mike Brecker Saxophone solo as it sails in like a great Steely Dan moment. At the time - stickers on the sleeve of the original vinyl LP made a big deal of "My Little Town" – the long-awaited reunion of Simon & Garfunkel in all but name. But the song always left me unmoved. 

Rehearing it however on this gorgeous remaster – I know warm to it better than I did (sweet harmonies). Sivuca plays Accordion and gives a Vocal Solo in the beautifully dishevelled "I Do It For Your Love" – a song with fabulous lyrics about a warm marriage on a rainy day and the drifting years that follow. A drum rattle introduces the witty "50 Ways To Leave Your Lover" – where our Paul accepts a woman's help. She doesn't want to intrude but does want to sleep with him (he agrees her diagnosis is probably a good one). And that roll call of names like Sam, Gus and Roy leaving their lovers in varying ways still raises a smile (you can hear Phoebe Snow, Patti Austen and Valerie Simpson on Backing Vocals with Hugh McCracken playing Guitar). The extremely quite Baseball song "Night Game" plays softly before Toots Thielmans comes sailing in on his Harmonica - classy like Larry Adler.

Side 2 opens with the manic "Gone At Last" where Phoebe Snow and The Jesse Dixon Singers come sailing in to amazing effect (she carries the second verse on her own). It's the kind of Dixieland romp he had on the wonderful "There Goes Rhymin' Simon" album in 1973. Bob James plays sweet Keyboards on the ballad "Some Folks' Live Roll Easy" as Hugh McCracken picks Guitar and David Sanborn provides Saxophone. It's such a simple song but so damn good too. One of the album's hidden gems is “You're Kind” with Joe Beck playing sweet Guitar licks throughout – beautifully clear Production to. It ends on the almost Gospel piano and voice of "Silent Eyes" – Leon Pendarvis on the Piano with The Chicago Community Choir lending their backing vocals as he sings of Jerusalem weeping alone.

When the "Greatest Hits, etc." set turned up in 1977 – it had two fantastic new songs as an enticement for buyers – the sexily languid "Slip Slidin' Away" and the brassy bopper "Stranded In A Limousine". It won't take many fans any time to work out that the finished studio cut of "Slip Slidin' Away" is unfortunately conspicuous by its absence here (the studio version of "Stranded In A Limousine" is a Bonus Track on the "One-Trick Pony" CD). The Demo is fully formed as he starts it with "...just keep playing..." instructions to the players. But as nice as the Demo is – it's no substitute for the finished cut and is frankly a huge boo-boo on the blotter of this otherwise exemplary set. The "Gone At Last" Demo has The Jessie Dixon Singers on it and feels like an African chant as the drums patter and pace. Both are nice additions but with the two 'Greatest Hits' tracks AWOL – this CD would have been six stars and not five. But that core album is just so damn good...

"...Found a rug in an old junk shop...brought it home to you..." - Paul Simon sings on the beautifully crafted "I Do It For Your Love".

Seek out the Box Set version and bring this overlooked beauty into your home...

Friday 20 May 2016

"The Other Side Of The River" by TERRY REID (2016 Future Days Recordings CD Remaster) - A Review by Mark Barry...



"...Things To Try..." 

I ripped the shrink-wrap off this sucker with the glee of a piranha that hasn't eaten for three weeks as a baby elephant unwisely decides to take a nice bath in the 'river'. I've loved Terry Reid's third album and Atlantic Records debut with a passion for near 45 years - so the idea that a whole sixty-minute CD's worth of outtakes and unheard songs from these sessions existed was always going to test my pacemaker to the limit.

Details first - Future Days Recordings are part of 'Light In The Attic Records' group (with a Rhino association on this release) - a hugely respected American reissue label that has brought the world fabulous reissues of forgotten meisterworks by people like Michael Chapman, Betty Davis, Big Jim Sullivan, Bobby Whitlock, Karen Dalton, Kris Kristofferson and their big baby - Rodriguez (see my reviews for most of these artists and the Rodriguez film "Searching For Sugar Man"). Produced for release by experts PAT THOMAS and MARK BLOCK (they've also provided the superlative song-by-song liner notes) - the material has been licensed from Rhino and the analogue original tapes Researched by BILL INGLOT and MIKE JOHNSON, Multi-Track Mixing by BRIAN KEHEW with the final Remaster carried out by JOHN BALDWIN at John Baldwin Mastering.

USA and UK released Friday, 20 May 2016 - "The Other Side Of The River" by TERRY REID on Future Days Recordings/Rhino Custom Products FDR 629 (Barcode 826853062923) is a 11-track CD compilation offering six never-before-heard outtakes and five Alternate Versions of songs from the "River" sessions recorded in 1973 in two countries. EDDIE OFFORD (associated with Yes, ELP and Taste) recorded and produced the initial sessions in London (Advision and Olympic Studios) followed by TOM DOWD in Miami and Los Angeles (famously produced huge swathes of the Atlantic Records catalogue including Ray Charles and Aretha Franklin). All are Previously Unreleased and play out as follows (61:03 minutes):

1. Let's Go Down - Previously Unreleased Song
Features Bassist LEE MILES from the Ike & Tina Turner Revue, Drummer ALAN WHITE of YES and Guitarist DAVID LINDLEY (ex Kaleidoscope)
2. Avenue (F Boogie) - Previously Unreleased Alternate Take
London recording taken by Tom Dowd in the USA and overdubbed with the Ike & Tina Turner singers THE IKETTES
3. Things To Try – Previously Unreleased Alternate Take
Features Terry on Acoustic and David Lindley on Electric Guitar
4. Country Brazilian Funk - Previously Unreleased Song
Features Lee Miles, Terry Reid on Vocals and Gilberto Gil's 'The Brazilians' play Percussion
5. River - Previously Unreleased Alternate Take
Features Lee Miles, Terry Reid on Vocals and Latin Percussionist Willie Bobo
6. Listen With Eyes - Previously Unreleased Song
Features Lee Miles on Bass, Terry Reid on Acoustic and Willie Bobo on Percussion
7. Anyway - Previously Unreleased Alternate Take
Features Alan White of Yes on Piano - no Vocals
8. Celtic Melody - Previously Unreleased Song
Acoustic Instrumental recorded in London
9. Funny - Previously Unreleased Alternate Take
Features David Lindley on Pedal Steel Guitar and is one-minute longer than the version that turned up in 2006
10. Late Night Idea - Previously Unreleased Song
Recorded in Hollywood by Tom Dowd - Terry Reid on Steinway piano alone
11. Sabyla - Previously Unreleased Song
Features Lee Miles on Piano and Terry Reid on Lead Guitar

The gatefold card sleeve comes with a fab 16-page booklet featuring PAT THOMAS and MATT BLOCK liner notes. Entitled 'Many Rivers To Cross' – the prelude essay gives a potted history on Terry's career and hassles with Mickey Most's two-album lock down at the beginning of his career. But the details excel in the song by-song breakdowns (I've filled out the entries above from these). There are four photos of Advision and Olympic Sound Studios tape boxes and a snap on the front cover of Terry looking like a vagrant needing a good wash, a haircut and a real job. Odd though that the centre gatefold is blank - no photos guys?

The AUDIO is fantastic – the whole thing feeling like a well-recorded yet ramshackle Rolling Stones session – people feeling for a song – for a vibe – trying things out. It isn't all genius for damn sure but for lovers of the album "The Other Side Of The River" is going to be a thrill ride they will need in their life. And there's also a tangible sense of pride and excitement from the FDR compilers as well as Terry's amazed and bemused involvement with something that happened over 40 years ago (his comments feature a lot in the notes).

"Let's Go Down" was apparently a spontaneous jam and is probably the most exciting Rock track on the CD – a fabulous kicker of a song with amazing Production values and the band making every instrument wail and howl (Violin, Guitar and Brass). At 6:48 minutes – it's a very cool opening. Just as good is the Alternate of "Avenue" which features The Ikettes to stunning effect - making you wonder why they weren't included on the finished album version. But for me the goose bumps race up the arms on "Things To Try" - a more chilled version with amazing Production values as the acoustic guitars and drums assault your speakers (that gutteral vocal clear and powerful). "Country Brazilian Funk" is just odd - a six-hundred mile-an-hour guitar driven piece of drum battering that must have been fun to record but feels out of place with the mellow of the original album. Far better is the spoken count-in 'one-two...you know what to do...' to an Alternate "River" - a gorgeous ambler with beautifully clear Bass and Acoustic and a sexy vocal from Reid (feels like Santana on a chill with a great singer at the mike). The unissued "Listen With Eyes" again has that Jose Feliciano Latin acoustic guitar feel - a laid-back ballad with Willie Bobo guesting - very, very nice.

Some wonderful geezer studio chatter precedes the acoustic strum of "Anyway" and with Alan White's lovely barrelhouse piano complimenting the background - it already feels like a classic Ronnie Lane and Slim Chance beauty that you know you're going to love forever. He hums half way through (instead of lyrics) and it’s a crying shame there isn't a take with finished words (gorgeous stuff and 5:41 minutes long). "Celtic Melody" is only 1:35 minutes and consist mainly of hissy stops and starts on the Acoustic - but it shows his creative process - just playing and as his comments in the liner notes confirm - just 'making s*** up' as he went along. Back to the real deal with a fabulous Alternate "Funny" that runs to a whopping 8:06 minutes - apparently a minute longer than the mix that turned up on the 2006 CD compilation. He lets rip with that amazing voice as the acoustic and soft guitars keep it very mellow in-between. "Late Night Idea" is an accident - a work in progress never completed. Recording at Wally Heider's studio in Hollywood - Terry came upon a Steinway Grand piano and with Dowd letting the tapes roll - he sat down and played this intimate amble. It ends on "Sabyla" – an aimless meandering piano and guitar instrumental that the liner notes contend could have been a 70ts TV show theme (with a lot of a polish boys maybe).

So there you have it – "The Other Side Of The River" by Terry Reid is not all brill by any stretch - but man those good bits have me knobbling at the knees. And at my age I'm glad to be knobbling at anything...

"Crying" by ROY ORBISON (2006 and 2010 Monument/Legacy 'Extended' CD Remaster) - A Review by Mark Barry...





"...Love Hurts...Love Scars..."

Having established his vocal credentials with December 1960's debut LP "Roy Orbison Sings Lonely And Blue" (a legendary Audiophile creation -especially in Stereo) – it was time for sucker-punch number two. Rising to No. 21 on the US Pop charts – the Big 'O' gave us another masterpiece of pleading, needing and general lovelorn weepiness – 1962's "Crying".

Re-listening to it in 2016 on this fab little CD and you’re struck by the awesome Audio, the sheer classiness of the songwriting and his battle weary persona – a strangely warm and accessible thing that seemed to straddle that thin line between young love's emotional highs vs. bottomless heartbreak and still come out smelling of roses.

Like its famous predecessor – Monument 4007 is a wickedly good little album with monster hits like "Crying” and “Running Scared”. And by throwing in clever bonus cuts like the killer B-side "Candy Man" and the non-album 45 of "Dream Baby" - this tasty Sony Legacy CD reissue/remaster does the old doll super proud. No one is running scared from this one. Get ready with that boxes of tissues...here are the details...

UK and Europe released October 2006 – "Crying" by ROY ORBISON on Monument/Legacy/Sony BMG 82876 85574 2 (Barcode 828768557426) is an 'Expanded Edition' CD Remaster and plays out as follows (41:20 minutes):

1. Crying
2. The Great Pretender
3. Love Hurts
4. She Wears My Ring
5. Wedding Day
6. Summer Song
7. Dance [Side 2]
8. Lana
9. Loneliness
10. Let's Make A Memory
11. Nite Life
12. Running Scared
Tracks 1 to 12 are his second album "Crying" - released April 1962 in the USA on Monument M 4007 (Mono) and Monument SM 14007 (Stereo) and May 1962 in the UK on London HA-U 2437 (Mono only). Produced by FRED FOSTER – the STEREO Mix is used for the CD.

BONUS TRACKS:
13. Candy Man
Track 13 is the non-album B-side of "Crying" – released August 1961 in the USA on Monument MO 447 and September 1961 in the UK on London 9405. Beverley Ross and Elektra Records Folk singer Fred Neil co-wrote "Candy Man".

14. Let The Good Times Roll
Track 14 is the non-album A-side of a November 1965 USA 7" single on Monument 45-906 (it was recorded at the November 1961 sessions but not used until 1965). It peaked at No. 81 on the US singles charts.

15. Dream Baby (How Long Must I Dream)
Track 15 is the non-album A-side of a February 1962 USA 7" single on Monument 45-456 (written by Cindy Walker). It was issued February 1962 in the UK as "Dream Baby" on London HLU 9511 also with "The Actress" as its B-side.

16. The Actress
Track 16 is the non-album B-side to "Dream Baby (How Long Must I Dream)" in both the USA and UK. Roy Orbison and Joe Melson wrote it. 

MUSICIANS:
GUITARS – Harold Bradley, Hank Garland, Grady Martin, Boudleaux Bryant, Scotty Moore, Fred Carter Jr., Ray Edenton and Joe Tanner
TRUMPET – Carl Garvin and Cam Mullins
SAXOPHONE – Harry Johnson and Boots Randolph
HARMONICA – Charlie McCoy
PIANO – Floyd Cramer and Bill Pursell
BASS – Bob Moore
DRUMS – John Greubel and Buddy Harman
VIOLA - Howard Carpenter
CELLO – Bryan Bach
VIOLINS – Brenton banks, George Binkley III, Aileen Fentress, Solie Fott, Lillian Hunt, Jane Norris, Vernal Richardson, Wilda Tinsley and Dorothy Walker
BACKING VOCALS – Joe Melson and The Anita Kerr Singers

Although it has a pair of sepia-tinted Roy photos discussing something on a phone – apart from the repro of Boudleaux Bryant’s liner notes – there is naught else by way of history or discussion (more’s the pity). The booklet is pretty to look at admittedly but such a shame that Sony and compiler GREG GELLER didn’t stretch out a tad with the info (he deserved more). There's also another sepia photo of Roy beneath the see-through CD tray.

But all of that is naught to the truly beautiful CD Audio you get the second you start playing the expertly crafted songs. VIC ANESINI did the Remasters at Sony Studios in New York – and he's a name I've sung the praises of before. Anesini has handled very prestigious SONY catalogue – Elvis Presley, Simon & Garfunkel, The Byrds, Nilsson, Stevie Ray Vaughan, Carole King, Janis Joplin, Blood, Sweat & Tears, Santana, Mountain, Paul Simon, Lou Reed and The Jayhawks to name but a few. Clean – full of presence and warmth – this thing is a joy to listen too. And even if the strings and Anita Kerr Singers do tend to over dramatize some of the songs – Orbison's voice is a thing of wonder throughout. It's also one of those reissues that become vastly enhanced by the addition of four smartly chosen and apt bonus tracks - the chipper "Candy Man" B-side and the beautifully arranged pleader "Dream Baby (How Long Must I Dream)". 

Like the "...Only The Lonely" LP – this album opens with a mighty misery tune – our hero telling us that he was alright for a while until she stopped to say hello (women do these sort of cruel things). The audio on this mini masterpiece is (if you'll forgive the pun) – monumental – and all the more impressive to see that like much of the album the song is penned by Roy with his songwriting buddy of choice – Joe Melson. Buck Ram gave The Platters "The Great Pretender" and here Roy lays on the ache again – so too with Boudleaux Bryant's Everly Brothers hit "Love Hurts". Roy also penned the proud marital song "She Wears My Ring" – a staccato drum rumble pacing out her devotion. A wash of strings at the beginning of "Summer Song" threatens to drown the Roy Orbison/Joe Melson tune in a sea of maudlin – but then great voice and rhythm kicks in and it turns out to be one of the album's highlights.

Time to up the pace - so Roy and Joe open Side 2 with a 60ts hipshaker - their wickedly good "Dance" - a sax solo song that could surely have been another top ten hit. "Lana” is cute but somehow too poppy for its own good – better is his string melodrama of "Let's Make A Memory" and the double whammy finishers – a cha-cha "Night Life" and the fantastic teenage angst of "Running Scared" - a song that lets the full 'Big O' persona surface – hitting those great notes as the song climaxes. The four Bonus Tracks turn out to be just that – all killer and no filler. "Candy Man" is a favourite flip for Roy fans while the Harmonica and saxophone driven "Let The Good Time Roll" was probably too similar to other songs so left in the can only to be retrieved as a 45 in own right in 1965. And both "Dream Baby..." and "The Actress" is a superb 45 combo...

A sweetheart of a release then and one that boasts exceptional Audio - classy like the great man himself - and all of it done in conjunction with the Roy Orbison Estate.

"...I could smile for a while..." - Roy sang on "Crying". I agree...

PS: This CD has been reissued May 2010 in the USA using the same Monument/Legacy catalogue number of 82876 85574 2- but with a different barcode of 886977079023 – same tracks and same annotation

INDEX - Entries and Artist Posts in Alphabetical Order