This Review And 212 Others Is Available In My AMAZON E-Book
BOTH SIDES NOW
FOLK & COUNTRY MUSIC
And Rock Genres Thereabouts
Your Guide To Exceptional CD Reissues and Remasters
For the 1960s and 1970s
All Reviews In-Depth and from the Discs Themselves
(No Cut And Paste Crap)
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"...Looking
Back..."
How here's a treat, and a
lot of it too. Hailing out of Reading in Berkshire, our Guitar-playing
Harmonica-ingesting British hero MIKE COOPER sees his first five platters
between 1969 and 1973 be given the BGO treatment - New Remasters, Digipak
presentation and even three bonus tracks – rare stand alone single sides from
1970 and 1972 on Dawn Records.
His musical styles and
influences progressed from Roots Blues, Folk and Americana in 1969 (on Pye)
through to 1971’s Folk and Country Rock aided and abetted by guest players
taken a hiatus from their day jobs as Jazzers in groups like Mike Westbrook’s
Quintet, Nucleus and The John Dummer Band. The very Neil Young "Places I
Know" set from 1971 is a collaboration album with Michael Gibbs and his
next ensemble group 'The Machine Gun Co.' Playing superb 12-string guitar on
one of Cooper's 'you never see them' British singles "Your Lovely Ways
(Part 1 & 2)" is none other than Chris Spedding (it's the first of
three bonus tracks tail-ending on Disc 3). There's a wad of open tunings to
wade through, so let’s get at it...
UK released Friday, 22 March
2019 (29 March 2019 in the USA) - "Oh Really?!/Do I Know You?/Trout Steel/Places
I Know/The Machine Gun Co. with Mike Cooper/Bonus Tracks" by MIKE COOPER
on Beat Goes On BGOCD 1371 (Barcode 5017261213716) offers 'Five Albums On Three
Discs' plus Three Bonus Single Sides and plays out as follows:
Disc 1 (73:30 minutes):
1. Death Letter [Side 1]
2. Bad Luck Blues
3. Maggie Campbell
4. Leadhearted Blues
5. Four Ways
6. Poor Little Annie
7. Tadpole Blues [Side 2]
8. Divinity Blues
9. You're Gonna Be Sorry
10. Electric Chair
11. Crow Jane
12. Pepper Rag
13. Saturday Blues
Tracks 1 to 13 are his debut
album "Oh Really?!" - released February 1969 in the UK on Pye Records
NSPL 18281 in Stereo and in the USA on Janus JLS-3004. Mike Cooper on Vocals
and Guitar with Derek Hall on Second Guitar.
14. The Link [Side 1]
15. Journey To The East
16. First Song
17. Theme In C
18. Thinking Back
19. Thinks She Knows Me Now
[Side 2]
20. Too Late Now
21. Wish She Was With Me
22. Do I Know You?
23. Start Of A Journey
24. Looking Back
Tracks 14 to 24 are his
second studio album "Do I Know You?" - released March 1970 in the UK
on Dawn Records DNLS 3005 and 1970 in the USA on Janus JLS-3021. Mike Cooper on
Guitar, Vocals and Slide with Harry Miller of The Mike Westbrook Quartet on
Double Bass
Disc 2 (70:40 minutes):
1. That's How [Side 1]
2. Sitting Here Watching
3. Goodtimes
4. I've Got Mine
5. A Half Sunday Homage To A
Whole Leonardo Da Vinci (Without Words By Richard Brautigan)
6. Don't Talk Too Fast [Side
2]
7. Trout Steel
8. In The Mourning
9. Hope You See
10. Pharaoh's March
11. Weeping Rose
Tracks 1 to 11 are his third
album "Trout Steel" - released November 1970 in the UK on Dawn
Records DNLS 3011 (no USA issue)
12. Country Water [Side 1]
13. Three-Forty Eight
14. Night Journey
15. Time To Time
Tracks 12 to 15 are Side 1
of his fourth album "Places I Know" credited to Mike Cooper with The
Machine Gun Co. and Michael Gibbs - released November 1971 in the UK on Dawn
Records DNLS 3026 (no USA issue)
Disc 3 (75:35 minutes):
1. Paper And Smoke [Side 2]
2. Broken Bridges
3. Now I Know
4. Goodbye Blues, Goodbye
5. Places I Know
Tracks 1 to 5 are Side 2 of
his fourth album "Places I Know" credited to Mike Cooper with The
Machine Gun Co. and Michael Gibbs - released November 1971 in the UK on Dawn
Records DNLS 3026 (no USA issue). "Night Journey" and "Paper And
Smoke" feature The Machine Gun Company [Co.] - Alan Cook on Piano, Bill
Boazman, Geoff Hawkins on Saxophone and Pipes, Jeff Clyne of Nucleus, John Van
Derrick, Laurie Alan, Les Calvert on Bass and Tim Richardson on Percussion with
Chorus Vocals by Gerald Moore of Reggae Guitars, Jean Oddie and Jazz Vocalist
Norma Winstone
6. Song For Abigail [Side 1]
7. The Singing Tree
8. Midnight Words
9. So Glad (That I Found
You) [Side 2]
10. Lady Anne
Tracks 6 to 10 are his fifth
studio album "The Machine Gun Co. with Mike Cooper" - released
November 1972 in the UK on Dawn DNLS 3031 (no USA issue).
BONUS TRACKS:
11. Your Lovely Ways (Part 1
& 2) - UK 1970 7" Maxi EP single on Dawn Records DNX 2501, A-side,
Non-Album
12. Time In Hand - UK 1972
7" single on Dawn Records DNS 1022, A-side, Non-Album
13. Schaabisch Hall - UK
1972 7" single on Dawn Records DNS 1022, B-side, Non-Album Instrumental
Tracks 11, 12 and 13
featuring Chris Spedding on 12-String Guitar
As far as I know this is
only the second time BGO has used fold-out digipaks (Sonny & Cher was the
other in 2018) and I must say I miss the classiness of the outer card slipcase
because the four-panel digipak is a bit weedy and although every see-through
tray has original artwork beneath it – this is one of those cases where you
wish they’d done a Grapefruit Records reissue and stuck three card sleeves in a
clamshell box with a bigger booklet. At 24-pages you get all the original
artwork and new liner notes from noted writer JOHN O’REAGAN – but I think it ‘feels’
like one of those crappy Universal Deluxe Editions without the plastic titled
slipcase.
And in 2006 when Japan
reissued his most popular album "Trout Steel" on a SHM-CD with
original repro artwork – they included both seven-minute sides of his 1970 Dawn
Records single as two Bonus Tracks - "Your Lovely Ways (Part 1 &
2)" with its B-side "Watching you Fall (Part 1 & 2)". I
mention this because "Watching you Fall (Part 1 & 2)" is not here
– a damn shame because as you can from the total playing time for Disc 2, there
was room for one more important inclusion. But these are minor complaints
because the real spoils lie in new 2019 ANDREW THOMPSON Remasters that lift up
the primarily acoustic-based music beautifully. This threesome sounds gorgeous
and the music deserves it too.
The first album is pure Folk
Blues – Acoustic one-man renditions by way of Scunthorpe – all songs originals
except for the two openers – a cover of the Son House doomy classic "Death
Letter" and a Blind Boy Fuller song called (not surprisingly) "Hard
Luck Blues". The debut is a beginning and you can hear it – the whole
album quietly good, but more functional than inspiring. But when Cooper hit the
second platter "Do I Know You?" – it’s like he suddenly found his
voice – the songs more distinctively him than copyist styling of some Americana
dream. The most immediate comparison is Michael Chapman over on Harvest Records
(the playing and voice) – the opening instrumental "The Link" getting
a huge acoustic sound (like a 12-string). That promising entrée is followed by
an impressive Roy Harper-ish duo of tunes "Journey To The East" and
"First Song". Birdies and Froggies chirp and croak for the intro of
"Them In C", a Bluesy Slide Acoustic with treated vocals that sound
like Ray Dorset discovering the Delta as it segues into "Thinking
Back". Other winners include the pretty but painful "Too Late
Now", the panned Gallagher & Lyle acoustic guitars of "Wish She
Was With Me" and the tidal wash of "Start Of A Journey".
Everything has changed Cooper
sings on "That’s How" – another familiar acoustic strummer that opens
album number three "Trout Steel". Stefan Grossman and Bill Boazman
guest on guitars as do Mike Osbourne, Alan Skidmore and Geoff Hawkins on
varying Horns. Very cool acoustic soloing on "Sitting Here Watching"
while the run-together title "Goodtimes" feels like jolly Gallagher
& Lyle or Ronnie Lane’s Slim Chance rehearsing some slide acoustic
melodies. The eleven-minutes-plus of "I’ve Got Mine" feels like
experimental John Martyn, a bedroom of acoustic picking jabbed by Jazz
musicians who know how to feel out something special – probably the album’s
best moment – and something even Prog Folk lovers will crave.
After the acoustic-based
Blues and Folk variations of the first three albums, the overtly Country-Rock
of "Places I Know" feels like you’ve stumbled on Plainsong making
their debut album - only a year earlier. At times "Three-Forty Three"
even feels like Neil Young circa 1970 or Lindisfarne contemplating the Fog On
The Tyne. While the Bluesy groove of "Night Journey" is uncomfortably
close to Dylan and his Blonde On Blonde gem "Pledging My Time" – even
the way the sliding guitar strings build. But Roy Harper type greatness comes
in the epic 8:30 minutes of the Side 1 finisher "Time To Time" – all
strummed acoustics and Alan Cook giving us aching piano echoing in the
background only to be joined by gorgeous Norma Winstone and Chorus ooh and aahs
as the strum builds – you don’t know, the way she can be from...
The strangely deflated
mellow of "Song For Abigail" opens "The Machine Gun Co. with
Mike Cooper" album – the whole LP apparently supposed to have been the
second half of the double-album "Places I Know". The fourteen-minute
John Martyn Guitar and Rock Fusion noodle that is "So Glad (That I Found
You)" is either going to test you or thrill you. But as much as I try to
like the tunes, few move me and I can’t help thinking this half of the double
was canned for a reason. Way prettier and a reminder of his fresh-faced genius
is the ultra-rare 1970 single Mike Cooper "Your Lovely Ways (Part 1 &
2)" with Chris Spedding elevating its seven minutes to gorgeousness by way
of his 12-string guitar playing – Michael Gibbs directing the cello. Given a
picture sleeve (repro’d on Page 16) – it was a Maxi single that played at LP
speed and along with "Time In Hand" and its piano-ballad B-side
"Schaabisch Hall" end Disc 3 on a high.
For sure not everything here
is undiluted Mike Cooper genius (Michael Chapman or Roy Harper would thrash him
song-wise any day of the week). But there is also a great deal to love and it’s
been decades since I heard it all sound so well. Maybe next time though BGO –
go for that clamshell box and some tasty card sleeves...
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