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"…Better
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You And Me Brother…We Can Make It So…"
There are now TWO CD issues of this gorgeous and cool
60ts Folk-Soul album on Ace/Beat Goes Public that requires some explanation...
The first CD was released in November 1995 in the UK
on one of Ace Records label imprints - Beat Goes Public CDBGPM 101 (Barcode
029667510127). It was a straightforward reissue of the 8-Track Mono 1965 US
vinyl album on Prestige 7383 (also credited as PRLP-7383 on some original
copies). It ran to 37:46 minutes and had no mastering or remastering credits.
The sound quality was ok but it has been made redundant by...
This 2nd issue of "The New Folk Sound Of Terry
Callier" by TERRY CALLIER was UK released July 2003 on Ace/Beat Goes
Public CDBGPM 156 (Barcode 029667515627) and is an upgraded Remaster that adds
on Three Previously Unreleased Outtakes from the original session to the
album's eight tracks upping the playing time to 55:01 minutes.
1. 900 Miles [Side 1]
2. Oh Dear, What Can The Matter Be
3. Johnny Be Gay If You Can Be
4. Cotton Eyed Joe
5. It’s About Time [Side 2]
6. Promenade In Green
7. Spin Spin Spin
8. I’m A Drifter
BONUS TRACKS:
9. Be My Woman
10. Jack O’ Diamonds
11. The Golden Apples Of The Sun
This new version on Beat Goes Public CDBGPM 156 has
been transferred by JOE TARANTINO at the Fantasy Studios in California - and if
I was to describe what's better - it's the vocals - they're far more amplified
and to beautiful effect. Unfortunately, it's still a gatefold slip of paper
that provides no history of the record (the original May 1965 liner notes are
reproduced, but it's the usual vague Sixties babble that doesn't actually
inform you of anything).
Aged only 23 - "The New Folk Sound Of..."
was recorded by Samuel Charters in the Webb Recording Studios in Chicago in
just one day - 29 July 1964 - and released late summer of the following year
1965 (no one seems to know the exact month - there’s even talk that it wasn’t
released until late 1968 because the first reviews appeared January 1969).
There are only 3 musicians - TERRY CALLIER on Guitar and Vocals, TERBOUR
ATTENBOROUGH on Bass and JOHN TWEEDLE also on Bass. Another surprise is that
all the songs are covers - five being Public Domain Traditionals while the
other three were from songwriter catalogues of the time.
Side 1 opens with the lovely and lonesome "900
Miles" which sets up his style and the album's overall feel. Although it's
just him on Acoustic Guitar with his voice high up in the mix and the other
instruments behind him, the effect is more FOLK-SOUL than just Folk or Roots.
It's beautifully atmospheric - the kind of album you'd play on a quiet Sunday
morning when you just want something soothing on the ear and brain.
Some tracks work better than others. It's difficult to
hear "Oh Dear What Can The Matter Be" now without thinking of a
schoolyard song we used to sing which rudely rhymed a "Lavatory" with
"Matter Be". But things get better with the quietly lovely
"Johnny Be Gay If You Can Be" and "Cotton Eyed Joe". The
difference on the Remaster of "Cotton Eyed Joe" is stark - the vocals
soar out of the speakers.
One of the album's true masterpieces is Side 2's
opener - the plea for racial equality and an end to all war - "It's About
Time" (lyrics above). Written by a beat poet and a female US songwriter
(Kent Foreman and Lydia Wood) and running to a mere 3:33 minutes, it features a
lovely guitar strum, but this time it has the added double bass of TERBOUR
ATTENBOROUGH which lifts the song out of it's folk-roots feel into something so
much more powerful and substantial. It still sounds awesome to this day - as
relevant then as it is now. It's followed by "Promenade In Green"
which is a Negro song from Alabama copyrighted by Robert Kaufman and Len
Chandler in 1961 (a year before Callier started singing) - it's heart-meltingly
lovely. "I'm A Drifter" is excellent too, but probably overstays its
welcome at just short of nine minutes.
The extras are a revelation. It's easy to see why they
were left off the album - it's not that they're sub-standard - it's just that
they were more of the same and something had to give. Which is good news for us
some 45 years later because the gambling song "Jack O' Diamonds" is
superb. But the real winner is his cover of the Judy Collins song "The
Golden Apples Of The Sun" which incorporated the poetry of William Butler
Yates into the words. It's gorgeous. What a find!
As you've no doubt gathered, I've been soppy about
Terence Orlando Callier for years, so perhaps my review is overly gushing - but
once your weary lugs actually hear this criminally forgotten gem, you'll
understand why...
Despite the lack of notes and an appreciation of the
man's legacy - this is a great reissue of a soft and graceful start - and a
philosophy to life that continues to inspire to this day.
I strongly urge you to get this superb CD reissue into
your life...
PS: see also my reviews for the three albums that
followed on Cadet Records - "Occasional Rain" (June 1971), "What
Color Is Love" (March 1973) and "I Just Can't Stand Myself"
(October 1973)
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