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Saturday 11 April 2020

"The Albums 1969-1972" by THE CLIMAX CHICAGO BLUES BAND [First Three LPs] and CLIMAX CHICAGO [Fourth and Fifth LPs] -– Featuring Five UK Albums and Eighteen Bonuses - "The Climax Chicago Blues Band" Debut from February 1969 on Parlophone, "The Climax Blues Band Plays On" from November 1969 on Parlophone, "A Lot Of Bottle" from December 1970 on Harvest, "Tightly Knit" from October 1971 on Harvest and "Rich Man" from January 1973 on Harvest (June 2019 UK Esoteric Recordings 5CD Clamshell Mini Box Set – Ben Wiseman Remasters) - A Review by Mark Barry...











"...Anybody's Boogie..."

Now here's something I'd venture to say Climax Blues Band fans never thought they'd see – the early five-album incarnation of their British Blues Boogie lumped together into one place - mini clamshell box set, singular card repro sleeves, foldout double-sided poster, rare bonuses - nice presentation and all of it at a very reasonable price.

It's a huge haul too - the first three albums credited in the UK to THE CLIMAX CHICAGO BLUES BAND (two on Parlophone in 1969 and one on Harvest in 1970) and the last two as the shortened CLIMAX CHICAGO on Harvest in 1971 and early 1973 (they are mostly known as CLIMAX BLUES BAND in the States). But you also get 18 Bonuses across the five discs from CD reissues/remasters first issued February and May 2013 (and those card repro sleeves are rarely seen artwork into the bargain). Let's put a sock in it...

UK released 28 June 2019 - "The Albums 1969-1972" by CLIMAX BLUES BAND on Esoteric Recordings ECLEC 52679 (Barcode 5013929477902) is a 5CD Clamshell Mini Box Set of Remasters for Five Albums plus Eighteen Bonus Tracks - they play out as follows:

CD1 "The Climax Chicago Blues Band" (68:39 minutes):
1. Mean Old World [Side 1]
2. Insurance
3. Going Down This Road
4. You've Been Drinking
5. Don't Start Me Talkin'
6. Wee Baby Blues
7. Twenty Past One [Side 2]
8. A Stranger In Your Town
9. How Many More Years
10. Looking For My Baby
11. And Lonely
12. The Entertainer
Tracks 1 to 12 are their debut album "The Climax Chicago Blues Band" - released February 1969 in the UK on Parlophone PMC 7069 and Parlophone PCS 7069 in Stereo and December 1969 in the USA on Sire SES 97013 (Stereo Mix used). Produced by CHRIS THOMAS - it didn't chart in either country.

BONUS TRACKS:
13. Checking On My Baby
14. Arthur's Boogie
15. Stormy Monday
16. Don't Start Me Talkin' (Take One)
17. Anybody’s Boogie
18. You've Been Drinking (Take One)
19. And Lonely (Take Five)
Tracks 13 to 19 first appeared on the February 2013 CD reissue of "The Climax Chicago Blues Band" on Esoteric Recordings ECLEC 2373 (Barcode 5013929437340) and were Previously Unreleased at the time

CD2 "The Climax Blues Band Plays On" (60:53 minutes):
1. Flight [Side 1]
2. Hey Baby, Everything's Gonna be Alright, Yeh Yeh Yeh
3. Cubano Chant
4. Little Girl
5. Mum's The Word [Side 2]
6. Twenty Past Two/Temptation Rag
7. So Many Roads
8. City Ways
9. Crazy 'Bout My Baby
Tracks 1 to 9 are their second studio album "The Climax Blues Band Plays On" - released November 1969 in the UK on Parlophone PCS 7084 in Stereo and November 1970 in the USA as "The Climax Chicago Blues Band Plays On" on Sire SES 97023. Produced by CHRIS THOMAS - it didn't chart in the UK but did peak at No. 197 in the USA.

BONUS TRACKS:
10. Like Uncle Charlie
11. Loving Machine (Tracks 10 and 11 are the non-album A&B-sides of an 3 October 1969 UK 7" single on Parlophone R 5809)
12. Dance Of The Mountain King's Daughter
13. Flight (First Mix)
Tracks 10 to 13 first appeared on the February 2013 CD reissue of "The Climax Blues Band Plays On" on Esoteric Recordings ECLEC 2374 (Barcode 5013929437449)

CD3 "A Lot Of Bottle" (59:07 minutes):
1. Country Hat [Side 1]
2. Every Day
3. Reap What I've Sowed
4. Brief Case
5. Alright Blue?/Country Hat (Reprise)
6. Seventh Son [Side 2]
7. Please Don't Help Me
8. Morning Noon And Night
9. Long Lovin' M
10. Louisiana Blues
11. Cut You Loose
Tracks 1 to 11 are their third studio album "A Lot Of Bottle" - released December 1970 in the UK on Harvest SHSP 4009 and May 1971 in the USA as "Climax Blues Band" on Sire SI 4901 (with the same tracks). Produced by CHRIS THOMAS. Their first three albums were credited to The Climax Chicago Blues Band in the UK, the first two the same in the USA while album three was credited to Climax Blues Band in the States.

BONUS TRACKS:
12. Flight (Live)
13. Seventh Son (Live)
14. Reap What I Have Sowed (Live)
Tracks 12 to 13 recorded live at The Blow Up Club, London, Autumn 1971 and first issued on the February 2013 reissue CD for "Climax Blues Band" on Esoteric Recordings ECLEC 2375 (Barcode 5013929437548). See NOTE below re missing Bonus Track.

CD4 "Tightly Knit" (53:57 minutes):
1. Hey Mama [Side 1]
2. Shoot Her If She Runs
3. Towards The Sun
4. Come On In My Kitchen
5. Who Killed McSwiggin [Side 2]
6. Little Link
7. St. Michael's Blues
8. Bide My Time
9. That's All
Tracks 1 to 9 are their fourth studio album "Tightly Knit" (the band credited as CLIMAX CHICAGO) - released October 1971 in the UK on Harvest SHSP 4015 and February 1972 in the USA on Sire SI 5903 (the band credited as CLIMAX BLUES BAND). Produced by CHRIS THOMAS

BONUS TRACKS:
10. Hey Mama (Live)
11. Shoot Her If She Runs (Live)
12. Spoonful (Live)
Tracks 12 to 13 recorded live at The Blow Up Club, London, Autumn 1971 and first issued on the May 2013 reissue CD for "Tightly Knit" on Esoteric Recordings ECLEC 2385 (Barcode 5013929438545)

CD5 "Rich Man" (43:50 minutes):
1. Rich Man [Side 1]
2. Mole On The Dole
3. You Make Me Sick
4. Standing By A River
5. Shake Your Love [Side 2]
6. All The Time In The World
7. If You Wanna Know
8. Don't You Mind People Grinning In Your Face
Tracks 1 to 8 are their fifth studio album "Rich Man" - released January 1973 in the UK on Harvest SHSP 4024 and February 1973 in the USA on Sire SAS 7404. Produced by RICHARD GOTTEHRER. Didn’t chart UK, but peaked at No. 150 in the USA.

BONUS TRACK:
9. Mole On The Dole (Single Version) - 10 November 1972 UK 7" single on Harvest HAR 5065. A-side. Track 9 first appeared in May 2013 on the CD reissue of "Rich Man" on Esoteric Records ECLEC 2386 (Barcode 5013929438644).

As you can see from the track-list layouts above, all five discs are a grouping together of five Remasters Esoteric did of the band's material in 2013 clumped together for this June 2019 Box Set. There are two cuts missing worth a mention - when Esoteric Recordings reissued "A Lot Of Bottle" on CD in February 2013 - that Remaster had four bonus tracks and not just the three live on offer here. The missing song is "Spoonful", a cover version of the Willie Dixon-written Howlin' Wolf classic that turned up as the non-album B-side to "Reap What I've Sowed", a Climax Blues Band 7" single on Harvest HAR 5029 in the UK, released 13 November 1970. I suspect that someone simply forgot to put this tune on here (bit of an oversight as there was enough playing time), so if fans want that Blues cover version, they'll need to get the "A Lot Of Bottle" CD reissue on ECLEC 2375 (Barcode 5013929437548). The B-side of the "Mole On The Dole" Single Version is called "Like Uncle Charlie" - but I think it’s a different version to the 1969 stand-alone single where the song first turned up and is not included on this set.

The six-leaf double-sided foldout poster has all the artwork for the five album covers, pictures of the boys and track-by-track reissue credits – but no liner notes. The five single card sleeves make for a lovely surprise because these are not British album sleeves (the final two by Hipgnosis) that you see every day of the week. All the CDs are picture discs (album artwork) and the Remasters are the BEN WISEMAN versions – Esoteric have a top quality rep on Audio and its upheld here. The clarity at times even exposes the slightly amateur feel to the first two albums especially. But damn do they all sound good. To the music…

The self-titled debut album opens with the very John Mayall and The Bluesbreakers-influenced "Mean Old World" only to follow with the far better barrelhouse piano romp "Insurance" (both sounding very cool). More band originals come in the shape of "Going Down This Road" but the Sonny Boy Williamson cover of "Don't Start Me Talkin'" cooks better. We go Acoustic Blues with the excellent "Wee Baby Blues" - a Traditional about loving that sweet thing that sure look good to me (fab audio and Harmonica from Colin Cooper). Trying to keep the original-material count high, the band give us the guitar-jaunty instrumental "Twenty Past One" and the slide electric of "Looking For My Baby" - a bopper about a gal our hero loves the most. The debut album delves into Howlin' Wolf's "How Many More Years" while going Scott Joplin with a false-78-sounding version of "The Entertainer" as it fades out. Far better however comes in the Bonus Tracks on CD1 in the shape of Sonny Boy's "Checking On My Baby" and keyboardist Arthur Wood giving us a rolling Fats Domino-like instrumental in "Arthur's Boogie". We then get almost five and half minutes of T-Bone Walker's shuffle Blues "Stormy Monday" running alongside the more sober "And Lonely (Take Five)" - a down-in-the-dumps Blues let down by a weak vocal.

"...Plays On" opens as if its a different band - a more Jazz and Prog influenced John Mayall with Dick Heckstall-Smith on Saxophone as Colin Cooper hits those Alto and Tenor Saxophones on the instrumental "Flight". There's no doubt that is Colosseum exciting. Back to Harmonica and Guitar territory with the chugging "Hey Baby, Everything's Going To Be Alright..." - a very cool Boogie lifted up by clear Bass from Derek Holt and steady rhythm sticks from George Newsome. Possibly trying to cross Richie Havens with Jose Feliciano for the just plain hammy "Cubano Chant" ends up confusing on all fronts. Better is an instrumental cover of Graham Bond's "Little Girl" while 2001: A Space Odyssey looms over the organ intro to "Mum's The Word" before it goes all space and weird and you wonder who replaced the Blues Bar band with a light-show Pink Floyd. With that experimental noodle out of the way, the band return to Elmore James rapid slashing of guitars with "Twenty Past Two/Temptation Rag" - a Blues Boogie played at near breakneck speed interrupting by barrelhouse piano. No less than pioneer label man Marshall Chess penned "So Many Roads..." a fab 'gotta find my baby' slow blues with great guitar fills from Pete Haycock. The album ends on a really great rollick called "Crazy 'Bout My Baby" - the band cohesive and kicking up a boogie storm. And again the extras are real bonuses - the stand-alone 45 "Like Uncle Charlie" b/w "Loving Machine" is a Rocking affair and the instrumental Jazz-Meets-Rock "Dance Of The Mountain King's Daughter" comes on like Deram's East Of Eden or even Ireland's Skid Row in their more Prog guitar moments - brilliant.

By the time we reach platter number three "A Lot Of Bottle" – it's August 1970 in the studio and the band has had two albums in the previous year that were well received critically but barely registered with a rapidly changing listening audience (the second hits the outer reaches of the Top 200 in the USA for one week). White boys singing Blues (new and old) was already over by the end of 1969, so there is a very real feeling of the group trying to grab hold of a mixed identity with LP No.3 - and in my book succeeding.

You still get Blues in all its varying forms on "A Lot Of Bottle" - but you also get the Fleetwood Mac 'Then Play On'-sounding shuffle of "Every Day" and the rough-rocking A&M Humble Pie period feel to "Reap What I've Sowed" – a kick-ass grungy 45 of slide Rock that no one noticed. That's contrasted with the Bonnie Raitt rattling acoustic guitars of "Country Hat" – an instrumental that strips away all of the band only to leave Peter Haycock impressing on those bottleneck strokes. As if to change tack yet again – we then get "Brief Case" – a wickedly good Rock-Jazz riffer that feels like Colosseum cooking with Canned Heat. Another too-cool-for-school Harmonica-driven Dirty Blues Band-sounding instrumental comes in the shape of the magnificent "Alright Blue?" which features a clever Reprise of the slide in "Country Hat" that opened the LP - only this time on electric guitar – Haycock sounding like Mickey Moody of Snafu and Nazareth doing his best Elmore James.

Side 2 of this criminally forgotten album opens with a deep-voiced cover of Willie Dixon’s "Seventh Son" – a Fever-like Bass note and distant guitar holding stage until all Hell breaks loose and the band literally come boogieing in - soloing on guitar as the brass supports like CBB was jamming at The Isle Of Wight (an impressive six and half minutes). "Morning Noon and Night" features Joe Turner lyrics from Atlantic Records original despite the band trying to claim the tune as their own. Speaking of old genius, perhaps best on the album is the Johnny Winter guitar-and-harmonica combo delivered on "Louisiana Blues" – a storming version of the Muddy Waters classic. Going down to New Orleans, get me a Mojo Hand…indeed. The album ends on "Cut You Loose" – a very Savoy Brown meets Ten Years After shuffle with shimmering guitar anchored by a Georgie Fame organ. The three live versions only seasoning to this forgotten broth of Blues goodness.

Album four was their first for Harvest in the UK (October 1971) and along with an eye-catching Hipgnosis sleeve clearly the production values were amped up to slick on the Brass and Harmonica combo that is "Hey Mama". They try their luck at some ham-fisted razor and gun lyrics in the unfortunately titled "Shoot Her If She Runs" – heavy guitars doubling up with vocals. "Towards The Sun" is a driving out to the big yellow thing poppy ditty that feels a little like Canned Heat on a diet. Things improve immeasurably with their slide guitar Foghat-like cover of Robert Johnson’s classic "Come On In My Kitchen" – a doubled-up guitar and Harmonica chugging in a very cool way.

The one and half minute "Little Link" is an Allman Brothers guitar instrumental that sounds like its title. It's a lead-in to the near ten minutes of a huge Slow Blues monster called "St. Michael's Blues" where CBB think they’re Led Zeppelin and the singer Robert Plant. It's actually a hugely impressive chunk of Blues Rock revolving around a girlfriend mashing up his Marks and Spencer socks (yikes!). A one-time cool vibe oozes out of "Bide My Time" – a slick piece of jangling guitars anchored by distant Harmonica and Keyboards jabs. It ends on the Jug Band ditty "That’s All" – two minutes of CBB sounding like "Neanderthal Man" by (pre 10cc) Hotlegs.

Record number five sees our boys contemplating feelingless types who drive Cadillac's in a world where the rich man wins and the poor man pays. As the title track suddenly launches into a rapid Allmans guitar boogie – it seems CBB are off into another direction. The full-length album version of "Mole On The Dole" (5:04 minutes) was chosen as a 3:59-minute seven-inch single edit by Harvest Records in advance of the album in November 1972 and suddenly CBB sound like a plaintive Nilsson or The Strawbs contemplating unemployment. It’s pleasant but that’s about all. Then it's a John Lee Hooker 'Boogie Chillun' groove for the I love you so much, "You Make Me Sick" song – home to some great Johnny Winter type slide guitar pinging about the speakers. And on it goes…

You can't but feel that The Climax Chicago Blues Band flirted around the danger zone for five whole albums without ever getting truly dangerous enough for people to care. And not for the first time did ludicrous Hipgnosis artwork confuse buyers (what kind of band is this?). But there are gems on all of these records and that "A Lot Of Bottle" third album is a bit of a forgotten masterpiece to me (nondescript artwork did it no favours either).


"The Albums 1969-1972" by The Climax Blues Band is a rather cool little reissue really and as they sang on the Son House cover that ends album number five - "Don't You Mind People Grinning In Your Face" - where the singer tells us "...bear this is mind...a true friend is hard to find..." Well I think there's more than one or two pals waiting for you in here...check it out...

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