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WHOLE LOTTA LOVE - 1969
Rock, Pop and Genres Thereabouts
Exceptional CD Reissues and Remasters
Rock, Pop and Genres Thereabouts
Exceptional CD Reissues and Remasters
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"...Spent It All On Comfort For His Mind..."
For a good few years now
I've had an e-Book series on Amazon under the general umbrella of 'Sounds Good
Music Books'. And one of those 30-or-so releases is entitled "I SAW THE
LIGHT - Forgotten Albums 1955 to 1979" with a whopping 458 entries and
nearly 1,900 e-Pages.
Well, Hoyt Axton's
overlooked and largely forgotten Country-Folk pastoral socially conscious gem
"My Griffin Is Gone" will be going in there with an unceremonious
bullet come next update (which will be early 2022).
"My Griffin Is
Gone" is not the five-star masterpiece many claim, but there are at least
six or seven of the twelve tracks that I play a 'lot' - and they are good man -
Nick Drake and Paul Buckmaster flute and acoustic guitar pastoral plaintive
good - with a smidge of Tony Joe White and Fred Neil deep-voiced guttural cool
thrown in for good measure. The lyrics too are brilliant – life, friends,
religion, drugs, the counter culture, childhood lingering and more. Sometimes
they can be twee for sure – all flowers and sunshine (it was 1969 after all).
But mostly they're intelligent, street-insightful and in the hands of an artist
able to communicate them with an unflinching eye.
And audio-wise, this
sweet-sounding 2006 CD on England's Acadia (part of the Evangeline Records
group) is licensed from Sony/BMG who own the tapes for Columbia Records, so the
Remaster is genuinely clear and really good (some tiny traces of hiss but
nothing that really detracts). Those strings on "Revelations" are
gorgeous as are the Brass Arrangements on the brilliant "Way Before The
Time Of Towns". Let's get to the babbling people brook...
UK released July 2006
(August 2006 in the USA) - "My Griffin Is Gone" by HOYT AXTON on
Acadia ACA 8117 (Barcode 0805772811720) is a straightforward CD Reissue and
Remaster of his 1969 album (in Stereo) and plays out as follows (35:47
minutes):
1. On The Natural [Side 1]
2. Way Before The Time Of
Towns
3. Beelzebub's Laughter
4. Sunshine Fields Of Love
5. It's All Right Now
6. Gypsy Will
7. Revelations [Side 2]
8. Snow Blind Friend
9. Childhood's End
10. Sunrise
11. Kingswood Manor
12. Chase Down The Sun
Tracks 1 to 12 are his fifth
studio album "My Griffin Is Gone" – released January 1969 in the USA
on Columbia CS 9766 (Stereo) and in the UK on CBS Records M 63588 (Mono) and
CBS S 63588 (Stereo). The Stereo mix is used for this CD. Produced by ALEX
HASSILEV, players included David Cohen of Country Joe & The Fish &
Elephant's Memory on Guitar, James Burton of Elvis Presley fame on Dobro, Larry
Knechtel of Bread on Keyboards (with sessionman Mike Melvoin also on keys),
Jimmie Fadden of The Nitty Gritty Dirt Band and Ben Benay of Delaney &
Bonnie on Harmonicas with Chuck Berghofer and Gary Coleman of The Wrecking Crew
on Bass and Percussion. All songs written by Axton except "Kingswood
Manor" with Peter Steinberg of the US group The Shambles.
The six-leaf foldout inlay
has in-depth liner notes from ALAN ROBINSON who does a damn good job of
explaining Axton and his late 60ts pretty-sounding yet acidic LP – the only
real loss being the lyric insert sheet that came with original US LPs – it's
not reproduced which is a mistake on an album that relies so heavily on words
both hummed and snarled. Still, the Remastered Audio is lovely throughout, so
that makes up for the presentation basics. To the music...
Axton had been punching out
albums since 1964 and his songwriting prowess had not gone unnoticed - Three
Dog Night making a No.1 out of "Joy To The World" - while Steppenwolf
made a stunner of "The Pusher" - the subject matter of drugs and
their destruction being something of a serious bugbear for Axton. In fact,
Steppenwolf and their lead vocalist John Kay covered "Snow Blind
Friend" off of "My Griffin Is Gone" for their 1970 LP
"Steppenwolf 7" - recognizing easily with lyrics like "...did
you say you saw your good friend flying low, blinded by the snow, lying on the
sidewalk with a misery on his brain...spent it all on comfort for his
mind..."
Drugs and their devastation
were not far from Hoyt's mind at any given moment (as was religion) – take the
Simon & Garfunkel quiet prettiness of "Kingswood Manor" which
very effectively paints a nightmare picture on an addict interned -
"...this jacket is tight, but I feel fine, though they say I've lost my
mind...the doctor came, and in his hand, the ticket to the promised land, a trip
to paradise, little pills instead of tea, he said he'd come to rescue me from
the maddening saddening gloom in the paisley rubber room..."
In the lovely
"Childhood's End", he sounds so like Fred Neil it's uncanny, while
the gorgeous "Way Before The Time Of Towns" was a highlight on the
Ace Records compilation "Choctaw Ridge: New Fables Of The American South
1968-1973" that they put out in July of 2021 to mucho praise (see my
in-depth review).
Will this one eventually rise out of the ashes and be born anew (like its title)?
"My Griffin Is
Gone" by Hoyt Axton is the kind of album that means a lot to a lot of
people who were lucky enough to stumble on it in the racks of record shops in
the spring of 1969. A genuine lost gem then and one you need to get mythical
figures on...
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