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"...Will Feel The Benefit..."
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Music Of 1977 to 1979
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After the January 1976 release of their fourth
studio album - "How Dare You!" – the original fab-foursome of 10cc
split into two – Kevin Godley and Lol Crème exploring the Gizmo Guitar and their
experimental October 1977 3LP Box Set "Consequences"
- while Eric Stewart and Graham Gouldman kept the 10cc moniker and the band
going.
Much was muted in the press at the time about a supergroup splitting up (Beatles comparisons abounded) – but the
overall winning comerciality of "Deceptive Bends" shocked many in
May 1977 – the 10cc sound still fresh and inventive – and all of it
handled by the dynamic remaining duo (with help from Drummer Paul Burgess and
Strings Arranger Del Newman). Fans even got three singles out of "Bends" – the
hooky-as-it-gets "Good Morning Judge" and "The Things We Do For
Love" that open the LP and the lesser rather-sappy 45 "People In Love".
And then there was the brilliance of the
eleven-and-a-half minute three-part "Feel The Benefit" – an absolute
showstopper that finished the LP over on Side 2. I've seen 10cc do it live in
the 80s and it tears up the crowd every time – reminding you of the melodies
chopping and changing and flitting in and out (there is even a Prog Rock
element to it). "Deceptive Bends" even came in cool Storm Thorgerson Hipgnosis
gatefold sleeve artwork. So it's hardly surprising that with Three Bonuses –
this old but great-sounding CD Remaster offers a punter loads to nibble on. Lots
to discuss...
UK
released June 1997 - "Deceptive Bends" by 10cc on Mercury 534 974-2
(Barcode 731453497429) is a 'Digitally Remastered' Expanded Edition CD Reissue
with Three Bonus Tracks that plays out as follows (51:33 minutes):
1.
Good Morning Judge [Side 1]
2.
The Things We Do For Love
3.
Marriage Bureau Rendezvous
4.
People In Love
5.
Modern Man Blues
6.
Honeymoon With B Troop [Side 2]
7.
I Bought A Flat Guitar Tutor
8.
You've Got A Cold
9.
Feel The Benefit (Parts 1, 2 & 3)
(i)
Reminisce And Speculation
(ii)
A Latin Break
(iii)
Feel The Benefit
Tracks
1 to 9 are their fifth studio album "Deceptive Bends" - released May 1977
in the UK on Mercury Records 9102 502 and May 1977 in the USA on Mercury SRM-1-3702.
Produced by 10cc - it peaked at No. 3 in the UK and No. 31 in the US LP charts.
BONUS
TRACKS:
9.
Hot To Trot
Track
9 is the 3 December 1976 UK 45-single on Mercury 6008 022, Non-LP B-side of
"The Things We Do For Love" (Dec 1976 USA on Mercury 73875)
10.
Don't Squeeze Me Like Toothpaste
Track
10 is the 1 April 1977 UK 45-single on Mercury 6008 025, Non-LP B-side of "Good
Morning Judge" (May 1977 USA on Mercury 73917 with "People In Love"
as the A-side)
11.
I'm So Laid Back, I'm Laid Out
Track
11 is the 8 July 1977 UK 45-single on Mercury 6008 028, Non-LP B-side of "People
In Love" (July 1977 USA on Mercury 73943 with "Good Morning Judge"
on the A-side)
The
8-page booklet is both good and bad, but you can' help feel that it's functional at
best. Only the front and rear cover of the LP is represented with the inner
gatefold and the hugely detailed lyric inner-sleeve both AWOL (no tasty foreigh picture sleeves either). In their place
is a new set of liner notes from CHRIS WHITE that convincingly covers their surprisingly
good fifth LP for Mercury Records with archival interview quotes from Stewart
and Gouldman (first time on CD Remaster too). And the three Non-LP B-sides will
allow US and UK fans sequence the 45s – properly good additions for those who've waited decades for them.
ROGER
WAKE who did all the Strawbs and Joan Armatrading CD Remasters on A&M
Records – handles the Remaster here and it's an audio winner. Fans will go for
deep LP cuts like the quietly gorgeous "Marriage Bureau Department"
and the R&B chug of "Modern Man Blues" and find hugely improved
sonic details (guitar soloing) – clear as a bell. After the "Art For Art's
Sake" muffle on the decidedly mixed sound to "How Dare You!" –
Bends is a welcome uplift. And again, crank it! To the music...
With
every song written by Stewart and Gouldman – and both playing a huge array of
instruments (leaving the Drums to Jethro Tull sessionman Paul Burgess) – the
album is essentially theirs completely. Engineered by Eric Stewart, it also
sounds so damn good. And as I said before – the Remaster has really brought out
those discoveries - "Marriage Bureau Department" and the R&B chug
of "Modern Man Blues". You could almost hear five 45s in its
clever-clogs run.
After
the general excellence of Side 1, the opening duo of Side 2 are very
disappointing – neither "Honeymoon In B Troop" or "I Bought A
Flat Guitar Tutor". Even if it is a tad B-side-ish, at least the hot toddy
jaunt of "You've Got A Cold" feels like that cool 10cc of old – great
guitar work too that's brought out by the speaker-to-speaker remaster. But the
side is dominated by the three-parts of "Feel The Benefit" – a very
One Night In Paris affair with an equal amount of melody changes and wild lyric
runs. The Latin Break is still a hoot and that dual guitar battle in Part 3 is
utterly brilliant and cranked with those strings too.
Bonuses: released
a full five months ahead of its parent LP - "The Things We Do For Love"
had the suggestive "Hot To Trot" – a very 10cc B-side – good not
brill enough to be on the LP (she was smiling at me). The putty in my hands "Don't
Squeeze Me Like Toothpaste" is OK too, but again never rises too much
else. But hell, it sounds great in Remastered form. Best of the three is "I'm
So Laid Back, I'm Laid Out" – a tune I would have replaced the Guitar
Tutor LP track with.
Once
again, I'm taken aback at the last-ability of 10cc's Seventies Music – goodies galore
and a few gems worthy of re-discovery into the cheap-as-chips CD reissue bargain. Time to feel that benefit once again...
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